4 a . tt ° 1 ° ivnroity Soria 1 ■ *‘®® j_ a Stetc x}n \h,oZ *«*• ?ai 1 V01.20N0.45 Persistent rain eliminated many of the events at the Ephrata and West Lampeter Fairs this past week, but at the Farm Show Complex, where this scene was taken, the Pennsylvania Grant Heilman leaving area By Peggy Frailey Grant Heilman, one of the country’s foremost agricultural photographers and a fighter for preser vation of farmland, is going to leave Lancaster County and move to Colorado, where he and his wife, noted artist Barbara Whipple, will build a new home on a slope of the Rocky Mountains. The reason simply put, Heilman no longer wants to live in what he terms the “creeping metropolism” that has invaded Lancaster County. He and his wife will open a combined studio in the small town of Buena Vista - population about 2500 and take their chances with the wide open spaces that have become so rare in the east. Meanwhile Heilman will continue to run the photography studio he owns on West Lincoln Avenue, still doing the bulk of his own photographic work from his new western home, and making periodic trips back to Lititz. The actual operation of the plant will be done by his present staff there. Although a lot has been done in recent years to try to In This Issue FARM CALENDAR 10 Markets 2-6 Sale Register 76 Farm Almanac 8 Classified Ads 26 Editorials 10 Homestead Notes 42 Home on the Range 45 Jr. Cooking Edition 46 Country Comer 42 All-American went on until rising waters forced the closing of the show on Thursday night Water was knee deep here and threatening the barns. By 3:00 a.m. Friday it was entering preserve Lancaster County, it is not enough and it came too late, Heilman maintains. “The dye is cast in Lan caster County,” he said. “We’ll take the alternative.” “Lancaster County is not facing up to what are becoming uninteresting living conditions,” the photographer-naturalist said during an interview this week. “A great deal has been done here, but not enough to keep it from being un comfortable (living con ditions) and since we have the option to move, we are going to.” “I suppose I will be criticised by some for saying this about Lancaster County, but it’s how I feel,” Heilman said. For a number of years now, Heilman has been a strong advocate of preser vation, and has used his voice to try- to arouse public interest m environmental situations. He chose this route deliberately, he ex plained, believing he could be of more use as a “thorn in the side” rather than sitting on boards and commissions. His voice has been heard I Continued on Page 511 Crop Report 67 Sale Reports 83 Chester DHIA 48 YorkDHIA 50 OleyPair 68 New Holland Fair 73 All American 20-21 Lampeter Fair 16 EphrataFair 19 Serving The Central and Southeastern Pennsylvania Areas Lancaster Farming, Saturday. Sept. 27.1975 Renowned naturalist photographer, Grant Heilman, whose pictures appear far and wide on and in agricultural publications, plans to move to Colorado next June because of the urbanization which is taking place in Lancaster County. He’s shown above taking a close-up of a cocoon on a pine tree behind his studio in Lititz. the barns and cattle were taken away about 500 head were tied on the State Hospital Grounds. By 7:30 all of the animals except for one bull Had been moved out There was about 10 iltitx K*cord Kxprcii Pboto J inches of water in the large'arena and about IVz feet in the barns. Milk trucks had trouble getting in to pick up the milk from as many as 700 milking animals. Class I milk price to $ll By Dieter Krieg WITMER “It looks like we’ll have an (ap proximately) $ll.OO Class I milk price by the end of the year,” said Boyd Gartley, director of member and public relations for Inter- State Milk Producers Cooperative. Speaking here at the annual dinner meeting for District 6, Gartley reminded the dairymen that “we must be cautious about the price going up too fast because of consumer resistance.” Someone near the head table responded with a loud and clear “right on.” Noting that advertising is paying off, Gartley told the Youth pursues farming career By Melissa Piper PENN MANOR “Farmers have made this country what it is today and I’d like to be a part of that tradition.” Although these words might have been spoken by a long time far mer, they actually came from a young man who is just beginning his career in the field of agricultural production. Ron Hunt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Hunt, Miller sville, has already been active in agriculture for three years although he is presently a senior at Penn Manor High School. Being an FFA member since his freshman year, the young man has taken projects in $3.00 Per Year capacity crowd that Order 4 has recorded the highest increase of Class I sales ci any Order in the country. He also added that the pas) fiscal year went down a: “the best financial year ii the history in th« cooperative.” Commentini briefly on advertising, th« Inter-State official observe) that “the in thing” nowaday is the “fresh and natural, which is what milk is al about. Giving Inter-Stat Cooperative members reason to pat themselves c the back, Gartley said th? their cooperative is “th most efficient c [Continued on Rase 241 veal calves, and market a' veil as breeding swine. Ron has taken his FF/ work seriously not onh trying his best at doin; successful projects but als in his activities. The Pen; Manor Youth has been . member of the State poultr judging team that compete in Kansas City, a member c the award winning meat judging teams and also o the State dairy judging tear that entered competition a the Eastern States Expo i Springfield, Mass. Ron has been on th parliamentary procedur team and has received th Star Greenhand and Sta Chapter Farmer award: [Continued on Pace 18]