VOL 21 NO. 26 NEFPCO Board Hits Railroads For Action On New Freight Rates WASHINGTON, D. C. At its res eat semi-annual meet ing, the Board of Directors of the Northeastern Poultry Pro ducers Council endorsed a plan which will again at tempt to obtain a reduction ot fte.rht rates on feedstuffs moving into the northeast. The action was necessary due to the recent withdrawal of the Ne%v York Central Rail i odd’s proposed rate sched ule The new schedule had been withdrawn because of the ICC's approval of the Pennsy-Central merger. The Board \ filed to use every legal means available to pressure the new Penn-Central Ratl- SWCD Directors Hold Planning Meeting in a-continuing effort to de velop ?b overall, workable plan foi the future develop ment of Lancaster County, the Soil & Water Conservation District directors held a dis cussion meeting Wednesday night with Ellis Harned, Lan caster County Planning Com mission Director In the informal exchange of ideas which followed, it was emphasized by chairman Amos Funk that the district was anxious to find out how its ac tivities could best be coordin ated with those of the com seive the interests of the county, and at the same time piotect the Class I and II faim land Harned briefly reviewed county planning studies in re lation to soils and physical characteristics He further de fined the role of the county planning commission as an ad visoiy agency “It has no reg ulatory authority,” Harned said, “except for sub-division (Continued on Page 7) Farm Calendar May 30 12 noon to 2 p.m, 4-H Capon Club members will pick up their birds at the Mervin Peifer farm, Manheim R 1 May 31 8 pm, Lancaster County Pomona Grange at White Horse Fire Hall June 1 Deadline for Dairy Pi incess Contest applica tions. 8 pm, Red Rose 4-H Baby Beef & Lamb Club at John Neff School June 2 7 pm, 'Twilight taut giowers’ meeting in Chester County at Hayman’s Noithbrook Orchards, Route 872, fi\e miles west of West Chester. June 3 6-30 p.m, Lancaster County Farm Equipment Dealers Assn, spring meet ing, at Meadow Hills Dining Hall, New Danville Pike, Lancaster. road Jo, adopt the proposed rates once the merger between the two carriers becomes ef fective. Other business items dis cussed by the Board included mission to develop a long range plan which would best (Continued on Page 13) Area Fall Fair Schedule Set Although there is still a long, hot summer between now and the Country Fair circuit which in Sep tember, the Pennsylvania De partment of Agriculture re cently posted schedules for the 105 fairs booked for 1966 in the state. The fairs will share in the distribution of state funds as partial reimbursement for premiums paid out in 1965. According to State Secretary •of Agriculture Leland H. Bull, ’whose department dis tributes the- state fair funds, - (Continued on Page 7) WHAT A DIFFERENCE A DAY MAKES' That’s all that separates the tobacco plants shown here by Robert Mylin; those on the left are one day older. Mylin covered half of his seedbeds this year with plastic, and the other half with conventional muslin. The field-improvised “growth board” was set up to show the extreme difference in size caused by the two growing methods. The plants on the left, grown under plastic, range between six and ten inches in height, while those grown under muslin average short of two inches. Mylin, a dairyman at Willow Street R 2, grows about eight acres of tobacco each year. L. F. Photo Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 28, 1966 Beef Club To Vote On Steer-Purchose Plan Alternatives Red Bose 4-H- Baby Beef and Lamb Club members will meet next Wednesday, June 1, at the John Neff School at Neffsville High on the agen da will be a vote to decide the future of the 130-member club’s calf-buying program. At the previous meeting, the issue was debated by two, member teams, and three al ternative plans were present ed for consideration: I—all members would be responsible for purchasing their own steers, instead of the present plan under which steers are purchased in large lots by county extension personnel and the club’s leaders. 2 the present plan would be continued, and no member could buy individually; 3—a compromise plan combining both alternatives which would allow any member who de sired to buy his own animal. Following the vote on that important issue, Dr. Sam Guss, extension veterinarian from Penn State University, will speak on the subject of “Baby Beef Health” Spring Comes On Schedule For Tobacco Plants Under Plastic, Grower Finds by Don Timmons Although Spring seemed to bypass Lancaster County this year, it must really have been here all the while Half of the tobacco seedlings on the Robert Mylin farm at Willow Street R 2 felt its warmth right through the roof of their plastic-enclosed world. And they responded with a mighty growing effort. The other half of this year’s as piring tobacco crop only shiv ered as Spring slipped cold ly by. Mylin planted four seedbeds this year. He covered two of these with muslin and two with plastic He also planted two varieties Penn Bel 69 and Hill Island one of each under plastic and the same under muslin. The only dif ference in treatment under the two systems, he said, was that the plastic-covered seed beds were planted one day $2 Per Year earlier than the others. plants under the plastic re ceived some ammonium ni trate fertilizer when they were big enough The plants under the muslin never got big enough for that treatment. By last weekend, the plants grown under plastic were ready for the field Those un der muslin were doing their darndest to “think tall,” but their best efforts only pro (Continued on Page 9) Red Rose FFA Slates Summer Schedule At a meeting Monday nigh* at Ephrata High School, mem bers of the Red Rose Futui’e Farmers of America Chapter initiated scheduling on most of their summer show and social activities The Elizabethtown Chapter was delegated to handle the county FFA sport schedule, which will feature inter-chap ter baseball competition. The annual FFA Swine Show has been set for July 26, beginning at 8 am, at Lancaster’s Union Stoclc (Continued on Page 9) DHIA Directors And Testers Plan Meeting Dnectors of the Red Rose Dairy Herd Improvement As sociation voted Monday night, at a meeting in the Lancas ter Farm Credit Building, to hold a social get-together with the association's 17 testers so that each could gain a better understanding of the other’s problems. While it was decid ed discussion at the meeting would be recorded by the sec retary, the directors also agreed that no action would be taken at the social meet ing Directors Allen Risser and Daniel S Stoltzfus were nam ed as a committee by board piesident Robert Breneman to plan the event for late July or early August (Continued on Page 6) Weather Forecast The weatherman promises, in his words, “near-perfect” weather for the weekend. The five-day outlook calls for temperatures to average near normal, or slightly be low. Some shower activity Is expected Saturday as a cold front moves into the area, and scattered showers are predicted again about Tues day. No general rain pattern Is in sight for the period.