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The Rural Voice, 1986-10, Page 3043-• Spicer MacGillivray Chartered Accountants LISTOWEL 291-1251 Partners M.J. Hoyles, C.A. N. MacDonald Exel, C.A. Manager L. M. Gagnon, C.A. GODERICH 524-2677 Partner R.E. Takalo, C.A. Manager R.M. Kaufman, C.A. FAWCETT TRACTOR SUPPLY Ontario's Largest Stock of Used Tractor Parts • Rebuilt Blocks • Heads • Starters • Etc. Check Our Prices on New Farm Tires "WE NEED" LATE MODEL TRACTORS FOR WRECKING R.R. 2, St. Marys 519-284-2379 Cut fuel costs as you keep livestock confinement areas warm and dry... the air, but keep the heat. Exhaust fan pulls warm, moist, foul air into the heat exchanger core. Inlet fan pulls fresh outside air into the heat exchanger core. rt, Corrugated thermal grids transfer heat from stale to fresh air. ©Fresh air enters the room within 65-7007o of the building temperature. Only a 1l0 -volt outlet is needed. Simplicity is the Del -Air Heat Exchanger difference. installation is as easy as a normal exhaust fan. Conserving animal heat reduces or eliminates the cost of supplemental heat. Cleaning takes moments. Automatic defrost prevents freeze-up. Three models available to fit specific confinement needs. Ask us for details soon. HEAT EXCHANGER HYDE PARK FARM SUPPLY HYDE PARK, ONTARIO NOM 1Z0 519-471-6870 28 THE RURAL VOICE NEWS MISSOURI SUMMIT: FAIR PRICES FOR FARMERS Farmers, ranchers, and makers of policy from around the world recently attended an International Farm Crisis Summit and found common ground for achieving their own kind of peace. Brian and Gisele Ireland of Teeswater represented the Ontario Federation of Agriculture at the summit, held in St. Louis, Missouri. There was general agreement among the represen- tatives that farm prices and policies are driving farmers from the land, and that the looming trade war can only worsen condi- tions in both developed and developing countries. Farmers agreed that they want to get their price out of the marketplace rather than be sup- ported by subsidies, the Irelands report. A subsidized commodity dumped on the world market at below the cost of production destroys the farmers who produce the commodity in both developed and developing countries. The nearly 100 delegates unanimously endorsed the summit's final resolution, which incorporated the following prin- ciples in domestic and interna- tional farm policies. 1. Fair prices for producers around the world to ensure pro- fitable agriculture. 2. All producers must have the opportunity to produce and sell at a profit in their local markets, for their own nation's self-sufficiency. 3. There must be multi -lateral negotiations to determine fair trading agreements between pro- ducers and consumers. Trade wars in agricultural commodities escalate the financial failures of family farm enterprises both here and abroad and are the main reason world hunger is on the in- crease. 4. Effective supply management must be instituted by the major producers to ensure that unsold stock does not disrupt world trade. Excessive production of any com- modity has proven that more pro- duction decreases the price paid to the producer. Summit delegates sent a telex to