)L . 6. NO. 26 RECOLLECTIONS OF PAST SPRINGS are brought to mind by the wooden plow the wall. Made during the time when wood was plentiful and metal was scarce, the v has a metal jointer, but the share and moldboard are of wood. Mr. and Mrs Rus if 49 Robert Ave., Trenton, N J, left, are shown some of the exhibits at the Landis ley Farm Museum by Raymond Althouse, right, an employee at the museum. mdls Valley Museum ans Two Crafts Days From the time you walk in the front door of the 18th ury kitchen until you walk out the back door of the itry store at'the Landis Valley Farm Museum, you live ural Lancaster County as our forefathers must have 1 a hundred years ago. s the friendly guides just too familiar and too near v you the tools of the at hand. |e of farming as it was |;iced before the mechan revolution, you can’t feeling a sense of pnde ir rural heritage, iwever, one of the most mg observations is on parking lot. Out-of-State ls o plates outnumber the asylvania tags by a good )n ty Lancaster Coun by and large, are not ' the visitors to the Perhaps most Lan- Countians have visited >seum, or perhaps it is i Calendar Lancaster Sertoma holds annual Chicken -'cue m Long’s Park, Harrisburg Pike. 22—6 30 p.m. - Joint hug of the county bee ?rs and fruit growers le orchard of Morse >ma ». Ephrata R 2. Pm - County Future inors of America meet Pe quoa Valley high Pm . Elm-Penryn 4- omnuinity club meets «e Penryn fire hall. 00 pm. - Manor cmb meets in * the Manor High School. Myers, State 4-H "ill discuss 4-H Oq j' 1 00 am. - South- Unct 4-H dairy r °inmittee meets at Guernsey Sales Pavi ’ . T nc °l n Highway, f). l Lancaster. 00 pm. - Co "H Holstein Club at the home of ; ttiv, ePi Barevllleßl. 8 °0 p.m. Rough , H light horse and meets at VaUey Pablos. Quarryville A feeling of excitement is in the air these days at the Landis Valley Farm Museum Craft days have been sched uled for June 17 and 18, and guides and other personnel are looking forward to the time when 20 craftsmen will put into use many of the ma chines which made life more bearable when the country was young and the industrial revolution was but an infant. During Craft Days, black (Turn to page 14) County Girl Is Member Of Breed Assn. AverriL L. Royer, the 11 year old daughter of Mr and Mrs. Herbert M. Royer, 2025 Oregon Pike, Lancas ter, has been accepted into Junior Membership in the Holstein - Fresian Associat ion of America, according to information received this we ek. Junior membership is a vailable to persons under 21 years who are owners of registered Holstein dairy animals. Boots And Saddles Horse Club Meets The, Boots and Saddles, 4-H light horse and pony club held their regular monthly meeting at the Lan disville fire hall recently with 49 members present. The next meeting is sched uled to be held June 9 at the Mountain View Pony Farm near Denver. Steve Sites, reporter for the club, announces new members are welcome. AGRICULTURAL LIBRARY 'Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 20, 1961 By: Jack Owen Washington D. C—The so-called Omnibus Bill for ag riculture looks to take the government out of agiiculturc, contrary to popular reports, Secretary of Agriculture, Or vill Freeman told members of the Newspaper Farm Editors Association this week. In answer to the question, “If you get the Omnibus Bill passed, will you impose con trols on beef, pork and poul try’” the Secretary hurriedly replied, “I have no plans to impose controls on anything.” Secretary Freeman pointed out that he now has the pow er to impose marketing quo tas and authorize direct pay ments under existing legisla tion. -The new bill (The El lender-Cooley Bill currently in committee in the House-ot Representatives), he said has controls which are not to be found in current legislation. “Some people say the checks go so far as to be burden some,” he said. , - Mr. Freeman said he is East©m H. 5. Adds Break In The Rainy Weather eac^ er 7 Robert G. Daugherty, for- Sends Farmers Into Corn Fields merly of Dubois, Jefferson rdimeib lIIIU V.um neiUb County, has been elected Warm weather and clear thought earlier, the Pennsyl- teacher of vocational agricul skies this week sent farmers vania Crop Reporting Ser- ture by Eastern Lancaster into the field to try to bring vice says today in its week- County School District at corn planting - up to date, ly crop and weather round- New Holland, it was announ- Many tractors were on 24 up. There’s some concern that ced this week, hour schedules with mem- cool, wet weather may have Daugherty, who will grad bers of the family taking adversely affectel pollination, uate from The Pennsylvania shifts in order to take ad- but most growers feel that State University in June, will vantage of the ideal plowing there have been enough begin his duties with the conditions. (Turn to page 12) school as of July 1. As with Many fields were planted other teachers of vocational by late Thursday with many J_ _ A M agriculture, he will be era more farmers hoping for the vJoiQ©n OpOT n - n ployed on a full 12 months weather to hold through the *|- «• , i basis. week end- Early-planted corn I OUTS fiOTnOUS© Daugherty will leach one is up in a few scattered fields of the four classes of high around the county. school vocational agriculture Color of the crop is excellent (the other three classes will except in a few low or wet continue to bo taught by spots. Robert D. Herr, the present Forage crops in the county teacher) and spend the rest continued to make excellent his time with the out of growth. Alfalfa weevil dam- (Turn to page 13) age has been reported in sev eral parts of the county and spraying with Methoxychlor is being done by those farm ers who do not plan to har vest the alfalfa for another seven days. Canning tomatoes in many areas are responsible to the weather. Those fields not caught by late frosts are in excellent condition, while frosted crops look only fair, but promise to grow out of most of the damage. Weeds threatened to be a problem m some fields but with the finer days, cultivation can now begin in most fields. Winter damage to peaches was not as extensive as Beekeepers And Orchardists Plan Joint Meeting Next Week lnnf oU Srowor b c eC^ CeperS , l n , d colonies of bees (weather ~8-5S S=."K Orchaidists and apiarists care and management, will discuss common prob lems in the orchard of Dr. Carl Bittner, Exten- IVlorse Brossman, Ephrata q ’on Fruit Specialist, will 82, beginning at 6:30 p.m. discuss orchard management (DST) on May 22. > - 'nd fruit tree disease prob- W. W. Clarke, Extension * ems - Bee Specialist from Penn- The Brossman orchards sylvania State University, arc located three miles east with the assistance of local of Akron and one mile west beekeepers present at the of route 322 on the Bethany meeting, will examine the road. Farm Bill Limits Power Freeman Tells Reporters Bees In Action was the title of a demonstration giv en by Donald Kraybill at the Thursday night meeting of the Garden Spot 4-H club. Kraybill, who lives at 599 Lampeter road used a glass frame enclosing live bees to tell the story of life in a bee colony. The business of the meet ing at the home of Wilmer Wenger, 76 Greenfield Road, followed a tour of the mem bers through the greenhouse of Raymond Burkhart, 1865 Old Philadelphia Pike. Dur ing the business session, the club voted to send a copy of “4-H News”, the official news letter, to the Lancaster Free Public Library as one of the community projects of,the club. Next meeting is scheduled to be held June 15 at the home of Harvey Heller, 751 Willow Road. Lois Ovcrgaard is reporter for the club. $2 Per Yeai “Playing it strictly by oar” and being a pragmatist in re gards to the new program. “No program can work'with out producer cooperation and producer concurrence” lie said. As long as it is cute to cheat on a program, the pro gram is in trouble, he said. The Omnibus Bill, in looking to take the government out of agriculture, calls tor the cooperation and concurrence of producer groups m plan ning a program tor the in dustry. The Secretary called at (Turn to page 6) Hatch Report Shows Increase During April a total of 5 5 million egg type chicks were hatched in the Key stone state. Tins was 20 per cent above April 1960 but slightly below the five year (1955-59) average. For the four-month (January throu gh April) period, egg type chick production was up six per cent over a year ago and one tenth above the five year average over the na tion as a whole. In Pennsyl vania, production of egg type chicks during the period was (Turn to page 12) FIVE - DAY WEATHER FORECAST Saturday * Wednesday Temperatures during the next five days are expect ed to be near the normal range of 54 at night to 77 in the afternoon. Little day to day change in tempera ture is expected during the period. Precipitation may total in excess of inch falling as rain about Wed nesday.