Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, March 30, 1974, Image 15

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    Who Will
IContinutd from Pat* 1)
farms may become a more
dominant factor in good
production, just as they have
come to dominate good
processing and marketing.
And in any case, farms will
continue to get bigger.
EPTAM
For WEEDS On ALFALFA ond POTATOES
AVAILABLE IN GRANULES OR LIQUIDS
APPLICATOR AVAILABLE TO APPLY BOTH TYPES
SUTAN + ATRAZINE - LASSO FUROAN
CONTACT
JONAS S. EBERSOLE
Vh MILES NORTH OF BIRD-IN-HAND ON STUMPTOWN ROAD
HIGH PRESSURE
WASHING
OF POULTRY HOUSES AND VEAL PENS
BARRY L. HERR
1744 Pioneer Road, Lancaster, Pa
Phone 717-464-2044
Formerly operated by Maynard L Beitze!
FOR A HEAP BIG
PLANT MUNCY-CH
HYBRID SEED COR
Good Supplies Available from Muncy-Chi
Dealers or Direct from Muncy
ASK ANY OF THESE NATIONAL
AND STATE CHAMPIONS
*250~ RICH HARRISON’ - National 1 acre champion,
CASH Lyndonville, N.Y. - Muncy-Chief 5X662
*lOO •0° WILLIAM DIXON - Pennsylvania State 1 acre
CASH champion • Muncy Chief SXSSO
*loo°° MIKE MORRIS - Kentucky State 1 acre champion •
CASH Muncy Chief 5X662
si aa oo BARRY ROBERTSON - Virginia State 1 acre champion
*loo* - Muncy Chief SXB7B
CASH
BARRY LONG - North Carolina National 5 acre,
>2so*°° Champion - Muncy Chief 5X777
CERT.
c _ __ M JOHN PAXTON - Pennsylvania State 5 acre -
*loo* Champion - Muncy Chief 5X662
CERT.
Dealerships available Sell now for this Sprint Start
early lor Fall 1974 and Sprint 1975
• GENTLEMEN
•
• Pleaae santl information an the fallowing
2 □ Please serKl catalog
• J Retail Prices
JVVholesale price list lam a Dealer
._ . ■ □I am interested in l»ein« a Muncy Chief Dealer if area it open
■ CHIIr Ot am interested in showmy yaur film Tha Pr**f Is In lha
1 nrro rnnfnci • Date wanted Estimate number af people
» vJ'-re CPmeST ■ Where l* be shown
5 acre contest * • Ijm interested mj*»mnels74 Muncy Chief
• □ 1 acre contest UJ 5 acre contest
FOR TROPHIES, CERTIFICATES AND CASH AWARDS : go-,*-- ,
' • LJ Ganarat farmer Li Machinery Dealer
„ — _ • Q Corn Grower O Fertiliser Dealer
MUNCY~CHIEf -Ear Ho
HYBRIDS I
MUNCY. PENNSYLVANIA 17756 I *'
Ph 717—546-5911 • 55
SPECIAL 10% DISCOUNT ON SEED CORN -5% other
seeds to Young Farmers or Schools, FFA - 4-H Clubs or
other Farm Groups
“Continuation of the trend
toward larger and fewer
farms can be expected as
successful fanners expand
their onerations. Increased
control of agriculture by the
food marketing and farm
supply industries and,
perhaps to a lesser extent, by
other nonfarm inverters can
also be expected,” Guither
IN 1974
The New Muncy Chief Film - “The Proof Is In the
Harvest” in color and sound is now available to
schools, Young Farmer Associations. State or Local,
and other groups for viewing Film length is about 15
or 20 minutes. No charge.
Just ask for it and give date
concluded.
Leonard Kyle, a Michigan
State University economist,
agreed with Guither that
farm operations will be
bigger. Kyle, in fact,' ap
peared to be an outspoken
supporter of a corporate
farming system for the U.S.
“Many farmers still don’t
take the possibility of a
corporate agriculture
seriously because they don’t
believe it can happen,” Kyle
said. “Twenty years ago,
almost no one believed it
could happen. But today, the
corporations themselves,
and growing numbers of
integrated or displaced
farmers know that cor
porations can succeed in
various parts of both field
crop and livestock
production.”
Some corporations now
farm huge acreages of
specialty crops, manage
great ranch spreads, and
feed hundreds of thousands
of cattle, Kyle said. Almost
all broilers and many
turkeys and eggs are
produced by farmer-growers
who are under contract to
vertically integrated firms.
Efficient use of capital,
technical information and
management by cor
porations all tend to favor a
system where farming could
eventually be controlled by
SEND COUPON FOR FREE CATALOG
AND AWARD BOOK.
• TO MUNCY CHIEF HYBRIDS
• MUNCY PA.
DATE
Tattf Xcrt* Farmed —. Acres to Corn
210
Bu-a
203
Bu-a
195
Bu-a
Bu-A
187
Bu-A
180
Bu-A
Ph»n«
County _____ State _
fewer than 500 corporations
in the U.S. “Those farmers
miss the point who laugh at
certain operating errors
made by corporate far
mers,” Kyle said. “For
example, while the errors
made by Penn Central ap
pear to have been tremen
dous, that huge' railroad
system still exists. As
another example, IT&T grew
so fast and so large, not
because of any exceptional
operating" efficiency, but
rather, because it had a
delibrate and successful
strategy of growth via
acquisition and merger.”
The capacity of the giant
corporation to grow and
grow, despite the lack of any
real competitive edge over
individual farmers in a
traditional accounting sense,
is the crucial difference
between the corporate and
the individual competitor,
Kyle told the group.
Wallace Barr, of Ohio
State University, discussed
two different types of
agricultural system
dispersed open market and
the government controlled.
The basic features of a
dispersed system, Barr said,
would be modest size,
freedom of the operator to
make decisions and the
existence of an open market.
“Central to the system is the
freedom of the operating
farmer to make
management decisions,”
Barr said.
This system would con
form to what people
traditionally think of when
they think about farming,
and it is a system which
would serve a nation of
farmer-citizens very well.
However, in our society,
where the number of far
mers keeps dwindling
steadily, some steps would
have to be taken to assure
the success of a dispersed
system. Two of the strongest
steps proposed by Barr
would be to prohibit
agribusiness corporations
from engaging in
agricultural production, and
putting strict limits on
amount and terms of land
ownership by nonfanners.
Barr would not exclude
incorporated family farms
from the system, but would
eliminate the conglomerate
A MILKMOVER
SYSTEM Ills you out of
tht bun sooner-with more money
irt your pocket! It saves your lugimt
heavy pails of milk from barn to cooler
• HAS MORE MILK CAPACITY
• PERMITS FASTER MILKING
• ELIMINATES EXTRA HELP'
• PROTECTS MILK QUALITY
• IS 100'/. SELF CLEANING
• HAS ELECTRIC CONTROLS
• FITS INTO ALL RARNS
• EASILY INSTALLED
Available thru your
local dairy equipment
dealer or call the fac
tory collect to arrange
for a free demonstration
on your farm.
Manufactured by
□#ouo
m INDUSTRIES INC
UOHIMSON
P.0.80X 283,
ELKTON, MD. 21921
Phone 301-398-3451
Lancaster Farming, Saturday. Mar. 30.1974
or contractually Integrated
operation that has farming
as one of its activities.
“In a dispersed system,
larger numbers of individual
fanners must be able to
make management
decisions and not have them
taken over by land owners,
creditors, input suppliers, or
purchasers of raw com
modities,” Barr said.
While a government
controlled agriculture would
seem distasteful to most
farmers, Barr commented,
there is already a degree of
government control. The
recent experiment with price
-controls on beef was one
example he noted.
Donald D. Knutson, head
of the USDA’s Farmer’s
Cooperative Service,
discussed the possibility of
developing a cooperative
system of agriculture in the
country. He said it would
involve fewer and larger
units than in the present
system of voluntary fanner
cooperatives. To maintain
control, all farmers would
belong to tightly organized
cooperatives that would
handle most procurement of
supplies and all marketing of
agricultural products. Land
ownership would generally
remain with the individual
cooperative members.
Happy Retirement!
But don't depend upon social security
payments for that. To do a few of the
things that may be dear to your heart like
travel or helping your children takes
more than a monthly check from Uncle
Sam.
That's why it's so important to save
something while the going is good.
Today, there is no better place to save for
the future than our Association. Why
postpone security?
Now Poyiig up to 714% Interest on
SAVING CERTIFICATES
6% $l,OOO min. for 1 year
6 Va% 5,000 min. for 2Vi years
7Va% 10,000 min. for 4 years
interest penalty is required for early withdrawal
Interest is paid from day of deposit today of
withdrawal... payable quarterly.
SAVINGS ARE INSURED UP TO $20,000
FIRST FEDERAL
Savings and Joan
' ASSOCIATION OS LANCASTER
Mam Office
25 North Duke St
Phone 393-0601
Mft Park City Branch
Sears Mall
PH.299-3745
*s|l|l Lititz Branch
69 E. Mam St
Ph: 626-0251
Under the system,
marketing decisions by the
cooperative would place
direct restrictions on
producers' production and
marketing decisions. But
farmers would control the
cooperatives and they would
approve restrictive decisions
on themselves. The farmer
would be preserved as a
capitalist, but he would have
to see that the cooperative
operated in his best interest.
Knutson said individual
farmers and ranchers in this
system would face more
restrictions than in the open
market, but less restrictions
than in the corporate
system.
Harold Guither then ad
dressed the group on the
subject of a combination
system. Here, Guither said,
independent farm producers
would have freedom to make
management decisions, but
cooperatives and cor
porations would be assured
of continuied operation
Government would support
an active role for each.
A special government
body would monitor the
changing structure and
recommend actions to
maintain the combination
system of agriculture, so nc
single system would be
allowed to dominate.
New Holland Branch
100 E Mam St
Ph 354-4427
15