Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, October 01, 1977, Image 119

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    Buck track held nat’l. tractor pull
I THE BUCK - The nation’s
hnly tractor pulling stadium,
located 10 miles south of
Lancaster along Route 272,
tvas the site of a national
tractor pulling contest last
iveekend. Tractors and
visitors from several states
vere represented during the
CLICK'S
ROOFING & SPOUTING
Handler & Installer Of
BAKED ENAMEL TIN ROOFS
Colors: Turquoise, Red, Olive Green, Rust,
Brown, White and Plain.
Sizes: 5 ft. up to 36 ft. All in one. Also cut to exact
length.
SAMUEL B. CLICK
R,D.I, Kmzer, Pa PH. |717|442-4921
Call in Morning Before 6:30
and Evenings after 6:00 P.M.
No Sunday Calls
THE SENTINEL
two-day pulls. Midwestern
tractor pullers were
especially well represented,
with nearly half of the top
finishers being from that
area. Midwestern tractors
shut out eastern tractors
entirely, as a matter of fact,
in two classes, those being
the 9000 pound modified and
the 12,000 pound super stock.
The best any of the Lan
caster County puller could
do was capture a first place
in the 5000 pound super stock
class. Tim Stauffer ac
complished that victory with
his Deutz 8006, a tractor
which received national
recognition a few weeks ago
at a national pull in Ohio.
Stauffer was first there too.
Regular Buck pullers were
well represented in a
number of classes, as
several thousand fans
cheered for their favorite
tractors and drivers. Said to
be the fastest growing rural
sport in America, tractor
pulling has reallly caught on
in southeastern Penn
sylvania and other areas.
It’s a noisy event. Some
wouldn’t have it any other
way. There’s lots of smoke
too, as some machines use
up several gallons of fuel in
one 300-foot run. It’s all a
part of the tractor pulling
See your dealer about the Sentinel —or drop us a line
RO. Box 433
Elizabethtown, PA 17022
atmosphere, if you’ll pardon
the pun.
Tractor pulling is catching
on in the rest of the world as
well. Last week, for
example, two Lancaster
County machines were
shipped to the Netherlands
to be part of a show there. A
separate article on that
appears elsewhere in this
issue.
One of the more spec
tacular machines last
week’s visitors to the Buck
track got to see was a tur
bine-powered tractor which
had an appearnace and
sound all its own. It
screamed to life twice last
weekend, with Art Arfons of
Akron, Ohio behind the
controls, and on both oc
casions this team of man and
machine finished well ahead
of the competition. In
another class, competitors
came with inches of each
other.
Following is how the men
Round-the-clock
guardian of
stdred milk
temperature
If you depend upon your milk check for a living,
protect that income by insuring milk quality.
The least expensive, single-payment insurance
obtainable is the Sentinel the heavy-duty,
10-inch recorder which charts round-the-clock
temperature of your milk-cooling or holding tank.
Assure yourself and your processor that
proper milk temperature is always maintained.
Keep a permanent log of compressor operation
and tank cooling or pre-cooling efficiency, from
first filling to pickup.
Cleaning temperatures increasingly ques
tioned by sanitarians—are record '-. n the same
chart ' j
At little added cost the Sentinel is available with
provision for actuating an alarm or warning light if
milk holding temperature rises above pre-set level.
Remember—if it prevents the loss of only one
tank of milk, the Sentinel has paid its own way.
Q PARTLOW
Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 1,1977
and their pulling machines
did at the Buck last week.
9000 pound modified
1. Art Arfons, turbine, full
pull, and 266 feet, 8 inches; 2.
Ron Barga, Ansoma, Ohio,
Allison aircraft, full pull and
229-3; 3. Norm Smith,
Versailles, Ohio, Allison
aircraft, 264-9.
12,000 pound super stock
1. Danny Dean, South
Charleston, Ohio, IH 1066,
full pull; 2. Norm Green,
Indianapolis, Ind., AC D-21,
full pull, hook broke 3.
Marhsall Myre, Seneca, 111.,
IH 966,241-7.
5000 pound super stock
1. Tim Stauffer, Ephrata,
Deutz 8006, full pull; 2. Tom
Urmson, Transfer, Farmall
460, 219-2; 3. Jim Brubaker,
QuarryviUe, AC 180,204-8.
7000 pound super stock _
1. Bill Rockefeller, Phelps,
N.Y., JD 4010, 272; 2.
Leonard Thomas,
Boonesboro, Md., JD 4020; 3.
Tim Stauffer, Ephrata, i
Deutz 8006,263-11.
500 pound modified
1. John Hileman, Rock
ford, Ohio, Cockshutt 40 with
454 Chevy engine, 248-7; 2.
Gary Mills, Fallston, Md.,
AC with 427 Chevy, 242; 3.
Larry Jones, Washington,
Ind., Ford with 454 Chevy,
228-10.
7090 modified
1. Art Arfons, 271; 2. (tie)
Fuhrman Brothers,
Dacatur, Ind , Cockshutt 50
with 454 Chevy, 261-10; Dave
Hileman, Rockford, Ohio,
John Deere with two 454
Chevys, 261-10.
9000 pound super stock
1. Danny Dean, South
Charleston, Ohio, IH 1066,
267, 2. Tom Middleton,
Ridgely, Md., IH 1066, 253-8;
3. Vem Over, Shgo, Pa., IH
856,251-3.
12,006 pound unlimited
1. Robert Riggs, Brook
ville, Md., JD 4320,196-10; 2.
John Lancaster, Trafalgar,
Ind., AC 210,196-6; 3. Warren
Tureshell, Ashtabulu, Ohio,
Allison, 192-3.
Parade begins
Del. 4-H week
DOVER, Del. - Delaware’s
twelfth annual 4-H parade
will be held in Milford, Del.,
on October 1, at 1:30 p.m.
This event marks the
opening of 4-H Week,
sponsored by the Delaware
Cooperative Extension
Service.
Competition will include
five divisions for entrants
ranging in ages from 9 to 19.
The divisions include floats,
marching groups, bicycle
groups, mounted groups and
individual entries. Between
35-50 units from par
ticipating 4-H clubs in Kent
and Sussex counties are
expected to compete.
The theme of this year’s
parade will be the same as
that for National 4-H Week -
“Freedom to Be.” The rain
date for the event is October
COMPUTE
FARMPAINTINC
We Lise Quality
PAINT
AERIAL LADDER
EQUIPMENT
• Modern and Efficient
Method
• Reasonable Prices
119