VOL. 8 NO. 16 £. / t * <* * THREE VETERINARIANS PREPARE their supplies for the day before starting on their calls. Dr. -Robert McMullen, left, and his two assistants, James Cox, center, and Larry Schmuck, gather medicine and equipment which will be needed during the day. The three veterinarians work out of the same office to cover the area around Quarryville and-south to the Maryland state line. Corn Borer Control Spray Does Not Pay For Itself Chemical control of corn borer does not pay for itself, county corn growers were told Tuesday night John O Pepper, extension entomologist ftom the Pennsyl vania State University, speak ing at a meeting of about S 5 farmers in che Landisville fire hair said. “We have not been able to make corn borer con trol pay.” iHe said D-DT can be used to control Japanese Beetles, but if it is used, the fodder can not be used for forage. If the fod der is to he used for livestock feed, Sevin is recommended He reminded farmers that neither Dieldnn or Heptachlor is to be Farm Calendar Mar. 23 10 a m Pennsj!- vama Landrace Swine show at Martin’s Sales Stables, Bl ue Ball. Sale ot entries alj 1 p.m. Mar. 25 - 9 a m North Car olina farmers to begin tour of the count} at the farm of Noah Kreidei, Manheun R 3 7:30 pm —Reoigamzation meeting of Elm-Penryn 4-H club m the Peni}n fire hall. 7:36 pm County FFA meeting m Ephrata High School. Mar. 26 1 P m. Meeting on 1964 Wheat Program at the Production Credit build ing, Roseville Road. . -X Continued on Page 10J -Y \ "* * > used for spring application on forage crops In answer to a question. Pepper said there is no eviden (Continued’ on page’B) Poultry Meet Will Feature Pullet Growing All aspects of pullet rearing will be discussed at a meeting scheduled to be held in the Lancaster Poultry Center, Ro seville Road, next Thursday, March 28 at 7 45 p.m. The special education meet ing sponsored by the Lancaster Poultr> Association will feat ure Dr Floyd Hicks, the new poultry extension specialist, from the Peans>l\ama State Unuersit} Dr Hicks has been actne m poultry work in Mic higan for several jears and w ill discuss pullet laismg in that state He will also mod el ate a panel of local poultr>- men and uidustrj men concer ned with pullet production. Also on the program will he Dr Donald Smgletaiy, Direc tor of the diagnostic section ot Whitmoyer Laboi atones, My erstown He will discuss sani tation and general management as they relate to disease con trol. All county poultrymen are invited. ij.f-t.fit'> . i t >j Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 23, 1963 Wheat Program To Be Subject Of Meeting Farmers will be better in formed about how to vote in the proposed wheat program referendum scheduled tor May if they attend the meeting on March 26 at 1 p m in the Pro duction Credit building on Ro seville Road, according to Ed ison Osborne, Peach Bottom, a member of the state Wheat Committee Arnold Pmay of the state Agriculture Conservation and. Stabilization committee will be on hand to explain details of the 1964 wheat program. An attempt will be made to secure (Continued on Page 10) Farmers Asked To Show Hay Fanners from the county are invited to exhibit samples of bam cmed hay in the North eastern Hay Drying Association winter hay show' and meeting at Allentown next week The meeting wni be held in the Lehigh Valley Cooperative Farmers auditorium on March 2<) with the ha\ judging to be gin at 1 p m on March 2S The piogiam on Fridav will begin at 10 am with a hay judging contest to be followed by a tom of the Lehigh Valiev plant. After a business meeting: at 1 p in Harvey Dreibelbis of Hominy Hill Farms will talk on “A Decade”. Presentation o{ awards -will be made by John (Continued on Page 2) li u I IJl‘ ‘IIMr li 1!11 < • 1 t' 11 1 1 II If if li 1 1 i ' I Ride With The Veterinarion Modern Animal Medicine Uses Scientific Methods Editor's Note: This is the fourth in a series of articles dealing with .Lancaster County businesses related to agricul ture. The writer will spend a day riding with personnel who serve the farmer but who do not actively engage in the busi ness of farming. The articles are an attempt to bring the farm er a report of the .job of service personnel before they reach the farm. Other articles will be printed in the following weeks. They rolled the old dairy short ribs on the left side of cow right over on her back a cow that had a slight fever and massaged her abdomen, and poor appetite He heard This was something new to abomasum noises where rumen me I had never seen a cow noises should have been; there “rolled” for the treatment of a was a slight lump on the cow’s displaced abomasum (fourth side, and since she showed stomach), but Hi Robert Die- traces of acetonemia in a una- Mullen, Quarryville, said it is alysis, the diagnosis was “dis not a new piactice placed abomasum”. s ■* V - Earlier in the day, as I rode with Dr. McMullen, ano'her farmer had discussed the pio cedure with us, and I almost hoped we would have the op poitumt> of seeing it in prac tice not that I wished any tiouble on a fanner, but I hoped one of our calls would include a cow with a twisted digestive tract The condition appears to be getting moie common, Dr Mc- Mullen said As the internal organs retain to place after the cow diops a call, the aboma sum sometimes slips out ot itr. noimal position beneath the nimen (the big first stomach) and twists the digestue tiact causing a constriction and con sequent slow down ot bowel movements The cow r goes off feed and shows traces of a mild case of acetonemia L. F. Photo At the farm of Albert Ston er, Quarrynlle Rl, Dr Mc- Mullen listened with his ste thoscope in hollow below the Farm Bureau Co-op Plans To Buy Unsold Tobacco Crops In Co. The Lancaster County Faun Bureau Cooperative this week revealed a plan to purchase the unsold portion of the 1962 county tobacco crop. The Farm Bureau consented to the program with the provi sion that the County Tobacco Groweis (Cooperative withdraw its proposed marketing plan John Wolgemuth. assistant manager of the Lancaster Cou nty Farm Emeau Coopeiative said late this week that details of the plan have not yet been worked out, but all buying will be on a contractual basis with a binding agreement on the producer At a meeting Wednesday night, the tobacco coopeiatire agieed to abandon its plan toi a maiketmg program According to Wolgemuth, the Farm Bureau will purchase the () op, but gioweis will he re quired to redu (r their 10 Go ac reage under tenvatn e plant. \et to be approied Mark Hess of the state Faim Bureau said this week he hop es buying of the filler leaf can begin this month The tobacco would probably be purchased By: Jack Owen Stoner put the cow m » box stall and Dr McMullen placpd a long lope over her neck The ends ” eie drawn down between the fore legs, crossed over her back and out between her hind legs along side the uddei A tug on the lope put the cow on her side. While one man held her head down so that she could not get up, Stoner and the doctor idled hei onto her back and massaged her bell>. The cow got to her teet, and appealed no woise for her strange treatment The lump on her side was gone and she went back to her stall to chew her cud The tieatment usually works, Dr McMullen said, but once in a while, in stubborn cases, surgery is performed and the abomasum is sutured into its proper position. The operation was routine for Dr McMullen who has (Continued on Page &) on grade, and the tentative pro gram would call for acreage controls, a marketing agree ment and a selling tee. The Farm Bureau had a mar keting program under consid eration tor some time, but wai ted until the tobacco coopera te e decided if it could work out a plan of its own Farm Bureau spokesmen told the to {Continued on Page 4) FIVE-DAY WEATHER FORECAST Temperatures during the next file days are expected to a\erase near normal to tour degrees below the normal ra ange of 34 at night to 54 in the afternoon. Near season able temporal ii res are expect ed Saturday with warmer weather following Sunday through Tuesday and turning cooler again Wednesday. Precipitation during the per iod is expected to total 0.1 inch or less occurring near the end of the period. $2 Per Year