OCR Text |
Show MILFORD POETRY GROWERS WILL EECT DEEGATE TO ATTEND CONVENTION WHEN UTAH GROWERS MEET AT SALT LAKE CITY At the meeting of the Milford Poultry Association to be held at the Community Club House in. South Milford, at two o'clock on the afternoon of January 11, officers will be elected and a delegate chosen to attend the Utah Poultry Producers' Cooperative association associa-tion convention to be held in Salt Lake between January 19 and 21. Thevchoosing and sending of a delegate to the convention at Salt Lake City is of special importance as a considerable amount of educational matter on the subject of turkey growing and marketing mark-eting will be discussed and information invaluable to the local turkey growers will be available at the turkey session which will be held on the first day of the convention under the direction of the Utah Turkey Growers' association. According- to advance information sent out by the Utah Poultry Producers' Produc-ers' Cooperative Association, the turkey tur-key sessions will be followed by sessions ses-sions for the egg and chicken men which will begin Tuesday at 9 a. m., Community singing under E. J. Kirk-hanl Kirk-hanl and selections by the Springville quartet are first on the program. Anderson to Preside Joseph Anderson of Lehi, president presi-dent of the Utah Poultry Producers' Cooperative association, will preside at the meeting. He will open the business busi-ness with an address of welcome and the president's annual address. j Clyde C. Edmonds, general manager, of the association, headquarters at Salt Lake, will present his annual re-j port including a' discussion of the as-sociation's as-sociation's activities during the past year and prospects for 1931. Musical numbers arranged by Mr. Kirkham will follow. The poultry disease situation in Utah will be discussed by Dr. Hugh Hurst, Salt Lake, one of the association's associa-tion's chief poultry veterinarians, and then the meeting will adjourn to visit the association's new $225,000 central warehouse, office building and egg plant, nearing completion in Salt Lake. Free transportation will be furnished convention delegates. Musical Program Returning to the hotel, the business meetings will reconvene at 2:30 p. m., with Mr. Kirkham directing the singing sing-ing of an old time song and then a musical number from Draper. Benjamin Brown, director of markets mar-kets for the association with headquarters head-quarters in New York City, who is coming to Utah expressly for the meeting, will give an address. Mr. Brown is expected to recount the association's as-sociation's marketing experiences in the east during the past year, tell of the boycott on Utah eggs attempted by New York "racketeers" and "gangsters," "gang-sters," and explain the advantages of the advantages of the direct sales connection con-nection formed between the Utah poultry society and the Jewish Grocers' Groc-ers' association, a huge organization of over 1,000 chain store units. Expected Ex-pected market trends for 1931 will also be discussed by Mr. Brown. Picture Show After an address by Carl Frischk-nicht, Frischk-nicht, an expert poultryman, a picture show will be enjoyed and then the local lo-cal presidents and state veterinarians will hold separate meetings. : Community singing and a musical number by the Riverton local will open op-en the Wednesday morning session, Jan. 21, followed by an address from Byron Alder, professor and poultry expert at the Utah State Agricultural college. Dr. C. T. Jones, veterinarian, and E. G. Peterson of the U. S. A. C, are the other speakers for the morning morn-ing session. Dr. Pren Moore, veterinarian; a representative re-presentative of the Utah State Farm bureau, and Harden Bennion, state commissioner of agriculture, will speak at the Wednesday aftenoon meeting. The convention will close with the annual election of directors. |