Pioneer Pres. Predicts 6.1 Bil. Bu. Corn Crop An agricultural seed company official last week predicted the 1974 corn crop in the U.S. will not exceed 6.1 billion bushels, causing food costa to remain at their present levels or perhaps increase. R. Wayne Skidmore, president of Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc., told the New York Society of Security Analysts that ad verse spring weather can be blamed for cutting earlier estimates of both acreage and per acre yield. The head of the lowa-based seed firm said preliminary results of his own company’s survey of com growers shows they were able to boost acreage only 9 per cent instead of 10 per cent as estimated in March by the U. S. Depart ment of Agriculture. “Our agronomists Order Now For Fall Sowing WL3OS & WL3II THE HIGHEST TIEIDING ALFALFA IH PA. Save with HEIST'S SEEDS HEIST SEED COMPANY Finest Quality Seeds (Since 1925) Mount Joy, Pa. Ph. 653-4121 F OT Tox-o-Wix GRAIN DRYER WILL DRY CORN FOR PENNIES PER BUSHEL. isSW TOX-0-WIK S CONTINUOUS RECIRCULATING GRAIN DRYERS WORLDS LARGEST SELLING RECIRCULATING BATCH GRAIN DRYERS BECAUSE - Price is Lower MODELS AVAILABLE - Costs Less to operate 270 - 250 BUS - Easier to operate 370 350 BUS - Dries more efficiently 570 - 500 BUS - Will dry 50 per cent moisture down to 12-15 per cent moisture A. C. HBISBY RDI, Jonestown, Pa. 17038 Phone 717-865-4526 LOCATED Vz MILE SOUTH OF FREDERICKSBURG OFF RT. 343 ---------------------------- estimate that due to flooding, reduced plant population, late planting and lower fertilizer rates, an average com yield of 88 to 90 bushels can be expected. This means a U. S. crop of 6.0 to 6.1 billion bushels,” Skidmore said. The U.S.D.A. projected yields of 97 bushels per acre before the planting season. Using its March 1 survey of acreage intentions, the department forecast a U.S. corn crop of 6.7 billion bushels. On June 24, it reduced its estimate by 300 million bushel. Farmers last year produced only 5.6 billion bushels of com. As a result, carryover on October 1 of this year is expected to be about 450 million bushels or about one month’s reserve. The much larger crop Your Best Investment ON DISPLAY AT Farm Equipment Inc. predicted earlier would have reduced high feed costs currently plaguing livestock and poultry growers. This, in turn, could have resulted in somewhat lower consumer prices for meat, milk and eggs. The big crop would also have permitted high levels of corn exports to continue, aiding the U.S. balance of payments. The smaller crop prospects this year almost certainly call for another year of all-out production, Skidmore said. He forsees adequate supplies of seed for 1975 planting. •7.37 Price N.Y.-NJ. A uniform farm price of $7.37 per hundredweight (46.5 quarts) for June milk deliveries to pool handles under the New York - New Jersey marketing orders was announced today by Thomas A. Wilson, market administrator. The uniform price was $8.03 in May 1974 and $6.27 in June 1973. The butterfat differential was established at $.070 for each tenth of a pound of fat for June milk testing above or below 3.5 percent. This column will discuss the impeachment question before the House of Representatives. However, it will not presume to make any judgment whatever about the case either for or against the President. As I have said on so many other occasions, that judgment can only be made once the Judiciary Committee has presented all the evidence and has made its recom mendations based upon that evidence. Then, and only then, can each Congressman Farm Milk for June in Market Wilson stated that receipts from purchases reached 899,748,787 pounds, an in crease of 20,592,522 pounds, 2.3 percent from May 1973. Class I receipts of producer milk totaled 367,402,946 pounds in June, decreasing by 28,941,222 from June 1973. Handlers paid $10.13 per hundredweight for fluid milk product receipts. This ac counted for 40.8 percent of the pool. It was also noted by Wilson that bulk tank unit receipts rose to 850,662,998 pounds, increasing from 808,788,603 pounds in June 1973. This jump altered their proportion of the pool receipts from 92.0 percent in 1973 to 94.5 percent this year. The volume of tank milk used as Class II and subject to the transportation credit amounts to $515,394.49. This cost covered 515,394,449 pounds, 60.6 percent of tank receipts. I Pool producers continued ■ to decline in number from I 22,280 to 21,204, while ■ average daily deliveries per ■ producer rose 99 pounds ■ reaching 1,414. I ■ The market administrator I said that the handlers’ I reports used to compute the I pool decreased to 116 from I 134. The pool bulk tank units I fell to 214, decreasing by 6 I from June 1973. I For May deliveries the I gross value to farmers I totaled $66,451,084.91. Wilson | explained that this included | differentials required to be | paid to dairy fanners but not '| voluntary premiums or I deduction authorized by the I farmer. I All prices quoted are for I milk of 3.5 percent butterfat I received within the 201-210 ■ mile zone from New York I City ■ r COMPLETE FARM PAINTING SPRAY-ON AND BRUSH-IN METHODS For FREE Estimates Write DANIEL $. ESN (G. RALPH MILLER) 80X351.RD1, RONKS.PA. 17572 weigh the facts, search his conscience and make a fair determination of how he should vote. But, since fairness is an all-important ingredient in something as serious as impeachment, I have grown increasingly concerned about the way the Judiciary Committee has been han dling the flow of information that will be so vital in making a final deter mination in the House. The leaking of selected material by members of the Committee was inexcusable. These men and women were given a solemn respon sibility when the House entrusted them with the impeachment investigation. While I sincerely believe that the chairman and the majority of the members of the Judiciary Committee find the leaks as ob jectionable as I do, the fact remains tnat a few members of that committee have degraded the investigation by selectively leaking in formation in an obvious attempt to undercut the President’s defense. But perhaps even more disturbing is the policy, evidently developed by the whole committee, to give the news media information before the rest of the House Members are permitted to see it and evaluate it. When the differences between White House transcripts and those prepared by the Easier To Replace? Judiciary Committee were As a roan’s head gets bigger, revealed, those of us with the the easier 18 to 611 hls shoes ' Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 20,1974 — obligation for voting on the impeachment question in the near future had to find out about those differences in the newspaper. And, of course, that meant that out source of information had been subjected to any editorial changes and omissions that the papers felt were in order. The question is whether we are running a judicial proceeding or a circus on this whole impeachment issue. If we’re running a circus, then I can understand why you have your public relations men getting the story to the news media as your first consideration. But if it is a judicial proceeding that we’re conducting, and the Constitution clearly indicates that impeachment is a judicial-type action, then those of us who are serving basically as grand jurors should be the committee’s chief clients. At the same time it is being released to the press. The circus atmosphere is disturbing because I believe that, above all else, the American people want the outcome of this whole Watergate crisis to reveal the truth and serve justice on the people responsible for violating the law and misusing their power. That outcome cannot be achieved when the principal attempt is to win headlines. 33