C24—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 9,1980 WASHINGTON, D.C - Rotten weather and potential crop failures have helped at least one segment of agriculture. The Carter Administration has announced it will make no request to Congress asking that USDA be allowed to forgo the semi-annual price adjustment due Oc tober 1. At the same time the Administration indicated it would not press to have the dairy price support level lowered from 80 percent of parity to 75 percent One proposal under con sideration would have required the drop if Com modity Credit Corporation York plowmen to compete in county contest YORK County plowmen will compete for honors in the level and contour divisions this Tuesday when the Joe Stump farm off Route 30 west hosts the annual York County plowing contest The first furrow will turn at 12 30 sharp as entrants in both the small and large plow divisions will compete on level land and countour category entrants take to the hills Winners will represent York County at the state plowing competition, scheduled for Saturday, Augpgt 16, at Hershey Estatps-j Each - plowman is responsible for supplying his own equipment The host farm is on Hull Drive, just behind the Use of water for livestock (red meat, poultry, eggs, and milk) is expected to increase from 1.9 billion gallons a day to 2.5 billion gallons a day by the year 2000 protect your fa against costly utility power failures and black outs Pi*Co* TRACTOR DRIVEN ALTERNAT 15,000 THRU 75,000 WATTS A C No one can match PINCOR the new leader in farm standby power l Models from 15,000 thru 75 000 watts AC ■ Continuous and consen/ative output ratings ■ No aluminum wire, all copper wired and wound ■ Long life 1800 R P M alternator operation ■ 5 Year parts and labor warranty ■ Lease purchase plan ■ Affordably priced If vou shoo and compare you will buy PINCOR 1 Contact Midwest Progressive Equip. P.O. Box 441 Lebanon, In 46052 317-482-4776 Dairy support level should remain at 80% stocks were to reach a certain level Large pui chases of sur plus dairy goods, many of them by CCC, were cited as a major incentive for a potential change in the dairj support program As the law stands now, dairymen will receive 80 percent of parity adjusted semi-annually to keep up with inflation. With no change for thcoming in current regulations, dairymen can pencil in an upward ad justment m dairy support prices of between 75 cents and $1 per hundredweight, effective October 1,1980. Whether the oversupply in Leisureville Apartments on Route 30, west of York Sponsor of the competition is the Agriculture Extension Office Distributor Openings 1 | NAME I ADDRESS 1 CITY I PHONE # Please Send More Information I Inlo on Distributor Openings milk production will be augmented because of the support price hike remains to be seen. But the near disaster in crop production in the midwest which i • •■!%> into the government s thinking on the dairy support question, seems to have been the dominant factor in the final decision Less grain production should mean higher feed prices for cows USDA and other agricultural analysts said they figured dairymen would cut back on the amount of feed given cows, thus cutting production. Consumer and farmer groups were asking whether it would be good policy for a government agency to en courage more dairy production in the face of a great oversupply Of course, any major drop in milk output could chew away the surplus and con fuse the milk marketing system The thinking of farm leaders that the adjustment would be needed to meet higher costs of production, Pincor Alternator STATE ZIP including a pi ejected grain price boost, apparently carried the battle in Washington Also entered on the economic graphs was the possibility that poultry and red meat prices could jump in the last quarter of this year or early the first quarter of 1981 An increase in those areas would make dairy products more at tractive to the consumer A number of arguments Let the Friendly First make your dairy farm a land of milk and money. You know all those great things you'd do with your dairy farm "if vou only had the money' 1 " Well, the time to do them is now with help from the Agricultural Loan Division of the First National Bank of Strasburg The Ag Loan Division is headed by Bob Badger, who really understands your unique and complex money problems He'll gladly sit down with you and work out a special dairy loan package that gives you exactly what you need Bob will use the Friendly First's flexible payment schedules to make sure you get a loan you can live with comfortably bo tor the new cows you want to add to your herd, the up-to-date milking machinery, the bigger barn, the additional pasture acreage any improvement 01 addition contact the Friendly First's Ag Loan Division You'll soon have your "land of milk and money" and some new tnends besides’ THE AGRICULTURAL LOAN DIVISION OF Thje c Frier(dly Tirgt THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF STRASBURG Lancaster County’s Oldest National Bank I* u Jt[ against a price increase fell by the wayside The nation’s dairy herd is well culled, so little decrease will come from animals leaving the milking string Per cow milk production is expected to continue to in crease due to the better genetic makeup of the cows now on farms But as farmers well know, economic projection remains one of the most imprecise of sciences - —flfl | 11 While an increase in support prices now seems a certainty, the ultimate effect the increase will have on both farm and consumer prices remains to be seen. At present it looks as though farmers will have something under a dollar per hundredweight more sup port under their milk checks, a figure which could cost the consumer between one and two cents per quart more for milk at the store —CH fi itr Cf ITI