li t'lLf; :/vTTECi||fr*' * ” isnoM^hZ. Local horse racks up blue at Penn National lgf ’s Pennsylvania ■tonal Hoifee Show wraps ■today with |lO,OOO Grand mt De Perth National. This Ee concludes a nine-day pit packed with com iltion between some at the pen’s finest horses and IT number of local luestrians will be coming me with numerous ribbons Un this prestigious show, inging home a blue ribbon the Amateur Five-Gaited ddte Horse class is Jean unsay, Lancaster. In this Issue SECTION A: Editorials, 10; Dairylea, 15; Guernsey xiplets, 17; Last dairyman in county, 26; Franklin beef, 19; Thomasvllle to reopen, 32j Lancaster beef tour, 34. SECTION B: Swine operation, 2; 20th forage con erence, 4; Ephrata FFA, 6; Farm equipment outlook, ; Reading Fair family, 9; The Milk Check, 11. SECTION C: Homestead notes, 2; Home mi the Range, ; Joyce Bupp’s column, 10; Apple Qiieen USA, 22; lerks swine club, 28; York Holstein meeting, 32; Del. armland program, 36. SECTION D; Tennessee Walkers, 2; Dauphin DHIA, ; Upper Susquehanna DHIA, 10; Sheila’s Shorts, 16; tsk the VMD, 17; Farm Talk, 19. Milk plan draft in final stages BY DICK ANGLESTEIN HARRISBURG - The iitial draft of Penn rtvama’s proposed milk larketing promotional •ogram is expected to be sady for distribution during ■e coming week. “The draft is in its final reparation and is being mewed by department ficials,” according to imes Sumner, Director, ireau of Markets, State spartment of Agriculture. The draft will be stributed to represen tives of various co-ops, ■dependent producers and tatewide farm Animal rights movement disrupts barnyard BY DEBBIE KOONTZ I Farmers already must deal with a small army of state and federal inspectors sticking their neaas into their bulk tanks and milking machines, win li* 16 < * ay “•y not be far away when inspectors 1 be more concerned about healthy conditions for than for people. * Mw ®ove*nent in the UJS. now known as the Rights Movement at first it was the basis for a lot of good jokes we best being the one about chickens marching around tow picket signs it no longer can be described as trouble for poultry and jt b « growing problem for which producers n, £jto fa* answers. j*J*«uch gatberingtook place last Monday night at the twucay inn ia lancaster. Ninety-one poultry servicemen Aboard her 7-year-old American Saddlebred gelding, Grand Larceny, Jean rode to the top of her class, out-showing a field of 15 outstanding competitors on Thursday evening. This is not the first win for Bamsay's horse, called Rufus. He was pinned the champion American Sad dlebred 5-Gaited Horse in two other states, Ohio and New Jersey. And, be also was tagged champion at the recent Fall Show held at Quentin, Lancaster County. Ramsay said she has been riding horses for 30 years organizations who met late last month as an informal committee to begin work on the proposed program. Following receipt of the draft, the different groups will review the various proposals in preparation for a second meeting of the informal committee. This second meeting, at which groups will offer comments on the program and consider «tny additions, deletions or revisions, is expected to’ be held in the first week of November. Several co-ops have been in contact with the PDA since the first committee Humans squawk for better barn conditions Lancaster Farabi, Saturday, October 25,1M0 and she emphatically stated she’s always been aboard American Saddlebreds. Currently in her stable at Windridge Farm, Jean has two of her favorite breed of horses Grand Larceny 7 , and an A-year-old pleasure mare, Hazel Gemini. Ramsay, who works as a secretary in Lancaster General Hospital’s Durg and Alcohol Clinic, said she is on the show road from April through November. The last show for her this year is the November 4-9 show at Madison Square Gardens in New York City. She men tioned she is quite excited about going to this show because she is one out of 35 of die nation’s top horses and riders selected to compete. Li the Thursday afternoon show, Ramsay rode another local horse to third place honors in the ESHBA American Saddlebred Three-Gaited,, Pleasure Horse Class. She was astride A Lovely Decision, a 6-year old mare owned by Melanie Lipensky of Lebanon. (Turn to Page Al 2) meeting to amplify their positions on the proposed program, Sumner said. Their positions have not appreciably changed from those expressed at the first meeting held on Sepetmber 30. Following the completion of a final draft, the PDA would give notice of a public hearing on the proposed program. The actual referendum vote among producers is not expected to be leld until about late-January of 1981, with the final tally of votes not being made until ap proximately March. and farmers grouped to discuss the critical influence such supporters of animal rights may have. Or. Dale Schwindaman, senior staff veterinarian of Veterinary Service, USDA in Hyattsville, Md., spoke to the group on exactly what it is the supporters of animal welfare want to change. Pam Wunderlich, Lebanon, and her American Saddlebred mare Genius Jane brought home honors during competition at the Pennsylvania National Horse Show, held October 17 totodaypt the Farm Show Complex. ■ -- "" ? Carter mushroom tariff surprises area growers BY CURT HAULER WASHINGTON, D.C. - President Jimmy Carter’s decision last week to impose stronger tariffs on imported mushrooms has caught fanners by surprise. While a number of farm groups sought relief from foreign imports for mushroom growers, most had asked for import quotas. The stepped-up tariffs caught most producers by surprise. Tariffs currently are 13 percent of the sale price of mushrooms. They will in crease to 33 percent next year, decreasing to 28 percent and then 23 percent in the following tjro years. Carter rejected quotas. The tariffs apply to mushrooms canned, frozen or in jars. Fresh or dried mushrooms are not in cluded. The actual base tariff of 3.2 cents remains. As ol November 1, the current 10 percent ad valorum tax, imposed on the invoice value of product, will jump to 30 percent plus the base 3.2 ceqts. The ad valorum tax drops to 25 percent the next year and 20 percent the last year of the tariff. - Most fanners and fanner groups, used to thinking in terms of pounds of mushrooms and quotas were taken back by the tariff idea. No one was able to say exactly what the increased tariff would to do import volume. While the tariff represents a significant increase over the existing tariff, there is no assurance that a 20 percent boost in tariff rates will mean a 20 percent* drop in foreign mushrooms entering the country—or any drop m imports at all. Pennsylvania Fanners Union noted the tariff was What concerns welfarists most is the intensive con finement production of farm animals. Crowding livestock and poultry in pens leads to unnatural behavior and to distressfor these animals, they daim. The movement is centered in the Institute for the Study of Animal Problems, in Washington D.C., and is directed by Dr. Michael Fox, the head of the Institute, which is a division of the Humane Society of the United States. This organization is against many agricultural prac tices. The first few, which are of great concern to the poultry producers, are commercial egg production cage management systems, feeding and watering procedures, broiler production units, debeaking and poor ventilation. Other practices the organization Would like to see changed are: tail docking, total confinement and farrowing pens for hogs, veal calf husbandly and feed lot finishing of beef $7.50 Per Year unrelated to the domestic cost of production or any parity index in mushrooms. Also disturbing to PFU was the idea of having all revenues from the tariff go to the U.S. Treasury and none to helping domestic producers. But Farmers Union said it was glad the President did something, pointing out President Gaiter was not obliged to do anything at all. Farmers Union said it is difficult to know what effect the tariff will have, adding the group hopes the ad ministration imposed the tariff knowning what the outcome would be. Pennsylvania Farmers’ Association was not so op timistic. * “We don’t think it will solve the problem. If they have a lot of mushrooms over there why not pay some (Turn to Page A 24) (TurwtoPag«A36) *