4 —Lancaster Farming, Friday, Aug. 17, 1956 Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly Newspaper Established November 4, 1955 Published every Friday by OCTORARO NEWSPAPERS Quarryville, Pa. Phone 378 Lancaster Phone 4-3047 , Alfred C. Alspach ... Ernest J. Neill C. Wallace Abel • ... Robert G. Campbell .. Robert J. Wiggins ... . - Subscription Rates; $2.00 Per Year Three Years $5.00; 5c Per Copy Entered as Second-Class matter at the Post Office, Quarryville,-Pa., under Act of March 3, 1879 Lancaster County Ranks High More records agriculturally are being stacked up by Lancaster County to truly label it the Garden Spot of the United States. Amazing it is that the fields are sovaned. Other competing counties may shine in one division alone, but Lancaster County’s position is more widespread. Some have been itemized in Lancaster Farming. Other reports come m day by day, so a review is not out_of place at the moment; Among the top 100 counties of the United States in each division, Lancaster County stands nationally 1, second in number of chickens four months old and older; 2, third in poultry and poultry products sold, 3, sixth in chicken eggs sold; 4, 13th in chickens sold; 5, 87th in turkey hens kept for breeding, 6, 40th in turkeys raised; 7, ninth in total number of cattle and calves sold; 8, 11th in value of 1954 cattle-calf sales; 9, 18th in cattle and calves on farms, 19, 7th in dairy products sold, $16,657,000 in 1954; 11, 11th in milk cows on farms, with 58,267; 12, 11th in whole milk sold, 394,545,000 lbs, valued at $16,608,707, or 7th in value for the nation; 13, seventh in horses and mules on farms, 7,853 for Oct.-Nov. 1954, against 16th place in 1950 with 10,122. On and on the record could read. More agricultural facts may be revealed by the US. Department of Com merce, more records may be established for Lancaster County. Following the seasons through their 12-month pattern, the newcomer to Lancaster County still finds the County amazingly beautiful in all parts of the year. Green fields, contoured rows, the various phases ol harvest, the miles and miles of timbers, neat farmlands, excellent appearing buildings, a case of thriving agricul ture. There have been deviations in the weather pattern, first a lack of necessary rain, then an abundancy r a mild winter sparked with some heavy snow and drifting, iced highways and a demand for careful driving. - What season’s the best? Even after a year, that is im possible to determine. There’s something wonderful about each, but to watch development of the crops from plowing to harvesting, onfe finds something most heartening, some thing that makes Lancaster County truly outstanding. This is not to be read by the younger generation, the school-going crowd, which soon gives up the pleasures of vacationing to return to what they consider the dull classroom There is a faction among this group, we don’t hesitate to say, which is happy to see school open again, as the pleasures of summertime develop into harvest work There’s much shopping to be done, new clothes, new togs tor the classroom, A new lunch-pail was among the items purchased in our day, but this is being replaced by school cafeterias Books too are furnished by the school system as a rule'today College enrollments are at new records, and classroom facilities in many cases are inadequate, despite one of the most extensive expansion programs in many a year There’s a greater opportunity for the high school gradu ate of today to attend college, if he can gain admittance in budgeted eni oilments Pop was never sure his daughters got their dollars’ north out of college, although they worked several years m teaching after getting their degrees Some, he con tended, went to college ust to get a tuisband Types change, daughters don’t. Today the supply of well'educated prospective wives is at an mgh. STAFF . Business Manager Advertising Director Circulation Directed One Year Back to School 50 Years Ago This Week 50 YEARS A(*o (1906) By JACK REICHARD POTATO GROWER SOLVES WEED PROBLEM A Western potato grower claimed he had solved the prob lem of weeds which usually went to seed in his patch atter the potatoes were ripe by sow ing buckwheat just as the vines began to die. He declared he planted his potatoes a good- depth so that little hilling was neces sary, cut the buckwheat when ripe and later dug his potatoes. He explained this gave him two crops from the same piece of land, and at the same time he had the satisfaction of having his field kept free of weeds Publisher .. Editor On the Lancaster farm of Alfred Fisher, New Provi dence, was grown a potato curio, consisting of five white potatoes grown together. The center one and three of the ones attached were large and about the size of a walnut. The unusual growth was on display at the office of the Quarryville Sun, 50 years ago this week. Across the sea, in Switzer land, over 5,000 peasants fled from the Val Vedasco section on the Swiss Italian frontier, during a severe storm on Lake Maggiore. The superstitious vil lagers declared that they had seen an angel in the sky point ing a finger at the. valley. They believed ' that the valley was doomed and m great terror, fled from their flourishing orchards, gardens and fields, which were deserted, acording to a patch from Geneva. SECRETARY INSPECTS PACKING PLANTS In Nebraska, Secretary Wilson of the Department of Agricul ture, inspected the meat pack ing plants in South Omaha with out the owners knowing about it. Wilson, unattended and with out registering or disclosing his identity, arrived at a local hotel and drove alone to the packing plants He said later - “I have inspected all the packing plants and found them in good condi tion. I will go from Omaha to Minneapolis ” 25 Years ,Ago 25 YEARS AGO (1931) The sixteen 4-H Girls’ Clubs of Lancaster County held con tests at Williamson Park and were attended by more than 100 persons. The Clay group scored the highest number of points in the contests on the all day program, and were awarded a silver loving cup by Mrs. J. R. Cassel, presi dent of the Pennsylvania So ciety of Farm Women. A novel feature of the af ternoon session, with Miss Mary Brubaker presiding, was a “Press Revue’’ in which the girls dressed in clothes of their own making and paraded be fore the ludges and assembly V ** <• DUCK’S BLACK EGGS UPSET SCIENTISTS For /ears white duCks had been laying white eggs And scientists didn’t get excited But in 1931, New Jersey poul tiy fanciers did a lot of fancy talking about a black duck that was laying black eggs The duck was owned by Mar vin Snowhite, fifteen, of Bridge town, and had laid four black eggs m a row. Marvin was so excited, he broke the first egg. A hen was -sitting on another. A third was being exhibited and on Lancaster Farms the fourth was opened and cooked It was just like other eggs. How would you like to plow, harrow, plant, weed and seed your ground water, and feed your mules, mend your har ness. pick your cotton,, haul it to market, and get $290 in full payment for your year’s work? Well, that’s what the average cotton farmer hi the United States got in 1931. Twenty five years ago this week, (he Chevrolet Motor Com pany announced “20 beautiful models at prices ranging from $475 to $675 F. 0.8. Flint, Mich BUZZARD GANG. MAKES NEWS Joe Buzzard, aged 70, member of the famed Welsh Mountain horse stealing trio, Joe. Abe, and Ike Buzzard, was again be hind cell bars following his ar rest on suspicion in Southern New Jersey while driving a horse and buggy which was stolen from John Kauffman, of hear Bird-m-Hand, Lancaster County. According to a record Joe, himself, had carefully kept, he had spent exactly 21 years of his life behind cell bars, up to August, 1931. , J. ' Background Scripture t Matthew 0:25* 14: I John 2 28*5*21. Devotional Reading! Psalm 40 < ♦ “We Know” Lesson for August 19, 1956 State Conservation Society Will TWee In Millersville Prof. Clarence Bryriei, omist at Penn State, hai attention to the annual ( of • the Keystone Ch chapter president, is aidu program committee in p|r the event. Committeenie. V. C. Miles, Coudersport, M. Wise, Cansle; and I Graham Netting, of Pittsb Carnegie Museum. SAVED FROM CRAS Union, S.C - John was throvra through the shield when his brand m crashed jmto a railroad Brady suffered only bruises, although he was si of most of his clothing i was a total wreck. you who believe,” he says,' you may know that you hav nal life." (I John 5:13.) “By This Ws Know” You know you have_ a it looking in the mirror. Yot you have a farm because tl is on record at the court You know you have sixty in the bank because thi statement tells you so. But you know you have eternal is infinitely more impoitai any of these things. Knowi have it is likewise the mo knowledge you can have Tl letter of John is not coots “iVe know”; the apostle got say why we have every ugl sure One outstanding reaso pressed in the sentence, “VI we have passed fiom death because we love the bit (3:14) You’ll not be mud athlete if you don’t like s You’ll never make a far faimers don’t appeal to y you have nothing to do will If you are a Christian, fntlu you will surely love Clmst you do love them, its i enough sign for the apostl Listening to the Word The reader- will find other signs by which, Joh we can know whether " eternal life This life car looked at, it cannot be graphed, weighed or >r 6 Like any other kind of hi' be known by its effects V’o a plant is living by the fad puts out shoots and leav’i can’t *ut the plant open i the life, but you can see Ii way it behaves that it is k' with eternal life (And bv tl the reader will note tin speaks of “having,” not “1 have” eternal life) O n! point may be noted here J different ways of expicsd assurance: We know passed from death to We Know he abides in us . • " we are of the tiuth . . " that we abide in him '' that we are of God knows God ’’ he says G tens to us ” In other woiJ who know God listen to o speaks the Word of God of a lover is it who wi M c his sweetheart's love leu '' kind of soldier is it "I'J reads nor opens an orde. superior officer? Who' sports lover is it who at the spoils page 7 So ‘ 1 ask. How much of a C l '-' 1 >ne who never leads " ather in heaven has to i his Word? God's P od’s words ised on ontlinra oopyrjs’I'* 1 '* vision of Christian tal Council of the Cburcl <* the U S. A. Released by t ss StTVUr -'