I am changing the format of the newsletter to include only one news article with comments, and additionally it will include my comments on a hot topic of the day. If you like the new format let me know and I will use it on occasion in the future.
I can’t help but to remind you that The First Annual AgPlus (FREE) Football pool is in progress. The sponsors and AgPlus are providing a new prize each week so it is never too late to join. Corey Groves from J&J Wood Products, Inc. Naches, Washington is our latest winner. Corey won the new iPod Classic. A wise man told me “You got to play to win.” I will share that thought with you. Play and you at least have a chance of showing up in the winner’s circle. That is not a bad place to be with over $9,000 in prices left to give away! http;//www.agplus.net
E. Coli Fears Spark Bagged Salad Recall
By LISA LEFF – 7 hours ago
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A package of Dole salad mix that tested positive for E. coli has triggered a recall in at least nine states, prompting new produce fears almost exactly a year after a nationwide spinach scare.The tainted bag of Dole's Hearts Delight salad mix was sold at a store in Canada, officials said. Neither Canadian health officials nor Dole Food Co. have received reports of anyone getting sick from the product.The voluntary recall, issued Monday, affects all packages of Hearts Delight sold in the United States and Canada with a "best if used by" date of September 19, 2007, and a production code of "A24924A" or "A24924B," the company said.Last year, an E. coli outbreak traced to bagged baby spinach sold under the Dole brand was blamed for the deaths of three people and for sickening hundreds more across the U.S. Authorities eventually identified a central California cattle ranch next to spinach fields belonging to one of Dole's suppliers as being the source of the bacteria.A recent Associated Press investigation found that government regulators never acted on calls for stepped-up inspections of leafy greens after that outbreak, and regulations governing farms in the fertile central California region known as the nation's "Salad Bowl" remain much as they were.