Farmer , Grain Dealer Clash Over Contract I Continued From Pagt 1) to replace the corn that Campbell didn't deliver, Hostetter said he’d have had to pay out close to 112,000, Replacing the wheat would have cost another 12000. Campbell’s position was that he had delivered all the grain he had, except for 2000 bushels of corn and some 25 acres that he had cut for silage to feed his dairy herd. Campbell told the jurers that he had planned to plant another 225 acres to corn in order to fulfill the contract with Hostetter, but that the fields he wanted to use were FARM* Need more room? Farm-Families have a "before you know it" way of growing and homes have a way of get- ting smaller. Save your family the inconveni- ence of cramped living space and ask us to- day about a loan for expansion. We have help- ed many young families live more comfort- ably with convenient financing. standing in water until late July. He also said that he had discussed this problem with Hostetter, and that Hostetter had told him to fill the contract as best he could. Campbell also said that Hostetter had implied that his grain firm would supply ■ seed and fertilizer to plant the 225 acres, but that he had never received these sup plies. Hostetler’s lawyer told the court that his client was entitled to the difference between the market and the contract price, and that the fanner was liable for that cost. 411 W. ROSEVILLE RD., LANCASTER PH. 393-3921 Campbell’s attorney, on the other hand, told the Jurors that his client had in fact delivered all the com he could at a contract price that was $1.25 under the market price, and that the verbal agreements had, in fact, changed£>e contract after it became apparent that Campbell couldn’t meet the contract requirements. The case dragged on for an entire day, and attorneys for both sides wore a path between the judge’s bend] and their client’s tables, discussing the technical points'of contract law and the complexities of the future/ and cash grain markets. It was a very complicated proceeding, ‘ with many recesses, with the Jurors retiring to the Jury room only at 5:00, after a day of confusing, and sometimes heated, debate. In finding in favor of the farmer, the Jury said that Hostetter should pay the soybean contract price, and that Campbell could not be held liable for the non deliver under the com and wheal contracts. Editor’s Note: It is not our practice to cover court trials in this newspaper, nor is it our practice to comment on the findings of a court of law. We do not claim to make any comment here on this case, we do not claim'to agree or disagree with the jury’s ° verdict. We went to the trial ds an impartial observer, and we have attempted to report it in an impartial manner. We felt the story merited publication primarily because it points out the very complex nature of contract agreements, and the need for both dealers and fanners to think carefully about both verbal and written agreements. . The farm community itself is a very complex system of interrelated parts. We feel that when one part of that system is injured, it does not redound to the benefit of any other part. Like a bruised apple, a sore affecting any part of agriculture will soon affect the entire system. TURN ONS CREDIT AGWAY BUILDING, LEBANON PH. 273-4506 i! /Ol ui iwj in ij i •'»**»« i • Lancaster Farming, Saturday , Nov. 9. 1974—7 Sico Scholarship Funds Available Dr. D. L. Biemesgerfer, President of the SICO Foundation in Mount Joy, today announced that a record high of 60 four-year college scholarships will be made available by the Foundation to worthy and needy 1975 area high school graduates who plan to pursue a career in elementary education. Biemesderfer further reported that the value of each scholarship is being increased to a new high of $2,0 00 for four years or $5OO per year, reflecting the in creased tuition costs at the participating colleges. For 33 years, the SIOO Foundation, sole stockholder hr The SICO Company, the largest distributor of CITGO petroleum products in the United States, has con tributed support amounting to more than $1,518,400 Jor the education of young people in the Company’s marketing area of central and south-central Penn sylvania, the state of Delaware, and Cecil County, Maryland. At present, 129 SICO Foundation Scholar ship winners are attending classes in the eight par ticipating colleges which are ["ATTENTION' ' CATTUMBI.,. We Specialize m shipping fever medications. Intra-Nasal and Intra Muscular Vaccine We offer a complete medication program Cattle off feed, poor appetite, worms, Bloat diarrhea, lice foot rot and respiratory conditions HEATED LIVESTOCK WATERERS, -FARM GATES, AND HOG FEEDERS. ZIMMERMAN $ Animal Health Supply R.D.#4, Litifz, Pa 17543 Phone 717-733-4466 3 miles W. of iphrata-aiong WOODCORNER ROAD the State Colleges located at Cheyney, Kutztown, MillersviUe, Shlppensburg, and West Chester in Penn sylvania; the Delaware State College and the University of Delaware in Delaware; and the Salisbury State College in Maryland. With the awarding of this year’s scholarships, the total number of students who will have benefitted from the SICO Foundation scholar ships will go well over the 1,000 mark. Dr. Biemesderfer urged interested families and students who would like to compete for these scholarships to contact their proper high school'guidance official for application forms in the very near future. Eligible to compete are high school seniors whose legal residences are located in the state of Delaware; "the counties of Adams, Berks, Chester, Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware, Lan caster, Lebanon and York in Pennsylvania; and Cecil County in Maryland. The deadline for completion of aj] forms and letters requires that they be postmarked prior to March Ist, 1975.