9 Bergland urges (Continued from Page 1) 3elow the r »n program release period in which they once m( do not sell, they will owe the rs still government 1/12 of the 20 un will m per cent per bushel lump ;heir gn sum that they were ad- yr. vanced at the beginning of cond typ the year. i n the Should the market again as a ‘ he pric< g MEMO | -140 pc ' HAY - f e S I STRAW & I EAR CORN I SALE ’and. EVERY MONDAY AT 11 A.M. lrdcl ? EVERY WEDNESDAY ? rs . t t 12:00 NOON ,le fc NEW HOLLAND SALES ',. P 1 STABLES, INC. dlnt< Phone 717-354-4341 that Up to $225 CASH! iEHL 9 BONUS PAYMENT SCHEDULE Equl»m«nl jan FEB MM Description Medel No CB7OO $lOO $l3O $lOO F«ra|* Harvatlart CBCOO ICO ISO 11$ Ol2OO 225 175 130 MC77O $125 $lOO $ 70 Mawar MCMO 125 100 70 CanCltlanari MCIO7O 125 100 70 , MCIOM 125 100 70 a lnim j| al . N Mlsoo SICO $l4O $lOO ■ " oun * 9Mn MISOOA 1W 140 100 I Flail Chappara FC72C 5 DO $ $5 $ 50 V Paraaa ■lawtr* Fit* 10 $5 50 Farif* limn tugM *0 $5 50 Salt Unlaadln* guMO $0 $5 50 CUC2O CO $5 10 behl" Makes Buying Easier . ZOOK’S FARM STORE Honey Brook, PA A. L HERR & BRO. Quarryville, PA 717-786-3521 S. JOHNSON HURFF Pole Tavern Monroeville, NJ 609-358-2565 or 609-769-2565 STOUFFER BROS. INC. Chambersburg, PA 717-263-8424 ARNETTS GARAGE Rt. 9 Box 125 Hagerstown, MD 301-733-0515 NEVIN N. MYER & SONS, INC. Chester Springs, PA 215-827-7414 drop below the release level, the loan program will go into effect once more and the farmers still under the program will not be able to sell their gram without penalty. A second type of release level in the program is known as a “call level.” When the price of grain on the open market reaches this height - 140 per cent of the loan rate for com and 175 per cent for wheat - the entire program is cancelled and the farmer is required to sell tus product and repay the loan. If neither of these levels is reached and the loan runs the entire length of the three year contract, at the end of three years the farmer is responsible for paying the' principle plus the ac cumulated interest at six per cent. Should a farmer decide, however, that he wishes to Early Buyer’s Cash Bonus Now you can get cash back from Gehl with the purchase of eligible forage harvesting and haymaking equipment. See us for full details. (Offer valid on eligible equip ment retailed between Dec. 19, 1977 and Mar. 31,1978) UMBERGER’S MILL Rt 4 Lebanon, PA (Fontana) 717-867-5161 BINKLEU HURST BROS. 133 Rothsville Station Road Lititz, PA 717-626-4705 PEOPLE’S SALES & SERVICE Oakland Mills, PA 717-463-2735 WILLIAM DAUGHERTY R.D. #2 Felton, PA 717-244-9787 ERNEST SHOVER FARM EQUIPMENT 19 W. South St. Carlisle. PA 717-249-2239 remove this grain from the program before either type of release level is reached, he will owe the amount of the loan plus interest, as well as all the storage advanced from the time the agreement plus the mterest on that storage. This serves as a type of penalty for early withdrawal. According to the ASCS office, if the grain in storage should begin to deteriorate, the three-year program has built into it a system whereby the fanner may sell his ’77 crop and replace it with the ’7B crop. This must be done within 30 days and must be approved by the county committee. However, the grain must already be harvested and be in storage before the replacement can be made. According to Carl Kauf man, state executive director of ASCS, the pur pose of the three year program is to take some grain off the market to Up to $lBO CASHI Up to $125 CASH! N. G. HERSHEY & SON Manheim, PA 717-665-2271 AGWAY, INC. Chapman Equip Center Chapman, PA 215-398-2553 CHAS. J. McCOMSEY &SONS Hickory Hill, PA 215-932-2615 WERTZ GARAGE Lineboro, MO 301-374-2672 LEBANON VALLEY IMPLEMENT CO., INC. Richland, PA 717-866-7518 CLAIR J. MYERS Lake Road R 1 Thomasville, PA 717-259-0453 subsequently mcrease the value of the free floating remaining grain. “We want to isolate this gram from the market as a stop gap measure,” states Kaufman, “and, we want to get the set aside program going and reduce produc tion. In 1977 when the Farm Bill first went into effect, prices did go up because millers anticipated the smaller amount of grain. So, in ef fect, our aim is to isolate the market and when the price is up to appropriate level, to rlease the excess gram onto the market.” To participate in the program, a farmer must file a request for price support by February 28 for the ’76 crop of barley, oats, and wheat, and by March 31 for the 1977 crop of barley, oats, and wheat. The market (Continued from Page 10) purchased had little more resem blance to the drink I enjoy than the mere fact that it was a liquid The milk in that particular plastic jug had a repulsive taste, and was of visibly poor quality Fortunately, I do know what good milk tastes like and I continue to consume considerably large quantities of that thirst quencher. But think of the housewife who isn’t that well acquainted with milk. Will she increase her purchases of milk, or attempt to avoid it from nowon? Granted, the farmer isn't always to blame for an inferior product that shows up in the grocery store. In fact, the farmer might only be responsible a fraction of the time It’s true that the dairyman can’t do a whgje lot about milk sales in the theater. But maybe his co-op can. It’s also true that the egg producer has Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 4,1978 N.Y. packer charged NEW YORK, N.Y. G. & L. Packing Co., Inc., New Mills, N.Y., has been charged with violating financial and payment requirements of a federal fair trade practices law for the livestock, poultry, and meat industries. The firm is a meat packer. It purchases meat, meat food products, and poultry throughout New York and in Boston. The firm has been charged with operating as a packer while its current liabilities exceed its current assets; and issuing insufficient funds and failing to pay, when due, for more than no way of controlling what his buyer is doing with the eggs Bad eggs in New York City are out of his reach in more ways than one All that considered, it remains certain that the farmer is the one who takes it on the chin, whether he deserves it or not. As a former dairyman, I can confess that the milk in a cow’s udder wasn’t always fit for the tank, and the milk in the tank wasn’t always up to the standards set by the cooperative which handled the milk. That serves as an example that farmers can do something to in crease the quality of their product if they’re a little more careful and a little more conscientious. There's an untapped market potential out there. It exists for milk, meat, eggs, and virtually anything else the farmer produces. All we have to do is do our part to assure quality production, and search for marketing areas such as theatres where our products might be served. $146,000 worth of meat, meat food products, and poultry. G. & L. Packing Co., has a right to a hearing. If the charges are proven, the firm would be placed under a cease and desist order. Food Costs Consumers spent almost $164 billion for food originating on U S. farms in 1976 When the food left the farms, these foods had a value of $54 billion The marketing bill of $llO billion was spent on transportation, processing and distributing these foods. 37