ma — PE re Se PAGE TWO THE POST, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1939 FARMERS THANKFUL FOR RISING PRICES AND ABUNDANT CROP His Victory In Contest With Nature Means Fatter Purses For Many Folks Smoke Over Pittsburgh, Coal Cars Creaking To The Coast Tell The Farmer That The Goose Hangs High By MASON GILPIN Associate Editor, “Pennsylvania Farmer” Banners of a thousand hues proclaimed the ending of another growing season as October painted Pennsylvania hills more gaudy than Joseph’s coat. And now November brings crisp nights. Cold blasts whistle and the quail shivers in corn shocks, while groundhogs sleep and crows hurry as past a grave- yard. Noon silhouettes of tree and barn have shortened with the briefer days. The jousts in corn fields have subsided. Apples, parchment-packed and wax-protected little worlds of cell and cider, are in storage. The backache of potato picking is eased. The farmer has finished a season’s work. What are the results of this annual contest with the ele- ments; this seasonal battle with the bugs; this perennial en- durance test of skill and mind and stamina? The life of the tiller of the soil is as arduous, his success as thrilling, and more important than that of ancient armored knight. For on the wisdom of his judgment, the extent of his knowledge and skill, and on the uncontrollable sun and rain, depend the food and clothing of a people. On these things also depend the com- fort of the farmer's family and the prosperity of the in- dustries which supply agricul- ture with its needs. Not only the farmer but all allied indus- tries rise and fall with his for- tunes. Now The Goose Hangs High When a pall of smoke hangs over Pittsburgh and Pittston, when mile- long trains of loaded hopper cars creak out of the coal fields, when autos of factory workers clog park- ing areas, Pennsylvania farmers know the goose hangs high. For then their millions of customers can each afford two eggs for breakfast, cream in their coffee, lard in their pie crust and roast beef for lunch. To get these things they bid up the price, and the man who has some- thing to sell prospers. The farmer has risked his capital and given his time to grow certain crops. And now those things he has produced are wanted in the market places. Many a game is won in the last few minutes of play and the market demand at the end of many a year means red or black ink for agriculture. This year it is black, MILK RISE DECEMBER 1 ONE MORE REASON WHY FARMERS GIVE THANKS The local farmer’s immediate future has been brightened more in anticipation of the better price he will receive for his milk after December 1. The income from milk effects the Pennsylvania farmer’s economic condition more than that from any other farm enterprise. A survey made recently on 79 dairy farms in four areas of the state showed that 35 per cent of the total cash income in 1938 was obtained from the sale of milk and cream. The average dairyman had approxi- mately $178 per cow invested in his busines. The gross cost of keeping a cow for one year was $157.06. Manual labor was estimated at 30 cents per hour. The average cost of produc- ing milk in the four areas studied was $1.89 per 100 pounds. But on individual farms the cost of production ranged from as little as $1.16 per hun- dred-weight to $3.40. The sum- mary of the cost and returns shows that the average return per cow was $157.85, leaving an average net profit of 79 cents per cow. tice of turning corn into milk, meat and wool it follows the most effective system of marketing. A NOW NOVEMBER BRINGS CRISP NIGHTS . . .THE year’s joust with nature. The fields lie silent as a split rail fence rule this autumn scene near Harvey’s Lake. FARMER'S SEASON ENDS Chill blasts whistle across the hardening earth. The tiller of the soil has finished another a graveyard. Peace and (take note, Postscripter) els, while the national average is | bushels this year was worth $19,- 27.9 bushels. [| 561,000 or 50% more than the 22,- This year’s 19,230,000-bushel 002,000 bushel crop last year. Spuds wheat crop was nearly a million | bring 25c¢ a bushel more than a bushels above the ten-year average | year ago, thanks to more “folding and is worth 2lc a bushel more | money” in pay envelopes of workers than last year. Safe in farm bins, | this autumn. it is a certified check for $15,000,- Apple pie for breakfast has long 000. Wheat in Pennsylvania yields! been a staple item on the Pennsyl- about 634 bushels more per acre|vania Dutchman’s menu, but now than the national average. Wheat |even the humble college professor, is often a side-line, raised to pro- | the timid banker and the distracted mote a desirable rotation and Bed lawyer can afford it, for the Penn- to bed hens. sylvania apple crop runs over 6,000,- 000 bushels. It is a way ahead of Hay For Horsepower > Oats was about the same and bar- | 2°Y ¢ropP 10 recent years and places | Pennsylvania fifth among all states ley twice the total yield of a year]. 5 in the total production of apples. oo ig ina hors gh Priced 15c¢ a bushel under last year, many griddles for careless cooks. | 1® crop is worth to growers 50% Pennsylvania is the second state in more 2s n they got 5 1932. in buckwheat production. Hay was less! coin of ‘the realm 363s rmging mn : i three and six-tenths million dol- than average in amount but $1.80 a | : ton more in value. The 2,687,- lars—and a few jugs of cider. 000 hay crop if cashed and turned! With cash to meet his current into armor plate would build a $27,- ‘needs and capital intact; with ade- 407,000 battleship, while last year a) ; l ] similar hay-built battleship would credit; with well-built barns full of cost the same and in addition pro- well-fed livestock; with a system of vide $170,000 worth of gilding for | soil management based on ten gen- quate equipment and a surplus of | for the rise in prices comes when ers have an abundance of things ell. n the beginning of 1933 farm prices scraped the bottom, and loud was the lament throughout the land. There were those who said a curse was on the people, but others la- bored on and watched farm prices begin a steady climb. They dou- bled in three years, outstripping other prices and reaching a peak when a lesser decline set in and of over 130 in the beginning of 1937, extended two and a half years to the summer of 1939, when it stop- ped and prices soared again. They continue on a satisfactory level. It Took 200 Years To Learn A bulge in prices does not make ~ Pennsylvania farmers rich, but as the old lady who drank 25 cups of coffee said, when asked if coffee kept her awake, “it helps”. A good corn crop does not make million- aires out of our farmers. nor would a failure bust them. With a na- tional average yield of 41 bushels per acre Pennsylvania is one of the most efficient corn producing states in the Union, and with the prac- big wheat crop does not leave our farmers. breathless with, astonish- ment. In a poor year they produce more wheat per acre than the spe- cialized wheat growing areas do in a good year. The same is true of many other crops and commodi- ties. Neither bumper crop nor dis- appointing yield disrupt the even tenor of the Keystone farmer's way, for he puts his eggs in many bas- kets through his habit of diversified farming which he and his fore-bear- ers have found good by 200 years of experience. This year's 55,191,000-bushel corn crop, while smaller than last year, is 5,000,000 bushels above the ten-year average. If sold from the farm it would bring 8c a bushel more than last year, but since it is sold to hens and hogs and cattle it brings to the farmer considerable more than the market price. This practice of ‘selling corn is a double- barreled defense against depression. The manure it makes produces more corn the following year. The aver- age yield of corn in Pennsylvania over a period of years is 41.5 bush- gun turrets. mutton. Pennsylvania is not so important a sheep territory as Aus- tralia, but two counties in this state produce a million pounds a year of the best wool grown in the world, without apologies or excep- Our hay, however, ! erations of” experience; with a buyer will go into horsepower, milk and |for all he can grow within trucking distance of his farms, and with gen- eral business conditions favorable, the Keystone farmer is not a candi- date for the poorhouse. He can eat his roast turkey and pumpkin pie with considerable satisfaction in be- | Pomona Grange, No. 44 | To Meet Saturday | Pomona Grange, No. 44, will meet |on Saturday at Mountain Grange, Carverton. Sessions will be called | at 10:30 and will be devoted to bus- { iness and reports of officers of va- rious granges. The afternoon ses- sion will be open to the public. Mrs. Ira Gross, lecturer of the | State Grange, will speak. There will be an interesting program. At | the evening session the Lackawanna | degree team will confer the fifth degree. Five-Legged Calf Born At Meshoppen A five-legged calf has been born on the farm of Albert Gilmore, Me- shoppen. The calf, which weighed 120 pounds, was normal, except for the extra leg, which was appended J the rear of the body. RENN'S CAFE — THURSDAY — FARMER DANCES — FRIDAY — FLOOR SHOW AND DANCING SATURDAY—DANCING ol Music by COMPARATIVE YIELDS AND PRICES IN STATE 3 10-year-average CROP 1939 (1928-1937) Corn 56,191,000 bu. 51,087,000 bu. Wheat 19,230,000 bu. 18,486,000 bu. Ooats 26,590,000 bu. 25,937,000 bu. Barley 3,245,000 bu. 1,468,000 bu. Buckwheat 1,725,000 bu. 2,620,000 bu. Hay 2,687,000 tons 3,004,000 tons ; Tobacco 35,270,000 lbs, 37,923,000 Ibs. | Potatoes 21,735,000 bu. 25,584,000 bu. Apples 6,000,000 bu. 4,137,000 bu. Peaches 2,618,000 bu. 1,678,000 bu. Pears 856,000 bu. 617,000 bu. Grapes 23,800 tons 23,020 tins ? Southerner Seeks Moving Pictures At ; Goss Coat Of Arms Trucksville Church | jal Mrs. Berkely Reed of 132 West| A three-reel moving picture, + Chestnut Street, Asheville, N. C., has asked The Post to help her in her search for a copy of the Goss| family coat of arms. Mrs. Reed also is interested in information about the LaBar and Kunkle fami- lies. She is a niece of Anna ‘E. Kunkle, whose history of the Kun- kle family was published in The Post last year. Doctor Bags Bobcat Dr. Malcolm J. Borthwick of Shavertown bagged a 45-pound bobcat, one of the largest shot in this region in recent years, while hunting near Forkston, on South Mountain last week, | MEN’S FURNISHINGS and HATS QUALITY 9 WEST MARKET STREET WILKES-BARRE “Mgona and her People”, will be shown at Trucksville Methodist Church tonight (Friday) at 7:30. The entertainment will be sponsored by the Junior and Senior divisions of the Women’s Missionary Society. There will be refreshments and good music. 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