THE MODERN FARMER'S ANSWER TO MANURE MANAGEMENT ■CBM G AGRICULTURAL EQUIPMENT DIVISION KING HYDRAULIC POWER LTD. WOODSTOCK, ONTARIO HUES * No daily spreading, agitation or liquid handling * No freezing problems * Handles liquids, solids and bedding * Economical yearly storage * Manure is processed and becomes a product for use in crop production it Manure can be handled with conventional equipment AVONDALE SUPPLY CENTER LANCASTER SUPPLY Hershey hosts NEPPCO meeting HERSHEY, Pa. - A ahow which promlaea to be "as sparkling, as lively and as .nteresting as any we’ve staged in recent years" is in store for those attending the 44th annual gathering of the Northeastern Poultry Producers Council, ac cording to Dr. John .W. Dodge, NEPPCO president. The show will be launched with a keynote luncheon on October 21 and conclude with the big annual banquet on the evening of Thursday, October 23. The bright new Convention Center in this resort city, a really big market egg and prize-carton display and impressive social and en tertainment programs will team with two morning-long series of educational sessions to make the trip to Hershey more than wor thwhile for the producer and fa. * Nutrient conservation Junction US 1 & 41 Avondale, PA 215-261-8238 CHAPMAN STORE Ro2,W«scosriHe, PA 215-395-3311 the allied industryman, according to Dodge. With early attendance and commercial display registration at a high level, all signs point to a very successful convention as the group returns to the heart of Pennsylvania farm country, according to Richard I. Ammon, NEPPCO executive director. Keynote speaker Dr, Robert R. Spitzer, coor dinator of the Food for Peace Program for the U.S. Department of State, will set the pattern for theme directed speakers to follow in a year NEPPCO is stressing “Time for Decision”. Spitzer will explore the future of world animal agriculture and offer in sights into the manner in which individual producers can deal with the fast- M Move manure away from the barn * Pollution, odour and fly control TEMPLE SUPPLY N. sth St. Highway Templi, PA 215-929-5264 I Y * Hydraulic dependability ■¥■ Easy installation •¥■ Low maintenance 1027 Dillenrillt Rd. Lancaster, PA 717-397-4761 Lancaster Farming. Saturday, Oct 18,1975—19 occuring changes and trends. Other speakers at the show will provide up-to-the-minute outlooks on how poultry will be capitalized in the im mediate years ahead, on the rail transportation picture for agriculture and one practical approaches to current poultry health concerns. A round-up seminar on high-impact events facing the poultry industry today will place five experts from varied fields on the platform at the final morning-long session. When visitors are not attending educational sessions or viewing the full array of commercial exhibits in the new Con vention Center, they will have access to programs especially tailored to the interests of women and YORK WEST STORE 26 W. Market St. York, PA 717-792-2674 young adults and to a series of social and spectator ac tivities. Information on show registration is available at NEPPCO offices, 322 Oxford Valley Road, Fairless Hills, Pa. 19030, Tel. 215-547-0190. Room reservations should be made directly with the Hershey Motor Lodge. Need for exports cited HUDSON, lowa - Lifting the moratorium on grain sales to Poland was a good move but does not go far enough, according to the president of the American Soybean Association. “With the large crop in> creases indicated in the October crop report, there is no reason to continue the moratorium on sales to the USSR,” said Seymour Johnson of Indianola, Miss. He noted that soybean production is now estimated at 1.47 billion bushels, three per cent above last month’s estimate and 19 per cent above last year’s crop. “This coupled with a carryover of 186 million bushels from last year’s crop, means that we are going to have to sell a lot of soybeans overseas if soybean production is to remain profitable,” Johnson said. “Indications are that the Soviet Union will need to buy 75 million bushels of soybeans this year, and the moratorium may force them to purchase all they need from Brazil, our strongest competitor/’ Noting that soybeans are the nation’s largest single export item, he said the loss of soybean sales to Russia would be a loss of about $375 million to the U.S. economy and balance of payments. Johnson also said the loss of a large scale in a year of oversupply could result in a smaller soybean crop next year, since depressed soybean prices may cause growers to turn to more profitable com production. “This would put soybean production into a feast famine cycle that is not good for farmers, not good for domestic consumers who want stable prices, and not good for our overseas customers who need a steady source of supply.” Truly, truly , I say to you, the hour is coming and now is, when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God, and those who hear will live. For as the father has life in himself, so he has granted the Son also tc have life himself. John 6: 25,26
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