Vol. 1 No. 51 Corn Crop Here Best in Years; Weather Helps Prospects of a 'pumper corn crop with yields reported up to 150 bushels per acre are in store for Lancaster County During Tuesday’s tour of Chester County, one Lancaster County farmer told he had shucked, some corn that mea sured from 75 to 150 bushels per acre. “A lot will run over 100 bushels,” County Agent Max M. Smith advised this morning. ~ Weather the past week has been especially beneficial With out rain, corn has dried well and is safer to cnb now than it has been m some time Several queries have been re ceived by Mr.-Smith relative to pasturing clover and alfalfa fol lowing frost. “It is safe with any kind of cattle with good man agement,” Mr. Smith told. Pas ture only when dry, in the aft ernoon, not in the morning when dew is on oX following a shower. Pasturing is best when it follows feeding of hay. Frost ed alfalfa can be dangerous, and can cause bloat very easi ly. Use‘of the fields now wilf not damage next year’s crop. “We are discouraging cutting altalfa and clover for hay at this late date,” Mr. Smith added. It may injure the 1957 crop Wait until alfalfa or clover has been frozen or killed'by host before cutting. Right now it’s still grow ing Throughout Tuesday’s tour, Lancaster County farmers seem ed quite pleased with this year’s crops Tobacco cure is good CCC Price Support Investment Aug. 31 Almost $8 Billions Washington, (USDA) The U S Department of Agriculture reported today that as 'of Aug ust 31. 1956, the investment of the Commodity Credit Corpor ation in price support piogiams. amounted to $7,829,984,000 made up of loans outstanding of $2,463,146,000 (including $230,- 386,803 of loans financed by lending agencies), and the cost value of inventories, $5,366,838,- 000 As of August 31, 1955, the investment was $7,116,855,000 of which loans outstanding amount ed to $1 33V 143 000' and inven tories $5,779,712,000 Eastern States to Open Building Jan. 1 January 1 has been set as the prospective date for opening of the new East°rn States Farmers Exchange office and warehouse at Manheim Pike and Diller ville Road, Lancaster The $50,000 building is of steel and aluminun and- measur es 22 by 50 feet with a truck dock 40 by 60 SAMPLE COPY See—SPECIAL OFFER—Page 13 Santa Gertrudis cattle generally a solid dull red with occasional spots of white stand by one of the sheds on -> 'i *7, ■da■v- 1 < - Jtf I „ «. ~ - Feeder Calf Sale, Southeast Show Scheduled Two events are coming up in early November of special in terest to livestock producers and youth First is the second annual Pennsylvania teeder calf sale Nov. 3, next the Southeast Dis trict 4-H Baby Beef and -Lamb Club annual Roundup and Sale Nov. 6,7, 8 ,In the Saturday, Nov. 3 auc tion, starting at,l p. m., a large selection of steer and heifer calves and yearlings will be offered. Angus, Hereford and Shorthorn breeds will be rep- resented, and all entries will be graded. Offerings will sell by auction, individually and in pen lots. “This is an excellent opportun ity to obtain club calves,” the sponors advise Co-Sponsors are the Pennsylvania Livestock and Allied Associations, Inc, the Lancastei Union Stock Yards Co . and the Lancaster Live Stock Exchange. Ten southeastern Pennsylvania counties Adams, Berks, Ches ter, Cumbeiland, Dauphin, Lan caster, Lebanon, Northampton, Perry and York will be rep i esented in the Southeast Round- Up and Sale Judging will start Wednesday morning and con tinue through Thursday morn ing, Nov 6 and 7, with 300 steers and 20 pens of fat lambs going on sale at 1 p m Thursday, Nov. 8. Abiam W Diffenbach will be auctioneer in the event conduct ed by the Lancaster Live Stock Exchange Quarryville (Lancaster County) Pa,, Friday, Oct. 19, 1956 H Santa Gertmdis in Feed Lot 'FA Land Judging Contest Saturday Lancaster County Future Farmers of America will com pete in the first annual county Land Judging Contest on the Andrew Hackman farm R 2 Manheim, Saturday A plaque will be awarded the winner, and the chapter placing first will be eligible to enter its representative in the in er county meet in York County later < Honey Crop in State Lowest For 32 Years Harrisburg—Cool weathei and excessive _ rainfall this season pi evented Pennsylvania honey bees from gathering their usual amount of nectar and the honey crop is the lowest in 32 years, according to preliminary esti males announced today by the State Department of Agriculture. Honey __ production for the past season is set at 2,940,000 lbs, 40 per cent below the 1955 output of 4,884,000 lbs, a Sept. 15 survey of Pennsyl vania beekeepers revealed. This year’s crop came from 147,000 colonies, 1,000 fewer than last vear. In mid-September beekeepers wera hopeful for a noimal fall and a builcT-up of surplus honey from fall neotar pioducxng plants. However, frost on Sept. 21, together with low tempeia tures, abruptly ended the fall nectar flow Many beekeepers reported stocks in the hives insufficient to provide food during the winter and as a result feeding of the colonies would be required. Honey yields per hive this year, as reported in mid-Sep tember, averaged 20 lbs com pared with 33 lbs in 1955. Buck and Doe Run Valley Farms of King Ranch near Coatesville (Lancaster Farm ing Staff Photo) Game Bink Set Free in State Total 264,000 Harrisburg Abotu 264,000 game birds were liberated in Pennsylvania by the Game Com mission this year or will be stocked m appropriate areas be fore the end of the 1956 small game season Following are de tails of these releases as pro vided by the agency’s Propaga tion Division Ring - necked Pheasants Ap proximately 52,000 pheasants, about evenly cocks and hens, were turned loose this spring Over 17,000 of these birds, in the latio of 1 male to 10 females, were released last June During -the cunent month 22,000 cocks and 9,000 hens will be liberated During November, m-season re leases of 12,000 cock pheasants will be made Final figures on the pheasant chick program have not been tabulated, but on the basis of the number supplied to qualified farmeis and the per centage of rearing success last year it is anticipated approxi mately 130,000 of these birds will be liberated prior to and during the 1956 .season The ra tio will be about 50-50, cocks to hens ißobwhite Quail 6,000 quail were liberated on agricultural land in the Commonwealth this spring. The sex ratio was half males and half females. In the summer 250 pairs of breeders were set free on farms. About 2,500 of these desirable litt'e birds weie released this fall. E OTARI ANS VISIT SPABC Thirty-eight members of the Lancaster Northeast Rotary Club and ten guests toured the Pennsylvania Artxfical Breed ing Cooperative Monday even ing. $2 Per Year 325 Make Cattle Tour; King Ranch Of Top Interest By ERNEST J. NEILL Three hundred and twenty five Lancaster County farmers Tuesday toured Chester County areas that represented vanoujs phases of farming and industry in a 135-mile trip by six buses and 16 private automobiles Included in the 325 were not only cattle feeders, but poul try and dairy men as well, making- the first trip of its kind from the Garden Spot. Visited were the Ford Assembly plant and the Medford Packing Co. at Chester, the Medford Farms at West Grove, and Buck and Doe Run Valley Farms near Coatesville, _a unit of the far flung King Ranch of Texas, Kentucky and Pennsylvania. On the Buck and Doe Run Val ley Farms the visitors saw 5,230 head of Santa Gertrudis cattle on 10,000 acres of grass, a ranch western in size by dimensions, seven by nine miles Burnett Wilson, manager of the Chester County division of King Ranch, operations that include a pelleting mill that turns out 16 tons of feed daily for the dull red Brahma-Shorthorn crosses. The story of Buck and Doe Run Valley Farms dates back many years, when it was origi nally a part of the DuPont es tate in the vicinity of Kennett Square In 1947, when dry weather in Texas necessitated expansion to more favorable cli mate, the Klebergs acquired the DuPont farm and since that time have doubled the acreage Stake and ndei fences miles and miles long sunound the clean, green pastures, now fram ed in autumn foliage Cowboys in leather chaps and sombreros held cattle on the same lands that the red coats of fox hunters are seen when the hunt is on. Sparkling streams and in numerable ponds serve each pasture where the Santa Ger trudis are fed on grass. Small (Continued on page 13) King Ranch Manager BURNETT H. WILSON, who has acquired the nickname Tommy for many years, tells visiting Lancaster County feed ers of operations on the 10,- 000-acre Buck and Doe Run Valley Farms of King Ranch near Coatesville. (Lancaster Farming Staff Photo).