j t 's Good Economy Control Pests In Stored Grain fOBING SMALL GRAIN ion and-which is effective m ■'’ when goring this season's controlling insects such as gj! grains, an “ounce'’ ol cadelles, granary weevils, qlll vcn'uon can pay off by confused flour beetles, saw- P tcctmg “pounds" of your tppthecL beetles, rice weevils 1)r0 „jl grains in storage. and many other insects at whcthei' you later sell the tacking stored grain. Mix % nin or feed it, you’ll profit quarts of a 25'% emulsifiable from quality grain In which solution in five gallons of nsects damage is reduced or water and apply to the walls, Emulated. - ceilings and floors with a 1 The first s t e P * n ?rain stor- knapsack, garden or power IS to do a thorough job sprayer. This amount of solu t removing all the old gram iion will cover 2 500 square from your bins It’s especial- fee t of surface area. , inl portant to clean out ev ery crack and cicvice in the flooi or wall—e\on clean up' old grain outside the bin. Then it’s a good idea to re pair any holes and to make {lie bin as rodent proof as possible Now, thoroughly heat your Advertisers will be glad empty grain storage bin with to have you mention Lancas jnethoxychlor, an insecticide ter Farming when answering which has long ’-csidual act- advertisements nßl i l inn»iiuii.i l H., mtfi/fs -JLA_ > r-' / iMi Use These FLY KILLERS... .... DIRECTLY ON ANIMALS ® Ortho Dairy & Stock Fly Spray Wet hairs on dairy animals • Korlan 12 E - Use with fuel oil 10 1 on back rubbers • Korlan 25 W. P. Use with water 4 lb in 25 gal as a direct spray • Marlate 50 Use as a dry rub on dairy animals * Not on dairy animals Aiglen Blend Sc McGinnis Bareville Martin’s Hardware Buck Musser’s Campbelllown A M Brandt Sons Hardware Downingiown Biandywine Hardware & Supply Co. T , Fiazer’s Feed Store T e J* n ° n „ J W Maxwell Hardware Bureau " arm Elizabethtown Lincoln Ehzabethtown Farmers j E Galen> Hardware Supply Co , Inc Kaylor Bros Ephrata Martin’s Feed Mill C P. Wenger & Sons Manheim Florin Hess Bros Gap Summers Bros Honeybrook Palmyra S. n. & Sons John W. Bashore Hdw. Feed Mill Inc.' Martin D. Kern & Son Parkesburg Hardware E. H Keen & Son J. C. EHRLICH CHEMICAL CO., Inc. Distributor ""•■■■■■■■l ••■■■■«■■■■■■■■■■■■*•• 736 - 738 East Chestnut St., Lancaster, Ph. EX 7-3721 Such a program of clean ing and then spraying with methaxychlor is a proved method for protecting your stored grain against insect damage. Get Your Supply at Hershey Hershey Estates Kiikwood L H. Jackson Glenn D Myer (Myer’s Store) Lancaster 1 L H Brubaker Lancaster County Farm Bureau Sears Roebuck Co. Weaver’s Hardware Lililz L H Brubakar Eby’s Mill Inc Leroy Geib Estate N G Hershey & Son Robert Hess Store Oxford Oxford Hay & Grain Co 2'4-D Is OK For Weed Control In Wheat, FDA Report Says In response to many re quests for information on the use of 2,4-D to control weeds in wheat, the Depart ments of Health, Education and Welfare and Agricultu re today issued the follow ing statement. 1. No new regulations have been issued concerning the use of 2,4-D (2,4-Dich lorophenoxy acetic acid) for the control of weeds in wheat. 2. The chemical has been used effectively and safely to control weeds in wheat for the past 12 years. It is reg istered by the Department of Agriculture for distribu tion in interstate commerce for such use. 3. There is no Govern ment regulation requiring ...IN BUIXiDINGS Korlan 12 E 1.12 for 3-4 week residual Diazinon 25 E 1 25 for 3-4 week residual Dipterex Bayer L-13/59 As bait dry or wet Ortho Fly Killer Dry Bait Just scatter thinly on floor Lethalaire Bomb D-200 or V2l Use daily in milkhouses, barns and your home Magic Circle Industrial Aerosol Bomb Use in milk houses, barns and your home 2Vs lb. non-refillable aerosol Fly Cakes all season - Use 1 fly cake for each 100 sq. ft. Oriho Fly Killer D • Contains DIBROM® Use as a space spray, as a bait and for increased residual fly control These Dealers Quarryville Ross H. Rohrer & Sons Red Lion Cape Horn Gram & Feed Rising Sun. Md. S H. Montgomery & Sons Ronks Lester A. Singer Schoeneck Brehm & Enck Hardware Stevens Snader’s Mill Strasburg I. B Graybill & Son Washing on Boro Ament’s Hardware West Chester Fru 5t Growers of Chester Courty Inc. West Willow We t Willow Farmers Assn. Willow Street Dombach Bros. York Spang’er & Sprenkle Inc Yor 1r Farm Supply Inc Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 2, 1960—7 use of 2,4-D at any specific period prior to harvest. Lab els used by manufacturers contain recommendations for the use of the chemical by wheat growers. Also, the Department of Agriculture has suggested that ordinarily in order to get the best re sults, the chemical should be applied approximately 50 days before harvest. This, however, is not a regulation As a matter of fact, approv- ed patterns of use have in cluded application up to a few days before harvest. It has been pointed out that although the dissipation of the chemical by oxidation and weathering would be less in the case of the later application, this is balanced by a reduction in the possi bilities of translocation of the material through the plant during the ripening stage. 4 Since tne nrst use of 2,4-D, no residue of the chemical has been found in wheat and the Departments do not have evidence that late use of proper amounts of the chemical will result in any residue in wheat 5. If information is devel oped to show the existence of residues, the new infor mation would be considered by both Departments and action would be taken to set a tolerance Tolerances have been established for #2, 4-D residues in pears, ap ples, citns fruits, quinces, as paragus This tolerance has been set at five parts per million which provides a wide margin of safety On the basis of the action taken in connection with other products, it can be assumed that if it became necessary to consider the etabhsh ment of a toleiance in wheat a tolerance would be estab lished The first dairy cattle were brought to Jamestown, Va, in 1611 A census made in Virginia colony in 1625 re corded 364 cows Today the re are more than 19 million dairy cattle in the United States NEW! 72. 6-foot chopper ai a 5-foot price A full 6-foofer for the forage harvest and green chop ping plus all a shredder can do. Big, big capacity PTO-powered with 72 inches of rotating flails and a knife-edged fan to double-cut the crop and keep 6 feet of swath sailing into the wagon. Loads it trigger-quick way back to the wagon corners. No fan threshing or crushing! Cuts and chops at the flails . . . chops finer at the fan. Up to Va more capacity than most flail choppers. It’s Gehl built . . . durable, and is actually priced below most 5-foot machines. OEHL RUT* ALL THE PRICr TORS IN Vo FAVOR SNA* LY’S FARM SERVICE NEW HOLT* • Cattle Type (From page 6) type should be kept in prop er perspective in their re lationship to the total needs of the dairy industry. The publicity and recognition of ten associated with judging contests at State and nation al levels may exaggerate the importance of type m dairy ing, according to Dr. Bayley Analysis of more than 10 USDA and State research studies involving Ayrshire, Holstein, and Jersey breeds, said, Dr. Bayley, has shown that if type classification of breed associations were used in conjunction with product ion records m breeding pro grams, milk production wo uld be increased by only 4/10th of 1 per cent more than by use of production records alone. “Dairy character,” a fact or used in determining ‘type' is more indicative of milk production than final type classification, Dr. Bayley said. If breeders used dairy character and production re cords together as guides, he added, analysis shows that milk production m future generations would be increas ed by 2 ot 3 per cent more than by use of production records alone. But if “dairy character” were used as the sole guide for selecting bre eding animals, production would be mcdeased less than half as fast as by selection based soley on production records Type as rated by the breed associations continues to be imoortant in determing the price of animals sold for breeding purposes, because dauymen do not realize the small correlation between type and mJk production. Dr. Bayley said. When dairymen become more fully aware of the facts revealed bv research relating to typo. Dr Bayley predicted, they will give this factor considerablv less im portance than it is given now The dairy cow is perhaps the most efficient and pro ductive animal domesticat ed by man. She converts grasses and roughage which man cannot eat into milk — “nature’s most nearly per fect food." GEHL CHOPPER INCH CUT PHONE EL 4-2214