SYRACUSE, N.Y - The first Empire Conservation Tillage Conference will be held m Syracuse at the New York State Fairgrounds, MEMO HAY, STRAW & EAR CORN SALE EVERY MONDAY At 11A.M. \ NEW HOLLAND SALES ! STABLES, INC. 1 Rhone 717-354-4341 | Lloyd H Kreider, Auct I leoseeeeoeeooeae i / m fiolgligM For on this night a child is born and the angels sing. Joy be with you this Christmas. KELLER BROS. TRACTOR CO. 717 949-6502 Buffalo Springs, PA 717-949-6502 Route 419 Between Schaefferstown & Cornwall Lebanon County New York to host February 19,1981. Sponsored by the Empire Chapter of the Soil Con servation Society of America, the one-day meeting is expected to at tract farmers and others from around the Northeast who are interested in the latest developments in conservation tillage. The program will run from 10 a.m to 4 p.m and will feature equipment and supply displays, farmer presentations, and recent research findings. Fanners will see exhibits and displays by equipment dealers, chemical com panies, and seed suppliers They will be able to talk to commercial dealers about the latest technology There will also be non-commercial displays by agencies and other organizations involved in conservation tillage The morning program will begin with a presentation by J Roger Barber, Com missioner, NYS Department of Agriculture & Markets on the theme of the conference “A New Era in Northeast Agriculture ” The role of conservation tillage in the Northeast will be discussed by Paul A Dodd, State Conservationist for the Soil Conservation Service in New York. Featured speaker for the morning will be Mike Sager, an agricultural advisor and farmer from Woodford County, Illinois, who pioneered many of the current conservation tillage Delaware names new environmental specialist DOVER, Del. J Ross Hams, Jr. has been ap pointed extension specialist in environmental quality, according to Samuel M. Gwinn, director of the Delaware Extension Ser vice. In this newly created position, Harris will plan, develop and conduct educational programs to assist farmers and lan downers with implementing practices related to the control of rural nonpomt source pollution. He will be working with individual farmers, local watershed groups and others concerned with water quality management planning in Kent and Sussex counties Harris earned a B.S in We Specialize in Aerial Work Using Our Twin Bucket Boom Truck / ELECTRICAL \ / / CONTRACTING \ 55Ft I Specializing In \ \ j AGRICULTURAL / WIRING I Also Residential Industrial j And Commercial Work / IvVviXX Free Estimates / We H*ve Poles In Stock 25 30 35 (45 & f ty tillage conference methods Specific con servation tillage pactices in New York will be the subject of Jim Peck, President of ConsulAgr, consulting company of Brookside Laboratories, and farmer from Newark, N.Y Fitting soil types to tillage practices will be discussed by Steve Probst, State Resource Conservationist for the Soil Conservation Service in Illinois Rick Koelsch, Energy Specialist for Cornell University Agricultural Engineering Department, will address the energy aspects of conservation tillage The afternoon session will feature an Ohio no-till ex perience presented by Neal agriculture from the University of Delaware in C.M. HIGH SO. 320 Kin* St Myerstown, PA 17067 Ptant 717-866*7544 * Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 20,1980—€35 and Nellie Springer, farmers from Knox County, Ohio who have been doing no-till for seven years on their farm with com, soybeans, small grains and forages. The remainder of the afternoon will offer discussions on conservation tillage for com and con servation tillage for small grains and forages as viewed by two panels made up of farmers and specialists The panel on tillage for com will be moderated by Ev Thomas, Regional Ex tension Specialist on Field Crops. Panel members will in clude Andy Burt, farmer from Canandaigua, N.Y., Butch Mattoon, farmer from Phelps, N.Y., and Bill Johann Farmer from 1975, and pursued graduate study in Biological and Agricultural Engineering at North Carolina State University, Raleigh, N.C. Since March of 1979 Harris has been employed as a research associate in the University of Delaware’s Farmers should expect increased labor costs COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Farmers should expect higher labor costs in 1981, according to John W. Wysong, extension farm management specialist and professor of agricultural economics at the University of Maryland. Two forces are behind the expected increase, notes Wysong First, the federal minimum hourly wage will rise from the 1980 level of $3 10 to $3 35 on January 1, 1981. The second force involves the social security tax on employee earnings. The tax rate will not only rise from 6.15 percent to 6.65 percent, but the amount of total in come subject to tax will rise from 525,900 to $29,700 per year. Since most hired farm workers earn less than the new level of taxable ear nings, their employer will have his tax bill increased to 6.65 percent on all wages paid, reports Wysong Several suggestions have been made to offset the unpact of rising labor costs DURABLE, ENGINEERED STRUCTURAL STRENGTH UP TO 40# ROOF & 25# WIND Construction Co., Inc. 1218 STEUBEN STREET UTICA. NEW YORK 13501 Telephone Area Code 315 724 5593 Orange County, N.Y. The panel on conservation tillage for small grams and forages will consist of Bill Kirby, Regional representative for Ortho-Chevron Chemical Company, Dean Lmscott, Cornell Agronomy Depart ment and Lynn Hoffman, Research Farm Manager, Penn State University. Tickets will be available from local Soil and Water Conservation District of fices. The ticket price of $2 covers admission and a copy of the proceedings. For additional information on the conference, tickets, or displays, contact Fred Gaffney, Soil Conservation Service, 771 Federal Building, Syracuse, New York 13260 department of agricultural engineering. In his new position he is headquartered at the Kent County Extension Office, which is located in the Wesley Church Education Building, Dover on the price of producing milk and meat, but these suggestions have not been acted on by Congress. One of these recom mendations involves tax incentives for employers who hire youths and give them training on the job. Another proposal is to lower the minimum wage to 75 percent of the base rate for youths under 20 years of age. During rough economic tunes, young, inexperienced workers have the most trouble finding and holding a job, notes Wysong. Passage of legislation which permits faster rates of depreciation on new equipment and building investments is still another area to help decrease the impact of rising labor costs. Efficiencies in other areas of farm management also can help to lower the costs of each unit of output. Assistance and additional information on farm management is available through county extension agricultural agents ** j «2*; PARTY