Tobacco Crop Smallest In 33 Years Pennsylvania’s 1068 tobacco production is forecast at 36 mil lion pounds, the lightest crop in 3,'< years. Production from this season’s 20,000 acres is expected to be 7 percent smaller than last year and more than a fourth be low average. Yield prospects are 1,800 pounds per acre, 50 pounds less than a year ago and 25 pounds less than the 1982-66 average. Harvest of this year’s crop, MOST ADVANCED HYBRIDS IN CORN-GROWING HISTORY! OR SILAGE Contact Your Nearest Hoffman Seed Man A. H. HOFFMAN SEEDS, INC. Landisville (Lancaster County), Pa. c Hoffman C/ FARM SEEDS ALFALFA • CLOVER • PASTURE OATS • FUNK’S G-HYBRIDS S, H. Hiestand & Company Harold H. Good Grubb Supply Company Stevens Feed Mill, Inc. , Elizabethto 1 —■ 111 l A&I i MVV f <■■ * s. > *. * over by October 1, is slightly the small late tobacco plants. Low humidity, plenty of sun- curing process is well advanced later than a year ago but about Nearly all plants were harvest- shme and adequate air move- for O ctober L Very little of the normal. Beneficial rains oc- ed, despite earlier fears that late crop was damaged by hail, and curred the second week of Sep- fields would not be worth cut- mellt dunn = September created quality and color appear to be tember and promoted growth on ting. ideal curing conditions, and the excellent. Nixon Aid Proposes "Foreign Food Corps" In Address To NEPPCO Dr. Robert R. Spitzer, a prom- country a n administration inently mentioned candidate for which cares about and will fight the post of Agriculture Secre- for the American farmer” tary in a Nixon cabinet, last Noting that he has become week proposed a “Foreign Food personally involved as the chair- Corps” which would be dedicat- man °t Republican presidential ed to increasing the agncultur- candidate Richard Nixon’s Na al efficiency of farmers over- tional Aguculture and: Food seas Committee, Spitzer alluded to Speaking before a large au- indications he might succeed dience at the 31st exposition of Freeman in the event of a Re tne Northeastern Poultry Pro- publican victory at the polls ducers Council m the Farm month. Show Building, Spitzer blasted “I have no personal ambi- Agnculture Secretary Orville tions,” the Wisconsin corpora- Freeman as “unqualified for his tion president said. “I don’t job” and called on American know what would happen if I farmers to “get involved in poll- were asked to serve in some tics” and to help “bring this capacity, but I know I am going Salunga m* mi y-’tQ'c&l oif' hf harvested acres.. wN.'W -A* - LQ PEP FEEps is supporting the U.S. Public Health ' Service Injury Control Program... for pedestrian visibility SEE US ABOUT HOW YOU CAN GET YOUR SRFEII Mm FREE! with the purchase FULQPEP of selected feeds I Stevens and Leola . Terre Hill n k m>. Lancaster Farming, Saturday. October 10.19C8 igwlgfecßß, U 1960 to do all I can to aid the agri cultural industry in this coun try ” The Foreign Food Corps which Spitzer proposed ‘‘would be a far better answer to the problems of other countries than the giveaway programs we have involved ourselves in over the last several years,” he said. The son of a Wisconsin dairy farmer, Spitzer said he is well acquainted with the plight of the farmer in this country to day. ‘‘Agriculture is our nation’s largest single industry, with a value in excess of $270 billion,” he said. “But the fact that only six percent of our population is today actively involved in some kind of farming has greatly re duced consideration for the % ; “ >• fft V