li'brG.ry See cl. of 107 Pictet, ElcLgi n r rn o Uiilv jrGity Pr.r I'-, 1 '-, P n -• I^^'o2 * 0 Vol. 19 No. 18 Lancaster Countians were welt represented at Thursday’s Pennfield Dairy Awards Banquet in York bounty. Seated, left to right, are Joel ! Habegger, Pennfield’s feed marketing Pennfieid Awards to High Milk Producers Avalong Dairy Restaurant, York Cbunty, was the site for the Third' Annual Pennfieid Dairy' Awards Banquet held Thursday. ' T he feed firm awards prizesto those of its customers who own or manage herds with out' 'standing records. Joel C. Habegger, Penn- field Feed marketing division manager, served as master of ceremonies and introduced special guests. Featured speaker of the day was Dr, Richard Peacock, Raymond Long feeds about 5000 head of steers every year on his Berks County cattle farm. He sold a successful trucking business in 1969 to buy the farm. manager, J. Harold Musser and Jesse Balmer. Standing are James Musser, Earl Stauffer, Clarence Stauffer, Ray Young, G. Hershey Hosteler and Ed Snavety. Peacock, director of technical * services for 'Pennfieid, discussed the company’s computerized total rations program. He pointed out how it has be nefited dairy farmers in the past year and projected future plans for CTR. Robert E. Gregory, dairy and livestock marketing manager, introduced this year’s winners and awarded each with an engraved ' tron’ , plaque or silver plate. The 1973 categories {Continued from Page 17) Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 23, 1974 Conservation Law Meeting Announced For Ephrata Farmers in the nor* theastem portion of Lan caster County will have an opportunity to learn more about Pennsylvania’s Clean Streams Law and its effect on agriculture at an evening meeting set for Monday, April 1. The meeting is being sponsored jointly by the Cocalico Watershed Association and the Lan caster County Conservation District. It will be held at Ephrata High School and will start at 7:30 p.m. Ray Long’s Glad He Switched . . . From Trucks to Cattle In 1969, Ray Long sold a thriving trucking business for enough money to do nothing for the rest of his life. Long isn’t a man who can do nothing, though, so he bought a beef farm in Berks County. “I was glad I did, too, until last Sep tember,” the cattleman told Lancaster Farming this, week in the kitchen of his Bechtelsville RDI farmhouse. “This business was good to me up until the market went bad. I don’t see it getting any better for another six months.” “The people who stick it out, though, will be okay in the long run,” Long said. He has a big investment in the cattle business and he does plan to stick it out. Besides his 300 acres in Bechtelsville, Long has another farm in the Hamburg area and a 750-acre spread in southcentral Virginia with a cow calf operation. Last year the former trucker ran some 5000 steers through his feedlots. “I like to feed heavy steers. I buy them when they’re at 900 to 1000 pounds and finish them to a choice 1200 to, 1250 pounds. Some, like the angus, go out a little lighter, but I usually get more for those anyway.” “It costs me about 50-cents for every pound those animals gain. I sold a load yesterday for 43.5-cents a pound. Nobody can keep on doing that for too long.” Long feels that the cattle market would be a lot better off Feedmen Look At Fuel and Finance “The government has turned minor scarcities into major shortages,” H. Lou Moore told a Pennsylvania feed industries conference in Harrisburg on Wednesday. The conference was a cooperative effort by PennAg Industries Association and Penn State. Moore is a professor of agricultural economics at Penn State and a vocal critic of government price con trols. “Washington started price controls because of pressure from consumers, but that hasn’t helped our mflatio' problem one bit.” “They’ve also increased social security payments, minimum wages and social welfare programs. Last year they spent $3 billion on the food stamp program. That had more of an effect on inflation that ’ the Russian wheat-deal that, got so much publicity. I think the government has given up on the inflation fight. Everybody talks abput in flation but nobody wants to do anything about it.” In This Issue FARM CALENDAR 10 Markets 2-4 Sale Register 50 Fanners Almanac 6 Classified Ads 31 Editorials 10 Homestead Notes 34 Home' on the Range 38 Organic Living 18 Lancaster Co. DHIA Correction 22 Youth Conservation Program 43 Thoughts in Passing 44 Lebanon Co. DHIA 12 Moore said 1973 was a good year for farmers, with net incomes up some 32 percent, but he doesn’t expect 1974 to be as good. Moore feels agriculture will solve its fuel and fertilizer problems this year'and predicts an even bigger export market this year for American crops. FARM TRENDS Farm Financial Outlook For 1974 Is Good Most farm operators are expected to close out 1974 .in very favorable financial condition as a result of continued high net farm incomes and relative ease in obtaining loan funds to finance capital purchases and production expenditures, according to the USDA Outlook and Situation Board. As of January 1,1974, total farm sector assets were valued at $459.8 billion, total debts at $81.7 billion, and farmers' and landlords’ equities at $378.1 billion. The debt-to-asset ratio on January 1,1974, was 17.8 percent -- down from 19.6 percent on January 1, 1973. Annual capital formation for the sector in 1974 is forecast at $12.3 billion, and uses of funds to pur chase real estate from owners leaving the sector are estimated at $12.7 billion. These two uses of funds are' expected to be financed by using $13.2 billion of current income from farm and norifarm sources and by increasing total by $ll.B billion. The balance sheet forecast for January 1, 1975, shows total assets reaching $521 billion, up 13 percent. Total debts are forecast at $94 billion, up 14 percent. The ratio of debt to assets will therefore rise modestly from 178 percent to 18.0 percent. today if the government hadn’t slapped price controls on beef last summer. “A lot of feeders held their cattle off the market, back then, waiting for higher prices. Some of them are still waiting. I heard about a feeder in the Midwest a few days ago who took a load of 1600-pound steers to the auction and sold them for 31-cents a pound. There are still a lof of heavy steers out there and the market’s going to be rough until they’re all sold.” Cattle are sold from the Long herd almost every business day. He sends many of his animals to a local butcher, and what -the butcher doesn’t buy go to local auctions. “I’ve always got cattle ready to sell. That way I can take'ad vantage of temporary swings in the market. During the truck strike, we moved 12 loads of steers out.” '“'One man works almost full-time in trucking Long’s cattle to market. He uses three big tractor-trailers for the work. Another full-time man helps with trucking, feeding and other chores, and a part-timer works evenings. Long’s wife, Mary, helps out whenever she’s needed. Labor is kept to a minimum by the no-roughage feeding program. “I buy com from farmers wherever I can get it,’ Long said, “and I mix it with supplement and feed it. The | Continued'on Page 16) “We grow 43 percent of the world’s com and 74 percent of the world’s soybeans on 12 percent of the world’s land,” Moore said. “We have the climate and the soil to continue to be the world’s largest exporter of agricultural products, [Continued on Page 9] •*»%*«*#*«*« # »***«*»***»%*»*«*«*»*v»*i # »*»*»*%i*i*i*i%*r*i*z* [Continued on Page 13] $2.00 Per Year by Dick Wanner