READ LANCASTER FARMING FOR FULL MARKET REPORTS The “new settlers” are coming— and enjoying what they find here! The new settlers, of course, don’t come in covered wagons. Now they drive station wagons, filled with kiddies and pets and furnishings and more. But, if the transportation is different, their reasons for choosing Southern Lancas ter County are much the same as the origi nal pioneers’. They value the clean air and water, the friendliness, the room to grow in. And many have found, to their satisfac tion, that our style of banking (“the way you’d do it”) fits right in. Inside our beautiful, new building, we operate on a first-name basis. Red tape is practically non-existent. Our employes are local persons, implementing policies set by local directors for one bank office—not four or ten. With us, savers receive the highest bank interest permitted by law. Mortgages and other loans are tailored to individual needs. Automating a Small Fluid Milk Plant To automate or not to automate; this question may be answered for small fluid milk processing plant owners and managers in a new report of the U S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) If small dairy plant owners and managers are to continue operating, they must compete with larger automated plants. In ORDER YOUR SPRING FARM SEEDS NOW MANY FARM SllD ITCMS ARC IN SHORT SUPPLY Cert. Iroquois Alfalfa Cert. Pennscott Red Clover Cert. Saranac Alfalfa Cert. Ladino Clover Cert. Cayuga Alfalfa Cert. Garry Oats Cert. W-L305 Alfalfa Cert. Russel Oats Cert. Vernal Alfalfa Cert. Clintland Oats Cert. Buffalo Alfalfa Erie Spring Barley Grasses Maine Grown Certified Seed Potatoes DeKalb Corn Sudax SMOKETOWN Phone Lane. 397-3539 And, when it comes to checking, it’s free free for everybody, with no minimum bal ance required. Whether you’re brand new to our vicin ity, or practically an old-timer, you're wel come here. Because, from our genuine smiles to our accommodating service, we’re a liltle part of what’s nice about Southern Lancas ter County. Farmers National Bank of Quarryville Banking the way you’d do it. Membi r, 1 otb’ial Deposit limiunui Con. jialu. n 1 * Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 27,1973—11 automating their fluid milk plants they must reduce the labor requirements for performing the processing operations without sacrificing either the safety of the quality of the finished product. However, operating costs must be reduced enough to pay for the automated equipment installed Engineers of USDA’s Agricultural Research Service, in cooperation with food scien tists of the Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station, Columbia, designed and installed in the fluid milk processing line at the University of Missouri plant an automated system that produces a 7 7 percent annual net savings This system has safety features that equal or exceed those recommended by U.S. Public Health Service, and required by state and local regulations. Additions to the conventional processing line consist of Air-actuated valves and cleaned-in-place fixtures A two-speed sanitary cen trifugal pump A liquid level controller and a spray tube for the vacuum chamber A control system which per mits the homogenizer to be cleaned-m-place with the processing line Reduced labor costs account for all resulting savings Equipment costs are higher for the automated system Ap proximately 65 percent of the savings involve homogenized milk Copies of the publication, ARS NC-2, “An Economic Analysis of Automating a Small Fluid Milk Plant,” are available free from Dr Maynard E Anderson, Agricultural Engineering Department, Building T-12, University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo 65201 Please use zipcodes 5n