JOHflD€€R£ PfIYS YOU TO ORD® 1979 TILLfKiE OR HflY TOOLS If! 1978 s Getuptos9ooln John Deere dollars plus o tox credit Order any new John Deere equipment listed below before the dates specified and you’ll earn from $75 to $9OO in John Deere dollars you can excnange for goods or services at our store And we'll give you our best deal on the new tool What’s more, equipment ordered from our lot before 1978 ends can mean big savings via investment tax credit BUYER BONUS IN JOHN DEERE DOLLARS FOR ORDERS SIGNED THROUGH EQUIPMENT DISKS: 100 fritegral 110 and 111 210 310 340 and 1630 r 220 230 350 440 1640 330 331 and'36o 370 ", ’ - CHISEL PLOWS: 1608 M Integral 1608 R Drawn Rigid 1610 Integral Rigid 1610 Drawn Rigid (11-foot) 1611 R Drawn Rigid $lOO 1620 Drawn Flexible 1623 Drawn Flexible (23- to 1610 Drawn Flexible (23-fool) 1610 Drawn Rigid Folding (19-foot) 1623 Drawn Flexible (29- to 41-foot) $3OO 1610 Drawn Flexibte (29- to 37-foot) $4OO 1650 Folding $9OO EQUIPMENT, BALERS: 346 and 4JO 466 and 51Q MOWER/CONDITIONERS. 1207 and 1209 1214 1380 MOWERS: 350 and 450 RAKES: 567 650 and 660 670 and 671 CHOPPER SHREDDER: WINOROWERS: 800 830 2280 This offer is subject to equipment availability =; PIKEVILLE m EQUIPMENT, INC. E 9 Oley, PA ISP' 215-987-6277 WENGER IMPLEMENT, INC. The Buck - Quarryville, PA 717-284-4141 | *5 I. G.’s AG SALES EDWARDS & COX j Silverdale, PA Oxford, PA 215-257-5136 215-932-2929 STANLEY A. KLOPP, INC. Bernvilie, PA 215-488-1510 smism JAN 31,1979 APR. 30,1979 $75 $125 $2OO $275 $350 $5OO ‘S9OO $2OO FEB. 2«, 1979 JUNE 30,1979 $2OO $3OO $4OO $250 5350 $4OO $75 $lOO $175 $2OO $450 $6OO $9OO WM, Broiler (Continued from Pace 1) people in the county are under contract and know when and where their broliers'willgo. 01 According to a report prepared by A. Kennit Birth, poultry marketing specialist at Penn State, both the pounds and the numbers of broilers produced in 1979 will exceed the year earlier levels. He expects prices the first quarter of the year to average close to the year earlier, levels, ' when the wholesale prices of Grade A ready-to-cook broilers in New York City averaged about 42 cents a pound. He noted that the broiler situation can change quicker than the situation for either eggs or turkeys, and said that he expects about the same profit picture from broiler production next year if the industry does not go overboard in expansion, He thought the expansion might be limited by the availability of hatching eggs and hatchability. Also af fecting the expansion will be the high capital investment required for today’s modem broiler houses. ' According to Birth, the prices of broilers are being strengthened by the high prices of beef. One of the plus factors in the broiler industry is the increased tonnage of poultry $5O $75 $125 $l5O $2OO s3oo' $550 $125 $175 $250 $550 $125 $175 $250 $l5O $2OO $250 $5O $75 $lOO $125 $275 $350 $550 ,g&l 1978 was a good year for the broiler industry, and those involved are hoping for continued growth and expansion throughout 1979. meat now being used for further 'processing. This factor helps expand meat sales because most of these processed products are of the convenience type. Cleve Hastings, grow-out manager of Pennfield Poultry, Lancaster, said that there was continued‘growth in the Pennfield broiler business in 1978. He told that the shortage of hatching eggs held back that expansion a little more than they would have liked to see, but added that that shortage was nationwide, and has Lancaster Famine, Saturday, December 2,117M3 affected future expansion plans somewhat The year 1979 will see more expansion, he con tinued, and the company expects a year “on par” as this one in 1978. He thought some new housing would be needed, and noted that some of the primary breeders are being booked “way ahead”, which may continue to slow down the expansion. He too spoke of the higher prices for both beef and pork, mentioning the lower supply of beef available, and stated that consumers are becoming increasingly aware that poultry is nutritionally an excellent buy. He said that the per capita consumption of poultry is expected to in-, crease each year. Representing Victor Weaver Poultry, New Holland, Allan Tate stated that the broiler production there will be growing next year, with the company expected to increase its kill, using more birds from the local area. The company now kills 105,000 birds a day, compared to 87,000 a year ago. He, too, thought that the outlook for -the broiler in dustry was good, citing the high prices of pork and beef as making poultry a very buyable product.