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The Rural Voice, 1983-07, Page 29Stabilization for sheep Agriculture Minister Eugene Whelan announced stabilization payments will be made available to Canadian sheep pro- ducers for Iambs and wool marketed in 1982. The payments amount to $1.70 per Iamb and $0.388 per kilogram of wool. The support levels for these products are calculated at 90 per cent of the previous five-year average market price. adjusted to reflect changes in cash costs of production. The payments represent the differences between the support levels and the average market prices for 1982. The 1982 average market return for slaughter Iambs sold through stockyards was $68.96 per hundredweight, and the support price was established at $70.73 per hundredweight. Eligible producers could then receive a deficiency payment of $1.77 per hundredweight of $1.70 on a per Iamb basis for Grade A, B and C and Easter Iambs. Payments will be made on a per animal basis to allow for easier administration of the program. Any payments made to producers under provi ficial income insurance pro- grams will be deducted from the federal support payment for Iambs. Market returns for wool in 1982 averaged $1.704 per kilogram. The sup- port price at the 90 per cent level was established at $2.092 per kilogram. A deficiency payment of $0.388 will be available to eligible producers. Pro- cessed wool sold through the handicraft trade is not eligible for the deficiency payment. "Since the returns from wool are not covered under any provincial price sup- port plan, all producers across Canada can quality for federal assistance," Whelan said. Application forms will be sent directly to sheep producers across Canada. Forms will also be available at Agricul- ture Canada stockyard offices, at the department's livestock and poultry divi- sion in each province, Farm Credit Corporation and provincial extension offices. ❑ Tiling helps increase yields Effective April 1, 1983, interest rates on tile drainage loans were reduced to eight per cent from 10, with maximum loan assistance to be continued at 60 per cent of the cost of eligible installations, Agriculture and Food Minister Dennis Timbrell announced. FARM ADVICE Initial allocations to municipalities will equal last year's expenditures. The ministry will forward survey question- naires to municipalities from time to time throughout the installation period. The information on actual needs as shown by the surveys will indicate the total dollar requirements for the 1983-4 program. The loans will run for a 10 -year period. Complete details have been provided to municipalities participating in the program. Under the tile drainage program the municipalities issue debentures to cover the cost of approved projects. The province purchases the debentures and the municipalities lend the proceeds to farmers whose drainage projects meet the program's qualifications. Some 4,000 Ontario farmers tile ap- proximately 200,000 acres every year. Through the use of drainage systems in their fields, farmers can drain the soil of excess moisture and increase the lands productivity. Research shows that tile drainage can increase yields between 1 and 80 per cent. ANY BROKERAGE FIRM CAN SELL PROPERTY, BUT WE AT AGRI-NATIONAL REALTY BELIEVE THAT SELLING PROPERTY IS ONLY ONE LINK IN THE CHAIN OF PROVIDING SERVICE TO OUR CLIENTS. OUR STAFF OF HIGHLY QUALIFIED SPECIALISTS TAKE PRIDE IN COMPLETE STEP BY STEP ANALYSIS OF EACH SITUATION, PROVIDING THE MOST RE- LIABLE AND PROFITABLE TRANSACTION AVAILABLE TO BOTH BUYER & SELLER. PROFESSIONAL ANALYSIS OF NEEDS, THE MONEY MARKET FEASIBILITY AND A THOROUGH UP-TO-DATE UNDERSTANDING OF TODAY'S BUSINESS CLIMATE ARE JUST SOME OF THE QUALITIES WHICH SET US APART FROM THE OTHERS. 77 MAIN ST. • SEAFORTH, ONTARIO NOK 1 WO // THE RURAL VOICE, JULY 1983 PG. 2'