Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 01, 1945, Page 10, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    rEN HERALD AND NEWS
Thursday, february 1. IMS
Farm Loan Groups
Consolidate Here;
Changes Announced
Consolidation of three nation
al farm loan asociations In this
district into the Klamath Nation
al Farm Loan association, with
headquarters at Klamath Falls;
payment of thousands of dol
lars in cash settlement for asso
ciation stock held by former bor
rowers who have paid off their
loans, and rehabilitation of the
association capital structure, a
announced by H. E. Hamaker,
secretary-treasurer of the con
solidated organization.
Heading the new, enlarged as
sociation, which manes ana ser
vices loans for the Federal Land
Bank of Spokane, is E. A. Geary,
well known farmer of Klamath
. county. R. L. Darling, farmer
stockman at Fort Klamath has
been elected vice-president. Oth
er members of the cooperative's
board of directors are U. E.
Keeder and L. J. Horton of Klam-
anza. and George Denton of
tr VI am nth.
Consolidation of the accounts
of these associations will bring
to more than 400 the number of
farmer-borrowers served by the
larger organization, and the com
bined loan volume wm exceeo
SPOKANE. Wash.. Feb. 1 VP
The eight Oregon branches of
the Spokane froaucuon ureaii
association supplied $13,051,281
in credit to 1,557 farmers last
year, the corporation's annual
report showed today.
About 43 percent of the capi
tal stock in the eight associations
is now owned by Oregon farm
ers and stockmen, who have set
their goal at 100 percent, said E.
E. Henry, PCA president here.
Capital stock investment now
stands at S735.000 a $78,435 in
crease over 1943 although the
Oregon members started from
scratch 11 years ago, Henry re
Dorted. Offices are in Salem,
Baker.. Klamath Falls, Pendle
ton, Portland, Keomona, Mea
iord, and The Dalles.
Three of the Oregon branches
paid a total $25,797 in dividends
to members last year. The state's
associations have $1,086,571 in
reserve; and undistributed earnings.
Egg Price Increase
Raises Living Cost
PORTLAND, Feb. - i CP)
, Chief cause of a 1.1 per cent in
crease in- living costs here for
the quarter ending December 15,
1944, was a 28.8 per cent jump
in egg :pricesr a federal report
showed; today.
Some small .items formerly
classified as luxury goods but
now listed essential, including
cigarettes and beauty shop costs,
rose .8 per cent. Clothing and
house furnishings also increased
slightly, the U. S. bureau of la
bor statistics said. -
Rents dropped one tenth of
one per cent in the six months
from June to December.'
Oregon Farmers Need
No RACC Loans
CORVALLIS," Feb. 1. (IP)
Oregon farmers will need no
regional agricultural credit cor
poration loans this year, the
state USDA war board reported
today.
The board said Oregon's rec
ord 1944 farm production was
accomplished without RACC
loans, and that other credit
facilities promised to be ample
this season. RACC loans were
made here in 1943.
Wool Socks
Wool or Part-Wool
For Shoe or Boot
OREGON WOOLEN STORE
Main and 8th
$1,000,000, according to Hamak-
Rehabilitation of the capital
structure of those associations
which have been impaired will
erase all outstanding obligations
and set up reserves to cover an
foreseeable losses on loans uun
on the books, Hamaker said.
The associations will have
three vears in which to determ
me their losses, it enaoies mem
to settle in full for stocK neict
bv former borrowers who have
nairt nff their loans but failed
to obtain reimbursement for their
association stock.
"This consolidation and re
habilitation program, which
strengthens the farmer-owned
and farmer-controlled mortgage
credit system in this and other
Pacific northwest states, is made
possible through operating econ
omies of the Federal Land Bank
of Spokane," said Hamaker.
"Savings which resulted from
these economies and from the
use of government funds in pre
vious years are being passed on
to farmer-borrowers as part of
the cooperative function of the
bank.
"Established 27 years ago to
give agriculture access to a per
manent and adequate source of
long-term mortgage credit, spe
cially geared to its needs, the
land bank system nationally has
financed more than a million
farmers. Its goal from the start
has been to place ownership and
control entirely in'the hands of
borrowers through their nation
al farm loan associations.
"The Federal Land Bank of
Spokane, which serves the four
states of Montana, Idaho, Wash
ington and Oregon, has now
realized that goal. During 1944
it repaid the last block of capital
stock subscribed in the early
thirties by the federal govern
ment, and funds are being ac
cumulated to retire by May 15
the last of the government's paid-
in surplus.
"During the past several years
the bank also has been decentral
izing its activities, giving the
NFLA boards of directors the
responsibility for servicing its
loans and contracts. Through
this program and through refine
ments in operating procedures,
the bank has reduced its person
nel to 83 as against 441 in 1936.
savings in operating expense
since that time have amounted
to more than $640,000 per year.
"These savings have permitted
the bank to set the Dace for
long-time interest rates at 4 per
cent on all regular loans made
through national farm loan as
sociations. A five per cent di
vidend to all stockholders was
declared on September 30. 1944.
Through this new program and
through other operating econ
omies and sound business prac
tices, the bank contemplates go
ing on a permanent dividend
paying basis," Hamaker concluded.
No Lyin'-a Lion
iiiiin i rm
This mountain lion was preying
Utah, so Stuart Hamblen of mo
tion pictures orougni mm auwii
.ifl. n-Kii-h tin hac hae-
ged,87 bears, 14 mountain lions
ana snow wiuvi,
T
Chiloquin
Sgt. Alfeo E. Minato has
recently been promoted to that
rank. He is with the army air
force somewhere in Italy. Sgt.
Minato is in the 250th air group,
which has recently received a
unit citation, and he will receive
an air medal. He has been on six
sorties, which is equivalent to
10 missions.
. Harold Collins, who is in the
navy, is home on leave. He has
seen action in the South Pacific.
Reno De Bortoli is home on a
furlough visiting his parents and
friends. He is in the army air
force.
Dick Flury, ace basketball
player, is now stationed at the
San Diego naval base. He was
sent to "boot camp" immediate
ly after his physical examination
at Portland.
Billei Wade. Chiloeuln hleh
school student, broke her leg
while skiing two weeks ago. She
had symptoms of pneumonia but
it is reported that she is doing
nicely now.
Many Chiloquin citizens at
tended We thrilling basketbal
game between the Harlam
Globetrotters and the Klamath
All Stars Tuesday night.
The cost of AAA superphos
phate distributed under the 1045
conservation materials program
will be $34 per ton, county agri
cultural conservation associa
tions were notified this week by
the state AAA committee.
Against this $34 cost, farmers
receive a credit of S24 a ton for
applying the phosphate to le
gumes, grasses, permanent pas
tures and cover crops in or-
cnaros. xne amount of phos
phate that a farmer can obtain
under the program is limited by
his farm allowance, which is the
sum of $2 times the acres of crop
land ano orcnard in tne farm.
To assist m meeting the ur
gent need for increased milk
production, emphasis is being
piaceo on using aaa pnospnate
to boost the yield of Oreeon's
dairy pastures. Preference is
being given to dairy counties in
allocating the state's 5000-ton
quota of phosphate for the first
six montns of 1945.
Phosphate supolies in the na
tion, as a whole, are consider
ably below the amount that
farmers would use this year if
this fertilizer were available in
liberal quantities. Part of the
shortage has been caused by the
increased demand for sulfuric
acid in the munitions industry,
limiting the amount available
for ' manufacturing super-phosphate.
Future of Flax
Industry Studied
CORVALLIS, Feb.- 1 (P)
Future of Oregon's flax industry
is being studied by two Oregon
agricultural experiment station
officials, now visiting linen man
ufacturers in the east.
Dr. D. D. Hill and Dr. D.. B.
De Loach will return here in
mid-February after investigating
possible peacetime flax markets
in this country.
For
Commercial
Itefrigeratloit
SALES and SERVICE
See
Karl Urquhart
Refrigeration
Equipment Co.
611 Klamath
Phone 6455
HIGHWAY 47 SOUTH
CAL-ORE
WILL
o '- RE-OPEN
TONIGHT
Cfll-ORE
TflVfRI.
Hlft H WAY 97 SOUTH
(Feb. 1)
With
ABBY GREEN
And Hii 5-Piece Orchestra
CHI-ORf
HIOHWAV T SOUTH
CM-ORE
TAVERI.
HIOHWAV 97 SOUTH
Statistics showing the much
larger reduction in sheep num
bers in Oregon in recent years
compared with other western
states and with the country as
a whole, proved to be sobering
(acts when presented by H. A.
Lindgren, extension livestock
specialist, at the annua! meeting
o( the Oregon Wool Growers as
sociation in Prineville.
Records going back to 1B67
showed that the total o( sheep
nnrt innihs now is at the lowest
nnint since 1880. The number o(
sheep ana Minos on urviion
(arms, January 1. 1944. is esti
mated at 1,217.000 head, which
was 16 per cent fewer than the
number a yo.tr earlier, and 41
per cent below the 1935-1939
average.
Leaders of the association
blame high production costs In
the range siiecn industry and in
ability to get enough competent
herders at any price for the fact
that the reduction in sheep num
bers in eastern Oregon has been
67 per cent, while a 2 per cent
increase was shown in western
Oregon, where farm flocks un
der fence predominate. The con
clusion reached from the general
discussion of the causes for the
decline in the eastern Oregon
sheep industry was that many
taciors nave combined to in
crease the cost of production out
of proportion to increased prices
o( wool and lambs, thereby mak
ing other farm enterprises more
profitable.
Turkey Bulletin
Revised by OSC
A revised edition of a former
bulletin entitled "Management
of Turkey Breeding Stock." bv
Noel L. Bennion, extension poui-
iryman. nas just Been issued by
tne ussu extension service as
bulletin No. 644. The new bulle
tin is somewhat larger than the
old, contains more illustrations,
and has some new data and re
ports on newer methods.
Oregon turkey growers nor
mally keep from 300,000 to 325,-
uuu turKey breeders, which pro
duce more than six million
poults. Only about one-third of
these poults are brooded on Ore-
gon farms, while two-thirds arc
exported as poults or hatching
eggs to various Darts of the Un .
ed States, says Bennion.
Ration Calendar
War Prim anrf nflnnin n4 aia
Main street. attic hnun rt.nJ in
J. rn, to 4:30 p. m.: Saturday, 10 a. m.
p. ou rnonc tuoi jor au I ru or fixa
tion. All ntlHcaHrtn muat ha XT A rT m tn
to the War Price end Rationing Board
at 430 Main street, and NOT presented
in person.
SUGAR Ration book 4 Sugar stamp
No. 33 valid February 1.
PROCESSED FOODS
BLUE STAMPS .Ration rw.V J W-9
J-2, K-2, L-2. M-2. X-3 through Z-3
uu UIIUIHII U-J Villi V11IQ.
M.U uiAiwra Y-a ana z-a gooa tor
10 DOint each. A -2. R-2. C.o. n.2 nn in
valid. Q.5 through X-5 still valid.
Take used fats to your meat dealer
and he will pay 4 cents and two points
per pound.
anuw Katton oooic 3 Airplane snot
KLAMATH BASIN ,
Carload Potato Shipments
(Figures from Stato-Fcderul Inspoctor Ross Aubrey)
Day 01
Month
g,..on wm """ "M: "
., J,;.' jraT
o o who IUI"
7 u,T am xi i wi
70 " " aa m amw
ao , xa irau i'ti w mu
N) :eu rait ia l in ou.n
o iiT is ia.t mk
31 m inaa in lau awia
gg 0111 IU1T 0 I"" 8W0
71 mu win iiJ IIU !
w m a" "a
71 TH T31 44 3U1 IHWT
72 7m asm C aaa aisa
0 7IKI B1RU st ato tuia
M b.vi nwu na n ami
djj mil ii a im
el wi aain a km
ea "Si a.w 3u aaa aaau
w noi sum M 7:i a
M Tito aiiw a7 aio a
o inu nnu t aw a4a ,
38 1301 37 71B MJ
u M.n a 7ia avis
3t 1370 D37S M 7J7 IB0.1
ci iTuu ata ui
jo ;w3 aii iaj eo7l
5a tTia P44i a aia ajoa
0 1419 Wll ail IKW 0744
30 14Stii B4l 30 0J0 07M
j) 1474 IM7I1 0 oaa 74
31 1303 KUO 57 7ia
CarloU
Overload! and Truckloada .
TOTAI Mia
Itamps 1, 2 and 3 sood Indefinitely.
uasului E. a iiamp cooa uniii
March' 21. 1949. All gas rationing: ap-
DlleaUons must be aceomnanfed bv mils.
age rationing ilip which was received
witn new -a uook.
FUEL OIL Period 1 and 3 valid until
August 31. 1945. Other periods wUl be
announced as they become valid.
renoa number a. vana January s.
Weekly
Market Trend
(Td I tor's Note: The following markel
Information Is supplied from maturUl
obtained over tho government leaird
wire in the office of the cxtcnim
economist at Oregon State college. The
material, In the form of a weekly sum
mary ot trends In Ihe livestock market,
Is not Intended to replace day by day
market reports.)
GENERAL LIVESTOCK
Except for a sharp In r rente In the
sheep dlvUlon. receipts of livestock at
North Portland Moudny were about In
line with other recent week. The sal
able supply of cattle wa 2100 head, hogi
1100, and sheep and Iambi 1300. - Sheep
numbers were double those of a week
previous.
Cattle were
fed steers
hoes were
feeder pigs advanced 25 cents to sell
at lis to $13.50. Lamb buyers were
pressing for lower prices on the bails
of largcd supplies. Marketings of cattle
In the midwest recently have been con
siderably below those of a few weeks
ago and leu than a year earlier. Prices
have strengthened under a strong de
mand with steers at Chicago On January
24 bringing a top of $17 It. Offerings
are now showing a larger proportion
of the better grades of fed steers.
Eastern hog markets report com
paratively light marketings Offerings
at the 12 principal midwest markets last
week totaled about 230,000 he nil, com
pared with about 300.000 head a year
ago. Normally, hog slaughter begins to
decline around mid-January. Lat year
was a notable exception and so far this
year receipts have hetd fairly constant,
but at a much lower level.
A noticeable decline In tha averave
quality pf lambs offered at North Port
ana nas occurred. Tms is due to the
llsrht carlot movement out of feedtnli.
Most of the, receipts have been truck
Ins from nearby farms. Demand has
were up 3.1 rents with good
i as high as $16.50. Slaugnter
been strong and prices on loot! quality ,
offerings have held.
rK: iiutpi.im
No nollcrattlo change In the coil ol
Hvciluck feed occurred last week but
price average a Utile lower than Ihey
were a year ago. Hay Is quoted about
the same as a year ago but oats and
barley are both slightly lower. Country
supplies of oats and barley r becoming
sea t ve.
rccd corn, which was practically un-
obtainable a year ago. Is now available
at prices fairly comparable with other
icvtl grainm uui reinuvny cixiifiivu
with wheat by-pruduct. Prices of com
mercial feedstuff, by-products of the
milling and criuhlng ntlu trips, continue
at ceiling levels at Portland with some
Hems still very scarce. win run anu
nilildllnei havn held at Hfl W. Ihe celtllia
since max I mum prices were first citati-
lishcd In IIM;i, L.H,sbc1 meal is qumeii
at H7 but supplies ate light, Suytmnn
meal sold the pail week at f-fll.di) and
meat anu uone moai at m w,
Higher livestock prices and somewhat
lower grain prices have resulted in moie
favorable feeding ratios now than pr
valled a year ago, Dated on Chicago
prices of No. 3 yellow corn and good lo
choice hog, loo pounds of hog would
buy 12 H bushels of corn nn an average
during the first Hire weeks in aJanuary.
compared with 11. 0 biuhels In January
1044. In January tow, 100 pounds of
hog would buy IS. 4 bushels of corn.
A hundred pounds of good steers will
buy 1J.4 bushels of corn in January this
season compared wllh 12 0 btithels a year
ago, and 14. 0 bushels, the 10-year aver
ago. Compared with average, middlings
are relatively cheaper than bogs tliU
season. A hundred pounds of hogs In
January would purchase nn an average
73S pounds of middlings this year com
pared with 000 a year ago, and 6U
pounds, the 10-year average.
WOOI, MAKKKT
Trading In domestic Wt-wli was much
slower In the Doston wool market the
past week. Very Utile graded territory
fine staple and half-blood wool remains
on which options have not been placed,
A lot of ao.OOO pounds of Wyoming
three eighths AO's to fttt's- graded staple
wool, shrinking 30 per cent, was sold
at a grease price of 04 cents.
Market
Quotations
fluxing qiiulalUms;
AmwrJrun Van
Aim I'ar A f dy ....
Am Tel A Tvl
Ansrtmda
('lit Packing ,
I'at Ti actor
t'litmi.iMuvt'fllin noi
t-mils-Wi'itlil
l.'r trial KUM'trle
(11 Nor lly litd
Illinois t'eitiiol .
jut lliii veslei- , .
Krnmu'oU
l.ocKherjl
Long -Hell "A"
Mniiigoinery Wtiul .
Naslt-Kelv ,
N Y 1'imti'nl
Northern Pnolflu ....
1'or tin X ri , . ,
Park4itl Motor
pcntfi It It
llcMOlOU' Slret
Kii'hneld (III
H.i(eav SUH'es ,
hears Hoehurk .
Fcmthei n Pafific . ..,
fHIiitlnrtl Hraiitls . .
htllivhlne Mining
Tiaiis-Amerlt's
llnioii till t'nllf . ,
Pulim I'dCiflc
II N Nteel , , .,
Warner Pictures . ,
, am,
. 41
i Hi's
. 77 .
" r -,
i?.':
. up,
a,.,
. S4;
Potatoes
tii ? ami 1,1,1 toui ...
s
... . f Itllllif
Vi IO(l(l f i if Hi " v witii
chnlve tiaiu,-. .
" '""Ml lt.lt
WHEAT
I'lllr'a....
keu we,- ':Jr 1
i S ''1' s ft.!
.... . i.i i,r; ,"i.iM
I'J"' Inking ,.. '.' T ni.S
in
.. , ,
i." .V"" t k .
in. iiV i, i invsrM
i ii.! '.. on i'.'VI
r k .?V
.1 it
y. lit., m , , .,7
llttM. deinanil etfenlu a aiiAttle trai
off r i litati mi kel flint at re Ulna ; new
slm-k: supplies verv light, demand ex
ceeds suipllrs, market (Inn. Maine
Katahillna. vi.mmniclfll. $.104; North Da.
kola IIU Tilumpha. t. N No I. I 1 1.
rommeii'iat WUcnnslit t'hlppewa,
i S. Nn. I. S.uw. rioii.ln in irt,k.
miss Triumphs. U. 14. No. I, $4 70,
POItTt.ANl). Or.. Keb. I lAP WrAI
Kaldbln and total fit HI o I MM calves 21;
maikel aclive. steady -strung some cows
sllahtlv Mailer: coitimon-iiieitliiin steer
111" W l.Ji. rumiiiun lueilluni heifers
$lii(K. i:ioo: cull, down to fti.ftt: fanner
cutler cow. snivinwt; fat dairy ijpe
Cows $900-11 DO. faltly good beef rows
$1200: good heavy bulls $11 73-12 Oil,
common light bulls down lo $rt 30: koihI.
choice vealri $l.l .VI. 13 00: common uuwn
lo siooit; runs uuwn in ao.iMi
Malable hogs 2Vi; I.Hal 3D0: market
active, fullv ilcoriy-; gotMl-chnlce 17i.
210 llw $13 73, 2n3 Hi 3 00. .123 14U
IU $14 30. Ugllt llghU $14 3(1: good 41RI.
uo lb. sows $1.1 7.4 urn; gmHl chulie
feeder nlg iiuolabte $l3(Ht3d.
Salable am) total sheep on. few itikkI
Phiilro w tied Inmli un to $13 23 or
nta above Wednesday s lott: com
mon grades salable down to $11,00,
good 'Choice ewes quulablo I to $7 23,
r mica no. rh. l tAP.wrA. tuiihu
hng BOOU: tola! 1.1.0UU; arttve. fully
sleauy: good and choir n narrows and
gilts IW lbs, and over at $14 73 ceiling,
few good and cholra 140-100 lbs. $14 A3
14.73: all tfood and choice Sows 114 UO:
arty rlearaiu-e.
Haiatiie cattle nwxi: toiat woo; sal a me
calves nog; total MOO,- fed steers and
yearlings steady to Weak, all nther
classes fully steady, however, with row
and bulls Active: largely aleer run,
eastern rail transportation difficulties
bearish factors in market; bulk sleets
$14. 2.3-10 00; top $ltl.73 on weighty bul-
Clnssificd Ad. Briiif Results.
To help feel your best
IT'S VITALLY IMPORTANT TO KEEP
PROPER IRON LEVEL IN THE BLOOD
One-ounce dish of KELLOGG'S All-Bran gives
over yard your daily minimum iron needs
EVERYONE, young or old, needs iron constantly
to help keep up the "iron level" in the blood
to help keep vitality up to par.
The best place to get iron is in foods. But-there
are only a few foods that have a significant amount
of iron. Thus, your diet can be lacking in iron with
out your knowing it-and your "iron level" may
decline.
Fortunately, there is one everyday breakfast
cereal that is a rich, inexpensive source of readily
assimilable iron. It's kellooo's all-bran, which
actually gives you more available iron than
spinach. And, in addition to iron richness, this nut
brown, crunchy breakfast cereal is an important
natural source of calcium, phosphorus, and vita
mins Bi, Bi and niacin. That's because ALL-BRAN,
produced by Kellogg's in Battle Creek, is made
from the vital outer layers of finest wheat.
KELLOGG'S All-Bran is made from the
VITAL OUTER LAYERS of finest wheat
fou know that the skin of a potato and the pee of
an apple are richest in vitamins and minerals, In
the vital outer layers of wheat, too, Nature stores
some of the grain's most important nutrients.
' all-bran is made of these vital outer layers and is
more abundant in many iood elements than whole
Wheat itself.
America's Great Regulating Cereal
And, in addition to being a storehouse of iron and
other important elements, famous kellogg's
all-bran is Nature's great rkoulatino cereal.
Millions eat it regularly. It's America's most widely
used regulating FOOD. Just a one-ounce serving
eaten daily is usually adequate for satisfactory
taxation, all-bran does not interfere with normal
digestion. It is triple-milled for golden softness.
Be sure your family gets a good start on its
requirements of iron and other important food
ilementa! Serve kellooo's all-bran regularly.
I.'''' IWIl'HHailiiM . - s
Potato
Growers!
See
Tom Thorn
before you sell!
Nick Delis Co.
San Francisco
Branch Office Hatfield
M'l . .
' IMdllll'lll . .-
ii i"nci whirl
1,11 urr i''i,,M
iMvminn inirfac. i
pniiitT lnii,,i,...ci1
i..-.. . .. . "H, riiii -j
iy iiMiiiiiiiuf ,;i.7.""i
v-nindii,, ,! Ad, rllJ
Cruiser Cooti
vockinowj
OREGON WOOLEN STB?
'"i main
Never before
Anything inet
New tyMtoitriiuplJ
Is Btrmlincd for iif3
miiiy Ooiuncil, rorrrf
tructcil fiirloncrrM.k
. fr0 tlTVlct. lo,r mnl
mil. No Win, (jtu,il
. iw moving uruge
of orxlcr, in otiiinvjra
Knjoy running wiln-ili
want, whenever vmiwi
with this smiting m I J
wsier nyiicm. It s ihij
tho job, lwy thrift.
A Good Supply ol ft
rumps Kow on Hii
SAMSON
Implement Cj
2424 6outh ilk I'.l
Klamath FtlU
Lenny's woics
MORE BLOOD DONATIONS
NEEDED NOW
Mill Edith Jane Meyer, 835 Trinity Ave.,
Bronx, N. Y., gave hor first pint of blood on
her 21st birthday, two yean ago. To dote, ihe
hai donated 7 pints. Other patriots oro urged
to donate blood for urgently noodad plmma.
' Fluid part of tho blood Is rostorod in a fow
hours. Maintaining the body's proper "iron
level" helps to robulld the rod corpuiclos.
Eat kellooo's all-bsan as a cereal,
. uiniuinns, or on otner cereals.
MIMlki
ILUUiitu
sssT try.
11
ffff V II Pi It alllsb . . '
From the cock of
the walk to the lowliest
biddy the word's get
ting around that Larro
Feeds are back with alt
their prewar quality. Dur
ing the emergency, Larro
Feeds were maintained at
the highest nutrient level
possible under wartime
conditions. But now that
ingredient restrictions
have been lifted, Larro
Feeds are restored to their
full quality standard.
Look for the "Farm
tested" label!
7J
OeNIRAW
sun. Fr
ley. Afi"Fi
In the first twelve weeks, good, healthy chick!
often multiply their hatching weight thirty
times. Larro Chick Builder ii dcsiRned
' provide nutrient which help chicks fulfill tnia
natural urge to grow. Years of research m
feeding tests at Larro Research Form ljv
proved Larro Chick Builder economical w.
iced, safe and productive.
SFP VnilD i a bra re a i CD
vl linilSV 1EiM-n
"Farm-luM" Is a ntlilircd trada.marV f flENERAI'