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The Rural Voice, 1986-08, Page 34ttEEP TUU1 fiflPPY USE PUT1PS SPREf1DE]S Bf�f�Ti CLEf1TlEff GumIIl HUSKY FARM EQUIPMENT LTD. AI.MA 519-846-5329 HENRY, TIM, and RANDY would like to thank our customers for their patronage in the past and are eager to serve you in the upcoming harvest season. Along with recently acquiring a license to handle RED WHEAT - We are now offering GRAIN BANKING! Licensed Grain Elevator Handling Red Wheat, White Wheat, Barley, White Beans, Soybean, Corn, Feed & Seed. filasberi+oedr Bar -B -Dee Farms Ltd. R.R. No. 1, BORNHOLM, Ontario NOK 1A0 PHONE (519) 347-2966 GRAIN HANDLERS • FEED SUPPLIES 32 THE RURAL VOICE NEWS FEED DEALERS AND TRUCKERS SHOULD JOIN FORCES Canadian feed dealers and truckers should work together with other sectors in agriculture and food in counteracting the trend away from meat consumption, ac- cording to Ross Daily, the Business Editor of CFPL-TV in London. He told members of the Cana- dian Feed Dealers' Association at their annual meeting in Toronto recently that he recognizes that their immediate concern is how to sell more feed, but, he said, this will depend on meat consumption. He said that the feed industry is one of the lesser known links in the chain that starts with the cow/calf man and ends on the dining room table. One of the problems is that the fate of the final product — meat — has been in the hands of processors and retailers. "They have been managing your future and your welfare," he said. In background material for the conference it was stated: "It is assumed that consumer prefer- ences for meat which changed radically during the 1980s are ex- pected to persist." "Says who?" Daily challenged. If this change in preferences is to be reversed, and he maintained stoutly that it can be done with the same methods with which it came about, it must be done by the total industry, which includes the feed industry. Farmers may do some promotion but won't improve what's happening at the retail level. He accused the packers and retailers of doing a poor job, with some notable exceptions, like Schneider's who sell a "lite meat" line and the Kroeger company in the U.S. who sells salt free bacon and ground meat with a guaran- teed fat content. "If you were vertically in- tegrated in a large organization that owned cow/calf men and owned chain stores, this (lack of involvement) never would have happened." Feed dealers should go after (meat) retailers, he suggested, and urge them to develop, or demand that processors develop for them, fast and easy to cook meat pro- ducts. Dealers should protest the use of