NOM»TRAHSFIMAS I*C g*ggF r PUKScmsio iv tmi stesromyor >k3»icotTi>m THE FOOD STAMP ISSUE (Continued From Page 14] other welfare programs. But for each dollar’s worth of food stamps they received, they spent as much as 50 cents on food. The liberalized APPLY LIME ON FROZEN GROUND r ~ Don’t hesitate to apply lime, even if the ground is frozen. The freezing and thawing action of Winter helps disseminate the lime, assuring you a properly balanced soil, ready for Spring plowing. And remember, liming pays in extra bushels and tons of crops and fprage. MARTIN’S LIMESTONE Blue Ball, Pa. 354-4123 Gap, Pa. 442-4148 wmmm 00 NOT FOLD Ajriciltonl Maaduici program, says the ERS study, has resulted in ~an even higher ratio. Two cents to the dollar Looking at nationwide food expenditures, about 2 cents of ever dollar are generated by the food stamp program. Cost to taxpayers comes to somewhat over $3 billion a year for the more than 13 million people enrolled. What do they buy with food stamps? According to the ERS study, food stamp recipients use a large portion of their expanded buying power to buy more red meats, particularly ground beet and lower cost beef cuts. Other big items are bakery products and fruits and vegetables. The share of each food dollar breaks down like so among the major food groups: : Meat group (includes eggs, dry beans and peas, nuts, and meat mixtures) $0.38 Milk group (includes milk, cream, cheese, frozen desserts) .13 Vegetable and fruit group .20 Bread-cereal group .12 Other food (fats, oils, sweets, etc.) .17 With red meats com prising such a high proportion of food stamp dollars, ERS researchers did some further analysis. Stamps for meat It was estimated that roughly 15 cents of each dollar’s worth of bonus food stamps resulted in added spending for red meats. Compared with total U.S. spending on red meats, bonus food stamps came in for $3Ol million in 1972 against $35 billion for the Nation as a whole, or less than 1 percent of the total market. However, red meat bought with bonus food stamps was responsible for a larger share of the year-to year expansion in demand for red meat in 1971-72. Bonus stamps may have accounted for over 5 percent of the total expansion in red meat spending. In general, food stamps can’t claim credit for a significant portion of the rise in total consumer ex penditures for meat since 1969, the ERS report says. On the other hand, the ex panded issuance of food stamps has enabled low income families to afford meat they could not buy before. Marketing costs continue to take the biggest bite from our food dollar. Of the $132.2 billion Americas shelled out for farm foods last year, almost two-thirds went to pay the marketing bill. The bill for marketing farm foods tallied $82.3 billion in 1973. This was 5 percent more than in the previous year but was about the same as the average annual increase for the past 11 years. [Continued On Page 18] Lancaster Farming, Saturday, Dec. 7,1974 Know Where the Activities Will Be? Read the Farm Women Calendar. r : I New Idea’s Manure Spreaders Wood take it That’s why they use Penta treated clear yellow pine in - every New Idea Spreader box. Every New Idea spreader in the line has wood sides, bottom and end . . . because wood can take it. Wood battles against damage. Wood won’t bend, can't rust... and fights corrosive acids better than any other spreader box material. Warranty On Wood That’s why only New Idea says, “In the unlikely event that any of the wood components in your New Idea Manure Spreader rot through, Avco New Idea will make replacement, no charge. Replacement will be made without cost to you, the original purchaser, at your nearby New Idea dealer... no charge for wood, no charge for labor or freight.” We make your job a little easier. UUBERGERS MILL LANC. EQUIP. CENTER, INC. RD4, Lebanon Kmzer, Pa (Fontana) 717-442-4186 or 717-867-8221 717-768-8916 A. L. HERR t BRO. Quarryvifie 717-786-3521 CHAS.J. McCOMSEY & SONS Hickory Hill, Pa ?15-932-2615 STOLTZFOS FARM SERVICE Cochranville, Pa. 215-593-5280 A.B.C. GROFF, INC. New Holland 717-354-4191 V*? r >W AJ . can i ROYH. BUCK, INC. Ephrata, R 0.2 717-859-2441 N.G. HERSHEY & SON Manheim 717-665-2271 LONGENECKER FARM SUPPLY Rheems 717-367-3590 LANDIS BROS., INC. Lancaster 717-393-3906 15