WISCONSIN Heavy-Duty ENGINES Amos L. Fisher 3141 Old Phila Pike 717-768-3729 Bird-in-Hand, PA 17505 C Please send me color catalog on the Cherokee horse stock trailers and GN flatbeds I Address j City I Phone TMI SYSTEMS PEOPLE / v \ NURSERY DOUBLE DECKS V- \ ■ . ? , : !■ •• \ ♦ s .. l-T ‘ • ' - ‘ •-N | ' “V* ("''J'/ •v 4 FD W 1 f" ★ FULL LINE PARTS DEPARTMENT ★WE SELL, SERVICE AND INSTALL R So S w Pr sTre e e:. R PA d ~ A fflHSi wJ INC* Lancaster Co i 717-464-3321 6 to 65 H-P. AUTHORIZED SERVICE CENTER COMPLETE REBUILDING - LARGE PARTS INVENTORY FISHER ENGINE SERVICE State Farwcraft Enable You' To Grow I More Pigs | In The Same' Amount I Of Space. ; "V Zip Tender-C^re® The Sensational Different Type Flooring For Pigs Of All Sizes and Ages... that Q Greatly Reduces Leg and Foot Abrasions and Sores. Q Makes 3-Week Weaning Practical. Q Keeps Dry; Minimizes Corrosion and Rusting; Gives Many More Years of Service. Eastern annual meeting set SYRACUSE - Eastern Milk Producers Cooperative Association, Inc. will hold its annual meeting and banquet June 5 and 6 in the Hotel Syracuse, here. Activities begin at 10 a.m., both days, with an official call to order and opening prayer. Welcoming the delegates and guests will be Arden Tewksbury, president of the dairy cooperative. At 10:20, Tuesday, June 5, General Manager Howard McDonald will review resolutions and amendments. That will be followed by presentation of amendments to by-laws and action thereon. The final forenoon program calls for a Order No. 4 Class I milk priced ALEXANDRIA, Va. - Middle Atlantic Order Market Administrator Joseph D. Shine announced a Class I milk price of $13.41 MEMO HAY, STRAW & EAR CORN SALE EVERY MONDAY At 11A.M. EVERY WEDNESDAY 12:00 NOON NEW HOLLAND SALES STABLES, INC. Phone 717-354-4341 Lloyd H. Kreider.Auct. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 12,1979 report from the Resolutions Committee and actions on the resolutions. The afternoon session will begin with resolutions from the floor, followed by general discussions. The business meeting adjourns at 3 p.m. Dinner will be served at 5:30. On Wednesday, June 6, Tewksbury will deliver a 25- mmute address, beginning at 10:05 a.m. this will be followed by officers’ reports at 10:30 and committee reports at 11. Taking part in the officers’ reports will be David Clements, Jr., vice president; Franklin Wagner Sr., secretary; and Stanley at $13.41 for June per hundredweight for June 1979. This price is up four cents from May and is $1.39 higher than the June 1978 Class I milk price. Order No. 4 prices are announced for milk testing 3.5 per cent but terfat, f.o.b. plants lo cated within 55 miles of Philadelphia, and also within 75 miles from the nearer of Washington, D.C. or Baltimore, MD. There is also a six-cent direct delivery differential ap ATTENTION POND & STREAM OWNERS! Is your pond doing ?ts job in supplying water for: • Fire protection • Recreation is your stream eroding your land beyond hope? We are professional fish and wildlife biologists experienced in; • Pond design and construction. • Pond renovation, spillway and dike repair. • Pond sealing (chemical & physical) • Aquatic weed and algae control. • Stream rehabilitation/erosion control. • Impact assessment & aquatic bioassays. • Fish populat'on management. • Fish disease problems. • Water quality analysis • Wildlife management & landscaping for wildlife attraction POND MANAGERS Korona, treasurer. Speaking for the committees will be Charles Shoop, auditing; Robert K. Hill Jr., public relations; Clyde Wilson, sales; and Stanley Korona, milk price regulations. Wednesday afternoon the delegation will hear an annual report by General Manager McDonald. Also on the agenda are any un finished business, Including more resolutions from the floor. The meeting breaks at 3 p.m. The banquet will begin at 6:30 p.m. Awards will be presented at that time. plicable to producer milk received at plants located within 55 miles of Philadelphia. Mr. Shine announced a Class II milk price of |10.56 per hundredweight for April 1979 and a butterfat dif ferential of 13.9 cents for the month. The Class n milk price remains at $10.56 for the third straight month while the butterfat dif ferential increased eight tenths of a cent from March and 1.1 cent from February. These class prices are based on the April 1979 Minnesota-Wisconsin man factoring milk pice of $10.63 per hundredweight adjusted to a 3.5 per cent butterfat content. The USDA reported that the wholesale price of Grade A butter at Chicago for April was $1.2074 per pound and the nonfat dry milk price was $.7761 per pound, f.o.b. plants in the Chicago area. ® Livestock • Wildlife Sherwood E. Peterson, Director 3 Cedarhurst Circle Lancaster, PA 17603 717-872-6713 107