Own the best... FARM-RITE buildings Steel frames on concrete piers make the difference! • Steel where st««i is needed, wood where wood serves best • Standard widths 60, 50,40', 30 Any length • All usable Jpace, floor to roof, no truss interference • Strong steel roofing and siding with baked-on enamel in colors k Completely new ALL-STEEL sliding door won't warp • Backed by 60 years of Ceco engineering experience Let us (how you a FARM-RITE BUILDING OUR SYSTEMS BUILDERS POLE BUILDINGS • STEEL & WOOD BUILDINGS STEEL COLUMN BUILDINGS • MATE Rt TL • ERECTION JOSEPH 2AWADA 215/756 6801 No doubt about it You've made great strides in building your herd's pro duction Even if average, your herd's milk production has probably doubled in the last two decades And you're looking for more We re ready to take you much further, and faster Curtiss stands ready now with the Holstein sire power to help you break your genetic barriers with every crop of replacements To help you reach greater milk and butter fat levels, and send you to the bank with more profit E 3 ■ V CECO ii, i| )‘‘l* ~ li J h R D 2 KEMPTON PENN A 19529 -.curass Egg conference (Continued from Page 1) acquaint you with the goals and accomplishments of NEMA and UEP Your input will be welcome and we hope that you will draw long-term directions from the meeting.” “UEP,” he continued, “speaks for egg producers with a special authority. It is the only national organization whose interest is concerned solely with the economic well-being of the egg industry.” A greeting to the guests by Don Horn, vice president of Pennfield Corporation, will open the meeting. That will be followed by an update on NEMA activities from Bill Rent and Charles O’Reilly. Ms. Christine Bushway, coordinator of promotions for the American Egg Board in the Northeast, will detail the phases of the AEB’s l^ow 7 Just look at the sire summary data of these five Curtiss sires Here s the kind of PD Milk. PD Butterfat, and PD $ that can put most any herd into a totally new profit picture Sure you've seen high production figures on sires from other sources But you 11 note that Curtiss sires offer something more total performance Not only high milk and butterfat pro duction but also style dairy character udder strength and balance, and other traits that contribute to higher produc tion and reproductive efficiency These efforts to move more eggs to consumers. Highlight of the meeting will be a talk by Greg Murch, director of marketing for UEP and architect of the UEP’s egg export program. He will discuss Washington’s political scene, touching on , those subjects m particular which are pertinent to the egg industry. In addition, he will relate UEP’s plans on how to offer a com prehensive cooperative program for farm insurance to members. Summarizing the session, A 1 Wenger of Dutchland Farms will outline the role that NEMA, the other regionals, and UEP can play in making egg production a strong, well-knit segment of American agriculture. Anyone who owns a laying flock and has not received an invitation to the June 20 meeting is asked to mail a too add up to more dairy income So go ahead Shoot for higher milk production Do it with Curtiss sires and watch your herd take on the advanced look of high production and superior type Call your Curtiss distnbutor today Or call us Curtiss Breeding Service Division of Searle Agriculture Inc ilzlizrj 312-639-2141 • Cary, IL 60013 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 10,1978—35 Pa. has most hog packers HARRISBURG - In 1977 there were 258 federally mspected plants which killed hogs m Pennsylvania. This was the largest number of hog packers listed by any state. The second highest number was 113 reported by Missouri. lowa listed only 25 plants but 18.6 million hogs were slaughtered givmg an average of 740,000 hogs slaughtered per plant in lowa in 1977. A further breakdown by size in Pennsylvania reveals some interesting in formation. There were 213 card requesting further information. Correspon dence should be addressed to NEMA, Box MM, Durham, N.H. 03824; or NEMA, 136 Harron Avenue, Hightstown, N. J. 08520. curuss Distributors & Dealers S erving Your Area: NEW JERSEY NAA»^*~s^i plants in the Commonwealth which slaughtered less than 1,000 hogs during the year. Thus, 82 per cent of the plants in the state accounted for less than two per cent of the total hog slaughter. There were 34 plants which slaughtered between 1,000 and 9,999 head, while 7 plants processed 10,000 to 99,999 head. All but four of the state’s plants fall m these groups, but these 254 plants account for only 15 per cent of the state’s slaughter. The four largest slaughter plants in Pennsylvania slaughtered 2.4 million hogs in 1977 - a shopping 85 per cent of the state total. fdaO A month k FRANKLIN Robert Kitchen (201)827 4659 PHILLJPSBURG William Shandor (215)253 2773 3 ENNSYLVAN!A BERNVILLE John Bicksler (717) 866 6869 ELVERSON Mert Stroble (215)286 9173 HAMBURG Doug Lesher (215)562 3206 LEBANON Lyn Knssmger (717)272 6824 LYNDELL William Downing (215) 942 2688 McVEYTOWN Jim Swigart (717)899 7372 MANHEIM Cliff Gibble (717)665 6858 MIFFLINBURG David Dietrich (717) 966 2438 MIFFLINTOWN John Zendl (717)436 6386 MILLVILLE Don Harding (717)458 5367 ORWIGSBURG Eugene Koch (717)366 1131 PETERSBURG John Foster Jr (814)667 3614 OUARRYVILLE Carl Boyan (717)786 2645 SCHWENKSVILLE William Shainline (215)287 6500 STEWARTSTOWN Marvin Joines (717) 993 2281 SUNBURY Wilfred Deppen (717)286 7290 TOWANDA Chas Robbins [717) 265 5026 CURTISS SALES REP Harold Steele 202 E Julian Street Martmsburg PA 16662 (814) 793 3312 DISTRICT SALES MANAGER Bob Elliott 87 Morninglory Lane Manheim PA 17545 (717)665 6858 CUIHiSS CLASSIC OCTOBER 4.1978 DUNDEE, ILLINOIS (S> QjßnssJ H c U R T ,ss C T ei.uro»fJ: