SFCS Ms. Rainbow Brite, exhibited by Royal Charolals Co. of Greensburg, Pa., was selected as grand champion of the Charolals show at the Indiana State Fair last month. Pennsylvania Heifer In Charolais Show Tops INDIANAPOLIS, IN Held on the state fairgrounds in Indiana polis, Ind., The Indiana State Fair Charolais Show featured 56 head of quality, registered Charolais cattle. Marvin Nichols of Ankeny, lowa, judged the animals in front of a sizable crowd. Getting the grand champion female nod was SFCS Ms Rain bow Brite. The March 3, 1987, daughter of Silver Creek Thunder bolt also claimed the senior champion female honors in the 40-head female show. She was exhibited by Royal Charolais Co. of Greensburg, Pa. Claiming the reserve grand champion award was the junior champion female. Perfection’s Tally 11. The Sept. 16, Sire Power Fund Announced TUNKHANNOCK (Wyoming) The Board of Directors of Sire Power’s Northeast Sales Division (NESD) is very happy to announce the initiation of a Scholarship Program to help deserving youth living in the NESD membership area continue their college educa tion. A total of five $1,000.00 scholarships will be made avail able. These scholarships will be awarded at the 1988 Sire Power Annual Meeting which will be held Tuesday, January 24, 1989. The eligibility requirements for these scholarships are as follows: 1. The applicant must be a col lege Sophomore, Junior, Senior, or Graduate Student during the year of application. 2. Parents, guardians or applic ants must be patrons of Sire Pow er’s NESD membership area, which covers Central and Eastern Pennsylvania and the State of New Jer 1987, daughter of BR-MF Kruger rand T 752 was exhibited by Per fection Charolais of Warsaw, Ind., and Willard Walker of Springdale, Ark. Another Willard Walker entry rose to the top in the bull show. JSC Chairman 1034, a 1986 son of JSC Alladin 101 P, also claimed the show’s senior champion bull honors. Coming in to claim the reserve grand champion bull slot was CLC High Card 7111. Also the junior champion bull, he was exhibited by Comer Land & Cattle Co. of Tompkinsville, Ky., Proffitt Charolais of Tomkinsville, Ky., and Wolfiridge Cattle Services of New Richmond, Ohio. High Card is an April 17,1987, son of Silver Creek High-Rise H 99. Scholarship 3. scholarship must be applied to continued education ip an agricultural related field. 4. Previous scholarship award winners will remain eligible dur ing subsequent award years. “The continuing education of our youth in agriculture is very important to the NESD Board of Directors and Sire Power Manage ment. With the NESD Scholarship Program we would like to make this continued education possible for young people of farm families in Sire Power’s NESD member ship areas,” states DuWayne Kutz, Sire Power General Manager. To receive an NESD scholar ship application, interested stu dents should contact Gary L. Hen nip, Sales and Service Director, Sire Power, Inc., R.D.#2, Tunk hannock, Pennsylvania 18657, phone (717) 836-3168. Deadline to submit applications is Novem ber 1, 1988. IKKAD LANCASTER FARMING FOR COMPLETE AND UP-TO-DATE MARKET REPORTS Pennsylvania and Northeast Agriculture H. Louis Moore Professor of Agricultural Economics Penn State University century, the North importance as the bread basket of the nation. The expanses of fertile, cheap land to the West shifted many enterprises in that direction. The railroads in the last century and trucks in this century opened our markets to more distant production. Today, markets in many cases have become even international in scope. Yet the North Atlantic states (New England, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania) continue /goj\ Grain Systems Incorporated We Have Been Selling, Installing And Servicing This Very Dependable Type Of Drying System For 15 Years. Con tact Us For Free Quotation. LOUCKS GRAIN EQUIPMENT INC. R.D. #l2, Box 307 York, PA. 17406 to play a role as agricultural pro ducers. Nursery, vegetable, fruit, dairy, livestock and some field crops are important in the North east. These North Atlantic states accounted for 6.6 percent of the nation’s cash receipts from agri cultural production in 1970. With the big push in grain production and export sales in the 1970 s in the Midwest, the shore held by the North Atlantic states dropped to just 5.1 percent by 1980. TTie agri cultural recession of the first half of the 1980 s hit other areas harder than the Northeast. Grain produc ers were especially hard hit. The Northeast improved its position during the agricultural recession years and by 1987 accounted for 5.8 percent of the nation’s cash receipts from agriculture, up from 5.1 percent in 1980. Which states in the North Atlan tic area arc major players in agri culture? Most people indicate that the two most important states are TOP DRY New York and Pennsylvania. It is generally believed that New York is a larger agricultural state than Pennsylvania. Why? There are two reasons: (1) New York does have a larger dairy industry than Pennsyl vania, and (2) New York was more important than Pennsylvania until the 19705. In 1970, Pennsylvania produced 31.5 percent of the agri cultural cash receipts in the North east while New York’s share was 33.8 percent. Combined, the two states produced 65.3 percent of all the cash receipts in the Northeast. The recent summary for 1987 indicates that Pennsylvania now accounts for 40 percent of the total agricultural cash receipts in the Northeast. (Up from 31.5 percent in 1970). New York’s share at 31.2 percent in 1987 is down from 33.8 percent in 1970. In 1987 these two states shared 71.2 percent of the total cash receipts in the 9 state area. Pennsylvania is strong in a num ber of agricultural enterprises such as dairy, poultry, hogs, mushrooms and nursery products and maintains strong supporting industries that supply the inputs, financing and marketing services to keep agriculture viable. The smaller New England states arc betting on minor crops such as blueberries, broccoli and endive with sales made direct to the con sumer as their road to growth. The transition period for agri culture, which began in 1980, has seen Pennsylvania’s agricultural receipt grow from $2.70 billion in 1980 to $3.23 billion in 1987, and the state moved up from a ranking of 21st to fourth in cash receipts.