VOL 26 No. 46 Upper Conestoga cleanup meetings to begin BY DICK ANGLESTEIN LANCASTER A series of meetings to inform officials and fanners in northeastern Lancaster County of the federal funds available to-clean-up the head waters of the Conestoga will be held beginning next week by the Lancaster Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service. A little tender loving care from mom'helps triplets get off to a good start at Carl and John Indiana County Fair features dairy show INDIANA Dairy cattle breeders and 4-H’ers gathered last week at the Indiana County Fair to exhibit their animals while show judge Patty McMurray, Washington, eyed class after class ot Guernseys, Brown Swiss, Jerseys, Ayrslures, Holsteins and Milking Shorthorns. The top Holstein of the day was an aged cow exhibited by Jody Nesbit, Marchand. The Grand Champion, Bra-Mar-ABC is sired Inside This Week’s... The Maryland State Fair wound up its activities on Labor Day with the Maryland State Holstein Show. Find it and more on pages..-CIS and D 6. Bob Weaver has an inventory of equipment that would turn any dealer green but with a small twist...o2. A victory once is great, but a victory twice is twice as nice for the Holstein at the Southeast 4-H District Dairy Show...DlO. , The first meeting, according to Ray Brubaker, of the ASCS Office, will be held Thursday evening for officials of the townships included in the cleanup area. _ '' . Supervisors and planning commission" members from the affected townships will be invited to the session -in the library meeting room of the Ephrata Junior High School at 7:30 p.r*- on Myer’s Walnut Run Farm in Lititz. by King, of the .ABC and out of ~a PenstatelnvanhoeStar. - ■ Gregory Edwards, Indiana, exhibited the Reserve Grand Champion Black and White, Ray- Anthony Apollo Annie. The in termediate calf is sired by Ray- Anthony Apollo Flash and out of Case-Ridge Joe Ann. , Clarksburg Guernsey breeder Ethel Coleman captured the Grand (Turn to Page Al 5) Lancaster Farming, Saturday , September 12,1981 Thursday, Sept. 17. . Townships involved include Brecknock, Caernarvon, Clay, Earl, East Cocalico. East Earl, Ephrata and West Cocalico. Part of Salisbury TownjUip is in the area, but no farmland is included. _ , in addition to an explanation of the federally funded proyect, plans also will be made'' for a series of public ’ to be beld in Oc Jody Nesbit, 16, at the halter of Bra-Mar- ABC Lori, the Grand Champion Holstein of the ' Indiana County Fair Open Dairy Show is COLUMNS Editorials, A 10; Now is the time, A 10; Joyce Bupp’s column, C 7; Ida’s Notebook, C 8; Ladies, have you beard?, CIO; Farm Talk, DO. tober and November throughout the project area. “The public meetings will be held to inform farmers of the goals of the project and the benefits of participation,” Brubaker said. A film and slide program are planned to be Shown. The public meetings tentatively slatpdfor October and November will be scattered throughout the Trio triumphs over tremendous odds BY DONNA TOMMELLEO LITITZ “Congratulations, it’s a Jieifer...and a heifer....and another heifer?!’* Although they weren’t passing out cigars, Lititz brothers Carl and John Myer were two surprised but happy dairymen on Tuesday. Their 4-year-old Holstein, Star- Rock Sunshine Betty presented them with triplets, a' rare oc curence axnongdairy cattte.Bven rareris the-fhctthe progeny, were, all female. And the three new additions, sired by JQak 'HiU/Ranch Kingsman, beht the-odds a third time by surviving the nine month ordeal in the uterus. According to Penn State dairy science professor George Hargrove, the rate of abortions and still births with multiple off spring are much higher than with single births. ; Hargrove also pointed out that multiple births tend to appear in cycles. The Myers probablv won’t flanked by show judge Patty McMurray, left, and Indiana County Dairy Princess Lori Kirkland. HOME AND YOUTH Homestead notes, C 2; Home on the Range, C 6; Kid’s Komer, Cl 4; 4-H news, Cl 3; FFA, Cl 7; Solanco Fair previews, C 29; Farm Women news, CSS. $7.50 Per YeaT project area to minimi» tran sportation problems for burners desiring to attend. TO.date, only five fanners have' signed up at the ASCS Office and filed requestsfor assistance the program officially ban died two months ago. None of the five requests have been reviewed for approval yet (TurntoP«B*A34) disagree since twins woe bom bat month at their-Walnut Run Farm. However, cows that freshen with twins or triplets run a higher risk of post-partum problems such as retained placentas, silent heats or longer interval antU first heat Will the Betty cow repeat her performance? Nobody knows, for sure, but Hargrove explained that certain individuals have a higher for thettait " £!arly Tuesday afternoon the lag black Holstein had the first calf and within two hours all three -heifers jamyed. Myer? were oh hand since the third calf needed some assistance to start breathing. By the evening .milking, mother and babies were doing fine. And then it was bade to the business of dairying. Carl and John are the second generation Myer to operate the 500-acre dairy which includes a milking herd of about 130 Holsteins. . Their goal, explained Carl, is to (Turn to Page A 34) OAKY ' Milk Market Hews,- All; Allentown Dairy, B 6; Cows are what they eat, B 3; Allentown Goat Show, C2B; Mifflin Dairy Princess, C 9; Juniata DHIA, Dl5; Hun tingdon DHIA, Dl5; Mifflin DHIA, Dl9; Perry DHIA, D 22.