York County Monthly Report DHIA 58 3 Me Ral Dairy Farm Pinky Marg 3 4-6 305 Shirley 3 6-9 252 3 8-11 305 3 6-4 305 3 4-6 305 3 3-1 305 3 3-4 301 3 3-2 294 3 3-6 294 3 2-6 305 3 2-8 305 3 4 295 SURGE I: >&Mr Notary milking parlor sxsu* BRANDT'S FARM SUPPLY, INC. (Continued from Page 50) 4 305 16,879 5-3 305 13,712 15,351 13,174 13,180 16,006 15,815 18,524 14,350 14,059 13,762 14,305 11,264 13,038 ft V. GLENN E. HURST RD2, East Earl, Pa. Ph. 215-445-6865 601 E. High St.- Ehzabethtown, Pa. Ph. 717-367-1221 Dairy Show was fourth in the tough Jersey placing. Pennsylvania State University finished second in the intercollegiate scoring with 1971 points, just nine fewer than Purdue, as the two teams, along with third place Cornell outdistanced the field of 14 colleges and universities which included representatives from half of the, Big Ten schools. Delaware Valley College, Doylestown, Bucks County, was fifth. PSU and Delaware Valley each placed two team members in the top ten among the 42 individual competitors led by Ginger DAIRY GO-ROUND & i (Continued from Pace 521 SURGE OFFERS YOU A COMPLETE MILKING PARLOR SYSTEM It takes more than just a turntable, stalls and pipe to make a successful Rotary Milking Parlor System. With Surge you get it all good cow milking ... automatic propping .., automatic • Randalls ~. consistent cow movement ... automatic quarter take-off ... gentle and sanitary milk handling and cooling .... top labor efficiency ... quality equipment ... expert installation ... and dependable service. DEALER IN YOUR AREA Sechrist, Fayetteville, Franklin County. Ms. Sechrist, who was first in total reasons, actually finished in a tie for overall scoring, but a tie-breaking device was weighted in favor of actual placing and she was moved back to runnerup. The other Keystone collegians in the top ten were Roger Campbell, Quarryville, Lancaster County, and James Bates, Jamestown, Mercer County. David Rama, Yorktown Heights, New York, a member of the Delaware Valley College team, also finished in the top ten. Ohio Farm Premiere Brown Swiss Exhibitor The 1974 Eastern National AUTOMATED ROTARY CALL THE SURGE GROFF EQUIPMENT 2 W. State St. Quarry vi lie, Pa Ph. 717-786-7225 LESTER B. BOLL RDI, Lititz, Pa. Ph. 717-626-6198 Lancaster Farming. Saturday, Sept. 28,1974 Show for the Brown Swiss Cattle Breeders Association was staged again this year as part of the All-American Dairy Show. Top cow in the breed was “L-J Harvest Gem,” a five year-old shown by Royal Hill Farms, Fort Wayne, In diana. Another five-year-old, “Vine Valley Paul Lu Ann,” from the Coventry Swiss Farms, Palmyra, N.Y., was the reserve grand champion female. The two cows were also tapped as senior and reserve senior champions enroute to their grand championship laurels. The junior winners were a pair of yearling heifers from the Top Acres Farm, St. Pairs, Ohio. They were “Top Acres Rally Clever” and “Top Acres Stretchy Quip,” with the latter the reserve junior titlist. Top Acres Farm used these two titles as a springboard to the premier exhibitor award for the Brown Swiss Eastern National. The Ohio dairy farm also brought the best dairy herd into the ring. “L-J Revival R” was the grand champion bull. Last year he was reserve senior champion at the PAA. The four-year-old is from Sand Rock Farm, Rocky Ridge, Maryland. A two-year-old, “McCoy Beautician Gaze Prince,” also from the land of pleasant living, took runner-up honors. “Prince” is owned by Christopher J. Morley, Bel Air, Maryland. Yearling bull calves from the midwest earned the junior awards. “L-J Pride Stretch” picked up another banner for the Royal Hill Farms and “Vel-Geen Qts King Men” was reserve junior bull for Eugene Krebs, Botkins, Ohio. L & J Farm Hilliard, won the official tabulation as the premier breeder for this event although the farm no longer exists as a dairy farm operation. Likewise, the premiere sire accolade went to “Welcome In Stretch,” now deceased and his last owner was the defunct L & J Farm. Host State Farms Take Five Of Seven Guernsey Titles At PAA Judging m the Guernsey classes opended Wed nesday’s events at the All- American; and except for the two top female awards, it was almost an all- Pennsylvania affair. Limited entries in the morning judging restricted the bull titles to just three and Keystone State breeders copped all of them. “Hollow View C. Jethro,” a year-old bull calf, topped the junior classes before being tapped as grand champion bull. He was en tered by Hollow View Farm, Quarryville. The Snider Homestead Farm, New Enterprise, moved their two year-old “Snider’s Arcos Butch” into a reserve grand championship after having (Continued on Page 55) •mom MILK*MORE MEAT • MOM PROFIT MADISON SILOS Div. Chromalloy American Corp. 1070StemmetzRd. Ephrata, Penna. 17522 Ph. 733-1206 LOCAL DEALERS Frank Snyder Akron Caleb Wenger Quarryville 548-2116 Landis Bros. Inc. Lancaster 393-3906 Carl L. Shirk 867-3741 Lebanon Sollenberger Farm Supply Centerport, Pa Ph 215-926-7671 53 859-2688
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers