VOL. 12 NO. 34 County 4-H Demonstrators Capture 7 Blue Ribbons at Regional Contest Nine Lancaster County young sters entered the Pennsylvania Southeast Regional 4-H Day demonstration competition held Tuesday at the Owen J. Rob erts High School in Chester County. Seven of them came home with blue ribbons. Six of the seven blues rep resented first-place wins, five in agricultural projects and one in home economics. These win ners will compete in state com petition August 7-9. Other rib bons won included one each of red and white. In the general agriculture category, Averril Royer of 2025 Oregon Pike topped entries from the ether 12 southeastern Pennsylvania counties in the region with her demonstration on “How to Give a Demonstra tion”. Ann Nissiey, Mount Joyßl, and Audrey Yunginger, Mari etta Rl, teamed up to win the County Barley Harvest Winds Up; Wheat Approaches 40 percent Cut A'; check ' wi% ,several; grain elevator ’ late - THuTS 2 - day suggested that ? this year’s barley.’harvest is just-about wound up. “We see an occasion al truckload on the road, but for all practical purposes it’s fin ished,” one operator reported. Wheat, reported "tough” last week, is little better this week, although test weights are re ported improved at 58-585 pounds per bushel. With some rain reported nearly every day last week, an d precipitation totaling more than two inches, not much of the crop was cut. Although actual rain avoided the county most of this week, humidity and lower overnight temperatures slowed drying. Moisture measurements on wheat received at grain ele vators during the week ranged 14.5 to 15 5%. At any level above 13.5 most wheat must be artificially dried before storage. ™ONE GOOD DAY” “If we get one good drying Farm Calendar July 23 —Ftanm Women No. 26, annual picnic at Sico Park, Mount Joy. . - —Lancaster Pony Club, at Drumiore, July 24 -7 p. m., York Coun ty Poultry Assn*, annual ban quet and queen* pageant, at the WmJtersbown Fire Halt —Fulton Grange annual pic nic afc the Grange Hall, Qak ryn July 25-16 a.xn. Lancaster Co- Plowing Contest and Con servation Field Day, at the - farms of Edwin Kurtz and Louis Hurst, both Ephrata m. ' July 26 —10:45 a. m, Lancaster County HoMiedn Assn, field .day - and. judging contest at' ■Amos Rutt farm, Qaarryviate R 2. - ‘ July 27—0-30 p.m., 'County (Continued oarage 14) 1 ■ uvestocx conservation category with a demonstration titled “Protect Livestock Use Pes ticides Safely”. In the livestock demonstra tion category, another counity team won with the subject “Corn Silage Is King”. They were Dale Bushong, Columbia R 2, and Marvin Nissiey, Mount Joy Rl. Two other county demonstra tors won in the entomology and handyman categories. They were Hugh Wenger, Quarry vilie R 2, and Dale Shank of Lititz R 3. Their subjects were, respectively, “Mounting of Ad ult Insects”, and “Common Wood Joints”. In the home economics divi sion the county’s one winner was Kaye Smith, Ephrata R 2, for her clothing construction demonstration titled “A Press ing Need”. Betty Barley, Mil (Continued on Page 8) day youTl "realiy some wheat movement in the coun ty,” one operator predicted. He estimated the amount of wheat cut in Lancaster County at about 40%, but noted there may be as much as 80 percent still standing in some other ar eas of the east where weather hasn’t been as “good” as it has locally. Weather permitting, all esti mates were that the county’s wheat harvest would be pretty well wrapped up by the end otf next week. Farm & Home Campaign Kick-off Date July 31st ' CAMPAIGN. DIRECTOR Furhman F. Bailey explains how' the county has been’ divided into five large areas for ■ the fijnd drive which -will he launched Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 22,1967 Brucellosis Licked By 1971 Is Po. Goal HARRISBURG State Ag riculture Secretary Leland H. Bull today announced changes in brucellosis control regula tions aimed at stamping out the disease in Pennsylvania by 1971. Brucellosis is a disease of livestock that causes contagi ous and infectious abortion in cattle. It also is the cause of undulant fever in human be ings, a serious disease that can be transmitted from infected animals. Pennsylvania began a cam paign in 1936 to rid the state of brucellosis Control programs carried out since then have re duced the incidence of the dis ease in cattle to less than one tenth of one percent. Bull said. (Continued on Page 5) Consv. Field Day & Plow Contest Details Set Final details for next Tues day’s annual plowing contest and conservation field day were announced- yesterday by Aaron Lancaster County Soil land ■ Water Conservation District director. With the weather-delayed wheat harvest, there was some doubt that the 12-acre grain field on the Edwin Kurtz tom at Ephrata R 1 would be ready for the bite of contestants’ plows. But Stauffer reports most of the wheat is cut, and baling of straw is underway. The field will be ready for Soil Conservation Service technd (Continued on Page 8) Irwin Joins County Extension Staff NEPPCO Co-Op Division Supports 5.109 And Ex. Large Egg Quotes The NEPPCO Division of Co- operatives, meeting recently on Cedar Point near. Sandusky, 'Ohio, “voted'to support - “ The ag- ricultural Producers Marketing Act of 1967” (5.109 and some 40 similar bills in the U.S. House of Representatives). The Division thus becomes the first poultry organization to openly support the bill which is intended to protect produc- ers from discrimination leveled against them by handlers be- cause they are members of a bargaining or marketing co- operative. The bill is strongly supported by the four big na- August 2nd. The goal of the Farm & Home Foundation drive will be $lOO,- 000, which, it is anticipated, will deliver the new Center debt-free. Li.F.Photo. Jay W. Irwin $2 Per Year Jay W. Irwin joined the Lan caster County extension staff as assistant county agent this week, filling the vacancy cre ated when Wmthrop Merriam resigned that post in June. Irwin is a native of Blair County. His wife, the former Betty Wilson of Centre Hail, and their sax children, present ly reside in Latrobe. The fam ily expects to move to Lancas ter County in the near future. Irwin graduated from Penn State University in 1949 with a major in agricultural eco nomics. Following college, he served two years as a veterans’ agricultural training supervi sor, then for the next 15 yeans was manager of Farm Bureau Cooperatives in Indiana, Ve nango, and Westmoreland coun ties. For the past two years he was employed as unit manager (Continued on Page 8) tional farm organizations and the U.S. Department of Agri culture. It is- opposed by the National Broiler Council, the Institute of American Poultry Industries, Poul try & Egg Association and sev era! southern state poultry as sociations. EX-LG. FAVORED In other action, the Division also went on record as favor ing the establishment of an “Extra Large” egg price quo tation. Last fall, the Urner Barry Company, publishers of “Producers Price - Ciurent , (Continued on Page 9) Meetings Set For Strasbourg And Lititz Directors of the Lancaster County Farm and Home Foun dation met Tuesday evening at the temporary headquarters in the Agway building on Diller ville Rd., to map final plans for launching a $lOO,OOO fund drive. It will he a three-week effort with the goal of collecting suf ficient contributions to enable the board to turn the new Fai m and Home Center over to Lan caster eountians debt-free. Former assistant superintend ent of schools Furhman F. Bai ley, who was hired for an eight week period to run the cam paign, briefed the board mem bers on actions taken and re sults so far. He explained that the county had been divided into five areas, each with a chairman Then, each area was sub divided among district chairmen who will work with volunteer solici tors in their districts. “The cry of the hour is for more district chairmen,” Bailey (Continued on Page 16)