•X X JLU\/i I /99 (Contfnuad from Pa|« If is a member of the Midway Other contestants par- Church of the Brethren youth ticipating in the contest group and choir. 1 were; Linda Kreider, 18, She is a member of the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cedar Crest Medical Careers Irvin H. Kreider, RD2, Club and Organ Club. Palmyra. Susan Werner, 16, Mary Ann, whose parents the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. own 160 head of Holsteins, Lewis M. Werner, EDI, plans to work for her father Fredericksburg; and Rose on the farm and may go into Brandt, 16, daughter of Mr. the Brethren Volunteer and Mrs. Bernard Brandt, Service.within a year. RDI, Fredericksburg. • WINDROWERS • CUT-DITIONERS • FORAGE EQUIPMENT • CASE LAWN & GARDEN TRACTORS • NEW IDEA ELECTRIC LAWN & GARDEN TRACTORS WE HAVE NEW AND USED e WELCOME YOU TO STOP IN AMO SEE U A. L. HERR & BRO. i*, ‘ < * Mary Ann Reist recipient of the Miss Congeniality 1974 Award at the Lebanon County Dairy Princess Pageant. Master of Ceremonies for Judged for the pageant the event was Alfred Brandt, included; Mr. Harold Lebanon, Mr. Brandt is the Brecht, Assistant County State President of the Agent of Schuylkill County; Pennsylvania Dairy Herd Mn£ Faye Strickler, Ex- Improvement Association, tension Home Economist of Also presiding at the Berks County and Miss contest was Donna Ben- Betsy Ellsworth, Myer netch, Lebanon County stown. Dairy Princess of 1973. Melissa Piper Named Associate Editor Melissa Piper, Sturgis While attending Penn Lane, litatz, has been named State, Miss Piper was active Associate Editor with the in many agricultural ac- Lancaster Farming tivities including the Block Newspaper. and Bridle and the Editor of .Miss Piper, who resided in the Ag Hill Action Columbia County before Newsletter. moving to Lititz, graduated Having lived on a farm from Benton Area High noted for livestock and crops School and received a production, she was active in Bachelor of Science Degree 4-H receiving numerous in General Agriculture from awards for her work in Penn State at the June veterinary medicine, .commencement - exercises. TRY A CLASSIFIED AD You Be The Judge Your Lancaster County Dealer Ken Herr Asks You to Shop and Compare Before You Buy Quarryvilie 786-3521 i - Then YOU Be the Judge! A LARGE INVENTOR EQUIPMENT rswa eehl ■ ® ■ Gets into your system FARM TRENDS Dorothy Neal, head of the Lancaster County ASC: office, reminds farmers that July 15 is the last day fo signing up for the 1974 Wheat and Feed Gran Program. She said no set-aside acreage and n conserving base is required this year. You've got t sign up if you want to be eligible for deficienc payments (based on target prices), disaste payments, price support loans and if you want t protect your crop history for allotment purposes. Lehigh Names Former Kraftco Official President The troubled Lehigh Valley Farmers Cooperative has named Robert P. Barry president. Barry is < former official of the Sealtest Division of the Kraftcc Corp., in Philadelphia, and replaces Richard Allisor who was fired last month. Barry was reported! picked for the job over three other front runners, on< of whom was former Pennsylvania Milk Marketing Board chairman Harry Kapleau. I ‘ According to the Pennsylvania Department o Agriculture, in 1971 the value of the total agncultura output in Lancaster County was $211,650,200. B\ 1973 the output value had leaped almos $100,000,000. totaling $311,210,160. Lancaster County was ranked first in five com modify categories including dairy products, poultr; and broiler production, cattle and calves, hogs anc layers and eggs, in Pennsylvania for 1973. The Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture Crof and Livestock Summary noted that the county dairy production totaled $60,703,000. Last year, placing tht area first in state production. Total value for the Poultry-Broiler industry it Lancaster County was $26,072,000; while layers am eggs registered at $40,707,000. Cattle and Calve production value registered $95,677,000. last yea with hogs valued at $7,421,000. Lancaster Count ranked second in poultry production other thai broiler and layer production and third in sheet production in the state. Corn and grain registered the highest acreage user in Lancaster County from 1971-9173 with an average yield of 84 bushels per acre. Hay followed in second place with an average q 16.8 tons per acre. The total value of all crops in 197 was $74,736,360. approximately $26,000,000. ove the 1971 figure. Lancaster Farming, 15.1974— (Continued from Page 1| Sign Up Now for Wheat and Feed Grain Program Lancaster Co. Leads Pa. Agriculture 25