'>i Once in 14 Million Births It has been said that quadruplets among beef cattle oc- cur once in every 14 million calvings, but these four little r , Ataerdeen-Angue aristocrats are only interested in a square meal at the moment. Born March 10 at Scenic View Ranch, owned by 0. H. Delchamps near Point Clear, Alabama, they, have plenty of blue blood. They are daughters of the 1954 Alabama State Fair Angus champion, Ankonian 3298th, and granddaughters of 1949 International Grand Champion Angus bull, Eileenmere 1032nd Their dam, Blackbird SF Bth is 5 1-2 years old and has previously given birth to three single, normal'calves. The little heif ers will receive the registered names of Blackbird 625th, 626th, 627th, and 628th. They were one week old when this picture was taken. Chicago Yards Seeking Oldest Shipper; Many Records Destroyed CHICAGO The Chicago Stock Yards as delving into an cient, dusty records and asking for help from anyone whose memory goes back more than half a century in an effort to find the names of individuals to be honored at an Awards Ban quet on June 14 next as a fea ture of its 90th Anniversary celebration. The task might not he so com plicated were it not for the fact that many records were destroy ed m the stock yards fire of 1934. For that reason, the Awards Eligibility Committee which will determine the win ners, seeks the aid of individuals having first-hand knowledge of livestock farmers who have ship ped animals each year to the Chicago market for 50 years or more. Plaque or Cup Awarded Top guest of honor at the ceremonies to be held in the Grand Ballroom of the Stock Yard Inn will be the oddest ac tive shipper to be selected from among the half-century group of award winners Each will re ceive an appropriate plaque or cup in recognition of his contri bution to the long and meritori ous record of the Chicago live stock market The records being studied en compass shipments of more than a billion head of livestock. Nominations of livestock farm ers for the honor must be made either in person or by mail to the Anniversary Awards Com mittee, Room -116, Exchange Building, Chicago Stock Yards, not later than Tuesday, May 15. Others to be honored include the oldest active livestock sales man. livestock buyer, individual trucker and railroad man, op erating at the market. Cross-Sectio.n of Market -All interests at the Chicago market are participating in the big celebration. The Awards Banquet is being sponsored by the Stock Yards Club of Chica go which represents a complete cross-section of the market cemmlssion forms, livestock buy ers, banks, packers and the Chi cago Union Stock Yards. The Chicago Stock Yards reached its 90th anniversary on last Christmas Day. President, William Wood Prince announced the Awards Banquet as the first of two or three appropriate events to be held this year to properly commemorate the ac- complishments of the oldest and greatest livestock market in the nation.. since the opening day, Dec 25, 1865, more than 1 billion i 0 million head of livestock have arrived at the market When the billionth animal arrived on Sept- 7, 1954, the entire livestock industry joined in a fitting cele bration ceremony under the arch of the famous Old Stone G.jte Entrance. President Prince, pre sented a check of $l,lBO 'to the livestock farmers who shipped the animal to market, represent ing a dollar a pound for the Hereford steer whicn was give, the appropriate nickname, “Billy the Billionth ” Bert Fevold t Sons of Humboldt, lowa, were the shippers. 40 Times Around World At that time, the statisticians figured that if a billion animals were placed in a single line head to tail, the line would stretch around the world at the equator nearly 40 times. They figured, too, that it would take an automobile one year traveling at a speed of 103 miles an hour to reach the end of the line of the bullion animals. And should the animals pass by in a parade, one every three seconds, it would take nearly a centurf' to pass a given point. The billion animals represent a value of $3l billion which, in statistical fancy, would create a pile of silver coins that might go sky high if we let the boys with the slide rule continue But by anyone’s standards it’s a staggering volume of business, and the pace goes on as the market,, operators look ahead. TIMBER FIRE STOPPED ■Bainbmdge Fire Co. men Mon day night extinguished a woods fire on the farm of Jonas For rey at' Stackstown. No damage was reported. Refuse being burned got out of control and caused the fire, it was said. EDINGER RETIRES Paul E.. Edinger, assistant di rector of agricultural and home economics extension at the Pennsylvania State University, will retire July 1, ending 4l years of educational service. He was county agricultural agent in Cumberland county from 1917 to 1929. The World’s merchant fleet has tripled since 1900. Newsprint output and use set new records in March. State Farmer Title Won by Erie Countian Robert C Boyd, 34, R 1 North East m Erie County, Pennsyl vania’s “Outstanding Young Farmer” and three lunners-up were honored Saturday night in a banquet at the Palmyia Ameri can Legion Home with the Penn sylvania Junior Chamber of Commerce as hosts Also honored were Ralph M. Horst, 32, R 3 Lebanon, and Don old E Lanius 29, R 3 York, sec ond and third place winners re spectively Cited for setting the example ol progressive farming, the thiee were the state’s top men in the national search which reached its conclusion in Pitts burg Wednesday and Thursday Mr Boyd, married and the lather of two children, is part owner and manager of a 204- acre Erie county farm, speciahz 'ng in dairying and orcharding. Mr Horst, is married and has three children, a veteran of Woild War 11, holding a Bache ’or of Science degree from the Pennsylvania State University. Operating 190 acres, he specia lizes in orcharding and is a member of the Lebanon Jaycees. The third place winner, Mr Lanius, operates a 325-acre farm in partnership with his father In 1953 and 1954 he won the Pennsylvania State Univer sity five-acre corn contest, and through contour farming has in creased his corn yield from 90 bushels to 159 busnels on the average. PARADISE TOASTMASTER Robert D Esbenshade has been nominated by President Eisenhower as Paradise post master He has been acting post master since April last year when he succeeded Samuel T Hershey, retired His name now goes to the Senate lor confirma tion. Today’s Most Modern B™B Line °* Tractors With Advantages for Cost-Conscious Farmers 300 4OO 3«PBow “cn 5-PBow ®T| ■ ■ Come in . .. See the tract designed to trim costs .. Herr s Implement Store Kaylor Brcs. WEST WILLOW, PA. (Route 230) RHEEMS, PA. ArthurS. Young Co., Inc. KINZER, PA. Weather Wet, And Cool Here (Continued from page one) writes that again that section may have to “dust in” its 1956 corn crop “The wind sure can blow and March is going out like a lion We have part of the oats sowed and not a bit of ram. Oh, the faith a farmer has to have to go ahead and put the ciop in ” Florida Suffers Drought Colonel John A McComsey, USA (Ret), from San Antonio. Texas, told Lancaster Farming this week that his section has known nothing more than an oc casional ram measuring 02 of an inch at any time in the past four yeais Spring dust storms and torna does lashed the southwest dust bowl again, with dust reported worst m Texas, eastern New Mexico, east and southeast Colo rado, southern and southwest Oklahoma and the panhandles of Texas and Oklahoma Florida has experienced an un usual drought and last weekend an 18-hour fire scorched and 8 8 8 it I HERR THE PUMP MAN | || 211 N. Ann St. Lancaster Pa. Ph. 3-3694 [| Tripl-Range Transmission has 12 speeds forward, 3 reverse. Makes full use of engine power at every tillage job . . . matches every crop condition in PTO harvesting. Gets more done with every man-hour ... every drop of fuel. Gas or diesel. Beats anything yet for gasoline economy at full and varying loads. Powr-Range 8-speed transmission includes two “creep ers” for tough PTO jobs. Eagle Hitch 3-point hook-up and Duo- Control hydraulics save precious time. Gas or diesel engine. Starts directly on diesel fuel at touch of a button. Six-cylinder design and Powrcel controlled combustion make it amazingly smooth-running and easy on fuel. Six-point fuel protection and paired cylinder heads make maintenan> e easy, economical. Jared Stauffer MARTINDALE, PA. Lancaster Farming, Friday, April 13, 1956 ►♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ I H H >♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦< ►♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦l Jpft 4 INDUSTRIAL NEED GUERNSEY COWS MAKE AR RECORDS J W McCoy, West Chcstoi, Pa, has two registered Guern seys that recently completed of ficial pioduction iccords m the Advanced Regisliy division oi the Ameucan Guernsey Cattle Club Osboi le Hill Pat Teresa, a lunioi thiee year-old, pioduced 13.029 lbs of milk and 676 lbs of fat in 365 days She was milk ed two times daily This pioduc tion represents appioximately 6250 quarts of high-quality milk She met calving lequncments Osborne Hill Baron’s Deloies, a five year-old, pioduced 12,346 lbs of milk and 570 lbs of fat in 305 days She was milked two times daily This pioduction represents approximately 500 quarts of high-quality milk She met calving requirements burned 5,000 acres of timber - lands in the northeastein sec tion of the Sunshine State, lakes were drying up, crop and citrus trees were being killed in the worst dry spell in 65 years Some relief came at Mid week in showers that gave Florida a “ten-Million dollar boost,” in t ehwords of one state agricultural specialist PUMPS FOR EVERY FARM HOME AND Walter Binkley & Son Lirmz. PA, L I. Herr & Bro* QU ARRYVILLE. PA. 5