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The Rural Voice, 1998-06, Page 65surface water. • Be more aggressive when looking into antibiotic use on animals. Despite the recommendation, there is at least one partner in the study who is still pointing fingers. Joe Gleason, founder of Huron's Edge, a group concerned about pollution from large livestock operations, said he offered to pay for a laboratory' study to find out whether bacteria lose some of their antibiotic resistance once they enter the surface water like lakes and streams. He said if that were true,, it might show livestock operations are in fact the primary source of E. coli in the lake. However, he said SOLVE turned his offer down. Prout said that SOLVE may eventually take him up on his offer, but it didn't want to delay the release of theresults past the press conference.11. Bruce County Junior Farmers mark 50 years The Bruce County Junior Farmers will mark their 50th anniversary this year with a reunion centered in the Paisley area. The reunion will be held July 17, 18 and 19. A Friday night dance will be held at the Palace on the Paisley fairgrounds. Saturday will feature a baseball game with the Junior Farmers (any members past or present) versus the CKNX Try- Hards. Saturday evening will feature a beef barbecue and dance at the Paisley Arena. Music will be a live band "Black Magic" as well as a D.J. Tentative plans for Sunday include a church service and a picnic -style brunch at the Saugeen Bluffs 'Conservation Area. It is hoped that many past Junior Farmers and their families will come out to enjoy the weekend events. There were three Junior Farmer Clubs in Bruce County: Port Elgin, Teeswater and Ripley. The Port Elgin Club has members from Tara to Walkerton and most points in between. To attract new members News this year the club has decided that first year members will not have to pay a membership fee for 1998. Members do not need to have a rural background to enjoy and benefit from the Junior Farmer experience and new faces are always welcome at our meetings and events. To join you must be between the ages of 15 to 29. If you are interested in the organization or are a new member and want to know about upcoming events, contact Jeff Schwass 389- 5260.0 New plant uses Ontario hard maple By Andrew Grindlay A new busincss has sprung up in Southwestern Ontario that is sure to please farmers who have woodlots on their property. Tri -County Lumber Inc. has opened a hardwood flooring plant in the old Big -O factory near Hensall from which some 3,000 board feet of flooring is produced daily. Soon, according to Jake Hovius of Tri - County, a second shift will be added, increasing daily output to 5,000 board feet per day. (One board foot is the equivalent of a block of wood 1" x 12" x 12".) The plant buys all grades of logs of hard maple, ash, red and white oak, beech, hickory and some walnut and has them sawn in one of three local sawmills. The boards are then made into flooring in the Hensall plant and the flooring is shipped across Canada and to the U.S., Europe and Asia. "The best hard maple in the world comes from Southwestern Ontario", says Mr. Hovius, who said in an interview that hard maple and white ash are the main products of his mill. More good news for farmers with maple trees comes from Ottawa whcre The Original Maple Bat Co. is producing hard maple baseball bats and meeting with some success in getting them accepted for use in the major leagues. According to Sam Holman, president, a maple bat will last longer than one made of ash and will let a good hitter get greater distance. His company needs a good supply of hard maple sapwood 2 1/2' thick from which he turns out the bats on a lathe. Although prices of hardwoods have softened recently, because of the Asian financial crisis; a spokesman for the Pannill Veneer Co. in Kitchener, while leading members of the Huron/Perth chapter of the Ontario Woodlot Owners on a tour of his veneer mill, said that his company has been paying as much as S3500 per thousand board feet for top grade veneer quality hard maple logs delivered to the mill. "European buyers", he said, "will accept, only the very best quality veneer."0 Ontario Pork block agreements achieve U.S. equivalency Ontario Pork has announced two new block agreements with Quality Meat Packers that mark a new level in hog marketing for the pork producers of the province. The new agreements, effective June 1, 1998, will deliver two lots of 5,000 hogs/week, each at 103.25 per cent of the formula price. The pricing agreements then increase to a new level of 103.5 per cent on December 1, 1998. The hogs will be indexed on the Ontario grid at the time of delivery, with the processor paying the freight based on the Harriston rate. The agreements are in effect for the duration of nine and 15 months respectively. "I am extremely pleased with the outcome of the pricing negotiations with Quality Meat Packers," stated Julien R. Den Tandt, Chief Executive Officer. "We have reached a key marketing goal of raising the price to a level that we believe is very close to U.S. equivalency for the first time. I applaud Quality Meat's willingness to bring Ontario's price level to one that is comparable to what we have negotiated with other provinces. Quality Meat Packers' long term commitment will improve producers access to world markets, while continuing to build Ontario's viable pork industry." "These new contracts with Quality JUNE 1998 61