TRY A CLASSIFIED AD LEVEL FLO SILAGE SPREADER IN TWO MODELS TO FIT 10 TO 30 FT. SILO, 9” Steel or Vinyl Fill Pipe installed on any type Silo. - Concrete Stave Silos - Silo Unloaders - Belt and Auger feeders - Liquid Manure Systems - Barn Cleaners STOLTZFUS SILO EQUIPMENT RDI, Box 77 Kinzer, Pa. 17535 Phone 717-768-3873 BANVEL. Herbicide Post-emergence application gets to the root of your tough broadleaf weed problem Banvel from Velsicol controls hard-to-kill broadleafs ... smartweed, pigweed, morning glory, thistle, many others. For one simple reason. Banvel translocates. P. L ROHRER & BRO., INC. SMOKETOWN, PA. SALES & SERVICES Absorbed by leaves, stems, roots, Banvel moves with plant fluids from leaf tip to root tip. Destroys as it goes. So, no regrowth. Ask us for application details about Banvel, today. DISTRIBUTED BY Farmers Not on Easy Street, Maryland News stories that pit the far mer and the consumer in op posing roles are misleading, and yet they continue in the wake of the April meat boycott, according to Dr. Robert E. Wagner, director of the Cooperative Extension Service at the University of Maryland in College Park. In a recent release to one of the leading newspapers in Washington, D.C., a nationally syndicated columnist wrote of the problems facing American farmers The writer pointed out that “the typical American stares at the latest horrible figures on the upsurge of food prices and cost of living and angrily envisions the U. S. far mer sitting on his porch, wat ching the spring planting season arrive and rocking his way to easy street.” This is a misleading picture of both consumers and farmers, says Wagner. Equally misleading is the statement that the farmer is getting the “lion’s share” of the market basket. Last year, according to the writer’s figures, a farmer received $521 of the $1,311 retail PH. 717-397-3539 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 26,1973 Extensionist Says price ot the market basket purchased by the typical American family. This figure applied only to farm-originated food items. In pointing out what does happen to the money spent on farm-originated food, Wagner used a $lO market basket as an example. “If you could purchase a market basket of farm originated food items for $lO, you would be paying $5.55 for processing, packaging, tran sporting and marketing. “Out of his balance of $4.45, the farmer pays $3.36 for production costs, which include the cost of seed, fertilizer, pesticides, machinery gas, oil, repairs, hired labor, electricity, insurance, etc. “Of the $lO for the original purchase, a farmer receives $1.09 for his labor, management and executive abilities, and his in vestment. This, in effect, is his gross salary; it is what he has left for taxes, medical expense, food, clothing, education, etc.” Average farm income in the U.S. is 17.1 percent less than the income of a nonfarm family. Wagner pointed out that this means an average family of four people on the farm is expected to face the same price increases with an income that is $2,632 below the income of a nonfarm family. “I’m not saying that the farmer is down and out financially though some are-not that he Aerial ladder Equipped FARM PAINTING We Spray it on and Brush It In! FOR FREE ESTIMATES CALL COLLECT 717-393-6530 OR WRITE HENRY K. FISHER 2322 Old Phila. Pike Lancaster, Pa. 17602 wants sympathy,” Wagner stated. “What I am saying is that the American farmer has done a job for you and me unequaled anywhere in the world. • “The farmer has met the demands exerted by rising costs, population growth and expanding urban development crowding m on farmland, by producing ever increasing amounts of food on the same acreage. “Where else in our economic system, declared the Maryland Extension administrator, can we find such a high order of ef ficiency? It is a great American success story. It is fantastic that the farmer should require so little for his share, especially when his contribution to the whole food chain is so critical.” Beef Club Sets New Meeting Time The New Holland 4-H Baby Beef Club met Monday night at the Robert Martin farm. New Holland RDI. After the regular business meeting was held, movies on farming from New Holland Machine Company were shown. The next meeting will be at 8 p.m. (new time) June 18 at the Mark Yoder farm, Elverson RDI. Bill Hughes News Reporter 17
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers