VOL. 12 NO. 25 / ' OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS of the Lancaster County Farm & Home Founda tion toured the partially completed Farm & Home Center Tuesday to observe the . jrrogress being made. The late spring weather has delayed construction consideraib- were told. From left they arerMelvin R. Stoltzfus; Benjamin Burldiold re^TJ^es-Ttigsef-MrS’.Xandis Myer; B. Suavely Garber; and John H. Herr. -v t Photo K&H Center Nears ZO% Completion; Six, $3OO Scholarships Available 0n a pre-board meeting tour of-the new Farm & Home Cen ter Tuesday evening, F & H Foundation directors noted that Slusser Named State Holstein Assn. Fieldman David C -Slusser of Chardon, Ohio, has been appointed to the position of Holstein Field man for the Pennsylvania Hol sfein Association succeeding NeMa B. Empet, it was an nounced this week. He will as sume his duties with the state' breed association effective June 19. 'Since his graduation fiom the Penn State University in 1965, where he majored mdauy (Continued on Page 9) Otvid Slusser foundations and office walls were completed According to an estimate by building com mittee chairman Jacob Kurtz, Jr, the Center is about 20 per cent completed at this time Originally planned for com pletion m November, the com bination of poor working wea ther this spring and sinkholes in the underlying limestone (Continued on Page 4) Milk Marketing Talk To Highlight Ephrata Adult Farmer Program The regular monthly meet ing of the Ephrata Adult Farm er class will feature a discus sion on “New Developments m Milk Marketing, Pricing, Federal Orders, and Regula tions Speaking at the Tuesday eve ning, May 23, meeting wall be William Johnstone, extension faim management specialist from Penn State University, and Boyd Gaitley, public re lations directoi for Inter-State Milk Producers Cooperative The meeting will be held in the Ephrata High School agri culture room, and will begin at 8 p.m Vocational agricul ture teacher Lewis Ayers will conduct the meeting, and all interested dairy farmeis are invited to attend ✓ Farm Calendar May 22-7:45 pm, 4-H leaders, members, and parents, dime on writing and presenting demonstrations, at UGI audi tonum. -8 p.m., Special meeting of (Continued on Page 4) Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 20, 1967 DHIA Directors Plan May 22nd Meeting Directors of the Red Rose Dairy Herd Improvement As sociation will hold their regu lar quarterly meeting Monday night, May 22, at 8 o’clock, as sociate county agent Victor Plastow announced this week The meeting will be held at the Penn Dairies Plant, second floor High on the agen da foi discussion will be chang es in rates to danymen for the use of Association equipment, Plastow noted, urging all di rectors to attend NEW COUNTY COUNCIL presidents elected Thursday night at the reorganize tion meeting at Rohrerstown Elementary School are Kaye Smith and Mike .Smuck'er, both of Ephrata R 2 L. F. Photo Cool, Wet Spring Hinders Farm Field Work In County bj Don Timmons The only time the weather makes news is when it’s eithei real good, or real bad Foi things like bi caking piolonged di ought periods, and raising creek levels and water tables. May weather to-date has been real good Foi farmers itching to get at their seasonal field choies, it has been impossible l We talked to faimers ail around the county late this week, and the story was much the same everywhere—very lit tle com planted and none up yet, potatoes, a little behind but germinating well wheie seed was treated with a fungi cide before planting, tobacco, plants small for this time of the jeai—about dime-sized one grower notes —plants will be late getting to the fields with corn planting requiring full working time, vegetable pro ducers, probably suffering more than general farmers, with Mike Smucker and Kaye Smith To Head 4-H County Council At the reorganization meet ing of the 4rH County Council Thursday night, members elect ed Mike Smucker and Kaye Smith, both of Ephrata R 2, to head the council for 1967-68 Smucker, who will serve as president of the agricultme section, is the 16-year-old son of Mr and Mrs Edward F Smucker Mike is also active in Future Farmers of America activities, and recently won the Lancaster-York area public speaking contest He is a jun ior at Garden Spot High School and is president of the Grass land FFA Chapter there $2 Per Year some ear I j crops complete “wash out” NEW DANVILLE AREA One dany farmer in the New Danville area told Lancaster Farming he’d planted about half his corn crop during the fiist week m May, and hadn’t been able to get into the fields since A check for gemmation this week on that early corn showed the shoots were within about one-quarter inch from breaking ground Although those he checked looked good, he felt he wouldn’t know what kind of a stand he’d get for another week, 01 so A farmer’s rain gauge in that area recorded 2Vz inches of rainfall since May Ist— above normal, but below amounts received in some sec tions of the count;, ELIZABETHTOWN AREA “There’s not much corn planted in our area,” said one (Continued on Page 8) Miss Smith is a 17-year-old senior at Conestoga Valley High School where she is in the bus iness curriculum She is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Grant C Smith In other business, associate county agent Winthrop Merri am announced that the county council has been asked to as sist with part of the Interna tional Farm Youth Exchange program (IPYE) when that or ganization holds its state con vention in Lancaster County in July Delegates to the conven (Continued on Page 6)