Farm Bureau calls for end PARK RIDGE, 11. The general farm organization end of the US. embargo of lead of the nation’s largest has called for the immediate gram to the Soviet Union on THE SYSTEMS PEOPLE SUPER SPRING SALE VEAL - SWINE - CALF CASHES THE COMPLETE SYSTEM BUILDING AG STAR Having Problems Raising Veal, Swine or Calves? Let Us Show You A Castle. BUY AN AGSTAR CASTLE AND CASH IN ON THE VEAL MARKET fik Sk VEAL CASTLE Aluminum Headgates Available for Veal FULL LINE PARTS DEPARTMENT WE SELL, SERVICE AND INSTALL to Russian grain embargo the grounds that it is inef fective and damaging both to American agriculture and to the nation’s economy. Robert Delano, a Virginia gram producer and president of the three million member-family American Farm Bureau Federation, accused Carter and ad ministration officials, in cluding Secretary of Agriculture Bergland, of failing to keep faith with farmers in protecting them as promised, against pnce drops caused by the market intervention. Delano noted that Bergland refused to exercise his authority to declare a paid land diversion to remove cropland equivalent to the 17 million metric tons of embargoed gram sales. He said that present depressed prices are ex pected to decline further this fall when new crop gram is added to the unsold carryover stocks. The farm leader reminded Carter that Bergland promised farmers: “If you wait, we will make sure you don’t take a loss.” “We have waited for three months. It is past the best time for the adrmnstration to act in keeping this promise,” Delano said. The Farm Bureau president added that “farmers are hardest hit among citizens making economic sacrifices at a TO EM HERR M SUPPLY DIRECTION! FARM I. HO) F*«MtMOMr SUPPLY IF WILLOW STREET 1 MILE SOUTH Ol Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, April 5,1980—C39 time when soaring inflation and near impossible credit conditions have caused a cash-flow crisis m rural America. “Prices for corn, wheat, and soybeans have fallen m the country and will remain depressed as long as a large tonnage of these com modities is held by the government. “We gave reluctant support to the boycott on the basis of national security,” Delano said, adding that very little supportive security action has oc- Emergency farm loan bill signed by President WASHINGTON, D.C. President Jimmy Carter has signed into law legislation authorizing up to $2 billion m additional emergency farm loans to financially strapped farmers who might other wise be forced out of business due to sagging farm prices, tight credit, and high interest rates. The 'President had earlier threatened to veto the legislation, which was authored by U S. Congressman Tom Harkm of lowa. The bill extends the Economic Emergency Assistance loan program, which was due to expire in May, and authorized up to an additional $2 billion in emergency farm loans under the program Carter had earlier ob lected to Harkin’s bill DEAD STOCK REMOVED PROMPTLY ANYTIME ANYWHERE We Charge For distant Pickups. A. F. BRANDT’S SONS RENDERERS ELIZABETHTOWN, PA (717) 367-6026 lmpr v Helps eliminate spoilage % Reduces seepage, gaseous losses - Improves payability, digestability Gives you better control Permits economic advantages * £ST WBTH EACH 400-POUND ORDER OF SILA-TRIME ELMER M. MARTIN R.D. #2 Myerstown, PA Phone 717-949-2081 curred. “These security measures should have included the severing of all business and cultural contacts and ties with the Soviet Union, other than those diplomatic contacts necessary to resolve the current situation. “This should include cancellation of the contract to televise the 1980 Summer Olympic games; full enlistment of allies in backing expanded sanctions and public rejection of the Salt Two treaty,” Delano concluded. because it did not raise in terest rates for loans under the program to “prevailing market rates.” Instead, it continued the current “cost of money to the government, plus up to one per cent rate.” Harkm argued Congress should continue the “cost of money” rate, which is substantially below current market rates, because farmers are facing low prices, tight money supplies, and high interest rates, a combination Harkm described as “potentially disastrous” for the farm economy. Congress voted to contmue the current “cost of money” rate, and sent the bill to the President last week. The President signed it into law Sunday ivery