MCMP (Continued from Page Al) marketing activities and are financially strong'.” “Functions which can best be handled at the corporate level will be handled in Louisville, and matters best handled on a local level will be dealt with in Baltimore,” noted MCMP general manager Ralph Strock. Dairymen, Inc., follows the policy of centralized direction, but decentralized operations within each division. Thus, MCMP will continue to maintain its own division board of directors and management team. In the final moments before the last two or three ballots were collected from the raptly attentive audience, manager Strock again outlined the months of study that had brought the cooperative to this history-making meeting. He said the cooperative had looked in several directions, seeking a partnership where they would be best equipped for the changing demands of the dairy industry. Strock predicted milk volume handling by farmer-owned The 48-knife 3960 Powr-Mizer Forage Harvester... more capacity from tractors up to 180 hp USED FORAGE HARVESTER \ JOHN DEERE JOHN DEERE 3800 38 With With 2 R Corn 2R CORN cooperatives will continue to in crease; buyers will become larger nationwide or regional customers, requiring large volume suppliers; and successful suppliers will be those with the foresight to increase their scale of operations to new market needs. The manager also predicted that, following this pattern of ever larger marketing organizations, in the future the nation’s supply of milk is likely to be handled by perhaps 13 to 15 large, regional cooperatives. “Maryland Cooperative is an organization that believes like we do,” Said P.L. Robinson, president of Dairymen, Inc. “The cooperative’s biggest responsibil ity is to guarantee established markets for members.” Expanding on that theme was Ben F. Morgan, Jr., Dairymen’s chief executive officer. “Our purpose is to serve the dairy farmer in the marketplace and give some meaningful in fluence,” said Morgan. “Dairy farmers should make the rules, not by playing ‘catch-up’.” During a pre-ballot tabulation question-answer session, Morgan CORN SILAGE TIME Machines To Do Your Work Faster With Less Fuel Cost SPECIAL RENTAL S^OO l^oo 243 with Chopper Drive. Like New Corner of Ruppsville Road & Chapman Road, Wescosville, Pa. 215-398-2553 Open Mon. thru Fri. 8:00 AM to 5 PM; Sat. 8:00 AM to 12:00 WAIVER of FINANCE TO JANUARY 1982 CHAPMAN EQUIPMENT CENTER, INC. fielded one query on how milk would continue to be handled within the Baltimore market area. He indicated that if bottling plants in the area would come up for sale, Dairymen would evaluate their possible acquisition in a “strictly businesslike way.” If the operation of such facilities would be deemed profitable, the cooperative would then consider such purchases. Flav-O-Rich, the processing sales arm of Dairymen, Inc., is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the members, operating 20 bottling plants. Last year, Flav-O-Rich earned $5.6 million on operations, and is projected this year to $6 million. Management of Dairymen, Inc. speculates someday the processing business may completely fund the operating costs of running the large cooperative. According to James W. Mc- Dowell, Jr., vice president of operations for Dairymen, roughly 97 cents of every dollar of milk handled through the cooperative returns to producers. That tran slates, he says, to about 40 cents per hunderedweight in operating In Stock Ready To Go FOX MAX I DIBHv s lpr d harvester 3 Row Narrow No Cab Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 29,19>1—A37 costs. One as yet unsettled issue , the method of raising milk promotion funds, emerged during the member question-answer period proceeding the vote counting., Maryland Cooperative members have been contributing 13 cents per hundredweight, but funds were subject to “ask-out” by those not wishing to support the Federal Order 4 promotion program. For the past two years. Dairyman, Inc, has operated their own cooperative promotion program, based on board philosophy and policy aimed at long-term goals of marketing milk. DID YOU EVER SEE mRBmIERIL,* rntr Two new Time-Mizer Self-Propelleds 210 hp Model 5720 275 hp Model 5820 8 and 18% more horsepower INTERNATIONAL 650 Forage Harvester w/ Pick Head and 2 R Corn Head “We develop a game plan, as to our objectives, and put our dollars there,” explained McDowell. That funding amounted to a mandatory 8.1 cents per hun dredweight, with no “ask-outs” permitted. McDowell assured MCMP producers the workability of the Order 4 program will be carefully analyzed and a decision made only after intense study. With the approval of MCMP members to merge, Dairymen, Inc., now encompasses 8,000 farmer-members operating in 17 states. FOX 3005 Forage Harvester w/2 Row Com Head (agway)