X itlook r f jntinued from P««e 8) (dncrcnse In output dur lj, 0 first half of 1000 may ’go largo t'h'at broiler t will average under a earlier. If low prices rlal'ise, they will tend to growth In broiler pro lon, but will probably halt expansion. KKi’S gher turkey prices and r feed costs this year set the stage for a large lase dn turkey produc ln 1966. Hatching activ h&s been stepped up In it months, and intentions Dairymen everywhere 1 are getting and more |w«th Ful-O-Pep Dairy Feed NEW HOLLAND QUARRYVILLE See what Ful-O-Fep Cattle-izer Dairy Feeds can do for YOUR milk production! Passmore Supply Co. Cochranville, Fa. Harold H. Good Terre Hill S. H. Hiestond & Co., Inc. H. M. Stauffer & Sons, Inc. Salimga Witmer J* C. Walker & Son, Inc. Gap, Penna. reported by breeders are for expansion next year. If these intentions ore fol lowed, and indications are that they will be, next year's turkey crop could exceed tho record crop of 1001. Al though demand for turkey ex panded this year, it is not expected to increase a» much in 1966 in spite of greater export interest, some further decline in red meat competi tion, and continuing growth in the economy. Outlook for broilers and turkeys hinges on the de gree of expansion in the poul try meat industry, but fore cast is for reduced prices to HOLLAND STONE a luxury you con afford) CONCRETE PRODUCTS, INC. I MEW HOLLAND PENNSYLVANIA more milk butterfat COCHRANViLLE STEVENS producer! in 1000, Two bright apoti nro Incroaecd per capita consumption of poul try meat*, and continued re duction of competition from red menu, duo to the high er prices of the latter. In 1963, producers sold about six' percent more poultry at a the percent higher price, indicating phenomenally stiong consumer denrand. Hut poultry demand generally tends to weaken temporarily following a period of rapid ly increasing consumption. So, a continuing rate of In creased consumption may be nuestiouable. Inside, outside, you’ll find die rich 1 quarried look of HOLLAND STONE adds a touch of real ele gance to your building designs. And yet, HOLLAND STONE is one of the most economical build* ing materials today. Its unique versatility in rise and lends a structural freedom to builders, noting nevr ideas, as well as cost problems. Conies in a wide choice of naturally warm, disdncthro colors, plus Colonial white. MEW OLLAND ELIZABETHTOWN SALUNGA Grubb Supply Co. Elizabethtown Kirkwood Feed & Groin Kirkwood Stevens Feed Mill, Inc. Stevens, Penna. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 11, 1965—7 H(S«8 Prices of egg products for tlio first half of 19G6 are ex pected to aiorugo nbovc tho same period tills year. Pi ices in the second half of the year will depend largely on tho iiinulicr of replacement chicks hatched over the next six or seven months. The low prices early in 19(53, following relatively low prices in late 1961, caused a seven percent reduction in number ol flock replacements raised in 1963. On October 1, there were 19 million fewer (OiiMets in laying flocks, but 10 million more hens. Over the next few months, layer numbers may decline still .further because of increased liquidation of old flocks. Al so, because of more hens and tower pullets in laying flocks, egg pioduction hi the fiist half ol 1986 is likely to be down somewhat from 1965. Outlook for eggs—good for first half of 1966. .Higher egg (Agway) this is your SPECIAL INVITATION TO ATTEND Agways 100-20 PIIIS CORN MEETING (100-20 means, how to grow 100 bushel or more shelled corn or 20 tons or more silage per acre) When Tuesday Eve.,Dec. 21st, 7:30 p.m. Where Meeting Room, Lancaster (Forme’r Farm Bureau Store) Speaker Harold Mangel, Soils and Crops Technician from Agway COME ONE! COME ALL! GARDEN SPOT UNIT, Inc. (Former Eastern Stales & Farm Bureau) "Anyone May Buy From Agway" P. L ROHRER & BRO., INC. i ■ 1 SMOKETOWN prices this fall and winter, plus lower teed prices, will probably keep hutching* larger than a year cm licV over the next lew months. .Thin would loud to a larger, younger and more pioductlve national laying flock In the second hall of I 960, wine’t in turn would result in low er prices during that period. <si;.\i:it.M, onxooiv fou FA KM FAMIMKS Outlook for the average family lorm good with expanding domestic and loi cign maikets for food and filler and declining faun num bers, many authorities see a. bright future lor the family farm that will geai-up tor efficient pioduction. They feel that 1966 wili be just the beginning ot a long, piospei ous cycle because ot om u - ci'easing domestic food needs and our commitm'ents abroad as the biead basket of the world. Ph. Lane. 397-3539
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers