NO LIFTING MILK on the James Graybill farm. Milk rom his 36 holsteins flows by gravity to a vacuum release nder stalls m his milk ng parlor and is pumped under ressure to the bulk tank in his milk house With no expos rc to the ar, the' milk is pumped into milk Company’s in k tiuck. Here James, left, talks with the truck driver, onald Lefever, Lancaster, while the milk flows LANCASTER COUNTY DISTRIBUTOR FOR DITHANE M-22 LEBANON CHEMICAL CORP. LEBANON. PENNA. Dithane M-22 Users Sweep Top Tomato Grower Prizes Three top winners in the 1960 New Jersey 15-ton Tomato Club competition used Dithane® M-22 to control anthrac nose, early and late blights, gray leaf spot and septoria leaf spot in their prize crops. The following table lists these three champion growers, their 'winning figures, and their Dithane spray programs: YIELD per ACRE t/y -£ V< * GRADE ACREAGE *</ & % APPLICATIONS FUNGICIDE Mr. Elmer A. Tindall has been a top winner for 12 years. He is a long-time Dithane user. The father of Bruce Jones, the 4-H winner, is also a Dithane user. Mr. Lester C. Jones grew 55 acres of tomatoes in 1960 with a yield of 20.9 tons per acre. Mr. Tindall and Mr. de Silvio use RHOTHANE® for insect protection to avoid costly losses from hornworm and fruit worm. Your dealer can help you plan a spray program to help bring you prize-winning yields, too. SPRAY AND SAVE WITH DITHANE M-32 DITHANE M-22 AVAILABLE AT SM P. L. ROHRER & BRO Inc. MOKETOWN, PENNA. Phone L- -aster EX 7-3539 CLASSYIELD CLASS 4-H CLUB ;*||| Elmer A. Tindall h s Emidio de Silvio 3 Bruce Jones f- * Windsor, N.J. Cedar Brook, NJ. Medford. N.J S 1 4 (j!ii >..± <■ . 24.3 tons US #1—85.2 % US #2-14 6% Cull* —0 2% '&| jt] 20 9 DITHANE M-22 5 at 3 lbs/*oro M ROHIVI m HA & AS I PHILADELPHIA 5. PA. ‘.'Milking Parlor li’rom page 1) to be m Iking 40 cows by winter and perhaps have 50 by this tme next year I can take ca.e of that many with the new system, he says. Before installation o h-> parlor about six weeks ago the 36 cows were milked in a stanch on barn and nr Ik carr ed to the bulk tank. “Now I do the milking my self Before there was two or three of us—two milkng and one carrying m Ik, and it took iust as long as it does now ” Graybill says. I had the parlor ordered before this new system came out, but when I heard about it, I changed my order, Graybill said The new system to which he referred has the milk line below 'he floor of the milk ing stall. Wth tills set-up no milk is raised under vacuum, (one of the causes of rancidi ty m pipeline milking sys tems) but flows by grav'ty to —L F Photo 34,5 tons US. #1—734% US. #2—26 3% Cull*—o 3% 12 7 DITHANE M-22 11 at 2 Ibs/aero Phone CR 3-IGB7 >. > > v ' r 21.7 ions * A jjj OS. #l-64% kj U.S. #2—32% WB Cull* —4% 8 93 V* DITHANE M-22 |rt| 7 at 3 lb»/«cro Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 24, 1961—7 a vacuum release and is g TobaCCO Disease pumped to the bulk tank un- (From page x/ der pressure. , , , appl cd between the regular The vacuum line is also of intervals glass and is washed each Where wildfire is present, milking along wflh the mik Luock recommends mcreas line, but the two systems arching the streptomycin to 200 on separate pumps The vac parts per million for the uum line operates at 18 inch- next two or three sprays es ol vacuum while the milk Most of the d sease inci hne has only 13, making for dence occurred where grow faster, easier milking and ers stopped the spray pro less fluctuations n vacuum at gram when they began puli the cow’s udder. mg 1 Many milking parlor in- Lucck re P° rted the two stallations in the county have newly-released varieties of been installed in remodeled i°kacco released carl.er this bank barns and resemble ye?r by the Pennsylvania dark cellars more than par- S ' ate Umvers ty appeared to lore, but the parlor on the be free from any disease ' Graybill farm is light, airy to keep clean and The farmer receives 12 per y ‘ 18 °nly good look- cent less for a typical “mar ng, but very eff cient”. says ket basket” of farm grown (Turn to page 11) food than he did in 1947-49. •»■■■■■■■■■>■■■■!]■■■■■• r*issnaaa»BaaaaDHßaßßaiai | Keep Those Milk Pails Full | 1 Don’t Cheat Your Cows | a r ■ DON’T make the mistake of trying to keep those * 3 cows of yours producing at top capacity on just ■ 3 grass and water' Sure, they’ll: live and give SOME « ■ milk, but for PEAK of high quality milk at low ■ a COST, switch ’em now to FLORY’S FORTIFIED 5 * DAIRY FEED. Your cows will produce better, J 5 more vigorous calves. They’ll give better milk g ■ LONGER. m 2 ■ ■ 10 a “45 YEARS SERVICE TO THE FARMER” g | A. MELLINGER & SON I ■ * a Coal - Lumber - Feed - Building Materials g J PHONE: Ephraia RE 3-478 S AKRON. PA. ■ g Make Th s Your J» 3 HEADQUARTERS FOR FLORY’S FEEDS ■ s ® ■ ■ %■«■■■■■■ ■aaßßaaaßßßaaaßaßaaaaßaaaanaaßßaaaalP NOW COMES THE BigC p ■* ' A >A 18-FT. BIG New GLEANER Combine • Big capacity throughout! • 18, 16 and 14-foot headers • 8,311 square inches of separating area • 60-bushel grain tank Planetary final drive gears for smoother forward motion , less slippage. Ask us about the Allis-Chalmers plan to finance your time purchase of farm equipment , ALLIS-CHALMERS A SALES t SERVICE Mann & Grumelli Farm Serv. R. S. Weaver Qr-ifryville, Pa. L. H. Bru' ker Lltitz. Pa N. G. Myers & Son L. H. Brubaker RV, «ms, Pa. Snavely’s Farm Service Czxaneo 1» *o Allis Chalmers tra<l«mufc. SEE IT HERE! Nissley Farm Service Washington Boro D a. Lancaster. Pa Stevens, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers