OL2SHo.6K^ a . Something for eveiyone at Ag Progress ■ BY DICK ANGLESTEIN ■ ROCK SPRINGS There will be something for Everyone when the “biggest Buid best ever” Ag Progress Bays opens Tuesday at Penn State’s Agricultural Research Center. I Theme of this year’s ■went,, which has attracted Inore than 250 commercial Exhibitors who are Displaying some $2O million north of equipment and machinery, is “Penn State Agriculture: 125 Years of Krogress.” I Machinery demon-- fttrations are scheduled Ihroughout the event, ■Tuesday through Thursday. Korn chopping and handling Bt 10:30 a.m. is followed by mowing at 11:30 a.m. Krimary tillage gets started t 12:30 p.m., with secon lary tillage at 2 p.m. Hay naking winds up the emonstrations at 3 p.m. Bus tours of the research lots leave every half hour rdm 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. from he headquarters. The buses nil transport spectators to he wagon tour sites. A theatre with continuous ntertainment will offer a aried program of wide ppeal. The program chedule includes segments n spinning, lace making, erbs and flowers, food afety, rural crime revention, folklore, uilting, winemaking, orticulture and even some luegrass music. Special programs of in vest to the small-fry will be taged daily in the children’s :nt. A Home and Family Adams County farmers charge unknowns with rain theft BY CURT HAULER GETTYSBURG - A group )f Adams County farmers, neetmg for the second time n one week, has charged :loud seeders are preventing am from falling on their arms. ln this Issue SECTION A: Editorials, 10; Sheila’s shorts, 19; ■hester hogs, 20; Chester dairy show, 26; Eastern lolstem show, 28; Berks Holstein meet, 33; Dauphin 4- [ dairy, 34. SECTION B: Fulton Grange meets, 2; Lycoming gent to retire, 4; What’s new, 6; Blackbird damage, 7; ucks-Mont swine, 9. SECTION C: Homestead notes, 2; Home on range, 6; arm women’s picmc, 8; State 4-H winners, 12; ractor pulls, 13; Joyce Bupp, 14. SECTION D: Lebanon 4-H hogs, 2; Lebanon DHIA, , County’s a supermarket, 10; Ag Progress exhibitors, ? ; Ag Progress map, 18; Bradford DHIA, 32. SECTION E: Del. nitrogen research, 2; World [ hamp auctioneer, 4; Lebanon 4-H horses, 10; Lebanon ■rand champ hog, 12; Farm talk, 18; Huntingdon '•HIA, 25; Blair DHIA, 30. Living tent will be the location of exhibits and demonstrations on energy saving techniques, nutrition and health, family recreation, housing, cooking and clothing. Among the educational exhibits staged by Penn State, Federal and State agencies and farm organizations will be wood products, on-the-spot forage analysis, a computerized program on auto purchase and operating costs and troublesome weeds. The Dairy and Livestock Tent again will be a center of interest containing historical and contemporary displays. Top samples of hay and haylage will be on display m the Hay Tent. Special events on Tuesday will be a Penn State ag alumni luncheon, a ceremony at the Jerome K. Pasto Agricultural Museum and a visit by Governor Dick Thornburgh and other top state leaders. On Wednesday, there’s the House Ag Committee lun cheon and on Thursday a visit by the Susquehanna Region Grass Roots Com mittee. Small wpodlot management. and other conservation practices can be seen in the conservation research area. Altogether,' it will be a mix of historic displays and antique machinery with the most up-to-date ways of heating a home, harvesting a crop, growing a garden or practicing soil and water conservation. In response to the charges delivered Wednesday, Pennsylvania Agriculture Secretary Penrose Hallo well has ordered the State Police and the Bureau of Aviation to investigate possible cloud seeding. Laacastar Fanafog, Saturday, August 16,1960 Acres of the latest models of farm equipment will be displayed and demonstrated during Ag Pro- Approximately 15,000 visitors a day are expected for the event. All in all, the 1980 Ag Progress Days is expected to live up to its billing as the largest outdoor educational event for agriculture in the East. The Rock Springs Agricultural Research Center is located along Route 45 nine miles west of State College. Hallowell took the action, invoking his power as chairman of the state weather modification'board. The farmer group, which also drew about 140 growers to a session last Friday night, says rain clouds regularly come over the inountains from the west but never dump the anticipated moisture in the county, these gram growers point to heir-stunted com as proof of i lack of ram. They say extremely high *ates of cloud seeding, rather than encouraging rainfall, actually reduce the rhances of rainfall to almost lefo. While nobody is pointing angers publicly, several* groups are mentioned as laving motives to keep •amfall out of the County. One is the Gettysburg area ;ourist trade which might Ag preserves inch ahead LINCOLN Agricultural land preservation in Lancaster County moved one small step farther toward reality this week. The Ephrata Township Planning Commission and Township Board of Super visors held a joint public hearing Monday night at which the initial draft of profit from good vacation days. The second is the construction business. A third group is fruit farmers in the area who may fear a sudden ram could brmg hail and damage tree (Turn to Page Al 5) In budget cuts: Is conservation fall guy? WASHINGTON,D.C. - Will the 1981 conservatioh program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture be cut by more than 25 percent? This question is embroiled in the current fiscal dilemma m the nation’s capital as bureaucratic infighting flares -to attempt to keep within President Carter’s budget guidelines in gress Days Tuesday through Thursday at Penn State. revised agricultural zoning district regulations were unveiled for the first time to the farm community. Reception by attending farmers was generally as warm as the humid tem peratures prevailing in the Lincoln Fire Hall. An in formal straw poll taken by the planning commission showed unanimous approval of the concept of farmland preservation and majority favor of the manner in which the township is tackling the pioneering legislation. One of the primary con cerns expressed by farmers dealt with existing zoning restrictions on non conforming farming uses m residential districts governing how much these farm uses may be expand. Existing regulations state that non-conforming uses tnis election year. All you get from Washington are rumors of budget cuts or informal confirmation of possible budget cuts. The present rumor is that the Annual Conservation Program of the USDA will be cut by about $5O million from the $l9O million level passed by the House. Consideration of budget levels are now 7.50 Per Year ii i i I may only be expanded one tune up to 50 percent of present size. Farmers asked that the township consider lessening these regulations to permit unrestricted ex pansion so long as the operation would conform to new 200-foot setback tequirements and vegetative screening as written into the amended code. Among regulations in the new amended code for which farmers expressed wholehearted approval were those dealing with the recognition of the im portance of farming and protection of the right to farm. Early in the code a paragraph states the overall intent of the regulations: “Provide maximum (Turn to Page A 36) locked in discussion in the Senate. As soon as the Democrats return from the convention m New York City, the rumors may start moving closer again to reality. Reportedly, the Senate Appropriations Committee has been directed by the Senate Budget Committee to (Turn to Page A 36)