Bradford do. DHIA (Continued from Page 024) 3 5 305 24,908 3 6 305 21,538 62 R 66 c f Snowcrest Farm Miracle Tammy Dennis Lehman Sherry James Boor Heather Lewis & Lois Alderson Dolly 3 Michell 3 Ida 3 Shores Brothers Nan 3 Leslie Freeman 4317 3 5077 3 Harold Warner & Sons Dot 3 Warren J. Roberts Linda- 3 Endless Mts. Farm Beth 3 Jerry Pruyne 35 . 3 64 3 12 . 3 Etsbree Bros. 134 3 ,42 3 91 3 54 3 74 3 . 182 L- ~ "3- "IS3 " " 3 141 3 ' Peck Hill Farms <- • 193 3 7 3 107 3 50 3 Calkins Farm Hazel 3 Clifton McMurray 92 3 Althea - 3 Davis Brothers Dl5 3 085 . 3 Abraham S. Derstme Lassie Sonia Patsy Poetry Victory „Philcrest Farm Lois c Lethe Halstead Bros v- 70 <£/Duane Maggie David Page Spotty '‘Marshall M. Watkins • Angie 'Jay& Faye Good ' Bald-Tv K Leaky >" ' PL-700 '■ - BTwm2 Kerryview Acres Sweet P Scott Moore 90 Richard H. Storck 3 3 &Pai 3 3 3 . 3 H & R Dairy Farm Donna 3 Rustic View Farm Jackie 3 Lawrence A. Swartley 36 3 37 ' ' 3 REMODELING . OR BUILDING? Start with the best foundat • Manure Pit Walla • Hog House Walls • Chicken House Walls « Concrete Decks • House Foundation Walls • Barnyard Walls • Concrete Pit Tops • Silage Pit Walls • Retaining Walls • Insulated Walls • Slatted Fencing 305 305 305 305 305 305 305 303 305 305 305 305 ~ 7 „ 305 305 305 . 305 305 305 305 305 305 —305 - 305 305 305 5 7 7 4 , 3- 305 305 305 305 305 284 301 296 305 305 305 305 278 305 3 • _305 305 305 305 ' 305 305 305 302 305 305 305 - $O5 305 305 305 294 305 410 Main St. * Akron, PA 17501 • (717) 859-2074 or 733-9196 Call NOW For New Building. 837 848 781 622 19,920 16,465 710 23,103 710 17,052 746 873 847 18,912 19,965 23,266 20,883 733 730 18,026 22,558 612 17,456 725 21,264 766 19,922 735 737 837 725 21,011 17.542 22,380 -18,609 993 706 - 820— —"796'' 735 841 756 724 21,953 20,223 22,476 J-7-,92^ 18,682 20,074 18,427 18,081 822 709 711 655 23,651 19,137 18,831 16,743 713 21,760 713 793 18,030 23,698 861 607 19,179 16,003 832 825 932 669 677 18,883 18,311 24,700 17,218 20,316 763 718 22,183 19,186 797 20,757 "■'M 19,982 ■ . 767 746 22,441 20,146 816 733 713 715 788 17,308 18,127 17,935 26,694 703 - 16,353 705 16,807 763 22,470 750 17,692 778 16,642 740 882 18,691 22,190 Invest in Quality - It will las LAS VEGAS, Nev. r - The livestock industry shouldn’t “kid itself” that high interest rates and a stumbling economy are its only problems, a former senior economist with the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank said here recently. Sheldon. Stahl, speaking at the annual meeting ot Livestock Marketing Association, said there are “long-term changes taking place that are compounding your problems and that will continue to impact on your industry for the foreseeable future.” These include the possibilities that consumers .may be gradually- and permanently- -turtung away -frtnjTred meat, and that recent "decades of high beef consumption were an aberration produced by the post-war baby boom. “It might be satisfying to say that Carol Foreman is gone now and that nutritionists are kooks, but if that’s the way you’re thinking, do the best you can to purge yourselves of those kinds of thoughts and ask yourself a much more troubling question,” Stahl said. "How well do you understand your consumer and his patterns of consumption? What if there are 3 3 _ 46 3 Calvin & Rich Shaffer 12 3 40 Lewstone Farms Sarah Parks Knoll Farms - 61 3 5 3 6 Francis Chaffee 3 4 3 2 Gray Bonny Stuart Wnsley 3341 2003 3 2002 Roma me & Jeff Sechnst Lisa 3 Wanda >-3 James & Diane Elvidge Bessie 3 Sweety 3 Dave L. Wright Bliss 3 Raymond A. Scnvens 29 3 Clarence Stevens Shawn 3 James & Betty Davis 105 4 R. Brown & R. Ely Jan ' 3 Poured Solid Concrete Steel Reinforced Weils. ■ The Wall is Only a$ Good - CONCRETE WORK, INC. Economist cautions against expansion long-term changes underway (so that) the industry might not again return to the high levels of activity and profitability that it enjoyed in the past?” Stahl, now head of his own economic consulting service, asked the audience to speculate that high meat consumption might have been caused by low land prices for producers, and the post- World War Two baby boomr two factors he said are unlikely to recur. The fastest-growing segment of the U.S. population is the age group from 25 to .that ‘-They may have been nutured on beef, but they experiment; they’re into natural foods, fish, poultry, and lots of other things. ’ ’ What this means for the livestock industry, Stahl said, is “You can’t count on the same kind of consumer being out there as was there 10 to 20 years ago. ” And, he said, “You can’t count on ever agam having low, single digit interest rates.” Stahl pointed to the American automobile industry, which he said, “is dead as a doornail,” as an example of how not to deal with today’s consumer and today’s economy. 22,609 857 . 25,038 728 19,133 740 305 305 305 23,449 1091 18.533 812 305 305 19,677 305 18,356 305 19,327 14,444 305 305 20,468 17,039 19,956 305 305 305 20,438 22,399 305 305 22,355 20,395 305 305 17,284 305 21,589 305 17,581 305 15,818 305 17,373 305 a lifetime. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 6,1982—D25 887 755 787 612 765 718 779 725 836 DON'T BE SLOW Call Now To Place Your CLASSIFIED AD Ph: 717-394-3047 or 717-626-1164 782 802 647 815 712 706 762 Guard GffltflGDaoQ Qdqsqqcqoqg© €®ini[»)aoo\y Farmer in Bradford County looses 160 cows in $750,000. barn fire. Is your insurance adequate to cover such a loss? Our agent in your area will gladly give you a quotation without obligation. JAY H. LUTZ & CO., INC. 20 S. Fourth St., Columbia, PA PAUL G. MURRAY HIS. ASSOC. 5 S. Hess St., Quarryville, PA ' JOHN E. PAXSON P.O. Box 40, New London, PA STUBBS-UNRUH INSURANCE AGCY Bowmansville, PA Domestic automakers were late in realizing the public’s ac ceptance of smaller and cheaper foreign cars. And, he said, it's become a "badge of honor not to trade a car in every three years, but to drive (it) until the wheels fall off.” He called this a change in "secular attitudes” that will brmg profound changes and problems fof'the U.S. automakers. But “the industry won’t believe it, and because they have refused to believe reality for a long time, they are now reaping the results of that - stupidity:”.. , Stahl told his audience, primarily livestock marketing businessmen, “There is a lesson in this for your people. Don’t miss that bus. Ask yourself, 'Are we speaking with the consumer, who purchases our products, not just to him or her?' “It’s the difference between...a dialogue and a monologue. You’ve got to speak with, instead of speaking to.” Stahl added that “I’m an op timist, because I believe that when we face up to the problems that we have, and the sacrifices that we might have to make, we can do something about it.” Asked to elaborate on what sacrifices the livestock industry should make, he said, “This is a time for consolidation and cost controls-don’t expand.” On the national level, Stahl said tax increases, not cuts, are the only way to bring the federal deficit under control and per manently lower interest rates. “Unless interest rates come down, we are going to be stuck with an economy that continues to be sick for a very long, long tune. LMA’s annual meeting was held in mid-January at the Riveria Hotel. Lancaster, PA 717-569-5361 “Friend of Fanners since 1896.'T “
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers