This could be a good year for president of Agri-Commodities, grain farmers, according to some Inc , was made at last fall’s economists, and that’s mostly Department of Agriculture because of an ever-tightening Outlook Conference world gram situation. His prediction is based on the At least one observer says simple law of supply and demand, there’s potential for a run-up in He says the world faces “an un farm prices that will be the most precedented vulnerability to a dramatic of the past decade That supply shortage.” comment from Bruce Scherr, The commodities expert says the Valumatziclll silage distributor-unloader by JA IVIES WAY All ring-drive silo unloaders are not alike The Volumatic E has become the Volumatic IE silo unloader. Every major feature has been systematically adapted to match Jamesway’s Industry-leading ring-drive experience. That’s why other ring-drives can’t match Jamesway features or performance. Why settle for less? See us for systems and service that help make the good life better. AGRi EQUIPMENT INC. 2754 Creek Hill Rd. Leola, PA 17540 717-656-4151 I. G. SALES Rt 113, Box 200 Silverdale, PA 215-257-5135 G. HIRAM BUCHMAN, INC. Rte 519 - N off Rte 46 P 0 Box 185 Belvidere, NJ 07823 201-475-2185 GEORGE A. COLEMAN BENNETT MACHINE CO. Rt #2. Box 216 1601 S. Dupont Blvd Elmer, NJ Milford, OE 609-358-8528 302-422-4837 Farm Talk Jerry Webb # DEPENDABLE MOTORS ROVENDALE SUPPLY Honey Brook, PA RD 2, Watsontown, PA 17777 215-273-3131 717-538-5521 215-273-3737 SOLLENBERGER SILOS HENRY S. LAPP RFD 2, Chambersburg, PA RDI, Cams, Gap, PA 17527 717-264-9588 717-442-8134 HARRYLTROOP Rt 1 Cochranville, PA 19330 215-593-6731 ERB& HENRY EQUIP., INC. 22-26 Henry Avenue New Berlinviile, PA 215-367-2169 expected high prices will have little impact on U.S. com exports, which are expected to total 2.6 billion bushels during the 1980-81 marketing year. High pnces could cut domestic com use for feed and that may mean more wheat is going to be used for livestock, and it may also change some farmers feeding patterns as they opt for more grass and shorter feedlot finishing periods. Scherr expects the prospects for strong prices next fall for both com and wheat to be a strong motivating force to get farmers to plant all the acreage they can for harvest this yea^. Reports indicate farmers are planning to harvest a sharply larger wheat acreage, and early thinking shows com plantings could increase also Scherr thinks it will take bet ween four and six million ad ditional acres of corn in 1981 to meet the anticipated need. “ft will be very difficult to enough acreage to meet i. A. SWOPE Box 121, ROl Myerstown, PA 717-933-4758 DETWILERSILO REPAIR Rt 2, Newville, PA 717-776-7533 demand of the following crop year,” he says. As a result, he anticipates that farmers may do more double cropping as they harvest their wheat as rapidly as possible and then go to soybeans. Higher farm prices are bound to trigger substantially higher food prices this spring and summei, and that could mean more political pressure to restrain exports and thus protect U.S consumers. Couple that with the potential for actual food shortages in some areas of the world and it could be a very interesting marketing year. Dawson Ahalt, chairman of the Department of Agriculture’s World Food and Agricultural Outlook and Situation Board, feels that disappointing world gram harvests this fall would lead to widely fluctuationg prices and perhaps serious food shortages in some parts of the world He says those prospects are possible because world grain stocks have been depleted as a result of crop shortfalls in 1980. And that’s an interesting prospect since the potential for shortages comes just two years after the largest global accumulation of gram stocks in over a decade. Ahalt says that only underscores the fact that the. world food situation is indeed fragile, that the balance between too much and too little food can tilt easily and rapidly in a very short period of time get the Consider that in the early 1960’s the world was in a much more comfortable position in terms of gram and food supplies. End-of season wheat stocks back then STAUFFER’S USED TRACTDRS Used 010006 Deutz tractor, 105 Hp w/cab, heater and air con- Rebuilt 09006 Deutz Tractor, 95 ditionmg 16-speed fully synchro Hp Engine and tractor completely trans and independent 540/1000 rebuilt and updated w/lateat, 06 PTO. 18 4x38 tires Used duals features Higher capacity available hydraulics All-synchro trans w/16 Ford 850 Gas. 41 Hp. w/540 PTO Ford 6000 Commander diesel, 66 3-pt lift w/load & depth control Hp Engine recently overhauled Good condition Good condition PLUS (1) I.H. Farmall “H”, engine with clutch recently rebuilt. 540 PTO Call Harold Stauffer. Local bank financing available. PARTS DEPARTMENT TURBO KIT •We stock the parts - our parts stock | For D lOOO6 levels are higher than ever. ! | DEUTZ • Deutz parts prices have not increased ; I Installed with exist since 5/1/80. Stock up now to beat the | ing air clea'ner. (No upcoming 7% increase. ; > muffler). Set up for DEUTZ TRACTOR < 120 HP output. SEAT SPECIAL $ 5O * | 19Q 19 ftauffer Diesel Inc. 312 W. MAIN ST., NEW HOLLAND, PA. 717-354-4181 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 11,1981-Dl3 represented about four months utilization. Feed grain reserves were at about a three-month level But those were hard times for U.S. farmers. The government was storing burdensome surpluses and farmers seldom got more than the loan rate for then- gram. Twenty years later, and it’s an entirely different ball game The experts say world grain reserves have been steadily shrinking, with an especially dramatic downtrend m feed gram The tightening world gram reserve situation has serious implications for U.S. farmers. That happens because we have a capacity to produce more gram than can be used in this country, and so over the years exports have been steadily climbing. Back m the early sixties when world gram reserves were much more generous we were exporting about four billion dollars worth a year. By 1970, that was up to around seven billion, then m 1973 exports shot up dramatically to 17 billion dollars. Even that is a small number compared to today’s dollar value of agricultural exports, which are expected to reach an all-time record of about 48 billion dollars during the 1980-81 marketing year. So bring on the warm spring days and the gentle rainfall, and hold back the embargoes and other world strategies that affect far mers. It’s planting time, farmers are anxious to get at it, and they would much prefer good prospects for a profitable crop year. speeds forward shift on the go Independent PTO. Cat 2 linkage New 18 4x34 tires RENT OR BUY