*I(V- Lancaster Farming. Saturday. October 18. lf)(»!) I NEPPCO Re-Elects Russo, Names Officers, Directors ATLANTIC (TIT \.l - Albeit .1 Uu.sso. Woods ilk*. K I. wits le elected piesulent ot the Kortheaslein Poultiy I’ioduceis Council (NEPPCO) as the {group held its annual meeting in conjunction with the 32nd convention and exposition, hoie Wednesday. Burnell Weiner, Union. Ohio, was named as vice president with James C Weisel, treasur er Harry P Metz, Belleville, Pa . was elected secretaiy to re place Henry L Stevens, Goss ville, N H Stevens, who has served the council as secietaiy and director for several years, retired because of ill health He was named a director at-large Installed as directois to the Council weie Moms L Burr. Hampton, RI, Henduk VVent ink, Wyomissing. Pa, McDon ald Millei, Mornsulle, Vt, H Robert Housei. Wavnesboi o Va and Clifford C Eastman, Laconia, N H As a pioducei-ouented 01- gamzation, NEPPCO has found that state affiliates have laid teavv stress upon this factoi in selecting representatives NEPPCO’s officers aie almost THROWING THE SWITCH President Albert J. opening the NEPPCO EXPOSITION. At left is Richard invanably opeiatois of poultiy Russo, of NEPPCO, joins hands with New Jersey Poul- I. Ammon, NEPPCO executive director; at right Phillip cnterpnses Piesident Russo, try Princess Karen Batten to throw the switch officially Alampi, New Jersey Secretary of Agriculture Vice President Wainei and Secretary Metz aie operatois of their icspective states, and farms and hatcheries Directoi have been active in a broad Burr operates a hatcheiy, laises ian § e °f poultry projects some 300,000 bi oilers a year Director Miller owns and opei ates a poultry faim producing batching eggs Cliffoid Eastman cwns and operates Sunny Slope Poultry Farm, with some 23,000 laying hens Wentink and Hous er, while not poultrymen, have a long history of close associa tion with the poultry industries Robert K. Rohrer Bulldozing - Grading Patz Sales & Service Barn Cleaners - Silo Unloaders - Cattle Feeders Quarryville, R. D. 1 Hensel 548-2559 SWEIGART FIRESTONE 329 W. High St., Manheim, Pa Wentink as geneial manager of maiketing and farm opera tions for Miller & Bushong, Inc , Rohrerstown, Pa, is involved in the production of more than 10 million broilers and nine mil lion dozen eggs a year. Houser is a former hatcheryman who has shifted his interests into the field with DeKalg Ag Research, Inc mmrm A Lancaster Farming Classified Ad Can Help Ph. 665-2258 Hunting License Sales Show Marked increase Pennsylvania, which sells fai more hunting licenses than any othei state in the nation, show ed a maiked increase in the number of sportsmen afield dur ing the license year ending Au gust 31, 1969, the Game Commis sion announced this week Hunting license sales for the 1968 69 year totaled 1.118,572, an increase of 57,574 over the pieceding year- Resident license sales foi the year just ended were 1,028,568, the first time the figure has top ped the million mark Of even greater interest weie BUTLER STOR-N-FEED® SYSTEMS FOR FORAGE AND GRAIN _ If all you get is "the blues" from shop ping for a low moisture silage system, take a look at the big, white Butler Stor-N-Feed.® Here's up to 1128 tons of "oxygen controlled” storage for corn silage, or 620 ions for low moisture silage—plus Butler’s exclusive, maintenance-free breathing sys tem. No breather bags to replace, no relief valves to let air in. Efficient top unloader is easily serv iced. Delivers more silage, faster, than bottom unloaders ... and with only five horsepower. Bright, white finish reflects heat— minimizes gas expansion. Price for the Butler Stor-N-Feed® sys tem? You’ll be amazed. Thousands of dollars less than some systems. There’s an equally efficient and economical sys tem for high moisture gram, too. And Butler offers low cost deferred payment terms and lease plans. See Us Si *BUTLER*% $ agri-builder] the 90,004 hunting licenses sold to non-i esidents. This figuie is an all-time recoid and repre sents an increase of almost twenty percent over the 72,535 sold in the preceding year The non-resident increase was the largest percentage gain since 1946 Included in the resident li cense sales figure were 155,838 Tumor licenses sold to youths sixteen years of age and under, another new record The previ ous high had been the 136,723 sold the previous year. Also included in the resident sale were 960 free licenses issu ed to disabled war veterans and 16,709 free licenses issued to on for Complete Information / FARMILL CONSTRUCTION Rt. #l, Gordonville, Pa. 17529 Phone 768-8796 fulltime sei vicemen on active duty. Leading counties in the sale of resident hunting licenses for the past year were Allegheny, 70,897, Westmoi eland, 44 629; Lancaster, 36,834, York, 33,511; and Luzerne, 29,599 Pennsylvania’s 1967-68 sale of hunting licenses led the natica in every catgory, and the Key-, stone State was responsible for about one-fourth of the national increase in number of hunters. It is to be expected that the state will maintain its number one ranking as a result of the 1968-69 license sales