“iTUUVtIb,,, VOL. 11 NO. 8 Conn. Farmers Impressed By County Farms by Evoi-ctt Nowswajigoi' St,a,ff Reporter A group of ouit-of-state farmers visited a leading Lancaster County manufac tunng firm a.nd a top local dairy on their way to the Pennsylvania Farm Show m Harrisburg, last week. After touring the New Holland Machine Company, a hu« load of Connecticut tourists armed at the Gor d'onville R 1 farm of John E. Efe/h late Monday afternoon to seie the big, lugged, full uddered legistered Holsteins that have iust completed the DHIA herd aierage of 18.- 250 pounds of milk and G 45 pounds of hutterfat. This makes the fifth heid average over 60 0 lib completed by (Continued on Page 6) Crop Adjustment Rates Announced For County Adj-itnient payment rates for croplands diverted undei the Cropland Adjustment Pro gram have been announced for Lancaster County by Fred G Seldo'mndge, chair man, Agricultural Stabiliza tion and Con-sen atiton County CloiniSnltree Bachnent rates wall be re lated to the value of crops prevalently giown, and pio du'etivity on acreages put into the CAP progiam. The adjustment rate for •wheat, barley, corn and grain sorghum is 40 percent of the county price-support loan rate, which an Lancster County won Id be wheat .58 per bushel; barley .3 6, corn .47, grain s'orghium .37. The chairman also remmd e'd tiifct other cropland on a farm, to be iWol tided m a CAfc agreement will he elig ible for adjustment payment rate*!, -varying, from $3 00 to $7 Od an acre, depending on the productivity of the crop land Agreements wull cover five to ten yea.rs See Your Problems As Challenges, Mgt. Specialist Tells Poultrymen Pohalirymen, regardless of location, have indniidual problems — “but let’s call them challenges” — poultry management consultant Joe Claybwsh for DeKalb Agn. Assn, told more than 100 Farm Calendar JantKUV 24 2i4th-2frth. ■Vegetable Growers Confer ' cute, Nittany JLion Inn, Penn State .University. 7:30 p.m, Bphrata -.Aitfullt .Farm -Welding Class, «it .Ephrata (Hugh School, ©.in., Installation, of Red Rose FFA officers at lanupeiter-Strasiburg High THE PRINCESS AND THE PRINCIPAL Lancaster County Dairy Princess for 1965, Miss Linda Welk, shown with Frederick P. Sample, supervising principal of Manheim Township High School. Sample delivered a stirring talk cn “Today’s Youth” to some 400 county farm people at the annual DHIA dinner meeting at the Holiday Inn, Lancaster. L. F. Photo. Extensionist To Discuss Success Of Farm & Home Centers At F & H Annual Meeting Here On Tuesday The Lancaster County Farm made and the contribution and Home Foundation ■Bill to the commaiin'ty of an ag hold ilts annual meeting- on n'cultural and homeniakang Tuesday, January 25. at Hos- centei tetter's Banquet Hall in The progiam Will also fea llount Joy The dinner meet- ture a brief business meet ing wall begin at 6:45 pm , ltl g conducted by Foundation and is open to anyone president B Suavely Garber, throughont the county who (Continued on Page 12) is interested in thus project The program will feature an illustrated" report by Har old Sweet on -some of New York State’s more than two dozen ' Farm & ■ Home Cen tei s Sweet, associate profes sor in extension administra tion at Cornell Uninersuty, is in a positron to speak from experience on the progress area poultry meu Thursday nrgihit at the Lafayette Ftfre Hall, Lancaster. “We sometimes get the im pression that our competitors are 10 feet tall," the special ist said. He told the poultry men that he had traveled all over and seen all sizes and shapes of poultry operations. “Bekeve me, they’re not ten feet tall,” he said “They just have different challenges than you have ” ' He illustrated his points with a senes ot- slides, show ing operations ’around the country. Some of the maHion hen plants have' their own unique - "challenged.”' Over population. Too tnlaay (Shack (Continued on Page 4) * ~r f -x Sr £' -ir ~ Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 22, 1966 County 4-H Council Elects Directors Six directors were elected Wednesday at tlie annual , meeting of the Lancaster , County 4-H Leaders Council meeting at the Production Credit Office. , Named to two-year terms on the home economics coun- i (Continued on Page 4) s. AG Harold B. Sweet DHIA Banquet Features Educator Discussing Youth And Society; Frey Herd Gets Top Co. Award “I'.m for all education ” Piederkk P Sample told an audience of some 415 farm folk at the annual Red Rose Dairy "Herd Improvement As sociation dinner meeting on Thursday “But not to the ex tent that it overshadows fair play, decencv, patnotisra, honesty and othei moial val ues ” Sample is supervising prin cipal at lUanheim Township High School 'and well quali fied to discuss Ivis 'chosen top ic — “Today’s Students ” The most impoitant piob lem we face with v outh tv day ns not teaching them leading, writing aiithmetic and all the assorted foimal tiaming thej will need in latei lute, Sample said “Somehow well get that iob done But the hig pioblem is helping each youngstei de velop as a (complete peison MR. AND MRS. J. MOWERY FREY, JR. at the Red Rose DHIA annual dinner meeting at the Holi day Inn, Lancaster. Frey received a plaque from the association as owner of the high butterfat herd in the county for 1965. L. F. Photo Wheat Growers Offered Options The 196 G voluntary wheat program offeis several op ticas to. farmers so they can best plan, their individual op erations. according to the Ag ricultural Stabilization and Conservation (ASC) County Comim'ittee. The options include plant ing wheat on all allotment acres; 'diverting allotment acres from production to con serving uses for payment; overplanting the allotment by up to 50 percent and storing the excess production for bad crop years; substituting (Continued on Page 6) $2 Per Year as an individual “We say we don’t want people adl the same, and yet we continually cast them all in the same mold.” the prin cipal said We put a child into school and put a statistical number on him He becomes one oC the 32 million elementary students in the U S . or one of the 17 .million high school students, and we spend 23 billion dollars to keep hfm theie Seventy pei cent o£ them will woik in occupa tions touiouovv that are not even lasted today. “These are statistics Childien don’t care about numbers and such. THiev caie about being a part of the vvoild around them. Thev caie about w'ho they aie and vvheie thev fit m. We must encouiage the di veisity that as piesent and. (Continued on Page 5) Weother Forecast Lancaster County will con tinue' to shiver for the next five days at least, as con tinuing cold temperatures are forecast with little day to day change. Daytime highs will average about 38 de grees, with overnight lows dipping into the upper teens. We may be cold, but there won’t be much of the white stuff to bother with during this period either. Snow is forecast for coastal areas about Sunday night, and flur> ries over the mountains about the same time. But the weatherman sees little chance for precipitation la our area for the next fiwe days.