1 No. 39 Jheat Quality ipwer; Prices pound $2.00 ||| By ERNEST J. NEILL Mffiteal tough, off color, test wffight low. ||Kuch are typical comments apTh ered today in a Lancaster KpTnfng survey of grain receiv jlp terminals throughout. Lan gSter County, where continued Shis have lowered quality and Htoused fears of damage from Brouting in wheat yet to be Sinbined. Ifcargill, InCf, at Marietta, ad pes there is now more ipois |jre and signs of sprout dam- Se in wheat harvested early |gs week. Scattered truckloads srere being received at mid mek from on-farm storage that flowed this year's harvest be- Hjeen rainshowers “Wheat that afto be cut now-may'be showing llpiage from sprouting,” Car ad added. |i “Prices are holding very Steady, moving up a week Iko last Monday on dry wain, and we have been pay ing $2.07 to $2.08 per bushel pe past ten days,” this firm Bald. ERight now _the big question Srk is, how will the balance of Ke wheat fare after intermit int rainy weather’ •Jumping from the western sec »n of the Garden Spot to the rarth and extreme south, other Sports were similar. The ~Nel- Rn Weaver firm in Lrtitz and miarryville reported no .wheat wd been received since the Sin. Before that time it was real ■ee, but early this week it was Sal tough, off color, as far as |e southern end of the County las concerned. BAround Lititz way, wheat re reived last week was pretty Eugh when that originating out E the southern end was OK luc-es are ranging around $2 • (Continued on page three) ■lie Laborer Shot in rolanco Camp Dispute E One laborer was stabbed an other wounded by a bullet in a labor dispute at the Gibbs Foods, Ric cannery work camp near Blew Texas in southern Lancaster Bounty early Wednesday • .Treated at Lancaster General Hospital for a 22 caliber bullet found was William E Pulley, 39 Styde, Md. Major Wilkerson, 24,’ f Tennessee was treated for a unor slash wound in the back Delmas J. Johnson, Charleston, • C, work camp foreman, has een charged with aggravated ssault and battery. ' 4H MEET POSTPONED T , h ®s n ® etln g the New Rol and 4R Baby Beef club has been mstponed until 8 p m. Aug. 3 " Holland Park It was or wenmg. scheduled for Friday Combines are busy in Lancaster County, harvesting the heavy 1956 small gram crop. Although yields are reported from County Farmers Vote 5 to 1 No On Wheat Quota Although farmers throughout the nation voted 94,861 to 21,649 for the continuation of federal controls o’ n wheat next year, Lancaster County farmers voted 5 to 1 no, 968 votes against, 579 for. Eighty-three ballots iwere challenged. Neighboring counties also vot ed no, with Lebanon 10 for, 44 against; York 92 for, 108 against; Berks 47 for, 57 against. Voting throughout Lancaster County was light, despite the fact Friday was rainy and field work was impossible This is the fourth consecutive year Lancas ter County producers have voted no on marketing quotas. More Volunteers for Poult Center Needed More volunteers are needed at the construction site of the new Poultry Center being erected at the intersection of Route 230 By pass and Roseville Road, Lewis Mortensen, East Petersburg, secretary of the Lancaster Co unty Poultry Poultry Assn., ad vises. Foundations have been poured, and concrete blocks are being laid for walls. Those wishing to contribute labor are urged to phone Mr. Mortensen. DRAFT QUOTA 1,157 - Pennsylvania’s September draft quota has been fixed by Selective Services headquarters as 1,157 men all 22 yeajrs or old er. In August, the call was 1,021. “ Quarryville. Pa., Friday, July 27, 1956 Combines Busy in County Poultry Sales in Week Total 194,735 Poultry sales at the Lancaster Poultry 'Exchange, Rohrerstown, last week totaled 62 lots, or 194,- 735 birds Listed were 70 lots, a total of 207,435. For "the corresponding week a year ago, there were 46 lots, 126,- 765 buds listed, and 45 lots, 126,- 190 birds sold. Women’s Hobby Show at Steam Engineer Meet When the annual meeting of the Rough and Tumble Engineers Historical Association convenes Aug 16-18 at Kmzers, there will be a hobby show for women a welcome concession to what was once a man’s world. For three days the old steam ers on hand in the lot of Arthur S. Young & Son Implement Co. east of town will huff and, puff, along with steamers brought in by other enthusiasts of the old time farm implements. Vice president of the associa tion is Everett Young, who ad vises the event will include saw milling' exhibitions, dynameter tests, demonstrations of old-time threshing techniques, pulling contests, and a men’s hobby ex hibition of steam engine models. New officers will be elected at a business meeting opening night, Thursday, Aug. 16. Thousands are attracted to the beehive of activity on Highway 30 each year when smoke rolls to the sky, when steam whistles blast back memories of old-time threshing rigs, when good folks get together. INJURED IN FALL John B. Miller. 67. HI Bird-in- Hand, was injured Tuesday after noon when he fell from a ladder while working in a barn on his farm. good to excellent, considerable trouble has been encountered by wet weather and downed gram. Financial Loss In Crops High; Rains Blamed HARRISBURG Farmers of Pennsylvania are faced with heavy financial losses because of wet weather preventing har vesting of hay and small grains, observers in the State Depart ment of , Agriculture declared today. In addition, potato growers were -warned by the Harrisburg office of the Pennsylvania Co operative Potato. Growers Asso ciation that the build-up of heavy rainfall during June and thus far in July has created condi tions favorable to epidemics ot late blight “Nothing but dry weather from now on through July and August and more and better spraying will ward off a ma jor disaster/’ said Dr. E. L. Nixon, association director. Blight spreads quickly under wet and humid conditions, he added. Spraying of potatoes has been retarded by rain and wet grounds. Rainfall last week ranged from one-third inch in Pittsburgh to nearly three inches in the Wil liamsport area. Northwestern counties had light rains, mod erate to heavy elsewhere. Southeastern counties received over two inches on Saturday. The forecast for this week is one inch in Western Pennsyl vania, three-fourth inch in the eastern part of the State from showers and scattered thunder storms. Federal-State surveys for the week ended Monday showed it to be the second consecutive week of cool and cloudy weath- (Continued on Page Five) ?2 Per Year Weather Wet; Crops Suffer, Spuds Delayed By LF Staff Reporter In direct contrast to last year’s dry, hot July, tempera assocaiLetetcafthiqeup tures and moisture this month have thrown grain and vegetable schedules out of kilter in Lancas ter County. According to Bernard T. White of the Weather Bureau office in Lancaster, by mid week, 484 inches of rain have been received in Lancaster County for the month to date, compared to a norm of 4.37 for the entire month Rainy, cool, damp. “Tempera tures have been averaging two degrees below normal,” Mr. White told Wheie July 1955 was' continued hot and dry, this month has had but three days with temperatures of 90 de grees or more. “There has been some ram on 14 of the first 24 days of July, 1956,” Mr. White reported from his rec ords In the five-day forecast, which extends through next Monday, temperatures in the mid-Atlantic states are ex pected to average near nor mal, warm and less humid through Friday, with showers and thunderstorms likely Sat urday and Sunday. Considerable damage to crops has been reported throughout the County, where heavy rains flattened corn and small grams. Combining has been hampered by downed grain, but corn has perked up and a considerable percentage has already tasseled. Friday night showers dumped 1.36 inches of ram on the Coun ty in a 24-hour period that found flash floods striking parts of western Pennsylvania and Maryland. Temperatures a year ago now here were in the high 90s, with 99 reached in a seven day period of rising tempeia tures. Some Reports of Wildfire Tobacco m Lancaster County is starting to top, and there are reports of wildfire in .some fields where no spray control was exercised m seed beds. Otherwise there is none. “You can do a good job of controlling (Continued on page 16) Saturday Deadline To Plow Up Wheat In' line with other extensions granted under the Soil Bank ag ricultural act, the deadline for farmers over planting wheat who wish to plow under part of their crop to meet acreage require ments has been extended until this Saturday The deadline for plowing und er corn remains July 31 to bring acreage into qualifying levels. Storm damage to wheat in the past week may encourage some farmers to plow under part of their crop to receive federal pay ments. INJURED BY COMBINE Robert G. Hambleton, 52, New Providence, was treated at Lan caster General Hospital early this week for fractures and cuts on three fingers of his left hand. He reported he was injured while working on a grain combine.