AthLancaster Farming, Saturday, July 7,2001 rtfgSs L, .. - lA/CCK WIT JTLLS-j^-=^ — — a Crops and Robbers July 14 is Bastille Day, a national holiday in France that commemorates the storming of the Bastille fortress in Pans. Built in the 14th century and ■~>ved ;he beginning of the French Revolution in " 7 89, the Bastille prison had become a il of royal oppression. Almost two tunes later, on Bastille Day 1976, mada's House of Commons voted to abolish the death penalty; the 'ote released 11 men from death ;ow. Canada’s last executions (by hanging) had been carried out in 1962. Cnmes punishable by execu >n included rape, murder, and trea .—..ured yea. earlier, there had been over 200 crimes punishable by death, including the unlawful tak ing of turnips. A thief k nows a thief as a wolf knows a wolf is- Idling wastes fuel; just 15 seconds consumes more fuel than restarting the car. Stolen Turnip Puree 8 medium white turnips 1/8 teaspoon ground caraway 3 medium yellow onions S tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons fresh parsley, chopped 1 teaspoon lemon juice salt and pepper, to taste Pare and slice turnips, boil with caraway ui tender, for about 20 mi utes. Peel and chop onir and sautd thcmjn half United Feature Syndicate (Printed in the U S A ) Westminster Hay Westminster, Maryland Report Supplied By Auction July 3,2001 HijwSlnw—Grain 99 LOTS. ALFALFA: BALE 1.80-6.10, ROUND Bastille Day, butter. Add parsley, lemon juice, and seasonings to onions. When turnips are :r, drain and iash them ice into a •ving bowl, tke a hol , and fill with the mixture. is 4 serving*. 14.00. TIMOTHY: .75-2.10. MIXED HAY: .50-3.50. GRASS: .35-1.20, ROUND 5.00- 10.00. STRAW: .15-1.30. GROUND CORN: 3.50-4.25. July 14 OLD FARMER’S WEATHER PROVERBS The goat will utter her peculiar cry before rain. Lightning in summer indicates healthy weather. Attention, Gardeners! The summer 2001 Gtrdener's Comptnkw is now on sale. You can buy it at super markets, bookstores, or garden centers. Or send $3.99 to ith remain- ig butter, The Old Farmer’s Almanac, DeptGCSU, P.O. Box 520, Dublin, NH 03444. 200 Madison Ave. NY. NY 10016 (212-293-8500) Corn Belt Feedstuff St. Joseph, Mo. July 3,2001 Report Supplied By USDA CORN BELT FEEDSTUFF: Whole sale Bids. Truck or Rail dollars per ton. Feedstuff prices were steady to slightly higher for the week. Feed ingredients showed some strength due to the upcom ing holiday shortened week. Most mills will be shut down for the 4th so buyers will pay more for some products. Tight supplies are being reported by many plants. Demand remained steady this week. Alfalfa and alfalfa by-products were steady as supplies continued tight to lower yields reported. SOYBEAN MEAL: 44 percent rail bids 11.50 to 12.50 higher at 168.50- 171.50. 48 percent rail 11.50 to 12.50 higher at 178.50-180.50. Truck 44 per cent 12.50 higher at 172.50-177.50; 48 percent 12.50 higher at 181.50-185.50 per ton. CORN BY-PRODUCTS: Gluten Feed 21 percent, Interior Points, 1.00 to 2.00 higher at 54.00-62.00; Chicago 2.00 to 5.00 higher at 55.00-62.00; 60 pet Gluten Meal, Interior points, 5.00 higher at 235.00- Chicago 10.00 higher at 240.00- Rail hominy feed Central Illinois Points, steady at 48.00-50.00; trucks steady at 50.00-52.00. Crude corn oil steady at 15.50-16.50 cents per lb. MIDDLINGS: Northwest 1.00 lower to 3.00 higher at 43.00-48.00; Buffalo 1.00 to 3.00 higher at 43.00-50.00 per ton. ALFALFA PELLETS: Toledo, Ohio 17 percent dehydrated, steady at 125.00- 142.00 and 15 percent sun-cured, steady at 120.00-137.00 per ton. Toledo, Ohio meal 17 percent, steady at 127.00- 144.00. IS percent, steady at 122.00- 139.00 per ton. DISTILLERS DRIED GRAINS: Central Illinois, steady to 2.00 lower at 73.00-85.00; Chicago steady at 80.00- 85.00. Lawrenceburg, steady at 75.00. Nebraska steady at 75.00- 83.00. Minne apolis steady to 1.00 lower at 75.00 per ton. BREWERS DRIED GRAINS: Newark, NJ steady at 80.00. Williams burg, VA steady at 65.00. Hostetter Management Company has swine finishing floor contracts available. We are looking for new or existing barns with capacities of 400 head or more. If swine production is of interest to you, we are offering opportunities to become part of a growing PA swine management company. For details and cash flow info contact Francis Strause (570) 286-7472 Hostetter Management v ,v“ H Company H "% /If 120 Lake St. IJ| \ I M Ephrata. PA II i M. tel: 717-721 -9127, M ■*/ c ° Fax:7l7-721-9128 POURED WALLS Formerly Aaron Fisher - NRCS Approved Manure Storage Pits - Foundation Walls, Retaining Walls N L— -133 Maxwell Hill Road Morgantown, PA 19543 610-286-9217 Leave Message East Fluid Milk And Cream Review Madison, Wis. July 3,2001 Report Supplied by USDA Spot prices of class II cream, dollars per lb. butterfat; F. 0.8. producing plants: Northeast - 2.6288-2.7692. Deliv ered Equivalent: Atlanta - 2.5686-2.7692 mostly 2.6488-2.7291. PRICES OF CONDENSED SKIM, dollars per lb. wet solids, F. 0.8. pro ducing plants: Northeast, Class 11, in cludes monthly formula prices: 1.0500- 1.1500; Northeast, Class 111, spot prices: .8000-.9600. The following are the June 2001 Class and component prices under the Federal Milk Order pricing system: Class II $16.05 (up $.33 from April), Class 111 $15.02 (up $1.19); and Class IV $15.33 (up $.29). Product price averages used in computing Class prices are: butter $1.9263, NDM $1.0148, cheese $1.6211, and dry whey $.2764. The Class II but terfat price is $2.2159 and the Class 111/ IV butterfat price is $2.2089. An eariy-week cold front broke the heat wave that plagued the Northeast most of last week. Milder temperatures currently prevail, but milk output is still dropping through the region. In the Southeast, the milk flow is still easing lower, but at a slower pace. Following typical summer patterns, butterfat and protein tests on incoming milk are fall ing. Bottled milk sales are reported as poor throughout much of the East. In scattered areas, first-of-the-month orders are slightly improved. Surplus milk volumes are lighter and manufac turing plants are operating on slightly reduced schedules. Florida handlers are still shipping some milk out of state. A year ago at his time, Florida’s exports had dipped to almost zero and imports began in late July. The Fourth of July holiday falling in the middle of a week does disrupt demand and processing schedules, but most contacts see few problems In clear ing any extra milk that may show up. - The c«iu|pnSed skim market is mostly steady. Demand is fair to good and sup plies are more than adequate to meet those nee4s. Some operations did tempo rarily restart their dryers.to clear some of their excess condensed skim. Also, some did clear to Midwest plants. The fluid cream market is firm. Sup plies are tighter and demand is often im proved. Spot prices are about steady. The CME weekly average for butter is up fractionally and multiples are occa sionally higher. Some cream buyers are looking at Western suppliers to supple ment their regular sources. Ice cream output is steady to heavier now that summer is in full swing. Sales of soft serve mix, ices, sherbet, and frozen no velties are all improving along seasonal patterns. Cream cheese output is steady to slightly heavier. Churning activity is limited. Belleville Livestock Auction Belleville, Pa. July 4,2001 Report Supplied By Auction CATTLE 393...(SUPPLIED BY THE AUCTION). HEIFERS: Choice 2-4 1100-1400 lbs 61.00-64.00, Select 1-3 50.00-55.00. COWS: Breakers 75-80% lean 43.50- 48.00, Boners 80-85% lean 39.75-44.00, Lean 85-90% lean 36.75-42.00. Shells down to 30.00. BULLS; Yield Grade 1 1200-1700 lbs 57.00-58.75. CALVES 115...VEALERS: Standard and Good 90-110 lbs 70.00-82.50, Utility 60-80 lbs 20.00-30.00. FARM CALVES; No 1 Holstein bulls 95-120 lbs 155.00-174.00, No 2 85-110 lbs 77.50-150.00. HOGS 0...N0 MARKET TEST! FEEDER PIGS 37...1-3 39.00-50.00. per head. SHEEP 25... SLAUGHTER LAMBS; Choice 40-70 lbs 75.00-99.00. FEEDER LAMBS: Good and Choice 70-100 lbs 65.00-73.00. SLAUGHTER SHEEP; 26.00-47.00. GOATS 9...(A11 sold by the head). •Large Billies 40.00-125.00, Large Nan nies SS.OO-71.00, Large Kids 27.00- 50.00- per head. ' -