Vol. 1, No. 11 Farm Womeij Elect Officers At Harrisburg HARRISBURG Newly elect ed officers of the Society of Farm Women of Pennsylvania are. treasurer, Mrs Milton Eber ly, RD 3. Lancaster, (to succeed Mrs Samuel Moyer, RD 2, Her shey; and director, Mrs. D L Howard, RD- 2, HummeJstown, Dauphin County, to succeed Mrs Oren McCaleb, RD 6, Carlisle. Mrs, Charles Shriver, RD 3, Waynesburg,- Greene County, was elected president at (the 1955 convention for a term of two years; 'also, first vice president, Mrs. Mark Herr, 2, College ville, Montgomery County; sec ond vice president, Mrs. Fred Bikle, RD I,•'Fayetteville, Frank lin County; and secretary," Mrs. Edwarct Boyd,' Sioystown, Som erset County. Seventeen counties now have membership in (the Society with total membership exceeding TJ,- 000, it was announced at the Farm . Show meeting County presidents reported cash and ma terial donations were made to welfare find health agencies and drives, to-hospitals for new equip ment, and-' for expenses' of 4-H Club members to club week and leadership school- Moneyunakmg activities, ranged -from bake sales to lunch stands at sales and auc tions to the sale of greeting cards and small household articles. , Resolutions adopted at its busi ness session included a recom mendation for necessary legisla tion making mandatory the re moval of doors, hinges, or lids from 'unused, refrigeratros or, ice, boxes as soon as possible to safe guard the lives of young chil dren; to stress the value of re gular church attendance; to urge (that family planning, of activi ties inelude~the' young people; a recommendation for a State law prohibiting the - disposal of trash along the highways The Society also adopted a resolution “to extend to our 'President wishes for continued good health and to pledge 'our support to his -efforts in guiding our people.” Homsher Farm Sells, $60,100 To R. H. Rohrer Raymond H- Rdhrer, R 7 Lan caster, l«te last week purchased the 135-acre farm of the late Jdhn in Strasiburg Twp, tor $60,100. Offered at public sale by Mrs. Esther B. Homsher, the improved arm includes a two and one-half story brick dwelling, stone and frame tenant [house, a large bam with stable capacity for 75 cows or steers, a brick garage, milk house and other buildings Mr. Homsher, weU known feed manufacturer, died last year. Auctioneer was Stanley H Deiter- Ground was broken Saturday morning for the new Lancaster Poultry Center. Here, meinbers of the Lancaster Poultry Association and the Lancaster Poultry Ex- Robert Welk Outstanding FFA Boy of Year; His Holstein Places Third -HARRISBURG A plaque de signating him as the “outstand ing FFA boy of the year” was presented to Robert L. Welk, Strasburg, RD-1, Lancaster Coun ty, at the close of the Future Farmers of America - mid-winter meeting in the Forum Welk, who is'State president of the FFA, has a distinguished record as a farm boy. He operates a 75-acre farm, helps his father on the family’s 85-acre farm, and has a part-time job with an im plement dealer His farming pro gram in his senior year includ ed 1500 broilers, 4 dairy'calves, 4 dairy cows, 6 brood sows, 20 fattening hogs, 10 acres of corn, 10 acres of hay, 5 acres of wheat, and 3 acres of barley. He was president of his class, FFA presi dent of his chapter and county, won the Keystone Farmer de gree in 1954 and was elected State president last June. Holstein Calf Places The hoy" plaque is being donated by the Penn sylvania Farm Bureau Coopera tive Association A Holstein calf Robert showed won a prize in judgings at the 1956 State Farm Show Entered in the vocational class of the dairy department of the Show, young Welk’s animal won the $6 third prize for heifers one year and under 18 months. Robert is an FFA member at Lampeter- Strasburg Union High School, Lancaster County Quarryville, Pa., Friday, January 13, 1956 Ground Breaking Ceremonies i More than 1,000 public school vocational agriculture students who are members of the Future Farmers of Anierica were here ROBERT L. WELK for the annual Farm Show con vention of the FFA’s Pennsyl vania Association. Following a meeting of the FFA State officers, and executive committee m the morning, blue jacketed FFA - members from every corner of the Common wealth crowded into the Forum of the. Education Building that to join, in' bestowing the highest honors which the farm-boy organization can con fer at the State level. Keystone Degrees to 244 “Keystone Farmer” degrees for 244 FFA boys, honorary Key stone Farmer titles for 49 busi ness and professional men, and citations to 26 newspapers, ra dio and television stations and other organizations vtere confer red. * The 100-piece FFA State Band and the FFA 'Chorus furnished music for their fellow members’ convention. change gather in front of the sign erected at the proposed site at the intersection of Highway 230 Bypass and Roseville Road. -(Lancaster .Farming Staff -Photo). Baby Beeves in 4-H Classes Go On Sale Friday HARRISBURG The 125 4-H baby beeves that paraded through the judging ring Thursday at the' Farm Show will go on the auction block there Friday aft ernoon They tip the scales at a total of 135,580 lbs nearly 70 tons of beef on the hoof when University. This was an average of 1085 lbs. They were judged Thursday by Byron Good, of Michigan Sjate State University Seventy of the steers are An gus, 45 Herefords, and 10 Short horn. Weighed in also were the 50 pens of lambs that complete the 4-H livestock part of the show. The lambs are of six breeds Hampshire, Shropshire, South dawn, Dorset, Chevoit, and Suf folk- They tipped the scales at a total of 16,507 lbs In charge of the weighing in wtere E. G. Hamill, ~ Hollidays burg, county agent of Blair coun ty, and Prof. Monroe J- Armes, extension farm management spe cialist, the Pennsylvania State University- Henry Shields, weigh master for Swift & Co., Harris burg, operated the scales. Sale of the 4-H steers and iambs, along with open class animals, will start ait 1 o’clock Friday The sale will be in the large arena. Col. Guy L. Pettit, Bloofhfield, lowa, will .be auc tioneer. " FAMED LUCIFER DIES Lauxmont Admiral Lucifer, one of the best known hulls in artifi cial breeding service in (the Unit ed States died Tuesday at the Southeastern Pennsylvania Arti ficial Breeding Cooperative. He had been bred, during his life time, artificially to 45,190 cows. Several of his sons remain -in service at- SEPABC. $2 Per Year County Tobacco Cops 92 of 94 Prizes at Show By LF Staff Reporter HARRISBURG Lancaster County, contributing $lO million to the Keystone State’s annual sll-million tobacco business, ■walked off with 92 of 94 awards in the Cigar Leaf Tobacco show at the 1956 Pennsylvania Farm Show. Promises of “typical Farm Show weather” held too true on opening day, as ice glazed high ways in many sections of the State and cut attendance to 60,- 000, compared to 1954’s opening day of 80,000 when heavy snow blanketed the State- Roads Conditions Improve Road conditions improved Monday night , Grand champion wrapper in the cigar leaf tobacco division for Pennsylvania Seedleaf or Broadleaf, went to George Webb, Jr-, R 1 Elizabethtown, while grand champion filler was shown by Abram Bollinger, R 4, Lititz. Clinton county was the sole chal lenger to the Garden Spot, but placed seventh in one division, ninth in another against 12 en. tries from Lancaster County. Here are other Lancaster County awards: FFA Swine Hampshire - 10, Kenneth B. Garber, HI Willow Street. Yorkshire: 2, Gerald C. Rohr er, Smoketown. Vocational Swine Awards Berkshire, junior sow pigs: (6 shown): 4, Richard Heagy, Rl Mount Joy. Yorkshire, junior sow pigs (6 shown); 2, Gerald C Rohrer. Shropshire fat lambs class 183, 1, Larry Falco, Rl i Millersville; class 184,' 1, Samuel Long, R 4 (Manheim; 2, Dorothy Stehman, R 3 Lancaster; 3, Gloria Brubak* er, Rl Ephrata. Hampshire fat lambs, class 187, 1, Mary Ellen Hess, Rl Bare ville; 3, Henry Gnsiner, Man heim Southdown fat lambs class 189, 2, Lorraine Hackman, R 3 Eliza bethtown; 3, June Greiner, R 4 Manheim; Class 190. 1, Leona Augsberger, Rl Reinholds; 3, Lorraine Hackman, R 3 Elizabeth town. FARM SHOW CHAMPIONS From Lancaster County FAT SHEEP (Wethers) Shropshire, Samuel Long,. Man heim. Hampshiite, Mary Ellen Hess, Bareville. Southdown, Leona Augsberger, Remhold. Grand champion wether. South down, Leona Augsberger. Reserve grand champion weth er, Hampshire, (Mary Ellen Hess. Corn Award List 4-H Club Classes Class 13- (District 1) Hybrid Dent (10 tears): 1, James R. Groff, R 7 Lancaster; 2, John A. Wagner, Quarryville; 3, G. A. Brubaker, R 1 Ephrata; 4, Clyde Brubaker, R 1 Ephrata. Class 6 (State-wide) 10 ear open pollinated Dent or Flint: 5, Daniel A- Brubaker, R 1 Eph rata; Class 7 (District 1) 30 ear hybrid Dent, 4, Daniel A. Bru baker; 5, A H, Weidman, R 1 Manheim; class 9 (state-wide) 30 ear open pollinated Dent or Flint, 1, D- M. Landis, Lancas ter; 3, Clyde Brubaker, R 1 Eph (Conltiniied on page three)