roTi7 L Day Set for Mar. 11 Ister County’s Annual Dairy Day program will I a t 930 a.m., Wednesday by J. Rohrer Wxtmer, I ceremonies for the annual event, according to [mith, chairman of the Dairy Day Committee, wing opening ceremonies, announcements and pns a quartet of speakers, including three Penn Kalists, will be heard. Horne, PSU agri igineer, will speak ting and Wafering .Parkin, PSU dairy will discuss “Wa lewage Disposal.” nauel Guss, PSU specialist, will pre topic of “Dairy Mastitis - King, img the morning .Richard J. Spiers, iiries president, will Dairy Outlook ; Situation.” / ternoon session will i Parkin returning Ik on “Dumping at 1:30 p.m. ; pm., Smith- will ; a panel discussion Comfort - Breed ing - Herd Replace members will be Announced For ato Growers Institute •ennsylvania’s second largest potato producing .ancaster County is expected to send a large del -3 the Bth annual Pennsylvania Potato Growers March 11 and 12 at Potato City Hotel near Coud rding to county-by county potato production rec ig back to 1939, Lancaster in that year was the itato county in the Keystone State, e following year Lehigh growers put that county id which they held until the drought year of 1957 le, with more favorable weather conditions, be top potato county with Lehigh second and Lan rd ;ar Lehigh regained ein spud output aster came back to >nd spot which it for 17 consecutive 40 through 1956. facts came to light Pennsylvania Crop ! Service records ailable this week the State Depart ! Agriculture to the ama Co-operative growers Association, of the Potato City vo-day conference is : f° r full discussion Brs of current prob below grass roots” ft comes at a time rowers will obtain - ln making final '°ns for their 1959 5,000 acres, Lancas- day ather ■ORECAST lay - Wednesday Weather Bureau, incastor Office eralures Wl n aver . degrees above ° r five-day : * air a «d colder a >} Varmin 3 Sun ; y , chance about Man ner Tues. & W ed. 18 mperalur « range Mrs Raymond Witmer, Har old Book, Ivan G. Martin and John Metzler. Smith reported an all-day display of water softnerand conditioner equipment will be on exhibit, also dumping station outfits. Lunch will be available at the Pavilion for $1 per ( person. Dairy Day is conducted by the Extension Service in cooperation with the Milk Distributors, Milk Market ing Co-ops and Dairy Breed Associations. Committee members are. Charles E. Cowan, John A. Flora, B. Snavely Garber, S. A. Horron, Robt. Kauffman, Robert Keen, Aaron Landis, Alan B. Miller, Dr. -T. H. McMurray, John Paes, Mel vin R. Stoltzfus, J. Rohrer Witmer and Dr. H. G. Wohn :seidler ter County commercial pota to growers last year harvest ed 965,000 hundredweight values at $1,727,300 -based on December 15 prices which averaged about $1.78 per hundred pounds for the county. The average yield per acre was 193 cwt., high est for any county in the state and well above the state average of 175 cwt. an acre. Erie was second in acreage at 5,600 but third in volume, 952,000 hundred weight, averaging 170 bags of 100 pounds each- to the acre. Biggest volume of potatoes harvested m Lancaster Coun during the 1939-58 period was 1,240,000 hundred weight in 1948 when the yield averaged 155 cwt. from 8,000 acres. Several hundred Pennsyl vania potato growers are expected to attend the Pota to City Institute, according to Ivan Miller, Corry, Presi dent of the association. Program, planning includes top place consideration of the latest innovation in po tato culture—twin row vs. triple row planting in com parison with the longstand ing single row practice. Advocates of multiple row planting claim higher yields of U. S. No. 1 tubers which may revolutionize potato production, they say David Seem of Kutztown will moderate a panel at 10 o’clock Wednesday morning, (Turn to page 11) Lancaster. Pa.. Saturday, March 7, 1959 LATE FEBRUARY, 1958 brought this scene to Lancaster County as one of-the heaviest snowfalls in history throttled activity in the region. From the 800-plus travel ers stranded in a Turnpike restaurant to countians cooking in their fireplaces, it was an experience to remember in the vagaries oi Pennsylvania weather This year Lancast er County had about 1 5 inches of snow during all of February—only 7 2 inches from No vember 1 to March 1. February’s normal snowfall - 72 inches. LF PHOTO Mere 10% of Last Year's Snow Total In County For Entire Winter-So Far ' - One year ago" this week; ’Lancaster 4 County and the entire Eastern half of the U. S. was diggmg out—again— from heavy snowfall. Electric service had been restored. It was again possible to communicate by telephone and a trip to town was again possible. In many cases, inadvis able, but possible. The 1957-58 winter snow fall total for Lancaster County was a stagger;ngly 'Artic-like 60 inches. The 1958-59 winter snowfall to tal to date has been a paltry but appreciated 7.2 inches, In fact, most Lancaster County farmers are wishing they had some of that 60-in snowfall on their fields, be cause since May, 1958 pre cipitation for the county is 5 5 inches below normal for the nine month period. In addition, much of the precipitation for this winter quickly became runnoff due to solidly frozen ground. As a result, soil conditions over most of the county are noticeably drier than prefer red. In the plains and mid-west states by contrast, snowfalls have been among the heavi est on record From east cen Extension Schedules T obacco Seed T reatin g Meetings A two-day series of seed-treating and disease-control demonstration meetings for county tobacco growers is scheduled for March 12 and 13 by the county Extension Service, in cooperation with Penn State University. Harry S. Sloat, associate county agent, reports that meetings will be held at the following places and times MARCH 12—9 a m Witmer J. Rohrer farm, Strasburg RD 1, east of Strasbury. 1.30 pm, farm operated by Chester Sensemch, Li titz RD 3, one mile south of Lititz March 13—9 a.m., farm of Ernest Lefever, Lancaster RD 2, between Millersville and Central Manor. 1:30 pm., farm operated by John K. Fisher, Mount Joy RD 1, between Mount Joy and Marietta. i tral New Mexico, across the Texas Panhandle, over nor thern Oklahoma and up into the corn "belt, snow covered the ground almost constant ly The same condition exist ed throughout the mid-lands and into northeastern Penna. New York's upstate region and New England. Heavy snowfall as usual, were the rule for the Sier ras and Cascades on the Pa cific s’ope. although the Rockies had some historic low snowfall totals in many «pots, coupled with except ionally frigid temperatures., Washington Boro, in Lan caster County, is consider ing return to Manor town ship after flood borne ice smashed a major portion of that village’s real estate. The eastern Corn Belt flooding particularly along the Wabash, inundated thou sands of acres of farmland— To control Wildfire, Sloat reccomends cleaning and. treating seed before plant nng, treating muslin and se edbed boards with formalde hyde solution before plant ing, sterilizing-seedbeds; us ing bordeaux spray or drench on bed after seeding before covering; watering plants in the morning on sunny days; using regular seedbed spray or dust program; spraying : or dusting plants with DDT before planting to control $2 Per Year along with urban and su burban areas. But in Lancaster County, December was the coldest month of the winter. Total precipitation was 1 21 inches 191 below normal. Snow fall was .7 inches—normal 4 1 November had been 2 5 degrees above normal in tem perature, with a 47 2 average and 133 inches above nor mal precipitation, with a 4.06 total, including a half inch of snow. Normal November snowfall is 11 nches. January was about normal with a 32 degree tempera ture average. But moisture was 1 39 inches below norm at 1.77, with only 4 5 inches of snow, compared with the norm of 8 3 inches. February also was drier} than normal, with 1.73 inch es of total moisture, .88 be low norm, with a mere 1.5 inches of snowfall, against the 7.2 inch normal blanket. Temperatures for the month averaged 15 degrees above normal at 34.5. January’s low was 12 de grees, February—lo; and De cember 13 flea beetle, and preventing the tobacco from getting overripe in the field. Dr. O. D. Burke, Penn State plant disease specialist will treat seed with silver nitrate solution and explain the above practices during the four meetings. One quart of seed will be cleaned and treated for each grower dur ing the meetings Sloat reports this program will continue as it has for the past seven years, with a small charge for cost of ma terials. Each farmer will have to give his seed a final washing at home and then spread it to dry, he added.