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The Rural Voice, 1979-04, Page 33now control 48 per cent of the food retail business in Canada. The solution to the problem, Mr. Hill said, is for producers to band together and form a common voice. He said single producers are reluctant to testify before the Royal Commission hear- ings investigating the matter because they're afraid they will lose their contracts with the major chains in retaliation. "There's no doubt that in unity there's strength," Mr. Hill said. The speaker also called on farmers to band together to fight the price-fixing he accused the large supermarkets of taking part in. Mr. Hill said the cut-rate prices charged consumers in supermarkets aren't based on real fluctuations in wholesale prices. As an example, he cited the price of chicken last fall. When producers lowered their prices to retailers, the retailers' prices remained the same per pound regardless. Mr. Hill said the supermarkets in cases like this band together to create a "common" pricing system rather than a "competitive" pricing system. OBPMB predicts more soybean acreage This year, soybean crops away up are expected to be from 1978, according to Gordon Anderson, chairman of the Ontario Bean Growers Co-operative. Mr. Anderson was interviewed following a soybean information meeting held in Seaforth Mr. Anderson said the story the co- operative is hearing from producers is that they are cutting back on their white bean crop due to poorer prices and problems with weather during the harvesting season. Soybeans are now the largest American cash crop and the U.S. supplies much of the world demand for the crop. Mr. Anderson said Canada is way down in soybean production and our country still imports U.S. soybeans to meet Canadian domestic market demand Included in the information meeting was a film advocating the solid seeding technique for soybeans, rather than leaving space between the rows. The film, which focused on an Illinois soybean grower, said the solid seeding technique could produce a yield increase of up to 10 per cent. Advantages of the technique include eliminating the need for cultivation and better weed control. The Illinois farmer experimented with :he solid seeding technique on a 90 acre field and increased his yield from 40 bushels per acre to 54 bushels per acre with the new technique. The grower treated his field with a grass -prevention herbicide first and then used an old grain drill to provide solid planting. In order to ensure the seed in the tractor tire tracks was covered, the grower added a tillage device between the drill and his tractor. Once the soybeans have started to mature, in about 30 to 35 days, the plants will form a solid canopy on the field which should prevent weed growth. Carl Van Hove, a salesman with King Grains in Paincourt, told the soybean growers that in Dover Township, most growers leave room between their soybean rows so they can get in and scuffle if their chemical weed control practices fail. Local women at Rural Learning seminar Brenda McIntosh from R.R.#4, Seaforth was recently sponsored by the OFA to participate in the Rural Learning Association Provincial Seminar held at Geneva Park Conference Centre at Orillia. Louise Marritt, R.R.#1, Wingham was sponsored by R.D.O.P.; Sheila Gunby, R.R.1, Dungannon acted as a group leader for the Rural Learning Association. Approximately fifty people from across Ontario gathered to discuss "Personal Power - Organizational Strength". They discussed methods of solving problems relating to rural people and their or- ganizations as well as interpersonal blocks that created problems. Dr. Wallace Clement, McMaster Univ., author of "The Canadian Corporate Elite" discussed the critical conflict areas con- fronting the farming community. He stated that the farmer has "an illusion of independence" but they are dependent on supply, distribution and capital. Despite this fact, Dr. Clement was basically optimistic saying that one of the positive strategies farmers could imple- HOW IT WORKS: 20" disc. blades, mounted on individual pivots, are rotated by hydraulic motors to cut bean plants off below ground surface. Each pivot -mounted section rests on two depth wheels. Two or three windrows are produced, depending on the number of blades. The Smyth Bean Cutter can be mounted on the front or on the rear of a tractor. This compact machine is not bothered by mud or trash. Canada's first rotary bean cutter is a product of the George Smyth Welding and Machine Shop. THE FIRST NEW IDEA IN BEAN PULLING IN 70 YEARS. SMYTN Welding and Machine Shop RR 2, Auburn, Ontario (519) 529-7212 THE RURAL VOICE/APRIL 1979 PG. 31