OCR Text |
Show . , : il Utah Poultry Men Plan State Convention At S.L. tion will conclude wic'.i an open discussion of problems and election elec-tion of 1932 officers. Joseph Anderson of Lehi, president presi-dent of the Utah Poultry' Producers' Produc-ers' Cooperative association, will preside at the poultry convention, which opens at 9:30 a. m. Tuesday, January 19. - Following the president's presi-dent's annual address, Mayor Louis Marcus will welcome the poultry-men poultry-men of the state. Mr. Edmonds will give the manager's -report, and other talks will be given during the morning by H. L. Strong, assistant as-sistant association secretary; H. M. Blackhurst, manager of the feed department and Charles P. Rudd, poultry department manager. : At 2 p. m. the afternoon session will begin, featuring addresses by Mr. Brown, George F. Stallings of-. Eden, state i'arni bureau president; Dr. Hugh Hurst, Salt Lake-, poultry veterinarian. Governor George H. Dern will be the first speaker Wednesday morning. morn-ing. Professor Alder will then address ad-dress the assembly, followed, by Carl A. Badger, who will discuss the producer's viewpoint. At the afternoon meeting Mr. Edmonds will analyze: the association's finances; fin-ances; Dr. EG. Peterson; president presi-dent of the V. o. A. C, will speak, ami the .convention win conclude with the election of three new directors: direc-tors: Those retiring are Jesse W. ; Hoo'pes of Brigham City; Hans 1 Rigtrup, Springville; and J. J. Spendlovc, Richfield., The new board of directors will thenmeet to reorganize. r Approximately 1,000 poultrymen from Utah and southern Idaho are expected to gather in Salt Lake for the annual convention of the Utah Poultry Producers Cooperative association, as-sociation, set for Jan. 19 and 20 at the Newhouse hotel, Clyde C. Edmonds, Ed-monds, association general manager, man-ager, announces. j The poultry convention will follow fol-low the annual conclave of the Utah Turkey Growers' association, scheduled for Jan. 18 at the hotel, ind precede the yearly Utah State Farm bureau meet, Jan. 21 to 23, it the same place. All poultry producers and enthusiasts, en-thusiasts, whether among the 8.000 members of the Utah association or not, are invited to attend the sessions. Problems vital to the continued con-tinued success of Utah's poultry industry and to. increased profits or individual producers will be discussed dis-cussed by some of the nation's foremost authorities. .-Poultry .-Poultry and turkey feeds and 'coding, disease control, methods of bettering production efficiencies ind marketing problem?, are headline head-line tonica on the,plograr,ih roports Mr. Edmonds. . ' , The turkey growers' convention j will begin at 10 a. ra. Monday, Jan. 18. with A -DeMarr Dudley of Jen-J!i, Jen-J!i, state association .president, icting us chairman. . During . the forenoon no-ssion reports- will be neartl fi.oni- President Dudley; .B. VI. Mcntlenbull of Springville.., vice re.s!dent; K- Jensen, Manti, -aecre- Herbert Beyers, Salt Lake, assistant as-sistant genera manager of the Vorthwentern Turkey Growers' issociation, will give an address m "Turkey Business from a National Na-tional Point of View," and Mr. "Cdmonds will present a report on he activities of the northwestern association, of which he is vice resident and general manager. At the afternoon meeting, which convenes at 2 p. m., Benjamin 3rown, director of markets for the Utah poultry association at New Sfork, will speak on turkey market-ng, market-ng, followed by an address on 'Turkey Feeds and Feeding," from Professor Byron Alder, director of he Utah State Agricultural college poultry department. This oonven- |