*2B—Lancaster Firming, Saturday, September 1,1984 Rep. Robert Walker is ‘down on the farm’ during tour BY JACK HUBLEY BRUNNERVILLE Foreign investors and imports were among the key issues raised by concerned farmers who met with U.S. Representative Robert Walker at the Paul B. Kline farm north of Lititz on Monday. “We’re in a tough position if we shut down our foreign markets,” Walker responded, pointing out that our relationship with foreign countries is a two-way street and that our current farm economy is dependent on exports. “What we ought to do is insist that foreign products meet our own health standards,” he added. Addressing a question raised concerning the influx of foreign money in the poultry industry, Walker reminded farmers that the infusion of $BO billion in foreign capital for government bonds last year was important to the economy. He ventured that restricting farm ownership, as practiced in some states, might be one way of keeping farms in the hands of American farmers. Leap-frogging across rural Lancaster and Lebanon Counties on Monday, the Congressman began his tour at the farm of Donald Hershey in Manheim, moving to the Kline farm, and then Sheep parasite found WASHINGTON, D.C. A microscopic parasite has been confirmed for the first time as a widespread cause of sheep abortions m the United States, a U.S. Department of Agriculture scientist said today. Abortions in 16 flocks of sheep in lowa, Maryland, Montana, Minnesota and South Dakota have been traced to the parasite Toxoplasma gondii, which causes one-time abortions in sheep, said Jitender P. Dubey, a microbiologist in USDA’s Agricultural Research Service. “Up to now, toxoplasmosis-induced abortions have been reported in only one other case,” Dubey said. He is stationed at the research agency’s Beltsville, Md., Agricultural Research Center. Dubey said the parasite is well known as a cause of sheep abortions in other countries, but until recently it was not considered a problem in U.S. sheep flocks. Dubey said that for a ewe to abort from toxoplasmosis she must contract it when she is pregnant. After a ewe is infected the first time, she will not abort again even if reinfected. A ewe’s immune defenses control the growth of the parasites, the researcher said. These parasites remain in the body tissues as cysts, where they cause no further harm. on to the Clay View Farm of Kerry Boyd near Ephrata. The afternoon itinerary included two Lebanon County stops. Asked if a balanced budget was a possibility, Walker stated that the elusive black ink could become a reality with monetary reform. He called for the money supply to be pegged to real, marketable commodities. Lashing out at the Fed and chairman Paul* Volker, the Congressman said that the best way to catch up to the Japanese would be to put Volker in charge of their economy. Walker maintained that the U.S. economy is prime for growth, and that such growth was the vehicle to a balanced budget. The other key component in the formula, Walker said, is a balanced budget amendment aimed at keeping Congressional spending in line. Other topics discussed included the 1985 Farm Bill, a decrease in farmland values since the late 1970’5, the Chesapeake Bay and livestock disease problems in cluding pseudorabies and avian flu. The Congressman urged far mers to stay abreast of develop ments in the Bay cleanup, since Lancaster and York County mm S^EAD! S-nSBA—St Jf. e | consump cut ullage ‘'^pending sagSS^SS^ST sgg3SSpßSs»> Offers prescription for sick Fed . budget agriculture is being asked to the avian flu indemnity program, cases were being reviewed by the shoulder a large part of the the Congressman stated that the Department of Agriculture and the responsibility for the Bay’s prograin was rapidly craning to a General Accounting Office where deterioration. close. He said that a few individual reimbursement had apparently When questioned on the status of been insufficient. CLOSEOUT SPECIALS ON ALL 1984 FORD LAWN A PARPEN TRACTORS gi -cerned farmers at the Paul Kline farm in Brunnerville on Monday morning. The Kline pullet farm was one of five stops on the Congressman’s Lancaster-Lebanon County tour. See The New ford Tractors In Stock And Ready To Go I NOW...GET ON NEW FORD EQUIPMENT! Buy and take delivery of any new Ford industrial tractor, tractor loader or backhoe-loader before June 30,1984. 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