Vql. 1, No. 21 County Digs Out , From Snows as Spring Arrives Moisture that will benefit Lan caster County crops came with one of the worst snowstorms in years, that closed many rural roads on the eve of Spring Some snow arrived Friday. More came Sunday morning, and by Monday Holtwood measured 15 inches of snow on the ground. Snowplows were on the job early and constantly where they could travel, but drifts as high as 12 feet cut off sections of Martic Townhip from the rest of the world. Not For The Birds This weather was strictly not for the birds- Robins sought shelter from the storm wherever they could. Many persons placed food in protected spots for the harbingers of Spring that arriv ed on the correct date blit iced VP , Out on Route 7, Lancaster, Raymond H. Rohrer advised Lancaster Farming a tame hand ed pigeon arrived at 2 p. m.'m the. storm and took up residence with the Rohrers until he is “found” again. “I know he's lost,” Mr. Rohrer told, “for he’s tame and is carrying a numbered band on his leg.” Purple shaded, the bird will be returned to its rightful owners if they can identify the" pigeon and give its numbers, Mr- Rohrer asked- Many Roads Blocked Two roads in Martic Township, one leading from Rawlmsville to Bethesda,-"the other from Rawl inville ito Mt Nebo caused a fury between the State Highways Department and supervisors and residents. Complaint was made that roads remained blocked aft er the State Highways Depart ment refused to give a satisfac tory explanation as to why they were not opened. Peach Bottom, in the southern ehd of the County, also had heavy snows and mountainous snow drifts.' Schools closed generally, in the County Monday, many except those in the southern end re opened Tuesday. Sales of tire chains were brisk, and one operator spent nine hours straight Sunday afternoon and evening putting chains on cars Innumerable accidents were reported on slick highways, and lacknifed trailer trucks were noted an many plates In other parts of the country, west to Ohio, the story was much the same Traffic on the Pennsyl vania Turnpike was jumbled, and one report told of 500 to 600 bucks being stalled, ditched, jacknifed, upset m a short area. One crew of workmen scent seven hours driving from Wilkes Barre to southern Lancaster County. Excellent Cover for Crops However, there were benefits in the snow It provided excellent cover for crops and snow melt ing Tuesday and Wednesday al (Continued on Page Two) Many Lancaster County farms* were caught this week-on the eve of Spring with their snow, fences down. Scenes as the one above were common' throughout the' Gar den Spot Monday, but often snow fencing Antarctic Vet Snowbound on Visit In Southern Lancaster County By LF Staff Reporter County snows stalled a recent Antarctic visitor. South Pole conversation seemed too appropriate when snows last Monday peppered down outside the window, when evergreens were capped with white and icicles hung from branches. But tn Hal Phipps, Peach Bot tom, who just came back from the land where it can get 175 degrees below zero, there is .little basis for comparison. -In Operation Deep-Freeze Hal, 22, the son of Mr- and Mrs. Vernon P Phipps, down on the Pennsylvama-Maryland bor der, participated in the Navy’s Operation Deep-Freeze with Ad miral Richard E Byrd, and lived aboard ship during the Dec. 24 to Feb 15 stay Winter here is summer in the Antarctic. “The sun was shining 24 hours a day, it wgs fairly warm, and you could go around m your shirt sleeves if the wind didn’t hit you,''’ Hal told “The worst trouble was, the weather was too warm,” he continued. “Ice was melting and breaking up, and temperatures went as high as 38 degrees, as low as i’zero,”*he told Octoraro News -1 papers Quarryville, Pa., Friday, March 23, 1956 Springtime, Wintertime Panama, New Zealand Winter m Lancaster County, arriving on the eve of Spring, snowbound" the Patuxent River Naval Air Station Yeoman Third Class. He came to visit his par ents and friends over the week end, and, like many others, found transportation tied up when it was time' to report back He re quested and was granted leave until transportation cleared up HAL PHIPPS Sailing Nov. 10, 1955, Hal was aboard the USS Wyandotte. Stops were made in Panama and Port Littleton, New Zealand, where the expedition moved into the ice fields of the South Pole regions Christmas Eve in Mc- Murdo Bay found no evergreens on the landscape, no vegetation of any kind. Preceding the line of ships was the USS Glacier, an ice breaker opening a path for (Continued on Page Three) had been rolled and stored, causing many .rural roads to drift shut. This unusual storm of fine, powdery, blowing snow help ed much to supply adequate subsoil mois ture to start this Spring’s crops. Senate Passes Farm Measure, Now to House WASHINGTON The Senate this week passed the multi-billion dollar farm bill with forecasts a presidential veto may follow. Senator Allen J-. < Ellender (Democrat - Louisiana) warned high price supports on milk with out production controls could drag the whole farm program down. Supporters of the administra tion hoped to knock out a" sec tion-of the measure that raised minimum price supports on milk used m manufactured foods from 75 to 80 per cent and changing the base period for figuring parity At present it is supported between 75 and 90 per cent, now at 82 per cent or about $3.15 cwt: Unde£ the Soil-Bank proposal, farmers could receive up to $l,- 200,000,000 this year by with drawing land from crop use and shifting work to conservation Price supports would be denied farmers not complying with the soil-bank plan The bill now moves to the House for action Tomato Contracts Sharply Higher Sharply increased prices are being offered by Campbell Soup Co. and H J. Heinz, hoping to increase total acreages in Lan caster County this year. The two were reported offering $36 and $24 a. ton on a grade basis, com pared to $34 and $2l in contracts last year. Some smaller operators were reported changing to dairy or poultry to increase incomes, fal lowing losses suffered last year due to weather in the tomato line. $3 Per Year Millarden Angus Sale Top $6500 To Coloradoans By ERNEST J. NEILL Annville, Pa.—“ This sale pro ves what International Livestock Exposition grand champions can do m boosting average prices," one midwestern fieldman re marked following the Saturday sale of Millarden Farms Angus here. SUMMARY < Total Average 4 Bulls $6,675 $1,668 46 Females $78,525 $1,707 50 Lots $85,200 $1,704 Topping the sale was lot 45, the July 9, 1954 cow Millarden Blackbird 80, going at $6,500 to Haystack Angus Ranch, Long mont, Colo, 'rtiis summer year ling show heifer was sired by Prince Eric 2d of Angus Valley out of Evader’s Grenadier Black bird FP, from the famed Fair Promise herd. She sold bred to Ankoman OB 13th, the 1955 In ternational Grand Champion bull. Approximately 800 There 1 This was Millarden Farms sec ond annual prodrction sale, mark ing 20 or more years of Angus breeding. The stands in the sale barn were crowded, with ap proximately 800 persons from all parts of the nation, represent ing some of the finest herds in Angusdom. Two bulls sold at $2,500 each, lot 2, MUlardenmere 15th, selling to Fra-Mar Farm, Thomaston, Ga. t and an extra lot, Millarden Eile enmere, selling to Velda Farms, Tallahassee, Fla. Second high in the sale was another cow, lot 5, Millarden Gammer Erona, a smooth, sweet headed daughter of Eileenmere of Woodbar, selling bred to An onian OB 13th to Highland Farm, Doylestown, Pa., for $6OOO. On the side of her sire, Eileenmere of Woodbarr, she traced back to .the outstanding International star, Eileenmere 85th, and on her dam’s side to Black Prince of Sunbeam. Two Cows at $5,000 Each Two cows sold at $5,000 each. Lot 10, Millarden Blackcap 45, going to Heckmere’s Highlands, Valencia, Pa., and -lot 11, Millar den Juana, to Bray’s Island Plantation, Yemassee, S. C. Both were bred to Ankoman OB 13, The lot 10 cow will be a senior yearling for this year’s show circuit, a great granddaughter o£ Envious Blackcap B 15th, from well-known Reverie Knoll Farm. The cow, purchased by Bray’s The Pennsylvania State Univ ersity paid $4,000 for the lot 46 cow, Millarden Blackbird 70, to join their University Park herd. This junior yearling was from the 1955 show string, a typical daughter of Eileenmere of Wood barr She sold heavy in calf since June 29, 1955 to Millardenmere 999 35. Prove Worth at Harrisburg White Gates Farm, Flanders, N J, took the lot 33 cow, Mil larden Blackbird 75, a powerful upheaded, beefy broody cow bred to Ankonian OB 13. This May 17, 1954 cow traced ancestry .back to Eileenmere 487th, the famed Penney & James bull, and Band olier of Anoka 6th. Hosts were E. D Williams, president of Millarden Farms, a division of H. E. Millard Lime & Stone Co.,"Tfenry Z. Gingrich, general manager of the Annville farm, and James A. Christian, manager of the Woodbury, Ga., division of Millarden Farms. (Continued on Page Five)