10—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. July 27.1968 RETCHERI (Gosifp) n^OOMWe.eBJ Jut-cone (w.ea. /6M MC6R. oyc HOOT > 'GOLLY DVB MOARfOWC IR6ECUTOV<KR eooe J !TUL- &«#« M« YOUfc MAT. Cl-M Yoo TM(«IK SO? t MAS «r, O MY, YOUR MA/t JTM/C T»»»wrv CMNTS ItffUTH 5#lCiX9 eooo AUT QMi June Price Deliveries of base milk by pro ducers in June 1966 are priced at $6 22 per hundredweight un der the Delaware Valley Federal order, while excess milk will be paid for at $4 06 per 100 pounds. The weighted average price or value for the total supply of June producer milk is $5 96 per hun dredweight, i effecting a Class I utilization level of 64 2 percent for the month. The weighted average price this June is 5 cents below the initial Delaware Valley market uniform price, $6 01, which was computed one year earlier. Class I milk in June 1967 comprised 76.4 percent of the pool, over 12 percentage-points higher than this year, although somewhat in flated by the reclassification of packaged milk inventories which occurred at that time Handlers’ cost of Class I milk this June is 28 cents above a year earlier due to the May Ist adjustment from $6 65 to $6 93 per hundred weight The price of II milk is also higher, toy 216 cents. Umfoim prices for base and excess milk in June are subject to an 8-cent per point differential for milk testing above or below the 3 5 percent butterfat stand- • Calendar (Continued fiom Page 1) Thursday, August 1 900 a m Lancaster County Black and White Show, Guernsey Barn. Saturday, August 3 5 30 p m. Garden Spot Young Farmeis Picnic, High School Athletic Field Milk Breaks MILK DRINKERS should be happy if you believe Aristotle’s 2,000 year-old definition of hap piness as a “conscious sense of vitality.” . ONE LEADING but ter manufactuier is sponsoring a “Hamburgei Happening” pro motion with an ad headline stat ing that “Only love beats butter ” . . BIG SCOOP from the Navy is that cones will be served with ice cream aboard the USS Springfield. Excessive speed is responsible for only three out of each ten highway fatalities. /MAIMSHtI KH Mors [TCWAMZI CK CCMT VMM I DROOP 000 LOSS A. For Base Milk Is $6.22 ard. Also, the prices are adjust ed for location on milk received at pool plants which are 45 miles or more from the nearest pricing point Philadelphia, Pa, Tren 'ton or Atlantic City, N J. June’s price for base milk is down 16 cents from the May 1968 level ($6 38) because the volume of Class I milk was significantly lower in relation to producers’ deliveries of base milk. The ex cess price declined one cent, from the $4 07 paid the previous month. Base milk represented 87.9 percent of all milk received from Order No 4 producers dur ing June, the last base-paying month during the 1968 season. The lowest percentage of base milk during the period occurred in May 85 percent. The volume of producer milk in the June pool was 1928 mil lion pounds, up 14 6 percent from the 168 2 million pounds pooled during the same month of 1967 The seasonal decline from May PUBLIC SALE BLACK AND WHITE HOLSTEIN FARM Wednesday, August 7, 8 P.M. Most all Atlantic Breeding. Complete Herd Dispersal of Registered and Grade Holsteins for Amos Roland, Manheun Rl, held at the Black & White Holstein Farm, located along Rt. 230 Bypass directly across from the Comet Outdoor Theatre. 42 Cows in all stages of Lactation. 8 heifers bred and open. Daughters selling from cows that have milked up to 96 lbs. per day. SPECIAL MENTION 4 yr. old Ivanhoe due to Archie in August. An incomplete record as a 3 yr. old, 248 days, 13,- 464 lbs. with a 3.7% test, 505 lbs. Fat. The only reason herd is selling owner was injured. Sale Manager Charles C. Myers Pedigrees - Henry Kettering Auct. - Abe Diffenbach SZ.H lcU t ,TT\ /I/MAYCemss nbtt\ (Mi ‘ atilt )(• I ») | /CM HO* 3CMOMOT I \W 0UU ’ 71 t / vlungt eeeeocKT / r V P6ft DlCtf 'V was 6.4 percent, representing the difference in average daily milk receipts between the two months. May’s total milk supply was 212 8 million pounds, and 205 9 million pounds when adjusted to a 30-day month There are 5,356 producers to be paid through the marketwide pool in June, an in crease of 808 over a year earliei when 4,548 dairy farmers shared in the pool. The average milk de livery per dairyman dropped 33 pounds (2.7 percent) from June 1967, to 1,200 pounds per day. Pool handlers (dairies) utiliz ed 123.9 million pounds of the June producer milk supply for Class I, compared to 128 S mil lion pounds a year earlier and 142.4 million in May 1968 The yearly decrease in Class I milk was close to 4 percent despite the decline in Class I milk meas ured 10 percent on a daily basis, also reflecting sharply lower flu id milk sales during the past month. Local Youths To : Attend Convention A pair of local youths have been selected to attend the A.I.C. Convention. Averrll L. Royer of 2025 Ore gon Pike, Lancaster, and Ken neth 'S. Risser of RDI, Leola, both delegates to the Pennsyl vania Association of Farmer Co operatives Summer Institute at Shippensburg State College, July 14-18, have been named to attend the American Institute of Cooperatives annual meeting at Blacksburg, Va., Aug. 4-8. v Mi [• f# Selection of the 'delegates . Some two-thirds of the 18 mil climaxed the five-day Institute new homes, built since in which 162 outstanding rural World War II are already too boys and. girls participated-insmall for families living in them. 6 miles south of Quarryville, 2 miles south of Rt. 222',, 2 miles north of Rt. 272 along road from Unicorn to Little Britian,-10 miles north of Oxford, Pa. on the former Jay LeFever Farm. 44 REGISTERED COWS (3 grades included) 8 Heifers, All Ages 2 Bulls, (1) is from a 20,000 lb. 4% 4am 30 day tested for interstate shipment. Vz the cows-due to freshen or will be fresh within 30 days of the sale. Many milking 70 lbs. They have plenty of size and dairy quality* Sires represented: Osborn- Dale Ivanhoe, Oakcrest Robnrke Dean, Dorothic Colantha Lucifer, Grand Rang R. A. Franco, P. Lucifer J Ty Vic, Cochran General, Mistyvale Master Duke, Don Augar M. Promise, Glenafton Royal Hamilton. Many of the. dams are from Canadian sires. Yonr in spection invited, be sure to see them sell. - * Also (5) 50 lb. Surge Units. Lunch Available Carl Diller and J. Everett Kreider, Aucts. HORSE AND PONY SALE MONDAY EVE., JULY 29,1968 MARTIN’S SALE STABLES Blue Ball, Pa., Lancaster County Kentucky Saddlebred horses, lot of Standardbred horses. Load of ponies from Ky. Good consigned horses. We expect 100 head. Horses hitched at 1 P.M. Tack at 4 P.M. Horses at 6 P.M. PAUL Z. MARTIN PH. (717) 354-6671 * , J. B. KREIDER Complete Holstein Dispersal FRIDAY, AUG. 2 -12:30 P.M. PENNSYLVANIA YORKSHIRE CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION, INC. Sponsors 2 Quality Pork Events AUGUST 1 AND 2, 1968 Farm Show Bldg., Small Arena, Harrisburg, Penna. Thursday, August 1, 9:30 A. M. Live Evaluation certified litter contest. Cash prizes for Junior and Senior contests. Program by Penn State University —1:00 P.M. Friday, August 2,2:00 P. M. Showing and Judging of Yorkshire Sale Animals. 6:30 P.M.—Sale of Yorkshires 50 Head Bred Gilts—l 2 Littermate Pairs of Open Gilts—ls Boars 4:00 to 8:00 P.M. Barbecue by Pennsylvania Livestock and Allied Industries Judges: Dan Baker and Vein Hazlett For catalog write or call: Wellington A. Hiester, Sr., Sec’y.-Treas. R 3, Fleetwood, Pennsylvania 19522 Phone: 215 / 944-8579 or Reno H. Thomas, President BeaVertown, Pennsylvania 17813 Phone: 717 / 658-6719 ;■ •.•PrAi'P.C.’i- youth education-pro* ■ gram. ’ Harold F. Doran, assistant professor of agricultural econo* mics Extension at The Pennsyl vania State University and In stitute coordinator, said the eight winners will receive ex pense-paid trips to Blacksburg, Va. They were selected on the basis of a report covering local activities, a competitive quiz, and participation in activities at the Institute as observed by other youths and resource per sonnel. Sale by J. B. KREIDER #2, Quarryville, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers