Paul Grossan, farm manager at Fox Hill Farm near Unionville clips an Angus in a demonstration explained by Tom Kmg (left, without hat) at the Brandywine & V 4 V County Youth Top Judging In Brandywine [Continued from page one) panel discussion on handling beef cattle will be discussed in five minute talks by six or seven people. Phases to be considered include pasture, herd'’ manage ment, herd sires, building herds, feeds and handling. Four counties were represent ed, Lancaster, York, Chester and Montgomery. Damn topped the first class, two-year-old and' senior yearling heifers, by show ing a heifer owned by his broth er, E. Bruce Boyd, a freshman Most Powerful . Mastitis Treatment EVER! ROCKLAND'S SUPER PENTA-CIN DISPOSABLE •. . Plus other potent antibiotics Here is the 'biq brother' to regular Pent-A-Cm we believe veterinarians will tegard as the final answer to difficult mastitis cases Never before has such o powerful dose of antibiotics been fo/mu •ated to fight mastitis * Penicillin G Crystolline Potassium end Procaine Penicillin G —1,000,00 c units combined hove been included tc niake Super Pent-A-Cm go to work fast ll*. P f ovide the oil-important sustained 'hnt°u os important, Ncrmycm k en ac^ec * to overcome orn-miEms birth become resistant to enh -1...,, 08 Dihydrostreptomycin and sulfa 9s round out" the potent formulation Also new... Rockland's DIAL-A-DOSE 0r Multiple-Dose Treatment ever n. o ?' s * mastitis treatment I've users ls ,he comment of early «isposohi. the new R °ckland Dial-A-Dose doses m|ector '• features five I2cc- Iwith mL ,rtlproved regular Pent-A-Cm •'Ps all n r mya " ? dded) F| ve disposable With rh« y ° u * reat • lve udder quarters n * * Q rrie precision injector. tfwJ.' A ' C,N ,S AVAILABLE in GLE DOSE INJECTORS, TUBES ROCKLAND I* ch RMICAL CO. WEST CALDWELL, N. J. flipping Demonstration V‘ * h !*• at the Pennsylvania. State Uni versity in animal husbandry. In junior yearling heifers, first place went to Miss Pa tricia O’Sullivan, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mis. Sam O’Sullivan of Camp Hill in York County. ' Miss O'Sullivan, a senior at New Cumberland High School, has been showing eight years and had both reserve cham pion steer and junior cham pion steer at the 1956 York Interstate Fair. Miss O’Sullivan, in addition to her winnings at York, served this year on the State Livestock Judging team. Second place in this class went to Ralph Keesey, Kennett Square, the sola Chester County 0 • * SECOND PLACE WINNER of the Brandywine Field Day judging contest was Darvin Boyd, R 1 Ephrata, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Boyd. enti*y under George Jacobs, in structor in vocational agricul ture. Darvm Boyd placed first in Class 111, summer yearling heif er, due to scoring on record book,* showmanship and fitting His heifer, a calf of the cham pion at least year’s Brandywine heifer show, lacked the typmess and growthmess to place first among the three shown. Second place went to David Bead, "White marsh, under Montgomery County Agent Marion Deppen x Another protege of Mr. Deppen, Wayne Astheimer of Royers ford, placed third. Class IV, senior heifer calf, was strictly a Lancaster Coun ty event under' County Agent Max M. Smith more proper ly a Quarryville event. Two sisters and One brother were among the four competing. Here Ernst Frey placed, first; Marion, Findley second, Magda Frey third, and her older 'sister Maria fourth. Marion’s entry was _the first offspring of his 1954 heifer. Judging were Tom King of Field Day on Fox Hill Farm near Union ville Saturday. (Lancaster Farming Staff Photo). the University of Pennsylvania, assisted by Jim Coyner of the American Aberdeen Angus As sociation out of Warrenton, Va., Joe Gibbon, who has had charge of the heifer project; Orville Haas, president of the Brandywine Association, Scott L. French, State Association Secretary-Fieldman, and Henry r Moon, from the State Extension Get top milk production * * All Red Rose Dairy Feeds are properly balanced to provide your cows with every nutrient, protein or mineral they need to keep them well fed, regardless of the qual ity of roughage available ... to help you obtain top milk production . . . and feed AT A PROFIT! Musser Farms, Inc. R. D. 2, Columbia, Pa. k it Brown & Rea Atglen, Pa. Service, supervisor of 4-H acti < vijties ,■ ip Pennsyl vania. Due to cloudy, cool weather and the press of farm work, at tendance was rather light, but around 50 persons were shown around the farm built since 1949 by Col. Howard C. Fair, a re tired Canadian Army officer. Here Angus and fox-hunting have been combined for busi ness and pleasure among the beautiful Chester County dis trict where horses, hounds, horns and red coated riders offer diversion, and continua tion of a Colonial- days tradi tion. Much improvement has been made in Fox Hill Farm, now encompassing 300 acres that combines two adjoining faims. Seventy head of Angus make up the herd, headed by the bull Millardenmere 14th, a son of the $30,000 Eileenmere of Wood bar at Millarden Farms, Ann ville, Pa Sharing the herd sire role is Rally Black Prince 6th from Rally Farms in Dutchess County; N. Y. Operating the farm are Paul Crossan, farm manager, and Lawrence Riggins, herd manag er Col. Fair holds high rank in the fox hunting activities of the neighborhood He’s fieldmaster for Mr. Plunkett Stewart’s hounds, an ardent fox hunter and noted polo player. Nearby are the farms of Mrs. Nancy Penn Smith Hannum and Mrs. Averell Penn Smith Walker, with Ree^Robb (1) Feed all the good quality forage your cows will eat— variety increases consumption (2) Supplement diets with Red Rose Dairy Feeds or Supplements—they are a concentrated source of all the essential nutrients (3) provide plenty of fresh water —high milk production is impossible without it (4) Keep cows dry and comfortable. R. W. Bollinger & Sons, Inc.. Manheim, Pa. West Willow Farmers Assoc. West Willow, Pa. Dairy Feeds and Dairy Supplements - . Here’s the way you can keep your cows looking, feeling and producing at higher, more profit- able levels ! milk this season, add Red Rose Dairy Feeds or Supplements to your roughages and home grains. See yourself that better feeding with Red Rose is your surest guarantee of profit. Lancaster Farming—S Friday, Oct. 5, 1956 a half cent to a cent per pound premium over market price. Another feature of the farm, which attracted much interest, was the use of Casupa Super Green pastures, a mixture from Switzerland that was explained by the firm’s representative, Kurt Servos. (Continued on page 6) FARMERS! Store Your porn and Make Money JWM with or ajjWjL without i! Don't sell now at low prices U. S. D. A. pays you storage BUCKEYECRIBS Immediate Delivery on new improved model. 5 year tax write-off. Phone or write for complete information SNAVELY SILO SALES, INC. Landisville, Pa. PHONE 3141 I f**M FEEOS || David B. Hurst Bowmansville, Fa. A. L. Herr & Bro. Quarryville, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers