Regina Lebo, (right) of Greencastle exhibited the grand champion steer at the Franklin County Fair. Purchased from Rocky Forge Farm near Waynesboro, her 1200-pound steer named Dr. J was also the show’s heavyweight champion. The show's reserve champion was shown by George Kuhns (left). Kuhns' 1180-pound crossbred steer placed second to Lebo's in the heavyweight class. The Franklin County 4-H Baby Beef Roundup is scheduled for Oct. 13, at the Greencastle Livestock Market, with the show at 11 a.m. and the sale getting underway at 7 p.m. Let Seel Crete Moke Those Roofs I The Fern Pointing Speeioiist" Since 1961 x We Have The Equipment To Do Your Job E THE ROOFS OFs AGRICULTURE - COMMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL - CHURCHES • Barn Painting • Milk House • Roof Coating • Water Proofing Silos • Stucco Farmhouses roofs mo PAimo ? "NO JOB WE CANT HANDLE" TOBACCO SHEDS • IMPLEMENT SHEDS BARNS* CHICKEN HOUSES • Asphalt Coating • Colored Coating • Fibered Coating • Waterproof Coating • Aluminum Coating For FREE Estimate CALL lALITIES ARE: OUR SPE Seal Crete Inc. PAINTING & WATERPROOFING RD 2, Box 417, Ephrata, PA 17522 • 717-859-1127 Franklin Co. champion (Continued from Page A2B) communities an attractive solution to, wastewater treatment and disposal problems." By the year 2000, he says "resource management” will be a basic concept in Delmarva far ming. By then, water probably will no longer be taken for granted as an abundant, low-cost resource. This should lead to more efficient irrigation and some shifting to highest value crops. Another resource, energy, will remain a concern of fanners. But by conserving energy, the specialist says area growers should be able to adjust to higher energy prices. At the same time, biomass farming-the production of crops and wood for conversion to energy-could become an economic alternative, competing for some Delmarva land now devoted to food production. \n\V 4Shm!e We Are The Fussy One's incaster Farming, Saturday, September 29,1984—A39 Angus steer is Environment While the availability of natural resources affects agriculture, farming in turn affects the en vironment. Vaughn points out that agriculture is criticized as a major source of environmental pollution in the U.S. Improper animal waste disposal, overuse of nitrogen fertilizers, and erosion and sedimentation are among the chief culprits. “Emerging technology and better management can reduce the environmental abuses attributed to agriculture,” he says, “but more farmers must adopt these practices. If they don’t do so voluntarily, chances are they’ll be stuck with unwanted regulations. “We must be realistic though,” he stresses. “Even with Uk best kind of management, thjjfc’s no way to eliminate all the en vironmental risks involved in farming. Unless Americans choose to pay much higher food prices, trade-offs between food production and environmental quality are unavoidable.” Such trade-offs are hard to make without more information on certain ba ,ic issues, Vaughn says. No one knows, for example, just what happens to pesticides when they leave a farmer’s field. He feels troublesome questions like this must be answered for the sake of agriculture as well as the en vironment. Farming is also on the receiving end of environmental pollution. Besides sharing in the broad public concern over water quality, agriculture in highly urbanized areas suffers the effects of air pollution. Acid rain and long range climatic changes are other farmer concerns. And application of sewage sludge to agricultural land can pose serious environmental and health problems unless carefully monitored and con trolled. "To maintain the critical balance between the requirements of food production and en vironmental quality, we may need expanded research as well as education on how to apply that research,” Vaughn says. Delmarva residents are becoming more interested in improved wildlife habitat and forest management, scenic preservation, and the opening of private land for recreational use But like farmland preservation, these things aren’t possible unless landowners receive adequate incentives. The task of funding incentive programs which benefit the environment of likely to fall increasingly on state and local governments, Vaughn predicts. To sum up, a healthy balance between Delmarva’s agriculture and environmental quality in the year 2000 will depend on how ef fectively peninsula farmers and public policies respond to pressures on land and water resources. MID-SOUTH TRACTOR PARTS, INC. Rt 280X316 Sikeston MO 63801 Mid-West's Largest and Most Complata Inventory CALL TOLL FREE Outotstete 1-800-325-7020 Missouri Ret 1-800-392-0929 We Ship Anywhere
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers