Vol, 11. No. 25 Above Normal Temperatures To Continue HARRISBURG Wet fields slowed down preparation of Pen nsylvania farm fields for spring planting, but above-normal tem peratures should continue with Uttle rainfall for the remainder of this week, the State Depart ment of Agriculture said Wed , nesday. In a weather and crop sum mary for the week ended Mon 'day, the Pennsylvania Crop Re porting Service said ithe Weather Bureau reported unseasonably high temperatures for the past week ithat ran into the, nineties in the andf Reading areas For the rest of this week temperatures should range from normal to six degrees above nor mal. High temperatuies in recent days brought all fruit blossoms out ahead of the expected sche dule and most areas are in full bloom. Blossom trails are mark ed for motorists in the Adams and Berks County areas where guided tours are planned for Sunday. Plenty of corn land is still to be prepared for planting over the State. Oats planting was be hind schedule ;at the,end of last week Warmer weather aided hay and pasture fields. Stands are good and cattle are on past ure, the report declared. Planting of early potatoes con tinues in the southeast and farm ers m other areas are waiting for fields to dry. Peas'for processing m south ern countries are a week to ten days late and planting is under way in central Pennsylvania counties. Harvest of spinach in volume is in progress in tho southeast, with quality reported good , Rhubarb is ready to cut and housewives next week may ex pect homegrown asparagus on the markets. SPRING, OR MAYBE SUMMER, came to • Lancaster County this week pushing tem peratures up into the 90’s. The long warm days, now have the trees bursting with Qnarryville (Lancaster County) Pa., Friday May 3, 1557 C. WARREN LEININGER, R 2 Denver, left, is the new president of the Lancaster County Swine Producers Assn, formed Tuesday night. Vice president is Richard Maule, R 2 Quarryville. The secretary treasurer, Harold Rohrer, R 7 Lancaster, was not present. Leininger is a Spotted Pol and China breeder and Maule raises Berkshires. (LF Photo) Water Soaked Barley Replaces Corn In Poultry Feeding Ration Test Scientist _at Washington State College, in experiments with chicks and poults, have discover ed a treatment using either water or ait enzyme mixture for barley that results in just as good growth of the birds and produces as much meat per pound of fed as corn does. The treatment worked out by the Washington ‘researchers in volves soaking the barley or other cereal grains in an equal weight of water until they absorb all the water. Then the gram is dried, ground, and mixed in a regular poultry ration. The reason for the improved re sults, the Washington scientists believe, is that the water unlocks some of the carbohydrates for merly inaccessible in the grain. The same results came from simp ly adding an enzyme mixture to feed containing barley. flowers and most pasture is In good shape. This herd of Holsteins find finds spring a very enjoyable time with lush pasture in an abandoned orchard. At four weeks of age, birds used in the.expenments had gain ed 190 pounds more per ton of feed on the treated barley than those on the untreated. County Health Fair Opens In Lancaster Wednesday More than 30 exhibits will be included m the Health Fair spon sored by the Lancaster YMCA and participating health agencies at the YMCA on May 8 through 11. ' The fair is to acquaint the Lan caster County public with the various facilities available through local agencies, and to educalte the public in the ways to make use of the facilities. The fair will open at 1.15 on Wednesday and will be opei until 9 p. m. and on Saturday, from 10 a. m. until 4 p. m. There is no admission charge. Lancaster County Swine Producers Organize at Meeting Tuesday C. Warren Leininger, R 2 Den ver, was elected president of the newly, organized - Lancaster County Swine Producers Assn, at the organization meeting at the Farm Bureau Cooperative in Lan caster Tuesday night. Vice president is Richard Maule, R 2 Quarryville, and secret ary treasurer is Harold Rohrer, R 7 Lancaster. Leminger is a spotted Poland China breeder, Maule raises Berk shires and Rohrer is a Chester- White, producer. Others named to the board of directors are Dunoc-Jersey, Arhe Anderson, Elizabethtown, Ham oshire, Earl Fisher, R 1 East Earl; Poland China, Harold B, Endslow, R 1 Marietta, Yorkshire, Kenneth Skiles, R 2 Narvon, commencal feeder, Ivan Click, R 7 Lancaster, and vocational agriculture inst ructor, Howard Siglin, Millers ville At this election, a third of the directors were elected foi three, two and one year terms Approximately 40 swine pro ducers heard Dwight Yonkm, Penn State swine specialists com mend Lancaster County for being the first southeastern Pennsy lvania county to organize such an assaciation He outlined the activities of the state and national swine pro ducers associations. The state or ganization, he said, is presently trying to get the legislature to outlaw the _useof live virus cho lera innoculation. The national organization has several programs underway to promote the use of pork and pork by-products. The second speaker at the meet ing was Grant Sherntt. of the animal husbandry department at Penn State. He said that meat type certi fication is one of the most effici ent ways to improve swine pro duction He listed three goals. First is increased sow pro ductity. For a gilt, the weaned litter of eight pigs must weigh 270 pounds and an eight pig litter from a 'sow must weigh 320 Northampton, Wayne Ctys. Certified Brucellosis-free by State and USD A HARRISBURG Northamp ton and Wayne counties were 1 certified as brucellosis-free last week by the state and federal de partments of agriculture m an, announcement by state sec. Wil liam L. Henning. v They bring to 55 the number of Pennsylvania counties where the troublesome ailment of cattle (Bang’s disease) has been brought under control, 25 of them in the past two years. In a run-down of testing work still to be done in 12 counties be fore the entire state can be certi fied, only two counties remain to be signed up for area testing, ac cording to Dr. H. A. Milo, direc tor of the State Bureau of Animal Industry. These counties are Lebanon and Bradford where 75 per cent of herd owners in only 18 of the state’s 1,569 townships still must sign agreements for blood testing of their cattle. $2 Per Year pounds Second is increased growth and feed efficiency in the animal. Tha goal here is for the hog to weigh 200 pounds in 180 days. And third is how well the car cass will cut out. Backfat should measure from 1.6 to 19 inches, the carcass length should be from 29 to 31 inches and the loin eye measurement should be at least 3 h square inches. Sherntt said that these basic repuirements for meat type cert ification seem rather easy on the surface because most tarmers can think of individual hogs that have exceeded these' repuirements. But he said that when every hog on the farm will live up to the goals, the farmer is doing a top notch job of management and feeding. He also gave some hints on in creasing gilt litter size by select ing the correct time for breeding. Tests have shown that gilts fared during the third heat period will average about a pig a litter more. Best time for service is during the fust 24 hours of the period. Breeding during the last or third 24 hours of the period will tend to decrease litter size, he said. -Sherritt is also an advocate of lean gilts and sows before and during the'gestation period. After the gilt gets to a 160 to 170 pound weight, the feed should be cut down to Jkeep gain to about ai pound and a half a day. The only time the gilt should go on full high protein feed is during breeding time. She should be on full feed for at least three weeks before she is to be bred. Another guest at the_ meeting was Walter Dunlap Jr., of thp Lancaster Livestock Exchange, He told the breeders that the Ex change is ready to stand behind then in any project that might be undertaken. ' A movie on Pennsylvania swine production was shown County Agent Max M. Smith presided at the meeting Testing has been completed in six counties where the incidencei of the disease is-not yet down to. federal-state certification require ments. These counties are Chest er, Cumberland, Franklin, Mont gomery, Philadelphia and Tioga, Four other counties Berks, Lancaster, Perry and York are completely signed up and testing soon will expand to all townships. To attain certification, less than one per cent of cattle and five per cent of herds must be free of the disease. Wayne County dairymen attain ed an 11003031 record, Dr. Milo §aid. When the first county-wide test was completed in 1954 it was found that 3.7 per cent of all cattle and 16.3 per cent of herds were infected. On the latest test only 5/100 of one per cent of cat tle and one-half of one per cent of herds were infected.