fH AGRICULTURAL LIBRARY VOL. 11 No. 5 AMOS FUNK shown in front of his modern roadside market. This was built in 1963 and now handles one-third of farm’s total production L. F. Photo Lancoster County Open & FFA Tobacco Shows Planned For Thursday The Lancaster Counts Open and FRA Toba co shoots will be he’d simultaneously on Thursday Januaiv 6, at the Baysuk Ogai Co vv aiehouse at &50 Noith IVatei St, Lan castei, at 12 30 pm. The classes oheied in both shows will be ecacth as those used loi Faim Show competition. In the adult show, theie ■will be two duisions in the Wrapper Class ever 2G inches and 26 inches and un der, w;;h the same wo di visions tor the Fillet B’s and Binder Classes The vocational school show will teatuie only two classes Wiapper and Filler with ondy one division m each class Farm Calendar January 3 7 30 pm, Lan caster Count' SWCD direc tors at Faim Ciedit Bldg, Larcastei January 4 7 30 p m Faim Aic "Welding Class at Penn Manor Hugh School; sub je t, “Sinking aics and running beads ’ Januaij , G 12 30 pm. Com ty Tobacco Show, Open and FFA luuniiig simul taneously. at Bavuk Ciaai Co warehouse 850 Xo. Watei St , Lancaster. —• 4 30 pm, Lancaster County Vo-Ag teachers meet at Garden Spot High School. —7:30 p.m., Ephra.ta Adult Farmer Class, “In'coxne tax —investment 'credit and rdepreeiaitiiO-n schedules.” Gov, Vetoes Out Of State Milk Resale BUI HARRISBURG—Gov Scian ton vetoed a bill this week that would have disconiaged Pennsylvania milk dealeis Horn buving milk out-ot-state toi ie=ale in the common- wealth The hill would have le quned dealeis and handsels who pm chase milk foi lesale in Pennsylvania at puces lower than those set by the Milk Contiol Commission to pay the ditteience to the com mlission. The governor said that in soflai as the milk bill would apply to milk bought out of state, it would go against the U S Constitution He said it Would place a burden on m teistate commeice Scianton added that the hill would inteifeie with Congiess’ powei to legulate inteistate commeice a power leseivecl to Congiess in the constitution , His conclusion is based on US Supieme Couit decisions, Scianton said This bill nas one o£ a package ot milk lefonn meas (Continued cn Page 9) Penn Manor To Hold Form Welding Course A taini aic ueldnig couise uill be otfeied In Penn Han oi High School begum l ng Januaiv 4 and running for fi\e consecutive Tuesday nights The classes will began at 7 30 p m The welding machines will he furnished by Dressel "Weld ing Company, and there will be a $5 registration charge to cover cost of the materials used. Although no limitation has (Continued on Page 4) Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 1, 1966- Lancaster Farming To Feature Special Form Show Issue Next Week Xe\t week Lanca = tei Fann ing w.ll piesent its annual Spec i! Faun Show issue This will include such aighliglus as j complete schedule ot p-\ cuts and othei Faun Show le Uni e- It has aho become a tradi tion that thin special issue should spotlight the Lancas ter Connie Futute Fanneis ot Anienca who hate been nominated to lecene the Ke\- store Degiee at then annual convention in Hanisburg, which is held in conjunction with then Fault Show ac tn i,ties Restrictions On Interstate Hog Shipments Eased The U S Department of Agucultme announced this week that it had eased le stnctions on the interstate mot enient of feedei and breedei pigs wlmch aie not laecmated for hog choleia Amendnie’nts to interstate shipping utles published mi the Fedeial Register make laccmation for hog choleia optional fOl hogs shipped fiom states in Phase IV of the 4-phase state-federal eiadication campaign and (Continued on Page 5) Weather Forecast The forecast for the next several days is a warm one. It will be fair and unseason ably mild through New Year’s Day, with cloudiness increasing late Friday after noon. Little measurable precipi tation is expected for the rest of this year. There’s Enough Work To Last The Year Around On The Funk Vegetable Farm ‘lf s - not all summeitime field woik on the tegetable and small fuut farm of Amos Funk, located about one mile southwest of Milletstille. He and two ot lus sons hate been busy building a business thht would occupy their time the jear aiound Thev faun 2 5 t nineties of ■vegetables on 107 acies. be ginning -with ihubaib in the ■very eail> spi mg and end ing the season i£ there is an end with celeiv. which they aie now hat testing and selling So tthat’s to do all winter 9 Well of course the 1 e's celeit to get leadt toi maiket tlnee dats a week there s equip ment to lepair. including 12- iiOO feet of nugation pipe which must be leadied tov the ne\t grotvmg season theie aie G acies of stiaw bernes to mulch theies sweet potato stoiage which must be checked toi tempeia tuie and hunndnt until the ciop is sold at the late ol 13-20 bushels pei week and seteial do?en othei legulai choi es But these actmties weie not sufficient to fill the win ter woik load, so last leai the Funks 'bun It a plastic coieied giecnhouse and this jeai added two inoie These houses measure 20 hi 100 feet They aie eoieied with two laieis ot plastic and aie heated and ventilated Amos son, Andy, supervises all of the gieenhouse pioduction, ANDY FUNK shows some of the hothouse toma toes grown in one of the farm’s three greenhouses These vines are averaging a yield this year of six pounds of tomatoes each. As the Funks learn more about this kind of management, they hope to push the yield figure several pounds higher. L. F. Photo $2 Per Year, and he said that using tneir oil-fiied steam heiturnaca it takes about $37 a week to heat the three houses oyer the tall and winter These thiee houses are opeiated on a bight produc tion schedule: one crop no sooner goes out than the next takes o\er Two varieties ot tomatoes are now being rais ed in one house Michigan 13S and Michigau-Ohio; vari eties especially adapted to gieenh'ouse culture Last year, (Continued on Page 6) Agri. Research To Move Ahead With New Funds HARRISBURG Scientific studies on a scoie ot prob lem aieas in the state’s farm piogiam soon will get under nai Ppiiiisi h ania Secretary ot Aaiicu tm o Leland H. Cull said lollowmg a tecent meeting ol the new Ad\isory Peseairh Fund Committee The committee cieated te cenil’ b\ act ot the Legisla tm e and the signature of Goiomoi Suanton ie\iewed a total ot moi e than seienty leseaich pioposals that had been submitted by muons tu teiested oi gamz'ations In its selections, the com mittee gate pieteience to pioblems ot an in gent nature and th'ose that, when solved, (Continued on Page 4)