Vol. 11. No. 32 Marcalena Hess Selected 1957 Poultry Queen The 1957 County ..Poultry Queen is Miss Marcalena Hess, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Henry Hess, Bareville. She was selected at the Poultry Assn, banbeque held Saturday at Lititz Springs Park. Her attendant is Miss Louise of Mr and Mrs. Norman M. Herr, 2237 Marietta Ave, Rohrerstown. The new queen is a 17 year old senior at Warwick Union High School. She is a former delegate to state 4-H week, an honor roll student and a mem ber of the Future Nurses Club at Warwick Union. She has been a member of the band for the past three years and is now baton twirler with the band. , Outside of school, she is pres ident of the Youth for Christ club, a vice president of her Sunday School Class and a past president of the Oregon-Rose ville Community 4-H club. In the cooking contests, a man, W R Hutchinson, 334 North Charlotte (St., won first prize in the senior division. His recipe was Stuffed Chicken Legs_ a la Hutch Miss Barbara Eby, 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Rob ert Eby, 1013 Lititz Pike, Lan caster, won first place in the pu nier contest by cooking South ern Oven Fried Chicken Runners-ulp were Mrs Helen Hastings, Kirkwood, senior; and Miss Mary Grube, R 3 Lititz, ju nior. All four prize winning recipes are printed on the Women’s Pages of this issue of Lancaster Farming. Other contestants, beside the winners ware: Senior, Mrs Man (Continued on page 7) Now Is The Time... M. M. Smith, County Agricultural Agent To Inspect Lightning Rods The thunderstorm season is at hand and high temperatures us ually bring severe storms With the great investment in buildings in Lancaster County, lightning rods should be checked, they should be connected from one end to another and be well grounded in moist earth. Ground them deep enough to reach moisture, merely in the ground for a few inches in dry weather may not do the job. To Investigate Thoroughly If you are faced with the investment in a bulk milk tank this summer, counsel with your milk buyer, fieldman, milk inspector and your equipment dealers. This is a long time investment with opera tion costs and dependable service from the dealer as big items The present trend is to install a tank large enough to bold six milkings. We have an extension leaflet available on this sutqect To Keep Steer Stables Clean During periods of high temperatures livestock will suffer far more from the heat u they are lying or stahled over a build-up of manure, hot weather causes this manure pack to heat and will reduce your gams. Barns that are kept clean, well bedded, in a darkened condition and with plenty of cross ventilation will be best. A single layer of burlap bag fastened over the windows will reduce fly trouble and keep it cooler. To Be Alert for Arrayworms Some farms are heavily infected with army worms They can do considerable damage in one night The pests resemble cutworms and will attack all vegetation, they especially like small grain fields. Con trol is to spray fields with heptachlor, chlordane, or toxaphene, another control is to mix a poison bait and broadcast over the area at the rate of 30 pounds an acre. To Take Your Time Combining Many bushels of grain are lost each year through too rapid oper ation of the combine. This is proven by the amount of volunteer growth in the fall. The machine will do a better job at moderate speeds. Also allow time for the grain to dry in the morning or after a rain, tough grain is poorer quality and may heat in the bin. FINISHING TOUCHES are put on a con sumer education display by Associate County Agent Harry S. Sloat Saturday at the Poultry Assn, berbeque. The display, Waiting List For BHIA Test Nearly Empty Directors of the Red Rose Dairy Herd Improvement Assn, announced this week that testers in the Lancaster-Manheim area are now able to add several herds on a full test basis with no waiting required. Prior to this time, the waiting list had been full for this area, but the formation of a thirteenth testing association and easing of herd size requirement due to the new record keeping system have reduced the size of the list For information on starting Quarryville (Lancaster County) Pa., Friday, June 21, 1957 Schuylkill Co-op Tour Visits Poultry Center Some 25 to 30_youngsters tour ed the Lancaster Poultry Cent. Monday as pait of a tour spon sored by the Schuykill Count Council of Farmer Cooperatives Mrs Clara Kopf, office manage of the exchange, and Daniel K Good, poultry buyer, explainer the functions of the exchange t the young people. testing, call the county extensio office, Lancaster Express 4-6951 or see any tester of the Red Ros Association Two Holsteins ‘Excellent’ In Umble Herd IBRATTLEBORO, VT Twc registered .Holsteins owned bi John M Umble, Box 155, Atglen Pa, have been officially classl fied ‘Excellent” the highes. rating attainable in the type clas sification program of The Hol stem-Fnesian Assn, of America This highly select designatioi is applied only to animals scor ing 90 or more of the 100 points representing theoretical perfec tion in body conformation. Of more than 30,000 registered Holstems officially classified for type last year, only 305 were rated “Excellent ’’ During a recent classification of the Umble herd by R. E Stnc- kler, lola, Kans, an official in spector on the staff of the nation al Holstein organization, AVonll Sovereign Tiny Pabst and Hyup Inka Sally scored 90 points each. The classification program in ' continuous operation since 1929 provides a universally recognized method of comparing the conformation of living anim als with that of the True-Type Holstein cow or bull. Participa tion is currently at an all-time high level. made by James Porter, extension poultry specialist at Penn State, shows some of the versatility of eggs in cooking. (LF Photo) T i.u AS n. jl QUEEN is on the blonde head of Miss Marcalena Hess, 17, R 1 Bareville, by the T-a tinng Poultry Queen, Miss Nancy Newcomer, R 2 Lit itz. Miss Hess was selected from a field of nine contestants for the honor at the county Poultry Association barbeque at Lititz Saturday. (LF Photo) Federal Milk Order Suspension Hearing Set Suspension of the Philadelphia Federal milk marketing order will ie the subject of a meeting sche iuled for June 27 by the U S. department of Agriculture. The neetmg will be open at 10 a m. in J. S. District Court Room No 1, Tmted States Court House, Ninth md Market Streets, Philadelphia, a. USDA announced that data, views or arguments may be pre sented to show whether or not the 'ederal order should be suspend 'd. The official notice of the meet ng said that “since the Federal irder, as a practical matter, is raving no significant influence non the prices being paid to lairy farmers in the Philadelphia market, there is serious doubt hat it is effectuating the declar 'd policy of the Act ” Behind the present action of USDA is a history of dual but in dependent regulation of the Phil adelphia market by Federal Ord er No 61 and by orders issued by the Milk Control Commission of the Commonwealth of Pennsyl (Continued on page 14) $2 Per Year