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The Rural Voice, 1983-10, Page 7team is unlikely to implement its proposal to pay dairymen to cull cows. The problem will continue to be debated, though, as production is well above last year. Milk production in August was 11.6 billion pounds; 2 per cent lower than July but 5 per cent above August of 1982. ONTARIO GRAIN & BEAN COM- PETITION IS FIERCE: Ontario grain and bean dealers are competing for business these days. Ample stor- age and handling facilities exist, while crops are down. The last Ministry of Agriculture report pegged grain corn production at 156 million bushels, compared to about 204 million last year; soybeans at only 29 million bu., compared to 35 million in 1982; and white beans at just over 1 million bags against almost 1.5 million last year. Result? The larger commercial houses seem ready to accept slim handling charges in return for volume. FARM SUPPLY BUSINESSES SHOULD BE BUSY IN FUTURE. The agricultural recovery continues to gear up. You have high grain prices which will encourage American far- mers to plant fence row to fence row next year. A good quality crop, at improved prices in Canada's west. Lower production but better prices in Ontario. An outlook for steady or perhaps even lower interest rates at least until the 1984 U.S. Presidential election. Agricultural machinery manufacturers, chemical companies, etc. have retrenched and become leaner and meaner, and are poised to show good profit sheets and good performance on stock markets into 1985. CHICKEN AND EGG SUPPLY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS ARE UNDER PRESSURE. Eastern Ontario farmers are gaining media attention as their non -quota birds die in barns. Despite this, the media is claiming that the federal government has been issuing import permits so U.S. supplies can be brought in. Certain processors are being accused of shipping illegally produced Ontario chicken into Quebec. In Saskatchewan, egg producers want a 4 4 per dozen price increase instead of the 2$ raise recently awarded to them, and the Federal Cabinet Committee on Wage and Price Restraints is reviewing the matter. It is no wonder, with these anomalies and squabbles reported regularly, that many con- sumers view marketing boards with suspicion. FARM MARKET PERSPECTIVE JOIN IN THE WORLD-WIDE OBSERVANCE OF MALNUTRI- TION AND FOOD SUPPLY PROB- LEMS... World Food Day began in 1981 as a commemoration of the founding of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. The observance is held each year on October 16th, the date FAO was founded in 1945. Across Ontario, people will be setting up displays, holding educational seminars, listen- ing to speakers, watching films...all designed to heighten awareness of world food issues. One idea: It might be a good time to seek out a well-run and worthwhile charity through which to donate some of your wealth. Most of us will be enjoying a harvest of better prices and better yields than were expected last spring. Others in the world are less fortunate. Let's share a little. AND FINALLY, it's accident time again. Corn harvest time typically results in many farm fatalities across North America, as farmers anxiously go to the fields to take off the crop. Be careful.0 AreYouSqueezingThe Life Out Of Your Soil? The idea is quite simple really ... you can pick up a handful of damp soil and feel it for yourself. Take that earth in the palm of your hand ... you can see and feel how the loose crumbly structure can hold the nutrients, moisture and oxygen that crops need to grow and flourish. But squeeze that soil in your fist and you squeeze the capacity to promote growth and plant life right out of soil. If you can do that with a squeeze of your hand, what does the weight of a tractor and spreader do? An LH manurigation system eliminates that kind of compaction and supplies your crops' nutrient needs! Find out more about MANURIGATION, call or write... . LH Resource i11�rG R.R. #3, Walton, Ontario. NOK 1Z0 (519) 887-9378 Irrigation and liquid waste utilization systems THE RURAL VOICE, OCTOBER 1983 PG 5