12—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 6, 1964 ;• County Dairymen (Continued Irom Page 1) Giemev’s 20 8 cows had an over all avei age of 606 pounds of butterfat and 15.642 pounds of milk with a 39 per cent test. Gieiner has been in the dairy business since he moved on the 60 acre farm of his grand father in 1939, but it was not until 1946 that he began buy ing a “few pui ebred Holsteins.” The 23 milkeis and 13 head of young stock in the herd are now registered and all are ar tificially sired Greiner has about 13 acres of permanent pasture in three patches on his 60 acres, hut he does not count on pasture for the total summer feeding pro gram. He plants rye in the fall and uses it for late pastuie In the spnng it goes into the silo and until it ferments, the cows are on a ration of hay, pasture and gram As soon as the rye sil age is icady to feed, Greiner hauls it to the cows on pas tuie twice a day. He also feeds his herd all the alfalfa hay they will clean up twice a day and a grain mixture of his home grown grains and a com mercial supplement He relies heavily on bailey in the gram mix “I didn’t husk any corn at all last year,” he said. Coin silage in the winter is fed m the barn both morning and evening and at noon on a wagon in the barn lot Hay is fed as the cows clean it up during winter months. '‘lf I walk through the barn five or Look! 10,000 Purchase LIMITED SUPPLY STOP IN TODAY six times a day, I will check to see that all the cows have hay in the trough,” is the way Greiner explains it. Greiner and his wife do all the work on the dairy herd and keep a laying flock of 1600 to 1700 laying hens. One other factor in the high production picture could be added to Greiner’s two—atten tion to detail where cow com fort is concerned • DHIA (Continued from Page 1) The 28 Registered Holsteins in the herd of Christ K. Lapp and Son, Gap R 2, was second high in the averages with 67 pounds of butterfat in 1,701 pounds of milk with a S.B test. High 305 day lactation record completed during the month belongs to a registered Hol stein in the herd of Calvin D. Beiler, Paradise Rl, Martha, a six year old cow, made 791 pounds of butterfat in 18,022 pounds of milk with a 44 per cent test. Linda, an eight year old reg istered Holstein in the herd of John E. Esh, Gordonville Rl, had a 305 day record of 767 pounds of butterfat in 22,626 pounds of milk with a 3.4 test. Another Linda, a grade Hol stein in the Clair M. Hershey herd had 766 pounds of but terfat in 16,207 pounds of milk with a 47 test Other cows finishing lacta tions with more than 700 pounds of butterfat were in the herds of Paul B. Zimmer man, C. Witmer Sherer, J. D. L. DIEM & SONS LITITZ NEWLY ELECTED OFFICERS of the Grassland FPA Chapter of the v Spot High School are, left to right, front row, Tony Polker, Secretary; Fred President; William Fisher, Vice-President. Back row, Robert Fisher, James Musser, Chaplain; Roy Bowman, Sentinel; and Glenn Weber, Second officers elected at the same meeting are, Sanford Gehman, Asst President; Kenneth Zimmerman, Asst. Secretary; Dale Hep 1 , Asst. Treasi Kxeffer, Asst. Reporter; Adam Zimmerman, Asst. Sentinel; and Glenn Asst. Chaplain. Mowery Prey and son, Seth J. Bnntm and shaub> and Donaid ry M. Frey, Clarence Lapp, A H & J. K. Bisser, s - 6611 s - Stoltzfus, J Paul E. Nissley and Son, Rob- Herds with averages of more Frey and Son, Paul It. ert H. Kauffman, Clarence than 60 pounds of butterfat Raymond and Louise ' Stauffer, John M. King, Arthur were Harry L. Troop, J. S. John S, Shelly and D. Wenger, Ivan S Stoltzfus, Sroucker, Hess and Grosh, Fur- Martin. S & H Green Stamps Of A New McCormick CAPACITY r?PBL , to you for high-performance BALING O’ see it today a NEW The people who bring you the machines that work This offer good until June 30 MORE PH. 626-2131 * . ■''v, fj, 3 V fen;- With Baler! ALERS if More, capacity to handle heavy windrows Jr More capacity to u« firm*, uniform bales —t* if Aferrcapacity to keep on-the-go > /‘j ** W,' '