VOL 27 Ha. 16 ‘Milkerendum’ hearings answer producers’ queries by, sheila miller LANCASTER —Farmers across the state met at five regional meetings this week to voice their concerns and sentiments coo*' cerning the , proposed ' Penn sylvania dairy promotion order, commonly referred to as the Milkerendum. rA crowd of 125 fanners and farm organization- ' representatives Columns Editorials; Now is the time, A 10; On being a farm wife, B 5; Ladies have you heard? BIS; Ida’s Notebook, Bid; Farming’s Futures, B 19; Farm Talk, Dl2; Brackett's Ag Advice, 018. Dairy Franklin OHIA, B 41; Cum berland DHM, 010; Dauphin DHIA,DI3; Perry DHIA, 020. Inside This Week’s... Dairy farmers from Blair and Bedford counties earn “milking degrees". See page...A2o. At Pennfield’s dairy day, Thursday, dairy farmers learned the key to dairy profit ability for the next few years. Interested? See page...A2l. t During the York Baby Beef awards banquet, Bill and Pat Holloway won the 1982 Citation Award for serving as leaders, judges and coaches for over twenty years! ...826. Want to meet the 1982 All-American Pork Producer? He's from Kenton, Del., and his story appears on page... 830. A 9-month-old Elevation daughter out of an Excellent Kingpin, topped the Maryland Holstein Convention Safe, Wednesday. Oak - Ridge Farms, of Ontario Canada paid $B,BOO turned out here at the Farm and Home Coder on Tuesday af ternoon to hear what Secretary of Agriculture Penrose Hallowell and his marketing assistant James Sumner and Deputy Secretary . , Luther Snyder had to say about the proposal. Of that group, 30 people presented testimonies. The meeting in what Hallowell termed the “heartland of the state’s dairy industry” turned out to be a welcome relief for the PDA representatives after having beard from a more uproarious crowd at last Friday evening’s meeting in / Scranton. The meeting here Home and Youth Home on the 'Range, BO; Homestead Notes, B 2; FWS calendar, B 5; Kid's Komer, BIO; 4- H news, B 20; Estate planning, B 12; Red Rose livestock banquet, B 16; Hiring underage help? 832. for Kents-Reserve Elevation Cherl-ET, the consignment of Marion F. Andrew, Centerville, Md. ' - , 1 , / ',v W-W '.V ‘■ ■ Lancaster Fannins, Saturday, February 13,1982 proceeded in an orderly fashion, with no uncontrolled outbursts from those assembled. Laying the groundwork for the session, Snyder and Sumner reviewed the provisions of the milk referendum which was requested years ago by the Keystone Milk Marketing Council, Inc. The proposal 'for a milk marketing order falls under the provisions of the Pennsylvania Agricultural Commodities Marketing Act of 1968, which establishes procedures for developing and operating marketing programs for generic promotion of Pennsylvania farm FmHA pledges financial aid HARRISBURG - "Although many farmers are facing financial difficulty because of today’s cost price squeeze, the Farmers Home Administration intendato do all it can to help it borrowers, stay in farmings” announced Penn sylvania’s FmHA State Director D. Elmer Hawbaker on Monday. iWe' recognize there are probfemswith high interest rates, inflation, a grain embargo, ad verse weather and other causes,’’ he said. "And these have been mtesified by overall bumper crops that have affected prices. "As Secretary of Agriculture John Block said recently, our farm economy is in a valley right now and needs seme help to move on up the hill on the other side.” Hawbaker’s remarks come at a tune when this rural credit agency products. The current law specifically outlines that this promotion and advertising program must not be brand oriented, and could only be changed through * legislative amendment. Snyder pointed out that Penn sylvania already has three existing marketing programs under the act apples since 1967, red cherries since 1974, and potatoes since 1976 v After receiving the request for a referendum from Keystone, Hallowell appointed a 23-member Dairy Promotion • Advisory Committee' in September 1986, Nine borrowers in trouble is under fire from farm organizations and other groups for supposedly helping to put the squeeze on fanners by forcing foreclosures. The FmHA chief in Penn sylvania terms these accusations as erroneous, at - least in the Keystone state, and cites only 9 farm cases that are in serious trouble. "We have a total of 62,000 far mers in Pennsylvania,” stated Hawbaker. "And of that total, FmHA services 2,947 of these farmers financially that’s 4.34 percent of all the farmers in the state and these are the people who can’t get credit anywhere else.” Hawbaker stated that the 9 serious cases' in Pennsylvania were pending "acceleration” of their loans. That is, the borrowers Open heifer tops Md. Holstein Sale BY DONNA TOMMELLEO WEST FRIENDSHIP, Md. - An Elevation daughter commanded $B,BOO, Wednesday, during the Maryland Holstein Convention sale, which closed out the two-day 18th Annual Maryland Holstein Convention. The $B,BOO price tag tor Kents- Reserve Elevation Cherl-ET was one ot the highest paid tor an open heiter in the history ot the Maryland convention sale, said a spokesperson trom Remsburg Sale Service. Wednesday’s tallies showed 52 head averaging $2,188 tor a gross ot $113,560. Consigned by Marion F. Andrew ot Centreville, Md., the 9-month old heiter was purchased by Oak Ridge Farm ot Ontario, Canada. The tancy Black and White is out ot an Excellent Kingpin daughter with a lop record as a 4-y ear-old ot 24,070 pounds ot milk and 786 pounds ot tat. Her second dam, a 3E 92 Excellent Astronaut, carries an impressive 26,000 pounds ot milk and 1,068 pounds ot tat as a 5- year-old. Third dam, Wmtacres Dean Charlene, is also a 3E 92 with $7.50 ptr year making his selections from a list of names submitted by farm organizations, dairy cooperatives, and independent producers. Since then, the -committee has been meeting and redrafting the statewide milk marketing order proposal which was given tentative approval a year ago and was finalized this past December. The referendum is tentatively scheduled for a vote sometime during March, unless testimonies received at the 5 public hearings would warrant a rewrite of the proposal. (Turn to Page A3B) were notified that there loans would have to be settled by a certain date. This is accomplished through liquidating assets and paying all debts, or by conveying all the assets to the government which then resells land, equip ment, cattle, etc. to clear the loans, he explained. Hawbaker stressed there has been "no actual foreclosures'* in the state recently and none are scheduled. He termed the "ac clerated” method of clearing debts as “voluntary liquidations.” If a farmer doesn't voluntarily liquidate, however, FmHA can take possession, he explained. Although the 9 serious loan cases all involve real estate mortgages, FmHA also lends money for operating and emergency costs to (Turn to Page A3B) a lifetime production ot 186,800 pounds ot milk and 6,845 pounds ot tat. A 3-year-old Astronaut daughter, consigned by William Schrader ot Earleville, Md., brought the sale’s second lop price ot $5,300. Wil-O- Mar Astro Pearl was purchased by Holmacres Holstein Farms ot Northheld, Minnesota. Out ot an Elevation daughter, the Pearl cow finished her tirst lactation with more than 16.200 pounds ot milk and 570 pounds ot tat. She is due to calve in March to Kopies Chiet Butt. The University ot Maryland consigned the third-high seller, which brought a $3,500 price tag. Terrapin Elevation 1261, pur chased by Hoodstead Farms, Middletown, Md., is sired by Elevation and out ot a Very Good Simpson Apollo Rebel daughter. The 3-year-old cow finished her tirst record with more than 17,800 pounds ot milk and 610 pounds ot tat. Elesabelh Ingall Gillel ot Taney town, Md., paid 3,000 tor a (Turn to Page A 34)