D2—Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, July 2,1983 p! ml IS* 8&s >; Have your seen a Gleaner combine like this? If you have, tell the owner to enter is in Allis-Chalmers’ "Oldest Working Gleaner Combine" Contest AC seeking oldest Gleaner MILWAUKEE, Wls. - To commemorate the 60th an niversary of Gleaner combines, Allis-Chalmers wants to honor the owners of the oldest working Gleaner combine units. Owners of these older working models are invited to enter the “Oldest Working Gleaner Combine” Contest. Allis-Chalmers will fly the winner and the winner's spouse to Kansas City for a weekend holiday which will include a Kansas City Chiefs football game and a tour of the combine manufacturing facility in Independence, Mo. The winner will also receive an Allis- Chalmers lawn tractor. Two contest runners up will receive a weekend holiday trip. In addition. IH dealer salesman wins district honors HERSHEY International Hann from Syracuse, N.Y. Harvester Co.’s top dealer On hand to assist with the honor salesmen were honored recently, ceremony was Del Reynolds, local here. territory manager for IH. Representing Erb and Henry Throughout the past year, In- Equipment Inc. in New Berlinvilie, ternational Harvester dealer was Barton. Ziegler winning the salesmen have been competing for total territory annual sales award top honors. This year’s banquet, in addition to top district award by held on May 15 was highlighted by International Harvester’s district a Loretta Lynn Concert in the marketing manager, Dennis M. Herahey Arena. award from Del Reynolds, local territory manager, for IH, and Dennis M. Hann, district marketing manager from Syracuse, N.Y. ■ 5 A* tf** the 25 oldest combine entries will receive a specially engraved replica of the new Series 3 rotary Gleaner combine. To enter the contest, the owner should send a photo of his or her Gleaner combine along with the model number and year, and owner’s name, address and phone number. The name of the owner’s nearest Allis-Chalmers dealer also should be included. All contest entries must be received by Aug. 31,1963. For more information and complete contest rules, write to “Oldest Working Gleaner Combine Contest”, Allis-Chalmers Cor poration, P.O. Box 512, M>vaukee, Wisconsin 53201. Hubbard h ■Sip? WALPOLE, N.H. ~ Hubbard Farms boated the New Hampshire Poultry Growers Association at its Headquarters recently.. Ap proximately 165 members o! the association turned out for their Spring meeting held at Hubbard’s Walpole, N.H. corporate offices. Poultry growers and egg producers from across the state and agricultural instructors from the University of New Hampshire toured the hatchery, research laboratories and administrative offices Wednesday afternoon. J ' >( ■o>-x .. Visitors were also treated to a tour of additional Hubbard Farms’ facilities which included several of the research farms and laboratories located nearby. After a social hour and dinner, Hubbard presented a short afterdinner program. Wentworth Hubbard welcomed the group and related a short history of the company. He described the first branch operation which was opened in Lancaster County, Pa. by Les Hubbard in 1932. In the fifties and in 1967, hatchery and breeding facilities were started in North Carolina and Arkansas respec tively. Alabama was next in 1974. In describing the operations in Europe, Hubbard said that the first operation was set up in Belgium to serve the European Common Market. Known as Hubbard Europa, they operate seven separate companies in France, Italy, Holland, Belgium. West Germany, the United Kingdom Cutworms can thrive in reduced-till corn WARRIORS MARK - Reduced tillage has become a popular practice in Pennsylvania in recent years. Unfortunately, reduced tillage com can be as popular with insects as it is with growers. In many instances, reducing tillage saves time, fuel and soil. But university and crop consulting specialists report that leaving plant residue on the soil surface also can serve as an invitation to soil insects - particularly cut worms. Over the last five years, cutworm outbreaks have hit com acreage more frequently throughout the state, causing substantial damage to unprotected com. Fritz McGrail, general manager of Webb’s Super Gro in Clinton County, has tracked the upsurge in cutworm reports in Penn sylvania’s Appalachian region. “We’ve had a tremendous number cf farmers reporting cutworm outbreaks in the last few seasons,’’ McGrail says. “Cut worm moths, which fly up from the south each spring, are attracted to surface trash you find in reduced til) fields. Crop residue offers an ideal place for the moths to lay eggs, which hatch into cutworm larvae in the late spring or early summer.” McGrail notes that the problem is becoming much more widespread, largely due to the trend toward less tillage. He estimates that 60-70% of the com produced in his area is grown under no-till or with very little tillage. Farmers who follow reduced tillage practices can control cutworms, but in essence they’ll need to rely more heavily on chemical control using an in secticide registered to control cutworms. There are two ap proaches that will cover most situations. The first is an at-plant preventative treatment using a granular insecticide applied with the planter. The granules are banded over the row and may provide dual protection against both cutworms and com root worms, providing the product used is labeled for both insects. Rescue treatment is recom mended by most universities. To be effective, this must be com- ts N.H P -lt spe Assn, at corporate headquarters at Walpole. and Ireland. ita on the world martet. Expanding its market throughout Europe. the Mideast, Far Bast and Africa, Hubbard opened franchises in many other In ' countries. Hubbard chides are now addin nearly ev«y counby in tbs “Jgi STd«SSd te Stepben Taylor, New HampatiiFe M»?<» «» Kew Ham*to Commissioner of Agriculture, is having^ addressed the group and expressed S^nnnm^ his enmpHmenta to the Hubbard U “ t I th ® efficient and economic its contribution to CoUld te key NewHampsWre agriculture and * world hunger. cornfields. The pest responsible is the black cutworm, shown in the lower left corner. bined with an aggressive, on-going scouting program to detect cut worm feeding early in the growing season. A disadvantage is that cutworms can be difficult to find and severe crop losses can occur before the problem is identified. A rescue operation is recommended as follows: at the two leaf stage, if three percent or more of the plants are cut and there are two or more cutworms per 100 plants, rescue treating is called for; at the four leaf stage, three percent cutting and four or more worms per 100 plants will warrant treatment. Jim O’Bryan, manager of Helena Chemical in Warriors Mark, favors the at-plant ap proach. “We’ve seen some growers cut soil insecticides from their programs because of low com prices, but we’ve also seen a lot of evidence that it’s the last place they should cut back,” O’Bryan points out. “That’s particularly true in this area around Huntingdon County, because there’s a very high per centage of no-till com, probably in the neighborhood of 75-85%. The risk of insect damage just can’t be ignored." Paul Dotterer, of Clinton County, agrees that preventative treat ment is good insurance and well worth the investment. “My sons and 1 grow 550 acres of no-till com for our dairy and beef herds,” Dotterer says. “We apply Lorsban 15G in a band in front of the press wheel of our Allis-Chalmers no-till planter. That way some of the insecticide gets dropped down into the seed furrow and gives us some protection around the germinating seed and the roots of seedling plants.” Applying insecticide in front of the press wheel or closing wheels in a band application is known as "T-ban ding.” This places most of the granules in a band wide enough to protect the developing roo| system from rootworm and cut? worm feeding, while some granules drop in around the seed for protection there against in furrow insects, too. For this type of application, the insecticide must have a low phytotoxicity or seed germination may be damaged. The product should be registerd for a broad spectrum of insect species as well. Currently, several insecticides can be used to protect reduced tillage corn from a cutworm in festation. For at-plant band ap plication: Lorsban 15G is registered for cutworm control; Dyfonate 20G for suppression of black cutworms only; and Mocap 10G for control of moderate in festations of black and sandhill cutworms. All are labeled for com rootwonn control. For rescue treatment, a broadcast application J of Lorsban 4E or Sevin 5% bait have proved effective in stopping cutworms, providing the ap plication is made'at an early stage of cutworm larvae growth.