Hoi. 1 No.4(T wheat Receipts Here at Peak; Duality Lower I- Although there is «txll some fo ra in to be moved from -the farms to terminals, most Lan caster County grain centers are passing the peak m truck traffic this week' I Prices are holding steady, with |2 paid Wednesday at Quarry fcille by Ross Rohrer & Sons, and $2.08 was- maintained from Mon day by ln c, at Marietta for deliveries °t the elevator. f Some Lancaster County farm ers are finishing oats harvest, • but as a rule most of the wheat ;has been harvested. "Tests weights are reallv low Tn * wheat,” Arthur Rohrer of , Quarryville advises, with one tshipment here weighing but ; 5314 lbs per bushel, and an other shipment averaging '6l Libs for a high.” ; Early wheatL|or milling aver aged 57 to-58 lbs in the south ern end. but now it probably won’t average out over 55 due’ tc damage from rains ?- Receipts are running about the same as last -year. Mr Rohrer Sold, - maybe a .little higher yields are .better—3o to 50 bu shels per acre—but quality is hot as good. In Marietta, the .Cargill firm, f advMfci the general run is ! weighing 56 to 57 lbs, some 59 ' a low of 51 and quite a few at L 55. Recently harvested grain 5 may average out 5614 lbs. Any scoring 61 lbs was probably harvested three weeks ago. . Wheat -is drying .down very well, Cargill advises Tuesday found as many as 15 trucks. standing m line to unload there. Wednesday the flow of trucks was steady, but there was no line; Cargill handles 100 cars in 12 hours, and being open 24 hours a day may handle-. 200 cars. Much of it is, going into storage, and wild probably move back into local flour mills Very little is going under* loan. Some Tobacco Is Harvested Outside Pequea i What probably set an earl .record m Lancaster County to iJuly was the .harvest of som this week near Pequei | Harry S. Sloat, associate Lar [caster County agricultural agenl ■ reports. Harry Eschbach, owner of Pequea Valley Farm, Willow • Street, said this was the earli , est in hiS more than 50 years . of farming that he has ever harvested tobacco. He 'started r his plants in frames April 16 • an d transplanted them to the ; 5 -acre plot June 6. In general, the Lancaster Co unty tobacco outlook is “pretty good.” ' Weather has improved th • past few days, and increase _dry weather here has permil [Ted combines to keep busy. Th cutting of hay i s bem i made, and sprayers are running f ' r «P«"".ed On Page Six) Quarryviile (Lancaster County) Pa., Friday, Aug. 3, Tom King, (left), livestock specialist at the Pennsylvania State University, and NeaLTX’lvey, >of .Jvy.LFarms, JMalvern, Pa-, compare notes during lunch on the lawn of the- Ivey home. The occasion wa*s the County. Holstein Group Field-Day Tuesday, Aug. 7 Several ' hundred dairymen and their families -are expected "to attend the annual field day of the Lancaster County Holstein Breeders Association next Tues day at the J Mowery Frey Farm, five miles south of Lan caster on Route 222, just east of Mylm’s Corner Addressing the group, accord ing to J- Robert Hess, R 1 Stras burg, field day comjnittee chair man, will be Glenn M. House hold di rp cto r of extension for the HoMein-Fnesian Association of America. Events start at 9:30 a. m. The Frey herd will be inspect ed and judging contests' V)[lU occupy the balance of the morning session. 1 Families are asked to bring basket lunches, and ice cream will be provided for the noon meal. Music will be offered by Lee Wickenhe'ser of Mount Joy, and a nna'Tet will sing during the lunch hour “Making Quality Hay” will be the subtext of a talk bv Lancas ter County Agricultural Agent Max M. Smith, who will also" 1 conduct a 4H dairy demonstra tion. Judging awards will be made at 2:30 p m. A swimming pool will be avail able for use during the after noon, and those interested are reminded to bring their ' swim suits. Comparing Brandywine Notes Lancaster County Youth Walk Away With Brandywine Judging Prizes By ERNEST J. NEILL MALVERN, Pa Lancaster County youth walked off with judging contest prizes here Saturday at the Brandywine An gus Breeders Field Day on Ivy Farms., For 'youth under 18, Wilbur Hassler, 14, of Manheim placed first in three sets of Angus. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Mark W. Hassler, he will be a Fresh man at Manheim next month. Placing second in the youth division was Darwin Boyd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer BoycT R 1 Ephrata, who will be in the tenth grade next year. William McDonald of Buttonwood Farms, Millersville, scored first m heif er judging, adding to Lancaster County t laurels •- Weather Hot, Sunny More than 200 were guests of the association and Neal D. Ivey,»owner of Ivy Farms. Weather was hot and sunny, but a broad, interesting pro gram made most ignore the siz zling temperatures. Experts in the field conducted demonstra tions, a panel discussion and ex planations of various factors in the current cattle business. Wilbur received a grooming stick as his prize, Darwin a grooming brush. In adult clas ses, Association President Or ville F. Haas of Cloud Valley Farms, Pottstown, presented first place award to Art Neuen schwander, herdsman at Millar den> Farms, Annville, second to E. L. (Bud) Jenks of Boudmot Farms, Chester Springs. During the afternoon program, a drawing was held for youth and the tidy young Angus heif- Saturday field day of the Brandywine An gus Breeders, where guests were 4-H and .FFA boys and girls. (Lancaster Farming Staff Photo). er donated by Warren Putnam’s Echo Falls Farm at New Hope was awarded Edward Radomski, son of Mr and Mrs Frank B. Radomski at Belfrey Farm, R 1 Norristown Presentation was by Robert L. Montgomery of" Ash (Continued on page 12) Green Tomato Prices $1.75 $l.OO Last Year Prices of green pack tomatoes in Lancaster County are running 75 per cent above a year ago, a check today reveals At the re ceiving station of Parke Eshle man, R 2 Holtwood, prices start ed at $175 per five-e'ghths bu at the beginning of the season and have remained at that figure, compared to $l.OO a year ago now Most southern Lancaster Co unty receiving stations are sc heduling receipts, and the station of Ben S Warfel & Sons on 72 south of The Buck was open from 1 to 5 p m. Thursday According to the Warfel’s the first ripe tomatoes were receiv ed at their station from the Washington Boro area Wednes day, about 400 baskets in all. “Heavy foliage due to the rains will retard ripening, but this is good growing weather,” they told Lancaster Farming This firm looks for a very good crop once the tomatoes start to ripen. Quality is improving as time goe son, the Eshleman station advised Lancaster Fanning and the season will probably continue five weeks. $2 Per Year July Second Coolest for Past 44 Years July normally one of the warmest months of the year departed Lancaster County with a near record for coolness. Ten tative figures at the Lancaster Water Works indicate an aver age for the month of 71.5 de grees, two and one-half degrees below normal. Throughout the mo.nth the weather was discussed and cussed as crops made bound ing- growth and field work and harvesting were delayed. . In general, it was the second coolest July on record here since 1913. Precipitation too went out of bounds, according to Bernarcf Whits, weatherman in Lancaster, with a July total of 566 in the city, one and one-third inches above normal. Those complaining can but look back to July 1952 when seven inches pouied down on the Garden Spot. Only five days in July, 1956 found temperatures of 90 or more, and there were about 16 days of the 31 wh*n some rain fell- here,_ In the five-day outlook, temp eratures are to average about two degrees below normal through Monday, with warmer temperatures Saturday, cooler by Monday There may be a "chance of showers Friday night or Satur day, Mr. White reports Poultry Sales Higher, Prices Down for Year Although receipts at the Lan caster '"Poultry Exchange are soaring to new records, with another new weekly receipt rec ord being established this week, prices are running considerably below a year,ago Such is the case statewide, for today’s farm puce index re port shows that as of July 15, 1956, chickens advanced 1.2 cents from June 15, 1956, but averaged 4.7 cents below mid- July 1955 Where broilers sold from 22 to 30 cents a year ago on the local auction, averaging 28.5, sales this week Tuesday ranged from 21 to 22k, averaging 21.21. Here is a tabulated compari son: 1956 Week Birds Avg. Ending July Sold Price 7th 160,250 23.98 14th 176,865 23.32 21st " 194,735 2133 28th 180,995 2100 31st 56,100 2121 Total 768,945 July 1955 Six Sales 1955 Week Birds Avg. Ending July Sold Price 9th 100,750 29.10 16th 115,860 27.94 , 23rd 126,190 28 93 30th 159,570 29.65 Total 502,370 Difference- 266,575 more sold in July this year than in July, 1955.