Md. Extension Says Rail Corn Rates Up 40% The recent short-lived trans portation shutdown caused by striking railroad signalmen added only insult to injury for agricultural processors and other freight shippers. For as long as most of them can remember, shippers of grain and similar bulk commo dities have been complaining about the poor condition of railroad boxcars, unnecessary .demurrage, and the undepend ability of rail freight shipping schedules. The advent of “Big John” hopper cars about five years ago held big promise for alle viating some of these com plaints. But their limited num ber and lack of adequate rail road sidings and loading equip ment at many rural points to OIL BASE HOUSE PAINT WHITE LATEX HOUSE PAINT WHITE FARM & RANCH RED FARM & RANCH WHITE CREOSOTE BASE PRIMED HiSULTIE SIDING, IN S'. Ft ORNAMENTAL IRON. 4' RAIL “LIQUID NAILS” PANR ADHESIVE PREFINISHED LAUAN PANELING V.I.P. MEDIUM- Big 4' x 8' Paneb handle the mammoth cars has made ' their appearance little more than a “flash in the pan.” Despite an appearance of doing little to improve service and equipment, U.S. railroads have gained permission from the Interstate Commerce Com mission for a series of five ex parte freight rate increases which have raised the actual cost of shipping corn from the Midwest to Eastern Maryland by 40 per cent since 1967. Railroad backers might argue that the cumulative total of these one-sided increases comes to only 32 per cent. But, like the compounding effect of .in stallment loan interest, actual increase approximates the 40 per cent figure, according to John L. Crothers Jr, Exten- ICASHWA v ' |ffH: iSSMfeco* £Nr Look For This Sign it p PURE RED OXIDE IN OIL BASE 3 Miles East on Route 340 2275 Old Philadelphia Pike LANCASTER, PA. WELCOME I FIRST QUALITY PAINTS SPECIALLY FORMULATED TO OUR EXACTING REQUIREMENTS ASSURE YOU THE BEST POSSIBLE PAINT AT LOW, LOW CASHWAY PRICES ... IT'S GUARANTEED! Vinyl Latex Wall Paint *3” Quart $1.39 $ 4 ,5 .„ SCJO 3 gal. s>3° gal. $ 4".„ THINKERS PAINT THINNER rURPEX TURPENTINE .. - $2-69 gal. SAW LINSEED OIL $2.95 jp*r. ALUM-COATING *18” »3” Tibe 79c *2” sion grain marketing and transportation specialist at the University of Maryland. Crothers pointed out in his weekly Maryland Grain Mar ket letter for May 7 that, from July 1964 to August 1967, the cost for shipping a ton of corn 695 miles from Toledo, Ohio, to Snow Hill, Md., was $7.30 per ton. Now the cost is $10.20 per ton. But rail service and gen eral equipment condition have deteriorated during the same time interval, he charged in a recent interview. On top of that, Crothers pointed out, official railroad rate schedules have not been updated since 1964. Figuring the interim series of five ex parte rate increases as sur charges to "the official rate OUR OWN CASHWAY BRAND Latex Semi-Gloss Enamel 59 «>.i. FLOOR t TRIM ENAMEL *4' 95 »«i. $1.20 gal. $1.59 gal. .UMINUM ASBESTOS IOF COATING XWE CHOSE ALCOA PIGMENTS |A9S $445 IWSGH-fcGA.L. 10' GUTTER $2-** FIBERGLASS PANELS 26" x B‘, 4 oz. , . FOIL FACED FIBER6LAS INSULATION OWENS/CORNING 3%" x 15", 70 Sq. Ft. Roll .. HAUL YOUR OWN AND SAVE YOU SAVE EVERY DAY AT CASHWAY Quart $1.75 Quart $1.70 COMBINATION DOOR •Seal OPEN 7:30 to 5:80 SDL DAYS A WEEK Phone: 397-4829 Phone: 397-4820 T-anoaster Farming, Saturday, July 24,1971 schedule has made present-day railroad shipping rate sche dules so complex and jumbled that only experienced person nel can compute them properly. And the jumbled mess has brought to a virtual standstill any possibility of instant, com puterized freight shipping rate schedules, he observed. The latest ruling by the In terstate Commerce Commis sion confirms a full six per cent rate hike sought by the rail roads under Ex Parte 265 and a variable adjustment of the 15 per cent increase requested un der Ex Parte 267. An interim eight per cent of this latter increase was already in effect in the East, Crothers reported. The final ICC order under Ex Parte 267 permits the following IHLITE IMINUM II CUSEI I m INCUIEB ■HUM FOR 'INSTALLATION INT STOCK SIZES J. 95 Ea. *4-20 Since 1967 adjusted freight rate increases: —l4 per cent within the East; —l2 per cent within the West, between territories and on export-import traffic. —6 per cent within the South. These increases are subject to the following limitations: —'Fresh fruit and vegtable piggyback rates from the West Coast increase only 9 per cent when they include a provision for protective service; —Rate increases for fresh fruits, vegetables, nuts, pro cessed foods, beverages and wines are limited to a maxi mum increase of 22 cents per cwt. —Grain and grain products are limited to an 11 per cent increase. —Lumber and forest products are limited to a maximum in crease of 15 cents per cwt. These freight rate increases are likely to be passed on to consumers for commodities like fresh foods from the West Coast. Crothers observed. But the shipping rate increases for grain and grain products are likely to hit farmers hardest. He pointed out that the rate in creases since 1967 for srain ship ments from the Midwest to Eastern Maryland points amounts to 8 cents per bushel. American Dairy Assn. Meeting “The Annual Meeting of Dis trict 18 of American Dairy Asso ciation and Dairy Council which includes Adams, Berks, Chester, Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin, Lebanon, Lancaster and York Pennsylvania Counties will take place at the Lebanon Valley Ex position Grounds, Cornwall and Evergreen Road, Lebanon, at 12 noon Thursday, August 5, with a chicken barbeque. The barbeque tickets may be obtained from Earl Patches, Annville, Chairman; George Moyer, Myerstown; Jay Russell, Ober, Lititz; Homer Campbell, Elizabethville; John >C. Krone, Glen Rock; John Lasher, Lykens; Willard Gray, Downington; or Field Representative Ray Wdt wer, Lititz. Staff members of ADA & DC will place special emphasis at this year’s annual meeting in re porting on the newly formed United Dairy Industry Associa tion and District 18’s role in its future activities. Also at the meeting, elections will be held to select three mem bers to serve on the District 18 Board of Committemen. The terms of Jay Russell Ober, Lititz; John C. Krone, Glen Rock; and Willard Gray of Dowington, ex pire. The District 18 membership will also be brought up to date on the activities during the past year by ADA & DC Director, George Moyer. Door prizes will be awarded and the membership is urged to make their reserva tions as soon as possible. , NEED ALFALFA SEED Fanners who know plant top producing FD-100 alfalfa. Also P.A.G. 617 Alfalfa Compare Our Prices. WILLIS H. WEAVER 342 Chocolate Ave. Mt. Joy, Pa. 17552 Phone 653-1312 13