Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, December 07, 1974, Image 52

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    >2—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. Dec. 7, 1974
5!
Wool Producers OK
Sheep producers by a
substantial margin have
voted to continue deductions
from Commodity Credit
Corporation wool program
payments to finance the
promotion of wool, according
to preliminary returns from
a mail referendum held Nov.
4 through 15, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture
has announced.
In Pennsylvania, 1071 of
the state’s 1275 sheep
NOW! For Hog Men From...
YOUR WAYNE
DEALER
ROBERT GUTSHALL
(717) 933-4616
Lancaster Pipe &
distributors
Acorn unloaders
bunk feeders
tube feeders
generators
chute hoppers
Self Unloading Silage Ca^
Cattle and hog feeders
Automatic roller mills
producers voted in favor of
the program. They
represented 84 percent of the
state’s sheepmen.
Nationally, about 85.5
percent of the producers,
owning 87.8 percent of the
sheep represented by those
voting in the referendum,
favored the advertising and
other market development
activities which would be
continued under a proposed
new agreement between the
—l9” impeller
Model 3013,27” impeller
Promotion
Secretary of Agriculture and
the American Sheep
Producers Council, Inc.
Sheep producers have ap
proved the wool and lamb
promotion program in five
referendums since 1954. In
the most recent referendum
of 1971, 87.0 percent of the
producers voting, who owned
87.2 percent of the sheep,
approved the program.
Approval by either two
thirds of the producers
voting or by producers of
two-thirds of the volume of
production represented in
the referendum is required
for the agreement to become
effective. Preliminary
results in this year’s
balloting show 40,181
producers voted for the new
agreement and 6,829
producers voted against it.
Those favoring the
agreement owned 7,959,642
sheep and those opposed to
the agreement owned
1,103,448 sheep.
The proposed agreement
authorizes . continued
deductions from payments
made under the National
Wool Act on. wool and un
shorn lambs marketed
during the four years, 1974
through 1977. Deductions are
authorized at rates up to 1%
cents a pound on shorn wool
and IVz cents a hun
dredweight on unshorn
lambs. These are the rates at
• •
Ask About Our
Rote Structures
Thrive Centers combine
expert engineering knowhow
and top quality buildings.
eOdor* and Manure Handling
Almost Eliminated
eßeducad Pig Mortality
eßattar Diaaasa Control
eßattar Working CondWona
Year Around
Proper insulation and ventila
tion lets animals do better
naturally
HUtKJES-WLT
Program
which payment deductions
havt, been made for the past
8 years.
The council’s expenditures
for wool and lamb promotion
during the year ended June
30, 1974, were about $2.2
million and its budget for the
current year is $1.6 million.
The council’s wool
promotion is on a national
basis in cooperation with
other segments of the in
dustry which provide ad
ditional or matching funds.
Lamb promotion now is
concentrated in high lamb
consuming areas. The
promotion activities include
advertising, merchandising,
and education.
Storing Onions
The “at home” life for
mature onions may be
several months, according to
Extension consumer
specialists at The Penn
sylvania State University.
Make sure you store them at
slightly cooler than room
temperature. You may keep
onions in their loosely woven
of open’mesh containers for
several months. At high
temperatures or in high
humidity, they sprout and
decay.
Thrive
Centers
Puts KAN
Together
YOUR
HUSKEE-BILT
MAN:
IS
MERVIN MILLER
RD2, Keener Road,
Lititz, Penna.
Phone 626-5204
New Negley-Miller Silos
barn cleaners
Ritchie water fountains
The November 15 Index of
Prices Received by Penn
sylvania farmers increased 1
percent from mid-October
according to the Penn
sylvania Crop Reporting
Service. The index was 7 polar Weather
percent below a year ago. The Arctic la essentially an
Higher prices for wheat, surrounded by land: the
. B . , vuifQfnM milk Antarctic la land aurrounded by
oats, hay, potatoes, mUK, The Und ummi the
turkeys, and eggs ousel y c absorbs solar heat but the
lower prices for com, barley, aouthem oceans transfer heat to
fruit, meat animals and milk
cows. earth
Nationally, the November
15 Index of Prices Received
by Farmers decreased 2
percent from mid-October,
but was one-half percent
above a year earlier. Con
tributing most to the
decrease were lower prices
for cattle, soybeans,
oranges, upland cotton and
com. Higher prices for milk
and tomatoes were partially
offsetting.
The National Index of
Prices Paid was up 1 percent
from mid-October and 17
silo blowers
conveyors
calf stalls
free stalls
cow mats
barn fans
Oct. Farm Price Index
Rises 1 pet.
FARMERSVILLE AUCTION
TUESDAY EVE., DEC. ID 1914
6:00 P.M.
Located in Farmersville, 3 miles East of Brownstown,
Lancaster Co., Ra.
General Household Goods sale including: 4
pc. Mediterranean bedroom suite; Serta Deluxe
box spring mattress set; kneehoje desk; crib; 6
burner New Perfection coal oil stove; Niagna
vibrator: empire bureau; wood box; dry sink;
Avacado refrigerator (1 yr. old); Avacado elec,
range; old plank bottom rocker; saw bucks; 2
Cedar Chests, McCoy Pieces, Sleds, Horse
Breaker Cart, tools, lot of depression glass, etc.;
etc.
We Sell on Commission at 20 Percent.
Call 354-5095 Terms by:
John J. Ruff
We sell anything from attic junque to estates!
PUBLIC AUCTION
Farm Sold, Tenant must move. Located on Duhamel Corner Road,
just off Route 300,2 miles East of Sudlersville, Md.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7,1974
AT ll:OOA.M.
62 HOLSTEIN COWS & HEIFERS 62
This herd consists of 37 milk cows r many-fresh, some
close springers, many in full flow of milk. Artificial
breeding for over 12 years by Curtiss. 7 spring first calf
heifer, 6 open heifers ready to breed, 12 small &
yearling heifers. Accredited and retested.
FARM MACHINERY: INTERNATIONAL M and 300
TRACTORS, JOHN DEERE No. 45 Self-propelled
combine (2 row corn and 12’ grain heads), New Holland
No. 352 PTO feed grinder-mixer, Allis Chalmers No.
829 Haybine, N.H. No. 1010 Haystacker, 2 NH PTO
Chuck wagons, NH No. 68 baler, N.I. spreader, N.H.
spreader, Ontario hoe drill. Case disc, drill, NI mower,
Cross elevator & motor, JD trailer sprayer No. 32, AC 2
row chopper No. 780, hit. 2PR com picker, JD No. 6
chopper w-2 heads, JF flail chopper, NI rake, JD
rotary hoe, Oliver springtooth, JI) 8’ disc, land roller,
food mixer, 3 pt. AC blade, 2 tractor seeders, drag
harrow, hay crimper, Int. 2R cultivators, 2 metal grain
wagons, grease equipment, Myers water pump, truck
tires, oil drums, old lumber, 3 wood gates, portable
elevator drag, 1954 Chev. grain truck 8:25x20 tires,
Home comfort stove, etc., etc. Rotary tiller.
MILK EQUIPMENT, FEED EQUIP., UNIVERSAL
PIPELINE and 4 pipeline milkers and automatic
washer, Vacuum line, Universal vacuum pump,
SOLAR 340 vacuum milk tank (stamped),'w-auto
washer, water heater, SS wash vats, etc. Feed bunks,
hay rack, feed cart, concrete water trough.
HAY & STRAW: 3000 bales clover & timothy hay
(new), 2700 bales clover & timothy (last year), 700
Lespesda stubble hay, 300 mix hay, 500 bales wheat
strsw
IRVING YEAGER, Owner
Sudlersville, Md.
HARRY RUDNICK & SONS, Inc.
Sales Managers & Auctioneers
percent above a year earlier.
Higher prices for new and
used autos and turcks and
family living items ac
counted for most of the in
crease.
FOR COMPLETE
SERVICE CALL
JOHN E. MARTIN
RDI, Durlach
Road, Ephrata
733-3511 or
PAUL E. MARTIN
Stevens RDI, Box 561
733-3305
LICENSED
AUCTIONEERS
No Sale Too Small
or Large
Tents Available
LUNCH