*l2-Linca»ttf Farming, Saturday, October 13,1984 HARRISBURG - Three top Pennsylvania companies have been nominated for the 1984 Governor’s Export Award for Agriculture, according to State Agriculture Secretary Penrose Hallowell. The award will be presented Monday, Oct. 22, during the Pennsylvania International Trade Conference at the Hyatt Hotel in Pittsburgh. The three firms vying for the award are International Agricultural Associates of Nazareth, Northampton County; Matson Wood Products of Brookville, Jefferson County; and Sire Power, Inc. of T-j-khann^'-k, CAMP HILL Pennsylvania Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Association (PACMA), the marketing cooperative of the Pennsylvania Farmers’ Association, completed its first ever export sale Thursday with the loading of 60 feeder pigs aboard a cargo ship in Port Elizabeth, N.J. Brooks End sale reported BEAVERTOWN - Brooks End and Par Kay Farms held their annual Fall Sail on Oct. 5. The sale totaled $59,030.00 for 174 head. The average per hog was $339. The top-selling animal was a Yorkshire Boar RTB4 Paramount 14-8 at $1700.00, purchased by Sam Lane, Dover, N.C. The top-selling Yorkshire Bred Gilt was Lot 16 purchased by Hanna Etzler Beavertown, for $450.00 The top HAMPSHIRE SHOW TIMES FARM SHOW COMPLEX sales begPn saturday novembef Harrisburg, Pennsylvania I^AMreHiRE ingorder: ? : :88 a p.:;^ F R°s R E? OVER 100 HEAD sSe SATURDAY-NOVEMBER 3rd, 1984 Write Or Call For Your OXFORD 8:00 a.m.-souiHDowN Catalog-Today SOUTHDOWN OXFORD 3 firms vie for Pa. ag Wyoming County. The Governor’s Export Award recognizes Pennsylvania com panies which have achieved ex cellence in international trade. Awards are made in three categories: agriculture, manufacturing and service. “ Exporting agricultural products has helped America become the largest producer of goods and services in the world. Agriculture, the number one in dustry in Pennsylvania and the nation, plays a key role in main taining the country’s leadership in international trade and com- Pa. pigs sold to Bermuda for a three-day voyage to Ber- ~ , . , ~ muda effort, in breaking ground in mis PACMA president, S. Richard f rea - We feel f P orts "[ill give Moyer of Winfield, said, “The fa ™ e ” exp « , ma / ke i t °?' shipment is relatively small, but P°rtunities. PACMA s first sale numbers are unimportant right Jl as a , earaln B experience, now. What is significant, not only a * we ve been successful, for PACMA but all Pennsylvania w . e re , 00^ln ® forward to corn farmers, is that we’ve finally Pf e f ln B larger sales in the future succeeded, after a lot of time and lnvo vln ® a wl( * e range of farm selling Landrace Boar was Lot 131 purchased by James Young, Wellsboro, for $325.00. The top sellilng Landrace Bred Gilt was Lot 63 purchased by Norman Watson Cornish, Maine for $450.00. Averages include 31 head of Yorkshire Bred Gilts, $360; 40 head of Yorkshire Boars, $567 ; 71 head of Yorkshires, $477. 31 head of Landrace Bred Gilts, HELD IN CONJUNCTION WITH KEYSTONE INTERNATIONAL LIVESTOCK EXPOSITION merce,” Hallowell said. The State Department of Agriculture encourages Penn sylvania agribusinesses to expand services into the international sector. The Governor’s Export Award is one way to recognize those agribusinesses that have done so successfully. International Agricultural Associates derives 100 percent of its income from exported goods as it is organized exclusively to ex port a broad range of agricultural commodities. These commodities include feedstuffs and hay, vegetable and forage seeds, laboratory anH "" f ♦c"'* $342; 4 head of Landrace Boars, $309; 35 head of Landrace, $338. 6 head of Commercial Bred Gilts, $328 ; 62 head of Comm. Open Gilts, $183; 68 head of Comm. Gilts, $196. This sale offering sold into 8 different states. Much of this sale offering featured imported bloodlines. Next sale will be held at the farm Jan. 18. BRED EWE “EXTRAVAGANZA” YOU CANT AFFORD TO MISS THESE SALES PA HAMPSHIRE BRED EWE & EWE LAMB SALE PA DORSET BRED EWE & EWE LAMB SALE EASTERN OXFORD BRED EWE & EWE LAMB SALE MID-ATLANTIC SOUTHDOWN BRED EWE & EWE LAMB SALE Sal* Managed by: KEN BRUBAKER P.O. BOX 149 WESTTOWN, PA. 19395 215/696-5483 export award agricultural chemicals, livestock equipment and supplies, as well as live cattle. In 1983 the company had total sales of $647,500. The firm employs two people and reports that sales for the first quarter of 1984 were 30 percent greater than the same period in 1983. Matson Wood Products, the hardwoods and lumber subsidiary of Matson Lumber Company, had sales of $l2 million in 1983, and 59 percent of those sales were ex ported products. The firm’s export sales have more than doubled in the last five years. Those in- commodities.” PACMA arranged the sale by finding a supplier to fill an order received by INAGRA, Inc., an export company headquartered in Nazareth, Pa. The order, for what is believed to be the first feeder pig export to Bermuda, was placed by Raymond White, for use at the Horse and Buggy Restaurant on the island. The pigs were supplied by John C. Wagner, a PACMA member and operator of White Oak Mills, Lancaster Couny. The shipment was made from the Genesis Farrowing Unit, an 800-sow operation near Carlisle. PACMA is a farmer-owned and controlled cooperative which buys and sells feed, feed ingredients and livestock for members. It .also provides other services including forward contracting, spent hen marketing and processing apple bargaining. creased sales meant 30 new jobs at Matson Wood Products. Sire Power is an artificial in semination cooperative, one of the oldest animal breeding organizations in the world. In 1983, 24 percent of the firm’s $6.3 million sales were of exported products. However, this figure accounts tor 35 percent of the company’s sales volume. Sire Power reports it has entered a previously closed market, Canada. To do so, the company met strict health requirements imposed specifically by that market. The company exports to a variety of countries, including Canada, Chile, Mexico and Uruguay. is*®" I Now is | the Time ; FI (Continued from PaeeAlO) 4 cover crops such as rye, what, or barley. All of these are not toxic when frozen and usually do not present any bloating problems However, the legumes such as clover and alfalfa should be grazed carefully. They are not toxic, after being frosted, but will cause severe bloating if consumed while the frost is on the leaves. Allow the frost to thaw, and the plants to dry off, before turning in the herd or flock. Also, any of the sudan grasses or sorghum hybrids should not be grazed for at least a week after being frozen. (The Penn State Extension Service is an affirmative action equal opportunity educational Institution.) SOUTHDOWN DORSET