VOL 12 NO. 24 Waterways, First For Farmers Planning To £xpand Corn Production b> Don Timmons Tliere are two intei estmg tren is that seem to be de\ elop ing m Lancastei Counts ciop production and in the slate 1) an mciease m corn ptoduc tion over the past four years at the expense of small grains 2) more ol the total corn crop being pioduced for silage dur ing the same four-year period How accurately this change ovei to com can be related to dauy tamers switching to livestock production is a mat ter of some speculation For whatever reason, corn is ap parently gaming and small giam production is - declining This means several things to the farmer who is trying to utilize his' corn „land To the fullest One.Tf he no" longer has’ Rig need for. corn ..is. greater than for hay. So rather “than‘tie upltheTand' Clark Stauffer Tops Exhibits At 4-H Conservation Roundup At the first annual 4-H Con servation Club roundup, held Monday* night at Ephrata High School, Clark Staufter was awarded a plaque for best all around performance He was scored on his record book, and on his first-place exhibit which showed the use of cover crops to conti ol soil erosion His ex hibit included photographs and actual soil displays with and without covei crops Claik the 13yeai-old son of Mi and Mrs Aaion Z Stauf fer of Ephrata Rl, serves on the game committee of the Noi them Lancastei Countv 4- H Conservation Club and is active in the Babj Beef and Lamb Club and in 4-H traetoi club work Plaques were also presented to Curtis Horst for second place and to Debbie Schante for third The roundup was joint ef fort of the Northern and Southern Lancaster County 4- H Conservation Clubs It was Farm Calendar May 15-7 30 pm, Elm-Penryn 4-H' Club at Penryn Fire Hall May 16-8 p.m, Farm &. Home Foundation directors’ meet ing at Lancaster Farm Cred; it Bldg May 17-8 p m , Special meeting o£ Lancaster County 4-H Horse Club leaders at Lam caster Farm Credit Bldg to plan county horse piogram May 18-7.45 pm., 4jH County Council reorganization meet ing at Rohrerstown Elemen tary School -8 p.m. 4-H Leaders bi monthly meeting at Atlantic Breeders Cooperative. Step with contour strips which he once cropped for hay he is now looking for ways to put all or most of his land mlo coin Secondly though he contm übs to plant on the contoui when he replaces tne stups with a row crop such as corn he is wide open for soil ero sion WATERWAYS The first step in concerting to all-corn production—whether for grain or silage—is to de velop some means for ‘ w alk mg ’ the w ater oS the fields so that it doesn’t erode the soil Grassed waterways are &&■> ■sential to this intensive type of production on any slope great er than three percent, accord-' mg to Soil Conservation, Serv ice (SCS) work' unit conserva tionist -QrvaL iA. ,15 ass While waterways were also heeded on 1 "'itCditfedugd" oh" Page ,6 held in conjunction with a special meeting "oi the coujity SWCD directors Exhibits were judged by Charles Slaton. U. S Soil Conservation Service public information officer and by district vice chairman Hen ry H Hackman Assoc-ate county agent Win tin op Mernam who piesented the plaques, also announced that Ronald Stauffer had placed fust in the recent district di vision ox the State Conserva tion Contest. His placing won him a three-dav conservation (■Continued on Page '6) CLARK STAUFFER displays the first-place plaque which he won Monday mght alt the roundup of the Northern, and Southern Lancaster County 4-H Censer valtion Clubs Stauffer’s prize-winning ex habit demonstrated the effects of ground cover on soil erosion ' L F. Photo Lancaster Farming Saturday. May 13, 1967 Hoover, left, and Oryal A. Bass, SCS~ coniservationiist, examine l!he stand of tall fescus, redtop,, birdsfoot tre foil, and -Reed canary grass- Hoover will cut this- for hay soon, ■ L. F Photo Lane. Pork Producers Seek Queen; Full Slate Of Officers Reelected At a recent meeting of the Lancaster Couruy Swme Pro ducers Association directors reelected ad. oTicers and de cided to no’c a contest this xear for „ Lancaster County Pork Queen Ree ected wero John Hen ke! di escaei't Vi Lem mgei vicepres’Jent, and Janies Z Martin, secretary-treasuiei They wall serve during the 1937 68 yea r ' James HoTon Masonic Homes Fam Elizabethtovv n was installed as a new caioc toi oi the association He vas elected to a three-veer term at (Continued on Page 6 $2 Per Yeaj Win Merriam To Leave County Extension Staff Lancaster Jvixute county agent Winlhroo Mei nam an nounced this week !hat effect ive June 7th re mil be re si.mnt trom ihe countv exten- sion staff Mein.’m he has ac cepted a portion it West Vir ginia Lniver-it' Morgantown, V. \<■ He will be pait oi a tom-member stMe 4-H staff; his title will be State Exten sion Piogram Leadei 4-H and \outh Development Memam came to the county in 1958 as assistant county client He was promoted to as sociate agent in 1962 In commenting on his resig nation he noted he regreted leaving the county after nine years’ seivice here but felt • This opportunity is just too (Continued on Page 5) Winthiop lien lam Harnish Cow & Fisher Herd Top April DHiA A registered Holstein cow owned b. John M Harnisfa, Beaver Valiev Pike completed the highest individual 305-day lactation during April, accord ing to the Red Rose Hairy Herd Improvement Association. She pioduced 21681 pounds of milk and 899 pounds of but terfat The herd having the highest monthly butterfat aveiage was owned by Joseph L Fisher of fContinued on Page 4) Temperatures can be ex petted to continue averaging below normal for the next five davs, savs the weather man He looks for the “cool” to prevail throughout the pe riod, but promises milder temperatures about mid-week. And MORE RAIN is being called for with amounts to taling greater than 'h inch, expected over the weekend.