Give any chicken or meat gravy. Add just before gravy the “Stroganoff” serving, stirring only long touch by using sour cream enough to let it heat through. /'Ti bloomsburg dairy / H ) COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL FRIDAY, AUGUST 3rd 113 TOP QUALITY GRADE HOLSTEINS 15780, 3.8, 605 avg. Certified, tested ready for interstate. 2 Weaverline feed carts; solid or liquid spreader on Int. 1600 Loadstar truck, 29,000 mi. (like new). Owner, BLOOMSBURG DAIRY, INC. Watch for full listing. Sold & managed by M. Shavlor Sales 1 L-TJ 515 Elmira St., Troy, Pa. - 717-297-327* Reputable Sales Service " Licensed Bonded *■ BYERSHOLM FARM MILKING HERD DISPERSAL TUESDAY, JULY 31 . AT 12:30 P.M. Located in Perry Co., along Route 17, 2 I A miles south of Millerstown, Pa., 9 miles north of Ickesburg, Pa. 50 HOLSTEINS 30 REGISTERED • 20 GRADES CERTIFIED - ACCREDITED 30 DAY HEALTH TESTS Herd will be classified before sale. Rolling herd avg. 16,297 m. 3.7%, 597 f. 44 Cows m milk, 4 springing heifers, 2 service-age bulls. Calves from fresh cows sell. A young herd, majority are by N.E.B. A. sires. A good number fresh for base milk. Some due fall and winter. Many with records from 16,000 m. to over 20,000 m. and 600 fat to over 800 fat. Sires include Elevation, Jet Stream, Charmcross, Gent, Lucky, Double Triune, Prince, Rich, etc. A good herd to choose from. LUNCH AT SALE - SALE UNDER COVER CATALOGS Owners, MR. & MRS. CHARLES C. BYERS & SON R.l, Millerstown, Pa. 17062 717-589-7303 Dean Shull, Auct. Fred Naugle, Pedigrees for part of the liquid in the Farm bargaining bill meets opposition WASHINGTON, D.C. Farm Bargaining was the subject of a hearing held last week by the House Agriculture Subcommittee on Domestic Marketing, Consumer Relations & Nutrition. Dan Ghckman (D -KS) and Leon Panetta (D -CA) were the only Sub committee Members present in a large audience which heard testimony on HR 3535, the National Agricultural Bargaining Act. Opponents of the bill protested the expanded bureaucracy and additional regulation that it would require. They charged that the effect of the bill was directly counter to stated administration goals and the current national trend to reduce bureaucratic regulation and encourage healthy competition. One witness complained, “We Pits STATE GRADED SALE FRI..JULY 27 1:$0 P.M. AT WESTMINSTER LIVESTOCK AUCTION Westminster, Md Phone (301) 848-9820 PUBLIC SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE 31 ACRE FARM On Thursday, August 2, 1979 at 2 P.M atR.D. #l, Stewartstown, Penna in Hopewell Twp. along the Plank Road approx. 2 miles West of Stewart stown. The undersigned Executor of the Margaret A. Rife Estate will offer at public sale the following REAL ESTATE Farm consisting of approx 31 acres with lots of road frontage on Plank Road, also good frontage on both sides of Mattox Dnve.'approx 21 acres in good farming land, balance in woodland Improvements consists of a 2-story brick house with 3 rooms on first floor, 3 bedrooms & oath up stairs, electric & running water, storm doors, yard area with trees, also frame summer house, barn, one-car garage & other out bldgs, a very desirable location and offers some choice bldg sites and should be highly considered for development use Also ideal for farm use Could be used in various ways and must be seen to be appreciated Will be open for inspection on Sat, July 21 & Sat, July 28,12 noon to 3 P M or call auct Terms 10% down, balance in 30 days Other conditions will be given at time of sale. If on the market for a farm, be sure to see this one and attend this public sale Sat, Aug 2 at 2 P M Not respon sible for accidents on day of sale EXECUTOR FRANKLIN L BUSCH Jacob A. Gilbert, Auctioneer Rhone 717-252-3591 Richard H. Horn, Attorney are constantly hearing about de-regulating mdustnes, and less government. All HR 3535 can do is give us more of each.” Charles Kingston, from Musselman Fruit Products of Pennsylvania, pomted out that compulsory agricultural bargaining is simply a form of subsidizing the inefficient farmer by automatically providing a market for his commodities Less oats, rye barley predicted HARRISBURG - Based on July 1 conditions, Penn sylvania farmers wir produce less oats, rye and barley, and about the same quanitites of com for gram, sweet chemes and peaches according to the Penn sylvania Crop Reporting Service. Crops indicating an increase in production this year are winter wheat, apples, tart chemes and pears. Com for grain is estimated crop is expected to decline 15 at 113.0 million bushels, per cent to 5.0 million unchanged from last year at bushels, while a2O per cent an indicated yield of 95 decrease in acreage for bushels per acre. Winter harvest is expected at wheat production is forecast 100,000 acres, at 9 2 million bushels, up 13 This year’s Fall potato ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★* * r~=- * yL FARM SYSTEMS _ (R. T * |w CHR o°“fo» LOY ) Super Tanker * * and Nutri-Jector $ 1 * 1 For powerful I * liquid I jf manure - J. if handling * 1 * If Powerful Design! The big pump-type Super Tanker® doesn’t depend jf )f on gravity flow or augers So you can broadcast or inject up to 3200 gallonsof liquid manure in about s>£ minutes or less Makes one of yL. your worst chores easier J jf Powerful Build 1 The Chromalloy Farm Systems Super Tanker is yL. rugged-built for hauling huge payloads to your fields, year after j*. year Simple design gives strength dependability J jf- Powerful Injector! 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DUVALL, INC. TRACTOR J T 609-935-2250 301-662-1125 703-825-6150 T * _ * u Ask Us About Our Dealer Inquiries T Convenient Leasing Welcome J i Terms 717-569-8130 y J * 01979 Chromalloy American Corp Lancaster Farming, Saturday July 21,1979—133 regardless of how poorly he planned his operation. Representatives of the National Farmers’ Organization noted that the Capper-Volstead Act already grants farmers complete authority to bargain collectively, and they cited several current examples of successful bargaining. NFO further stated that effective bargaming requires farmers per cent from the previous year, is expected from an indicated 262,009 acres for harvest. A smaller rye crop at 476,000 bushels, down seven per cent a year ago, is indicated from a smaller acreage for harvest at 14,000 acres. The oats crop at 17.8 million bushels, down one per cent a year ago, is ex pected for harvest from 335,000 acres. The barley willing to commit enough product to interest a buyer, and persistent enough to stick together and make the bargain work. Without that commitment, says NFO, “a dozen bargaining bills won’t help.” In addition, NFO fears that passage of the bill would engender a number of lawsuits and set back the bargaining progress at tained in recent years. harvest is expected from an indicated 24,000 acres, 1,000 acres below 1978. This year’s crop of apples for com mercial uses at 515 million pounds is forecast as a 29 per cent increase from last year. A peach crop of 85 million pounds is expected to remain unchanged from last year’s production. The sweet cherries crop is expected to remain the same as 1978 at 750 tons. The tart cherries crops is forecast to increase 45 per cent this year to nine million pounds. Pears as forecast at 4,100 tons would be a 24 per cent in crease from last year’s crop 0f3,300 tons.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers