Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, March 26, 1960, Image 7

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    Reports
Control For
»nments indicate soil
j'ent may eventually re
tree spraying to con
nium curculio in peach
P ds the U S. Depart
of’ Agriculture report
lay.
•hard tests, conducted
•ntomologist Oliver I.
of Agricul-
Reseach Service at
Valley, Ga , proved se
insecticides capable of
good control of the
•m, dieldrm, or hepta
wa’s spread in the sp
oil the ground under
a t a rate of about 2
per acre and mixed
the top layer of soil
treatment controlled
cuicuho Conotrachleus
'har by killing the pest
it could emerge from
•ound Similar tests we
itained with all three
!S e chemicals.
one of the tests, aldrin
ilcs were spread under
ta peach trees in Mar
-1957. No insecticide
jfe
YOUR MONiYE
Here’s why: The Wayne Pullet
program develops chicks into
vigorous pullets with strong
frames, ready to Lay at the
proper time. You get higher
production, more large and
extra-large eggs, less prolapse
and improved livability. Feed
costs are low too, like those of
Mrs. Robert Miller, (Wabash,
NE
pu
H. M. STAUFFER & SON'S. Inc
Witm«r - Ronlcs - z.eol«. <-a
I C. ULRICH, JR.
Peach Bottom. Pa
FARM SUPPLY
Lilii*. Pa.
W BIG-YIELD PLANTING
TH SINGLE-ROW ACCURACY
* ac h Row-Flex planter unit plants at its own uniform
depth ■ — regardless of uneven ground.
Buy a 4-row unit this year . . . njake it a 6-row
planter later just add 2 more units. »
Plant-— band fertilize spray pre-emerge tor w 'd
control... all-uniformly for clean stands, fast gro.. -a.
Myers & Son R. S. Weaver L. H. Brubaker
Rheems. Pa.
H* Brubaker
lilite. Pq.
Peach Pest
was used on the trees during
the ‘57, ‘5B, or ‘59 season.
Only 1.6 per cent of the
harvested peaches were in
fested in 1957, 2.9 per cent
in 3(558, and 0.7 percent in
1959. It is possible some bo
tles • may have migrated fr
om outside the treated or
chard
In a cooperative experi
ment with a Georgia peach
grower, 64 pounds of 25-per
cent aldrm were mixed wi
th each ton of 10-10-15 ferti
hzer and spread under sev
eral thousand trees in Mar
ch 1958.
‘Each tree was treated wi
th 2Vi pounds of the mix
ture, which amounted to 2
pounds of aldrin per acre.
The material was broadcost
by hand and disked into the
ground No wormy peaches
were found when the orch
ard harvested in 1958
In 1959 the owner found
wcrmy fruit in only one sm
all area In contrast, peach
es in a neighbor’s untreated
orchard were ruined by the
plumb curculio.
Ind., who hou:
lets dt a feed o
or G. G. Wilson, Windsor,
Ky., 1,025 for 59c; and O. N.
McClung, Old Hickory, Tenn.,
700 for 74c each.
Begin now getting “More for
Your Money" the Wayne way.
We have Wayne calf and pig
programs tool
etpragrai
MHIERSVILLE SUPPLY CO. ABERDEEN. MILLS
Millersville. Pa. R.D. 2. Elizabethtown “a
LIME VALLEY MILLS
R.D. 1. Willow Street, P«
Snavelys Farm Service
Stevens, Pa.
Nsw Holland, Pa
Ice Cream Short Course
World Wide In Appeal
A world-wide reputation
for short course training in
ice cream manufacturing is
claimed by, the T>airy Science
Department' at The Pennsyl
vania State .University. Dur
ing a recent course for Ice
Cream plant personnel, train
ees came from Venezuela,
Colombia, ,Mexico, Sweden,
Holland, and Canada, in ad
dition to seven states.
Penn State has probably
trained as many short course
students in ice cream mak
ing as all other agricultural
fcolleges combined. That’s the
belief of Philip G. Keeney, in
charge of the two short cour
ses for plant - personnel and
makers of soft ice cream.
Agricultural short course
director Frel C. Snyder
hopes there is some connec
tion between Penn State’s
reputation for training and
the growth of the ice cream
manufacturing in the State.
Pennsylvania leads all states
in the amount of ice cream
'X.
\ ■'
/' , ?
ROHRER'S MILL
R 0.1. 'Honks-.
' ALUS-CHALMERS A
Sales and Service f
Ask us about the Allis-Chalmers plan to finance
your lime purchase of farm equipment.
* - - as er. Pa.
Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 28. 1980—7
produced—about 80 million
gallons a year. Of this total,
about 6 per cent is soft ice
cream.
“One of our objectives is
to instill within each student
an understanding of the im
portance of sanitary handling
of milk and milk products. - ’
Dr. Snyder points out.
Following World War 11,
the soft ice cream business
grew rapidly. Many people
started out with no prior ex
perience in proper handling
and care of perishable foods.
Equipment was not always
designed for proper cleaning
and sanitizing
So the soft ice cream short
course was urgently needed.
Started only three years ago,
it has now trained 55 men
from seven states. Students
study the composition and
problems of frozen desserts,
the ingredients to use, the
mixing process, type of
equipment to select, and fla
voring and freezing of soft
frozen desserts. Sanitation
■ Sure Crop Seeds
5 ALFALFAS
4 <
S Vernal
■j DePuit
■ Ranger
* Buffalo
* Grimm {
■ CLOVERS 5
■ Pennscott ■
■ Kenland ■
■ Penna. Grown ■
S Mammoth ■
■ HYBRID CORN ■
5 DEVELOPED BY - ;
S PENN STATE EXP. ■
S STATION i
5 Get our prices ■
■ and save money ■
■ REIST ■
I SEED COMPANY |
■ MOUNT JOY. PA. ■
■ Phone OL 3-3821 ■
%iiiiiiiiih»ihiih!
Nissley Farm Service
Washington Boro. Pa.
Msnn & GrumeDi Farm Serv.
J v
Quoaryrille. Pa.
and state regulations are
stressed.
The training of plant per
sonnel has an extra benefit —
international good will. For
the banquet on January 2&,
traditional foods were trans
ported by air from Venezue
la, Colombia, Mexico, Swed
en, and Holland. The foods
were gifts of trainees from
these countries and included
typical fare like tortillas,
creamed herring, fried ban
anas (platona). and candy
made from guava, a South
American tree fruit
TEST SOIL FOR POTATOES
A complete soil test is es
sential for each field planted
to potatoes, reminds Elmer
Pifer, Penn State extension
agronomist Intended use of
the crop also is a guide to
choice of fertilizer and the
amounts to be applied to get
satisfactory yields and the
quality desired.
Nationwide, Pennsylvania
is fourth among the 50 states
in total banking assets—fol
lowing New York, California
and Illinois
"DID YOU SAY
KEYSTONE
LEGHORNS?"