Vol. 1. No. 35 Some Spots in County Are Dry; Combining Now Although some scattered parts of Lancaster County are dry, hot weather has brought corn and tomatoes right along, Associate County Agent Harry & Sloat re ports today. Haymaking is generally in fuP . swing throughout the Garden Spot, although work is somewhat slow m the northern parts of the County where damp weather has slowed work Cherry picking is underway throughout the County, and the bulk of the strawberry crop has been picked and packed ’ Barley, Oats Combining Combining of barley started Tuesday, and wmter oats will bp combined starting next week Mr Sloat warns that pink ap hids and green peach aphids are very heavy at this time, and spraying is urged in tomato and potato fields Severe wind struck parts of tlm County Saturday night, with a little ram--Rain was heavier m .the southern end of the County, according to Bernard N White, in charge of the Lancaster Weather Bureau Office. A brief 'windstorm struck again Sunday mght. , 7 Cooler,, Weather Due - , Parts-Of the County reported a, -little shower Tuesday night, with .05 of an inch reported in .some places. Temperatures have been ranging above normal for the •month, at least one degree, Mr. White added. Precipitation in -Lancaster has totaled 2.77 for the month to date against a normal 2 81. Cooler-weather is moving in, and the five-day forecast indi cates lower tempeartures Thurs 'day and Friday, warmer Satur day, cooler again by Monday with showers and thunderstorms, totaling one-half to one inch, over the weekend. Sessions Underway On Migrant Workers Sessions are extending through today for the Migrant Worker Staff Orientation Conference of the Eastern Region, who are fa milianzizng themselves with ac tivities of nearly 1,000 migrant workers who will be employed in Lancaster County this summer. Meetings are being held in the Evangelical and Reformed Theo logical Seminary in Lancaster, with the county’s new chaplain, the Rev. Donald E. Smith in charge. County chairman is Mrs. R Morris Weaver, Millersville. 16 Sail for Germany Under Pax Program Sixteen young men sailed Monday for Germany where they will start alternative work pro jects in lieu of military service. Victor A. Olsen, former Man heim Township resident, ad dressed the group Friday "at the Mennoijite Central Committee headquarters, Akron. Sunday evening a farewell service of consecration for the young men was held at Metzler’s Mennomte Church. Despite frost, hail, wind and other ' vagaries of weather, the Lancaster Conn ty cherry crop this year is tops, sweet, spur - delicious.' Here is a heavily load- 4H, FFA Meet In Workshop, Tour Co-Ops Sixteen Future Farmers of America and Four-H Club members last night attended a meeting that is preliminary to attendance at the 28th summer meeting of the American Insti tute of Cooperation. This annual event this year will be at Raleigh, N. C., July 30 to Aug. 2. Topic of last night’s meeting at the Farm Bureau Auditorium in Lancaster' was J’Tlow Farm ers Can Organize to Do Busi ness.” A tour of Lancaster County cooperatives is also be ing made. Attending were representa tives of all cooperatives in Lan caster County, Four-H and FFA leaders. George M. Myers, sec retary of the Pennsylvania As sociation of Farmers Coopera tives spoke. Named for the workshop were Dean Hoffer, R 3 Manheim; Glenn L. Porter, R 1 Washing ton Boro; John D. Eshleman, R 1 Willow Street; James L. Hastings, R 2 Kirkwood; Ken neth Garber, R 1 Willow Street; Leßoy Esbenshade, Esbenshade Road, Lancaster; C. Kenneth Young, R 1 Mount Joy; Dale L. Shirk. iRI Quarryville; Lloyd Denlinger, R 4 Lancaster; Carl Metz, Lampeter; Mervin H. Bare, Witmer, C. Eugene Groff, Ri Ephrata, Donald Rafferty, R 1 Mount Joy, L. Deppen, Rl Marietta; Richard Ober, Rl Mount Joyr Kenneth W. Watts, Rl Elizabethtown. Quarryville, Pa., Friday, June 29. 1956 Heavily Laden- Cherry Branch Cherry Picking Headlines Season’s Activities on H. L. Shank Farm By ERNEST J. NEILL Pickers, by the thousands, are working this week on the ex cellent cherry crop produced along historic Conestoga River in Lancaster County by H. L. Shank. v Before the season ends, to wards the last of next week, some 9000 or 10,000 pickers may go home with 60 tons of white and dark sweet cherries, and the tangy red pie cherries. It’s been 20 years since Mr Shank, now nearing 72 years, began his popular pick-them yourself program. And already, the day before the Tuesday opener pickers were in there pitching, checking in through the weighing stand at the high way entrance, leaving after paying charges by weight. Covered Bridge of 1836 Some oi Mr. Shank’s orchards he west of New Danville, oth ers back of his residence along the New Danville pike north of town on the way to Lancaster. All in all, they cover some 125 acres of historic Lancaster County farmland, and some overlook histone Second Lock Bridge in a field aptly named Second Lock .Ridge. Second Lock Bridge dates back to 1836, and, Mr. Shank, an able historian, related the , 308-foot structure, longest cov ered bridge in the County, cost $3,800 when built. “It is well preserved, and should stand another 100 years,” Mr. Shank, told, adding that maintenance by the County is exceptional His neighborhood, where cherry picking is the leading item today, dates back much farther than that His people ar-, ed branch on the farm of H. L. Shank near New Danville. (Lancaster Farming Staff Photo) rived there m 1727, and in the ensuing years, the region around the covered bridge was one of the busiest in this sec tion. Location of the lock on the Conestoga Canal helped much in the early-day prosper ity of this section. Fruit Production 50 Years Ago Some of the cherry trees still producing are 30 years old. People from miles around, from Lancaster and ad joining counties, come by car and truck, containers rattling empty as noisily as some of the many devices Mr. Shank uses to discourage invasion by crows, blackbirds, robins. Flashing pieces of tin hang from trees, but the caw-caw caw of the crow grows into more of a vociferous complaint from aloft when a shotgun blast interrupts his feasting, or when a cherry bomb or two inch Fourth of July salute im presses him that he is doing wrong. “It’s a battle with the birds.'” Mr. Shank told “I use artifi cial owls, and the crows re spect them. Blackbirds and robins don’t’ he added. Use of firecrackers is restricted, be cause the birds soon get used to the racket. (Continued on Page Five) Wool Incentive Set At 44.9 Per Cent Some wool growers, USDA re ports, are still under the impres sion that under the incentive payment program it makes no difference what they sell their wool for, and that the govern ment will make up the difference between their individual price and the 62-cent incentive level. ?2 Per Year July 1 Date For Transfer At Landisville By Ernest J. Neill Julv 1 will be the official trans fer date of the new Pennsylvania State University experimental farm north of Landisville where Tuesday some 20 persons toured small gram plots and heard re ports from experts in the field. Dr C. S. Bryner, agronomist in charge of the plots, planned the meeting for farmers and seed growers where it was disclosed the new Dual winter wheat seems best adopted to Lancaster County growing conditions. Produced at Purdue, Dual is the first winter wheat developed that shows great resistance to both leaf rust and Hessian fly. Results are still unknown fully, the visitors were to'd, but yielded two to five bushels more than Pennoll on experimental farms at University Park. Grain Studied During the morning sessions, seed certification inspectors studied grain diseases, the ap pearance of weeds in plots on the Landisville station Weeds were indentified, as well as the partic ular strains of wheat, oats and barley Most of the new varieties of winter wheat produced in the United States are now in test plots at Landisville, and all var ieties of barley grown in the world are on test at State Col-" lege. Discussions were conducted on Tetra Petkufe rye, and there are several selections of Ken Bar— developed at the University of Kentucky and released simultan eously with Kentucky U by the Pennsylvania State University— that are promising, but not yet ready for release. Leconte and Dubois winter oats, the group was told, do best in Lancaster County. Seeding Rates One of the top topics of the day was seeding rates to produce early fall pasture “That’s where Dual works best,” the group was told. At University Park last year, varying rates of nitrogen were applied in the spring, and it was found addition of the fertilizer made growth too rank, with yields of 61.3, 53 3 ' and 56 3 bushels per acre, to average 57. Dual did not do so well at Lan caster County plots, yielding 47.3, 47.1 and 47.2, still averaging 52. L in two years at both stations. “The only varieties doing bet ter are some still very much in the experimental stage,” the ex perts advised. Tetra Petkus comes later in. the spring for pasture, and can outyield wheat for grain. In oats, both Dubois and Leconte pro mise satisfactory yields. Dubois is the better for general use, Le conte better for straw, but is not .as hardy Canadian selections, as Ken 8, the Dayton variety from Ohio and the Kenbar are also under test. Late September Planting In a seeding date of 2% bu shels per acre, satisfactory yields (Conltirfued on page three) ILLINOIS PEACH CROP UP Prospects of a 920,000 bu. peach crop this year will be about far above yields last year, the State-Federal grop Reporting Service in Springfield advises. The 1956 crop is still about" 58 per cent below the average for the last 10 years.