Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, March 31, 1984, Image 27

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    PFA legislative priorities
(Continued from Page Al)
most emotional and likely most
discussed by farmers - appears to
be in trouble, at least for this year.
With the introduction of new
Milk Security Fund legislation that
is aimed at getting the bankrupt
program back on sound financial
footing, this ever-present
economic threat to state dairymen
is lessened.
“This has been a serious issue of
the past two years,” Eckel said,
“and the new legislation should
receive favorable action from the
General Assembly.”
Long-term, Eckel and the PFA
launched an effort for farmland
preservation before a joint session
of the House and Senate ag com
mittees the week before.
“We must make a long-term
commitment to preserve far
mland, not for a few years or a
lifetime, but for generations to
come, Eckel said.
“The key is a well-financed
purchase of development rights
program. All Pennsylvanians will
benefit and all Pennsylvanians will
need to share in paying for it.”
And the third concern is the one
that has been demonstrated by
county associations along road
ways throughout the state and one
that becomes more emotional and
personal because each and every
member of a farm family has been
contending with it on a growing
basis.
TRACTOR CO., INC.
TRACTORS:
(1) JO 4630. Quad Range & Duals,Sharp. *19,500
JD 2510 Dsl Tractor, Power Shift, New Engine, New
Tires, Paint
JD 3020 Gas
(1) JD 2840, Loaded (Super Sharp)
JD 2640, dual remote
JD 2440 Hi-Low
JD 430 wide front, 3 pt
(1) White 2-105 w/Roll Guard
(I)IH46OGasN F. TA, Power Steering
(1) Farmall H w/Cultivators
IH 300 Row Crop WF T A fast hitch
Ford 600
COMBINES & PICKERS:
(1) JD 6620 LL Combine w/213 Flex
Head 800 hrs Price on Request
(1) IH 203 Combine, Gas w/10’ Platform,
P U Reel, 2 Row Cornhead, Cab
(1) New Idea #325 Two Row Narrow
Picker w/Sheller, Heavy PTO
(1) Gleaner Model K w/10' Platform and
2 Row Corn Head. Cab
(1) JD443 Corn head
(1) JD 443 Corn head, new
style
GRAIN DRYERS:
(2) New Farm Fans ABB Auto-Batch Dryers MUST
MOVE CALL FOR PRICE (Dealer Inquiries
Welcome)
(1) Used 350 BU Myer Morton
PTO Batch Dryer
PLANTERS:
JD7OOOBR3O' planter, hq P O P monitor, no-till
IH 400 4R Air Planter
JD 1240 Plateless Planter
GRINDER-MIXERS
SPECIAL:
1 only - New JD 700
COMING IN:
JD7C33sS'owConsv Planter
JD 4020 Tractor, Syncro, WF
6 Row 30" RM Cultivator
JD 3300 Dsl Combine w/343
Corn Head & Rotary Screen
30 Evergreen Rd,
Lebanon, PA
(717) 272-4641
That, of course, is the trash
tossed along roads and into fields,
particularly the beverage cans and
bottles.
And while each farmoi attending
the conference likely related
closest to this issue and probably
brought it up more readily in
Capitol contacts during the day, it
is the proposed legislation calling
for a mandatory deposit that
seemingly is in the most stalled
position at least for the moment.
The strong container and
beverage lobby has apparently
been pushing its loss-of-job
leverage to the utmost, par
ticularly in the western part of the
state.
Eckel stood before the packed
audience at the Penn Harris Motor
Inn and traced the life span and
costs of that trash, which can end
up embedded in a tractor tire or
the gut of a cow.
Holding up the paper sack; <
“It takes three years for this to
decompose.”
Next, a steel can
“This won’t rot away until after
five years.”
An aluminum can;
“This takes 500 years to
decompose.”
Plastic container
“Twelve to 17 years to disap
pear.”
And finally a brown beer bottle:
“Now, this critter takes one
million years to decompose.”
EVERGREEN
*6,850
*5,750
*13,900
*12,500
*12,250
*2,350
*15,900
*2,350
*950
*2,350
*2,350
*3,950
Hydraulic Control
(1) IH 46T w/Thrower
JD 660 Rake w/Wheel
JD 640 fSSIE/Wheel
Ml Rake
NH 275 Baler w/Thrower, Hydraulic Aim
’6,750 ULLAGE:
‘4,350
*6,950
*3,450
*3,450
‘6,250
FORAGE EQUIPMENT
ITERS
HARVE!
(1) John Deere 3940 Harvester,
Hydro-electric Controls, 1,000 PTO
Used very little
NH 1880 Self Propelled Harvester,
3 Row Pickup, Dsl Hydro, 600 hrs
JD 3800 Harvester w/Pickup
(1) John Deere 34 w/One Row RC & Pickup
(1) Grove Forage Wagon w/Roof & Gear
(1) John Deere Three Row Row Crop
Attachment, New Belts *3,850
(3) Badger Self Unloading Wagons w/Tandem Gears
and Roofs (Sharp) . M. *3,500
(1) Kelly-Ryan Silage Dump
Container
HAY MACHINES:
(1) John Deere 1209 Mower Conditioner
(1) MF #l2 Baler w/Thrower,
(1) nimfWtHti’ Irailer Plow, Hydraulic Lift
(1) JD F 350 5-16" Auto Reset Plow Sharp
IH 32 Wheel Carrier Disk, sharp
(1) IN 7 W«la»S" Auto Reset Plow Sharp
(1) John Deere AW 10 Disk
(1) John Deere 12 RW
(1) IH 10' Transport Disk
(1) Athens 10’ Disc, heavy duty
MISCELLANEOUS:
14 9x26 T-rail duals
20 8x34 direct axle, less rubber
NH 679 tandem axle spreader,
hyd endgate
48 LoadeßßaS
Year round cab (or JD 3020 or 4020
Crawford County delegation at PFA Legislative Banquet in Harrisburg this week in
cludes, seated from left, AMen Post, Jean Scouten and Cathy Miller; standing from the
left, Wilson Gum, Rep. Tom Swift, Rep. Jim Merry and Ork) Burnham.
Eckel estimated it costs Penn
sylvania fanners some $37 million
a year to contend with the cans,
bottles and trash.
And, he reported, it costs state
taxpayers $64.00 a mile to clean up
highways and if that amount were
projected for PennDOT over the
entire road network, it would
amount to some $3 million a year.
*8,950
’1,550
*1,850
*2,950
*3,250
*1,350
*1,050
*1,750
*1,150
*575
*2,950
*450
*2,850
*1,150
*2,850
*1,175
*875
*450
*1,650
*4,500
*1,750
*1,050
GREEN
:tor
NC.
Road
Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, March 31,1984-A27
PFA urges rabies action
CHAMBERSBURG - The
Pennsylvania Farmers’
Association (PFA) has urged the
General Assembly to take
measures to upgrade the state’s
diagnostic and research facilities
to meet the deadly threat of rabies
which is spreading in southcentral
Pennsylvania.
At a hearing of the House
Committee on Health and Welfare
today, PFA spokesman John
Stoner of Mercersburg, Franklin
County, said, presently, “...our
diagnostic and prevention services
are so overloaded that we no
longer have an accurate way to
track the spread or seriousness of
the disease.”
He added, “The Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania’s diagnostic
facilities can no longer test all
rabies suspect animals and now
limit testing to cases where a
person is actually bitten. If we are
serious about controlling rabies in
Pennsylvania and protecting the
citizens of our state from this
DON'T
BE
SLOW
Call Now To Place Your
CLASSIFIED AD
Ph: 717-394-3047 or 717-626-1164
disease we must upgrade our
diagnostic and research
facilities.”
Stoner, a dairyman and hog
producer, noted that Pennsylvania
has experienced an average of two
new cases of rabies in domestic
animals and wildlife each day this
year. He noted that eight members
of his family and five neighbor
children required a costly four
week series of rabies prevention
shots last summer because of
exposure to a rabies-suspect cat.
“It is easy to see why both I and the
Pennsylvania Farmers’
Association are concerned about
the rabies situation in Penn
sylvania,” he said.
PFA also expressed support for
the concepts contained in
legislation, H B 1700, which would
require all dogs in the state to be
vaccinated against rabies. PFA
has policy calling for vaccination
of all dogs and also recommending
that proof of vaccination be
required before licensmg.