ONE OF THE OUTSTANDING JERSEY COWS at Cornwall Farm is 'eight-year old MILKBOY LADY shown reaching for a special mouthful of grass. The permanent pasture she seems to be enjoying contains timothy, trefoil, and Kentucky bluegrass. In her fifth lactation she produced 15,525 pounds of milk and 855 pounds of fat. L. F. Photo • "CflfflfPower" pounds of fat in 318 days in (Continued from Page 6 i 8 years old and still going ing cewa were sired by Milk- strong. Cornwall MiLkboy boy, * bull that he bought Nan « another outstanding as a young animal from Mar- cow Wlth a record 9 > 990 lu Pams, Lincroft, N. J, and P° unds ° f , railk and 611 later said to Southeastern P° unds of fat in 305 days - Bieedew" (now ABC) He Another > Co ™ U has since developed into the - M^ ld ’ ’ c 2 mpleted a la . ctatl ° a (op Jersey sire in Pennsyl- wlth J 0 ' 670 P° unds m]k vania. Cornwall Milkboy Lady, aad 602 111 305 days for example, produced 15,525 771 ese cows all had a cow ‘ pounds of milk and 855 power ratmg between 10 and Dairymen everywhere are getting and more with Ful-O-Pep Dairy Feed NEW HOLLAND QU ARRYVILLE See what Ful-O-Pep Cattle-izer Dairy Feeds can do for YOUR milk production! Passmore Supply Co. Cochranville, P*. Millport Roller Milis S. H. Hiestand & Co., Inc. „ Salting* / ' 'W* - J. C. Walker & Son, Inc. Gap, Peima. v IVXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX^XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX’ 1 her fifth lactation. She is now COCHRANVILLE Millport more milk butterfat STEVENS Grubb Supply Co. Elizabethtown Kirkwood Feed & Groin H. M. Stauffer & Sons, Inc. Witmer , , " -V i r V i jSI Stevens Feed Mill, Inc. Stevens, Penna. • PSU (Continued from Page 1) age. Both of these factors hinder the necessary build-up of food reserves in the plant. Future hay crop yields will be directly effected by the amount of stored food re serves. There is no better time to correct the manage ment deficiencies of the ear ly season than during the pe riod when the second crop is developing for harvest. Second cutting alfalfa should be permitted to develop to the 50 percent bloom stage, so that stored food reserves can be accumulated in the plant In case bloom does not occur (because of climatic conditions, a recovery period of at least 5 to 6 weeks should elapse from date of first harvest to date of second harvest Remember that the 15, and showed up as very profitable producers Although Ed was born on the adjoining farm where his father and grandfather kept a dairy herd, he hasn’t spent all of his,, time as a dairyman. He learned to fly in the Air Corps during the war and saw service in the European and North African campaigns. Af= ter the war he completed the two-year agricultural course at Penn State University, re turning- to the farm in 1948. He continued flying and had his own plane for awhile, but now the landing strip is con verted to crops. The Osbornes live with their five children —ages 847—in a spacious old farmhouse on the main farm. ELIZABETHTOWN SALUNGA Kirkwood Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 5, 1965—7 leaves are the food manufac turing organs of the plant. All management factors which favor the development of healthy leaves favor the build-up of food reserves in the system of the plant High soil fertility and insect con tiol favor the plant vigor and health. All alfalfa stands should be sprayed with an approved in secticide on the stubble as soon as possible after the first cutting is removed This should be done even though the first cutting was sprayed, and even though weevil dam age is not particularly se vere at the time of the first harvest Stubble spraying at the start of the second growth period will provide opportunity to reduce the population of weevils so that an extended damaging peri od does not persist through- GET RID OF APHIDS, FLEA BEETLES and COLORADO POTATO Phosphamidon actually hunts pests down on pota- to plants. It Mils them wherever they’re hiding under the curl of a leaf in the crevice of a stalk, This is because Phosphamidon doesn’t kill by con tact alone. It’s absorbed by the foliage and goes through the entire upper part Of the plant system. That means it Mils hidden insects other sprays miss Phosphamidon gets rid of Colorado potato beetles, (even the resistant ones) as well as flea beetles, leaf hoppers and all four kinds of ap- hids that attack potatoes IJ ' Distributed by P. L ROHRER & BRO., INC. SMOKETOWN Phone Lane. 397-3539 BEETLES On Potatoes Ask us about' Phosphamidon Phosphamidom is absorbed quickly, too, so workers can enter the fields just a few* hours after spraying. Why take chances on missing any potato pests. See us now for ORTHO Phosphamidon. T M Reg U S Pat Off Ortho On All Chemicals, Read Directions and Cautions Before Use out the summer Many aMal fa fields will not make a second growth until a stubble spray is applied The recommended insecti cides aie the same ones which weie approved for use on the fiist cutting The same amounts of materials per acie should Ibe used The same precautions should be followed to prevent personal injury fiom the toxic ma terials and to prevent harm ful lesidues on the forage. Paiathion and Guthion are the prefened chemicals for the stubble spray mainly Be cause of their superior con trol of the adult weevils. Both adults and the laival forms will be present at the time when the stulbble spray is applied Parathion and Guthion are Both very high ly toxic to persons applying the spray.
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