GARBER OIL CO. {TEXACO) Fuel Chief HEATING OIL G Oil MIMING iObimiNl AIR CONDITIONING MOUNT JOY. PA I'll. IlKt-IKM NELSON WEAVER & SON Box 152-R2 Litilz, PA Corn Storage Available Custom corn drying. Also buyer of new corn & soybeans. 49% SOYBEAN MEAL BULK or BAGGED PHONE 717-626-8538 CALL US FOR "ON-THE-SPOT" FARM TIRE SERVICE IN-TI'E-FIELD! ON- HE-ROAD! ON-THE-FARM! Our fully equipped farm service truck brings you fast on-the-spof bre REPAIRS, REPLACEMENTS and HYDRO-FLATION WHEN AND WHERE YOU NEED IT Our trucks ore radio dispatched for faster service when you need it! SWEIGART TIRE SERVICE Formerly Sweigart firestone 677 W. HIGH ST. PHONE 665-2258 MANHEIM, PA HOME 665-3603 -■K' iC PS: VJj?i ,£st r i?- *' ■_ • 1» , ~“ ''• .'i;i‘ '■'. ' V FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 215-287-9650 OR 287-7315 OR MAIL COUPON Ag official says grain agreement essential “The only person in the food production chain whose neck is out all the way ia the farmer. That’s why the Russian grain agreement ia so essential,” Kenneth E. Frick, Administrator of the Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service (ASCS), told Pennsylvania ASCS officials gathered for a PENN VALLEY CROPSTORE INC. meeting recently in Champion, Pennsylvania. "The certainty of Russian purchases will be a plus for both the farmer and the consumer,” Frick said, “because ft will promote efficient agricultural production. The U.S.S.R. has become a guaranteed market the farmer can plan and plant for.” Continuing on the con* ference theme of In ternational Trade - The Key to Prosperity, Edward D. Hews, Director of the ASCS Eastern Region, emphasized the need to get food moving into export channels. “Over the next 25 years world population will double,” be said. “It is essential for American agriculture to meet the challenge of a hungry world by likewise increasing production and focusing on the world market.” YOU AND YOUR WIFE FOR LUNCHEON “FUTURE FOR TOMORROW” SPEAKERS: GEORGE LEWIS & GEOFF FEAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1975 NAME ADDRESS HOW MANY. Torgenson named director WASHINGTON - Secretary of Agriculture Earl L. Butz recently an nounced the appointment of Dr. Randall E. Torgerson as administrator of Farmer Cooperative Service (PCS). Dr. Torgerson had been serving as staff economist to the administrator of Agricultural Marketing Service, U.S, Department of Agriculture, since January 1874 on a special assignment from the University of Missouri. He succeeds Dr. Ronald D. Knutson, who resigned in August to become professor of agricultural policy and Both Frick and Hews termed rural development and conservation important in achieving efficient crop production. Frick said - government cost-share funds are spent to improve and correct conservation deficiencies in rural areas. Conference participants (farmer-elected ASC county committeemen, county office staffers and State personnel) also attended workshops covering the current trends in con servation, crop disaster insurance and farm markets. PaulH. Keeney, Chairman of the Berks County ASC Committee; Mark S. Balthaser and Donald E. Lutz, committee members; Henry E. Bohn, Sr., ASCS County Executive Director; and Dianne F. Younker & Janice E. Miller, program assistants, attended the two day conference. Invites ... AND A PRESENTATION 10:30 AM. TO 2:30 P.M. SHARP READING MOTOR INN WYOMISSING (JUST WEST OF READING) WARREN ST. BYPASS (422 BYPASS) PLEASE REPLY BEFORE NOVEMBER 15, 1975 MAIL TO PENN VALLEY CROPSTORE INC. BOX 75, RDI SCHWENKSVILLE, PA 19473 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, Nov. 8, 1975-28 marketing at Texas A&M University. As administrator of PCS, Dr. Torgerson will direct the research and technical assistance efforts of 60 agricultural economists and cooperative specialists. PCS programs are designed to increase the efficiency of the nation’s 7,700 farmer - owned cooperatives involved in the production and marketing of the nation’s food and fiber. These cooperatives have about 6 million members (many fanners are a member of more than one cooperative) and have a combined annual business volume in excess of $22 billion. Dr. Torgerson is the author of numerous articles and two books related to farmer cooperatives. As an associate professor at the University of Missouri - Columbia, he taught cooperative business organizations, management programs of cooperative firms, and economics of collective action in agriculture. He served as executive secretary of the Missouri Institute of Cooperatives, 1969-73, and as executive secretary of the Graduate Institute of Cooperative Leadership, University of Missouri, 1971-74. His father, Truman Torgerson, is general manager of Lake to Lake Dairy Cooperative, Manitowoc, Wis., a cooperative whose annual sales approach $6O million. Dr. Torgerson, 36, native of Wisconsin, earned a bachelor degree from the University of Minnesota and master’s and doctor's degrees from the University of Wisconsin, all in agricultural economics. He attended the Swedish Center for Cooperative Develop ment in 1962-63 and was a Fulbright Graduate Fellow at the Agricultural College of Norway in 1965-66. His book, “Producer power at the Bargaining Table: A Case Study of Legislative Life of 5.109,” was winner of the 1970 Curators’ Publication Award at the University of Missouri. He also authored “Farm Bargaining,” a description of this fanner activity in Norway and Sweden. He is married to the for mer Susan Grace Grundahl. They have one son, Knut Everett, age 3.