t—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 29,1971 DHIA Holds Meeting At the meeting of the Lan caster County DHIA board of directors this week, Chairman Donald S. Eby appointed a four member committee of Elmer Weber, chairman, Harry Ranck Jr, Paul N. Brubacher and Jay Newcomer. The committee will plan the DHIA annual meeting. Eby also named an accounts receivable committee to help bring accounts up to date. The committee includes Max Smith, Wilbur Houser, James G. Krei der and Elam Bollinger. Wilbur Houser reported that the time period involved in get ting test results back to the farmer has been excellent The county officially began partici Help Us Serve You Don’t assume we know about your farm organization’s meeting. To get your meeting on our Farm Calendar, it’s safer to assume we don’t know. Remind us by calling 394-3047 or 626 2191 or by writing to Lancaster Farming, 22 E. Main St, Lititz, Pa. 17543. You’ll be helping us to serve you better. P.S. If you’re not sure you told us already, we don’t mind hearing from you again. NEW PRAMITOL SPS WEED KILLER The best answer yet to your non-crop weed problems *easy-to-apply 1 pellets ■controls just i about evervl ■saves cutti and mowin ■makes thin took better Ask us about Pramitol Available /JjgJs Agri-Chemicals m Liquid V y Division of United States Steel for Spraying USS and VHRTAGREEN art registered trademark*. HEISEY i S Pa. 5 . i pating in the new Penn State testing system April 1. The board approved a 25 cent bulk tank test fee. It was noted that this barely covers costs when a 10 cent test cost, plus postage to Penn State and back are considered. The test is a special service sometimes re quested by farmers. It was noted the Lancaster County Holstein Breeders an nual field day will be August 3 and Atlantic on Parade August 4. Robert Hess, Strasburg RDI, has been re-elected state DHIA vice president, it was announc ed. CONTACT FARM SERVKE Myerstown Poultryman Named to NEPPCO, Organization Revamps Stand on Promotion William R. Myer, Myerstown poultry producer, has been named one of two new direc tors of the Northeastern Poul try Producers Council (NEP PCO). Myer will represent the Pennsylvama Poultry Federa tion. The other new NEPPCO board member is Lorain Basing er, Kenton, Ohio, poultry pro ducer, representing the Ohio Poultry Association. A total of 18 directors from 14 NEPPCO states and NEP PCO’S two divisions attended the recent historic meeting at which board of directors moved NEPPCO to a “middle of the road position” on policy state ments dealing with federal marketing orders and check-off programs for promotion. NEPPCO’s new policy state ment on marketing orders says: “We support the original con cept of the Agricultural Adjust ment Act of 1933 as amended and as re-enacted by the Agri cultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937.” 964-3444 In effect, this means NEP PCO is no longer unalterably opposed to marketing orders with or without production con trols, but will consider each new piece of such legislation on its own merits. “Most of our members are small to medium-sized produc ers,” said President Burnell Warner in announcing the board’s action. “One of the declared pur poses of NEPPCO is to promote and protect the best interests of its members In today’s world, we obviously cannot do that from a rigid policy posi tion We must maintain open minds and a certain amount of flexibility. Our revised policy statements will enable us to do that,” Warner concluded. On proposed legislation to raise funds for research and consumer education through a check-off, the NEPPCO board adopted this statement: “Recog nizing the continuing need for promotion of poultry and eggs, including the products made from them, and the industry’s responsibility to conduct mar keting and merchandising re search, we favor such programs raise and administer funds for as would permit producers to such purposes.” This replaces Don! kepi waiting at (he siloi ... MAKE FAST WORK OF SILO-FILLING WITH THE ALLIS-CHALMERS 480 FORAGE BLOWER / A BLOWER that can’t keep pace •with the capacity of your forage harvester is expensive as well as frustrating. You’ll never Be kept waiting when you make a silo-filling date with the Allis-Chalmers 480'. It’s got big, ton-a-minute capacity to fill the biggest silos in record time. It’s built rugged, too. Stays on the job, hour after 60-ton hour... day * after dependable day. See it today. iiliiiliirli, m Roy H. Buch, Inc. Ephrata, R.D. 2 Grumelli Farm Service ' Quarryville, Pa. L. H. Brubaker Nissley Form Service Lancaster, Pa. Washington Boro, P*. , a previous statement Banting NEPPCO’s support to “volun tary, industry-sponsored" prow grams. The new statement permits NEPPCO to support either voluntary or government-man dated programs so long as pro ducers administer the funds or otherwise manage them. On the most recent request of the railroads for another round of freight rate increases, the board instructed the NEP PCO staff to vigorously oppose the use of percentages to cat culate such increases. The board explained that freight rates on Midwestern grain shipped to the Northeast have traditionally and under standably been higher than similar rates to the Southeast. Each percentage increase ap proved by ICC, however,' has widened the disadvantage for the Northeast and further weak ened its competitive position. Fewer In Rural Areas Today less than 30 per cent of the United States population lives in rural areas. Less than 25 per cent of America’s 54 mil lion rural residents live on farms and earn their livelihood from agriculture. be r - N. G. Myers & Sion Rheems, Pa.