VOL. 25N».1*/Ur* Red Rose 4-H presents awards BY PAT KAUFFMAN LANCASTER - The Red Rose Baby Beef and Sheep Club Banquet was held Thursday, February 7 at the Farm and Home Center. Celebrity guests' from “The Gong Show,” bearing a remarkable resemblance to club members, followed steaming plates of beef in the evening’s agenda. The beef, donated for the occasion by Hamilton Bank, was processed by Stonebridge- Butcher Shop and savored by just about everyone. The one possible exception was Mary K. Longenecker, Pa, Young Farmers hold 20th convention BY SALLY BAIR Staff Correspondent GETTYSBURG - Earl C. Stauffer, Ephrata Sri, was chosen as president-elect by the Pennsylvania Young Fanners at their twentieth annual convention held this week at the Sheraton Inn, Gettysburg. Stauffer is a member of the Ephrata Young Farmer Chapter which also was named the Outstanding Young Farmer Chapter in the state. The award was presented to president Richard Pfautz for the chapter’s activities throughout the year. Stauffer and his wife Barbara received the out standing community service award for Region_H, and Ephrata Chapter member Vernon Leininger was named Region II Out standing Young Farmer over 30. Nearly 450 young farmers and their wives participated m the two-day event, which began Wednesday afternoon with tours to the Mason- Dixon Dairy and the Bat tlefield at Gettysburg. Region’s farm leaders testify against CNI milk proposal BYJANEBRESEE Staff Correspondent BINGHAMTON, N.Y. - One of the four hearings in the nation of the Dairy and Poultry subcommittee of the House Agriculture Com mittee was held Monday in the Federal Building in Binghamton, N.Y. Statements made at the meeting ran heavily against the Community Nutrition Institute’s proposal to Beef and Sheep Club banquet Lititz, who raised the steer. Her facial expression during dinner confirmed that. Those receiving awards included: Ernie Frey, R 2 Quarryville, was presented a colored - photo of “Road Runner” his Graiid Champion Steer, by J.C. Snavely and Sons. Also, a wnstwatch donated by Sperry New Holland for his County Championship. Jeff Hess, R 1 Strasburg, showman of the County Reserve Champion Steer, an electric dock donated by Farm Credit Assoc. Wayne Hess, R 1 Donald E. Sanders, Millmont Rl, was named the Outstanding Young Farmer under 30. Sanders represented Region 111 from the Mifflinburg Young Farmer Chapter. Sanders and his wife Carol farm in partnership with his father Henry and his brother James, at San-be Farms. Their registered Holstein herd averages 16,762 milk and 621 fat with 67 animals on test. All bull calves are raised in a beef fattening facility. The state winner in the Outstanding Young Farmer, over 30 category was Mark L. Stehr, Beavertown R 1, representing the West Snyder High School in Region 111. Stehr and his wife Gayle are partners in the Brooks End and Par Kay Farms, with swine and beef operations. The farm holds four purebred sales each year, selling over 2,000 head of breeding stock. In the beef breeding operation there are over 100 head of brood cows, with the offspring sold as feeder calves each spring. At Ag Committee hearing deregulate reconstituted milk from Order pricing. Hearing was held m the middle of one of the East Coast’s better dairy-oriented farming area. Congressman Matthew McHugh of the 27th district in New York state, also a member of the House Agriculture Committee, was instrumental in having the hearing held in his district. Congressman A 1 Baldus, a Lancaster Farminc, Saturday, February 9,1980 Conestoga, Champion County Showman, an electric clock award donated by Grubb Supply Co. Richard Hollinger, R 3 Elizabethtown, Highest Daily Gam, 3.44 lbs, trophy donated by Young’s Minerals, Inc. Andrew Graybill, R 1 Stevens, Second Highest Daily Gam, 2.96 lbs, trophy donated by Cope and Weaver Machinery. A big black rangy trio of steers took Grand Champion Tno at the State Farm Show and earned trophies for then owners: Ernie Frey; Bill Coyne, R 2 Quarryville and Purebred bulls are used for natural breeding of the cows. Statewide winners m the community service award project were Mr. and Mrs. David A. Dietrich, Mif flinburg R 2, from Mif flinburg High School, also in (Turn to Page A2B) Farmers win French Creek concessions BY DICK WANNER PHOENIX VILLE Detente may be dead m some parts of the world, but it was in the best of rosy cheeked health on Thursday night at the East Vincent Township Building near here. Some 40 Chester County Grangers met there with George Fogg and Roger Fickes, both of Penn sylvania’s Department of Environmental Resources, to talk about the impact of a proposal which would bring a 60-mile stretch of French Creek and its tributaries into the state’s scenic rivers program. DER had made similar proposals for the Pine Creek ' farmer from Wisconsin, chaired the meeting which began promptly at 10 a.m. He was assisted by chairman, Congressman Jeffords of Vermont, and Roger Albee, a member of the Minority staff. The room held nearly 100 people, some* observers, and others; farmers, agriculture educators, and (Turn to Page Al 7) Christ Herr, R 2 Narvon. Herr’s animal was raised through the FFA program. Trophies were donated by , PeimfieldCoTp. Reserve Champion Beef Trio at the State Farm Show included: Tim Hess, R 2 Lancaster; Kent Henry, ri Strasburg; George Metzler, East Petersburg. All received trophies donated by Creutzburg, Inc. Three county shepherds were honored. They are: Sarah Brubaker, Lan caster, County Champion Market Lamb and Junior Champion Hampshire Ewe, an electric clock donated by Wenger’s Mill. James Stauffer, Lan caster, Reserve County Champion Market Lamb, a pen set donated by West Willow Farmers Assoc. Barbara Herr, Rl Quarryville, Champion Junior Sheep Showman and , Junior Champion Southdown Ewe, a silver dish •award donated by Vigortone Co. The Livestock Judging Team consisting of Deb Greider, R 2 “Columbia; Wayne Hess; Barbara Herr; (Turn to Page A 33) in Tioga County, and for Slippery Rock Creek north of Pittsburgh. Opponents in both areas, though, led in large measure by the Grange, hammered both to dust. Grange opposition has centered around the use of eminent domain to acquire lands along officially Farmers question rents on utility right-of-way BYCURTHARLER PHILADELPHIA - After remaining dormant for five years, the question of rental rates for utility right-of ways again is in dispute. Philadelphia Electric Company has informed farmers along its right-of way that it intends to charge rent according to soil class. Utility representatives have asked farmers to sign 30 day leases for the land under the lines. But fanners, especially in the City area of Chester County, say they feel the utility is unfair in many of its requirements. Philadelphia Electric, in its statements to the public, has been conciliatory on many points but remains firm on others. In addition to farm land in Chester County, the PE G inny Thornburgh proudly displays the new PDA logo, “Pennsylvania Agriculture - We're Growing Better”. She enthusiastically tells everyone that Pa. products, like the apples, lettuce, and mushrooms pictured here, are the best designated- scenic rivers. They also have vigorously opposed any notions that would limit a farmers’ use of his land for agriculture, and any prohibitions against livestock in streams flowing past a farm. George Fogg, who heads up the scemc rivers program for DER, told Thursday right-of-way crosses farms in York, Lancaster, Delaware, Montgomery and Bucks Counties in Penn sylvania and Cecil County, Maryland. PE informed farmers in a letter that it wants to charge $45 per acre for Class I and n land, $35 for Class HI and IV, $25 for grazing land, and $lO SECTION A: Editorials, 10; Letters to editor, 16• CNI hearing, 20 and 21; Ask the VMD, 30; Three-sided milking, 32. SECTION B: Farm Credit changes, 2; Mixing herbicides, 3; Fire wrecks barn, 6; Blitecast cuts costs 8. SECTION C: Homestead notes, 2; Ida’s notebook, 6; Home on the range, 10; Joyce Bupp, 12; Ephrata Young Farmers, 14; Egg boom, 35. SECTION D: Berks County DHIA, 2; Lebanon County DHIA, 5; Dairy Business, 8; Farm talk, 10; Pesticide license update, 20. night’s group exactly what DER had done to meet Grange objections. “There will be no use of eminent domain in French Creek,” he said. “We could not require you to open your land along the creek for recreation. (Turn to Page A 23) for the worst land under its transmission lines. Harold Kulp, Pottstown, outlined some of the questions farmers have raised about the letter sent out by PE. Kulp is President of the Chester County Farmers’ Association. First, many farmers do (Turn to Page A 24) in this issue $7.00 Per Yew