Competition keen in Expo’s first r SHEILA MILLER IRISBURG A John > 4440 and a Case DC the top two tractors m day’s stock tractor g competition. Case, driven by Paul of R 1 Shippensburg, he winner in the 5500 class. The winning as 129 feet and an inch re. John Deere was ted by Albert Kiefer, mgor. The competition lose in the 13,000 pound with a pull off between Hoch’s Case 970 and d Gross’s John Deere but Kiefer pulled the >st load seven feet one arther than the other actors. s was the first year lr pulling contests were it the Farm Machinery but the interest strong with over J. M. HORST SERVICE CO. BOX 231, QUENTIN, PA DAIRY EQUIPMENT TANKS PIPELINE VACUUM PUMPS ETC. Selection of Used DUMP STATIONS From $ 3O0 &U p * Used Oelaval Bucket milkers and 50 Lb. Pails ★ Used 600 Gal. Tank PHONE: 717-274-1242 24 HOUR SERVICE Your Complete Systems Dealer •thirty, entries in the 5500 pound class, and close to twenty entries each in the other two classes.. The final competition will take place on Saturday, with the 9000 pound class, and the ,pull-off for the cham pionship. Ten finalists were selected from the two weight classes that pulled on Thursday. These ten pullers then chaw for their position for the Saturday evening finals. “It can make a difference depending on what order you pull,” said Charles Ker shner, of the Franklin County Tractor Pullers Association. “The track only gets reworked between classes, and in between pulls it is just smoothed down a little.” Kershner, of R 3 Green castle, helps to run the weight sled for the pulling Albert Kiefer had the winning pull in tough competition in the 13,000 pound class. competition. One of three in the state, the Franklin County pullers’ sled is the largest. “There are two others hke it, but one is in North Carolina and the other is in South Carolina,” he added. The other two sleds in the state, he said, are. one foot in diameter all around. These sleds belong to the North East club and the Buck club in Lancaster County. The sled *is specially designed to take the exhaust from the tractors and pipe it outside. This is almost a necessity in an indoor show, Kershner explained. As a matter of fact, one tractor was disqualified from the pull when the exhaust apparatus came off his tractor. The sled, said Kershner, is capable of going from zero weight to 42,000 pounds. A system of gears moves a weight box from the back of the sled, up over the . uptil all of the weight is the front of the sled and tractor is dragging weight. Air bags under the actually can lift it up off ground, and the tractor just rolling the load until weight is added on. The Franklin Cov puller said their sled has 10,000 miles on m ' years, going to tractor around the state. Ken. added, “Tractor pullmj getting bigger all the especially the mim-traci at 1500, 1700, and ] pounds. You don’t need a trailer to haul tl around.” Kershner explained minx-tractors can have horse power than modifieds. They are from the ground up, he and aluminum parts used to keep them light can easily cost $5OOO to one,” he added Lancaster Fannins, Saturday, March 1,1950—A35 tractor pulls The competition at this year’s Expo only included the stock tractors. The stocks have a speed limit of 3 m.p.h. and there can’t be any visible changes on the outside. Besides stocks and tmm tractor competition, tractor pulls can also include modified and super stock, where the speed is unlimited, along with visible changes to the tractors. “In the modifieds, about the only thing that belongs to a tractor is the rear-end, everything else is out of a car,” said Kershner. “You can do anything to it as long as you stay in your weight class.” Out of the twenty finalists from Thursday’s com petition over half of them are farmers, mostly in the dairy business. Paul Hoch, winner in the 5500 class, farms m part nership with his brother. They have a herd of 95 Holstein dairy cows, and farm 550 acres of land. This was his first win with the Case DC. And Albert Kiefer is a farmer too. He farms 2500 acres and has a dairy Expo opens (Continued from Page Al) Noah Wenger, represen tative from Lancaster County. “Farmers must be assured of sufficient energy at crucial times of the year,” Wenger said. “The in terstate highway systems have changed the face of Pennsylvania agriculture. We need to study energy and its usage and conservation, and look into alternate energy sources.” He added the Expo provides an opportunity for farmers to learn about some l of the innovations in energy systems. The young Expo drew a sizeable crowd for the tractor pulling competitions. The interest was high as far as the exhibitors were concerned, with entries reaching the upper limit in one of the classes. See ac companying story. And, although not as full as its big sister, the Farm Show, the Expo had a good showing of machinery and equipment exhibitors. There NEW^rn* DURSBAN INSECTICIDE Season-Long Lie Control With ONE Application Even Kills E Franklin DURSBAN 44 is the .iy cattle insecticide that kills the louse egg and nymph as well as the adult Just a single applica tion controls lice all season long • Proven over 99.9% effective • No side effects from late grub kill • Ready to use topical pour-on Trademark of The Dow Chemical Company Available From: PBS Livestock Drugs P.O. Box 9101, Canton, Ohio 44711 CALL TOLL FREE 800-321-0235 (For Beef & Non-Lactating Dairy cattle) operation. The tractor he used m this week’s contests is one he uses to farm. His win at the Expo is added to a long list of first places in his six years in competition. The ten finalists in the Thursday classes include: 5500 Class 1. Paul Hoch, 129-1; 2. Claude Homan, R 1 Centre Hall, 1234%; 3. Richard Troxell, R 1 Andreas, 122-9; 4. Gilbert Watson, 122-8%; 5. Mike Miller, R 3 Carlisle, 121- 4; 6. Dale Shupp, R 2 Tunkhannock, 121-1; 7. Carl Modica, Asbury, N.J., 120- 5%; 8. Larry Klinger, R 1 Sehnsgrove, 119-2; 9. George Easton, R 1 Cogan Station, 116-10; and 10. Donald Remley, R 3 Benton, 116-5. 13,000 Class 1. Albert Kiefer, 121-9; 2. Paul Hoch, 114-8; 3. David Gross, R 1 Hamburg, 114-5%; 4. Larry Klinger, R 1 Win field, 174-9; 6. Robert Kiefer, R 1 Bangor, 172-11%; 7. Barry Ott, R 2 Bangor, 171- 8%; 8. Ray Reighard, RD Woodbury, 165-8%; 9. Ronald Jumper, R 3 Nevmlle, 163-7%; »nd 10. Randy Greene, R 2 Canton, 159-7%. were numerous wood stove displays, along with other homesteader types, silo manufacturers, trucks, trailers, and grain dealers, and many, many others. The American Falls is 182 feet high and the Horseshoe (Canadian) Falls is 176 feet high. Passage across the inter national border is a routine matter at Niagara Falls for natural-bom citizens of the United States or Canada. Others also pass freely across the border, although it is suggested that they carry identification papers to avoid delays. The United States and Canada agreed in a 1950 treaty that 100,000 cubic feet of water per second must flow over the Falls during daylight hours in the tourist season from Apsd to Oc tober. At other times, in the off-season and during even ing hours, the flow may be reduced to 50,000 cubic feet per second. gl c-'?. . b—•