PILGRIMS PRIDE CORP
10-K, 1999-11-26
POULTRY SLAUGHTERING AND PROCESSING
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                    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                          WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549


                                 FORM 10-K


             ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15 (d) OF
                    THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

                 FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 2, 1999

                       Commission File number 1-9273

                        PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION
          (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

           DELAWARE                             75-1285071
(State or other jurisdiction of            (I.R.S. Employer
incorporation or organization)             Identification No.)

     110 SOUTH TEXAS, PITTSBURG, TX             75686-0093
(Address of principal executive offices)        (Zip code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code:  (903) 855-1000

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12 (b) of the Act:

                                        Name of each exchange on
TITLE OF EACH CLASS                          which registered

Class A Common Stock, Par Value $0.01   New York Stock Exchange
Class B Common Stock, Par Value $0.01   New York Stock Exchange

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12 (g) of the Act:  None

Indicate  by  check  mark  whether the Registrant (1) has filed all reports
required to be filed by Section 13 or 15 (d) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the
Registrant was required to file  such reports), and (2) has been subject to
such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes  X  No

Indicate by check mark if disclosure  of delinquent filers pursuant to Item
405 of Regulation S-K is not contained  herein,  and will not be contained,
to the best of Registrant's knowledge, in definitive  proxy  or information
statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form  10-K  or any
amendment to this Form 10-K.  [X]
<PAGE>

The  aggregate market value of the Registrant's Class B Common Stock, $0.01
par value,  and  Class  A  Common  Stock,   $0.01  par  value, held by non-
affiliates of the Registrant as of November 22, 1999, was  $81,546,439  and
$29,796,834  respectively.  For purposes of the foregoing calculation only,
all directors,  executive  officers,  and  5%  beneficial  owners have been
deemed affiliates.

27,589,250 shares of the Registrant's Class B Common Stock, $.01 par value,
were outstanding as of November 22, 1999.

13,794,529 shares of the Registrant's Class A Common Stock, $.01 par value,
were outstanding as of November 22, 1999.

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

Portions  of  the  Registrant's proxy statement for the annual  meeting  of
stockholders to be held February 2, 2000 are incorporated by reference into
Part III.
<PAGE>
                          PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION
                                   FORM 10-K
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS


                                    PART I

                                                                          PAGE
Item 1. Business............................................................ 4
Item 2. Properties..........................................................21
Item 3. Legal Proceedings...................................................23
Item 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.................23


                                    PART II
Item 5. Market for Registrant's Common Stock and Related Security Holder
        Matters.............................................................24
Item 6. Selected Financial Data.............................................25
Item 7. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Results of Operations and
        Financial Condition.................................................26
Item 7a.Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk..........31
Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data (see Index to Financial
        Statements and Schedules below).....................................35
Item 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and
        Financial Disclosure................................................35


                                   PART III
Item 10. Directors and Executive Officers of Registrant.....................36
Item 11. Executive Compensation.............................................36
Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management.....36
Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.....................36


                                    PART IV
Item 14. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and Reports on Form 8-K....36
Signatures..................................................................41


                  INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SCHEDULES
Report of Ernst & Young LLP--Independent Auditors...........................43
Consolidated Balance Sheets as of October 2, 1999 and September 26, 1998....44
Consolidated Statements of Income (Loss) for the years ended
    October 2, 1999, September 26, 1998 and September 27, 1997..............45
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity for the years ended
    October 2, 1999, September 26, 1998 and September 27, 1997..............46
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended
 ....October 2, 1999, September 26, 1998 and September 27,1997...............47
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements..................................48
Schedule II - Valuation and Qualifying Accounts for the years ended
    October 2, 1999, September 26, 1998 and September 27, 1997..............53


                                  PART I

ITEM 1. BUSINESS

GENERAL

     Pilgrim's Pride Corporation (referred to herein as "the Company",
"we", "us", "our" and similar terms) is one of the largest producers of
prepared and fresh chicken products in North America and has one of the
best known brand names in the chicken industry.  We are the fourth largest
producer of chicken in the United States and the second largest in Mexico.
Through vertical integration, we control the breeding, hatching and growing
of chickens and the processing, preparation, packaging and sale of our
product lines.  Our U.S. operations, including U.S. produced chicken
products sold for export to Canada, Mexico, Eastern Europe, the Far East
and other world markets, accounted for 81.3% of our net sales in fiscal
1999.  The remaining 18.7% of our net sales in fiscal 1999 arose from our
Mexico operations.  In fiscal 1999, we sold 1.8 billion pounds of dressed
chicken and generated net sales of $1.4 billion, net income of $65.3
million and earnings before interest, taxes and depreciation ("EBITDA") of
$142.3 million.

     Our objectives are to increase sales, profit margins and earnings and
outpace the growth of the chicken industry.  To achieve these goals, we
plan to continue the following strategies:

     -   CAPITALIZE ON ATTRACTIVE U.S. PREPARED FOODS MARKET.  We focus our
         U.S. growth initiatives on sales of prepared foods to the
         foodservice market because this market segment continues to be one
         of the fastest growing and most profitable segments in the chicken
         industry.  Products sold to this market segment require further
         processing, which enables us to charge a premium for our products
         and also reduces the impact of feed ingredient costs on our
         profitability.  Feed ingredient costs typically decrease from
         approximately 40-50% of total production cost for fresh chicken
         products to approximately 20-25% for prepared chicken products.
         Our sales of prepared food products to the foodservice market grew
         from $241.6 million in fiscal 1995 to $530.3 million in fiscal
         1999, a compounded annual growth rate of 21.7%.  In addition,
         these sales increased as a percentage of our total U.S. chicken
         revenues from 35.9% to 55.1% during the same five-year period.

     -   EMPHASIZE CUSTOMER-DRIVEN RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY.  We have a
         long-standing reputation for customer-driven research and
         development in designing new products and implementing advanced
         processing technology.  This enables us to better meet our
         customers' changing needs for product innovation, consistent
         quality and cost efficiency.  In particular, customer-driven
         research and development is integral to our growth strategy for
         the prepared foods market where customers continue to place
         greater importance on value-added services.  Our research and
         development personnel often work directly with institutional
         customers in developing products for these customers, which we
         believe helps promote long-term relationships.  Approximately
         $141.7 million or 21.6% of our sales to foodservice customers in
         fiscal 1999 consisted of products which we did not sell in fiscal
         1995.

     -   ENHANCE U.S. FRESH CHICKEN PROFITABILITY THROUGH VALUE-ADDED,
         BRANDED PRODUCTS. Our U.S. fresh chicken business is an important
         component of our business and grew from sales of $279.4 million in
         fiscal 1995 to $286.6 million in fiscal 1999. In addition to
         maintaining the sales of mature, traditional fresh chicken
         products, our strategy is to shift the mix of our U.S. fresh
         chicken products by continuing to increase sales of higher margin,
         faster growing products, such as marinated chicken and chicken
         parts.  A majority of our fresh chicken products are sold under
         the Pilgrim's Pride brand name, which is well known in many
         southwestern markets for quality and freshness.

     -   IMPROVE OPERATING EFFICIENCIES AND INCREASE CAPACITY ON A COST-
         EFFECTIVE BASIS.  As production and sales have grown, we have
         continued to focus on improving operating efficiencies by
         investing in state-of-the-art technology, processes and training
         and continuing to implement a total quality management program.
         Specific initiatives include:

         -    standardizing lowest-cost production processes across our various
              facilities;

         -    centralizing purchasing and other shared services; and

         -    upgrading technology where appropriate.

         We also made cost-effective acquisitions both in the U.S. and
         Mexico and subsequently increased the capacity and improved the
         efficiency of the acquired properties.  As a result, according to
         industry data, we have consistently been one of the lowest cost
         producers of chicken in the U.S., and we also believe we are one
         of the lowest cost producers of chicken in Mexico.

     -   CAPITALIZE ON THE GROWING MEXICAN MARKET.  We seek to leverage our
         leading market position and reputation for freshness and quality
         in Mexico by focusing on the following four objectives:

         -    to be one of the most cost-efficient producers and processors of
              chicken in Mexico by applying technology and expertise utilized
              in the U.S.;

         -    to continually increase our distribution of higher margin, more
              value-added products to national retail stores and restaurants;

         -    to continue to build and emphasize brand awareness and capitalize
              on Mexican consumers' preference for branded products and their
              insistence on freshness and quality; and

         -    to ensure that, as Mexican tariffs on imported chicken are
              eliminated by 2003, a significant portion of the chicken imported
              from the U.S. will be distributed through our existing and
              planned distribution facilities.  The location of our U.S.
              operations in the Southwest gives us a strategic advantage to
              capitalize on any exports of U.S. chicken to Mexico.

     Our chicken products consist primarily of:

        (1)   Prepared foods, which are foods such as portion-controlled
              breast fillets, tenderloins and strips, formed nuggets and
              patties and bone-in chicken parts.  Prepared foods are sold
              frozen and may be either fully cooked, partially cooked or raw,
              breaded or non-breaded, pre-marinated or non-marinated.

        (2)   Fresh chicken, which is refrigerated (non-frozen) whole or
              cut-up chicken sold to the foodservice industry either pre-
              marinated or non-marinated.  Fresh chicken also includes
              prepackaged chicken, which includes various combinations of
              freshly refrigerated, whole chickens and chicken parts in trays,
              bags or other consumer packs labeled and priced ready for the
              retail grocer's fresh meat counter.

        (3)   Export and other products, which are parts and whole
              chicken, either refrigerated or frozen for U.S. export or
              domestic use.  Our Mexico products primarily consist of value-
              added products such as eviscerated chicken and chicken parts and
              basic products such as New York dressed (whole chicken with only
              feathers and blood removed) and live birds.

     Our chicken products are primarily sold to:

        (1)   Foodservice customers, which are customers such as chain
              restaurants, frozen entree producers, institutions and
              distributors.  We sell to our foodservice customers products
              ranging from portion-controlled refrigerated chicken parts to
              fully-cooked and frozen, breaded or non-breaded chicken parts
              or formed products.

        (2)   Retail customers, which are customers such as grocery store
              chains, retail distributors and wholesale clubs.  We sell to
              our retail customers branded, pre-packaged cut-up and whole
              chicken, and fresh refrigerated whole chickens and chicken parts
              in trays, bags or other consumer packs.

     The following table sets forth, for the periods since fiscal 1995, net
sales attributable to  each of our primary product lines and markets served
with those products.  We  based the table on our internal sales reports and
their classification of product types and customers.
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                       FISCAL YEAR ENDED
                    Oct. 2,    Sept. 26,    Sept. 27,   Sept. 28,   Sept. 30,
                     1999        1998         1997        1996        1995
<S>                 <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>      <C> <C>     <C> <C>     <C> <C>
                  (53 WEEKS)  (52 WEEKS)   (52 WEEKS)   (52 WEEKS)  (52 WEEKS)
U.S. Chicken Sales:                     (IN THOUSANDS)
  Prepared Foods:
    Food Service  $  530,340  $  420,396   $  348,961   $  305,250  $  241,594
    Retail            28,254      46,400       42,289       43,442      39,071
  Total Prepared
      Foods          558,594     466,796      391,250      348,692     280,665
  Fresh Chicken:
    Food Service     125,395     145,297      174,103      145,377     140,433
    Retail           161,180     162,283      153,554      141,876     138,950
  Total Fresh
      Chicken        286,575     307,580      327,657      287,253     279,383
  Export and Other   118,327     139,976      142,030      140,614     113,414
  Total U.S.
      Chicken        963,496     914,352      860,937      776,559     673,462
Mexico               254,500     278,087      274,997      228,129     159,491
  Total Chicken
      Sales        1,217,996   1,192,439    1,135,934    1,004,688     832,953
Sales of Other U.S.
      Products       139,407     139,106      141,715      134,622      98,853
  Total Net Sales $1,357,403  $1,331,545   $1,277,649   $1,139,310    $931,806
</TABLE>

UNITED STATES

     The  following  table sets forth, since fiscal 1995, the percentage of our
net U.S. chicken sales  attributable  to  each of our primary product lines and
markets serviced with those products. We based the table and related discussion
on our internal sales reports and their classification  of  product  types  and
customers.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                           FISCAL YEAR ENDED
                      Oct. 2,    Sept. 26,   Sept. 27,   Sept. 28,   Sept. 30,
                       1999        1998        1997        1996        1995
<S>                   <C>  <C>   <C>    <C>  <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>
U.S. Chicken Sales:
  Prepared Foods:
  Foodservice         55.1 %       46.0 %      40.5 %      39.3 %       35.9 %
  Retail               2.9          5.1         4.9         5.6          5.8
      Total Prepared
         Foods        58.0         51.1        45.4        44.9         41.7
  Fresh Chicken:
   Foodservice        13.0         15.9        20.2        18.7         20.9
    Retail            16.7         17.7        17.9        18.3         20.6
      Total Fresh
         Chicken      29.7         33.6        38.1        37.0         41.5
  Export and Other    12.3         15.3        16.5        18.1         16.8
Total U.S. Chicken
    Sales Mix        100.0 %      100.0 %     100.0 %     100.0 %      100.0 %
</TABLE>

PRODUCT TYPES

     U.S.  PREPARED  FOODS OVERVIEW.  During fiscal 1999, $558.6 million of our
net U.S. chicken sales  were  in  prepared  food  products  to foodservice and
retail, as compared to $280.7 million in fiscal 1995. These numbers reflect the
strategic  focus  for  our  growth.  The market for prepared food products  has
experienced,  and we believe that this  market  will  continue  to  experience,
greater growth  and  higher  margins  than  fresh  chicken products.  Also, the
production and sale in the U.S. of prepared food products  reduce the impact of
the costs of feed ingredients on our profitability.  Feed ingredient  costs are
the   single  largest  component  of  our  cost  of  goods  sold,  representing
approximately  30.9%  of  our  U.S.  cost  of  goods  sold in fiscal 1999.  The
production of feed ingredients is positively or negatively  affected  primarily
by weather  patterns  throughout  the  world,  the  global  level  of  supply
inventories  and  the  agricultural  policies  of the United States and foreign
governments.  As further processing is performed,  feed ingredient costs become
a decreasing percentage of a product's total production  cost, thereby reducing
their impact on our profitability.

     We  establish prices for our prepared food products based  primarily  upon
perceived  value  to  the  customer,  production  costs and prices of competing
products. The majority of these products are sold pursuant  to  agreements with
varying  terms  that either set a fixed price for the products or set  a  price
according to formulas  based on an underlying commodity market, subject in many
cases to minimum and maximum prices.

     U.S. FRESH CHICKEN  OVERVIEW.   Our fresh chicken business is an important
component of our sales and has grown from  sales  of  $279.4  million in fiscal
1995  to  $286.6 million in fiscal 1999.  In addition to maintaining  sales  of
mature, traditional fresh chicken products, our strategy is to shift the mix of
our U.S. fresh  chicken  products  by  continuing  to  increase sales of higher
margin, faster growing products, such as marinated chicken and chicken parts.

     Most fresh chicken products are sold to established  customers  based upon
certain  weekly or monthly market prices reported by the USDA and other  public
price reporting services, plus a markup, which is dependent upon the customer's
location,  volume,  product  specifications  and other factors.  We believe our
practices with respect to sales of fresh chicken  are generally consistent with
those of our competitors.  Prices of these products  are  negotiated  daily  or
weekly  and  are generally related to market prices quoted by the USDA or other
public reporting services.

     EXPORT AND OTHER OVERVIEW.  Our export and other products consist of whole
chickens and chicken  parts  sold  primarily  in  bulk, non-branded form either
refrigerated to distributors in the U.S. or frozen  for  distribution to export
markets.  In  fiscal  1999,  approximately  $25.3 million of these  sales  were
attributable to exports of U.S. chicken.  These exports and other products have
historically been characterized by lower prices  and  greater  price volatility
than our more value-added product lines.

MARKETS

     U.S. FOODSERVICE.  The majority of our U.S. chicken sales are derived from
products sold to the foodservice market.  This market principally consists of
chain restaurants, frozen entree producers, institutions and distributors
located throughout the continental United States.  We are a major supplier of
chicken to Wendy's (TM) and KFC (TM), and in 1998 began selling chicken to
Burger King (TM).  We supply chicken products ranging from portion-controlled
refrigerated chicken parts to fully cooked and frozen, breaded or non-breaded
chicken parts or formed products.

     We believe Pilgrim's Pride is well-positioned to be the primary or
secondary supplier to many national and international chain restaurants who
require multiple suppliers of chicken products.   Additionally, we are well
suited to be the sole supplier for  many  regional  chain  restaurants.   These
regional  chain  restaurants  often  offer  better  margin  opportunities and a
growing base of business.

     We believe we have significant competitive strengths in  terms  of product
capability,   production   capacity,   research   and   development  expertise,
distribution and marketing experience relative to smaller and to non-vertically
integrated producers.  As a result of these competitive strengths, our sales to
the  foodservice  market  from  fiscal  1995  through  fiscal 1999  grew  at  a
compounded annual growth rate of 14.5% and represented 59.5%  of  the net sales
of  our  U.S.  operations in fiscal 1999.  Based on industry data, we  estimate
that total industry dollar sales to the foodservice market grew at a compounded
annual growth rate  of  6.9%  during the five calendar year period from 1994 to
1998. According to the FOOD INSTITUTE  REPORT, food expenditures on "food-away-
from-home" are estimated to increase by  a  4.8%  compounded annual growth rate
from 1999 through 2010 as a result of the growth of  quick  service restaurants
and  the  continuing  trend  of consumers spending money on food-away-from-home
rather  than "food-at-home".  Food-away-from-home  is  projected  by  THE  FOOD
INSTITUTE  REPORT  to  account  for  53% of total food expenditures by 2010, as
compared with 45% in 1998.

     FOODSERVICE--PREPARED FOODS.  The majority of our sales to the foodservice
market  consist  of  prepared  food  products.   Prepared  food  sales  to  the
foodservice  market were $530.3 million  in  fiscal  1999  compared  to  $241.6
million in fiscal 1995, a compounded annual growth rate of approximately 21.7%.
We attribute this  growth  in sales of prepared foods to the foodservice market
to a number of factors:

     FIRST, there has been significant  growth  in  the  number  of foodservice
     operators offering chicken on their menus and the number of chicken  items
     offered.

     SECOND, foodservice operators are increasingly purchasing prepared chicken
     products,  which  allow them to reduce labor costs while providing greater
     product consistency, quality and variety across all restaurant locations.

     THIRD, there is a strong  need  among  larger foodservice companies for an
     alternative  or additional supplier to our  principal  competitor  in  the
     prepared foods  market.   A  viable  alternative  supplier must be able to
     ensure  supply,  demonstrate  innovation and new product  development  and
     provide competitive pricing.  We  have been successful in our objective of
     becoming  the alternative supplier of  choice  by  being  the  primary  or
     secondary prepared  chicken  supplier  to many large foodservice companies
     because:
     -    we are vertically integrated, giving us control  over our supply of
          chicken and chicken parts;

     -    our further processing facilities are particularly  well suited to
          the high volume  production  runs  necessary  to  meet  the  capacity
          and quality requirements of the U.S. foodservice market; and

     -    we have established a reputation for dependable quality, highly
          responsive service and excellent technical support.

     FOURTH,  as  a  result  of  the experience and reputation developed with
     larger  customers,  we have increasingly  become  the  principal   supplier
     to   mid-sized   foodservice  organizations.

     FIFTH,  our  in-house  product development group follows a customer-driven
     research and development  focus  designed  to develop new products to meet
     customers' changing needs.  Our research and  development  personnel often
     work  directly  with  institutional  customers in developing products  for
     these customers.  Approximately $141.7  million  or  21.6% of our sales to
     foodservice customers in fiscal 1999 consisted of new  products which were
     not sold by us in fiscal 1995.

     SIXTH, we are a leader in utilizing advanced processing  technology, which
     enables  us  to  better meet our customers' needs for product  innovation,
     consistent quality and cost efficiency.

     FOODSERVICE--FRESH  CHICKEN.   We  produce  and market fresh, refrigerated
chicken  for sale to U.S. quick-service restaurant  chains,  delicatessens  and
other customers.   These  chickens  have  the  giblets  removed, are usually of
specific  weight  ranges,  and are usually pre-cut to customer  specifications.
They are often marinated to  enhance  value  and  product  differentiation.  By
growing  and  processing to customers' specifications, we are  able  to  assist
quick-service restaurant  chains  in  controlling costs and maintaining quality
and size consistency of chicken pieces sold to the consumer.

     U.S. RETAIL.  The U.S. retail market  consists  primarily of grocery store
chains and retail distributors.  We concentrate our efforts  in  this market on
sales  of branded, prepackaged cut-up and whole chicken to grocery  chains  and
retail distributors  in the midwestern, southwestern and western regions of the
United States.  This regional  marketing  focus  enables us to develop consumer
brand franchises and capitalize on proximity to the  trade customer in terms of
lower  transportation  costs,  more  timely, responsive service,  and  enhanced
product freshness.  For a number of years,  we  have invested in both trade and
retail marketing designed to establish high levels  of brand name awareness and
consumer preferences within these markets.

     We  utilize  numerous  marketing  techniques,  including  advertising,  to
develop and strengthen trade and consumer awareness and  increase brand loyalty
for consumer products marketed under the "Pilgrim's Pride" brand.  Our founder,
Lonnie  "Bo"  Pilgrim, is the featured spokesman in our television,  radio  and
print advertising,  and a trademark cameo of a person in a Pilgrim's hat serves
as the logo on all of  our  primary  branded  products.   As  a  result of this
marketing  strategy,  Pilgrim's  Pride  is  a well-known brand name in  several
southwestern markets, including in Dallas/Fort  Worth, Houston and San Antonio,
Texas,  Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Denver, Colorado,  Phoenix,  Arizona  and  Los
Angeles and  San  Diego,  California.   We  believe  our efforts to achieve and
maintain brand awareness and loyalty help to provide more  secure  distribution
for  our  products.   We  also  believe our efforts at brand awareness generate
greater price premiums than would otherwise be the case in certain southwestern
markets.  We also maintain an active  program to identify consumer preferences.
The program primarily consists of testing  new product ideas, packaging designs
and methods through taste panels and focus groups  located  in  key  geographic
markets.

     RETAIL--PREPARED  FOODS.  We sell retail oriented prepared foods primarily
to grocery store chains  located  in  the  midwestern, southwestern and western
regions  of the U.S.  Being a major, national  competitor  in  retail,  branded
frozen foods  is not a part of our current business strategy.  After an absence
of several years,  we  have  again begun servicing the wholesale club industry.
While traditionally this market  segment  has  been  characterized  as a "high-
volume,  low-margin"  business, with the recent acquisition of Hudson Foods  by
Tyson Foods, servicing  this  market  segment  has  become more attractive.  We
believe that our growth in this market segment will remain  relatively  modest,
however,  as  we  concentrate  our efforts primarily on faster-growing, higher-
margin market segments.

     RETAIL--FRESH CHICKEN.  Our  prepackaged  retail  products include various
combinations  of  freshly  refrigerated, whole chickens and  chicken  parts  in
trays, bags or other consumer  packs  labeled  and  priced ready for the retail
grocer's fresh meat counter.  We believe the retail,  prepackaged fresh chicken
business  will continue to be a large and relatively stable  market,  providing
opportunities for product differentiation and regional brand loyalty.

     EXPORT  AND OTHER CHICKEN.  Our export and other products consist of whole
chickens and chicken  parts  sold  primarily  in  bulk, non-branded form either
refrigerated to distributors in the U.S. or frozen  for  distribution to export
markets.  In recent years, we have de-emphasized our marketing of bulk-packaged
chicken  in  the  U.S.  in  favor  of  more  value-added  products  and  export
opportunities.  In the U.S., prices of these products are negotiated  daily  or
weekly  and  are generally related to market prices quoted by the USDA or other
public price reporting  services.   We also sell U.S.-produced chicken products
for export to Canada, Mexico, Eastern  Europe,  the  Far  East  and other world
markets.   Due  to U.S. consumers' preference for a chicken's white  meat,  the
U.S. chicken industry  has  traditionally  targeted  international  markets  to
generate  sales for a chicken's dark meat.  We have also begun selling prepared
food products  for  export  to  the  international  divisions of our U.S. chain
restaurant  customers. We believe that U.S. chicken exports  will  continue  to
grow as worldwide  demand  for  high-grade, low-cost protein sources increases.
We also believe that worldwide demand  for higher margin prepared food products
will increase over the next five years.   Accordingly,  we  believe we are well
positioned to capitalize on such growth.

     OTHER U.S. PRODUCTS.  We market fresh eggs under the Pilgrim's Pride brand
name as well as private labels in various sizes of cartons and  flats  to  U.S.
retail  grocery  and  institutional  foodservice customers located primarily in
Texas.  We have a housing capacity for approximately 2.3 million commercial egg
laying hens which can produce approximately  41  million  dozen  eggs annually.
U.S.  egg prices are determined weekly based upon reported market prices.   The
U.S. egg  industry  has been consolidating over the last few years, with the 25
largest producers accounting  for  more  than  54%  of  the total number of egg
laying hens in service during 1999.  We compete with other  U.S.  egg producers
primarily  on  the  basis  of  product quality, reliability, price and customer
service.  According to an industry  publication, Pilgrim's Pride is the thirty-
seventh largest producer of eggs in the United States.

     In 1997, we introduced a high-nutrient egg called EggsPlus (TM).  This egg
contains high levels of Omega-3 and Omega-6 fatty acids along with Vitamin E,
making the egg a heart-friendly product.  Our marketing of EggsPlus (TM) has
received national recognition for our progress in being an innovator in the
"functional foods" category.

    We also convert chicken by-products into protein  products  primarily  for
sale to manufacturers of pet foods.  In addition, we produce and sell livestock
feeds  at  our  feed mills in Pittsburg and Mt. Pleasant, Texas and at our farm
supply store in Pittsburg,  Texas  to  dairy farmers and livestock producers in
northeastern Texas.

     TOTAL  QUALITY  MANAGEMENT AND PRODUCTIVITY  IMPROVEMENTS.   Beginning  in
1991,  we implemented a  total  quality  management  program  to  increase  the
emphasis  by  all  of our employees on maintaining the highest quality products
and lowest cost production.  The successful implementation of these initiatives
for a company with a  size  of production base and the number of employees such
as we have usually takes several  years.   As  this  new management culture has
become  more  entrenched within Pilgrim's Pride, we have  begun  to  experience
significant  gains   resulting   from   these  efforts.   For  example,  cross-
geographical  business  process  teams  have  been  formed  and  are  producing
significant gains in performance characteristics.   The  gains range from waste
reductions to process yield improvements resulting in annualized  cost  savings
in  excess  of  $25.0  million.  Additionally,  in  fiscal  1999,  centralizing
purchasing  and  combining  our  purchasing power across company locations  has
successfully reduced the cost of procured  materials by more than $4.0 million.
We  have  also  employed new technology to consolidate  administrative  support
activities  such  as  accounts  payable  processing,  treasury  management  and
accounts receivable management.  This consolidation has reduced the transaction
costs of providing these services.

MEXICO

BACKGROUND

     The Mexican market  represented  approximately  18.7%  of our net sales in
1999. We entered the Mexican market in 1979 by seasonally selling  eggs  to the
Mexican  government.  Recognizing  favorable  long-term  demographic trends and
improving  economic conditions in Mexico, we began exploring  opportunities  to
produce and  market  chicken  in  Mexico.   In  fiscal  1988,  we acquired four
vertically integrated chicken production operations in Mexico for approximately
$15.1 million.  From fiscal 1988 through fiscal 1999, we made acquisitions  and
capital  expenditures  in  Mexico totaling $188.7 million to expand and improve
these operations. As a result  of  these expenditures, we have increased weekly
production in our Mexican operations by over 400% since our original investment
in fiscal 1988.  We are now the second  largest  producer of chicken in Mexico.
We believe our facilities are among the most technologically advanced in Mexico
and that we are one of the lowest cost producers of chicken in Mexico.

PRODUCT TYPES

     While the market for chicken products in Mexico  is less developed than in
the  United States, with sales attributed to fewer, more  basic  products,  the
market  for  value-added  products is increasing.  Our strategy is to lead this
trend.  The products currently sold by us in Mexico consist primarily of value-
added products such as eviscerated chicken and chicken parts and basic products
such as New York dressed (whole  chickens with only feathers and blood removed)
and live birds.  We have increased our sales of value-added products, primarily
through national retail chains and restaurants, and it is our business strategy
to continue to do so.  In addition,  we remain opportunistic, utilizing our low
cost production to enter markets where  profitable  opportunities  exist.   For
example,  we have increased our sales of live birds since 1994, as many smaller
producers exited  this  segment of the business as a result of the recession in
Mexico in 1995 and 1996.

MARKETS

     We sell our Mexico chicken  products  primarily  to  large wholesalers and
retailers.   Our  customer base in Mexico covers a broad geographic  area  from
Mexico City, the capital  of  Mexico  with a population estimated to be over 20
million, to Saltillo, the capital of the  State  of  Coahuila,  about 500 miles
north of Mexico City, and from Tampico on the Gulf of Mexico to Acapulco on the
Pacific,  which  region  includes the cities of San Luis Potosi and  Queretaro,
capitals of the states of the same name.

COMPETITION

     The chicken industry  is  highly  competitive  and some of our competitors
have  greater  financial and marketing resources than we  do.   In  the  United
States and Mexico,  we  compete  principally  with  other vertically integrated
chicken companies.

     In general, the competitive factors in the U.S.  chicken  industry include
price, product quality, product development, brand identification,  breadth  of
product  line  and customer service.  Competitive factors vary by major market.
In the foodservice  market, competition is based on consistent quality, product
development, service  and  price.   In  the U.S. retail market, we believe that
product quality, brand awareness and customer  service are the primary bases of
competition.  There is some competition with non-vertically  integrated further
processors in the U.S. prepared food business.  We believe we have significant,
long-term  cost  and quality advantages over non-vertically integrated  further
processors.

     In Mexico, where  product  differentiation has traditionally been limited,
product quality and price have been the most critical competitive factors.  The
North American Free Trade Agreement, which went into effect on January 1, 1994,
requires annual reductions in tariffs for chicken and chicken products in order
to eliminate those tariffs by January  1,  2003.  As those tariffs are reduced,
increased competition from chicken imported  into Mexico from the U.S. may have
a material adverse effect on the Mexican chicken industry in general, or on our
Mexican operations in particular.

     While the extent of the impact of the elimination of tariffs is uncertain,
we believe we are uniquely positioned to benefit  from this elimination for two
reasons.   First, we have an extensive distribution  network  in  Mexico  which
distributes products to 19 of the 32 Mexican states, encompassing approximately
74% of the total  population  of  Mexico.  We believe this distribution network
will  be  an important asset in distributing  our  own  U.S.-produced  chicken.
Second, we  have  the  largest U.S. production and distribution capacities near
the Mexican border, which  will  provide  us  with cost advantages in exporting
U.S. chicken into Mexico. These facilities include our processing facilities in
Mt.  Pleasant,  Pittsburg, Lufkin, Nacogdoches, Dallas  and  Waco,  Texas,  and
distribution facilities in San Antonio and El Paso, Texas and Phoenix, Arizona.

OTHER ACTIVITIES

     We have regional  distribution  centers located in Arlington, El Paso, Mt.
Pleasant and San Antonio, Texas; Phoenix,  Arizona; and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
that distribute our own poultry products along  with  certain  poultry and non-
poultry products purchased from third parties to independent grocers  and quick
service restaurants.  Our non-poultry distribution business is conducted  as an
accommodation  to  our  customers  and to achieve greater economies of scale in
distribution  logistics.  The store-door  delivery  capabilities  for  our  own
poultry products  provide  a  strategic  service  advantage in selling to quick
service, national chain restaurants.

REGULATION

     The chicken industry is subject to government  regulation, particularly in
the  health  and  environmental  areas, including provisions  relating  to  the
discharge  of  materials  into the environment,  by  the  Centers  for  Disease
Control,  the United States  Department  of  Agriculture,  the  Food  and  Drug
Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency in the United States and
by similar  governmental agencies in Mexico.  Our chicken processing facilities
in the U.S. are  subject  to  on-site examination, inspection and regulation by
the USDA.  The FDA inspects the  production  of our feed mills in the U.S.  Our
Mexican  food  processing  facilities and feed mills  are  subject  to  on-site
examination, inspection and  regulation by a Mexican governmental agency, which
performs functions similar to  those  performed  by  the  USDA  and FDA.  Since
commencement  of  operations  by  our  predecessor  in  1946,  compliance  with
applicable regulations has not had a material adverse effect upon  our earnings
or  competitive  position  and  such  compliance  is not anticipated to have  a
materially adverse effect in the future.  We believe that we are in substantial
compliance with all applicable laws and regulations  relating to the operations
of our facilities.

     We anticipate increased regulation by the USDA concerning  food safety, by
the  FDA  concerning  the  use of medications in feed and by the Texas  Natural
Resources and Conservation Commission,  the  Arkansas State Veterinarian Office
and  the  EPA  concerning the disposal of chicken  by-products  and  wastewater
discharges. Although  we  do  not  anticipate any regulations having a material
adverse effect upon us, we can give no assurance that such regulations will not
have such a material adverse effect.

EMPLOYEES AND LABOR RELATIONS

     As of November 23, 1999 we employed  approximately  11,200  persons in the
U.S. and 3,950 persons in Mexico.  Approximately 2,000 employees at  our Lufkin
and  Nacogdoches,  Texas facilities are members of collective bargaining  units
represented by the United Food and Commercial Workers Union.  None of our other
U.S. employees have union representation. Collective bargaining agreements with
the United Food and  Commercial  Workers  Union  expire on August 10, 2001 with
respect to our Lufkin employees and on October 6,  2001  with  respect  to  our
Nacogdoches  employees.   We believe that the terms of each of these agreements
are no more favorable than  those provided to our non-union U.S. employees.  In
Mexico,  most of our hourly employees  are  covered  by  collective  bargaining
agreements,  as most employees in Mexico are.  We have not experienced any work
stoppage since  a two-day work stoppage at our Lufkin facility in May 1993, and
we believe our relations with our employees are satisfactory.

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

     The Private  Securities  Litigation  Reform  Act  of  1995 provides a safe
harbor for forward-looking statements made by (or on behalf  of)  the  Company.
Except for historical information contained herein, Management's Discussion and
Analysis  of  Results  of  Operations  and  Financial  Condition and statements
included in Business elsewhere in this Form 10-K are forward-looking statements
that are dependent upon a number of risks and uncertainties  that  could  cause
actual   results  to  differ  materially  from  those  in  the  forward-looking
statement.   These  risks and uncertainties include changes in commodity prices
of feed ingredients and  chicken, the Company's substantial indebtedness, risks
associated with the Company's  foreign  operations, including currency exchange
rate fluctuations, trade barriers, exchange controls, expropriation and changes
in laws and practices, the impact of current  and  future laws and regulations,
the impact of the year 2000 and the other risks described  in the Company's SEC
filings.  The Company does not intend to provide updated information  about the
matters  referred  to  in  these forward looking statements, other than in  the
context of Management's Discussion  and  Analysis  of Results of Operations and
Financial Condition and other disclosures in the Company's SEC filings.

<PAGE>
DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

     Set forth below is certain information relating  to  our current directors
and executive officers:

EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE COMPANY      AGE             POSITIONS

Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim (1)                 71      Chairman of the Board

Clifford E. Butler                      57      Vice Chairman of the Board

David Van Hoose                         58      Chief Executive Officer
                                                President
                                                Chief Operating Officer
                                                Director
                                                (Principal Executive Officer)

Richard A. Cogdill                      39      Executive Vice President
                                                Chief Financial Officer
                                                Secretary and Treasurer
                                                Director
                                                (Principal Financial and
                                                   Accounting Officer)

O.B. Goolsby, Jr.                       52      Executive Vice President
                                                Prepared Foods Complexes

Robert L. Hendrix                       63      Executive Vice President
                                                Growout and Processing

Michael J. Murray                       41      Executive Vice President
                                                Sales and Marketing and
                                                   Distribution

Randy P. Stroud                         44      Executive Vice President
                                                Mexican Operations

Ray Gameson                             51      Senior Vice President
                                                Human Resources

David Hand                              42      Senior Vice President
                                                Sales and Marketing
                                                Retail and Fresh Products

<PAGE>
Michael D. Martin                      45       Senior Vice President
                                                Complex Manager
                                                DeQueen and Nashville
                                                Arkansas Complex

James J. Miner, Ph.D.                  71       Senior Vice President
                                                Technical Services

Robert N. Palm                         56       Senior Vice President
                                                Complex Manager
                                                Lufkin/Nacogdoches and Center
                                                Texas Complex

Lonnie Ken Pilgrim (1)                 41       Senior Vice President
                                                Director of Transportation
                                                Director

CHARLES L. BLACK (1) (2)               70       DIRECTOR

ROBERT E. HILGENFELD (1) (2)           74       DIRECTOR

VANCE C. MILLER, SR. (1) (2)           65       DIRECTOR

JAMES G. VETTER, JR. (1) (2)           65       DIRECTOR

DONALD L. WASS, PH.D. (1) (2)          67       DIRECTOR
_________
     (1)   MEMBER OF THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
     (2)   MEMBER OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE

     LONNIE  "BO"  PILGRIM  has  served  as  Chairman  of the Board  since  the
organization of Pilgrim's Pride in July 1968. He was previously Chief Executive
Officer from July 1968 to June 1998.  Prior to the incorporation  of  Pilgrim's
Pride,  Mr.  Pilgrim  was  a  partner  in  its predecessor partnership business
founded in 1946.

     CLIFFORD E. BUTLER serves as Vice Chairman  of the Board.  He joined us as
Controller and Director in 1969, was named Senior  Vice President of Finance in
1973, became Chief Financial Officer and Vice Chairman  of  the  board  in July
1983,  became  Executive  President in January 1997 and served in such capacity
through July 1998 and continues to serve as Vice Chairman of the Board.

     DAVID VAN HOOSE serves  as  Chief  Executive  Officer, President and Chief
Operating Officer, (Principal Executive Officer) of  Pilgrim's Pride. He became
a  Director  in  July  1998.  He was named Chief Executive  Officer  and  Chief
Operating Officer in June  1998  and President in July 1998.  He was previously
President of Mexico Operations from  April  1993  to  June 1998 and Senior Vice
President, Director General, Mexico Operations from August  1990 to April 1993.
Mr.  Van Hoose was employed by us in September 1988 as Senior  Vice  President,
Texas  Processing.  Prior to that, Mr. Van Hoose was employed by Cargill, Inc.,
as General Manager of one of its chicken operations.

     RICHARD A. COGDILL has served as Executive Vice President, Chief Financial
Officer, Secretary and  Treasurer, (Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)
since January 1997.  He became  a  Director  in  September  1998. Previously he
served as Senior Vice President, Corporate Controller, from August 1992 through
December  1996  and as Vice President, Corporate Controller from  October  1991
through August 1992.   Prior to October 1991 he was a Senior Manager with Ernst
& Young LLP.  He is a Certified Public Accountant.

     O.B. GOOLSBY, JR. has  served  as Executive Vice President, Prepared Foods
Operations since June 1998.  He was previously  Senior Vice President, Prepared
Foods  Operations from August 1992 to June 1998 and  Vice  President,  Prepared
Foods Operations  from April 1986 to August 1992 and was previously employed by
us from November 1969 to January 1981.

     ROBERT  L.  HENDRIX  has  been  Executive  Vice  President,  Grow-Out  and
Processing, of Pilgrim's  Pride since March 1994.  He was a Director from March
1994 to September 1998. Prior to that he served as Senior Vice President, NETEX
Processing from August 1992 to March 1994 and as President and Chief of Complex
Operations from September 1988 to March 1992.  He was on leave from the Company
from March 1992 to August 1992.   From  July  1983 to March 1992 he served as a
Director.  He was President and Chief Operating Officer of Pilgrim's Pride from
July 1983 to September 1988. He joined us as Senior Vice President in September
1981 when Pilgrim's Pride acquired Mountaire Corporation  of DeQueen, Arkansas,
and, prior thereto, he was Vice President of Mountaire Corporation.

     MICHAEL J. MURRAY has been Executive Vice President, Sales & Marketing and
Distribution since June 1998.  He previously served as Senior  Vice  President,
Sales  &  Marketing, Prepared Foods from October 1994 to June 1998 and as  Vice
President of  Sales  and  Marketing,  Food  Service from August 1993 to October
1994.  From 1990 to July 1993, he was employed by Cargill, Inc.  Prior to that,
from March 1987 to 1990 he was employed by us as a Vice President for sales and
marketing and prior thereto, he was employed by Tyson Foods, Inc.

     RANDY P. STROUD has served as Executive  Vice President, Mexico Operations
since August 1998.  Previously he was Live Production  Manager  at  the Lufkin,
Texas  Complex  from May 1989 to August 1998 and as Breeder Department  Manager
from June 1985 to May 1989.  Prior to that he was employed in various operating
management positions  by  Plus-Tex Poultry, Inc., a Lufkin, Texas based company
acquired by Pilgrim's Pride in June of 1985.

     RAY GAMESON has been Senior  Vice President, Human Resources since October
1994. He previously served as Vice  President  of  Human Resources since August
1993.  From December 1991 to July 1993, he was employed  by Townsends, Inc. and
served as Complex Human Resource, Manager.  Prior to that,  he  was employed by
us as Complex Human Resource, Manager, at our Mt. Pleasant, Texas location.

     DAVID  HAND  has  served as Senior Vice President of Sales and  Marketing,
Retail and Fresh Products since January 1998.  Previously he was Vice President
of Commodity and Export  Sales  from November 1996 to June 1998.  Prior to that
he was Director of Commodity and  Export  Sales  from  October 1992 to November
1996.  He joined Pilgrim's Pride in June 1990 and was Export Sales Manager from
June  1990  to  October  1992.   Prior to that he was President  of  Plantation
Marketing and was with ConAgra from 1979 to 1986.

     MICHAEL  D.  MARTIN  has been Senior  Vice  President,  DeQueen,  Arkansas
Complex Manager since April 1993.  He previously served as Plant Manager at our
Lufkin, Texas operations and  Vice  President, Processing, at our Mt. Pleasant,
Texas, operations up to April 1993.   He  has served in various other operating
management positions in the Arkansas Complex  since  September  1981.  Prior to
that, he was employed by Mountaire Corporation of DeQueen, Arkansas,  until  it
was acquired by the Company in September 1981.

     JAMES J. MINER, PH.D., has been Senior Vice President, Technical Services,
since  April 1994.  He has been employed by Pilgrim's Pride and its predecessor
partnership since 1966 and served as Senior Vice President responsible for live
production  and  feed nutrition from 1968 to April 1994. He was a Director from
the incorporation of the Company in 1968 through September 1998.

     ROBERT N. PALM  has  been  Senior  Vice President, Lufkin, Nacogdoches and
Center, Texas Complex since June 1985 and  was  previously  employed in various
operating management positions by Plus-Tex Poultry, Inc., a Lufkin, Texas based
company acquired by Pilgrim's Pride in June 1985.

     LONNIE  KEN PILGRIM has been employed by the Company since  1977  and  has
been Senior Vice President, Transportation since August 1997.  Prior to that he
served as the Vice President, Director of Transportation.  He has been a member
of the Board of  Directors  since  March  1985.   He  is  a  son of Lonnie "Bo"
Pilgrim.

     CHARLES   L.  BLACK  was  Senior  Vice  President,  Branch  President   of
NationsBank, Mt.  Pleasant,  Texas,  from  December  1981  to his retirement in
February 1995.  He previously was a Director of Pilgrim's Pride  from  1968  to
August  1992  and  has  served  as a director since his re-election in February
1995.

     ROBERT  E. HILGENFELD was elected  a  Director  in  September  1986.   Mr.
Hilgenfeld was  a  Senior Vice President, Marketing/Processing for us from 1969
to 1972 and for seventeen  years  prior  to  that  worked  in various sales and
management positions for the Quaker Oat Company. From 1972 until April 1986, he
was employed by Church's Fried Chicken Company ("Church's")  as Vice President-
Purchasing Group, Vice President and Senior Vice President. He  was  elected  a
Director  of  Church's  in 1985 and retired from Church's in April 1986.  Since
retirement  he has served  as  a  consultant  to  various  companies  including
Pilgrim's Pride.

     VANCE C. MILLER, SR. was elected a Director in September 1986.  Mr. Miller
has been Chairman  of  Vance  C.  Miller  Interests,  a real estate development
company formed in 1977 and has served as the Chairman of  the  Board  and Chief
Executive Officer of Henry S. Miller Cos., a Dallas, Texas real estate services
firm  since  1991.   Mr.  Miller  also  serves  as  a  director  of  Resurgence
Properties, Inc.

     JAMES G. VETTER, JR. has practiced law in Dallas, Texas since 1966.  He is
a shareholder of the Dallas law firm of Godwin, White & Gruber, P.C., (formerly
Godwin & Carlton, P.C.) and has served as general counsel and a Director  since
1981.   Mr.  Vetter  is  a  Board  Certified-Tax Law Specialist and serves as a
lecturer and author in tax matters.

     DONALD L. WASS, Ph.D. was elected  a  Director of the Company in May 1987.
He has been President of the William Oncken Company of Texas, a time management
consulting company, since 1970.
<PAGE>
ITEM 2. PROPERTIES

BREEDING AND HATCHING

     We supply all of our chicks in the U.S. by producing our own hatching eggs
from domestic breeder flocks in the U.S.  These  flocks  are  owned  by us, and
approximately  19.0% of them are maintained on 41 company-owned breeder  farms.
In the U.S., we currently own or contract for approximately 10.4 million square
feet of breeder  housing on approximately 274 breeder farms.  In Mexico, all of
our breeder flocks are maintained on company-owned farms totaling approximately
3.5 million square feet.

     We own seven  hatcheries  in  the  United  States.   These  hatcheries are
located in Nacogdoches, Center and Pittsburg, Texas, and DeQueen and Nashville,
Arkansas, where eggs are incubated and hatched in a process requiring  21 days.
Once  hatched,  the  day-old chicks are inspected and vaccinated against common
poultry diseases and transported  by our vehicles to grow-out farms.  Our seven
hatcheries in the U.S. have an aggregate  production  capacity of approximately
10.2 million chicks per week.  In Mexico, we own seven  hatcheries,  which have
an aggregate production capacity of approximately 3.3 million chicks per week.

GROW-OUT

     We  place  our  U.S.  grown  chicks on contract grow-out farms located  in
Texas, Arkansas and Oklahoma, some of which are owned by our affiliates.  These
contract  grow-out  farms  contain  approximately  3,985  chicken  houses  with
approximately 53.4 million square feet of growing facilities.  Additionally, we
own and operate grow-out farms containing approximately 390 chicken houses with
approximately 4.4 million square feet  of growing facilities in the U.S., which
account for approximately 7.6% of our total  annual  U.S. chicken capacity.  On
the  contracted grow-out farms, the farmers provide the  facilities,  utilities
and labor;  we  supply  the  chicks,  the feed and all veterinary and technical
services.  Contract grow-out farmers are  paid  based  on  live weight under an
incentive arrangement.  In Mexico, we place our grown chicks  on contract grow-
out  farms containing approximately 844 chicken houses with approximately  10.9
million  square  feet  of growing facilities.  Additionally, we own and operate
grow-out farms containing  approximately  523 chicken houses with approximately
7.9 million square feet of growing facilities  in  Mexico,  which  account  for
approximately 42.0% of our total annual Mexican chicken capacity.  Arrangements
with  independent  farmers  in  Mexico  are  similar  to  our arrangements with
contractors in the United States.

FEED MILLS

     An important factor in the production of chicken is the rate at which feed
is  converted into body weight.  The quality and composition  of  the  feed  is
critical  to the conversion rate. Accordingly, we formulate and produce our own
feed.  We purchase  feed  ingredients  on  the  open  market.  The primary feed
ingredients include corn, milo and soybean meal, which  historically  have been
the largest components of our total production costs.  In the U.S., we  operate
seven  feed  mills  located in Nacogdoches, Mt. Pleasant, Tenaha and Pittsburg,
Texas and Nashville and  Hope, Arkansas.  In the U.S., we currently have annual
feed requirements of approximately 2.4 million tons and the capacity to produce
approximately 4.2 million tons. We own four feed mills in Mexico, which produce
all  of  the requirements of  our  Mexico  operations.   Mexico's  annual  feed
requirements  are  approximately  0.7  million  tons with a capacity to produce
approximately 0.9 million tons.  In fiscal 1999,  approximately 26% of the feed
ingredients used by us in Mexico were imported from the United States, but this
percentage  fluctuates  based  on  the  availability and  cost  of  local  feed
ingredient supplies.

PROCESSING

     Once the chickens reach processing weight,  they  are  transported  in our
trucks to our processing plants.  These plants utilize modern, highly automated
equipment to process and package the chickens.  We periodically review possible
application of new processing technologies in order to enhance productivity and
reduce costs.  Our six U.S. processing plants, two of which are located in  Mt.
Pleasant,  Texas, and the remainder of which are located in Dallas, Nacogdoches
and Lufkin, Texas, and DeQueen, Arkansas, have the capacity, under present USDA
inspection procedures,  to  slaughter approximately 8.2 million head of chicken
per week, assuming a five-day  work  week.  Our three processing plants located
in Mexico have the capacity to slaughter  approximately  2.6  million  head  of
chicken per week, assuming a six-day work week, which is typical in Mexico.

PREPARED FOODS PLANT

     Our  prepared  foods  plant in Mt. Pleasant, Texas was constructed in 1986
and  has  been expanded significantly  since  that  time.   This  facility  has
deboning lines,  marination  systems,  batter/breading  systems, fryers, ovens,
both mechanical and cryogenic freezers, a variety of packaging systems and cold
storage.  This plant is currently operating at the equivalent  of  two shifts a
day  for six days a week.  If necessary, we could add additional shifts  during
the seventh day of the week.  We completed construction of a new prepared foods
facility at our Dallas, Texas location during the first quarter of fiscal 1998.
The Dallas,  Texas  facility  is  functionally  equivalent to the Mt. Pleasant,
Texas  facility.  During the first calendar quarter  of  1999,  we  acquired  a
prepared  foods  plant  in  Waco,  Texas from Plantation Foods, Inc.  The Waco,
Texas facility is functionally equivalent to the Mt. Pleasant and Dallas, Texas
facilities.

EGG PRODUCTION

     We produce table eggs at three  farms  near Pittsburg, Texas.  One farm is
owned by us, while two farms are operated under  contract by an entity owned by
our major stockholder.  The eggs are cleaned, sized,  graded  and  packaged for
shipment at processing facilities located on the egg farms.  The farms  have  a
housing capacity for approximately 2.3 million producing hens and are currently
housing approximately 2.0 million hens.



OTHER FACILITIES AND INFORMATION

     We operate a rendering plant located in Mt. Pleasant, Texas. The rendering
plant  currently  processes by-products from approximately 8.9 million chickens
weekly into protein  products.   These  products are used in the manufacture of
chicken and livestock feed and pet foods.  We operate a commercial feed mill in
Mt. Pleasant, Texas which produces various  bulk  and  sacked  livestock  feed,
which  are  sold  to  area  dairies, ranches and farms.  We also operate a feed
supply store in Pittsburg, Texas,  from  which  we sell various bulk and sacked
livestock feed products, a majority of which is produced  in  our  Mt. Pleasant
commercial  feed  mill.   We own an office building in Pittsburg, Texas,  which
houses our executive offices,  and  an  office  building  in Mexico City, which
houses our Mexican marketing offices.

     Substantially all of our U.S. property, plant and equipment  is pledged as
collateral on our secured debt.

ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

     From time to time we are named as a defendant or co-defendant  in lawsuits
arising  in  the  course  of our business.  We do not believe that such pending
lawsuits will have a material adverse impact on us.

ITEM 4.  SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS

     Pilgrim's Pride Corporation held a Special Meeting of Shareholders on July
20,  1999.   The  meeting was  held  to  amend  the  Company's  Certificate  of
Incorporation to permit  dividends  of  either  Class A Common Stock or Class B
Common Stock of the Company, as specified by the  Board  of  Directors  of  the
Company, to holders of the Company's Class B Common Stock. The number of shares
represented  at  the  meeting  was  20,885,680  with  417,713,600  votes.   The
amendment  was  passed  with  381,515,040  voting for the amendment, 36,149,000
voting against the amendment and 49,560 votes  abstaining.   The measure passed
and the articles are now amended.
<PAGE>

                                    PART II


ITEM  5.  MARKET FOR THE REGISTRANT'S COMMON STOCK AND RELATED SECURITY  HOLDER
      MATTERS

      QUARTERLY STOCK PRICES AND DIVIDENDS
      High and low sales prices of and dividends on the Company's Class B and
      Class A common  stock for the periods indicated (as adjusted for the
      June 30, 1999 stock dividend referred to in Note F of the Consolidated
      Financial Statements) were:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                             Prices             Prices
                              1999               1998              DIVIDENDS
<S>                      <C>         <C>   <C>        <C>        <C>     <C>
      QUARTER            HIGH        LOW   HIGH       LOW        1999    1998

      Class B Common Stock
      First            $16 1/16 $11 5/16   $11 1/16  $ 8 1/2      $.01   $.01
      Second            15  7/8  10 9/16    10 9/16    7 3/16      .01    .01
      Third             20        9 7/8     13 1/8     9 3/16      .01    .01
      Fourth            16 5/16   6 1/4     16 1/16   12 3/16      .01    .01

      Class A Common Stock
      First             N/A       N/A       N/A       N/A          N/A    N/A
      Second            N/A       N/A       N/A       N/A          N/A    N/A
      Third             N/A       N/A       N/A       N/A          N/A    N/A
      Fourth(1)        $14 3/4  $ 4 5/8     N/A       N/A          N/A    N/A

  (1) On July 2, 1999,  the  Company's board of directors declared a dividend
      of one share of the Company's Class A common stock for every two shares
      of the Company's Class B  common  stock.   The  additional  shares were
      issued  on  July  30,  1999.   The prices listed above are adjusted  to
      reflect such dividend.  Please refer  to  Note  F  of  the Consolidated
      Financial Statements for more information regarding the stock dividend.

The Company's Class B common stock (ticker symbol "CHX") and Class  A  common
stock (ticker symbol "CHX.A") are traded on the New York Stock Exchange.  The
Company   estimates  there  were  approximately  13,400  and  12,800  holders
(including  individual  participants  in  security  position listings) of the
Company's Class B and Class A common stock, respectively,  as of November 22,
1999.   See  Note  F--Common  Stock,  of the Notes to Consolidated  Financial
Statements for additional discussion of the Company's common stock.

















<PAGE>
ITEM 6.  SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

Selected Financial Data
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation


</TABLE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)          TEN YEARS ENDED OCTOBER 2, 1999
                        1999(a)     1998       1997       1996        1995
<S>                  <C>    <C> <C>    <C> <C>    <C> <C>    <C>    <C>     <C>
Income Statement Data:

Net sales            $1,357,403 $1,331,545 $1,277,649 $1,139,310    $931,806
Gross margin            185,708    136,103    114,467     70,640      74,144
Operating income (loss) 109,504     77,256     63,894     21,504(b)   24,930(b)
Income (loss) before
  income taxes and
  extraordinary charge   90,904     56,522     43,824         47       2,091
Income tax expense
  (benefit) (c)          25,651      6,512      2,788      4,551      10,058
Income (loss) before
  extraordinary charge   65,253     50,010     41,036     (4,504)     (7,967)
Extraordinary charge -
  early repayment of debt,
  net of tax                 --         --         --     (2,780)          --
Net income (loss)        65,253     50,010     41,036     (7,284)     (7,967)

Per Common Share Data: (d)
Income (loss) before
  extraordinary charge  $  1.58    $  1.21    $  0.99   $  (0.11)   $   (0.19)
Extraordinary charge -
  early repayment of debt    --         --         --      (0.07)          --
Net income (loss)          1.58       1.21       0.99      (0.18)       (0.19)
Cash dividends            0.045       0.04       0.04       0.04         0.04
Book value                 7.11       5.58       4.41       3.46         3.67

Balance Sheet Summary:
Working captial        $154,242 $  147,040 $  133,542   $ 88,455    $  88,395
Total assets            655,762    601,439    579,124    536,722      497,604
Notes payable and current
  maturities of
  long-term debt          4,353      5,889     11,596     35,850       18,187
Long-term debt, less
  current maturities    183,753    199,784    224,743    198,334      182,988
Total stockholders'
  equity                294,259    230,871    182,516    143,135      152,074

Key Indicators (as a percentage of net sales):
Gross Margin              13.7%      10.2%       9.0%       6.2%         8.0%
Selling, general and
  administrative expenses  5.6%       4.4%       4.0%       4.3%         5.3%
Operating income (loss)    8.1%       5.8%       5.0%       1.9%         2.7%
Interest expense, net      1.3%       1.5%       1.7%       1.9%         1.9%
Net income (loss)          4.8%       3.8%       3.2%      (0.6%)       (0.9%)

</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)          TEN YEARS ENDED OCTOBER 2, 1999

<S>                  <C>  <C>    <C>  <C>    <C>  <C>   <C>   <C>     <C>   <C>
                       1994       1993(a)      1992        1991         1990
Income Statement Data:

Net Sales            $922,609    $887,843    $817,361    $786,651     $720,555
Gross Margin          110,827     106,036      32,802      75,567       74,190
Operating income
   (loss)              59,698      56,345     (12,475)     31,039       33,379
Income (loss) before income
   taxes and extraordinary
   charge              42,448      32,838     (33,712)     12,235       20,463
Income tax expense
   (benefit) (c)       11,390      10,543      (4,048)        (59)       4,826
Income (loss)
   before extraordinary
   charge              31,058      22,295     (29,664)     12,294       15,637
Extraordinary charge-
   early repayment of
   debt, net of tax        --      (1,286)         --          --           --
Net income (loss)      31,058      21,009     (29,664)     12,294       15,637

Per Common Share Data (d)
Income (loss)
   before extraordinary
   charge            $   0.75    $   0.51    $  (0.83)   $   0.36     $   0.46
Extraordinary charge-
   early repayment of
   debt, net of tax        --       (0.03)         --          --          --
Net income (loss)        0.75        0.51       (0.83)       0.36         0.46
Cash dividneds           0.04        0.02        0.04        0.04         0.04
Book value               3.91        3.20        2.71        2.72         2.45

Balance Sheet Summary:
Working capital      $ 99,724    $ 72,688    $ 11,227    $ 44,882     $ 54,161
Total assets          438,683     422,846     434,566     428,090      379,694
Notes payable and
   current maturities of
   long-term debt       4,493      25,643      86,424      44,756       30,351
Long-term debt, less
   current maturities 152,631     159,554     131,534     175,776      154,227
Total stockholders'
   equity             161,696     132,293     112,112     112,353      101,414

Key Indicators (as a percentage of net sales):
Gross margin             12.0%       11.9%        4.0%        9.6%        10.3%
Selling, general and
   administrative
   expenses               5.5%        5.6%        5.7%        5.7%         5.7%
Operating income (loss)   6.5%        6.3%       (1.6%)       3.9%         4.6%
Interest expense, net     2.1%        2.9%        2.8%        2.5%         2.3%
Net income (loss)         3.4%        2.4%       (3.6%)       1.6%         2.2%

</TABLE>

(a) Fiscal 1999 and 1993 had 53 weeks.
(b) In addition to foreign exchange losses, the peso decline and the related
    economic recession in Mexico contributed significantly to the operating
    losses experienced by the Company's Mexico Operations of $8.2 million and
    $17.0 million for fiscal years 1996 and 1995, respectively.
(c) The Company does not include income or losses from its Mexico Operations in
    its determination of taxable income for U.S. income tax purposes based upon
    its determination that such earnings will be indefinitely reinvested in
    Mexico.  See "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition
    and Results of Operations" and Note D of the Consolidated Financial
    Statements of the Company.
(d) Historical per share amounts have been restated to give effect to a stock
    dividend issued on July 30, 1999.  See Note F of the Consolidated Financial
    Statements of the Company.

<PAGE>
ITEM 7.  MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF RESULTS OF OPERATIONS AND
FINANCIAL CONDITION
<PAGE>

GENERAL

      Profitability in the chicken industry  can  be materially affected by the
commodity  prices  of  chicken,  chicken  parts  and  feed  ingredients.  Those
commodity prices are determined largely by supply and demand.  As a result, the
chicken industry as a whole has been characterized by cyclical  earnings. These
cyclical  fluctuations  in  earnings  of  individual chicken companies  can  be
mitigated somewhat by:

     -   Business strategy;
     -   Product mix;
     -   Sales and marketing plans; and
     -   Operating efficiencies.

     In  an effort to reduce price volatility  and  to  generate  higher,  more
consistent profit margins, we have concentrated on the production and marketing
of prepared  food products. Prepared food products generally have higher profit
margins than our  other  products. Also, the production and sale in the U.S. of
prepared food products reduces  the impact of the costs of feed ingredients on
our profitability. Feed ingredient  purchases  are the single largest component
of our cost of goods sold, representing approximately  30.9%  of  our  cost  of
goods  sold  in  1999.  The  production  of  feed  ingredients is positively or
negatively  affected primarily by weather patterns throughout  the  world,  the
global level  of supply inventories and the agricultural policies of the United
States and foreign  governments.  As  further  processing  is  performed,  feed
ingredient costs become a decreasing percentage of a product's total production
costs, thereby reducing their impact on our profitability.
<PAGE>
The  following  table presents certain information regarding the Company's U.S.
and Mexico operations.









<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          FISCAL YEAR ENDED
                       October 2, 1999    September 26, 1998 September 27,1997
<S>                    <C>         <C>    <C>            <C> <C>           <C>
                         (53 weeks)           (52 weeks)         (52 weeks)
                                            (in thousands)
Sales to unaffiliated customers:
      United States      $1,102,903        $1,053,458            $1,002,652
      Mexico                254,500           278,087               274,997
Total sales to
  unaffiliated customers $1,357,403        $1,331,545            $1,277,649

Operating income:
   United States         $   88,177        $   36,279            $   29,321
   Mexico                    21,327            40,977                34,573
Total operating income   $  109,504        $   77,256            $   63,894
</TABLE>

The following table presents certain items as a percentage of net sales for the
periods indicated:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                             1999                 1998                 1997
<S>                        <C>   <C>            <C>   <C>           <C>   <C>
Net sales                    100.0 %              100.0 %             100.0 %
Cost of sales                 86.3                 89.8                91.0
Gross profit                  13.7                 10.2                 9.0
Selling, general and
   administrative expense      5.6                  4.4                 4.0
Operating income               8.1                  5.8                 5.0
Interest expense, net          1.3                  1.5                 1.7
Income before income taxes     6.7                  4.2                 3.4
Net income                     4.8                  3.8                 3.2
</TABLE>

Results of Operations

FISCAL 1999 COMPARED TO FISCAL 1998:

     Our  accounting  cycle  resulted  in 53 weeks of operations in fiscal 1999
compared to 52 weeks in fiscal 1998.

     NET SALES.  Consolidated net sales  were $1.36 billion for fiscal 1999, an
increase  of  $25.9  million,  or  1.9%  from fiscal  1998.   The  increase  in
consolidated net sales resulted from a $49.1  million  increase in U.S. chicken
sales to $963.5 million and by a $0.4 million increase of  sales  of other U.S.
products to $139.4 million offset by a $23.6 million decrease in Mexico chicken
sales  to $254.5 million. The increase in U.S. chicken sales was primarily  due
to an 8.7%  increase  in dressed pounds produced and partially offset by a 3.0%
decrease in total revenue  per  dressed  pound.  The decrease in Mexico chicken
sales  was  primarily  due  to a 19.6% decrease in revenue  per  dressed  pound
partially offset by a 13.9% increase in dressed pounds sold.

     COST OF SALES.  Consolidated  cost  of  sales  was  $1.2 billion in fiscal
1999,  a  decrease  of  $23.7  million, or 2.0% compared to fiscal  1998.   The
decrease resulted primarily from an $18.4 million decrease in the cost of sales
of U.S. operations and by a $5.3  million  decrease  in  the  cost  of sales in
Mexico  operations.  The  cost  of  sales  decrease in U.S. operations of $18.4
million was due primarily to a 22.1% decrease  in  feed  ingredients  cost  per
pound partially offset by an 8.7% increase in dressed pounds produced.

     The $5.3 million cost of sales decrease in Mexico operations was primarily
due  to a 15.4% decrease in feed ingredient costs per pound offset partially by
a 13.9% increase in dressed pounds produced.

     GROSS  PROFIT.   Gross  profit  was  $185.7  million  for  fiscal 1999, an
increase  of  $49.6  million,  or 36.5% over the same period last year.   Gross
profit as a percentage of sales increased to 13.7% in fiscal 1999 from 10.2% in
fiscal 1998.  The increased gross  profit  resulted  primarily  from lower feed
ingredient costs per pound and higher production volumes.

     Beginning in the fourth quarter of fiscal 1999, commodity chicken  margins
have  been  under  pressure  due,  in  part,  to  increased  levels  of chicken
production  in  the U.S. and Mexico.  To the extent that these trends continue,
subsequent period's  gross  margins  could be negatively affected to the extent
not offset by other factors such as those discussed under "-General" above.

     SELLING,  GENERAL  AND  ADMINISTRATIVE  EXPENSES.   Consolidated  selling,
general and administrative expenses were $76.2 million in fiscal 1999 and $58.8
million  in  fiscal 1998.  Consolidated  selling,  general  and  administrative
expenses as a percentage of sales increased in fiscal 1999 to 5.6%, compared to
4.4% in fiscal  1998,  due  primarily  to  increased  retirement  and  variable
compensation costs which are dependent upon U.S. profits.

     OPERATING  INCOME.   Consolidated operating income was $109.5 million  for
fiscal 1999, an increase of  $32.2  million,  or  41.7% when compared to fiscal
1998, resulting primarily from lower feed ingredient costs per pound and higher
production volumes.

     INTEREST EXPENSE.  Consolidated net interest expense  decreased  12.4%  to
$17.7  million  in fiscal 1999, when compared to $20.2 million for fiscal 1998,
due to lower average outstanding debt levels.

     MISCELLANEOUS,  NET. Consolidated miscellaneous, net, a component of Other
Expenses (Income), was  $1.0  million  in  fiscal 1999, a $2.7 million decrease
when compared to ($1.7) for fiscal 1998 due  primarily to losses on disposal of
assets.

     INCOME  TAX  EXPENSE.  Consolidated income  tax  expense  in  fiscal  1999
increased to $25.7  million  compared  to  an expense of $6.5 million in fiscal
1998.  This increase resulted from higher U.S.  earnings in fiscal 1999 than in
fiscal 1998.
<PAGE>

FISCAL 1998 COMPARED TO FISCAL 1997:

     NET SALES.  Consolidated net sales were $1.33  billion for fiscal 1998, an
increase  of  $53.9  million,  or  4.2%  over  fiscal 1997.   The  increase  in
consolidated net sales resulted from a $53.4 million  increase  in U.S. chicken
sales to $914.4 million and a $3.1 million increase in Mexican chicken sales to
$278.1  million  offset  by  a  $2.6  million  decrease of sales of other  U.S.
products  to  $139.1  million.   The increase in U.S.  chicken  sales  was  due
primarily to a 3.9% increase in dressed  pounds  produced  resulting  primarily
from the Company's expansion of existing facilities and the purchase of poultry
assets  capable  of  producing 650,000 chickens per week from Green Acre Foods,
Inc., on April 15, 1997,  and  by  a 2.3% increase in total revenue per dressed
pound produced.  The increase in Mexico  chicken  sales  was due primarily to a
6.5%  increase in total revenue per dressed pound offset partially  by  a  5.0%
decrease  in  dressed  pounds  produced.  Increased  revenues per dressed pound
produced in Mexico were primarily the result of higher  sales prices as well as
generally improved economic conditions in Mexico compared to the previous year.

     COST  OF  SALES.  Consolidated cost of sales was $1.2  billion  in  fiscal
1998, an increase  of  $32.3  million,  or 2.8% over fiscal 1997.  The increase
resulted primarily from a $37.4 million increase  in  cost  of  sales  of  U.S.
operations,  offset  by  a $5.1 million decrease in the cost of sales in Mexico
operations.  The cost of sales increase in U.S. operations of $37.4 million was
due to a 3.9% increase in  dressed  pounds produced and increased production of
higher cost and margin products in prepared  foods,  offset by a 16.5% decrease
in the cost of feed ingredient purchases per pound during the period.  The $5.1
million cost of sales decrease in Mexico operations was due primarily to a 5.0%
decrease  in dressed pounds produced partially offset by  a  2.9%  increase  in
average costs of sales per dressed pound produced.

     GROSS  PROFIT.   Gross  profit  was  $136.1  million  for  fiscal 1998, an
increase  of  $21.6  million,  or 18.9% over the same period last year.   Gross
profit as a percentage of sales  increased to 10.2% in fiscal 1998 from 9.0% in
fiscal 1997.  The increased gross  profit  resulted  from  higher  margins  for
poultry products in the U.S. and Mexico.

     SELLING,  GENERAL  AND  ADMINISTRATIVE  EXPENSES.   Consolidated  selling,
general and administrative expenses were $58.8 million in fiscal 1998 and $50.6
million  in  fiscal  1997.  Consolidated  selling,  general  and administrative
expenses as a percentage of sales increased in fiscal 1998 to  4.4% compared to
4.0% in fiscal 1997 due primarily to higher administration costs.

     OPERATING  INCOME.   Consolidated operating income was $77.3  million  for
fiscal 1998, an increase of  $13.4  million,  or  20.9% when compared to fiscal
1997,  resulting  primarily from higher margins experienced  in  the  U.S.  and
Mexico operations.

     INTEREST EXPENSE.   Consolidated  net  interest  expense decreased 8.7% to
$20.2 million in fiscal 1998, compared to $22.1 million for fiscal 1997, due to
lower outstanding debt levels.

     MISCELLANEOUS, NET.  Consolidated miscellaneous, net, a component of Other
Expenses  (Income), was ($1.7) million in fiscal 1998, a  $0.7  million,  or  a
30.4% decrease  when  compared  to ($2.4) million for fiscal 1997. Consolidated
miscellaneous, net in fiscal 1997  included  a $2.2 million final settlement of
claims resulting from the January 8, 1992, fire  at our prepared foods plant in
Mt. Pleasant, Texas.

     INCOME  TAX  EXPENSE.   Consolidated income tax  expense  in  fiscal  1998
increased to $6.5 million compared  to  an  expense  of  $2.8 million in fiscal
1997.  This increase resulted from higher U.S. earnings in  fiscal 1998 than in
fiscal  1997.  While Mexico earnings were also higher in fiscal  1998  than  in
fiscal 1997, Mexico earnings are not currently subject to income taxes.


LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES


     The  Company  maintains $70 million in revolving credit facilities and $30
million in secured-term  borrowing  facilities.   The credit facilities provide
for interest at rates ranging from LIBOR plus one and  three-eighths percent to
LIBOR  plus  one and three-quarters percent and are secured  by  inventory  and
fixed assets or  are  unsecured.   As  of  November 23, 1999, $63.2 million was
available under the revolving credit facilities and $28.3 million was available
under the term borrowing facilities.

     On  June  29,  1999,  the Camp County Industrial  Development  Corporation
issued $25.0 million of variable-rate  environmental  facilities  revenue bonds
supported by letters of credit obtained by the Company. We may draw  from these
proceeds  over  the  construction  period  for  our  new sewage and solid waste
disposal facilities at a poultry by-products plant to  be built in Camp County,
Texas.  The Company is not required to borrow the full amount  of  the proceeds
from the bonds. All amounts borrowed from these funds will be due in 2029.  Any
amounts we do not borrow by June 2002 will not be available to us. The  amounts
we  do  borrow  will  be  reflected  as debt when we receive them from the Camp
County Industrial Development Corporation.  It  is expected that the reflection
of the bonds as debt on our books will occur before  June  2002.  The  interest
rates  on amounts borrowed will closely follow the tax-exempt commercial  paper
rates.

     On  June 26, 1998 the Company entered into an asset sale agreement to sell
up to $60  million of accounts receivable.  Under this agreement, we sell, on a
revolving basis,  certain  of  our  trade  receivables  to  a  special  purpose
corporation,  wholly  owned by the Company, which in turn may sell a percentage
ownership interest to third  parties.  As  of  October  2,  1999, no sold trade
receivables were outstanding and the entire facility was available for sales of
qualifying receivables.

     At  October  2,  1999, the Company's working capital increased  to  $154.2
million and our current  ratio  was  2.24 to 1 compared with working capital of
$147.0 million and a current ratio of  2.32  to 1 at September 26, 1998. Strong
profits were primarily responsible for the increases in working capital.

     Trade accounts and other receivables were  $84.4  million  at  October  2,
1999,  compared  to  $81.8 million at September 26, 1998. The 3.1% increase was
primarily due to an increase in sales of prepared food products, which normally
have longer credit terms than fresh chicken sales.

     Inventories were  $168.0  million  at  October 2, 1999, compared to $141.7
million  at  September  26, 1998.  The $26.4 million,  or  18.6%,  increase  in
inventories between September 26, 1998 and October 2, 1999 was due primarily to
the continuing shift in the  sales  mix toward prepared foods, which requires a
higher level of inventory relative to  sales  as  well  as increased production
levels in both the U.S. and Mexico.

     Accounts payable were $81.6 million at October 2, 1999,  compared to $70.1
million  at September 26, 1998. The 16.4% increase in accounts payable  between
September  26,  1998  and October 2, 1999 was due primarily to higher levels of
purchases needed to support  the  increased  production levels in both U.S. and
Mexico.

     Capital expenditures of $69.6 million, $53.5 million and $50.2 million for
fiscal  years 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively,  were  primarily  incurred  to
acquire and  expand  certain facilities, improve efficiencies, reduce costs and
for the routine replacement  of  equipment.   We  have budgeted an aggregate of
approximately $100.0 million for capital expenditures  in  each of fiscal years
2000, 2001 and 2002, primarily to increase capacity through  either building or
acquiring  new  facilities,  to  improve  efficiencies  and  for  the   routine
replacement of equipment. However, actual levels of capital expenditures in any
fiscal  year  may  be greater or less than those budgeted. We expect to finance
such expenditures with available operating cash flows and long-term financing.

     Cash flows provided  by  operating  activities  were  $81.5 million, $85.0
million  and  $49.6  million  in fiscal 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.  The
decrease in cash flows provided  by  operating activities for fiscal 1999, when
compared to fiscal 1998, was due primarily to increased inventory levels offset
by increases in payables and accrued expenses. The significant increase in cash
flows provided by operating activities for fiscal 1998, when compared to fiscal
1997 was due primarily to increased net income, a reduction of inventory levels
and a substantially smaller increase in  accounts  receivable  for fiscal 1998,
when compared to fiscal 1997.

     Cash  flows  provided  by  (used  in)  financing  activities were  ($19.6)
million, ($32.5) million and $0.3 million for fiscal years 1999, 1998 and 1997,
respectively.  The  cash  provided by (used in) financing activities  primarily
reflects the net proceeds (payments) from notes payable and long-term financing
and debt retirements.

MARKET RISK SENSITIVE INSTRUMENTS AND POSITIONS

     The risk inherent in the  Company's  market risk sensitive instruments and
positions is the potential loss arising from  adverse  changes  in the price of
feed  ingredients,  foreign  currency  exchange  rates  and  interest rates  as
discussed  below.   The  sensitivity  analyses  presented  do not consider  the
effects that such adverse changes may have on overall economic  activity nor do
they consider additional actions management may take to mitigate  its  exposure
to such changes.  Actual results may differ.

     FEED  INGREDIENTS.   The  Company  is  a purchaser of certain commodities,
primarily  corn  and soybean meal.  As a result,  the  Company's  earnings  are
affected by changes in the price and availability of such feed ingredients.  As
market conditions  dictate,  the  Company from time to time will lock-in future
feed  ingredient prices using various  hedging  techniques,  including  forward
purchase agreements with suppliers and futures contracts.  The Company does not
use such  financial  instruments for trading purposes and is not a party to any
leverage derivatives.  Market  risk is estimated as a hypothetical 10% increase
in the weighted-average cost of  the  Company's  primary feed ingredients as of
October 2, 1999.  Based on projected 2000 feed consumption,  such  an  increase
would result in an increase to cost of sales of approximately $26.6 million  in
fiscal  2000  after  considering the effect of forward purchase commitments and
future contracts outstanding as of October 2, 1999.  As of October 2, 1999, the
Company had hedged none  of  its  fiscal 2000 feed requirements but had entered
into forward purchase contracts for  12.7%  of  its fiscal 2000 feed ingredient
requirements.

    FOREIGN CURRENCY.  The Company's earnings are  affected by foreign exchange
rate  fluctuations  related to the Mexican peso net monetary  position  of  its
Mexico subsidiaries.  The Company primarily manages this exposure by attempting
to minimize its Mexican  peso  net monetary position, but has also from time to
time considered executing hedges to help minimize this exposure.  However, such
instruments have historically not  been  economically feasible.  The Company is
also  exposed  to the effect of potential exchange  rate  fluctuations  to  the
extent that amounts are repatriated from Mexico to the United States.  However,
the  Company  currently   anticipates   that  the  cash  flows  of  its  Mexico
subsidiaries  will continue to be reinvested  in  its  Mexico  operations.   In
addition, the Mexican peso exchange rate can directly and indirectly impact the
Company 's results  of  operations  and  financial position in several manners,
including potential economic recession in  Mexico  resulting  from  a  devalued
peso.  The impact on the Company's financial position and results of operations
of  a hypothetical change in the exchange rate between the U.S. dollar and  the
Mexican  peso  cannot be reasonably estimated.  Foreign currency exchange gains
and losses, representing  the  change  in  the  U.S.  dollar  value  of the net
monetary  assets  of  the  Company's  Mexico  subsidiaries, were a gain of $0.1
million in fiscal 1999 and a loss of $2.3 million  and  $0.4 million for fiscal
1998 and 1997, respectively.  On November 10, 1999, the Mexican  peso closed at
9.39  to 1 U.S. dollar, a decrease from 9.41 at October 2, 1999.  No  assurance
can be  given  as  to the future movements in the peso that could affect future
earnings of the Company.

     INTEREST RATES.   The  Company's  earnings are also affected by changes in
interest rates due to the impact those changes  have  on its variable-rate debt
instruments.   The  Company  has  variable-rate  debt instruments  representing
approximately  10.5% of its long-term debt at October  2,  1999.   If  interest
rates average 25  basis  points more in fiscal 2000 than they did during fiscal
1999, the Company's interest  expense  would  be  increased  by $79,374.  These
amounts  are determined by considering the impact of the hypothetical  interest
rates on the Company's variable-rate long-term debt at October 2, 1999.

     Market  risk  for  fixed-rate long-term debt is estimated as the potential
increase in fair value resulting  from  a hypothetical 25 basis points decrease
in interest rates and amounts to approximately  $1.5  million, using discounted
cash flow analysis.

NEW ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

     ACCOUNTING  FOR DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS AND HEDGING  ACTIVITIES.   In  June
1998, the Financial  Accounting  Standards  Board  (FASB)  issued  Statement of
Financial  Accounting  Standards No. 133, Accounting for Derivative Instruments
and Hedging Activities (SFAS  133),  which  is  required  to  be adopted by the
Company  in  fiscal  years beginning after October 1, 2000.  SFAS  133  permits
early adoption as of the  beginning  of  any fiscal quarter after its issuance.
SFAS 133 will require the Company to recognize  all  derivatives on the balance
sheet at fair value.  Derivatives that are not hedges  must be adjusted to fair
value through income.  If the derivative is a hedge, depending on the nature of
the  hedge,  changes  in the fair value of derivatives will  either  be  offset
against the change in fair  value  of  the  hedged assets, liabilities, or firm
commitments through earnings or recognized in  other comprehensive income until
the  hedged  item  is recognized in earnings.  The  ineffective  portion  of  a
derivative's change  in  fair value will be immediately recognized in earnings.
The Company is currently evaluating  the impact of SFAS 133; however, it is not
expected to have a material adverse impact on the Company's financial condition
or results of operations.

IMPACT OF YEAR 2000

     The Year 2000 issue is the result of computer programs being written using
two  digits  rather  than four to define  the  applicable  year.   Any  of  the
Company's computer programs  that  have date-sensitive software may recognize a
date using "00" as the year 1900 rather  than the Year 2000.  This could result
in  a  system  failure or miscalculations causing  disruptions  of  operations,
including among  other  things,  a temporary inability to process transactions,
send invoices or engage in similar normal business activities.

     The Company began assessment of its future business system requirements in
1996.  As a part of the Company's  review,  it  determined  that  it  would  be
required to modify or replace portions of its software and hardware so that its
computer  systems will function properly with respect to dates in the Year 2000
and thereafter.

     To date,  the  Company has tested the identified systems and updated those
systems in the U.S.,  including  the  software  and  hardware components deemed
necessary  to  ensure  the  uninterrupted  fulfillment  of the  Company's  core
business  processes  as  they  relate  to  the  timely,  accurate  and  quality
production  and delivery of our products to our customers,  the  processing  of
accounting  information,   and  the  associated  processing  and  reporting  of
information  as  required  by  our  business  partners,  banks  and  government
agencies.  The Company has updated  its  core  systems  in Mexico.  The Company
presently  believes  that with these modifications and replacements,  the  Year
2000 issue will not pose  significant  operational  problems  for  its computer
systems.

     The  Company  has reviewed Year 2000 disclosures of the packaged  software
applications it uses  to  ensure  Year  2000 readiness.  The suppliers of these
software products have provided approaches for the Company to ensure compliance
of core software, either through program  options,  upgrades  or  new products.
These  solutions  have  been  implemented  and  are  operational.

     The  Company regularly  upgrades  and  replaces  hardware  platforms  such
as  database and application  servers  as  well as its telephone systems.  The
Company currently believes that all of its servers  are  Year  2000  ready  and
100% of our core personal  computers  are  Year  2000  compliant.   There  are
35 core telephone switching systems, all of which the Company believes are Year
2000 ready.

     The   embedded   technology  in  the  production  environment,   such   as
programmable logic controllers, computer-controlled valves and other equipment,
has been inventoried and  all  issues  identified have been resolved.  Based on
current evidence, the Company believes there  will  be  no significant exposure
with regard to its production equipment.

     Systems  assessments and minor system modifications were  completed  using
existing internal  resources  and, as a result, incremental costs were minimal.
System replacement, consisting  primarily  of  capital projects, were initiated
for  other  business  purposes  while  at  the same time  achieving  Year  2000
compliance.   System  replacement  projects  were   completed  primarily  using
external resources.  The total cost of the Year 2000 project is not expected to
have a material adverse effect on the Company's results of operations.

     Additionally, the Company has initiated communications  will  all  of  its
significant  suppliers  and  certain large customers to determine the extent to
which the Company's interface  systems  are  vulnerable to those third parties'
failure  to  remediate their own Year 2000 issues.   To  date  the  significant
suppliers, such  as  fuel,  electrical,  water, rail, grain and container, have
responded  favorably.   Other  key  vendor and  customer  assessments  are  98%
complete with favorable responses.  The  Company believes it has no significant
exposure  from  the remaining vendors or customers  that  have  not  responded.
However, there can be no assurance that the systems of other parties upon which
the Company relies  will  be  converted  on  a  timely  basis.   The  Company's
business,  financial  condition  or  results  of operations could be materially
adversely  impacted by the failure of its systems  and  applications  or  those
operated by others to properly operate or manage dates beyond 1999.

     The Company  has  instituted  a two-fold approach to contingency planning;
technical and business continuity.   The  technical  contingency  planning took
place  in  conjunction with the implementation of the Company's new information
systems in the  U.S.,  and will continue through the end of 1999 picking up the
non-core hardware and support technology in both the U.S. and Mexico.  Business
contingency planning is  currently  underway  and  the  Company  will establish
contingency  plans,  if needed, based on supplier evaluation and assessment  of
risk.

     The Company believes  that  its  initiatives  and  its  existing  business
recovery  plans are adequate to reasonably address likely Year 2000 issues;  if
unforeseen circumstances arise, the Company will attempt to develop contingency
plans for these situations.

IMPACT OF INFLATION

     Due to  moderate  inflation  in the U.S. and the Company's rapid inventory
turnover rate, the results of operations  have  not been significantly affected
by inflation during the past three-year period.


<PAGE>
ITEM 8.  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

     The  consolidated  financial  statements  together   with  the  report  of
independent auditors, and financial statement schedules are  included  on pages
44 through 55 of this document. Financial statement schedules other than  those
included herein have been omitted because the required information is contained
in  the consolidated financial statements or related notes, or such information
is not applicable.

ITEM  9.   CHANGES  IN  AND  DISAGREEMENTS  WITH  ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

     NOT APPLICABLE

<PAGE>
                                   PART III

ITEM 10.  DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF REGISTRANT

     Reference  is made to "Election of Directors" on  pages  3  through  5  of
Registrant's Proxy Statement for its 2000 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which
section is incorporated herein by reference.

     Reference is  made  to "Compliance with Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act"
on page 9 of Registrant's  Proxy  Statement  for  its  2000  Annual  Meeting of
Stockholders, which section is incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

     Information responsive to Items 11, 12 and 13 is incorporated by reference
from  the  sections  entitled  "Security  Ownership",  "Election of Directors",
"Executive Compensation", and "Certain Transactions" of  the Registrant's Proxy
Statement for its 2000 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.


                                    PART IV

ITEM 14. EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K

(a)(1)  The financial statements listed in the accompanying index to financial
        statements and schedules are filed as part of this report.

   (2)  All other schedules for which provision is made in the applicable
        accounting regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission are
        not required under the related instructions or are not applicable and
        therefore have been omitted.

   (3) The financial statements schedule entitled "Valuation and Qualifying
       Accounts and Reserves" is filed as part of this report on page 53.

   (4) Exhibits

(b) The Company filed a Form 8-K dated July 20, 1999, to report the amending of
    the Articles of Incorporation to permit dividends of either of its Class A
    Common Stock or Class B Common Stock to holders of its Class B Common
    Stock.


Exhibit
NUMBER
2.1  Agreement and Plan of Reorganization dated September 15, 1986, by and among
     Pilgrim's Pride Corporation, a Texas corporation; Pilgrim's Pride
     Corporation, a Delaware corporation; and Doris Pilgrim Julian, Aubrey Hal
     Pilgrim, Paulette Pilgrim Rolston, Evanne Pilgrim, Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim,
     Lonnie Ken Pilgrim, Greta Pilgrim Owens and Patrick Wayne Pilgrim
     (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 2.1 to the Company's Registration
     Statement on Form S-1 (No. 33-8805) effective November 14, 1986).

3.1  Certificate of Incorporation of the Company (incorporated by reference from
     Exhibit 3.1 of the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1
     (No.33-8805) effective November 14, 1986).

3.2  Amended and Restated Corporate Bylaws of Pilgrim's Pride Corporation, a
     Delaware Corporation, effective May 14,1999 (incorporated by reference from
     Exhibit 3.2 of the Company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three
     months ended July 3, 1999).

4.1  Certificate of Incorporation of the Company (incorporated by reference from
     Exhibit 3.1 of the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1 (No.
     33-8805) effective November 14, 1986).

4.2  Amended and Restated Corporate Bylaws of Pilgrim's Pride Corporation, a
     Delaware Corporation, effective May 14, 1999 (incorporated by reference
     from Exhibit 3.2 of the Company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the
     three months ended July 3, 1999).

4.3  Form of Indenture between the Company and Ameritrust Texas National
     Association relating to the Company's 10 7/8% Senior Subordinated Notes Due
     2003 (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 4.6 of the Company's
     Registration Statement on Form S-1 (No. 33-59626) filed on March 16, 1993).

4.4  Form of 10 7/8% Senior Subordinated Note Due 2003 (incorporated by
     reference from Exhibit 4.8 of the Company's Registration Statement on
     Form S-1 (No. 33-61160) filed on June 16, 1993).

10.1 Pilgrim's Industries, Inc. Profit Sharing Retirement Plan, restated as of
     July 1, 1987 (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.1 of the Company's
     Form 8 filed on July 1, 1992).

10.2 Bonus Plan of the Company (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.2 to
     the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1 (No. 33-8805) effective
     November 14, 1986).

10.3 Employee Stock Investment Plan of the Company (incorporated by reference
     from Exhibit 10.28 of the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1
     (No. 33-21057) effective May 2, 1988).

10.4 Second Amended and Restated Loan and Security Agreement dated July 31,
     1995, by and among the Company, the banks party thereto and Creditanstalt-
     Bankverein, as agent (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.38 of the
     Company's annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
     September 28, 1996).

10.5 Revolving Credit Loan Agreement dated March 27, 1995 by and among the
     Company and Agricultural Production Credit Association (incorporated by
     reference from Exhibit 10.39 of the Company's annual report on Form 10-K
     for the fiscal year ended September 28, 1996).

10.6 First Supplement to Revolving Credit Loan Agreement dated July 6, 1995 by
     and among the Company and Agricultural Production Credit Association
     (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.40 of the Company's annual
     report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended September 28, 1996).

10.7 Second Supplement to Revolving Credit Loan Agreement dated June 28, 1996
     by and among the Company and Agricultural Production Credit Association
     (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.44 of the Company's annual
     report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended September 28, 1996).

10.8 Third Supplement to Revolving Credit Loan Agreement dated August 22, 1996
     by and among the Company and Agricultural Production Credit Association
     (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.45 of the Company's annual
     report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended September 28, 1996).

10.9 Note Purchase Agreement dated April 14, 1997 by and between John Hancock
     Mutual Life Insurance Company and Signature 1A (Cayman), Ltd. And the
     Company (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.46 of the Company's
     Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three months ended March 29, 1997).

10.10 Aircraft Lease Extension Agreement between B.P. Leasing Co., (L.A.
    Pilgrim, Individually) and Pilgrim's Pride Corporation, (formerly Pilgrim's
    Industries, Inc.) effective November 15, 1992 (incorporated by reference
    from Exhibit 10.48 of the Company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the
    three months ended March 29, 1997).

10.11 Broiler Grower Contract dated May 6, 1997 between Pilgrim's Pride
    Corporation and Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim (Farm 30) (incorporated by reference
    from Exhibit 10.49 of the Company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the
    three months ended March 29, 1997).

10.12 Commercial Egg Grower Contract dated May 7, 1997 between Pilgrim's Pride
    Corporation and Pilgrim Poultry G.P. (incorporated by reference from Exhibit
    10.50 of the Company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three months
    ended March 29, 1997).

10.13 Agreement dated October 15, 1996 between Pilgrim's Pride Corporation and
    Pilgrim Poultry G.P. (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.23 of the
    Company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three months ended
    January 2, 1999).

10.14 Heavy Breeder Contract dated May 7, 1997 between Pilgrim's Pride
    Corporation and Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim (Farms 44, 45 & 46) (incorporated by
    reference from Exhibit 10.51 of the Company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q
    for the three months ended March 29, 1997).

10.15 Broiler Grower Contract dated January 9, 1997 by and between Pilgrim's
    Pride and  O.B. Goolsby, Jr. (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.25
    of the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1 (No. 333-29163)
    effective June 27, 1997).

10.16 Broiler Grower Contract dated January 15, 1997 by and between Pilgrim's
    Pride Corporation and B.J.M. Farms. (incorporated by reference from Exhibit
    10.26 of the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1 (No. 333-29163)
    effective June 27, 1997).

10.17 Broiler Grower Agreement dated January 29, 1997 by and between Pilgrim's
    Pride Corporation and Clifford E. Butler (incorporated by reference from
    Exhibit 10.27 of the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1 (No. 333-
    29163) effective June 27, 1997).

10.18 Second Amendment to Second Amended and Restated Loan and Security
   Agreement dated September 18, 1997 by and among the Company, the banks party
   thereto and Creditanstalt-Bankverein, as agent.

10.19 Revolving Credit Agreement dated March 2, 1998 by and between Pilgrim's
   Pride de Mexico, S.A. de C.V., (the borrower); Avicola Pilgrim's Pride de
   Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (the Mexican Guarantor), Pilgrim's Pride Corporation
   (the U.S. Guarantor), and COAMERICA Bank (the bank), (incorporated by
   reference from Exhibit 10.32 of the Company's Quarterly report on form 10-Q
   for the three months ended March 28, 1998.

10.20 Receivables Purchase Agreement between Pilgrim's Pride Funding
   Corporation, as Seller, Pilgrim's Pride Corporation, as Servicer, Pooled
   Accounts Receivable Capital Corporation, as Purchaser, and Nesbitt Burns
   Securities Inc., as Agent (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.33 of
   the Company's Quarterly report on form 10-Q for the three months ended
   June 27, 1998).

10.21 Purchase and Contribution Agreement Dated as of June 26, 1998 between
   Pilgrim's Pride Funding Corporation and Pilgrim's Pride Corporation
   (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.34 of the Company's Quarterly
   report on form 10-Q for the three months ended June 27, 1998).

10.22 Second Amendment to Security Agreement Re:  Accounts Receivable, Farm
   Products and Inventory between Pilgrim's Pride Corporation and Harris Trust
   and Savings Bank (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.35 of the
   Company's Quarterly report on form 10-Q for the three months ended June 27,
   1998).

10.23 Second Amended and Restated Secured Credit Agreement between Pilgrim's
   Pride Corporation and Harris Trust and Savings Bank, individually and as
   agent and the lenders from time to time parties hereto as lenders, dated
   November 5, 1999.*

10.24 Guaranty Fee Agreement between Pilgrim's Pride Corporation and Pilgrim
   Interests, LTD. Dated June 11, 1999.*

10.25 Heavy Breeder Contract dated October 27, 1999 between Pilgrim's Pride
   Corporation and David Van Hoose (Timberlake Farms).*

12 Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges for the years ended October 2, 1999,
   September 26, 1998, September 27, 1997, September 28, 1996 and September 30,
   1995.

21 Subsidiaries of Registrant.*

23 Consent of Ernst & Young LLP.*

*    Filed herewith

<PAGE>
SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the  Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, the issuer has duly caused this report to be signed  on its behalf
by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized on the 24th day of November 1999.

                                   PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION

                                             /s/
                                         Richard A. Cogdill

                                   By:
                                   Richard A. Cogdill
                                   Chief Financial Officer
                                   Secretary and Treasurer


Pursuant  to  the  requirements  of  the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,  this
report  has  been  signed  below by the following  persons  on  behalf  of  the
Registrant and in the capacities and on the date indicated.

     SIGNATURE                     TITLE                              DATE

/s/ Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim
_______________________            Chairman of the Board              11/24/99
Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim

/s/ Clifford E. Butler
_______________________            Vice Chairman of the Board         11/24/99
Clifford E. Butler

/s/ David Van Hoose
_______________________            Chief Executive Officer            11/24/99
David Van Hoose                    President
                                   Chief Operating Officer
                                   Director
                                   (Principal Executive Officer)

/s/ Richard A. Cogdill
_______________________            Executive Vice President           11/24/99
Richard A. Cogdill                 Chief Financial Officer
                                   Secretary and Treasurer
                                   Director
                                   (Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)

/s/ Lonnie Ken Pilgrim
_______________________            Senior Vice Presdient              11/24/99
Lonnie Ken Pilgrim                 Director of Transportation
                                   Director

_______________________            Director                           11/24/99
Charles L. Black

_______________________            Director                           11/24/99
Robert E. Hilgenfeld

_______________________            Director                           11/24/99
Vance C. Miller, Sr.

_______________________            Director                           11/24/99
James J. Vetter, Jr.

_______________________            Director                           11/24/99
Donald L. Wass, Ph.D.


REPORT OF ERNST & YOUNG LLP, INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

Stockholders and Board of Directors
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

         We  have  audited  the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation and  subsidiaries  as  of  October 2, 1999, and
September  26,  1998,  and the related consolidated statements  of  income,
stockholders' equity and  cash  flows  for  each  of the three years in the
period  ended  October  2,  1999.  Our audits also included  the  financial
statements schedule listed in  the  index  at  Item 14(a).  These financial
statements and schedule are the responsibility of the Company's management.
Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these  financial  statements
schedule based on our audits.

         We  conducted  our  audits  in  accordance with generally accepted
auditing standards. Those standards require  that  we  plan and perform the
audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements
are free of material misstatement.  An audit includes examining,  on a test
basis,  evidence  supporting  the  amounts and disclosures in the financial
statements.  An audit also includes  assessing  the  accounting  principles
used  and  significant  estimates made by management, as well as evaluating
the overall financial statement  presentation.   We believe that our audits
provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

        In our opinion, the financial statements referred  to above present
fairly,  in all material respects, the consolidated financial  position  of
Pilgrim's  Pride Corporation as of October 2, 1999, and September 26, 1998,
and the consolidated  results of its operations and its cash flows for each
of the three years in the  period ended October 2, 1999, in conformity with
generally  accepted accounting  principles.   Also,  in  our  opinion,  the
related financial  statement  schedule,  when considered in relation to the
basic  financial  statements,  taken as a whole,  presents  fairly  in  all
material respects the information set forth therein.

ERNST & YOUNG LLP


Dallas, Texas
November 2, 1999




<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Consolidated Balance Sheets
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

(IN THOUSANDS)                                 TWO YEARS ENDED OCTOBER 2, 1999
                                            1999                       1998
<S>                                          <C>                        <C>
Assets
Current Assets:
  Cash and cash equivalents             $  15,703                    $  25,125
  Trade accounts and other receivables,
    less allowance for doubtful accounts   84,368                       81,813
  Inventories                             168,035                      141,684
  Deferred income taxes                     6,913                        7,010
  Prepaid expenses and other
    current assets                          3,376                        2,902
    Total Current Assets                  278,395                      258,534

Other Assets                               13,632                       11,757
Property, Plant and Equipment:
  Land                                     26,177                       26,404
  Buildings, machinery and equipment      514,984                      470,763
  Autos and trucks                         38,479                       35,547
  Construction-in-progress                 42,694                       29,385
                                          622,334                      562,099
  Less accumulated depreciation           258,599                      230,951
                                          363,735                      331,148
                                         $655,762                     $601,439

Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity
Current Liabilities:
  Accounts payable                      $  81,587                    $  70,069
  Accrued expenses                         38,213                       35,536
  Current maturities of long-term debt      4,353                        5,889
    Total Current Liabilities             124,153                      111,494

Long-Term Debt, Less Current Maturities   183,753                      199,784
Deferred Income Taxes                      52,708                       58,401
Minority Interest in Subsidiary               889                          889
Commitments and Contingencies                  --                           --

Stockholders' Equity:
  Preferred stock, $.01 par value,
    authorized 5,000,000 shares; none issued   --                           --
  Common stock -- Class A, $.01 par value,
    authorized 100,000,000 shares; 1999 -
    13,794,529 shares issued and outstanding;
    1998 - no shares issued or outstanding    138                           --
  Common stock -- Class B, $.01 par value,
    authorized 60,000,000 shares; 1999 and
    1998 - 27,589,250 issued and outstanding  276                          276
  Additional paid-in capital               79,625                       79,763
  Retained earnings                       214,220                      150,832
    Total Stockholders' Equity            294,259                      230,871
                                         $655,762                     $601,439
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
</TABLE>
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Consolidated Statements of Income
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)        THREE YEARS ENDED OCTOBER 2, 1999
                                1999                 1998                 1997
<S>                             <C>                   <C>                   <C>
Net Sales                 $1,357,403           $1,331,545           $1,277,649
Cost and Expenses:
  Cost of sales            1,171,695            1,195,442            1,163,152
  Selling, general and
    administrative            76,204               58,847               50,603
                           1,247,899            1,254,289            1,213,755
  Operating Income           109,504               77,256               63,894

Other Expenses (Income):
  Interest expense, net       17,666               20,148               22,075
  Foreign exchange
    (gain) loss                  (50)               2,284                  434
  Miscellaneous, net             984               (1,698)              (2,439)
                              18,600               20,734               20,070

Income Before Income Taxes    90,904               56,522               43,824

Income Tax Expense            25,651                6,512                2,788
Net Income              $     65,253          $    50,010          $    41,036
Net Income  per
  Common Share-Basic
  and Diluted           $       1.58          $      1.21          $      0.99


See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
</TABLE>

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)

                SHARES OF COMMON STOCK    TOTAL    ADDITIONAL  RETAINED
                CLASS A        CLASS B     PAR      PAID-IN    EARNINGS  TOTAL
                                          VALUE     CAPITAL
<S>            <C>    <C>      <C>  <C>   <C> <C>  <C>  <C>  <C>  <C>  <C>  <C>
Balance at
 September 28,
 1996                --      27,589,250     $276    $79,763   $63,096 $143,135
Net income for year                                            41,036   41,036
Cash dividends declared
($.04 per share)                                               (1,655)  (1,655)

Balance at
  September 27,
  1997               --      27,589,250      276     79,763   102,477  182,516
Net income for year                                            50,010   50,010
Cash dividends declared
  ($.04 per share)                                             (1,655) (1,655)

Balance at
  September 26,
  1998               --      27,589,250      276     79,763   150,832  230,871
Dividend
  of Class A Common
  Stock      13,794,529              --      138       (138)       --       --
Net income for year                                            65,253   65,253
Cash dividends declared
  ($.045 per share)                                            (1,865)  (1,865)

Balance at
  October 2,
  1999       13,794,529      27,589,250    $414     $79,625  $214,220 $294,259
</TABLE>
See notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

(IN THOUSANDS)                             THREE YEARS ENDED OCTOBER 2, 1999
                                           1999            1998          1997
<S>                                        <C>              <C>           <C>
Cash Flows From Operating Activities:
  Net income                             $65,253          $50,010      $41,036
Adjustments to reconcile net income to
    cash provided by operating activities:
  Depreciation and amortization           34,536           32,591       29,796
  Loss on property disposals               2,668              132          874
  Provisions for doubtful accounts         1,122              409         (60)
  Deferred income taxes                   (5,595)             571        2,613
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
  Accounts and other receivables          (3,677)          (4,255)     (15,213)
  Inventories                            (26,351)           4,496       (9,314)
  Prepaid expenses and
    other current assets                    (474)            (246)        (999)
  Accounts payable and accrued expenses   14,195              996        1,056
  Other                                     (225)             312         (174)
Cash Provided by Operating Activities     81,452           85,016       49,615

Investing Activities:
  Acquisitions of property,
    plant and equipment                  (69,649)         (53,518)     (50,231)
  Proceeds from property disposals         1,178            5,629        3,853
  Other, net                              (2,822)             595       (1,291)
Cash Used in Investing Activities        (71,293)         (47,294)     (47,669)

Financing Activities:
  Proceeds from notes payable to banks    24,500           35,500       68,500
  Repayments on notes payable to banks   (24,500)         (35,500)     (95,500)
  Proceeds from long-term debt            15,258           21,125       39,030
  Payments on long-term debt             (33,029)         (51,968)     (10,027)
  Cash dividends paid                     (1,865)          (1,655)      (1,655)
Cash Provided by (Used in)
    Financing Activities                 (19,634)         (32,498)         348

Effect of exchange rate changes on cash
    and cash equivalents                      53             (437)           4

(Decrease) increase in cash and
    cash equivalents                      (9,422)          4,787         2,298
Cash and cash equivalents at
    beginning of year                     25,125          20,338        18,040

Cash and Cash Equivalents
    at End of Year                       $15,703         $25,125       $20,338

Supplemental Disclosure Information:
Cash paid during the year for:
  Interest (net of amount capitalized)   $18,130         $20,979       $22,026
  Income taxes                           $31,835         $ 4,543       $ 2,021
</TABLE>


See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

Note A
Business and Summary of Significant Accounting Policies:
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation (referred to herein as "the Company", "we", "us",
"our" and similar terms) is a vertically integrated producer of chicken
products, controlling the breeding, hatching and growing of chickens, and the
processing, preparation and packaging of its product lines.  The Company is
the fourth-largest producer of chicken in the United States, with production
and distribution facilities located in Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Arizona,
and is one of the two largest producers of chicken in Mexico, with production
and distribution facilities located in Mexico City and the states of Coahuila,
San Louis Potosi, Queretaro and Hidalgo.  The Company's chicken products
consist primarily of prepared foods, which include portion-controlled breast
fillets, tenderloins and strips, formed nuggets and patties, bone-in chicken
parts, fresh foodservice chicken, pre-packaged chicken and bulk packaged
chicken.

Principles of Consolidation:
The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of Pilgrim's Pride
Corporation and its wholly and majority owned subsidiaries.  Significant
intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated.

The Company reports on the basis of a 52/53-week fiscal year, which ends on
the Saturday closest to September 30.  As a result, fiscal year 1999 had 53
weeks while fiscal years 1998 and 1997 each had 52 weeks.

The financial statements of the Company's Mexico subsidiaries are remeasured
as if the U.S. dollar were the functional currency.  Accordingly, assets and
liabilities of the Mexico subsidiaries are translated at end-of-period
exchange rates, except for non-monetary assets which are translated at
equivalent dollar costs at dates of acquisition using historical rates.
Operations are translated at average exchange rates in effect during the
period.  Foreign exchange losses are separately stated as components of "Other
Expenses (Income)" in the Consolidated Statement of Income.

Cash Equivalents:
The Company considers highly liquid investments with a maturity of three
months or less when purchased to be cash equivalents.

Accounts Receivable:
The Company does not believe it has significant concentrations of credit risk
in its accounts receivable, which are generally unsecured.  Credit
evaluations are performed on all significant customers and updated as
circumstances dictate.  Allowances for doubtful accounts were $4.7 million
and $3.7 million at October 2, 1999, and September 26, 1998, respectively.

Inventories:
Live chicken inventories are stated at the lower of cost or market and
breeder hens at the lower of cost, less accumulated amortization, or market.
The costs associated with breeder hens are accumulated up to the production
stage and amortized over the productive lives using the unit-of-production
method.  Finished chicken products, feed, eggs and other inventories are
stated at the lower of cost (first-in, first-out method) or market.
Occasionally, the Company hedges a portion of its purchases of major feed
ingredients using futures contracts to minimize the risk of adverse price
fluctuations.  The changes in market value of such agreements have a high
correlation to the price changes of the feed ingredients being hedged.  Gains
and losses on the hedge transactions are deferred and recognized as a
component of cost of sales when products are sold.  Gains and losses on the
futures contracts would be recognized immediately were the changes in the
market value of the agreements to cease to have a high correlation to the
price changes of the feed ingredients being hedged.


Property, Plant and Equipment:
Property, plant and equipment is stated at cost.  For financial reporting
purposes, depreciation is computed using the straight-line method over the
estimated useful lives of these assets.  Depreciation expense was $33.4
million, $31.5 million and $28.7 million in 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

Net Income (Loss) Per Common Share:
Net income (loss) per share is based on the weighted average number of
shares of common stock outstanding during the year.  The weighted average
number of shares outstanding (basic and diluted) and per-share amounts
included herein was 41,383,779 as adjusted for the common stock dividend
referred to in Note F.

Use of Estimates:
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions
that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of
contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and
the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period.
Actual results could differ from those estimates.

Note B
Inventories:

Inventories consist of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)
                                  1999               1998
<S>                            <C>    <C>         <C>   <C>
Live chicken and hens          $  68,116          $  61,295
Feed, eggs and other              48,021             46,199
Finished chicken products         51,898             34,190
                                $168,035           $141,684
</TABLE>

Note C
Notes Payable and Long-Term Debt:
   The Company maintains $70 million in revolving credit facilities and $30
million in secured term borrowing facilities.  The credit facilities provide
for interest at rates ranging from LIBOR plus one and three-eights percent to
LIBOR plus one and three quarters percent and are secured by inventory and
fixed assets or are unsecured.  At October 2, 1999, $64.8 million was available
under the revolving credit facilities and $28.3 million was available under the
term borrowing facilities.  Annual maturities of long-term debt for the five
years subsequent to October 2, 1999 are:  2000 -- $4.4 million; 2001 -- $9.0
million; 2002 -- $9.3 million; 2003 -- $109.9 million and 2004 -- $5.6 million.
   On March 30, 1999, the Company borrowed $15 million on a pre-existing
secured term borrowing facility, the proceeds of which were used primarily to
acquire additional production facilities.
   On June 29, 1999, the Camp County Industrial Development Corporation issued
$25.0 million of variable-rate environmental facilities revenue bonds supported
by letters of credit obtained by the Company.  The Company may borrow from
these proceeds over the construction period of its new sewage and solid waste
disposal facilities at a poultry by-products plant to be built in Camp County,
Texas.  The Company is not required to borrow the full amount of the proceeds
from the bonds and any amounts not borrowed by June 2002 will not be available.
All amounts borrowed from these funds will be due in 2029 and will be reflected
as debt when received.  The interest rates on amounts borrowed will closely
follow the tax-exempt commercial paper rates.
   The company is required, by certain provisions of its debt agreements, to
maintain levels of working capital and net worth, to limit dividends to a
maximum of $3.4 million per year, and to maintain various fixed charge,
leverage, current and debt-to-equity ratios.  Substantially all of the
Company's domestic property, plant and equipment is pledged as collateral on
its long-term debt and credit facilities.
   Total interest was $20.8 million, $23.2 million and $23.4 million in 1999,
1998 and 1997, respectively.  Interest related to new construction capitalized
in 1999, 1998 and 1997 was $2.0 million, $1.7 million and $0.5 million,
respectively.
   The fair value of long-term debt, at October 2, 1999, and September 26,
1998, based upon quoted market prices for the same or similar issues where
available or by using discounted cash flow analysis, was approximately $209.7
million and $206.7 million, respectively.
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Long-term debt consists of the following:
(IN THOUSANDS)                                     MATURITY    1999     1998
<S>                                                 <C> <C>  <C> <C>  <C>  <C>
Senior subordinated notes, interest at 10 7/8%
  (effective rate of 11 1/8%)                          2003 $ 93,364  $ 95,512
Notes payable to an insurance company at 7.07% -
  7.21%                                                2006   67,843    56,554
Notes payable to bank at LIBOR plus 1.8%               2003   18,000    32,000
Notes payable to an agricultural lender at a rate
   approximating libor plus 1.65%                      2003    1,729    14,224
Other notes payable                                 Various    7,170     7,383
                                                             188,106   205,673
Less current maturities                                        4,353     5,889
                                                            $183,753  $199,784
</TABLE>

Note D
Income Taxes:
   Income before income taxes after allocation of certain expenses to foreign
operations for 1999, 1998 and 1997 was $76.6 million, $23.7 million and $15.8
million, respectively, for U.S. operations and $14.3 million, $32.8 million and
$28.0 million, respectively, for foreign operations.  The provisions for income
taxes are based on pre-tax financial statement income.
   The components of income tax expense (benefit) are set forth below:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                         <C>                <C>              <C>
                            1999               1998             1997
Current:
   Federal                 $28,449             $4,985          $1,113
   Foreign                     318                948             245
   State and other           2,480                  8          (1,183)
                            31,247              5,941             175
Deferred                    (5,596)               571           2,613
                           $25,651             $6,512          $2,788
</TABLE>

The following is a reconciliation between the statutory U.S. federal income
tax rate and the Company's effective income tax rate:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                             <C>              <C>              <C>
                                1999             1998             1997
Federal income tax rate        35.0%            35.0%            35.0%
State tax rate, net             1.3             (0.4)            (0.8)
Difference in U.S.
  statutory tax rate and
  Mexico's effective tax
  rate                         (8.1)           (23.1)           (27.8)
Other, net                        -                -                -
                               28.2%            11.5%             6.4%
</TABLE>



Deferred income taxes reflect the net effects of temporary differences
between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for financial
reporting purposes and the amounts used for income tax purposes.

Significant components of the Company's deferred tax liabilities and assets
are as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                          <C>                <C>
                                             1999               1998
Deferred tax liabilities:
   Tax over book depreciation             $24,345            $25,304
   Prior use of cash accounting            30,130             32,905
   Other                                    1,210              1,059
      Total deferred tax liabilities       55,685             59,268
Deferred tax assets:
   AMT credit carryforward                      -                234
   Expense deductible
      in different years                    9,889              7,643
      Total deferred tax asset              9,889              7,877
         Net deferred tax liabilities     $45,796            $51,391
</TABLE>

   The Company has not provided any U.S. deferred income taxes on the
undistributed earnings of its Mexico subsidiaries based upon its determination
that such earnings will be indefinitely reinvested.  As of October 2, 1999, the
cumulative undistributed earnings of these subsidiaries were approximately
$116.2 million.  If such earnings were not considered indefinitely reinvested,
deferred U.S. and foreign income taxes would have been provided after
consideration of estimated foreign tax credits.  However, determination of the
amount of deferred federal and foreign income taxes is not practical.

<PAGE>
Note E
Accounts Receivable:
   On June 26, 1998, the Company entered into an asset sale agreement to sell
up to $60 million of accounts receivable.  Under this agreement, the Company
sells on a revolving basis certain of its accounts receivable to a special
purpose corporation, which in turn may sell a percentage ownership interest in
the receivables to third parties.  As of October 2, 1999, no interest in sold
accounts receivable was outstanding and the entire facility was available for
sales of qualifying receivables.

Note F
Common Stock:
   The Company has two series of authorized common stock, Class A common stock
and Class B common stock.  The shares have substantially the same rights,
powers and limitations, except that each share of Class B common stock entitles
the holder thereof to 20 votes per share, except as otherwise provided by law,
on any matter submitted for a stockholder vote, while each share of Class A
common stock entitles the holder thereof to one vote per share on any such
matter.
   On July 2, 1999, the Company's board of directors declared a stock dividend
of the Company's Class A common stock.  Stockholders of record on July 20, 1999
received one share of the Company's Class A common stock for every two shares
of the Company's Class B common stock held as of that date.  The additional
shares were issued on July 30, 1999.  Historical per share and weighted average
shares outstanding amounts have been restated to give effect to the stock
dividend.

Note G
Savings Plan:
   The Company maintains a Section 401 (k) Salary Deferral Plan (the "Plan").
Under the Plan, eligible U.S. employees may voluntarily contribute a percentage
of their compensation.  The Plan provides for a contribution of up to four
percent of compensation subject to an overall Company contribution limit of
five percent of the U.S. operation's income before taxes.  Under this plan, the
Company's expenses were $4.6 million, $1.7 million and $1.2 million in 1999,
1998 and 1997, respectively.

Note H
Related Party Transactions:
   The major stockholder of the Company owns an egg laying and a chicken
growing operation.  Transactions with related entities are summarized as
follows:



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                             <C>              <C>              <C>
                                1999             1998             1997
Contract egg grower
   fees to major
   stockholder              $  4,501         $  4,989         $  4,926
Chick, feed and other
   sales to major
   stockholder                25,076           21,396           20,116
Live chicken purchases
   from major
   stockholder                26,899           21,883           20,442

</TABLE>

   The Company leases an airplane from its major stockholder under an operating
lease agreement.  The terms of the lease agreement require monthly payments of
$33,000 plus operating expenses.  Lease expense was $396,000 for each of the
years 1999, 1998 and 1997.  Operating expenses were $135,786, $52,950 and
$107,000 in 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.  As of October 2, 1999 the
Company had accounts receivable of $1.2 million from related parties, including
its major stockholder.

Note I
Commitments and Contingencies:
   The Consolidated Statements of Income include rental expense for operating
leases of approximately $17.3 million, $14.3 million and $11.3 million in 1999,
1998 and 1997, respectively.  The Company's future minimum lease commitments
under non-cancelable operating leases are as follows:  2000 -- $16.0 million;
2001 -- $15.3 million; 2002 -- $13.3 million; 2003 -- $10.8 million; 2004 --
$7.0 million and thereafter $11.7 million.
   At October 2, 1999, the Company had $5.2 million in letters of credit
outstanding relating to normal business transactions.
   The Company is subject to various legal proceedings and claims, which arise
in the ordinary course of its business.  In the opinion of management, the
amount of ultimate liability with respect to these actions will not materially
affect the financial position or results of operations of the Company.

Note J
Business Segments:
   The Company operates in a single business segment as a producer of
agricultural products and conducts separate operations in the United States and
Mexico.
   Inter-area sales, which are not material, are accounted for at prices
comparable to normal trade customer sales.  Identifiable assets by geographic
area are those assets which are used in the Company's operations in each area.
<PAGE>
Information about the Company's operations in these geographic areas is as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                      <C>  <C>       <C>  <C>      <C>  <C>
                                           1999           1998          1997
Sales to unaffiliated customers:
   United States                       $1,102,903     $1,053,458    $1,002,652
   Mexico                                 254,500        278,087       274,997
                                       $1,357,403     $1,331,545    $1,277,649
Operating income:
   United States                       $   88,177     $   36,279    $   29,321
   Mexico                                  21,327         40,977        34,573
                                       $  109,504     $   77,256    $   63,894
Long-lived assets:
   United States                       $  260,456     $  227,273    $  214,976
   Mexico                                 116,911        115,632       113,001
                                       $  377,367     $  342,905    $  327,977
</TABLE>
As of October 2, 1999, the Company had net assets in Mexico of $151.7 million.
During the year ended October 2, 1999, revenue from one customer represented
13.9% of Consolidated Net Sales.








Note K
Quarterly Results (Unaudited)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)             YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 2, 1999
                              FIRST     SECOND    THIRD    FOURTH     FISCAL
                            QUARTER(A)  QUARTER  QUARTER   QUARTER     YEAR
<S>                         <C>        <C>       <C>      <C>       <C>
Net sales                   $336,088   $329,894  $344,160 $347,261  $1,357,403
Gross profit                  43,901     46,262    49,415   46,130     185,708
Operating income              26,186     25,292    29,212   28,814     109,504
Net income                    15,920     14,580    18,317   16,436      65,253
Per Share: (b)
   Net income                    .39        .35       .44      .40        1.58
   Cash dividends                .01        .01       .01     .015        .045
   Market price:
    Class B common stock
     High                   16 11/16     15 7/8     20     16 5/16      20
     Low                     11 5/16     10 9/16     9 7/8  6 1/4        6 1/4
    Class A common stock
     High                        n/a         n/a       n/a 14 3/4       14 3/4
     Low                         n/a         n/a       n/a  4 5/8        4 5/8
</TABLE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)            YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 26, 1998
                          FIRST       SECOND      THIRD   FOURTH     FISCAL
                        QUARTER     QUARTER     QUARTER  QUARTER     YEAR
<S>                      <C>         <C>         <C>      <C>        <C>
Net sales               $337,887    $324,446    $328,500  $340,712  $1,331,545
Gross profit              29,380      26,861      32,736    47,126     136,103
Operating income          15,371      11,398      19,043    31,444      77,256
Net income                11,117       6,768      11,835    20,290      50,010
Per Share: (b)
   Net income                .27         .16         .29       .49        1.21
   Cash dividends            .01         .01         .01       .01         .04
   Market price:
   Class B common stock
     High                11 1/16     10 9/16      13 1/8   16 1/16     16 1/16
     Low                  8 1/2       7 3/16       9 3/16  12 3/16      7 3/16

(a) The first quarter of 1999 includes 14 weeks.
(b) Historical per share amounts have been restated to give effect to a stock
    dividend issued on July 30, 1999.  See Note F of the Consolidated
    Financial Statements of the Company.
</TABLE>
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
SCHEDULE II-VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS
<S>                  <C>          <C>  <C>   <C>    <C>   <C>    <C>  <C>   <C>
Col. A                 Col. B           Col. C            Col. D        Col. E
                                       ADDITIONS
                     Balance at
                     Beginning    Charged to Charged to   Deductions-  Balance
DESCRIPTION          of Period    Costs and    Other       Describe    at End
                                   Expenses   Accounts-              of Period
                                              Describe
<S>                   <C>  <C>    <C>  <C>    <C>   <C>   <C>    <C>  <C>  <C>
Year ended October 2, 1999:
 Reserves and allowances deducted
  From asset accounts:
   Allowance for doubtful
     accounts      $3,694,000    $1,122,000  $      --   $112,527(1) $4,703,483

Year ended September 26, 1998:
 Reserves and allowances deducted
  From asset accounts:
   Allowance for doubtful
     accounts      $3,823,000    $  409,000  $      --   $538,000(1) $3,694,000

Year ended September 27, 1997:
 Reserves and allowances deducted
  From asset accounts:
   Allowance for doubtful
     accounts      $3,985,000    $  (60,000) $      --   $102,000(1) $3,823,000

(1)  Uncollectable accounts written off, net of recoveries.
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                  EXHIBIT 12
                          PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION
               COMPUTATION OF RATIO OF EARNINGS TO FIXED CHARGES
                                            YEAR ENDED
<S>         <C>         <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
            OCTOBER 2,  SEPTEMBER 26, SEPTEMBER 27, SEPTEMBER 28, SEPTEMBER 30,
                1999          1998          1997          1996          1995

                                     (amounts in thousands)
<S>         <C>         <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
EARNINGS:

Income before income taxes
  and extraordinary
  charge      $90,904       $56,522        $43,824          $47         $2,091

Add: Total fixed charges
  (see below)  26,706        27,987         27,647       26,788         22,309

Less: Interest
  Capitalized   2,032         1,675            502         1,250           634

  Total
    Earnings $115,578       $82,834        $70,969       $25,585       $23,766

FIXED CHARGES:

Interest(1)   $20,889       $23,239        $23,889       $23,423       $19,076

Portion of rental expense
  representative of the
  Interest
    factor      5,817         4,748          3,758         3,365         3,233

Total fixed
  charges     $26,706       $27,987        $27,647       $26,788       $22,309

Ratio of earnings to fixed
  charges        4.33          2.96           2.57             -          1.07

Coverage
  deficiency        -             -              -        $1,203             -

(1) Interest includes amortization of capitalized financing fees.
</TABLE>

<PAGE>

                  EXHIBIT 22- SUBSIDIARIES OF REGISTRANT

1.  AVICOLA PILGRIM'S PRIDE DE MEXICO, S.A. DE C.V.
2.  COMPANIA INCUBADORA HIDALGO, S.A. DE C.V.
3.  INMOBILIARIA AVICOLA PILGRIM'S PRIDE, S. DE R.L. DE C.V.
4.  PILGRIM'S PRIDE, S.A. DE C.V.
5.  GALLINA PESADA S.A. DE C.V.
6.  PILGRIM'S PRIDE FUNDING CORPORATION
7.  PILGRIM'S PRIDE INTERNATIONAL, INC.
8.  PPC OF DELAWARE BUSINESS TRUST
9.  PPC MARKETING, LTD.
<PAGE>

                                EXHIBIT 23

                      CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

We consent to the incorporation by reference in the Registration Statements
(Form S-8 No. 3-12043 and Form S-3 No. 333-84861) of Pilgrim's Pride
Corporation, and in the related Prospectuses, of our report dated November
2, 1999, with respect to the consolidated financial statements and schedule
of Pilgrim's Pride Corporation included in this Annual Report (Form 10-K)
for the year ended October 2, 1999.

ERNST & YOUNG LLP


Dallas, Texas
November 24, 1999








<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 5
<MULTIPLIER> 1000

<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   YEAR
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-02-1999
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-02-1999
<CASH>                                           15703
<SECURITIES>                                         0
<RECEIVABLES>                                    90172
<ALLOWANCES>                                      5804
<INVENTORY>                                     168035
<CURRENT-ASSETS>                                278395
<PP&E>                                          622334
<DEPRECIATION>                                  258599
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                  655762
<CURRENT-LIABILITIES>                           124153
<BONDS>                                              0
                                0
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</TABLE>











           SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED SECURED CREDIT AGREEMENT


                                   Among


                        PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION


                                    And


                       HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK
                         INDIVIDUALLY AND AS AGENT


                                    AND


               The Lenders from time to time Parties Hereto
                                AS LENDERS


                       Dated as of November 5, 1999




<PAGE>
                             TABLE OF CONTENTS
                        Pilgrim's Pride Corporation
           SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED SECURED CREDIT AGREEMENT



    SECTION 1.1.  THE REVOLVING CREDIT
    Section 1.2.  The Notes
    SECTION 1.3.  INTEREST RATES
    Section 1.4.  Conversion and Continuation of Revolving Credit
                  Loans
    SECTION 1.5.  LETTERS OF CREDIT
    Section 1.6.  Reimbursement Obligation
    SECTION 1.7.  MANNER OF BORROWING AND RATE SELECTION
    Section 1.8.  Participation in L/Cs
    SECTION 1.9.  CAPITAL ADEQUACY
    Section 1.10. The Bond Letter of Credit
    SECTION 1.11. BOND REIMBURSEMENT OBLIGATION
    Section 1.12. Participation in the Bond L/C
    SECTION 1.13. REDUCTIONS AND REINSTATEMENTS
    Section 1.14. Liability of Harris
    SECTION 1.15. RELIANCE BY HARRIS
    Section 1.16. Notice of Default
    SECTION 1.17. INDEMNIFICATION
    Section 1.18. Documents and Reports
    SECTION 1.19. AMENDMENTS

Section 2.     The Competitive Bid Facility

    SECTION 2.1.  AMOUNT AND TERM
    Section 2.2.  Competitive Bid Requests
    SECTION 2.3.  SUBMISSION OF COMPETITIVE BIDS
    Section 2.4.  Notice of Bids
    SECTION 2.5.  ACCEPTANCE OR REJECTION OF BIDS
    Section 2.6.  Notice of Acceptance or Rejection of Bid
    SECTION 2.7.  RESTRICTIONS ON BID LOANS
    Section 2.8.  Minimum Amount
    SECTION 2.9.  THE NOTES
    Section 2.10. Term of and Interest on Bid Loans
    SECTION 2.11. DISBURSEMENT OF BID LOANS
    Section 2.12. Reliance on Telephonic Notices; Indemnity
    SECTION 2.13. TELEPHONIC NOTICE

Section 3.     Fees, Prepayments, Terminations and Place and
               Application of Payments.

    SECTION 3.1.  FACILITY FEE
    Section 3.2.  Agent's Fee
    SECTION 3.3.  OPTIONAL PREPAYMENTS
    Section 3.4.  Mandatory Prepayments - Borrowing Base
    SECTION 3.5.  PLACE AND APPLICATION OF PAYMENTS

Section 4.     Definitions

    SECTION 4.1.  CERTAIN TERMS DEFINED
    Section 4.2.  Accounting Terms

SECTION 5.     REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES.

    Section 5.1.  Organization and Qualification
    SECTION 5.2.  SUBSIDIARIES
    Section 5.3.  Financial Reports
    SECTION 5.4.  LITIGATION; TAX RETURNS; APPROVALS
    Section 5.5.  Regulation U
    SECTION 5.6.  NO DEFAULT
    Section 5.7.  ERISA
    SECTION 5.8.  SECURITY INTERESTS AND DEBT
    Section 5.9.  Accurate Information
    SECTION 5.10. ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS
    Section 5.11. Enforceability
    SECTION 5.12. RESTRICTIVE AGREEMENTS
    Section 5.13. Labor Disputes
    SECTION 5.14. NO VIOLATION OF LAW
    Section 5.15. No Default Under Other Agreements
    SECTION 5.16. STATUS UNDER CERTAIN LAWS
    Section 5.17. Federal Food Security Act
    SECTION 5.18. FAIR LABOR STANDARDS ACT
    Section 5.19. Organization and Qualification of the Guarantor

SECTION 6.     CONDITIONS PRECEDENT

    Section 6.1.  General
    SECTION 6.2.  EACH EXTENSION OF CREDIT

Section 7.     Covenants

    SECTION 7.1.  MAINTENANCE
    Section 7.2.  Taxes
    SECTION 7.3.  MAINTENANCE OF INSURANCE
    Section 7.4.  Financial Reports
    SECTION 7.5.  INSPECTION AND REVIEWS
    Section 7.6.  Consolidation and Merger
    SECTION 7.7.  TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES
    Section 7.8.  Leverage Ratio
    SECTION 7.9.  TANGIBLE NET WORTH
    Section 7.10. Current Ratio
    SECTION 7.11. NET TANGIBLE ASSETS TO TOTAL LIABILITIES
    Section 7.12. Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio
    SECTION 7.13. MINIMUM NET WORKING CAPITAL
    Section 7.14. Intentionally Omitted
    SECTION 7.15. DIVIDENDS AND CERTAIN OTHER RESTRICTED PAYMENTS
    Section 7.16. Liens
    SECTION 7.17. BORROWINGS AND GUARANTIES
    Section 7.18. Investments, Loans and Advances
    SECTION 7.19. SALE OF PROPERTY
    Section 7.20. Notice of Suit, Adverse Change in Business or
                  Default
    SECTION 7.21. ERISA
    Section 7.22. Use of Loan Proceeds
    SECTION 7.23. CONDUCT OF BUSINESS AND MAINTENANCE OF EXISTENCE
    Section 7.24. Additional Information
    SECTION 7.25. SUPPLEMENTAL PERFORMANCE
    Section 7.26. Intentionally Omitted
    SECTION 7.27. COMPLIANCE WITH LAWS, ETC.
    Section 7.28. Environmental Covenant
    SECTION 7.29. NEW SUBSIDIARIES
    Section 7.30. Guaranty Fees
    SECTION 7.31. KEY MAN LIFE INSURANCE
    Section 7.32. Sale and Leasebacks

SECTION 8.     EVENTS OF DEFAULT AND REMEDIES.

    Section 8.1.  Definitions
    SECTION 8.2.  REMEDIES FOR NON-BANKRUPTCY DEFAULTS
    Section 8.3.  Remedies for Bankruptcy Defaults
    SECTION 8.4.  L/CS
    Section 8.5.  Remedies under the Bond Documents

SECTION  9.     CHANGE IN CIRCUMSTANCES REGARDING FIXED RATE LOANS

    Section 9.1.  Change of Law
    SECTION 9.2.  UNAVAILABILITY OF DEPOSITS OR INABILITY TO
                  ASCERTAIN THE ADJUSTED EURODOLLAR RATE OR
                  ADJUSTED CD RATE
    Section 9.3.  Taxes and Increased Costs
    SECTION 9.4.  FUNDING INDEMNITY
    Section 9.5.  Lending Branch
    SECTION 9.6.  DISCRETION OF BANK AS TO MANNER OF FUNDING

Section 10.    The Agent

    SECTION 10.1. APPOINTMENT AND POWERS
    Section 10.2. Powers
    SECTION 10.3. GENERAL IMMUNITY
    Section 10.4. No Responsibility for Loans, Recitals, etc
    SECTION 10.5. RIGHT TO INDEMNITY
    Section 10.6. Action Upon Instructions of Banks.
    SECTION 10.7. EMPLOYMENT OF AGENTS AND COUNSEL
    Section 10.8. Reliance on Documents; Counsel
    SECTION 10.9. MAY TREAT PAYEE AS OWNER
    Section 10.10. Agent's Reimbursement
    SECTION 10.11. RIGHTS AS A LENDER
    Section 10.12. Bank Credit Decision
    SECTION 10.13. RESIGNATION OF AGENT
    Section 10.14. Duration of Agency

SECTION 11.    MISCELLANEOUS.

    Section 11.1. Amendments and Waivers
    SECTION 11.2. WAIVER OF RIGHTS
    Section 11.3. Several Obligations
    SECTION 11.4. NON-BUSINESS DAY
    Section 11.5. Survival of Indemnities
    SECTION 11.6. DOCUMENTARY TAXES
    Section 11.7. Representations
    SECTION 11.8. NOTICES
    Section 11.9. Costs and Expenses; Indemnity
    SECTION 11.10. COUNTERPARTS
    Section 11.11. Successors and Assigns
    SECTION 11.12. NO JOINT VENTURE
    Section 11.13. Severability
    SECTION 11.14. TABLE OF CONTENTS AND HEADINGS
    Section 11.15. Participants
    SECTION 11.16. ASSIGNMENT OF COMMITMENTS BY BANK
    Section 11.17. Sharing of Payments
    SECTION 11.18. JURISDICTION; VENUE
    Section 11.19. Lawful Rate
    SECTION 11.20. GOVERNING LAW
    Section 11.21. Limitation of Liability
    SECTION 11.22. NONLIABILITY OF LENDERS
    Section 11.23. No Oral Agreements.

SIGNATURE PAGE

<PAGE>
     Exhibit A Secured Revolving Credit Note
     Exhibit B Application and Agreement for Letter of Credit
     Exhibit C Environmental Disclosure
     Exhibit D Permitted Liens
     Exhibit E Form of Legal Opinion
     Exhibit F Compliance Certificate
     Exhibit G Borrowing Base Certificate
     Exhibit H Subsidiaries
     Exhibit I Intentionally Omitted
     Exhibit J Labor Disputes
     Exhibit K Existing Investments
     Exhibit L Competitive Bid Request Confirmation
     Exhibit M Confirmation of Notice of Competitive Bid Request
     Exhibit N Confirmation of Competitive Bid
<PAGE>
                        Pilgrim's Pride Corporation


                        SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED
                         Secured Credit Agreement


Harris Trust and Savings Bank
Chicago, Illinois

The lenders from time to time
parties hereto


Ladies and Gentlemen:

     The  undersigned,  PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation
(the  "COMPANY"),  refers  to  the  Amended  and  Restated  Secured  Credit
Agreement dated as of August  11,  1997, as amended and currently in effect
between the Company and you (such Secured Credit Agreement as so amended is
hereinafter referred to as the "CREDIT  AGREEMENT")  pursuant  to which you
agreed to make a revolving credit (the "REVOLVING CREDIT") available to the
Company,  all  as more fully set forth therein.  Each of you is hereinafter
referred to individually  as  "BANK"  and  collectively as "BANKS."  Harris
Trust and Savings Bank in its individual capacity  is sometimes referred to
herein  as  "HARRIS",  and  in  its  capacity  as Agent for  the  Banks  is
hereinafter in such capacity called the "AGENT."   The Company requests you
to  make certain further amendments to the Credit Agreement  and,  for  the
sake  of  convenience  and  clarity, to restate the Credit Agreement in its
entirety as so amended.  Accordingly,  upon  your  acceptance hereof in the
space  provided  for  that  purpose  below  and  upon satisfaction  of  the
conditions  precedent to effectiveness hereinafter  set  forth,  Section  1
through 11 of  the  Credit Agreement and Exhibits A through N thereto shall
be amended and as so amended shall be restated in their entirety to read as
follows:

SECTION 1.  THE REVOLVING CREDIT.

SECTION 1.1.  THE REVOLVING  CREDIT.   (a)  Subject to all of the terms and
conditions hereof, the Banks agree, severally  and not jointly, to extend a
Revolving Credit to the Company which may be utilized by the Company in the
form of loans (individually a "REVOLVING CREDIT  LOAN" and collectively the
"REVOLVING  CREDIT  LOANS"),  and  L/Cs  (as  hereinafter   defined).   The
aggregate  principal  amount  of  all  Revolving  Credit  Loans  under  the
Revolving  Credit  plus  the  aggregate  principal  amount of all Bid Loans
outstanding  under  this  Agreement plus the amount available  for  drawing
under  all  L/Cs  and  the  aggregate   principal   amount  of  all  unpaid
Reimbursement Obligations (as hereinafter defined) at  any time outstanding
shall not exceed the lesser of (i) the sum of the Banks'  Revolving  Credit
Commitments (as hereinafter defined) in effect from time to time during the
term of this Agreement (as hereinafter defined) or (ii) the Borrowing  Base
as  determined  on the basis of the most recent Borrowing Base Certificate.
The Revolving Credit  shall be available to the Company, and may be availed
of by the Company from time to time, be repaid (subject to the restrictions
on prepayment set forth  herein) and used again, during the period from the
date hereof to and including May 31, 2004 (the "TERMINATION DATE").

    (b)  At any time not earlier  than 120 days prior to, nor later than 60
days prior to, the date that is two  years before the Termination Date then
in effect (the "ANNIVERSARY DATE"), the  Company may request that the Banks
extend the then scheduled Termination Date  to  the date one year from such
Termination Date.  If such request is made by the  Company  each Bank shall
inform the Agent of its willingness to extend the Termination Date no later
than 20 days prior to such Anniversary Date.  Any Bank's failure to respond
by  such  date shall indicate its unwillingness to agree to such  requested
extension, and all Banks must approve any requested extension.  At any time
more than 15  days  before  such Anniversary Date the Banks may propose, by
written notice to the Company, an extension of this Agreement to such later
date on such terms and conditions  as  the  Banks may then require.  If the
extension of this Agreement to such later date is acceptable to the Company
on the terms and conditions proposed by the Banks, the Company shall notify
the Banks of its acceptance of such terms and  conditions no later than the
Anniversary  Date,  and such later date will become  the  Termination  Date
hereunder and this Agreement  shall  otherwise  be  amended  in  the manner
described  in  the  Banks' notice proposing the extension of this Agreement
upon the Agent's receipt  of  (i)  an amendment to this Agreement signed by
the Company and all of the Banks, (ii)  resolutions  of the Company's Board
of Directors authorizing such extension and (iii) an opinion  of counsel to
the  Company  equivalent  in  form  and  substance  to  the form of opinion
attached hereto as Exhibit E and otherwise acceptable to the Banks.

    (c)  The  respective  maximum  aggregate  principal  amounts   of   the
Revolving  Credit  at  any  one  time outstanding and the percentage of the
Revolving Credit available at any  time  which  each Bank by its acceptance
hereof severally agrees to make available to the  Company  are  as  follows
(collectively,  the  "REVOLVING  CREDIT  COMMITMENTS"  and  individually, a
"REVOLVING CREDIT COMMITMENT"):

   Harris Trust and Savings Bank $14,285,714 28.57144%
   U.S. Bancorp Ag Credit, Inc. $10,714,286 21.42857%
   CoBank, ACB $10,714,286 21.42857%
   SunTrust Bank, Atlanta $7,142,857 14.28571%
   Credit Agricole Indosuez, Chicago Branch $7,142,857 14.28571%
   Total $50,000,000 100%

Each Bank's Revolving Credit Commitment shall be reduced from  time to time
by the aggregate outstanding principal amount of all Bid Loans made by such
Bank,  and  shall be increased (but in no event above the amount set  forth
above for each  Bank)  by  the aggregate principal amount of each principal
repayment of such Bid Loans made from time to time.

    (d)  Loans under the Revolving  Credit may be Eurodollar Loans, CD Rate
Loans or Domestic Rate Loans.  All Loans  under  the Revolving Credit shall
be  made  from each Bank in proportion to its respective  Revolving  Credit
Commitment  as  above  set  forth, as adjusted from time to time to reflect
outstanding Bid Loans.  Each  Domestic  Rate Loan shall be in an amount not
less than $3,000,000 or such greater amount  which  is an integral multiple
of $500,000 and each Fixed Rate Loan shall be in an amount  not  less  than
$3,000,000  or  such  greater  amount  which  is  an  integral  multiple of
$1,000,000.

SECTION 1.2.  THE  NOTES.   All  Revolving  Credit Loans made by each  Bank
hereunder shall be evidenced by a single Secured  Revolving  Credit Note of
the Company substantially in the form of Exhibit A hereto (individually,  a
"REVOLVING  NOTE" and together, the "REVOLVING NOTES") payable to the order
of each Bank.   The aggregate principal amount of indebtedness evidenced by
such Revolving Note  at any time shall be, and the same is to be determined
by, the aggregate principal  amount  of  all Revolving Credit Loans and Bid
Loans made by such Bank to the Company pursuant  hereto  on or prior to the
date of determination less the aggregate amount of principal  repayments on
such Revolving Credit Loans and Bid Loans received by or on behalf  of such
Bank on or prior to such date of determination.  Each Revolving Note  shall
be dated as of the execution date of this Agreement, and shall be expressed
to  mature  on  the  Termination  Date  and to bear interest as provided in
Section 1.3 hereof.  Each Bank shall record on its books or records or on a
schedule to its Revolving Note the amount of each Revolving Credit Loan and
Bid Loan made by it hereunder, whether each  Revolving  Credit  Loan  is  a
Domestic  Rate  Loan, CD Rate Loan or Eurodollar Loan, and, with respect to
Fixed Rate Loans  and  Bid  Loans,  the  interest  rate and Interest Period
applicable  thereto,  and all payments of principal and  interest  and  the
principal balance from time to time outstanding, provided that prior to any
transfer of such Revolving  Note  all  such  amounts shall be recorded on a
schedule to such Revolving Note.  The record thereof, whether shown on such
books or records or on the schedule to the Revolving  Note,  shall be PRIMA
FACIE evidence as to all such amounts; provided, however, that  the failure
of  any  Bank  to  record  or any mistake in recording any of the foregoing
shall not limit or otherwise  affect the obligation of the Company to repay
all Revolving Credit Loans and  Bid  Loans  made  hereunder  together  with
accrued  interest  thereon.  Upon the request of any Bank, the Company will
furnish a new Revolving  Note  to  such  Bank  to  replace  its outstanding
Revolving  Note  and  at  such  time  the first notation appearing  on  the
schedule on the reverse side of, or attached  to, such Revolving Note shall
set forth the aggregate unpaid principal amount  of  Revolving Credit Loans
and Bid Loans then outstanding from such Bank, and, with  respect  to  each
Fixed  Rate Loan, the interest rate and Interest Period applicable thereto.
Such Bank  will  cancel  the outstanding Revolving Note upon receipt of the
new Revolving Note.

SECTION 1.3.  INTEREST RATES.  (a) DOMESTIC RATE LOANS.  Each Domestic Rate
Loan shall bear interest (computed  on  the basis of a year of 360 days and
actual days elapsed) on the unpaid principal  amount  thereof from the date
such Loan is made until maturity (whether by acceleration,  upon prepayment
or  otherwise) at a rate per annum equal to the lesser of (i)  the  Highest
Lawful  Rate  and  (ii)  the sum of the Applicable Margin plus the Domestic
Rate from time to time in  effect, payable quarterly in arrears on the last
day  of each calendar quarter,  commencing  on  the  first  of  such  dates
occurring  after  the date hereof and at maturity (whether by acceleration,
upon prepayment or otherwise).

    (b)  EURODOLLAR LOANS.  Each Eurodollar Loan under the Revolving Credit
shall bear interest (computed on the basis of a year of 360 days and actual
days elapsed) on the  unpaid  principal  amount  thereof from the date such
Loan is made until the last day of the Interest Period  applicable  thereto
or, if earlier, until maturity (whether by acceleration or otherwise)  at a
rate  per annum equal to the lesser of (i) the Highest Lawful Rate and (ii)
the sum of the Applicable Margin plus the Adjusted Eurodollar Rate, payable
on the  last day of each Interest Period applicable thereto and at maturity
(whether  by  acceleration  or  otherwise)  and, with respect to Eurodollar
Loans  with  an  Interest Period in excess of three  months,  on  the  date
occurring every three  months  from  the  first  day of the Interest Period
applicable thereto.

    (c)  CD RATE LOANS.  Each CD Rate Loan under the Revolving Credit shall
bear interest (computed on the basis of a year of  360 days and actual days
elapsed) on the unpaid principal amount thereof from  the date such Loan is
made until the last day of the Interest Period applicable  thereto  or,  if
earlier,  until  maturity  (whether by acceleration or otherwise) at a rate
per annum equal to the lesser  of  (i) the Highest Lawful Rate and (ii) the
sum of the Applicable Margin plus the Adjusted CD Rate, payable on the last
day of each Interest Period applicable  thereto and at maturity (whether by
acceleration of otherwise) and, with respect  to  CD  Rate  Loans  with  an
Interest  Period  in excess of 90 days, on the date occurring every 90 days
from the first day of the Interest Period applicable thereto.

    (d)  DEFAULT RATE.   During  the  existence  of an Event of Default all
Loans and Reimbursement Obligations shall bear interest  (computed  on  the
basis  of a year of 360 days and actual days elapsed) from the date of such
Event of Default until paid in full, payable on demand, at a rate per annum
equal to the sum of 2.5% plus the Domestic Rate from time to time in effect
plus the Applicable Margin.

SECTION 1.4.  CONVERSION   AND  CONTINUATION  OF  REVOLVING  CREDIT  LOANS.
(a) Provided that no Event of Default or Potential Default has occurred and
is continuing, the Company shall have the right, subject to the other terms
and conditions of this Agreement,  to continue in whole or in part (but, if
in  part,  in  the  minimum  amount  specified  for  Fixed  Rate  Loans  in
Section 1.1 hereof) any Fixed Rate Loan  made  under  the  Revolving Credit
from  any  current  Interest  Period  into  a  subsequent Interest  Period,
provided that the Company shall give the Agent notice  of  the continuation
of any such Loan as provided in Section 1.7 hereof.

    (b)  In  the  event that the Company fails to give notice  pursuant  to
Section 1.7 hereof  of  the  continuation  of any Fixed Rate Loan under the
Revolving  Credit  or  fails  to  specify  the Interest  Period  applicable
thereto, or an Event of Default or Potential  Default  has  occurred and is
continuing  at  the  time any such Loan is to be continued hereunder,  then
such Loan shall be automatically  converted  as  (and  the Company shall be
deemed to have given notice requesting) a Domestic Rate  Loan,  subject  to
Sections 1.7(b), 8.2 and 8.3 hereof, unless paid in full on the last day of
the then applicable Interest Period.

    (c)  Provided  that  no  Event  of  Default  or  Potential  Default has
occurred  and  is continuing, the Company shall have the right, subject  to
the terms and conditions  of  this  Agreement,  to convert Revolving Credit
Loans  of  one type (in whole or in part) into Revolving  Credit  Loans  of
another type  from  time to time provided that:  (i) the Company shall give
the Agent notice of each such conversion as provided in Section 1.7 hereof,
(ii) the principal amount  of any Revolving Credit Loan converted hereunder
shall be in an amount not less  than  the  minimum amount specified for the
type of Revolving Credit Loan in Section 1.1  hereof,  (iii)  after  giving
effect  to  any  such conversion in part, the principal amount of any Fixed
Rate Loan under the  Revolving  Credit  then  outstanding shall not be less
than  the minimum amount specified for the type  of  Loan  in  Section  1.1
hereof, (iv) any conversion of a Revolving Credit Loan hereunder shall only
be made on a Banking Day, and (v) any Fixed Rate Loan may be converted only
on the last day of the Interest Period then applicable thereto.

SECTION 1.5.  LETTERS  OF  CREDIT.  Subject to all the terms and conditions
hereof, satisfaction of all  conditions  precedent  to borrowing under this
Agreement and so long as no Potential Default or Event  of  Default  is  in
existence,  at  the  Company's  request  Harris may in its discretion issue
letters of credit (an "L/C" and collectively the "L/Cs") for the account of
the Company subject to availability under  the  Revolving  Credit,  and the
Banks  hereby  agree  to  participate  therein  as  more fully described in
Section 1.8 hereof.  Each L/C shall be issued pursuant  to  an  Application
for Letter of Credit (the "L/C Agreement") in the form of Exhibit B hereto.
The  L/Cs  shall consist of standby letters of credit in an aggregate  face
amount not to  exceed  $20,000,000.  Each L/C shall have an expiry date not
more than one year from the date of issuance thereof (but in no event later
than the Termination Date).   The  amount  available to be drawn under each
L/C  issued pursuant hereto shall be deducted  from  the  credit  otherwise
available  under the Revolving Credit.  In consideration of the issuance of
L/Cs the Company  agrees  to pay Harris a fee (the "L/C FEE") in the amount
per annum equal to (a) 1.0%  of the face amount of each Performance L/C and
(b)  the Applicable Margin for  Eurodollar  Loans  MINUS  one-half  of  one
percent  of the stated amount of each Financial Guarantee L/C (in each case
computed on  the  basis  of  a 360 day year and actual days elapsed) of the
face amount for any L/C issued  hereunder.   In  addition the Company shall
pay Harris for its own account an issuance fee (the  "L/C ISSUANCE FEE") in
an amount equal to one-eighth of one percent (0.125%)  of the stated amount
of  each  L/C  issued by Harris hereunder.  All L/C Fees shall  be  payable
quarterly in arrears  on  the  last day of each calendar quarter and on the
Termination Date, and all L/C Issuance Fees shall be payable on the date of
issuance of each L/C hereunder and  on  the date of each extension, if any,
of the expiry date of each L/C.

SECTION 1.6.  REIMBURSEMENT OBLIGATION.   The  Company  is  obligated,  and
hereby unconditionally agrees, to pay in immediately available funds to the
Agent for the account of Harris and the Banks who are participating in L/Cs
pursuant  to  Section  1.8  hereof  the face amount of each draft drawn and
presented under an L/C issued by Harris hereunder not later than 11:00 a.m.
(Chicago Time) on the date such draft  is  presented  for payment to Harris
(the obligation of the Company under this Section 1.7 with  respect  to any
L/C is a "REIMBURSEMENT OBLIGATION").  If at any time the Company fails  to
pay  any  Reimbursement Obligation when due, the Company shall be deemed to
have automatically requested a Domestic Rate Loan from the Banks hereunder,
as of the maturity  date  of such Reimbursement Obligation, the proceeds of
which Loan shall be used to  repay such Reimbursement Obligation. Such Loan
shall only be made if no Potential  Default or Event of Default shall exist
and upon approval by all of the Banks, and shall be subject to availability
under the Revolving Credit.  If such  Loan is not made by the Banks for any
reason, the unpaid amount of such Reimbursement Obligation shall be due and
payable to the Agent for the pro rata benefit  of the Banks upon demand and
shall  bear interest at the rate of interest specified  in  Section  1.3(d)
hereof.

SECTION 1.7.  MANNER  OF  BORROWING  AND  RATE  SELECTION.  (a) The Company
shall give telephonic, telex or telecopy notice to the Agent (which notice,
if telephonic, shall be promptly confirmed in writing)  no  later  than (i)
11:00 a.m. (Chicago time) on the date the Banks are requested to make  each
Domestic  Rate  Loan,  (ii)  11:00 a.m. (Chicago time) on the date at least
three (3) Banking Days prior to  the date of (A) each Eurodollar Loan which
the Banks are requested to make or  continue, and (B) the conversion of any
CD Rate Loan or Domestic Rate Loan into  a  Eurodollar Loan and (iii) 11:00
a.m. (Chicago time) on the date at least one  (1) Business Day prior to the
date of (A) each CD Rate Loan which the Banks are requested to make and (B)
the conversion of any Eurodollar Loan or Domestic  Rate Loan into a CD Rate
Loan.  Each such notice shall specify the date of the Revolving Credit Loan
requested (which shall be a Business Day in the case of Domestic Rate Loans
and CD Rate Loans and a Banking Day in the case of a  Eurodollar Loan), the
amount of such Revolving Credit Loan, whether the Revolving  Credit Loan is
to  be  made  available by means of a Domestic Rate Loan, CD Rate  Loan  or
Eurodollar Loan  and, with respect to Fixed Rate Loans, the Interest Period
applicable thereto;  provided,  that in no event shall the principal amount
of any requested Revolving Credit Loan plus the aggregate principal or face
amount, as appropriate, of all Revolving  Credit  Loans,  L/Cs,  and unpaid
Reimbursement   Obligations   outstanding   hereunder  exceed  the  amounts
specified in Section 1.1 hereof.  The Company  agrees  that  the  Agent may
rely  on any such telephonic, telex or telecopy notice given by any  person
who the  Agent  believes  is  authorized  to  give  such notice without the
necessity of independent investigation and in the event  any notice by such
means conflicts with the written confirmation, such notice  shall govern if
any  Bank  has acted in reliance thereon.  The Agent shall, no  later  than
12:30 p.m. (Chicago  time)  on  the  day any such notice is received by it,
give  telephonic, telex or telecopy (if  telephonic,  to  be  confirmed  in
writing  within  one Business Day) notice of the receipt of notice from the
Company hereunder  to  each  of the Banks, and, if such notice requests the
Banks to make, continue or convert  any  Fixed  Rate Loans, the Agent shall
confirm  to  the  Company  by  telephonic, telex or telecopy  means,  which
confirmation shall be conclusive  and binding on the Company in the absence
of manifest error, the Interest Period  and  the  interest  rate applicable
thereto promptly after such rate is determined by the Agent.

    (b)  Subject  to  the  provisions of Section 6 hereof, the proceeds  of
each Revolving Credit Loan shall  be  made  available to the Company at the
principal  office  of  the  Agent  in  Chicago,  Illinois,  in  immediately
available funds, on the date such Revolving Credit  Loan is requested to be
made, except to the extent such Revolving Credit Loan  represents  (i)  the
conversion of an existing Revolving Credit Loan or (ii) a refinancing of  a
Reimbursement  Obligation,  in  which  case  each  Bank  shall  record such
conversion  on  the schedule to its Revolving Note, or in lieu thereof,  on
its books and records,  and shall effect such conversion or refinancing, as
the case may be, on behalf of the Company in accordance with the provisions
of Section 1.4(a) hereof  and  1.8  hereof,  respectively.   Not later than
2:00 p.m. Chicago time, on the date specified for any Revolving Credit Loan
to  be  made hereunder, each Bank shall make its portion of such  Revolving
Credit Loan  available to the Company in immediately available funds at the
principal office  of the Agent, except (i) as otherwise provided above with
respect to converting  or continuing any outstanding Revolving Credit Loans
and (ii) to the extent such  Revolving Credit Loan represents a refinancing
of any outstanding Reimbursement Obligations.

    (c)  Unless the Agent shall  have  been  notified  by  a  Bank prior to
1:00 p.m. (Chicago time) on the date a Revolving Credit Loan is  to be made
by such Bank (which notice shall be effective upon receipt) that such  Bank
does  not  intend  to  make  the  proceeds  of  such  Revolving Credit Loan
available to the Agent, the Agent may assume that such  Bank  has made such
proceeds available to the Agent on such date and the Agent may  in reliance
upon such assumption (but shall not be required to) make available  to  the
Company  a  corresponding  amount.   If such corresponding amount is not in
fact made available to the Agent by such  Bank, the Agent shall be entitled
to receive such amount on demand from such  Bank (or, if such Bank fails to
pay  such  amount  forthwith  upon  such demand, to  recover  such  amount,
together with interest thereon at the  rate  otherwise  applicable  thereto
under  Section 1.3 hereof, from the Company) together with interest thereon
in respect of each day during the period commencing on the date such amount
was made available to the Company and ending on the date the Agent recovers
such amount, at a rate per annum equal to the effective rate charged to the
Agent for  overnight  Federal  funds  transactions with member banks of the
Federal Reserve System for each day, as determined by the Agent (or, in the
case of a day which is not a Business Day,  then for the preceding Business
Day)  (the  "FED FUNDS RATE").  Nothing in this  Section  1.7(c)  shall  be
deemed to permit any Bank to breach its obligations to make Loans under the
Revolving Credit or to limit the Company's claims against any Bank for such
breach.

SECTION 1.8.  PARTICIPATION IN L/Cs.  Each of the Banks will acquire a risk
participation for its own account, without recourse to or representation or
warranty from  Harris,  in  each  L/C  upon the issuance thereof ratably in
accordance with its Commitment Percentage.   In the event any Reimbursement
Obligation is not immediately paid by the Company  pursuant  to Section 1.6
hereof,  each  Bank  will  pay to Harris funds in an amount equal  to  such
Bank's ratable share of the  unpaid amount of such Reimbursement Obligation
(based upon its proportionate  share  relative  to  its  percentage  of the
Revolving Credit (as set forth in Section 1.1 hereof)).  At the election of
all  of  the  Banks,  such funding by the Banks of the unpaid Reimbursement
Obligations shall be treated  as  additional  Revolving Credit Loans to the
Company hereunder rather than a purchase of participations  by the Banks in
the related L/Cs held by Harris.  The availability of funds to  the Company
under the Revolving Credit shall be reduced in an amount equal to  any such
L/C.  The obligation of the Banks to Harris under this Section 1.8 shall be
absolute  and  unconditional  and shall not be affected or impaired by  any
Event  of  Default  or  Potential Default  which  may  then  be  continuing
hereunder.  Harris shall notify each Bank by telephone of its proportionate
share relative to its percentage  of  the  total  Banks'  Revolving  Credit
Commitments set forth in Section 1.1 hereof (a "COMMITMENT PERCENTAGE")  of
such  unpaid  Reimbursement  Obligation.   If such notice has been given to
each Bank by 12:00 Noon, Chicago time, each  Bank  agrees  to pay Harris in
immediately  available  and freely transferable funds on the same  Business
Day.  If such notice is received  after 12:00 noon, Chicago time, each Bank
agrees to pay Harris in immediately available and freely transferable funds
no later than the following Business Day.  Funds shall be so made available
at the account designated by Harris  in such notice to the Banks.  Upon the
election by the Banks to treat such funding  as additional Revolving Credit
Loans hereunder and payment by each Bank, such Loans shall bear interest in
accordance with Section 1.3(a) hereof.  Harris  shall  share with each Bank
on a pro rata basis relative to its Commitment Percentage a portion of each
payment  of a Reimbursement Obligation (whether of principal  or  interest)
and any L/C Fee (but not any L/C Issuance Fee) payable by the Company.  Any
such amount shall be promptly remitted to the Banks when and as received by
Harris from the Company.

SECTION 1.9.  CAPITAL ADEQUACY.  If, after the date hereof, any Bank or the
Agent shall  have  determined  in  good  faith  that  the  adoption  of any
applicable  law,  rule  or  regulation  regarding  capital adequacy, or any
change therein (including, without limitation, any revision  in  the  Final
Risk-Based  Capital  Guidelines  of  the  Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (12 CFR Part 208, Appendix A;  12  CFR Part 225, Appendix A)
or  of  the  Office  of the Comptroller of the Currency  (12  CFR  Part  3,
Appendix A), or in any  other  applicable  capital rules heretofore adopted
and  issued  by  any  governmental  authority),  or   any   change  in  the
interpretation  or  administration  thereof by any governmental  authority,
central  bank  or  comparable agency charged  with  the  interpretation  or
administration thereof,  or  compliance by any Bank (or its Lending Office)
with any request or directive  regarding  capital  adequacy (whether or not
having the force of law) of any such authority, central  bank or comparable
agency, has or would have the effect of reducing the rate of return on such
Bank's capital, or on the capital of any corporation controlling such Bank,
in each case as a consequence of its obligations hereunder to a level below
that which such Bank would have achieved but for such adoption,  change  or
compliance  (taking into consideration such Bank's policies with respect to
capital adequacy)  by  an  amount  reasonably  deemed  by  such  Bank to be
material, then from time to time, within fifteen (15) days after demand  by
such  Bank  (with  a copy to the Agent), the Company shall pay to such Bank
such additional amount  or  amounts  as  will compensate such Bank for such
reduction.

SECTION 1.10. THE  BOND LETTER OF CREDIT. Subject  to  all  the  terms  and
conditions hereof, Harris has issued a standby letter of credit (as amended
(including any amendments  increasing  the  amount  thereof) and reinstated
from time to time, the "BOND L/C") in an original stated  amount  of  up to
$25,239,727.00  (the "BOND L/C COMMITMENT") for the account of the Company.
The Bond L/C Commitment  shall  be separate and apart from, and in addition
to, the Revolving Credit Commitments.   The Bond L/C was issued pursuant to
a Reimbursement Agreement (the "REIMBURSEMENT  AGREEMENT" ) for the purpose
of supporting the Company's obligations relating  to  the  Bonds.  The Bond
L/C shall have an expiry date not later than the Termination  Date, subject
to extension as provided in the Reimbursement Agreement.  Nothing contained
in this Agreement shall be deemed to require the Company to cause the Bonds
to  be issued, it being agreed that the issuance of Bonds shall  be  within
the Company's  sole  discretion.   The Company shall pay Harris for its own
account an annual issuance fee (the  "BOND  L/C ISSUANCE FEE") in an amount
equal to one-eighth of one percent (0.125%) of  the  stated  amount  of the
Bond L/C, payable on the date the Bond L/C is issued by Harris and on  each
annual anniversary thereof.

SECTION 1.11. BOND  REIMBURSEMENT  OBLIGATION.   The  Company  will  pay in
immediately available funds to Harris the amount of each demand for payment
made  under  the Bond L/C immediately upon payment by Harris of each amount
so demanded and  on the date of each such payment by Harris (the obligation
of the Company under  this  Section  1.11  is  hereinafter referred to as a
"BOND REIMBURSEMENT OBLIGATION").

SECTION 1.12. PARTICIPATION  IN  THE  BOND L/C.  Each  of  the  Banks  will
acquire a risk participation for its own  account,  without  recourse to or
representation  or warranty from Harris, in the Bond L/C upon the  issuance
thereof ratably in accordance with its Commitment Percentage.  In the event
any Bond Reimbursement  Obligation  is  not immediately paid by the Company
pursuant to Section 1.11 hereof, each Bank  will  pay to Harris funds in an
amount equal to such Bank's Commitment Percentage of  the  unpaid amount of
such Bond Reimbursement Obligation.  The obligation of the Banks  to Harris
under  this Section 1.12 shall be absolute and unconditional and shall  not
be affected  or impaired by any Event of Default or Potential Default which
may  then be continuing  hereunder.   Harris  shall  notify  each  Bank  by
telephone  of  its  Commitment Percentage of such unpaid Bond Reimbursement
Obligation.  If such  notice  has  been  given  to  each Bank by 1:00 p.m.,
Chicago time, each Bank agrees to pay Harris in immediately  available  and
freely  transferable  funds  on  the  same Business Day.  If such notice is
received after 1:00 p.m., Chicago time,  each  Bank agrees to pay Harris in
immediately  available  and freely transferable funds  no  later  than  the
following Business Day.   Funds  shall  be so made available at the account
designated by Harris in such notice to the  Banks.  Harris shall share with
each  Bank  on  a pro rata basis relative to its  Commitment  Percentage  a
portion of each payment  of  a  Bond  Reimbursement  Obligation (whether of
principal or interest) and any Bond L/C Fee (but not the  Bond L/C Issuance
Fee or any Bond L/C Administration Fee) payable by the Company.   Any  such
amount  shall  be  promptly  remitted  to the Banks when and as received by
Harris from the Company.

SECTION 1.13. REDUCTIONS AND REINSTATEMENTS.   The  Company  and  the Banks
recognize,  acknowledge  and  agree  that  (i)  the  Bond  L/C provides for
automatic reductions and reinstatements as set forth in the  provisions  of
such  Bond  L/C, and (ii) the Bond L/C provides for the beneficiary thereof
to reduce from  time  to  time  the  amounts available to be drawn thereon.
Each Bank acknowledges that, because the interest component of the Bond L/C
may be reinstated at a time when the Company  has  not reimbursed Harris in
full for an interest drawing under the Bond L/C, the  total  may exceed the
Bond L/C Commitment pursuant to Section 1.10 hereof and each Bank agrees to
pay  Harris  its  pro  rata  share  of  any  drawing  under  the  Bond  L/C
notwithstanding that any such payment may result in the aggregate principal
amount  owing such Bank hereunder exceeding the Bond L/C Commitment of such
Bank.

SECTION 1.14. LIABILITY  OF  HARRIS.   None  of  the Harris-Related Persons
shall (i) be liable for any action taken or omitted  to  be taken by any of
them under or in connection with the Reimbursement Agreement  or  any  Bond
Document  (except  for  its own gross negligence or willful misconduct), or
(ii) be responsible in any  manner  to  any  of  the Banks for any recital,
statement, representation or warranty made by the  Company or any Affiliate
of  the  Company,  or any officer thereof, contained in  the  Reimbursement
Agreement or any Bond Document, or in any certificate, report, statement or
other document referred  to or provided for in, or received by Harris under
or in connection with, the Reimbursement Agreement or any Bond Document, or
for the validity, effectiveness, genuineness, enforceability or sufficiency
of the Reimbursement Agreement  or any Bond Document, or for any failure of
the Company or any other party to  the  Reimbursement Agreement or any Bond
Document to perform its obligations thereunder  (other  than  for the gross
negligence  or  willful  misconduct  of Harris).  No Harris-Related  Person
shall be under any obligation to any Bank  to ascertain or to inquire as to
the observance or performance of any of the  agreements  contained  in,  or
conditions  of,  the  Reimbursement  Agreement  or any Bond Document, or to
inspect  the  properties, books or records of the Company  or  any  of  its
Affiliates.

SECTION 1.15. RELIANCE  BY  HARRIS.   Harris shall be entitled to rely, and
shall be fully protected in relying, upon  any writing, resolution, notice,
consent,  certificate,  affidavit, letter, telegram,  facsimile,  telex  or
telephone message, statement  or other document or conversation believed by
it to be genuine and correct and  to  have been signed, sent or made by the
proper Person or Persons, and upon advice  and  statements of legal counsel
(including counsel to the Company).  Harris shall  be  fully  justified  in
failing or refusing to take any action under the Reimbursement Agreement or
any Bond Document which would otherwise require the consent of the Required
Banks  or  all  of  the  Banks unless it shall first receive such advice or
concurrence of the Required  Banks  (or, if required by this Agreement, all
Banks) as it deems appropriate and, if  it  so  requests, it shall first be
indemnified to its satisfaction by the Banks against  any and all liability
and expense which may be incurred by it by reason of taking  or  continuing
to  take any such action.  Harris shall in all cases be fully protected  in
acting,  or in refraining from acting, under the Reimbursement Agreement or
any Bond Document  in  accordance with a request or consent of the Required
Banks (or, if required by  this  Agreement, all Banks) and such request and
any action taken or failure to act  pursuant  thereto shall be binding upon
all of the Banks.

SECTION 1.16. NOTICE  OF  DEFAULT.  Harris shall  not  be  deemed  to  have
knowledge or notice of the  occurrence of any Potential Default or Event of
Default under Section 8.1(1)  hereof,  unless  Harris  shall  have received
written  notice  from  the  Company  or any other party to a Bond Document.
Harris shall take such action with respect  to  such  Potential  Default or
Event  of  Default under the Reimbursement Agreement and the Bond Documents
as shall be required pursuant to Section 8 hereof; PROVIDED that unless and
until Harris shall have received direction under Section 8, Harris may (but
shall not be  obligated  to)  take such action, or refrain from taking such
action, with respect to such Potential  Default  or  Event of Default as it
shall  deem  advisable  and in the best interest of the Banks,  except  any
action resulting in the acceleration or redemption of any Bonds.

SECTION 1.17. INDEMNIFICATION.   The  Banks shall indemnify upon demand the
Harris-Related Persons (to the extent not reimbursed by or on behalf of the
Company and without limiting the obligation  of  the  Company  to  do  so),
ratably according to such Bank's Commitment Percentage from and against any
and  all  liabilities,  obligations,  losses,  damages, penalties, actions,
judgments, suits, costs, expenses and disbursements  of any kind whatsoever
which may at any time (including at any time following  the  termination of
the  Bond  L/C)  be  imposed  on, incurred by or asserted against any  such
Person  and  which are in any way  relating  to  or  arising  out  of  this
Agreement or any  document  contemplated  by  or  referred to herein or the
transactions contemplated hereby or thereby or any  action taken or omitted
by  any  such  Person  under  or in connection with any of  the  foregoing;
PROVIDED that no Bank shall be liable for the payment to the Harris-Related
Persons of any portion of such  liabilities,  obligations, losses, damages,
penalties,  actions,  judgments,  suits, costs, expenses  or  disbursements
resulting solely from such Person's  gross negligence or willful misconduct
or for the fees and expenses of counsel in connection with the preparation,
execution, delivery, administration, or  modification  of the Reimbursement
Agreement or any Bond Document or any amendments thereto.   The  obligation
of the Banks in this Section shall survive the payment of all amounts owing
by the Company hereunder.

SECTION 1.18. DOCUMENTS AND REPORTS.  Harris agrees to deliver to the Banks
promptly upon receipt thereof copies of all documents and reports delivered
to Harris pursuant to the Reimbursement Agreement or any Bond Document.

SECTION 1.19. AMENDMENTS.    Harris   may   enter  into  any  amendment  or
modification  of,  or  may waive compliance with  the  terms  of  any  Bond
Document  (other than an  Indenture)  without  the  consent  of  any  Bank;
PROVIDED (a)  that  without the consent of the Required Banks, Harris shall
not execute any instrument agreeing to any amendment or modification of, or
waiver of compliance with the Reimbursement Agreement or any Bond Document,
which would waive any  "EVENT  OF  DEFAULT" arising under the Reimbursement
Agreement or any Bond Document, and  (b)  without the consent of all of the
Banks, Harris shall not execute any instrument agreeing to any amendment or
modification of, or waiver of compliance with  the  Reimbursement Agreement
or  any  Bond  Document, (i) which would (A) reduce the  principal  of,  or
interest on, any  Bond  Reimbursement Obligation, (B) postpone the due date
for any payment of principal  of,  or  interest  on, any Bond Reimbursement
Obligation, (C) extend the stated expiration date  of  the  Bond  L/C,  (D)
increase  in  any material manner (in the reasonable opinion of Harris) the
obligations of  the Banks, or (E) release or otherwise adversely affect the
interests of the  Banks  in  any collateral granted under the Reimbursement
Agreement or any Bond Document, or (ii) after the occurrence of a Potential
Default or Event of Default.

SECTION 2.  THE COMPETITIVE BID FACILITY.

SECTION 2.1.  AMOUNT AND TERM.   The  Company  may from time to time before
the Termination Date request Competitive Bids from  the Banks and the Banks
may make, at their sole discretion, Bid Loans to the  Company  on the terms
and conditions set forth in this Agreement.  Notwithstanding any  provision
to  the  contrary  contained in this Agreement, (a) the aggregate principal
amount of all Bid Loans  outstanding  hereunder  at any time may not exceed
$50,000,000,  (b)  no  Bank  may make Bid Loans in an  aggregate  principal
amount in excess of the maximum  amount  of  such  Bank's  Revolving Credit
Commitment  set  forth  in  Section 1.1(b) of this Agreement, and  (c)  the
aggregate principal amount of  all  Bid  Loans outstanding hereunder at any
time together with the aggregate principal  amount  of all Revolving Credit
Loans outstanding under the Revolving Credit shall not  exceed  the  Banks'
Revolving Credit Commitments from time to time in effect.  The Company  may
request  Competitive Bids and the Banks may, in their discretion, make such
Competitive Bids on the terms and conditions set forth in this Section 2.

SECTION 2.2.  COMPETITIVE  BID  REQUESTS.   In order to request Competitive
Bids, the Company shall give telephonic notice  to be received by the Agent
no later than 11:00 A.M., Chicago time, one Business  Day  before the date,
which must be a Business Day, on which a proposed Bid Loan is  to  be  made
(the  "BORROWING  DATE"),  followed  on  the  same  day by a duly completed
Competitive Bid Request Confirmation in the form of Exhibit  L hereto to be
received by the Agent not later than 11:30 A.M., Chicago time.  Competitive
Bid Request Confirmations that do not conform substantially to  the  format
of Exhibit L may be rejected and the Agent shall give telephonic notice  to
the   Company  of  such  rejection  promptly  after  it  determines  (which
determination   shall   be  conclusive)  that  a  Competitive  Bid  Request
Confirmation does not substantially  conform  to  the  format of Exhibit L.
Competitive  Bid  Requests shall in each case refer to this  Agreement  and
specify (x) the proposed  Borrowing  Date  (which shall be a Business Day),
(y) the aggregate principal amount thereof (which  shall  not  be less than
$3,000,000 and shall be an integral multiple of $1,000,000), and  (z) up to
3  Interest  Periods  with  respect  to the entire amount specified in such
Competitive Bid Request (which must be  of no less than 30 and no more than
180  days  duration  and  may not end after the  Termination  Date).   Upon
receipt  by  the  Agent of a Competitive  Bid  Request  Confirmation  which
conforms substantially  to  the  format  of  Exhibit L attached hereto, the
Agent shall invite, by telephone promptly confirmed  in writing in the form
of Exhibit M attached hereto, the Banks to bid, on the terms and conditions
of  this  Agreement,  to  make  Bid  Loans pursuant to the Competitive  Bid
Request.

SECTION 2.3.  SUBMISSION OF COMPETITIVE  BIDS.   Each Bank may, in its sole
discretion, make one or more Competitive Bids to the  Company responsive to
the  Competitive  Bid  Request.   Each Competitive Bid by a  Bank  must  be
received by the Agent by telephone  not later than 8:45 A.M., Chicago time,
on the Borrowing Date, promptly confirmed  in  writing  by a duly completed
Confirmation  of  Competitive Bid substantially in the form  of  Exhibit  N
attached hereto to  be received by the Agent no later than 9:00 A.M. on the
same day; PROVIDED, HOWEVER,  that  any Competitive Bid made by Harris must
be made by telephone to the Company no  later than 8:30 A.M., Chicago time,
and confirmed by telecopier to the Company no later than 8:45 A.M., Chicago
time,  on  the  Borrowing Date.  Competitive  Bids  which  do  not  conform
precisely to the terms of this Section 2.3 may be rejected by the Agent and
the Agent shall notify  the  Bank  submitting  such Competitive Bid of such
rejection by telephone as soon as practicable after  determining  that  the
Competitive   Bid   does  not  conform  precisely  to  the  terms  of  this
Section 2.3.   Each Competitive  Bid  shall  refer  to  this  Agreement and
specify  (x)  the  maximum  principal amount (which shall not be less  than
$3,000,000 and shall be an integral multiple of $1,000,000) of the Bid Loan
that the Bank is willing to make  to the Company (y) the Yield (which shall
be computed on the basis of a 360-day  year and actual days elapsed and for
a period equal to the Interest Period applicable thereto) at which the Bank
is prepared to make the Bid Loan and (z)  the  Interest  Period  applicable
thereto.   The  Agent  shall reject any Competitive Bid if such Competitive
Bid  (i)  does  not  specify  all  of  the  information  specified  in  the
immediately preceding  sentence, (ii) contains any qualifying, conditional,
or similar language, (iii)  proposes  terms  other  than  or in addition to
those  set  forth in the Competitive Bid Request to which it  responds,  or
(iv) is received  by  the  Agent  later than 8:45 A.M. (Chicago time).  Any
Competitive Bid submitted by a Bank  pursuant  to this Section 2.3 shall be
irrevocable  and  shall be promptly confirmed in writing  in  the  form  of
Exhibit N; PROVIDED  THAT  in  all  events  the  telephone  Competitive Bid
received by the Agent shall be binding on the relevant Bank and  shall  not
be  altered,  modified, or in any other manner affected by any inconsistent
terms contained  in,  or  terms  missing  from,  the Bank's Confirmation of
Competitive Bid.

SECTION 2.4.  NOTICE OF BIDS.  The Agent shall give  telephonic  notice  to
the  Company  no  later  than  9:15  A.M.,  Chicago  time,  on the proposed
Borrowing  Date,  of  the  number of Competitive Bids made, the Yield  with
respect to each proposed Bid  Loan,  the Interest Period applicable thereto
and the maximum principal amount of each  Bid  Loan  in  respect of which a
Competitive Bid was made and the identity of the Bank making each bid.  The
Agent shall send a summary of all Competitive Bids received by the Agent to
the Company as soon as practicable after receipt of a Competitive  Bid from
each Bank that has made a Competitive Bid.

SECTION 2.5.  ACCEPTANCE OR REJECTION OF BIDS.  The Company may in its sole
and  absolute  discretion,  subject only to the provisions of this Section,
irrevocably accept or reject,  in  whole  or  in  part, any Competitive Bid
referred to in Section 2.4 above.  No later than 9:45  A.M.,  Chicago time,
on the proposed Borrowing Date, the Company shall give telephonic notice to
the Agent of whether and to what extent it has decided to accept  or reject
any  or  all  the  Competitive Bids referred to in Section 2.4 above, which
notice shall be promptly confirmed in a writing to be received by the Agent
on the proposed Borrowing Date; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that (x) no bid shall be
accepted  for a Bid Loan  in  a  minimum  principal  amount  of  less  than
$3,000,000,  (y)  the  Company  shall  accept  bids  solely on the basis of
ascending Yields for each Interest Period, (z) if the  Company  declines to
borrow, or it is restricted by other conditions hereof from borrowing,  the
maximum  principal  amount  of  Bid  Loans in respect of which bids at such
Yield have been made, then the Company  shall  accept a pro rata portion of
each bid made at the same Yield, based as nearly  as  possible on the ratio
of the maximum aggregate principal amounts of Bid Loans for which each such
bid was made (provided that if the available principal  amount of Bid Loans
to be so allocated is not sufficient to enable Bid Loans to be so allocated
to  each such Bank in integral multiples of $1,000,000, the  Company  shall
select  which  Banks  will  be  allocated  such  Bid  Loans  and will round
allocations  up or down to the next higher or lower multiple of  $1,000,000
as it shall deem  appropriate  but  in  no  event  shall  any  Bid  Loan be
allocated  in  a  principal  amount  of  less than $3,000,000), and (w) the
aggregate principal amount of all Competitive  Bids accepted by the Company
shall  not  exceed  the  amount  contained in the related  Confirmation  of
Competitive Bid Request.  A notice  given  by  the Company pursuant to this
Section 2.5 shall be irrevocable and shall not be  altered, modified, or in
any other manner affected by any inconsistent terms  contained in, or terms
missing from, any written confirmation of such notice.

SECTION 2.6.  NOTICE OF ACCEPTANCE OR REJECTION OF BID.   The  Agent  shall
promptly  (but  in  any  event no later than 10:30 A.M., Chicago time) give
telephonic notice to the Banks  whether  or not their Competitive Bids have
been accepted (and if so, in what amount and at what Yield) on the proposed
Borrowing Date, and each successful bidder  will  thereupon  become  bound,
subject  to  Section  7 and the other applicable conditions hereof, to make
the Bid Loan in respect  of  which its bid has been accepted.  Each Bank so
bound  shall  notify the Agent upon  making  the  Bid  Loan.   As  soon  as
practicable on each Borrowing Date, the Agent shall notify each Bank of the
aggregate principal  amount of all Bid Loans made pursuant to a Competitive
Bid  Request on such Borrowing  Date,  the  Interest  Period(s)  applicable
thereto and the highest and lowest Yields at which such Bid Loans were made
for each Interest Period.

SECTION 2.7.  RESTRICTIONS  ON  BID LOANS.  A Bid Loan shall not be made if
an  Event  of Default or Potential  Default  shall  have  occurred  and  be
continuing on the date on which such Bid Loan is to be made and the Company
may not obtain more than three Bid Loans in any calendar week.

SECTION 2.8.  MINIMUM  AMOUNT.   Each  Bid  Loan made to the Company on any
date  shall  be  in an integral multiple of $1,000,000  and  in  a  minimum
principal amount of  $3,000,000.   Bid  Loans  shall be made in the amounts
accepted by the Company in accordance with Section 2.5.

SECTION 2.9.  THE NOTES.  The Bid Loans made by  each  Bank  to the Company
shall  be  evidenced  by the Revolving Note of the Company payable  to  the
order of such Bank as described  in  Section 1.2. The outstanding principal
balance of each Bid Loan, as evidenced  by  a Note, shall be payable at the
end of every Interest Period applicable to such  Bid  Loan.   Each Bid Loan
evidenced by each Revolving Note shall bear interest from the date such Bid
Loan is made on the outstanding principal balance thereof as set  forth  in
Section 2.10 below.

SECTION 2.10. TERM  OF AND INTEREST ON BID LOANS.  Each Bid Loan shall bear
interest during the Interest  Period applicable thereto at a rate per annum
equal  to the rate of interest offered  in  the  Competitive  Bid  therefor
submitted  by  the  Bank  making  such Bid Loan and accepted by the Company
pursuant to Section 2.5 above.  The  principal  amount  of  each  Bid Loan,
together with all accrued interest thereon, shall be due and payable on the
last day of the Interest Period applicable thereto and at maturity (whether
by  acceleration or otherwise) and, with respect to any Interest Period  in
excess  of  three  months, interest on the unpaid principal amount shall be
due on the date occurring  every  three  months after the date the relevant
Bid Loan was made.  If any payment of principal or interest on any Bid Loan
is not made when due, such Bid Loan shall  bear  interest  (computed on the
basis  of  a year of 360 days and actual days elapsed) from the  date  such
payment was  due until paid in full, payable on demand, at a rate per annum
equal to the sum of 2.5% plus the rate of interest in effect thereon at the
time of such default  until  the end of the Interest Period then applicable
thereto, and, thereafter, at a  rate per annum equal to the sum of 2.5 plus
the Domestic Rate from time to time in effect.

SECTION 2.11. DISBURSEMENT OF BID LOANS.  (a)  Subject to the provisions of
Section 6 hereof, the proceeds of  each Bid Loan shall be made available to
the Company by, at the Company's option, crediting an account maintained by
the Company at Harris Trust and Savings  Bank  or  by wire transfer of such
proceeds to such account as the Company shall designate  in  writing to the
Agent  from time to time, in immediately available funds.  Not  later  than
12:00 Noon, Chicago time, on the date specified for any Bid Loan to be made
hereunder,  each  Bank  which  is  bound  to make such Bid Loan pursuant to
Section 2.6 hereof shall make its portion of such Bid Loan available to the
Company in immediately available funds at the principal office of the Agent
in Chicago, Illinois.

    (b)  Unless the Agent shall have been notified  by a Bank no later than
the time the Agent gives such Bank a notice pursuant  to Section 2.6 hereof
(which  notice  shall be effective upon receipt) that such  Bank  does  not
intend to make the  proceeds  of  such Bid Loan available to the Agent, the
Agent may assume that such Bank has  made  such  proceeds  available to the
Agent on such date and the Agent may in reliance upon such assumption  (but
shall  not  be  required  to) make available to the Company a corresponding
amount.  If such corresponding  amount is not in fact made available to the
Agent by such Bank, the Agent shall  be  entitled to receive such amount on
demand from such Bank (or, if such Bank fails  to pay such amount forthwith
upon such demand, to recover such amount from the  Company)  together  with
interest thereon in respect of each day during the period commencing on the
date  such  amount was made available to the Company and ending on the date
the Agent recovers  such amount, at a rate per annum equal to the effective
rate charged to the Agent  for  overnight  Federal  funds transactions with
member banks of the Federal Reserve System for each day,  as  determined by
the Agent (or, in the case of a day which is not a Business Day,  then  for
the  preceding  Business  Day).   Nothing  in this Section 2.11(b) shall be
deemed  to  permit any Bank to breach its obligations  to  make  Bid  Loans
hereunder, or  to  limit  the  Company's  claims  against any Bank for such
breach.

SECTION 2.12. RELIANCE ON TELEPHONIC NOTICES; INDEMNITY.   (a)  The Company
agrees that the Agent may rely on any telephonic notice referred to in this
Section  2  and  given  by  any  person  the  Agent  reasonably believes is
authorized  to  give  such  notice  without  the  necessity of  independent
investigation, and in the event any such telephonic  notice  conflicts with
any written notice relating thereto, or in the event no such written notice
is received by the Agent, such telephonic notice shall govern  if the Agent
or  any  Bank has acted in reasonable reliance thereon.  The Agent's  books
and records  shall  be PRIMA FACIE evidence of all of the matters set forth
in Sections 2.2, 2.3, 2.4., 2.5 and 2.6 hereof.

    (b)  The Company hereby agrees to indemnify and hold the Agent harmless
from and against any  and  all  claims,  damages,  losses,  liabilities and
expenses, including court costs and legal expenses, paid or incurred by the
Agent in connection with any action the Agent may take, or fail to take, in
reasonable  reliance  upon  and  in  accordance with any telephonic  notice
received by the Agent as described in this Section 2.

    (c)  The Banks hereby agree to indemnify  and  hold  the Agent harmless
from  and  against  any  and  all claims, damages, losses, liabilities  and
expenses, including court costs and legal expenses, paid or incurred by the
Agent in connection with any action the Agent may take, or fail to take, in
reasonable  reliance upon and in  accordance  with  any  telephonic  notice
received by the  Agent  as  described  in this Section 2, to the extent the
Agent is not promptly reimbursed therefor by the Company.

SECTION 2.13. TELEPHONIC  NOTICE.  Each Bank's  telephonic  notice  to  the
Agent of its Competitive Bid  pursuant  to  Section  2.3, and the Company's
telephonic  acceptance  of  any  offer  contained  in  a  Bid  pursuant  to
Section 2.5, shall be irrevocable and binding on such Bank and the Company,
as applicable, and shall not be altered, modified, or in any  other  manner
affected  by  any  inconsistent  terms  contained  in, or missing from, any
written  confirmation  of  such telephonic notice.  It  is  understood  and
agreed by the parties hereto that the Agent shall be entitled to act, or to
fail to act, hereunder in reliance on its records of any telephonic notices
provided for herein and that the Agent shall not incur any liability to any
Person in so doing if its records conflict with any written confirmation of
a telephone notice or otherwise,  provided  that  any  such action taken or
omitted by the Agent is taken or omitted reasonably and  in good faith.  It
is  further  understood  and agreed by the parties hereto that  each  party
hereto shall in good faith endeavor to provide the notices specified herein
by the times of day as set  forth in this Section 2 but that no party shall
incur any liability or other responsibility for any failure to provide such
notices within the specified times; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that the Agent shall
have no obligation to notify the Company of any Competitive Bid received by
it later than 8:45 A.M. (Chicago  time) on the proposed Borrowing Date, and
no acceptance by the Company of any  offer  contained  in a Competitive Bid
shall be effective to bind any Bank to make a Bid Loan, nor shall the Agent
be under any obligation to notify any Person of an acceptance, if notice of
such  acceptance  is  received by the Agent later than 9:45  A.M.  (Chicago
time) on the proposed Borrowing Date.

SECTION 3.  FEES, PREPAYMENTS, TERMINATIONS AND PLACE AND APPLICATION OF
            PAYMENTS.

SECTION 3.1.  FACILITY  FEE.   For  the  period from the date hereof to and
including the Termination Date, the Company  shall pay to the Agent for the
account of the Banks a facility fee with respect to the Revolving Credit at
the  rate  of  three-eighths  of  one percent (0.375%)  per  annum  if  the
Company's Leverage Ratio is equal to  or  greater  than  0.45 to 1 and one-
quarter of one percent (0.25%) per annum if the Company's Leverage Ratio is
less than 0.45 to 1 (in each case computed in each case on  the  basis of a
year  of  360  days for the actual number of days elapsed) of the aggregate
maximum amount of  the  Banks'  Revolving  Credit  Commitments hereunder in
effect from time to time and whether or not any credit  is in use under the
Revolving Credit, all such fees to be payable quarterly in  arrears  on the
last  day of each calendar quarter commencing on December 31, 1999, and  on
the Termination Date, unless the Revolving Credit is terminated in whole on
an earlier date, in which event the facility fee for the final period shall
be paid on the date of such earlier termination in whole.

SECTION 3.2.  AGENT'S  FEE.   The  Company  shall  pay  to and for the sole
account of the Agent such fees as may be agreed upon in writing  from  time
to  time  by  the Agent and the Company.  Such fees shall be in addition to
any fees and charges  the Agent may be entitled to receive under Section 10
hereunder or under the other Loan Documents.

SECTION 3.3.  OPTIONAL  PREPAYMENTS.   The Company shall have the privilege
of prepaying without premium or penalty  and in whole or in part (but if in
part,  then in a minimum principal amount of  $2,500,000  or  such  greater
amount which is an integral multiple of $100,000) any Domestic Rate Loan at
any time  upon  prior  telex or telephonic notice to the Agent on or before
12:00 Noon on the same Business  Day.   The  Company  may  not  prepay  any
Eurodollar  Loan,  CD  Rate Loan or Bid Loan.  Any amount prepaid under the
Revolving  Credit  may,  subject  to  the  terms  and  conditions  of  this
Agreement, be borrowed, repaid and borrowed again.

SECTION 3.4.  MANDATORY PREPAYMENTS  -  BORROWING  BASE.  The Company shall
not  permit the sum of the principal amount of all Loans  plus  the  amount
available  for drawing under all L/Cs and the aggregate principal amount of
all unpaid Reimbursement  Obligations at any time outstanding to exceed the
lesser of (i) the sum of the  Banks'  Revolving  Credit Commitments or (ii)
the Borrowing Base as determined on the basis of the  most recent Borrowing
Base  Certificate.   In addition to the Company's obligations  to  pay  any
outstanding Reimbursement  Obligations  as set forth in Section 1.6 hereof,
the  Company  will  make  such  payments  on  any   outstanding  Loans  and
Reimbursement Obligations (and, if any L/Cs are then  outstanding,  deposit
an  amount  equal  to  the aggregate amount available for drawing under all
L/Cs into an interest bearing account with the Agent which shall be held as
additional collateral security  for  such L/Cs) which are necessary to cure
any such excess within three Business  Days  after  the occurrence thereof.
Any amount prepaid under the Revolving Credit may, subject to the terms and
conditions of this Agreement, be borrowed, prepaid and borrowed again.

SECTION 3.5.  PLACE AND APPLICATION OF PAYMENTS.  All payments of principal
and   interest  made  by  the  Company  in  respect  of  the  Notes,   Bond
Reimbursement  Obligations  and  Reimbursement  Obligations  and  all  fees
payable  by the Company hereunder, shall be made to the Agent at its office
at 111 West  Monroe  Street,  Chicago,  Illinois   60690 and in immediately
available  funds,  prior to 12:00 noon Chicago time on  the  date  of  such
payment.  All such payments  shall  be  made without setoff or counterclaim
and without reduction for, and free from,  any  and  all present and future
levies,   imposts,   duties,   fees,   charges,   deductions  withholdings,
restrictions or conditions of any nature imposed by  any  government or any
political  subdivision  or  taxing  authority  thereof.  Unless  the  Banks
otherwise agree, any payments received after 12:00  noon Chicago time shall
be deemed received on the following Business Day.  The Agent shall remit to
each  Bank its proportionate share of each payment of  principal,  interest
and facility  fees, and L/C fees received by the Agent by 3:00 P.M. Chicago
time on the same day of its receipt if received by the Agent by 12:00 noon,
Chicago time, and  its proportionate share of each such payment received by
the Agent after 12:00 noon on the Business Day following its receipt by the
Agent.  In the event  the  Agent does not remit any amount to any Bank when
required by the preceding sentence,  the  Agent  shall  pay  to  such  Bank
interest  on  such  amount  until paid at a rate per annum equal to the Fed
Funds Rate.  The Company hereby authorizes the Agent to automatically debit
its account with Harris for any principal, interest and fees when due under
the Notes, any L/C Agreement  or  this Agreement and to transfer the amount
so  debited  from  such account to the  Agent  for  application  as  herein
provided.  All proceeds  of  Collateral  shall  be  applied  in  the manner
specified in the Security Agreement.

SECTION 4.  DEFINITIONS.

SECTION 4.1.  CERTAIN TERMS DEFINED.  The terms hereinafter set forth  when
used herein shall have the following meanings:

     "ACCOUNT  DEBTOR"  shall  mean  the  Person  who  is  obligated  on  a
Receivable.

     "ADJUSTED  CD  RATE"  shall mean a rate per annum (rounded upwards, if
necessary, to the nearest 1/100  of  1%)  determined in accordance with the
following formula:

                              CD RATE               Assessment
Adjusted CD Rate =  100% - CD Reserve Percentage +     Rate

     "ADJUSTED EURODOLLAR RATE" means a rate  per annum determined pursuant
to the following formula:

     Adjusted Eurodollar Rate =            EURODOLLAR RATE
     { }100% - Reserve Percentage

     "AFFILIATE" shall mean any person, firm or corporation which, directly
or indirectly controls, or is controlled by, or  is  under  common  control
with,  the  Company.   As  used  in  this  definition  the  term "CONTROLS"
(including the terms "CONTROLLED BY" and "UNDER COMMON CONTROL WITH") shall
have the meaning given below.

     "AGENT" is defined in the first paragraph of this Agreement.

     "AGREEMENT" shall mean this Second Amended and Restated Secured Credit
Agreement  as  supplemented,  modified, restated and amended from  time  to
time.

     "ALTERNATIVE CREDIT FACILITY"  shall  mean  any  irrevocable letter of
credit, surety bond, insurance policy or other similar  instruments,  other
than  the  Bond  L/C,  issued  by  any  Person  to  support  the  Company's
obligations with respect to the Bonds.

     "ANNIVERSARY DATE" has the meaning specified in Section 1.1(b) hereof.

     "APPLICABLE  MARGIN"  shall  mean,  with  respect to each type of Loan
described  in  Column  A below, the rate of interest  per  annum  shown  in
Columns B, C, D, E and F  below  for  the range of Leverage Ratio specified
for each Column:




<TABLE>
<CAPTION
    A                B          C          D            E          F
<S>                 <C>       <C>        <C>          <C>         <C>
Leverage Ratio
                <0.35 to 1  >0.35 to 1  >0.45 to 1  >0.50 to 1  >0.60 to 1
                               and         and         and         and
                            <0.45 to 1  <0.5 to 1   <0.60 to 1  <0.70 to 1

Eurodollar Loans 0.625% 1.00% 1.375% 1.625% 2.0%
Domestic Rate Loans 0.0% 0.0% 0.125% 0.375% 0.75%
CD Rate Loans 0.75% 1.125% 1.50% 1.75% 2.125%

</TABLE>
Not later than 5 Business Days after receipt  by the Agent of the financial
statements  called  for  by Section 7.4 hereof for  the  applicable  fiscal
quarter, the Agent shall determine  the  Leverage  Ratio for the applicable
period  and  shall  promptly  notify  the  Company and the  Banks  of  such
determination  and  of  any  change  in  the Applicable  Margins  resulting
therefrom.  Any such change in the Applicable Margins shall be effective as
of the date the Agent so notifies the Company and the Banks with respect to
all Loans outstanding on such date, and such  new  Applicable Margins shall
continue  in  effect  until  the  effective  date  of  the  next  quarterly
redetermination in accordance with this Section.  Each determination of the
Leverage Ratio and Applicable Margins by the Agent in accordance  with this
Section shall be conclusive and binding on the Company and the Banks absent
manifest  error.   From  the  date hereof until the Applicable Margins  are
first adjusted pursuant hereto,  the  Applicable Margins shall be those set
forth in column C above.

     "ASSESSMENT RATE" shall mean the assessment  rate (rounded upwards, if
necessary,  to  the  nearest  1/100 of 1%) imposed by the  Federal  Deposit
Insurance Corporation or its successors  for insuring the Agent's liability
for time deposits, as in effect from time to time.

     "BANK"  and "BANKS" shall have the meanings  specified  in  the  first
paragraph of this Agreement.

     "BANKING DAY" shall mean a day on which banks are open for business in
Nassau, Bahamas,  London,  England,  Atlanta,  Georgia,  Denver,  Colorado,
Wichita, Kansas, Dallas, Texas and Chicago, Illinois, other than a Saturday
or Sunday, and dealing in United States Dollar deposits in London,  England
and Nassau, Bahamas.

     "BID  LOAN"  shall mean an advance from a Bank to the Company pursuant
to the biding procedures described in Section 2 hereof.

     "BONDS" shall  mean  the $25,000,000 aggregate principal amount of the
Issuer's   Environmental  Facilities   Reserve   Bonds   (Pilgrim's   Pride
Corporation Project), Series 1999.

     "BOND DOCUMENTS" shall mean the Indenture and any other instrument and
documents relating to the issuance and sale of the Bonds.

     "BOND L/C" shall have the meaning specified in Section 1.10 hereof.

     "BOND L/C  ADMINISTRATIVE  FEES"  shall  mean  the fees payable by the
Company pursuant to Sections 2.4(b) and (c) of the Reimbursement Agreement.

     "BOND L/C COMMITMENT" shall have the meaning specified in Section 1.10
hereof.

     "BOND L/C EXPOSURE" shall mean, as of any date of  determination,  the
sum  of  (a)  the unused amount of the Bond L/C Commitment, if any, (b) the
aggregate  principal   amount   of   all   outstanding  Bond  Reimbursement
Obligations, if any, and (c) the maximum amount available to be drawn under
the Bond L/C (after giving effect to any reductions  thereof as provided in
the Bond L/C), each determined on such date.

      "BOND L/C FEE" shall mean the fee payable by the  Company pursuant to
Section 2.4(a) of the Reimbursement Agreement.

     "BOND  REIMBURSEMENT OBLIGATION" shall have the meaning  specified  in
Section 1.11 hereof.

     "BORROWING  BASE",  as  determined  on  the  basis  of the information
contained  in  the  most recent Borrowing Base Certificate, shall  mean  an
amount equal to:

          (a) 65% of  the  Value  of  Eligible Inventory consisting of feed
     grains, feed and ingredients, plus

          (b) 65% percent of the Value  of Eligible Inventory consisting of
     live and dressed broiler chickens and commercial eggs, plus

          (c) 65% of the Value of Eligible Inventory consisting of prepared
     foods, plus

          (d) 100% of the Value of Eligible Inventory consisting of breeder
     hens,  breeder  pullets,  commercial  hens,   commercial  pullets  and
     hatching eggs, plus

          (e)  40%  of  the  Value  of  Eligible  Inventory  consisting  of
     packaging  materials,  vaccines,  general  supplies,  and  maintenance
     supplies, minus

          (f) the aggregate outstanding amount of  all Grower Payables that
     are more than 15 days past due, minus

          (g) the Bond L/C Exposure.

     "BORROWING BASE CERTIFICATE" shall mean the certificate in the form of
Exhibit  G  hereto  which  is  required  to be delivered to  the  Banks  in
accordance with Section 7.4(d) hereof.

     "BUSINESS DAY" shall mean any day except  Saturday  or Sunday on which
banks are open for business in Chicago, Illinois, Dallas,  Texas,  Atlanta,
Georgia, Denver, Colorado and Wichita, Kansas.

     "CAPITALIZED LEASE" shall mean, as applied to any Person, any lease of
any Property the discounted present value of the rental obligations of such
person  as  lessee  under  which,  in  accordance  with  generally accepted
accounting principles, is required to be capitalized on the  balance  sheet
of such Person.

     "CAPITALIZED  LEASE  OBLIGATION" shall mean, as applied to any Person,
the discounted present value  of the rental obligation, as aforesaid, under
any Capitalized Lease.

     "CAPITAL STOCK" means, with respect to any Person, any and all shares,
interests, participations or other equivalents (however designated) of such
Person's capital stock, whether  or  not  outstanding  on  the date of this
Agreement,  including,  without  limitation, any option, warrant  or  other
right relating to any such capital stock.

     "CASH  EQUIVALENT" shall mean  any  short-term  investments  that  are
classified as  cash equivalents on the Company's consolidated balance sheet
in accordance with  generally  accepted accounting principles, consistently
applied.

     "CD RATE" shall mean, with  respect to each Interest Period applicable
to a CD Rate Loan, the rate per annum  determined  by  the  Agent to be the
arithmetic average of the rate per annum determined by the Agent  to be the
average  of  the bid rates quoted to the Agent at approximately 10:00  a.m.
Chicago time (or  as  soon  thereafter  as practicable) on the first day of
such  Interest Period by at least two certificate  of  deposit  dealers  of
recognized national standing selected by the Agent for the purchase at face
value of  certificates  of deposit of the Agent having a term comparable to
such Interest Period and in an amount comparable to the principal amount of
the CD Rate Loan to be made  by  the  Agent for such Interest Period.  Each
determination of the CD Rate made by the  Agent  in  accordance  with  this
paragraph shall be conclusive and binding on the Company except in the case
of manifest error or willful misconduct.

     "CD  RESERVE  PERCENTAGE"  shall  mean  the rate (as determined by the
Bank)  of the maximum reserve requirement (including,  without  limitation,
any supplemental,  marginal and emergency reserves) imposed on the Agent by
the Board of Governors  of  the  Federal  Reserve System (or any successor)
from time to time on non-personal time deposits  having a maturity equal to
the  applicable  Interest  Period  and  in an amount equal  to  the  unpaid
principal amount of the relevant CD Rate Loan, subject to any amendments of
such  reserve  requirement  by such Board or  its  successor,  taking  into
account any transitional adjustments  thereto.   The Adjusted CD Rate shall
automatically be adjusted as of the date of any change  in  the  CD Reserve
Percentage.

     "CERCLA"   shall   mean   the  Comprehensive  Environmental  Response,
Compensation and Liability Act of 1980, as amended.

     "CERCLIS" shall mean the CERCLA Information System.

     "CHANGE IN CONTROL" means (a)  a  sale of all or substantially all the
assets  of the Company to any Person or related  group  of  Persons  as  an
entirety  or  substantially  as an entirety in one transaction or series of
transactions, (b) the merger or  consolidation  of the Company with or into
another corporation or the merger of another corporation  into  the Company
with the effect that immediately after such transaction the stockholders of
the Company immediately prior to such transaction hold less than 51% of the
total voting power generally entitled to vote in the election of directors,
managers  or trustees of the Person surviving such merger or consolidation,
(c) the Guarantor  or  the  Pilgrim  Family  shall  cease to own legally or
beneficially more than 51% of the total voting power  generally entitled to
vote  in the election of directors, managers or trustees  of  the  Company,
(d) during  any  period  of  two  consecutive years, individuals who at the
beginning of such period constituted  the Board of Directors of the Company
(together with any new directors whose  election  by  such  Board  or whose
nomination for election by the stockholders of the Company was approved  by
a  vote of a majority of the directors then still in office who were either
directors  at  the beginning of such period or whose election or nomination
for election was previously so approved) cease for any reason to constitute
a majority of the  Board  of  Directors  of  the Company then in office, or
(e)  the  stockholders  of  the  Company shall approve  any  plan  for  the
liquidation or dissolution of the Company.

     "CHANGE  IN  LAW" shall have the  meaning  specified  in  Section  9.3
hereof.

     "COLLATERAL" shall  mean the collateral security provided to the Agent
for the benefit of the Banks pursuant to the Security Agreement.

     "COMMITMENT  PERCENTAGE"   shall   have   the  meaning  set  forth  in
Section 1.8 hereof.

     "COMPANY" shall have the meaning specified  in  the first paragraph of
this Agreement.

     "COMPETITIVE BID" shall mean an offer by a Bank to  make  a  Bid  Loan
pursuant to Section 2 hereof.

     "COMPETITIVE  BID  REQUEST"  shall  mean a request made by the Company
pursuant to Section 2.2 hereof.

     "CONTROL"  or "CONTROLLED BY" or "UNDER  COMMON  CONTROL"  shall  mean
possession, directly  or  indirectly,  of  power  to  direct  or  cause the
direction  of  management  or policies (whether through ownership of voting
securities, by contract or otherwise);  provided  that,  in  any  event any
Person  which  beneficially  owns, directly or indirectly, 10% or more  (in
number of votes) of the securities  having  ordinary  voting  power for the
election  of  directors of a corporation shall be conclusively presumed  to
control  such corporation,  and  provided  further  that  any  Consolidated
Subsidiary shall be conclusively presumed to be controlled by the Company.

     "CURRENT  ASSETS"  of  any  Person  shall mean the aggregate amount of
assets  of  such  Person  which  in  accordance   with  generally  accepted
accounting principles may be properly classified as  current  assets  after
deducting adequate reserves where proper.

     "CURRENT LIABILITIES" shall mean all items (including taxes accrued as
estimated)   which   in   accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting
principles may be properly classified as current liabilities, and including
in  any  event  all  amounts outstanding  from  time  to  time  under  this
Agreement.

     "CURRENT RATIO" shall  mean  the  ratio  of  Current Assets to Current
Liabilities of the Company and its Subsidiaries.

     "DEBT"  of any Person shall mean as of any time  the  same  is  to  be
determined, the aggregate of:

          (a)  all indebtedness, obligations and liabilities of such Person
     with respect  to  borrowed  money  (including  by the issuance of debt
     securities);

          (b) all guaranties, endorsements and other contingent obligations
     of  such  Person  with  respect  to  indebtedness arising  from  money
     borrowed by others;

          (c)  all  reimbursement  and other obligations  with  respect  to
     letters of credit, bankers acceptances,  customer  advances  and other
     extensions  of  credit  whether  or  not  representing obligations for
     borrowed money;

          (d) the aggregate of the principal components  of  all leases and
     other  agreements  for  the use, acquisition or retention of  real  or
     personal property which are required to be capitalized under generally
     accepted accounting principles consistently applied;

          (e) all indebtedness,  obligations  and  liabilities representing
     the deferred purchase price of property or services  (excluding  trade
     payables incurred in the ordinary course of business); and

          (f)  all  indebtedness  secured by a lien on the Property of such
     Person, whether or not such Person  has  assumed  or become liable for
     the payment of such indebtedness.

     "DOMESTIC  RATE" means for any day the rate of interest  announced  by
Harris from time  to  time  as  its prime commercial rate in effect on such
day, with any change in the Domestic  Rate  resulting from a change in said
prime commercial rate to be effective as of the date of the relevant change
in said prime commercial rate (the "HARRIS PRIME  RATE"),  provided that if
the  rate  per  annum determined by adding 1/2 of 1% to the rate  at  which
Harris would offer  to  sell  federal  funds  in the interbank market on or
about 10:00 a.m. (Chicago time) on any day (the  "ADJUSTED FED FUNDS RATE")
shall be higher than the Harris Prime Rate on such  day,  then the Domestic
Rate  for such day and for any succeeding day which is not a  Business  Day
shall be  such  Adjusted Fed Funds Rate.  The determination of the Adjusted
Fed Funds Rate by  Harris  shall be final and conclusive except in the case
of manifest error or willful misconduct.

     "DOMESTIC  RATE  LOAN" means  a  Revolving  Credit  Loan  which  bears
interest as provided in Section 1.3(a) hereof.

     "EBITDA" shall mean,  in  any fiscal year of the Company, all earnings
(other than extraordinary items)  of the Company before interest and income
tax obligations of the Company for  said  year  and before depreciation and
amortization  charges  of  the  Company for said year,  all  determined  in
accordance  with  generally accepted  accounting  principles,  consistently
applied.

     "ELIGIBLE INVENTORY"  shall mean any Inventory of the Company in which
the Agent has a first priority perfected security interest, which the Banks
in their sole judgment deem to be acceptable for inclusion in the Borrowing
Base and which complies with each of the following requirements:

          (a) it consists solely  of  feed  grains, feed, ingredients, live
     broiler chickens, dressed broiler chickens,  commercial eggs, prepared
     food   products,  breeder  hens,  breeder  pullets,   hatching   eggs,
     commercial  hens,  commercial  pullets, packaging materials, vaccines,
     general supplies and maintenance supplies;

          (b) it is in first class condition,  not obsolete, and is readily
     usable  or  salable  by  the  Company in the ordinary  course  of  its
     business;

          (c) it substantially conforms  to  the  advertised or represented
     specifications and other quality standards of the Company, and has not
     been  determined by the Banks to be unacceptable  due  to  age,  type,
     category, quality and/or quantity;

          (d)  all  warranties  as  set  forth  in  this  Agreement and the
     Security Agreement are true and correct with respect thereto;

          (e) it has been identified to the Banks in the manner  prescribed
     pursuant to the Security Agreement;

          (f)  it  is  located  at  a  location  within  the  United States
     disclosed to and approved by the Banks and, if requested by the Agent,
     any  Person  (other  than  the  Company)  owning  or controlling  such
     location  shall have waived all right, title and interest  in  and  to
     such Inventory in a manner satisfactory to the Banks; and

          (g) it  is  not  subject  to any other lien, security interest or
     counterclaim.

     "ENVIRONMENTAL LAWS" shall have  the meaning specified in Section 5.10
hereof.

     "ERISA"  shall mean the Employee Retirement  Income  Security  Act  of
1974, as amended.

     "EURODOLLAR  LOAN"  shall  mean  a  Revolving  Credit Loan which bears
interest as provided in Section 1.3(b) hereof.

     "EURODOLLAR RATE" shall mean for each Interest Period  applicable to a
Eurodollar Loan, (a) the LIBOR Index Rate for such Interest Period, if such
rate  is  available, and (b) if the LIBOR Index Rate cannot be  determined,
the arithmetic  average of the rate of interest per annum (rounded upwards,
if necessary, to  nearest 1/100 of 1%) at which deposits in U.S. dollars in
immediately available funds are offered to the Agent at 11:00 a.m. (London,
England time) two (2)  Business  Days before the beginning of such Interest
Period by major banks in the interbank eurodollar market for a period equal
to  such  Interest Period and in an  amount  equal  or  comparable  to  the
principal amount  of  the Eurodollar Loan scheduled to be made by the Agent
during such Interest Period.

     "EVENT OF DEFAULT"  shall  mean  any  event or condition identified as
such in Section 8.1 hereof.

     "FED FUNDS RATE" shall have the meaning  specified  in  Section 1.7(c)
hereof.

     "FINANCIAL  GUARANTEE  L/C"  shall  mean an L/C issued hereunder  that
constitutes  a  financial  guaranty  letter of  credit  under  the  capital
adequacy requirements applicable to any of the Banks.

     "FISCAL  YEAR" shall mean the 52 or  53  week  period  ending  on  the
Saturday closest  to  September  30  in  each  calendar year, regardless of
whether such Saturday occurs in September or October of any calendar year.

     "FIXED CHARGE COVERAGE RATIO" shall mean the  ratio  of (a) the sum of
EBITDA  and all amounts payable under all non-cancellable operating  leases
(determined  on  a consolidated basis in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles, consistently applied) for the period in question, to
(b) the sum of (without  duplication) (i) Interest Expense for such period,
(ii) the sum of the scheduled  current maturities (determined in accordance
with  generally accepted accounting  principles  consistently  applied)  of
Funded  Debt during the period in question, (iii) all amounts payable under
non-cancellable  operating  leases  (determined  as  aforesaid) during such
period,  and  (iv)  all amounts payable with respect to capitalized  leases
(determined on a consolidated  basis  in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles, consistently applied) for the period in question.

     "FIXED RATE" shall mean either of  the Eurodollar Rate or the Adjusted
CD Rate.

     "FIXED RATE LOAN" shall mean a Eurodollar  Loan,  a  CD Rate Loan or a
Bid Loan, and "FIXED RATE LOANS" shall mean any one or more  of  such types
of Loans.

     "FUNDED  DEBT," with respect to any Person shall mean all indebtedness
for borrowed money  of  such  Person  and  with  respect to the Company all
indebtedness for borrowed money of the Company, in  each  case  maturing by
its terms more than one year after, or which is renewable or extendible  at
the  option  of such Person for a period ending one year or more after, the
date of determination, and shall include indebtedness for borrowed money of
such maturity created, assumed or guaranteed by such Person either directly
or indirectly, including obligations of such maturity secured by liens upon
Property of such  Person  and  upon  which such entity customarily pays the
interest, all current maturities of all  such indebtedness of such maturity
and all rental payments under capitalized leases of such maturity.

     "FUNDING  CORP." shall mean Pilgrim's  Pride  Funding  Corporation,  a
Delaware corporation.

     "GROWER PAYABLES" shall mean all amounts owed from time to time by the
Company to any Person  on  account  of  the  purchase price of agricultural
products  or  services  (including  poultry  and livestock)  if  the  Agent
reasonably determines that such Person is entitled  to  the benefits of any
grower's lien, statutory trust or similar security arrangements  to  secure
the payment of any amounts owed to such Person.

     "GUARANTOR"  shall  mean  Pilgrim  Interests,  Ltd.,  a  Texas limited
partnership.

     "GUARANTY  FEES"  shall  have  the  meaning specified in Section  7.30
hereof.

     "HARRIS" shall have the meaning specified  in  the  first paragraph of
this Agreement.

     "HARRIS  -  RELATED  PERSONS"  shall  mean Harris, together  with  its
Affiliates, and the officers, directors, employees,  agents  and attorneys-
in-fact of Harris and such Affiliates.

     "HIGHEST   LAWFUL   RATE"   shall   have   the  meaning  specified  in
Section 11.19 hereof.

     "INDENTURE" shall mean the Trust Indenture dated  as  of June 15, 1999
between the Issuer and the Trustee, relating to the Bonds, as amended.

     "INTANGIBLE  ASSETS" shall mean license agreements, trademarks,  trade
names, patents, capitalized  research and development, proprietary products
(the results of past research  and  development treated as long term assets
and excluded from Inventory) and goodwill (all determined on a consolidated
basis   in  accordance  with  generally  accepted   accounting   principles
consistently applied).

     "INTEREST  EXPENSE"  for  any  period  shall mean all interest charges
during such period, including all amortization of debt discount and expense
and  imputed  interest  with  respect  to  capitalized  lease  obligations,
determined on a consolidated basis in accordance  with  generally  accepted
accounting principles, consistently applied.

     "INTEREST PERIOD" shall mean with respect to (a) the Eurodollar Loans,
the period used for the computation of interest commencing on the date  the
relevant  Eurodollar  Loan is made, continued or effected by conversion and
concluding on the date one, two, three or six months thereafter and, (b) to
the  CD  Rate Loans, the  period  used  for  the  computation  of  interest
commencing  on  the  date  the  relevant CD Rate Loan is made, continued or
effected by conversion and concluding  on  the  date 30, 60, 90 or 180 days
thereafter, and (c) the Bid Loans, the period used  for  the computation of
interest commencing on the date the relevant Bid Loan is made and ending on
the  date  such Bid Loan is scheduled to mature, but in no event  may  such
period have  a  duration  of  less  than  30  days  or  more than 180 days;
PROVIDED,  HOWEVER,  that no Interest Period for any Fixed  Rate  Loan  may
extend  beyond  the Termination  Date.   For  purposes  of  determining  an
Interest Period applicable  to  a  Eurodollar  Loan, a month means a period
starting  on  one  day  in  a calendar month and ending  on  a  numerically
corresponding day in the next  calendar  month;  PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that if
there is no numerically corresponding day in the month in which an Interest
Period  is to end or if an Interest Period begins on  the  last  day  of  a
calendar month, then such Interest Period shall end on the last Banking Day
of the calendar month in which such Interest Period is to end.

     "INVENTORY"  shall  mean  all raw materials, work in process, finished
goods, and goods held for sale or  lease  or  furnished  or to be furnished
under contracts of service in which the Company or any Subsidiary  now  has
or hereafter acquires any right.

        "ISSUER"   shall   mean  the  Camp  County  Industrial  Development
Corporation,  a  nonstock,  nonprofit  industrial  development  corporation
existing under the laws of the State of Texas.

     "L/C" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 1.5 hereof.

     "L/C Agreement" shall have  the  meaning  set  forth  in  Section  1.5
hereof.

     "L/C FEE" has the meaning specified in Section 1.5 hereof.

     "L/C ISSUANCE FEE" has the meaning specified in Section 1.5 hereof.

     "LEVERAGE  RATIO"  shall  mean  the  ratio  for  the  Company  and its
Subsidiaries of (a) an amount equal to the sum of the aggregate outstanding
principal   amount   of  all  Debt  (other  than  (i)  Debt  consisting  of
reimbursement and other  obligations  with  respect  to  undrawn letters of
credit,  and (ii) the outstanding principal amount of the Company's  Senior
Subordinated  Notes,  so  long  as the trustee for  the Senior Subordinated
Notes  shall  hold  cash  in  an amount  sufficient  to  repay  the  Senior
Subordinated Notes in full) minus  the  aggregate  principal  amount of all
cash and Cash Equivalents reflected on the Company's balance sheet  that is
not  restricted  to secure the payment of off-balance sheet liabilities  of
the Company or any  Subsidiary,  to  (b)  the amount included in clause (a)
above plus Net Worth.

     "LIBOR INDEX RATE" shall mean, for any Interest Period applicable to a
Eurodollar Loan, the rate per annum (rounded  upwards, if necessary, to the
next higher one hundred-thousandth of a percentage  point)  for deposits in
U.S. Dollars for a period equal to such Interest Period, which  appears  on
the  Telerate  Page 3750 as of 11:00 a.m. (London, England time) on the day
two Banking Days before the commencement of such Interest Period.

     "LOAN" shall  mean  a Revolving Credit Loan or a Bid Loan, and "Loans"
shall mean any two or more Revolving Credit Loans and/or Bid Loans.

     "LOAN DOCUMENTS" shall  mean  this  Agreement and any and all exhibits
hereto, the Notes, the L/C Agreements, the  Reimbursement Agreement and the
Security Agreement.

     "NET  INCOME"  shall  mean  the  net income of  the  Company  and  its
Subsidiaries  determined  on  a  consolidated   basis  in  accordance  with
generally accepted accounting principles, consistently applied.

     "NET TANGIBLE ASSETS" shall mean the excess  of the value of the Total
Assets  over  the  value of the Intangible Assets of the  Company  and  its
Subsidiaries.

     "NET WORKING CAPITAL"  shall  mean  as to any Person in the excess for
such Person of current assets over current  liabilities, each as determined
in  accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting   principles  in  the
jurisdiction of such Person (or residence, in the case of an individual).

     "NET WORTH" shall mean the Total Assets minus the Total Liabilities of
the Company and its Subsidiaries, all determined on a consolidated basis in
accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting principles,  consistently
applied.

     "NOTES" shall mean the Revolving Notes,  and  "NOTE"  means any of the
Notes.

     "PAR   CAPITAL"   shall   mean   Pooled  Accounts  Receivable  Capital
Corporation.

     "PARTNERSHIP GUARANTY" shall mean  the  Guaranty  Agreement  from  the
Guarantor  to  the  Banks, as the same may be supplemented and amended from
time to time.

     "PBGC" shall mean the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.

     "PERFORMANCE L/C"  shall  mean  any L/C issued hereunder that does not
constitute a Financial Guarantee L/C.

     "PERSON" shall mean and include any  individual,  sole proprietorship,
partnership,    joint    venture,   trust,   unincorporated   organization,
association, corporation, institution, entity, party or government (whether
national, federal, state, county, city, municipal, or otherwise, including,
without  limitation,  any  instrumentality,   division,   agency,  body  or
department thereof).

     "PILGRIM FAMILY" means Lonnie A. "Bo" Pilgrim, his spouse,  his issue,
his  estate  and  any trust, partnership or other entity primarily for  the
benefit of his spouse and/or issue.

     "PLAN" shall mean  any  employee benefit plan covering any officers or
employees of the Company or any  Subsidiary,  any benefits of which are, or
are required to be, guaranteed by the PBGC.

     "POTENTIAL DEFAULT" shall mean any event or  condition which, with the
lapse of time, or giving of notice, or both, would  constitute  an Event of
Default.

     "PPAHC" shall mean Pilgrim's Pride Affordable Housing Corp.,  a Nevada
corporation.

     "PROPERTY"  shall  mean any interest in any kind of property or asset,
whether real, personal or mixed or tangible or intangible.

     "RECEIVABLES" shall  mean  all accounts, contract rights, instruments,
documents, chattel paper and general  intangibles  in which the Company now
has or hereafter acquires any right.

     "RECEIVABLES  SECURITIZATION  PROGRAM"  shall  mean   any  receivables
securitization program to which the Company is a party which  provides  for
the  sale  by  the Company, without recourse, of its Receivables for a cash
consideration of not less than 70% of the unpaid value of such Receivables,
and including in  any event the receivables securitization program pursuant
to which the Company will sell to Funding Corp. all or substantially all of
the Company's receivables  and Funding Corp. will in turn sell an undivided
interest in all of such Receivables to PAR Capital.

     "REIMBURSEMENT AGREEMENT"  shall have the meaning specified in Section
1.10 hereof.

     "REIMBURSEMENT OBLIGATION" has  the  meaning  specified in Section 1.6
hereof.

     "REQUIRED BANKS" shall mean any Bank or Banks which  in  the aggregate
hold  at  least  66-2/3% of the aggregate unpaid principal balance  of  the
Loans, Bond Reimbursement  Obligations and Reimbursement Obligations or, if
no Loans are outstanding hereunder,  any  Bank  or  Banks  in the aggregate
having at least 66-2/3% of the Revolving Credit Commitments.

     "RESERVE PERCENTAGE" means the daily arithmetic average  maximum  rate
at   which  reserves  (including,  without  limitation,  any  supplemental,
marginal and emergency reserves) are imposed on member banks of the Federal
Reserve  System  during  the  applicable  Interest  Period  by the Board of
Governors   of   the  Federal  Reserve  System  (or  any  successor)  under
Regulation D on "EUROCURRENCY  LIABILITIES"  (as  such  term  is defined in
Regulation  D),  subject  to any amendments of such reserve requirement  by
such  Board  or  its  successor,   taking  into  account  any  transitional
adjustments thereto.  For purposes of this definition, the Eurodollar Loans
shall be deemed to be eurocurrency liabilities  as  defined in Regulation D
without benefit or credit for any prorations, exemptions  or  offsets under
Regulation D.

     "REVOLVING  CREDIT"  shall  have  the  meaning specified in the  first
paragraph of this Agreement.

     "REVOLVING CREDIT COMMITMENT" and "REVOLVING CREDIT COMMITMENTS" shall
have the meanings specified in Section 1.1(c) hereof.

     "REVOLVING CREDIT LOAN" and "REVOLVING CREDIT  LOANS"  shall  have the
meanings specified in Section 1.1(a) hereof.

     "REVOLVING   NOTE"  or  "REVOLVING  NOTES"  shall  have  the  meanings
specified in Section 1.1(d) hereof.

     "SECURITY AGREEMENT"  shall  mean  that certain Security Agreement Re:
Accounts Receivable, Farm Products and Inventory, dated as of May 27, 1993,
from the Company to Harris, as Agent, as such agreement may be supplemented
and amended from time to time.

     "SUBORDINATED DEBT" shall mean indebtedness  for borrowed money of the
Company which is subordinate in right of payment to  the  prior  payment in
full  of  the  Company's  indebtedness, obligations and liabilities to  the
Banks under the Loan Documents pursuant to written subordination provisions
satisfactory in form and substance to the Banks.

     "SUBSIDIARY" shall mean  collectively  any corporation or other entity
at least a majority of the outstanding voting  equity interests (other than
directors' qualifying shares) of which is at the  time  owned  directly  or
indirectly  by the Company or by one of more Subsidiaries or by the Company
and one or more  Subsidiaries.   The  term  "CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARY" shall
mean  any  Subsidiary whose accounts are consolidated  with  those  of  the
Company in accordance  with  generally accepted accounting principles.  The
term "FOREIGN SUBSIDIARY" shall  mean  any  Subsidiary substantially all of
whose assets, operations and business are located  outside  of  the  United
States  and  the  term "MEXICAN SUBSIDIARY" shall mean a Foreign Subsidiary
substantially all of  whose  assets, business and operations are located in
the Republic of Mexico.  The term  "MATERIAL  SUBSIDIARY"  shall  mean  any
Subsidiary  whose  assets  total  5%  or  more  of  the Total Assets of the
Company.

     "TANGIBLE NET WORTH" shall mean the Net Worth minus  the amount of all
Intangible  Assets  of  the Company and its Subsidiaries, determined  on  a
consolidated  basis  in  accordance   with  generally  accepted  accounting
principles, consistently applied.

     "TELERATE PAGE 3750" shall mean the  display designated as "PAGE 3750"
on the Telerate Service (or such other page  as  may  replace  Page 3750 on
that  service  or  such  other  service  as may be nominated by the British
Bankers'  Association  as  the  information  vendor   for  the  purpose  of
displaying British Bankers' Association Interest Settlement  Rates for U.S.
Dollar deposits).

      "TERMINATION DATE" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 1.1(a)
hereof.

     "TOTAL ASSETS" shall mean at any date, the aggregate amount  of assets
of  the Company and its Subsidiaries determined on a consolidated basis  in
accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles  consistently
applied.

     "TOTAL  LIABILITIES"  shall mean at any date, the aggregate amount  of
all  liabilities  of the Company  and  its  Subsidiaries  determined  on  a
consolidated  basis   in  accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting
principles, consistently applied.

     "TRUSTEE" shall mean  Harris  Trust and Savings Bank, as Trustee under
the Indenture, and any successor trustee thereunder.

     "VALUE OF ELIGIBLE INVENTORY"   shall  mean  as of any given date with
respect to Eligible Inventory:

          (a) With respect to Eligible Inventory consisting of feed grains,
     feed, ingredients, dressed broiler chickens and  commercial  eggs,  an
     amount   equal   to   the   lower   of   (i)  costs  determined  on  a
     first-in-first-out  inventory  basis (determined  in  accordance  with
     generally  accepted accounting principles  consistently  applied),  or
     (ii) wholesale market value;

          (b) With respect to Eligible Inventory consisting of live broiler
     chickens, a  price  per  pound equal to 75% of (i) the price quoted on
     the Los Angeles Majority Market  on the date of calculation minus (ii)
     $0.085, rounded up to the nearest 1/4 cent;

          (c) With respect to Eligible  Inventory  consisting  of  prepared
     food products, the standard cost value;

          (d)  With  respect  to Eligible Inventory consisting of:  breeder
     hens, $1.50 per head; breeder  pullets,  $1.00  per  head;  commercial
     hens, $0.70 per head; commercial pullets, $0.40 per head; and hatching
     eggs,  $1.25  a  dozen;  or  in each case such other values as may  be
     agreed upon by the Company and the Required Banks; and

          (e) With respect to Eligible  Inventory  consisting  of packaging
     materials, vaccines, general supplies and maintenance supplies, actual
     costs.

SECTION 4.2.  ACCOUNTING  TERMS.   Any accounting term or the character  or
amount of any asset or liability or  item  of income or expense required to
be  determined  under  this  Agreement,  shall be  determined  or  made  in
accordance with generally accepted accounting  principles  at  the  time in
effect,  to  the  extent  applicable,  except  where  such  principles  are
inconsistent with the requirements of this Agreement.

SECTION 5.  Representations and Warranties.

     The Company represents and warrants to the Banks as follows:

SECTION 5.1.  ORGANIZATION AND QUALIFICATION.  The Company is a corporation
duly  organized  and  existing  and  in good standing under the laws of the
State of Delaware, has full and adequate  corporate  power  to carry on its
business   as   now  conducted,  is  duly  licensed  or  qualified  in  all
jurisdictions wherein  the nature of its activities requires such licensing
or qualification except  where  the  failure to be so licensed or qualified
would not have a material adverse effect  on  the  condition,  financial or
otherwise, of the Company, has full right and authority to enter  into this
Agreement  and  the  other  Loan  Documents,  to make the borrowings herein
provided  for,  to  issue the Notes in evidence thereof,  to  encumber  its
assets as collateral  security  for such borrowings and to perform each and
all of the matters and things herein  and  therein  provided  for; and this
Agreement  does not, nor does the performance or observance by the  Company
of any of the  matters  or  things  provided  for  in  the  Loan Documents,
contravene any provision of law or any charter or by-law provision  or  any
covenant,  indenture  or  agreement  of  or  affecting  the  Company or its
Properties.

SECTION 5.2.  SUBSIDIARIES.  Each Subsidiary is duly organized and existing
under  the  laws  of the jurisdiction of its incorporation or organization,
has full and adequate  corporate  or other organizational power to carry on
its business as now conducted and is  duly  licensed  or  qualified  in all
jurisdictions wherein the nature of its business requires such licensing or
qualification  and the failure to be so licensed or qualified would have  a
material  adverse   effect  upon  the  business,  operations  or  financial
condition of such Subsidiary  and  the Company taken as a whole.  As of the
date  hereof,  the  only Subsidiaries of  the  Company  are  set  forth  on
Exhibit H hereto.

SECTION 5.3.  FINANCIAL  REPORTS.   The Company has heretofore delivered to
the Banks a copy of the Audit Report  as  of  September  26,  1998  of  the
Company  and its Subsidiaries and unaudited financial statements (including
a balance  sheet,  statement  of income and retained earnings, statement of
cash flows, footnotes and comparison  to  the comparable prior year period)
of the Company as of, and for the period ending July 3, 1999.  Such audited
financial  statements  have  been  prepared in  accordance  with  generally
accepted accounting principles on a  basis  consistent, except as otherwise
noted therein, with that of the previous fiscal  year  or period and fairly
reflect in all material respects the consolidated financial position of the
Company and its Subsidiaries as of the dates thereof, and  the consolidated
results of its operations for the periods covered thereby.  The Company and
its  Subsidiaries  have  no material contingent liabilities other  than  as
indicated on said financial statements and since said date of September 26,
1998 there has been no material  adverse change in the condition, financial
or otherwise, of the Company and its  Subsidiaries,  taken  as a whole that
has not been disclosed in writing to the Banks.

SECTION 5.4.  LITIGATION;  TAX RETURNS; APPROVALS.  There is no  litigation
or governmental proceeding pending,  nor  to  the  knowledge of the Company
threatened,  against  the  Company  or any Subsidiary which,  if  adversely
determined,  is likely to result in any  material  adverse  change  in  the
Properties, business  and  operations  of the Company and its Subsidiaries,
taken as a whole.  All income tax returns  for  the  Company required to be
filed have been filed on a timely basis, all amounts required to be paid as
shown by said returns have been paid except where the  failure to make such
filing  or  payment  could  not reasonably be expected to have  a  material
adverse  effect  on  the  business,   operations,   Property  or  condition
(financial or otherwise) of the Company and its Subsidiaries,  taken  as  a
whole.   There  are  no pending or, to the best of the Company's knowledge,
threatened objections  to  or controversies in respect of the United States
federal income tax returns of  the  Company for any fiscal year except such
objection or controversies that could  not reasonably be expected to have a
material adverse effect on the business,  operations, Property or condition
(financial or otherwise) of the Company and  its  Subsidiaries,  taken as a
whole  or are being contested in good faith by appropriate proceedings  and
adequate  reserves have been provided therefor in accordance with generally
accepted accounting  principles  consistently  applied.   No authorization,
consent, license, exemption or filing (other than the filing  of  financing
statements)  or  registration  with  any  court or governmental department,
agency or instrumentality, is or will be necessary  to the valid execution,
delivery or performance by the Company of the Loan Documents.

SECTION 5.5.  REGULATION  U.   Neither the Company nor  any  Subsidiary  is
engaged in the business of extending  credit  for the purpose of purchasing
or carrying margin stock (within the meaning of  Regulation  U of the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System) and no part of the  proceeds of
any Loan made hereunder will be used to purchase or carry any margin  stock
or to extend credit to others for such a purpose.

SECTION 5.6.  NO DEFAULT.  As of the date of this Agreement, the Company is
in  full compliance with all of the terms and conditions of this Agreement,
and no  Potential  Default  or  Event  of  Default  is  existing under this
Agreement.

SECTION 5.7.  ERISA.  The Company and its Subsidiaries are in compliance in
all material respects with ERISA to the extent applicable  to them and have
received  no  written  notice  to the contrary from the PBGC or  any  other
governmental entity or agency.

SECTION 5.8.  SECURITY  INTERESTS   AND   DEBT.    There  are  no  security
interests, liens or encumbrances on any of the Property  of  the Company or
any  Subsidiary  except  such  as  are  permitted  by Section 7.16 of  this
Agreement, and the Company and its Subsidiaries have no Debt except such as
is permitted by Section 7.17 of this Agreement.

SECTION 5.9.  ACCURATE  INFORMATION.   No information,  exhibit  or  report
furnished by the Company to the Banks in connection with the negotiation of
the Loan Documents contained any misstatement  of  material fact or omitted
to  state  a  material  fact or any fact necessary to make  the  statements
contained therein not misleading  in  light  of  the circumstances in which
made.

SECTION 5.10. ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS.  (a) Except as disclosed on EXHIBIT C,
the Company has not received any written notice to  the  effect, or has any
knowledge, that its or any Subsidiary's Property or operations  are  not in
compliance  with  any  of the requirements of applicable federal, state and
local  environmental,  health   and   safety   statutes   and   regulations
("ENVIRONMENTAL  LAWS")  or  are  the  subject  of  any  federal  or  state
investigation  evaluating  whether any remedial action is needed to respond
to  a  release  of any toxic or  hazardous  waste  or  substance  into  the
environment, which  non-compliance  or  remedial action could reasonably be
expected to have a material adverse effect  on  the  business,  operations,
Property, assets or conditions (financial or otherwise) of the Company  and
its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole;

    (b)  there have been no releases of hazardous materials at, on or under
any  Property  now  or  previously  owned  or  leased by the Company or any
Subsidiary that, singly or in the aggregate, have,  or  may  reasonably  be
expected  to  have,  a  material adverse effect on the financial condition,
operations,  assets,  business   or  Properties  of  the  Company  and  its
Subsidiaries, taken as a whole;

    (c)  there  are no underground  storage  tanks,  active  or  abandoned,
including petroleum  storage  tanks,  on  or  under  any  property  now  or
previously owned or leased by the Company or any Subsidiary that, singly or
in  the  aggregate, have, or may reasonably be expected to have, a material
adverse effect  on the financial condition, operations, assets, business or
Properties of the Company and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole;

    (d)  neither the Company nor any Subsidiary has directly transported or
directly arranged  for  the transportation of any hazardous material to any
location which is listed or proposed for listing on the National Priorities
List pursuant to CERCLA,  on  the  CERCLIS  or on any similar state list or
which  is  the subject of federal, state or local  enforcement  actions  or
other investigations which could reasonably be expected to lead to material
claims against the Company or any Subsidiary thereof for any remedial work,
damage to natural  resources  or  personal  injury,  including claims under
CERCLA; and

    (e)  no conditions exist at, on or under any Property now or previously
owned or leased by the Company or any Subsidiary which, with the passage of
time,  or  the giving of notice or both, would give rise  to  any  material
liability under any Environmental Law.

SECTION 5.11. ENFORCEABILITY.   This Agreement and the other Loan Documents
are legal, valid and binding agreements of the Company, enforceable against
it  in  accordance with their terms,  except  as  may  be  limited  by  (a)
bankruptcy,  insolvency, reorganization, fraudulent transfer, moratorium or
other similar  laws  or judicial decisions for the relief of debtors or the
limitation of creditors' rights generally; and (b) any equitable principles
relating to or limiting the rights of creditors generally.

SECTION 5.12. RESTRICTIVE   AGREEMENTS.    Neither   the  Company  nor  any
Subsidiary  is  a  party to any contract or agreement, or  subject  to  any
charge or other corporate  restriction, which adversely affects its ability
to execute, deliver and perform  the  Loan Documents to which it is a party
and repay its indebtedness, obligations  and  liabilities  under  the  Loan
Documents  or  which  materially  and  adversely affects or, insofar as the
Company can reasonably foresee, could reasonably  be expected to materially
and  adversely  affect,  the  property, business, operations  or  condition
(financial or otherwise) of the  Company  and  its Subsidiaries, taken as a
whole,  or  would  in  any  respect  materially  and adversely  affect  the
Collateral, the repayment of the indebtedness, obligations  and liabilities
under  the  Loan Documents, or any Bank's or the Agent's rights  under  the
Loan Documents.

SECTION 5.13. LABOR  DISPUTES.  Except as set forth on EXHIBIT J, (a) as of
the date hereof, there is no collective bargaining agreement or other labor
contract covering employees  of  the  Company  or  any of its Subsidiaries;
(b)  no  such collective bargaining agreement or other  labor  contract  is
scheduled  to  expire  during  the  term of this Agreement; (c) no union or
other labor organization is seeking to  organize, or to be recognized as, a
collective  bargaining unit of employees of  the  Company  or  any  of  its
Subsidiaries;  and (d) there is no pending or (to the best of the Company's
knowledge) threatened strike, work stoppage, material unfair labor practice
claim or other material  labor  dispute against or affecting the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries or their respective employees.

SECTION 5.14. NO VIOLATION OF LAW.   Neither the Company nor any Subsidiary
is in violation of any law, statute, regulation, ordinance, judgment, order
or decree applicable to it which violation  could reasonably be expected to
in  any  respect  materially  and  adversely  affect  the  Collateral,  the
repayment of the indebtedness, obligations and  liabilities  under the Loan
Documents,  any  Bank's or the Agent's rights under the Loan Documents,  or
the Property, business, operations or condition (financial or otherwise) of
the Company and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole.

SECTION 5.15. NO DEFAULT  UNDER  OTHER AGREEMENTS.  Neither the Company nor
any Subsidiary is in default with  respect  to  any  note,  indenture, loan
agreement, mortgage, lease, deed, or other agreement to which it is a party
or by which it or its Property is bound, which default could  reasonably be
expected  to materially and adversely affect the Collateral, the  repayment
of the indebtedness,  obligations and liabilities under the Loan Documents,
any Bank's or the Agent's  rights under the Loan Documents or the Property,
business, operations or condition  (financial  or otherwise) of the Company
and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole.

SECTION 5.16. STATUS UNDER CERTAIN LAWS.  Neither  the  Company  nor any of
its  Subsidiaries  is  an  "INVESTMENT  COMPANY"  or  a  person directly or
indirectly  controlled  by  or acting on behalf of an "INVESTMENT  COMPANY"
within the meaning of the Investment  Company Act of 1940, as amended, or a
"HOLDING COMPANY," or a "SUBSIDIARY COMPANY"  of a "HOLDING COMPANY," or an
"AFFILIATE" of a "HOLDING COMPANY" or a "SUBSIDIARY  COMPANY" of a "HOLDING
COMPANY," within the meaning of the Public Utility Holding  Company  Act of
1935, as amended.

SECTION 5.17. FEDERAL  FOOD  SECURITY  ACT.   The  Company  has received no
written notice given pursuant to Section 1324(e)(1) or (3) of  the  Federal
Food  Security Act and there has not been filed any financing statement  or
notice,  purportedly  in compliance with the provisions of the Federal Food
Security Act, purporting  to  perfect  a security interest in farm products
purchased by the Company in favor of a secured  creditor  of  the seller of
such  farm  products.   The  Company  has  registered,  pursuant to Section
1324(c)(2)(D) of the Federal Food Security Act, with the Secretary of State
of each State in which are produced farm products purchased  by the Company
and which has established or hereafter establishes a central filing system,
as  a  buyer  of  farm  products  produced  in  such  State;  and each such
registration is in full force and effect.

Section 5.18. FAIR  LABOR  STANDARDS  ACT.  The Company and each Subsidiary
has complied in all material respects with,  and  will  continue  to comply
with,  the  provisions  of  the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, 29 U.S.C.
section201, ET SEQ., as amended from time to time (the "FLSA"), including
specifically,  but without limitation,  29  U.S.C.  section215(a).   This
representation  and   warranty,   and  each  reconfirmation  hereof,  shall
constitute written assurance from the  Company, given as of the date hereof
and  as  of the date of each reconfirmation,  that  the  Company  and  each
Subsidiary  has complied in all  material respects with the requirements of
the FLSA, in  general,  and Section 15(a)(1), 29 U.S.C. section 215(a)(1),
thereof, in particular.

SECTION 5.19. ORGANIZATION   AND   QUALIFICATION   OF  THE  GUARANTOR.  The
Guarantor is a limited partnership duly organized and  existing and in good
standing  under  the  laws  of  the State of Texas, has full  and  adequate
partnership  power to carry on its  business  as  now  conducted,  is  duly
licensed or qualified  in  all  jurisdictions  wherein  the  nature  of its
activities  requires  such  licensing  or  qualification  except  where the
failure  to  be  so licensed or qualified would not have a material adverse
effect on the condition, financial or otherwise, of the Guarantor, has full
right and authority to enter into the Partnership Guaranty, to guaranty the
payment when due of the Company's indebtedness, obligations and liabilities
to the Banks under  the Loan Documents pursuant to the Partnership Guaranty
and to perform each and all of the matters and things therein provided for;
and  the  Partnership Guaranty  does  not,  nor  does  the  performance  or
observance by the Guarantor of any of the matters or things provided for in
the Partnership  Guaranty, contravene any provision of law or any provision
of the Guarantor's  certificate  of  limited  partnership  or  its  limited
partnership  agreement  or  any  covenant,  indenture  or  agreement  of or
affecting the Guarantor or its Properties.

SECTION 6.  CONDITIONS PRECEDENT.

     The  obligation  of  the  Banks to make any Loan pursuant hereto or to
issue any L/C shall be subject to the following conditions precedent:

SECTION 6.1.  GENERAL.   The  Agent  shall  have  received  the  notice  of
borrowings and requests for L/Cs and the Notes hereinabove provided for.

SECTION 6.2.  EACH EXTENSION OF  CREDIT.   As  of the time of the making of
each  Loan and the issuance of each L/C hereunder  (including  the  initial
Loan or L/C, as the case may be):

          (a)  each  of  the  representations  and  warranties set forth in
     Section 5 hereof shall be and remain true and correct  as of said time
     as  if  made  at  said  time, except that (i) the representations  and
     warranties made under Section 5.3 shall be deemed to refer to the most
     recent financial statements furnished to the Banks pursuant to Section
     7.4 hereof and (ii) with respect to the Company's Foreign Subsidiaries
     the representations and warranties made under Section 5.13(d) shall be
     deemed to refer only to material strikes, work stoppages, unfair labor
     practice claims or other material labor disputes;

          (b) the Company shall be in full compliance with all of the terms
     and conditions hereof, and  no  Potential  Default or Event of Default
     shall have occurred and be continuing;

          (c) after giving effect to the requested  extension of credit and
     to  each  Loan  that  has  been  made  and  L/C issued hereunder,  the
     aggregate  principal  amount of all Loans, the  amount  available  for
     drawing under all L/Cs  and  the  aggregate  principal  amount  of all
     Reimbursement Obligations then outstanding shall not exceed the lesser
     of  (i)  the  sum  of  the Banks' Revolving Credit Commitments then in
     effect and (ii) the Borrowing  Base  as determined on the basis of the
     most recent Borrowing Base Certificate,  except as otherwise agreed by
     the Company and all of the Banks; and

          (d) no change shall have occurred in  the  condition or operation
     of  the  Company  or  any Subsidiary since the date of  the  financial
     statements (quarterly or annual, as applicable) most recently provided
     by the Company to the Banks  pursuant  to  Sections  7.4(a) or (b), as
     applicable, which, when considered in the aggregate, could  reasonably
     be  expected   to  have  a  material  adverse  effect on the business,
     operations,  Property  or condition (financial or  otherwise)  of  the
     Company and its Subsidiaries taken as a whole;

and the request by the Company for any Loan or L/C pursuant hereto shall be
and constitute a warranty to the foregoing effects.

SECTION 7.  COVENANTS.

     It is understood and agreed  that  so  long  as  credit  is  in use or
available  under  this Agreement or any amount remains unpaid on any  Note,
Reimbursement Obligation,  L/C,  Bond Reimbursement Obligation or Bond L/C,
except to the extent compliance in  any  case or cases is waived in writing
by the Required Banks:

SECTION 7.1.  MAINTENANCE.   The  Company  will,   and   will   cause  each
Subsidiary  to,  maintain,  preserve  and  keep  its plant, Properties  and
equipment in good repair, working order and condition and will from time to
time make all needful and proper repairs, renewals, replacements, additions
and betterments thereto so that at all times the efficiency  thereof  shall
be  preserved and maintained in all material respects, normal wear and tear
excepted.

SECTION 7.2.  TAXES.   The Company will, and will cause each Subsidiary to,
duly pay and discharge all taxes, rates, assessments, fees and governmental
charges upon or against  the  Company  or its Subsidiaries or against their
respective Properties in each case before  the  same  become delinquent and
before penalties accrue thereon unless and to the extent  that the same are
being  contested  in  good faith and by appropriate proceedings  diligently
conducted and for which  adequate  reserves  in  form and amount reasonably
satisfactory  to  the  Required Banks have been established  or  where  the
failure to make such payment  could  not  reasonably  be expected to have a
material adverse effect on the business, operations, Property  or condition
(financial  or otherwise) of the Company and its Subsidiaries, taken  as  a
whole, provided  that  the  Company  shall pay or cause to be paid all such
taxes, rates, assessments, fees and governmental charges forthwith upon the
commencement of proceedings to foreclose  any  lien  which  is  attached as
security  therefor, unless such foreclosure is stayed by the filing  of  an
appropriate bond in a manner satisfactory to the Required Banks.

SECTION 7.3.  MAINTENANCE  OF  INSURANCE.  The Company will, and will cause
each Subsidiary to, maintain insurance  coverage  by  good  and responsible
insurance underwriters in such forms and amounts and against such risks and
hazards  as  are customary for companies engaged in similar businesses  and
owning and operating  similar Properties, provided that the Company and its
Subsidiaries may self-insure for workmen's compensation, group health risks
and their live chicken  inventory  in  accordance  with applicable industry
standards.  In any event, the Company will insure any of its Property which
is insurable against loss or damage by fire, theft, burglary, pilferage and
loss in transit, all in amounts and under policies containing  loss payable
clauses to the Agent as its interest may appear (and, if the Required Banks
request, naming the Agent as additional insured therein) and providing  for
advance  notice  to  the Agent of cancellation thereof, issued by sound and
reputable insurers accorded  a  rating  of  A-XII  or  better  by A.M. Best
Company,  Inc.  or A or better by Standard & Poor's Corporation or  Moody's
Investors Service,  Inc.  and  all  premiums  thereon  shall be paid by the
Company and certificates summarizing the same delivered to the Agent.

SECTION 7.4.  FINANCIAL  REPORTS.  The Company will, and  will  cause  each
Subsidiary to, maintain a  standard  and  modern  system  of  accounting in
accordance with sound accounting practice and will furnish to the Banks and
their  duly  authorized  representatives  such  information respecting  the
business and financial condition of the Company and its Subsidiaries as may
be  reasonably  requested and, without any request,  will  furnish  to  the
Banks:

          (a) as  soon  as available, and in any event within 45 days after
     the close of each quarterly fiscal period of the Company a copy of the
     consolidated balance sheet, statement of income and retained earnings,
     statement of cash flows,  and the results of operations of the Company
     and  its  Subsidiaries,  for  such  period  of  the  Company  and  its
     Subsidiaries, and unaudited consolidating balance sheets, statement of
     income and retained earnings and  the  results  of  operations for the
     Company and its Material Subsidiaries, in each case, together with all
     such  information  for  the  year  to date, all in reasonable  detail,
     prepared by the Company and certified  on behalf of the Company by the
     Company's chief financial officer;

          (b) as soon as available, and in any  event  within 90 days after
     the  close of each fiscal year, a copy of the audit  report  for  such
     year and  accompanying  financial statements, including a consolidated
     balance sheet, a statement  of  income  and  retained  earnings, and a
     statement of cash flows, together with all footnotes thereto,  for the
     Company  and  its  Subsidiaries,  and  unaudited consolidating balance
     sheets, statement of income and retained  earnings  and  statements of
     cash  flows  for  the Company and its Material Subsidiaries,  in  each
     case, showing in comparative  form the figures for the previous fiscal
     year  of  the Company, all in reasonable  detail,  accompanied  by  an
     unqualified  opinion  of  Ernst  &  Young  or other independent public
     accountants of nationally recognized standing  selected by the Company
     and  reasonably satisfactory to the Required Banks,  such  opinion  to
     indicate   that  such  statements  are  prepared  in  accordance  with
     generally accepted accounting principles;

          (c) each  of  the  financial  statements  furnished  to the Banks
     pursuant  to  paragraph  (a) and (b) above shall be accompanied  by  a
     Compliance Certificate in  the  form  of  Exhibit  F  hereto signed on
     behalf of the Company by its chief financial officer;

          (d) within 30 days after the end of each month, a  Borrowing Base
     Certificate  in  the  form  of  Exhibit  G  hereto,  setting  forth  a
     computation  of  the  Borrowing  Base  as  of  that  month's end date,
     certified  as correct on behalf of the Company by the Company's  chief
     financial officer  and  certifying  that  as  of  the  last day of the
     preceding monthly period the signer thereof has re-examined  the terms
     and  provisions of this Agreement and the Security Agreement and  that
     to the best of his knowledge and belief, no Potential Default or Event
     of Default  has occurred or, if any such Potential Default or Event of
     Default has occurred,  setting forth the description of such Potential
     Default or Event of Default  and  specifying the action, if any, taken
     by the Company to remedy the same;

          (e)  promptly  upon  their  becoming  available,  copies  of  all
     registration statements and regular  periodic  reports,  if any, which
     the  Company  shall  have  filed  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange
     Commission  or  any  governmental agency substituted therefor, or  any
     national securities exchange,  including  copies of the Company's form
     10-K annual report, including financial statements  audited by Ernst &
     Young or other independent public accountants of nationally recognized
     standing  selected by the Company and reasonably satisfactory  to  the
     Bank, its form  10-Q  quarterly  report to the Securities and Exchange
     Commission and any Form 8-K filed  by  the Company with the Securities
     and Exchange Commission; and

          (f) promptly upon the mailing thereof  to the shareholders of the
     Company  generally,  copies of all financial statements,  reports  and
     proxy statements so mailed.

SECTION 7.5.  INSPECTION AND  REVIEWS.   The Company shall, and shall cause
each   Subsidiary   to,  permit  the  Agent  and  the   Banks,   by   their
representatives and agents,  to  inspect  any  of the properties, corporate
books and financial records of the Company and its  Subsidiaries, to review
and make copies of the books of accounts and other financial records of the
Company and its domestic Subsidiaries, and to discuss the affairs, finances
and accounts of the Company and its Subsidiaries with, and to be advised as
to the same by, its officers at such reasonable times  and intervals as the
Agent or the Banks may designate.  In addition to any other compensation or
reimbursement  to which the Agent and the Banks may be entitled  under  the
Loan Documents,  after the occurrence of an Event of Default and during the
continuation thereof  the  Company shall pay to the Agent from time to time
upon demand the amount necessary to compensate it for all fees, charges and
expenses incurred by the Agent  or  its  designee  in  connection  with the
audits  of  Collateral, or inspections or review of the books, records  and
accounts of the  Company  or any domestic Subsidiary conducted by the Agent
or its designee or any of the Banks.

SECTION 7.6.  CONSOLIDATION AND MERGER.  The Company will not, and will not
permit any Subsidiary to, consolidate  with  or  merge  into any Person, or
permit  any  other  Person to merge into it, or acquire (in  a  transaction
analogous in purpose  or  effect  to  a  consolidation  or  merger)  all or
substantially   all   the   Property   of  the  other  Person,  or  acquire
substantially as an entirety the business  of any other Person, without the
prior written consent of the Required Banks; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that (a) if
no  Potential  Default  or  Event of Default shall  have  occurred  and  be
continuing or shall result therefrom  (including  compliance on a pro forma
basis with Sections 7.8, 7.9, 7.10, 7.11, 7.12 and  7.13)  the  Company may
acquire  all  or  substantially  all  the Property of the other Person,  or
acquire substantially as an entirety the  business  of  any other Person if
the aggregate fair market value of all consideration paid or payable by the
Company in all such acquisitions made in any Fiscal Year  does  not  exceed
$50,000,000 and (b) a Subsidiary or the Company may acquire, merge with  or
into  or  consolidate with another Subsidiary so long as, in the case of an
acquisition, a merger or a consolidation involving the Company, the Company
is the surviving or resulting entity.

SECTION 7.7.  TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES.  The Company will not, and will
not permit any Subsidiary to, enter into any transaction, including without
limitation,  the  purchase, sale, lease or exchange of any Property, or the
rendering of any service,  with  any  Affiliate  of  the  Company  or  such
Subsidiary  except  (a)  in  the  ordinary  course  of  and pursuant to the
reasonable requirements of the Company's or such Subsidiary's  business and
upon fair and reasonable terms not materially less favorable to the Company
than  would  be  obtained in a comparable arm's-length transaction  with  a
Person not an Affiliate  of  the Company or such Subsidiary; PROVIDED, that
in the case of any such transaction  involving the Company or a Subsidiary,
on  the  one  hand,  and  another  Subsidiary,  on  the  other  hand,  such
transaction  is  in the ordinary course  and  pursuant  to  the  reasonable
requirements of the  Company's  or such Subsidiary's business, (b) on-going
transactions with Affiliates of the  type  disclosed in the Company's proxy
statement for its Fiscal Year ended September 26, 1998; (c) the sale of all
or substantially all of the Company's Receivables pursuant to a Receivables
Securitization   Program;   and  (d)  the  guaranties   and   environmental
indemnities described in Section 7.17(o) hereof.

SECTION 7.8.  LEVERAGE RATIO.    The  Company  will not permit its Leverage
Ratio at any time to exceed 0.625 to 1.

SECTION 7.9.  TANGIBLE NET WORTH.  The Company shall  maintain its Tangible
Net Worth at all times during the periods specified below  in an amount not
less than the minimum required amount for each period set forth below:

          (a) from the date hereof through the next to last  day  in Fiscal
     Year 1999, $181,091,000; and

          (b) from the last day of Fiscal Year 1999 and at all times during
     each Fiscal Year thereafter, an amount in any Fiscal Year equal to the
     minimum  amount required to be maintained during the preceding  Fiscal
     Year plus  an amount equal to 75% of the Company's Net Income (but not
     less than zero)  during  such  Fiscal  Year, if the Company's Leverage
     Ratio for such Fiscal Year is equal to or  greater  than  0.5 to 1, or
     50%  of  the  Company's  Net  Income  (but not less than zero) if  the
     Company's Leverage Ratio for such Fiscal Year is less than 0.5 to 1.

SECTION 7.10. CURRENT RATIO.  The Company will  maintain  at  all times and
measured  as of the last day of each quarterly fiscal accounting  period  a
Current Ratio of not less than 1.35 to 1.

SECTION 7.11. NET  TANGIBLE  ASSETS TO TOTAL LIABILITIES.  The Company will
not permit the ratio of its Net Tangible Assets to its Total Liabilities at
any  time  but  measured  as of the  last  day  of  each  quarterly  fiscal
accounting period to be less than 1.3 to 1.

SECTION 7.12. FIXED CHARGE COVERAGE RATIO.  The Company will not permit, as
of the last day of each fiscal  quarter  of  the  Company, its Fixed Charge
Coverage Ratio in the eight consecutive fiscal quarters of the Company then
ended to be less than 1.5 to 1 on the last day of each  fiscal  quarter  of
the Company.

SECTION 7.13. MINIMUM  NET  WORKING CAPITAL.  The Company will maintain Net
Working Capital at all times  during  each period specified below (measured
as of the last day of each monthly fiscal  accounting  period) in an amount
not less than the amount specified below for each period:

               (a) during Fiscal Year 1999, $50,000,000;

               (b) during Fiscal Year 2000, $55,000,000; and

               (c) during each Fiscal Year thereafter, $60,000,000.

SECTION 7.14. INTENTIONALLY OMITTED.

SECTION 7.15. DIVIDENDS AND CERTAIN OTHER RESTRICTED PAYMENTS.  The Company
will not (a) declare or pay any dividends or make any distribution  on  any
class  of  its  capital  stock  (other than dividends payable solely in its
capital stock) or (b) directly or  indirectly purchase, redeem or otherwise
acquire or retire any of its capital  stock (except out of the proceeds of,
or in exchange for, a substantially concurrent  issue  and  sale of capital
stock)  or  (c)  make  any other distributions with respect to its  capital
stock; PROVIDED, HOWEVER,  that if no Potential Default or Event of Default
shall exist before and after giving effect thereto, the Company may (i) pay
dividends in an aggregate amount  not  to  exceed  $3,400,000 in any Fiscal
Year,  (ii)  pay  dividends  permitted  under  Section 7.15(i)  during  the
immediately preceding Fiscal Year that were declared  but  not  paid in the
immediately  preceding  Fiscal  Year,  and  (iii)  repurchase the Company's
capital stock in an aggregate amount not to exceed $25,000,000.

SECTION 7.16. LIENS.   The  Company  will  not,  and will  not  permit  any
Subsidiary  to, pledge, mortgage or otherwise encumber  or  subject  to  or
permit to exist  upon  or  be  subjected  to  any  lien, charge or security
interest  of  any  kind  (including  any conditional sale  or  other  title
retention agreement and any lease in the  nature  thereof),  on  any of its
Properties of any kind or character other than:

          (a)  liens,  pledges  or  deposits  for  workmen's  compensation,
     unemployment   insurance,   old   age   benefits  or  social  security
     obligations,  taxes,  assessments,  statutory   obligations  or  other
     similar charges, good faith deposits made in connection  with tenders,
     contracts or leases to which the Company or a Subsidiary is a party or
     other deposits required to be made in the ordinary course of business,
     provided  in  each case the obligation secured is not overdue  or,  if
     overdue, is being  contested  in good faith by appropriate proceedings
     and adequate reserves have been  provided  therefor in accordance with
     generally accepted accounting principles and  that  the  obligation is
     not   for  borrowed  money,  customer  advances,  trade  payables   or
     obligations to agricultural producers;

          (b)  the pledge of Property for the purpose of securing an appeal
     or stay or  discharge in the course of any legal proceedings, provided
     that the aggregate  amount  of  liabilities  of  the  Company  and its
     Subsidiaries  so secured by a pledge of Property permitted under  this
     subsection (b) including interest and penalties thereon, if any, shall
     not be in excess of $5,000,000 at any one time outstanding;

          (c) liens,  pledges,  mortgages,  security  interests,  or  other
     charges  granted  to  the  Agent  to  secure  the  Notes, L/Cs, or the
     Reimbursement Obligations;

          (d) liens, pledges, security interests or other  charges  now  or
     hereafter created under the Security Agreement;

          (e)  security  interests  or  other  interests  of  a  lessor  in
     equipment  leased by the Company or any Subsidiary as lessee under any
     financing lease,  to  the  extent  such  security  interest  or  other
     interest secures rental payments payable by the Company thereunder;

          (f)  liens  of  carriers, warehousemen, mechanics and materialmen
     and other like liens,  in  each case arising in the ordinary course of
     the Company's or any Subsidiary's  business  to the extent they secure
     obligations that are not past due or, if past due, which do not exceed
     an aggregate at any one time of $5,000,000 or  are  being contested in
     good faith by appropriate proceedings and adequate reserves  have been
     provided  therefor  in  accordance  with generally accepted accounting
     principals;

          (g) such minor defects, irregularities,  encumbrances, easements,
     rights of way, and clouds on title as normally  exist  with respect to
     similar  properties  which  do  not  materially  impair  the  Property
     affected thereby for the purpose for which it was acquired;

          (h)  liens,  pledges,  mortgages,  security  interests  or  other
     charges  granted  by any of the Company's Foreign Subsidiaries in such
     Foreign Subsidiary's  Inventory, fixed assets and accounts receivable,
     in each case securing only  indebtedness  in  an  aggregate  principal
     amount  of  up  to  75%  of  the  Net  Working Capital of such Foreign
     Subsidiaries  incurred  by  such  Subsidiaries   for  working  capital
     purposes;

          (i) statutory landlord's liens under leases;

          (j) existing liens described on Exhibit D hereto;

          (k)  liens  on  the  cash surrender value of the  life  insurance
     policy maintained by the Company on the life of Mr. Lonnie A. Pilgrim,
     to the extent such liens secure loans in an aggregate principal amount
     not to exceed $900,000;

          (l)  liens,  security  interests,  pledges,  mortgages  or  other
     charges in any Property other than the Collateral securing obligations
     in an aggregate amount not exceeding $1,000,000 at any time;

          (m) liens, mortgages and security interests in the Company's real
     estate,  buildings,  machinery  and  equipment  securing  indebtedness
     permitted only by Section 7.17(j) of this Agreement;

          (n) the interest  of  any  purchaser of the Company's Receivables
     purchased by it pursuant to a Receivables  Securitization  Program  in
     such Receivables;

          (o)  liens  and  security  interests granted by PPAHC on its real
     estate  and  all buildings and improvements  thereon  and  all  rents,
     issues  and  profits   thereof   securing  indebtedness  permitted  by
     Sections 7.17(n) and (o) hereof;

          (p) (i) liens, pledges, mortgages,  security  interests, or other
     charges  granted  to  the  Agent to secure the Bond L/C  or  the  Bond
     Reimbursement  Obligations,  and   (ii)   liens,  pledges,  mortgages,
     security  interests  or  other  charges  in Property  other  than  the
     Collateral granted to the issuer of an Alternate  Credit  Facility  to
     secure  the  Company's  obligations to such issuer with respect to the
     Alternate Credit Facility;

          (q) liens, pledges,  mortgages  and  security interests on assets
     (other than the Collateral) of the Company  and  its  Subsidiaries  to
     secure indebtedness permitted by Section 7.17(u) hereof; and

          (r) liens of Agricultural Production Credit Association on equity
     interests in Agricultural Production Credit Association.

SECTION 7.17. BORROWINGS  AND  GUARANTIES.   The Company will not, and will
not  permit  any  Subsidiary  to,  issue,  incur, assume,  create  or  have
outstanding  any indebtedness for borrowed money  (including  as  such  all
indebtedness representing  the  deferred  purchase  price  of  Property) or
customer  advances,  nor be or remain liable, whether as endorser,  surety,
guarantor or otherwise,  for or in respect of any liability or indebtedness
of any other Person, other than:

          (a) indebtedness of the Company arising under or pursuant to this
     Agreement or the other Loan Documents;

          (b) the liability  of  the Company arising out of the endorsement
     for deposit or collection of commercial paper received in the ordinary
     course of business;

          (c) trade payables of the  Company arising in the ordinary course
     of the Company's business;

          (d) indebtedness disclosed on  the  audited  financial statements
     referred to in Section 5.3 hereof;

          (e)  Subordinated Debt in an aggregate principal  amount  not  to
     exceed $100,000,000 maturing no earlier than August 1, 2003;

          (f) indebtedness in an aggregate principal amount of up to 75% of
     each Foreign  Subsidiary's  working  capital incurred by the Company's
     Foreign Subsidiaries for working capital purposes;

          (g) Debt arising from sale/leaseback  transactions  permitted  by
     Section 7.32 hereof and under Capitalized Lease Obligations;

          (h)  indebtedness  of any Foreign Subsidiary to any other Foreign
     Subsidiary;

          (i) loans in an aggregate  principal  amount  of  up  to $900,000
     against  the  cash  surrender  value  of  the  life  insurance  policy
     maintained on the life of Mr. Lonnie A. Pilgrim;

      (j) Funded Debt incurred to finance capital expenditures;

               (k) in addition to the indebtedness permitted by Section  7.17(f)
     hereof,   unsecured   indebtedness  of  the  Company  or  its  Foreign
     Subsidiaries  in  an  aggregate   principal   amount   not  to  exceed
     $20,000,000 outstanding at any time incurred to finance  the Company's
     or its Foreign Subsidiaries working capital needs;

          (l) indebtedness in an aggregate principal amount not  to  exceed
     $85,000,000,   which   includes   $15,000,000  currently  unfunded  at
     principal and interest payments yet  to  be  determined,  owed to John
     Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company and Signature 1A (Cayman), Ltd.;
     notes  payable  with interest rates at 7.21%, 9.39%, 9.45%, 7.11%  and
     7.07%, payable in  monthly installments of $455,305, $61,839, $23,860,
     $134,750 and $135,412, respectively, plus balloon payments at maturity
     on February 28, 2006  and  any indebtedness incurred to refinance such
     indebtedness; PROVIDED such refinancing does not exceed the greater of
     the original principal amount of the indebtedness being refinanced and
     75% of the appraised value (as  shown  in an appraisal performed by an
     appraiser satisfactory to the Agent; PROVIDED  that the Agent shall be
     deemed to have approved any appraiser that has prepared  an  appraisal
     on  or before the date hereof for any assets pledged on or before  the
     date  hereof  to  John  Hancock  Mutual  Life  Insurance  Company  and
     Signature  1A  (Cayman),  Ltd.,  pursuant to the terms of that certain
     Amended and Restated Note Purchase  Agreement  among the Company, John
     Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company and Signature 1A (Cayman), Ltd.,
     so long as such appraiser prepares the appraisal  or  update  to  such
     appraisal   for   the  same  assets  referenced  above  on  or  before
     October 31, 2001) of the collateral securing such indebtedness;

          (m) indebtedness  of the Company and its Subsidiaries pursuant to
     Receivables Securitization Programs;

          (n) indebtedness of  PPAHC  to  Harris  in an aggregate principal
     amount not to exceed $1,820,000 incurred to finance  the  construction
     by  PPAHC  of  an  apartment  building in Camp County, Texas, and  any
     indebtedness incurred to refinance such indebtedness;

          (o) indebtedness of the Company  under its guaranty of payment to
     Harris, and any refinancing lender or lenders, of PPAHC's indebtedness
     described  in  subsection  (n) above and its  environmental  indemnity
     given to Harris, and any refinancing  lender or lenders, in connection
     with PPAHC's indebtedness described in subsection (n) above;

          (p) indebtedness of the Company relating  to  the Bonds, the Bond
     L/C and any Alternate Credit Facility;

          (q) unsecured indebtedness of the Company evidenced by its senior
     notes  due  no  earlier  than August 1, 2009 in an original  aggregate
     principal  amount not to exceed  $150,000,000  (the  "ORIGINAL  SENIOR
     NOTES"), PROVIDED  that concurrently with the issuance of the Original
     Senior Notes the Company shall deposit, or cause to be deposited, with
     the trustee for the  Company's  10-7/8%  Senior Subordinated Notes Due
     2003 (the "SENIOR SUBORDINATED NOTES") proceeds of the Original Senior
     Notes in an amount sufficient to repay the  Senior  Subordinated Notes
     in full;

          (r)  additional  unsecured   indebtedness  of the Company  in  an
     original   aggregate  principal  amount  not  to  exceed   $75,000,000
     evidenced by  additional  senior notes of the Company having identical
     terms as the Original Senior  Notes, PROVIDED that after giving effect
     to  the  incurrence  of such indebtedness  the  Company  shall  be  in
     compliance on a PRO FORMA  basis  with  the  financial requirements of
     Sections 7.8, 7.9, 7.10, 7.11, 7.12 and 7.13 of this Agreement;

          (s)  unsecured  indebtedness  of  any  Subsidiary  to  any  other
     Subsidiary  and  unsecured  indebtedness  of  the   Company   to   any
     Subsidiary,  PROVIDED  that  any  such  indebtedness of the Company is
     expressly subordinated to the prior payment  in full in cash of all of
     the Company's indebtedness, obligations and liabilities  to  the Agent
     and the Banks under this Agreement and the other Loan Documents;

          (t)  guarantee  by  any  Subsidiary  of  the  indebtedness of the
     Company permitted under subsections (q) and (r) of this  Section 7.17;
     PROVIDED   that  such  Subsidiary  guarantees  all  of  the  Company's
     indebtedness,  obligations  and liabilities to the Agent and the Banks
     under this Agreement and the other Loan Documents; and

          (u)  senior secured indebtedness  of  the  Company  under  credit
     facilities  agented  by  CoBank,  ACB or other lenders in an aggregate
     principal amount not to exceed the  greater  of  (i)  $200,000,000, or
     (ii) 75% of the appraised value (as shown in an appraisal performed by
     an appraiser satisfactory to the Agent; PROVIDED that the  Agent shall
     be  deemed  to  have  approved  any  appraiser  that  has  prepared an
     appraisal  on  or  before  the  date hereof for any assets pledged  to
     CoBank, ACB, as agent, on or before  December 31, 1999 pursuant to the
     terms of that certain Credit Agreement among the Company, CoBank, ACB,
     and  certain  lenders  a  party thereto, so  long  as  such  appraiser
     prepares the appraisal or update to such appraisal for the same assets
     referenced above on or before  October  31, 2001) of the assets of the
     Company and its Subsidiaries incurred to  finance the expansion of the
     Company's production and processing facilities,  fixture acquisitions,
     repayment of existing indebtedness and for general corporate purposes.

SECTION 7.18. INVESTMENTS, LOANS AND ADVANCES.  The Company  will  not, and
will  not  permit any Subsidiary to, make or retain any investment (whether
through the  purchase  of  stock,  obligations or otherwise) in or make any
loan or advance to, any other Person, other than:

          (a) investments in certificates  of  deposit having a maturity of
     one year or less issued by any United States  commercial  bank  having
     capital and surplus of not less than $50,000,000;

          (b)  investments  in  an  aggregate amount of up to $8,000,000 in
     deposits maintained with the Pilgrim Bank of Pittsburg;

          (c) investments in commercial paper rated P1 by Moody's Investors
     Service, Inc. or A1 by Standard & Poor's Ratings Group maturing within
     180 days of the date of issuance thereof;

          (d) marketable obligations of the United States;

          (e) marketable obligations guaranteed by or insured by the United
     States, or those for which the full  faith  and  credit  of the United
     States is pledged for the repayment of principal and interest thereof;
     provided that such obligations have a final maturity of no  more  than
     one year from the date acquired by the Company;

          (f)   repurchase,  reverse  repurchase  agreements  and  security
     lending agreements  collateralized by securities of the type described
     in subsection (c) and having a term of no more than 90 days, PROVIDED,
     HOWEVER, that the Company  shall  hold  (individually  or  through  an
     agent)  all securities relating thereto during the entire term of such
     arrangement;

          (g) loans, investments (excluding retained earnings) and advances
     by the Company  to  its Subsidiaries located in Mexico in an aggregate
     outstanding amount not  to  exceed $145,000,000 at any time, PROVIDED,
     HOWEVER,  that  the Company may  make  loans,  investments  (excluding
     retained earnings)  and advances to its Subsidiaries located in Mexico
     in an aggregate amount  equal  to  the aggregate amount of any capital
     withdrawn from its Mexican Subsidiaries  after the date hereof but not
     to exceed an aggregate amount of $25,000,000 in any Fiscal Year of the
     Company,  PROVIDED  FURTHER  that  any  such  investments   (excluding
     retained  earnings),  loans and advances shall not cause the aggregate
     outstanding amount of all  such loans, investments (excluding retained
     earnings) and advances to exceed $145,000,000 at any time;

          (h) loans and advances  to  employees and contract growers (other
     than executive officers and directors  of  the Company) for reasonable
     expenses incurred in the ordinary course of business;

          (i)  loans  and  advances  from  any Subsidiary  to  any  another
     Subsidiary or to the Company;

          (j) investments in an aggregate amount  not  to exceed $1,000,000
     in Southern Hens, Inc.;

          (k) investments in and loans and advances to each of PPC Delaware
     Business Trust, Pilgrim's Pride International, Inc. and PPC Marketing,
     Ltd.  in an aggregate amount not to exceed $1,000,000  for  each  such
     entity;

          (l) an initial capital contribution to Funding Corp. in an amount
     of up to  $1,000  and  investments,  if  any, arising from the sale of
     Receivables  at  a  discount  pursuant  to Receivables  Securitization
     Programs;

          (m) loans and advances to officers and  employees  of the Company
     and  its  Subsidiaries  made  in  connection  with such officer's  and
     employee's for housing related expenses or loans  associated  with the
     procurement or sale of personal residences or necessary for the moving
     of  key  personnel,  in  an aggregate outstanding amount not to exceed
     $3,000,000 at any time;

          (n)  investments  in Subsidiaries  to  the  extent  permitted  by
     Section 7.29 hereof;

          (o) investments permitted by Section 7.6;

          (p) investments made  prior  to the date hereof in Persons, which
     are not Subsidiaries, identified on Exhibit K hereto;

          (q)  investments  existing  on the  date  of  this  Agreement  in
     Subsidiaries listed on Exhibit H; and

          (r) investments not covered by subsections (a) through (q) above,
     in an amount not to exceed at any time an aggregate of $25,000,000.

SECTION 7.19. SALE OF PROPERTY.  The Company  will not, and will not permit
any Subsidiary to, sell, lease, assign, transfer  or  otherwise  dispose of
(whether  in  one  transaction  or  in  a series of transactions) all or  a
material part of its Property to any other Person in any Fiscal Year of the
Company; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that this Section shall not prohibit:

          (a) sales of Inventory by the Company  in  the ordinary course of
     business;

          (b)  sales or leases by the Company of its surplus,  obsolete  or
     worn-out machinery and equipment;

          (c) the  sale  by  the Company of all or substantially all of its
     Receivables pursuant to Receivables Securitization Programs; and

          (d)  transfers  of  assets  from  any  Subsidiary  to  any  other
     Subsidiary or to the Company.

For purposes of this Section 7.19, "MATERIAL PART" shall mean 5% or more of
the lesser of the book or fair market value of the Property of the Company.

SECTION 7.20. NOTICE OF SUIT, ADVERSE  CHANGE  IN BUSINESS OR DEFAULT.  The
Company shall, as soon as possible, and in any event  within  fifteen  (15)
days  after the Company learns of the following, give written notice to the
Banks of (a) any proceeding(s) that, if determined adversely to the Company
or any  Subsidiary  could reasonably be expected to have a material adverse
effect on the Properties,  business  or  operations  of the Company and its
Subsidiaries,  taken  as  a  whole,  being instituted or threatened  to  be
instituted by or against the Company or  such  Subsidiary  in  any federal,
state, local or foreign court or before any commission or other  regulatory
body (federal, state, local or foreign); (b) any material adverse change in
the business, Property or condition, financial or otherwise, of the Company
and  its  Subsidiaries,  taken  as  a  whole;  and (c) the occurrence of  a
Potential Default or Event of Default.

SECTION 7.21. ERISA.  The Company will, and will  cause each Subsidiary to,
promptly  pay and discharge all obligations and liabilities  arising  under
ERISA of a  character  which  if  unpaid or unperformed might result in the
imposition of a lien against any of  its  Property and will promptly notify
the  Agent of (a) the occurrence of any reportable  event  (as  defined  in
ERISA)  which  could reasonably be expected to result in the termination by
the PBGC of any  Plan  covering any officers or employees of the Company or
any Subsidiary any benefits of which are, or are required to be, guaranteed
by PBGC, (b) receipt of  any  notice  from  PBGC  of  its intention to seek
termination of any Plan or appointment of a trustee therefor,  and  (c) its
intention  to  terminate  or withdraw from any Plan.  The Company will not,
and will not permit any Subsidiary  to,  terminate  any  Plan  or  withdraw
therefrom  unless  it  shall  be  in  compliance  with all of the terms and
conditions of this Agreement after giving effect to  any  liability to PBGC
resulting from such termination or withdrawal.

SECTION 7.22. USE OF LOAN PROCEEDS.  The Company will use the  proceeds  of
all   Loans  and L/Cs made or issued hereunder solely to refinance existing
Debt and for general corporate purposes.

SECTION 7.23. CONDUCT  OF  BUSINESS  AND  MAINTENANCE  OF  EXISTENCE.   The
Company  will,  and  will  cause  each Subsidiary to, continue to engage in
business of the same general type as  now  conducted by it and, in the case
of PPAHC, to engage in no business other than the construction, acquisition
and renting, as landlord, an apartment building  in Camp County, Texas, and
the Company will, and will cause each Subsidiary to,  preserve,  renew  and
keep  in  full  force  and effect the Company's corporate existence and the
Company's and each Subsidiary's rights, privileges and franchises necessary
or desirable in the normal conduct of business; except where the failure to
preserve, renew and keep  in  full force and effect such rights, privileges
and licenses could not reasonably  be  expected  to have a material adverse
effect  on  the business, operations, Property or condition  (financial  or
otherwise) of the Company and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole.

SECTION 7.24. ADDITIONAL  INFORMATION.   Upon  request  of  the  Agent, the
Company  shall provide any reasonable additional information pertaining  to
any of the Collateral.

SECTION 7.25. SUPPLEMENTAL  PERFORMANCE.   The  Company  will  at  its  own
expense, register, file, record and execute all such further agreements and
documents,  including  without limitation financing statements, and perform
such acts as are necessary and appropriate, or as the Agent or any Bank may
reasonably request, to effect the purposes of the Loan Documents.

SECTION 7.26. Intentionally Omitted.

SECTION 7.27. COMPLIANCE  WITH LAWS, ETC.  The Company will, and will cause
each of its Subsidiaries to,  comply  in  all  material  respects  with all
applicable  laws, rules, regulations and orders, such compliance to include
(without limitation)  (a)  in  the case of the Company, the maintenance and
preservation of its corporate existence,  (b)  qualification  as  a foreign
corporation   wherein   the   nature   of   its  activities  requires  such
qualification except where the failure to be  so qualified would not have a
material adverse effect on the business, operations,  Property or condition
(financial or otherwise) of the Company and its Subsidiaries,  taken  as  a
whole,  (c)  the registration pursuant to the Food Security Act of 1985, as
amended, with  the  Secretary  of State of each State in which are produced
any farm products purchased by the  Company  and  which  has  established a
central filing system, as a buyer of farm products produced in  such state,
and  the  maintenance  of  each such registration, (d) compliance with  the
Packers and Stockyard Act of  1921,  as  amended,  (e)  compliance with all
applicable   rules  and  regulations  promulgated  by  the  United   States
Department of  Agriculture  and  all  similar  applicable  state  rules and
regulations,  and (f) compliance with all rules and regulations promulgated
pursuant to the  Occupational  Safety  and  Health Act of 1970, as amended;
PROVIDED that the failure of the Company to comply  with  this Section 7.27
in any instance not directly involving the Agent and the Banks or adversely
affecting  the  Agent's  security  interest  in  the  Collateral shall  not
constitute an Event of Default unless such failure would  have  a  material
adverse   effect   on  the  business,  operations,  Property  or  condition
(financial or otherwise)  of  the  Company and its Subsidiaries, taken as a
whole.

SECTION 7.28. ENVIRONMENTAL COVENANT.   The  Company  will,  and will cause
each of its Subsidiaries to:

          (a) use and operate all of its facilities and Properties  in
     material   compliance  with  all  Environmental  Laws,  keep  all
     necessary permits,  approvals,  certificates,  licenses and other
     authorizations relating to environmental matters  in  effect  and
     remain in material compliance therewith, and handle all hazardous
     materials    in   material   compliance   with   all   applicable
     Environmental Laws;

          (b) immediately  notify  the  Agent  and provide copies upon
     receipt  of all material written claims, complaints,  notices  or
     inquiries  relating  to  the  condition  of  its  facilities  and
     Property   or  compliance  with  Environmental  Laws,  and  shall
     promptly cure  and have dismissed, to the reasonable satisfaction
     of the Required  Banks,  any  actions and proceedings relating to
     compliance with Environmental Laws  unless and to the extent that
     the same are being contested in good  faith  and  by  appropriate
     proceedings diligently conducted and for which adequate  reserves
     in form and amount reasonably satisfactory to the Required  Banks
     have  been established, provided that no proceedings to foreclose
     any lien  which  is attached as security therefor shall have been
     commenced unless such  foreclosure  is stayed by the filing of an
     appropriate bond in a manner satisfactory  to the Required Banks;
     and

          (c)  provide such information and certifications  which  the
     Agent may reasonably  request  from  time  to  time  to  evidence
     compliance with this Section 7.28.

SECTION 7.29. NEW   SUBSIDIARIES.   The  Company  will  not,  directly   or
indirectly, create or  acquire  in  any  Fiscal  Year any Subsidiary unless
(a)  after  giving  effect to any such creation or acquisition,  the  total
assets  (determined  in   accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting
principles, consistently applied) of all such Subsidiaries would not exceed
5% of the Total Assets of the  Company  and  its  Subsidiaries, and (b) all
Inventory of such Subsidiaries are pledged to the Agent  for the benefit of
the Banks pursuant to a security agreement substantially identical  to  the
Security Agreement.

SECTION 7.30. GUARANTY  FEES.  The Company will not, and it will not permit
any Subsidiary to, directly  or  indirectly,  pay  to  the Guarantor or any
other  guarantor  of  any  of  the Company's indebtedness, obligations  and
liabilities, any fee or other compensation, but excluding salary, bonus and
other compensation for services  rendered  as an employee (collectively the
"GUARANTY  FEES") in an aggregate amount in excess  of  $3,600,000  in  any
Fiscal Year  of  the  Company.   For  purposes  of  this  Section 7.30, any
Guaranty  Fees  paid within 45 days after the last day of any  Fiscal  Year
shall be deemed to have been paid during such Fiscal Year.

SECTION 7.31. KEY  MAN  LIFE  INSURANCE.   The  Company  shall continuously
maintain a policy of insurance on the life of Mr. Lonnie A.  Pilgrim in the
amount  of  $1,500,000.00,  of  which the Company shall be the beneficiary,
such policy to be maintained with  a good and responsible insurance company
acceptable to the Required Banks.

SECTION 7.32. SALE AND LEASEBACKS.   The  Company  will  not,  and will not
permit  any  Subsidiary  to, enter into any arrangement with any lender  or
investor providing for the  leasing by the Company or any Subsidiary of any
real  or  personal  property  previously   owned  by  the  Company  or  any
Subsidiary, except:

          (a) any such sale and leaseback transaction,  PROVIDED  that  (i)
     such transactions may be entered into only in the year, or in the year
     immediately preceding the year, in which net operating losses, credits
     or  other  tax  benefits  would  otherwise  expire  unutilized and the
     Company delivers on officer's certificate to the Agent  to  the effect
     that  such  expiration of such net operating losses, credits or  other
     tax benefits  would  occur  but  for  entering into the sale/leaseback
     transaction;  (ii)  the Company shall be  completely  discharged  with
     respect to any Debt of  the  Company or such Subsidiary assumed by the
     purchaser/lessor in such sale/leaseback transaction; (iii) the Company
     shall deliver to the Agent an  opinion  of  counsel  that  the sale of
     assets  and  related  lease  will  be  treated  as  a  sale and lease,
     respectively, for federal income tax purposes; and (iv)  the  proceeds
     of such transactions are applied to the payment of Debt; and

          (b)  such  transactions  in  which  the  aggregate  consideration
     received by the Company upon the sale of such property does not exceed
     $6,000,000 in any Fiscal Year.

SECTION 8.  EVENTS OF DEFAULT AND REMEDIES.

SECTION 8.1.  DEFINITIONS.    Any  one  or  more  of  the  following  shall
constitute an Event of Default:

          (a) Default in the payment  when  due  of any interest on or
     principal   of   any  Note,  Bond  Reimbursement  Obligation   or
     Reimbursement Obligation,  whether at the stated maturity thereof
     or  as  required by Section 3.4  hereof  or  at  any  other  time
     provided in this Agreement, or of any fee or other amount payable
     by the Company pursuant to this Agreement;

          (b) Default in the observance or performance of any covenant
     set forth  in  Sections 7.4, 7.5, 7.6, 7.15, 7.17, 7.19 and 7.20,
     inclusive, hereof,  or  of any provision of any Security Document
     requiring the maintenance  of insurance on the Collateral subject
     thereto or dealing with the use or remittance of proceeds of such
     Collateral;

          (c) Default in the observance or performance of any covenant
     set forth in Sections 7.7, 7.8,  7.9,  7.10,  7.11,  7.12,  7.13,
     7.14, 7.16, 7.18, 7.21, 7.23 and 7.31, inclusive, hereof and such
     default  shall  continue for 15 days after written notice thereof
     to the Company by any Bank;

          (d) Default  in  the  observance or performance of any other
     covenant, condition, agreement  or provision hereof or any of the
     other Loan Documents and such default  shall continue for 30 days
     after written notice thereof to the Company by any Bank;

          (e) Default shall occur under any evidence  of  indebtedness
     in a principal amount exceeding $10,000,000 issued or  assumed or
     guaranteed  by  the Company, or under any mortgage, agreement  or
     other similar instrument  under  which  the same may be issued or
     secured  and such default shall continue for  a  period  of  time
     sufficient   to  permit  the  acceleration  of  maturity  of  any
     indebtedness  evidenced   thereby   or   outstanding  or  secured
     thereunder;

          (f)  Any  representation  or warranty made  by  the  Company
     herein or in any Loan Document or in any statement or certificate
     furnished by it pursuant hereto  or thereto, proves untrue in any
     material respect as of the date made  or  deemed made pursuant to
     the terms hereof;

          (g) Any judgment or judgments, writ or  writs, or warrant or
     warrants of attachment, or any similar process or processes in an
     aggregate  amount in excess of $10,000,000 shall  be  entered  or
     filed against  the  Company  or  any Subsidiary or against any of
     their respective Property or assets and remain unbonded, unstayed
     and undischarged for a period of 30  days  from  the  date of its
     entry;

          (h)  Any  reportable  event  (as  defined  in  ERISA)  which
     constitutes  grounds  for  the termination of any Plan or for the
     appointment by the appropriate  United States District Court of a
     trustee to administer or liquidate  any  such  Plan,  shall  have
     occurred  and  such  reportable  event shall be continuing thirty
     (30) days after written notice to  such  effect  shall  have been
     given  to  the  Company  by  any Bank; or any such Plan shall  be
     terminated; or a trustee shall  be  appointed  by the appropriate
     United States District Court to administer any such  Plan; or the
     Pension  Benefit Guaranty Corporation shall institute proceedings
     to administer or terminate any such Plan;

          (i) The  Company  or  any  Subsidiary shall (i) have entered
     involuntarily against it an order for relief under the Bankruptcy
     Code of 1978, as amended, (ii) admit  in writing its inability to
     pay,  or  not  pay, its debts generally as  they  become  due  or
     suspend payment  of its obligations, (iii) make an assignment for
     the benefit of creditors,  (iv)  apply  for, seek, consent to, or
     acquiesce in, the appointment of a receiver,  custodian, trustee,
     conservator,  liquidator  or  similar  official  for  it  or  any
     substantial  part  of  its property, (v) file a petition  seeking
     relief  or  institute any  proceeding  seeking  to  have  entered
     against it an order for relief under the Bankruptcy Code of 1978,
     as amended, to  adjudicate  it insolvent, or seeking dissolution,
     winding up, liquidation, reorganization, arrangement, marshalling
     of assets, adjustment or composition of it or its debts under any
     law  relating  to  bankruptcy, insolvency  or  reorganization  or
     relief of debtors or  fail  to  file  an answer or other pleading
     denying  the material allegations of any  such  proceeding  filed
     against it, or (vi) fail to contest in good faith any appointment
     or proceeding described in Section 8.1(j) hereof;

          (j) A  custodian, receiver, trustee, conservator, liquidator
     or similar official  shall  be  appointed  for  the  Company, any
     Subsidiary or any substantial part of its respective Property, or
     a  proceeding  described in Section 8.1(i)(v) shall be instituted
     against  the Company  or  any  Subsidiary  and  such  appointment
     continues   undischarged   or   any   such  proceeding  continues
     undismissed or unstayed for a period of 90 days;

          (k) The existence of an "EVENT OF DEFAULT" as defined in the
     Security Agreement;

          (l) Any shares of the capital stock  of  the  Company  owned
     legally  or  beneficially  by  the  Guarantor  or Mr. and/or Mrs.
     Lonnie  A.  Pilgrim  shall  be  pledged,  assigned  or  otherwise
     encumbered  for  any  reason,  other  than  the  pledge of up  to
     2,000,000 shares to secure personal obligations of  Mr.  and Mrs.
     Lonnie A. Pilgrim or such other personal obligations incurred  by
     any  Person  so  long  as such obligations are not related to the
     financing of the Company of any of its Subsidiaries;

          (m)  the Guarantor shall  terminate,  breach,  repudiate  or
     disavow the  Partnership  Guaranty  or  any  part thereof, or any
     event specified in Sections 8.1(i) or (j) shall occur with regard
     to the Guarantor;

          (n) The occurrence of a Change in Control; or

          (o) The existence of any condition or the  occurrence of any
     event specified as an "Event of Default" under the  Reimbursement
     Agreement.

SECTION 8.2.  REMEDIES  FOR  NON-BANKRUPTCY DEFAULTS.  When  any  Event  of
Default, other than an Event of  Default  described  in subsections (i) and
(j) of Section 8.1 hereof, has occurred and is continuing,  the  Agent,  if
directed  by  the Required Banks, shall give notice to the Company and take
any or all of the  following actions: (i) terminate the remaining Revolving
Credit Commitments and  the  Bond  L/C Commitment, if any, hereunder on the
date (which may be the date thereof)  stated  in  such notice, (ii) declare
the  principal  of  and  the  accrued  interest on the Notes,  unpaid  Bond
Reimbursement  Obligations  and  unpaid  Reimbursement  Obligations  to  be
forthwith   due  and  payable  and  thereupon  the   Notes,   unpaid   Bond
Reimbursement  Obligations  and  unpaid Reimbursement Obligations including
both  principal and interest, shall  be  and  become  immediately  due  and
payable without further demand, presentment, protest or notice of any kind,
and (iii)  proceed  to  foreclose  against  any Collateral under any of the
Security Documents, take any action or exercise any remedy under any of the
Loan  Documents  or  exercise  any other action,  right,  power  or  remedy
permitted by law.  Any Bank may  exercise  the right of set off with regard
to any deposit accounts or other accounts maintained  by  the  Company with
any of the Banks.

SECTION 8.3.  REMEDIES FOR BANKRUPTCY DEFAULTS.  When any Event  of Default
described in subsections (i) or (j) of Section 8.1 hereof has occurred  and
is  continuing,  then  the Notes, unpaid Bond Reimbursement Obligations and
all Reimbursement Obligations  shall  immediately  become  due  and payable
without  presentment,  demand,  protest  or  notice  of  any  kind, and the
obligation  of  the Banks to extend further credit pursuant to any  of  the
terms hereof shall immediately terminate.

SECTION 8.4.  L/Cs.  Promptly following the acceleration of the maturity of
the Notes pursuant  to  Section  8.2  or  8.3  hereof,  the  Company  shall
immediately  pay  to  the  Agent  for  the  benefit  of  the Banks the full
aggregate amount of all outstanding L/Cs and the Bond L/C.  The Agent shall
hold all such funds and proceeds thereof as additional collateral  security
for  the  obligations of the Company to the Banks under the Loan Documents.
The amount paid under any of the L/Cs or the Bond L/C for which the Company
has not reimbursed  the  Banks  shall  bear  interest from the date of such
payment at the default rate of interest specified in Section 1.3(d) hereof.

SECTION 8.5.  REMEDIES  UNDER  THE  BOND DOCUMENTS.   In  addition  to  the
foregoing, Harris shall have all of the  remedies provided to Harris in the
Bond Documents upon the occurrence of an Event of Default.

SECTION 9.  CHANGE IN CIRCUMSTANCES REGARDING FIXED RATE LOANS.

SECTION 9.1.  CHANGE OF LAW.  Notwithstanding  any other provisions of this
Agreement or any Note to the contrary, if at any time after the date hereof
with respect to Fixed Rate Loans, any Bank shall  determine  in  good faith
that  any  change  in applicable law or regulation or in the interpretation
thereof makes it unlawful for such Bank to make or continue to maintain any
Fixed Rate Loan or to  give  effect  to  its  obligations  as  contemplated
hereby, such Bank shall promptly give notice thereof to the Company to such
effect, and such Bank's obligation to make, relend, continue or convert any
such  affected Fixed Rate Loans under this Agreement shall terminate  until
it is no  longer  unlawful  for such Bank to make or maintain such affected
Loan.  The Company shall prepay  the  outstanding  principal  amount of any
such  affected  Fixed  Rate  Loan  made  to  it, together with all interest
accrued thereon and all other amounts due and  payable  to  the Banks under
Section  9.4  of  this  Agreement,  on the earlier of the last day  of  the
Interest Period applicable thereto and the first day on which it is illegal
for  such  Bank  to  have such Loans outstanding;  provided,  however,  the
Company may then elect to borrow the principal amount of such affected Loan
by means of another type of Loan available hereunder, subject to all of the
terms and conditions of this Agreement.

SECTION 9.2.  UNAVAILABILITY  OF  DEPOSITS  OR  INABILITY  TO ASCERTAIN THE
ADJUSTED  EURODOLLAR RATE OR ADJUSTED CD RATE.  Notwithstanding  any  other
provision of  this  Agreement  or any Note to the contrary, if prior to the
commencement of any Interest Period  any  Bank  shall  determine  (i)  that
deposits  in  the amount of any Fixed Rate Loan scheduled to be outstanding
are not available  to  it  in  the  relevant  market  or  (ii) by reason of
circumstances affecting the relevant market, adequate and reasonable  means
do  not exist for ascertaining the Adjusted Eurodollar Rate or the Adjusted
CD Rate,  then  such  Bank  shall  promptly give telephonic or telex notice
thereof to the Company, the Agent and  the  other  Banks (such notice to be
confirmed in writing), and the obligation of the Banks to make, continue or
convert  any  such  Fixed Rate Loan in such amount and  for  such  Interest
Period shall terminate  until  deposits in such amount and for the Interest
Period selected by the Company shall  again  be  readily  available  in the
relevant  market  and  adequate and reasonable means exist for ascertaining
the Adjusted Eurodollar  Rate  or the Adjusted CD Rate, as the case may be.
Upon the giving of such notice,  the Company may elect to either (i) pay or
prepay,  as  the case may be, such affected  Loan  or  (ii)  reborrow  such
affected Loan  as  another type of Loan available hereunder, subject to all
terms and conditions of this Agreement.

SECTION 9.3.  TAXES  AND  INCREASED  COSTS.  With respect to the Fixed Rate
Loans, if any Bank shall determine in  good  faith  that  any change in any
applicable  law,  treaty,  regulation  or  guideline  (including,   without
limitation,  Regulation  D of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System)  or  any  new  law,  treaty,   regulation   or  guideline,  or  any
interpretation  of  any  of  the  foregoing  by any governmental  authority
charged  with  the  administration thereof or any  central  bank  or  other
fiscal, monetary or other  authority  having jurisdiction over such Bank or
its lending branch or the Fixed Rate Loans  contemplated  by this Agreement
(whether or not having the force of law) ("CHANGE IN LAW") shall:

          (i)  impose, modify or deem applicable any reserve,  special
     deposit or  similar  requirements  against  assets  held  by,  or
     deposits  in  or  for  the  account of, or Loans by, or any other
     acquisition of funds or disbursements  by,  such Bank (other than
     reserves included in the determination of the Adjusted Eurodollar
     Rate or the Adjusted CD Rate);

         (ii) subject such Bank, any Fixed Rate Loan  or  any  Note to
     any   tax  (including,  without  limitation,  any  United  States
     interest equalization tax or similar tax however named applicable
     to the  acquisition  or  holding  of  debt  obligations  and  any
     interest  or penalties with respect thereto), duty, charge, stamp
     tax, fee, deduction  or withholding in respect of this Agreement,
     any Fixed Rate Loan or  any  Note  except  such  taxes  as may be
     measured  by  the  overall net income of such Bank or its lending
     branch  and  imposed  by   the  jurisdiction,  or  any  political
     subdivision or taxing authority  thereof,  in  which  such Bank's
     principal executive office or its lending branch is located;

        (iii)  change  the  basis of taxation of payments of principal
     and interest due from the Company to such Bank hereunder or under
     any Note (other than by  a  change in taxation of the overall net
     income of such Bank); or

         (iv) impose on such Bank  any  penalty  with  respect  to the
     foregoing  or  any  other condition regarding this Agreement, any
     Fixed Rate Loan or any Note;

and such Bank shall determine that the result of any of the foregoing is to
increase the cost (whether by incurring a cost or adding to a cost) to such
Bank of making or maintaining  any  Fixed  Rate Loan hereunder or to reduce
the amount of principal or interest received by such Bank, then the Company
shall pay to such Bank from time to time as  specified  by  such  Bank such
additional  amounts  as such Bank shall reasonably determine are sufficient
to compensate and indemnify  it  for such increased cost or reduced amount.
If any Bank makes such a claim for  compensation,  it  shall provide to the
Company a certificate setting forth such increased cost  or  reduced amount
as  a result of any event mentioned herein specifying such Change  in  Law,
and such  certificate  shall be conclusive and binding on the Company as to
the  amount thereof except  in  the  case  of  manifest  error.   Upon  the
imposition  of  any  such  cost,  the Company may prepay any affected Loan,
subject to the provisions of Sections 3.3 and 9.4 hereof.

SECTION 9.4.  FUNDING INDEMNITY.  (a) In the event any Bank shall incur any
loss, cost, expense or premium (including,  without limitation, any loss of
profit and any loss, cost, expense or premium  incurred  by  reason  of the
liquidation  or  re-employment  of deposits or other funds acquired by such
Bank  to  fund  or  maintain  any Fixed  Rate  Loan  or  the  relending  or
reinvesting of such deposits or  amounts paid or prepaid to such Bank) as a
result of:

          (i) any payment or prepayment of a Fixed Rate Loan on a date
     other than the last day of the then applicable Interest Period;

         (ii)  any  failure  by the Company  to  borrow,  continue  or
     convert any Fixed Rate Loan  on  the date specified in the notice
     given pursuant to Section 1.7 hereof; or

        (iii) the occurrence of any Event of Default;

then, upon the demand of such Bank, the Company shall pay to such Bank such
amount as will reimburse such Bank for such loss, cost or expense.

    (b)  If any Bank makes a claim for compensation under this Section 9.4,
it shall provide to the Company a certificate  setting  forth the amount of
such loss, cost or expense in reasonable detail and such  certificate shall
be conclusive and binding on the Company as to the amount thereof except in
the case of manifest error.

SECTION 9.5.  LENDING BRANCH.  Each Bank may, at its option, elect to make,
fund  or  maintain its Eurodollar Loans hereunder at the branch  or  office
specified opposite its signature on the signature page hereof or such other
of its branches  or  offices  as  such  Bank  may  from time to time elect,
subject to the provisions of Section 1.7(b) hereof.

SECTION 9.6.  DISCRETION OF BANK AS TO MANNER OF FUNDING.   Notwithstanding
any  provision  of  this  Agreement  to  the  contrary, each Bank shall  be
entitled to fund and maintain its funding of all  or  any part of its Loans
in  any  manner  it  sees fit, it being understood however,  that  for  the
purposes of this Agreement all determinations hereunder shall be made as if
the Banks had actually  funded  and  maintained each Fixed Rate Loan during
each Interest Period for such Loan through  the purchase of deposits in the
relevant interbank market having a maturity corresponding  to such Interest
Period  and bearing an interest rate equal to the Adjusted Eurodollar  Rate
or Adjusted CD Rate, as the case may be, for such Interest Period.

SECTION 10. THE AGENT.

SECTION 10.1. APPOINTMENT  AND  POWERS.   Harris  Trust and Savings Bank is
hereby appointed by the Banks as Agent under the Loan  Documents, including
but not limited to the Security Agreement, wherein the Agent  shall  hold a
security interest for the benefit of the Banks, solely as the Agent of  the
Banks, and each of the Banks irrevocably authorizes the Agent to act as the
Agent  of  such  Bank.   The  Agent  agrees to act as such upon the express
conditions contained in this Agreement.

SECTION 10.2. POWERS.  The Agent shall  have  and  may exercise such powers
hereunder as are specifically delegated to the Agent  by  the  terms of the
Loan  Documents, together with such powers as are incidental thereto.   The
Agent shall  have no implied duties to the Banks, nor any obligation to the
Banks to take  any  action  under  the  Loan  Documents  except  any action
specifically provided by the Loan Documents to be taken by the Agent.

SECTION 10.3. GENERAL   IMMUNITY.    Neither  the  Agent  nor  any  of  its
directors, officers, agents or employees  shall  be  liable to the Banks or
any Bank for any action taken or omitted to be taken by  it  or  them under
the  Loan Documents or in connection therewith except for its or their  own
gross negligence or willful misconduct.

SECTION 10.4. NO  RESPONSIBILITY FOR LOANS, RECITALS, ETC.  The Agent shall
not (i) be responsible  to the Banks for any recitals, reports, statements,
warranties or representations  contained in the Loan Documents or furnished
pursuant thereto, (ii) be responsible  for  the payment or collection of or
security  for  any Loans, Bond Reimbursement Obligations  or  Reimbursement
Obligations hereunder  except with money actually received by the Agent for
such payment, (iii) be bound  to ascertain or inquire as to the performance
or  observance of any of the terms  of  the  Loan  Documents,  or  (iv)  be
obligated to determine or verify the existence, eligibility or value of any
Collateral,  or  the  correctness  of  any  Borrowing  Base  Certificate or
compliance  certificate.   In  addition, neither the Agent nor its  counsel
shall be responsible to the Banks for the enforceability or validity of any
of  the  Loan  Documents  or  for  the   existence,  creation,  attachment,
perfection or priority of any security interest in the Collateral.

SECTION 10.5. RIGHT TO INDEMNITY.  The Banks hereby indemnify the Agent for
any actions taken in accordance with this  Section  10, and the Agent shall
be  fully  justified in failing or refusing to take any  action  hereunder,
unless it shall  first  be indemnified to its satisfaction by the Banks pro
rata against any and all  liability and expense which may be incurred by it
by reason of taking or continuing  to  take any such action, other than any
liability  which  may  arise out of Agent's  gross  negligence  or  willful
misconduct.

SECTION 10.6. ACTION UPON  INSTRUCTIONS  OF  BANKS.  The Agent agrees, upon
the written request of the Required Banks, to  take  any action of the type
specified in the Loan Documents as being within the Agent's rights, duties,
powers or discretion.  The Agent shall in all cases be  fully  protected in
acting, or in refraining from acting, hereunder in accordance with  written
instructions  signed  by the Required Banks, and such instructions and  any
action taken or failure  to act pursuant thereto shall be binding on all of
the Banks and on all holders  of the Notes.  In the absence of a request by
the Required Banks, the Agent shall have authority, in its sole discretion,
to take or not to take any action,  unless  the Loan Documents specifically
require the consent of the Required Banks or all of the Banks.

SECTION 10.7. EMPLOYMENT OF AGENTS AND COUNSEL.   The Agent may execute any
of  its  duties  as  Agent  hereunder  by  or  through agents  (other  than
employees) and attorneys-in-fact and shall not be  answerable to the Banks,
except as to money or securities received by it or its  authorized  agents,
for  the  default  or  misconduct  of  any such agents or attorneys-in-fact
selected by it in good faith and with reasonable  care.  The Agent shall be
entitled  to  advice  and opinion of legal counsel concerning  all  matters
pertaining to the duties of the agency hereby created.

SECTION 10.8. RELIANCE  ON DOCUMENTS; COUNSEL.  The Agent shall be entitled
to rely upon any Note, notice,  consent,  certificate,  affidavit,  letter,
telegram,  statement,  paper  or  document believed by it to be genuine and
correct and to have been signed or  sent  by  the proper person or persons,
and,  in  respect  to  legal  matters, upon the opinion  of  legal  counsel
selected by the Agent.

SECTION 10.9. MAY TREAT PAYEE AS  OWNER.   The Agent may deem and treat the
payee of any Note as the owner thereof for all  purposes  hereof unless and
until  a  written notice of the assignment or transfer thereof  shall  have
been filed  with  the  Agent.   Any  request,  authority  or consent of any
person,  firm  or  corporation  who at the time of making such  request  or
giving such authority or consent  is  the  holder of any such Note shall be
conclusive and binding on any subsequent holder,  transferee or assignee of
such Note or of any Note issued in exchange therefor.

SECTION 10.10. AGENT'S REIMBURSEMENT.  Each Bank agrees  to  reimburse  the
Agent  pro  rata  in  accordance  with  its  Commitment  Percentage for any
reasonable  out-of-pocket  expenses (including fees and charges  for  field
audits) not reimbursed by the  Company  (a) for which the Agent is entitled
to reimbursement by the Company under the  Loan  Documents  and (b) for any
other reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred by the Agent  on behalf of
the  Banks,  in  connection  with  the  preparation,  execution,  delivery,
administration  and  enforcement  of  the Loan Documents and for which  the
Agent  is  entitled  to  reimbursement by the  Company  and  has  not  been
reimbursed.

SECTION 10.11. RIGHTS AS A  LENDER.   With respect to its commitment, Loans
made by it, L/Cs issued by it and the Notes issued to it, Harris shall have
the same rights and powers hereunder as  any Bank and may exercise the same
as  though it were not the Agent, and the term  "BANK"  or  "BANKS"  shall,
unless  the  context  otherwise indicates, include Harris in its individual
capacity.  Harris and each  of  the  Banks  may  accept deposits from, lend
money  to, and generally engage in any kind of banking  or  trust  business
with the  Company  as  if it were not the Agent or a Bank hereunder, as the
case may be.

SECTION 10.12. BANK CREDIT  DECISION.   Each Bank acknowledges that it has,
independently and without reliance upon the  Agent  or  any  other Bank and
based on the financial statements referred to in Section 5.3 and such other
documents and information as it has deemed appropriate, made its own credit
analysis  and  decision to enter into the Loan Documents.  Each  Bank  also
acknowledges that  it  will,  independently  and  without reliance upon the
Agent or any other Bank and based on such documents  and  information as it
shall  deem  appropriate  at  the  time,  continue  to make its own  credit
decisions in taking or not taking action under the Loan Documents.

SECTION  10.13.  RESIGNATION  OF AGENT.  Subject to the  appointment  of  a
successor Agent, the Agent may  resign  as  Agent  for the Banks under this
Agreement and the other Loan Documents at any time by sixty days' notice in
writing to the Banks.  Such resignation shall take effect  upon appointment
of such successor.  The Required Banks shall have the right  to  appoint  a
successor  Agent  who shall be entitled to all of the rights of, and vested
with the same powers  as,  the original Agent under the Loan Documents.  In
the event a successor Agent  shall not have been appointed within the sixty
day period following the giving  of  notice  by  the  Agent,  the Agent may
appoint  its own successor.  Resignation by the Agent shall not  affect  or
impair the  rights  of  the Agent under Sections 10.5 and 10.10 hereof with
respect to all matters preceding  such  resignation.   Any  successor Agent
must  be  a Bank, a national banking association, a bank chartered  in  any
state of the  United  States  or  a  branch  of  any  foreign bank which is
licensed to do business under the laws of any state or the United States.

SECTION 10.14. DURATION OF AGENCY.  The agency established  by Section 10.1
hereof  shall  continue,  and  Sections 10.1 through and including  Section
10.14 shall remain in full force  and effect, until the Notes and all other
amounts due hereunder and thereunder, including without limitation all Bond
Reimbursement Obligations or Reimbursement  Obligations,  shall  have  been
paid  in  full  and  the  Banks' commitments to extend credit to or for the
benefit of the Company shall have terminated or expired.

SECTION 11. MISCELLANEOUS.

SECTION 11.1. AMENDMENTS AND  WAIVERS.   Any  term,  covenant, agreement or
condition  of  this  Agreement  may be amended only by a written  amendment
executed by the Company, the Required Banks and, if the rights or duties of
the Agent are affected thereby, the Agent, or compliance therewith only may
be  waived  (either  generally  or in  a  particular  instance  and  either
retroactively or prospectively),  if  the  Company  shall have obtained the
consent in writing of the Required Banks and, if the  rights  or  duties of
the Agent are affected thereby, the Agent, provided, however, that  without
the consent in writing of the holders of all outstanding Notes, unpaid Bond
Reimbursement  Obligations  and  unpaid  Reimbursement  Obligations and the
issuer  of any L/C or Bond L/C, or all Banks if no Notes or  L/Cs  or  Bond
L/Cs are  outstanding,  no  such  amendment  or waiver shall (i) change the
amount  or  postpone  the  date   of payment of any  scheduled  payment  or
required prepayment of principal of  the Notes or reduce the rate or extend
the time of payment of interest on the  Notes,  or  reduce  the  amount  of
principal  thereof,  or  modify  any  of  the  provisions of the Notes with
respect to the payment or prepayment thereof, (ii)  give  to  any  Note any
preference  over  any  other  Notes, (iii) amend the definition of Required
Banks, (iv) alter, modify or amend  the  provisions  of  this Section 11.1,
(v)  change  the  amount  or  term  of  any of the Banks' Revolving  Credit
Commitments  or the fees required under Section  3.1  hereof,  (vi)  alter,
modify or amend  the  provisions of Sections 1.9, 6 or 9 of this Agreement,
(vii) alter, modify or  amend  any Bank's right hereunder to consent to any
action, make any request or give  any  notice,  (viii)  change  the advance
rates  under the Borrowing Base or the definitions of "ELIGIBLE INVENTORY,"
(ix) release  any  Collateral  under  the  Security Documents or release or
discharge  any  guarantor  of the Company's indebtedness,  obligations  and
liabilities to the Banks, in each case, unless such release or discharge is
permitted or contemplated by  the  Loan  Documents,  or (x) alter, amend or
modify  any subordination provisions of any Subordinated  Debt.   Any  such
amendment or waiver shall apply equally to all Banks and the holders of the
Notes, Bond  Reimbursement  Obligations  and  Reimbursement Obligations and
shall  be  binding upon them, upon each future holder  of  any  Note,  Bond
Reimbursement Obligation and Reimbursement Obligation and upon the Company,
whether or not  such Note shall have been marked to indicate such amendment
or waiver.  No such  amendment  or  waiver  shall  extend  to or affect any
obligation not expressly amended or waived; and PROVIDED FURTHER,  that (x)
any  amendments  of  the  Reimbursement Agreement or the Bond Documents  by
Harris  shall  be  subject to  the  provisions  of  Section  1.19  of  this
Agreement, and (y) Sections  1.10  through  1.19,  both  inclusive, of this
Agreement  may  only  be  amended, modified or waived with the  consent  of
Harris.

SECTION 11.2. WAIVER OF RIGHTS.   No  delay  or  failure on the part of the
Agent or any Bank or on the part of the holder or holders of any Note, Bond
Reimbursement Obligation or Reimbursement Obligation in the exercise of any
power or right shall operate as a waiver thereof, nor as an acquiescence in
any Potential Default or Event of Default, nor shall  any single or partial
exercise  of  any  power  or  right preclude any other or further  exercise
thereof, or the exercise of any  other  power  or right, and the rights and
remedies hereunder of the Agent, the Banks and of  the holder or holders of
any Notes are cumulative to, and not exclusive of, any  rights  or remedies
which any of them would otherwise have.

SECTION 11.3. SEVERAL  OBLIGATIONS.   The commitments of each of the  Banks
hereunder shall be the several obligations  of each Bank and the failure on
the  part of any one or more of the Banks to perform  hereunder  shall  not
affect  the  obligation of the other Banks hereunder, provided that nothing
herein contained  shall relieve any Bank from any liability for its failure
to so perform.  In  the  event that any one or more of the Banks shall fail
to perform its commitment  hereunder,  all  payments thereafter received by
the  Agent  on the principal of Loans, Bond Reimbursement  Obligations  and
Reimbursement   Obligations  hereunder,  whether  from  any  Collateral  or
otherwise, shall  be  distributed  by  the  Agent  to the Banks making such
additional  Loans ratably as among them in accordance  with  the  principal
amount of additional  Loans  made by them until such additional Loans shall
have been fully paid and satisfied.   All  payments  on account of interest
shall  be  applied  as among all the Banks ratably in accordance  with  the
amount of interest owing to each of the Banks as of the date of the receipt
of such interest payment.

SECTION 11.4. NON-BUSINESS  DAY.   (a)  If  any  payment  of  principal  or
interest  on  any Domestic Rate Loan shall fall due on a day which is not a
Business Day, interest  at the rate such Loan bears for the period prior to
maturity shall continue to  accrue  on  such  principal from the stated due
date thereof to and including the next succeeding Business Day on which the
same is payable.

    (b)  If any payment of principal or interest  on  any  Eurodollar  Loan
shall  fall  due  on  a  day  which  is not a Banking Day, the payment date
thereof shall be extended to the next  date  which is a Banking Day and the
Interest Period for such Loan shall be accordingly  extended,  unless  as a
result  thereof  any payment date would fall in the next calendar month, in
which case such payment date shall be the next preceding Banking Day.

SECTION 11.5. SURVIVAL  OF INDEMNITIES.  All indemnities and all provisions
relative to reimbursement to the Banks of amounts sufficient to protect the
yield to the Banks with respect  to  Eurodollar  Loans,  including, but not
limited to, Sections 9.3 and 9.4 hereof, shall survive the  termination  of
this Agreement and the payment of the Notes for a period of one year.

SECTION 11.6. DOCUMENTARY  TAXES.   Although  the Company is of the opinion
that  no  documentary  or  similar taxes are payable  in  respect  of  this
Agreement or the Notes, the  Company  agrees  that  it will pay such taxes,
including interest and penalties, in the event any such  taxes are assessed
irrespective of when such assessment is made and whether or  not any credit
is then in use or available hereunder.

SECTION 11.7. REPRESENTATIONS.   All  representations  and warranties  made
herein or in certificates given pursuant hereto shall survive the execution
and delivery of this Agreement and of the Notes, and shall continue in full
force and effect with respect to the date as of which they were made and as
reaffirmed on the date of each borrowing or request for  L/C and as long as
any credit is in use or available hereunder.

SECTION 11.8. NOTICES.   Unless  otherwise expressly provided  herein,  all
communications provided for herein  shall  be  in  writing  or by telex and
shall be deemed to have been given or made when served personally,  when an
answer back is received in the case of notice by telex or 2 days after  the
date  when  deposited  in  the  United  States  mail (registered, if to the
Company) addressed if to the Company to 110 South  Texas,  Pittsburg, Texas
75686 Attention: Richard A. Cogdill; if to the Agent or Harris  at 111 West
Monroe Street, Chicago, Illinois 60690, Attention:  Agribusiness  Division;
and  if  to any of the Banks, at the address for each Bank set forth  under
its signature  hereon;  or  at such other address as shall be designated by
any party hereto in a written  notice  to each other party pursuant to this
Section 11.8.

SECTION 11.9. COSTS AND EXPENSES; INDEMNITY.   The Company agrees to pay on
demand  all  costs  and  expenses  of  the  Agent, in connection  with  the
negotiation, preparation, execution and delivery  of  this  Agreement,  the
Notes  and the other instruments and documents to be delivered hereunder or
in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby, including the fees
and expenses  of  Messrs. Chapman and Cutler, special counsel to the Agent;
all costs and expenses of the Agent (including attorneys' fees) incurred in
connection with any consents or waivers hereunder or amendments hereto, and
all costs and expenses (including attorneys' fees), if any, incurred by the
Agent, the Banks or  any  other holders of a Note or any Bond Reimbursement
Obligation  or  any  Reimbursement   Obligation   in  connection  with  the
enforcement of this Agreement or the Notes and the  other  instruments  and
documents  to  be delivered hereunder.  The Company agrees to indemnify and
save harmless the Banks and the Agent from any and all liabilities, losses,
costs and expenses  incurred  by  the Banks or the Agent in connection with
any action, suit or proceeding brought against the Agent or any Bank by any
Person which arises out of the transactions contemplated or financed hereby
or by the Notes, or out of any action  or inaction by the Agent or any Bank
hereunder or thereunder, except for such  thereof as is caused by the gross
negligence or willful misconduct of the party  indemnified.  The provisions
of this Section 11.9 shall survive payment of the Notes, Bond Reimbursement
Obligations  and  Reimbursement  Obligations  and the  termination  of  the
Revolving Credit Commitments hereunder.

SECTION 11.10. COUNTERPARTS.  This Agreement may  be executed in any number
of counterparts and all such counterparts taken together shall be deemed to
constitute  one  and the same instrument.  One or more  of  the  Banks  may
execute a separate  counterpart  of  this  Agreement  which  has  also been
executed by the Company, and this Agreement shall become effective  as  and
when all of the Banks have executed this Agreement or a counterpart thereof
and lodged the same with the Agent.

SECTION  11.11.  SUCCESSORS  AND  ASSIGNS.  This Agreement shall be binding
upon each of the Company and the Banks  and their respective successors and
assigns, and shall inure to the benefit of  the  Company  and  each  of the
Banks and the benefit of their respective successors and assigns, including
any  subsequent  holder  of  any  Note,  Bond  Reimbursement  Obligation or
Reimbursement Obligation.  The Company may not assign any of its  rights or
obligations hereunder without the written consent of the Banks.

SECTION 11.12. NO JOINT VENTURE.  Nothing contained in this Agreement shall
be  deemed  to  create  a  partnership  or  joint venture among the parties
hereto.

SECTION  11.13.  SEVERABILITY.  In the event that  any  term  or  provision
hereof is determined  to  be  unenforceable  or  illegal,  it  shall deemed
severed  herefrom  to  the extent of the illegality and/or unenforceability
and all other provisions hereof shall remain in full force and effect.

SECTION 11.14. TABLE OF  CONTENTS  AND HEADINGS.  The table of contents and
section headings in this Agreement are  for  reference  only  and shall not
affect the construction of any provision hereof.

SECTION  11.15.  PARTICIPANTS.  Each Bank shall have the right at  its  own
cost to grant participations  (to be evidenced by one or more agreements or
certificates of participation)  in  the Loans made, and/or Revolving Credit
Commitment  and  participations  in L/Cs,  Bond  L/Cs,  Bond  Reimbursement
Obligations and Reimbursement Obligations  held,  by  such Bank at any time
and  from  time  to  time,  and  to  assign  its  rights under such  Loans,
participations  in  L/Cs,  Bond  L/Cs, Bond Reimbursement  Obligations  and
Reimbursement Obligations or the Notes evidencing such Loans to one or more
other Persons; provided that no such  participation  shall relieve any Bank
of any of its obligations under this Agreement, and any  agreement pursuant
to  which  such  participation  or  assignment  of  a  Note  or the  rights
thereunder  is granted shall provide that the granting Lender shall  retain
the sole right and responsibility to enforce the obligations of the Company
under the Loan  Documents,  including,  without  limitation,  the  right to
approve  any  amendment,  modification  or waiver of any provision thereof,
except  that  such agreement may provide that  such  Bank  will  not  agree
without the consent  of  such  participant or assignee to any modification,
amendment or waiver of this Agreement that would (A) increase any Revolving
Credit Commitment of such Lender,  or  (B) reduce the amount of or postpone
the date for payment of any principal of  or  interest  on  any  Loan, Bond
Reimbursement Obligation or Reimbursement Obligation or of any fee  payable
hereunder  in  which  such  participant  or assignee has an interest or (C)
reduce the interest rate applicable to any  Loan or other amount payable in
which  such  participant or assignee has an interest  or  (D)  release  any
collateral security for or guarantor for any of the Company's indebtedness,
obligations and  liabilities under the Loan Documents, and provided further
that no such assignee  or  participant  shall  have  any  rights under this
Agreement  except  as provided in this Section 11.15, and the  Agent  shall
have no obligation or  responsibility  to  such  participant  or  assignee,
except that nothing herein provided is intended to affect the rights  of an
assignee of a Note to enforce the Note assigned.  Any party to which such a
participation  or  assignment  has  been granted shall have the benefits of
Section 1.10, Section 9.3 and Section  9.4 hereof but shall not be entitled
to  receive  any  greater payment under any  such  Section  than  the  Bank
granting such participation  or  assignment  would  have  been  entitled to
receive with respect to the rights transferred.

SECTION 11.16. ASSIGNMENT OF COMMITMENTS BY BANK.  Each Bank shall have the
right  at  any  time,  with the prior consent of the Company and the  Agent
(which  consent  will not  be  unreasonably  withheld),  to  sell,  assign,
transfer or negotiate all or any part of its Revolving Credit Commitment to
one or more commercial banks or other financial institutions; provided that
such assignment is  in  an  amount of at least $5,000,000 (or, if less than
$5,000,000, the amount of its entire Revolving Credit Commitment), provided
further that no Bank may so assign  more  than  one-half  of  its  original
Revolving  Credit  Commitment  hereunder unless it is assigning all of  its
interest hereunder, and provided  further  that  any Bank may assign all of
its interest hereunder to any of its subsidiaries or affiliates without the
Company's  or  the  Agent's  consent.   Upon any such assignment,  and  its
notification to the Agent, the assignee shall  become a Bank hereunder, all
Loans  and  the  Revolving  Credit  Commitment it thereby  holds  shall  be
governed by all the terms and conditions hereof, and the Bank granting such
assignment shall have its Revolving Credit  Commitment  and its obligations
and  rights  in  connection  therewith,  reduced  by  the  amount  of  such
assignment.   Upon  each such assignment the Bank granting such  assignment
shall pay to the Agent for the Agent's sole account a fee of $2,500.

SECTION 11.17. SHARING  OF PAYMENTS.  Each Bank agrees with each other Bank
that if such Bank shall receive  and retain any payment, whether by set-off
or application of deposit balances  or  otherwise ("SET-OFF"), on any Loan,
Bond Reimbursement Obligation, Reimbursement  Obligation  or  other  amount
outstanding under this Agreement in excess of its ratable share of payments
on all Loans, Bond Reimbursement Obligations, Reimbursement Obligations and
other  amounts then outstanding to the Banks, then such Bank shall purchase
for cash  at  face  value,  but  without recourse, ratably from each of the
other Banks such amount of the Loans,  Bond  Reimbursement  Obligations and
Reimbursement  Obligations  held  by  each  such  other  Bank  (or interest
therein)  as  shall  be  necessary to cause such Bank to share such  excess
payment ratably with all the  other  Banks;  PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that if any
such  purchase  is made by any Bank, and if such  excess  payment  or  part
thereof is thereafter  recovered  from  such  purchasing  Bank, the related
purchases from the other Banks shall be rescinded ratably and  the purchase
price  restored as to the portion of such excess payment so recovered,  but
without  interest.   Each Bank's ratable share of any such Set-Off shall be
determined by the proportion  that the aggregate principal amount of Loans,
Bond Reimbursement Obligations  and  Reimbursement Obligations then due and
payable  to  such Bank bears to the total  aggregate  principal  amount  of
Loans, Bond Reimbursement  Obligations  and  Reimbursement Obligations then
due and payable to all the Banks.

SECTION  11.18. JURISDICTION; VENUE.  THE COMPANY  HEREBY  SUBMITS  TO  THE
NONEXCLUSIVE  JURISDICTION  OF  THE  UNITED  STATES  DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS AND OF ANY ILLINOIS COURT  SITTING IN CHICAGO
FOR  PURPOSES OF ALL LEGAL PROCEEDINGS ARISING OUT OF OR RELATING  TO  THIS
AGREEMENT OR THE TRANSACTIONS CONTEMPLATED HEREBY.  THE COMPANY IRREVOCABLY
WAIVES,  TO THE FULLEST EXTENT PERMITTED BY LAW, ANY OBJECTION WHICH IT MAY
NOW OR HEREAFTER  HAVE  TO  THE  LAYING OF THE VENUE OF ANY SUCH PROCEEDING
BROUGHT IN SUCH A COURT AND ANY CLAIM  THAT  ANY SUCH PROCEEDING BROUGHT IN
SUCH A COURT HAS BEEN BROUGHT IN AN INCONVENIENT FORUM.

SECTION 11.19. LAWFUL RATE.  All agreements between  the Company, the Agent
and  each  of  the  Banks,  whether now existing or hereafter  arising  and
whether written or oral, are expressly limited so that in no contingency or
event whatsoever, whether by  reason  of  demand  or  acceleration  of  the
maturity  of  any  of  the  indebtedness  hereunder or otherwise, shall the
amount contracted for, charged, received, reserved,  paid  or  agreed to be
paid  to  the Agent or each Bank for the use, forbearance, or detention  of
the funds advanced  hereunder  or  otherwise,  or  for  the  performance or
payment of any covenant or obligation contained in any document executed in
connection  herewith  (all  such  documents  being hereinafter collectively
referred  to as the "CREDIT DOCUMENTS"), exceed  the  highest  lawful  rate
permissible  under applicable law (the "HIGHEST LAWFUL RATE"), it being the
intent of the  Company,  the  Agent  and each of the Banks in the execution
hereof and of the Credit Documents to  contract  in  strict accordance with
applicable  usury  laws.  If, as a result of any circumstances  whatsoever,
fulfillment by the Company  of  any  provision  hereof  or  of  any of such
documents,  at  the time performance of such provision shall be due,  shall
involve transcending  the  limit of validity prescribed by applicable usury
law or result in the Agent or  any  Bank  having  or  being  deemed to have
contracted  for, charged, reserved or received interest (or amounts  deemed
to be interest) in excess of the maximum, lawful rate or amount of interest
allowed by applicable  law  to  be  so contracted for, charged, reserved or
received by the Agent or such Bank, then,  IPSO FACTO, the obligation to be
fulfilled by the Company shall be reduced to  the  limit  of such validity,
and  if,  from  any  such circumstance, the Agent or such Bank  shall  ever
receive  interest  or  anything   which  might  be  deemed  interest  under
applicable law which would exceed the  Highest  Lawful  Rate,  such  amount
which  would be excessive interest shall be refunded to the Company or,  to
the extent (i) permitted by applicable law and (ii) such excessive interest
does  not  exceed the unpaid principal balance of the Notes and the amounts
owing on other  obligations  of  the Company to the Agent or any Bank under
any Loan Document applied to the reduction of the principal amount owing on
account of the Notes or the amounts  owing  on  other  obligations  of  the
Company  to  the  Agent  or any Bank under any Loan Document and not to the
payment of interest.  All  interest  paid or agreed to be paid to the Agent
or any Bank shall, to the extent permitted by applicable law, be amortized,
prorated,  allocated,  and  spread  throughout   the  full  period  of  the
indebtedness   hereunder  until  payment in full of the  principal  of  the
indebtedness hereunder (including  the  period  of any renewal or extension
thereof) so that the interest on account of the indebtedness  hereunder for
such  full  period  shall  not  exceed  the  highest  amount  permitted  by
applicable  law.   This paragraph shall control all agreements between  the
Company, the Agent and the Banks.

SECTION 11.20. GOVERNING LAW.  (a) THIS AGREEMENT AND THE RIGHTS AND DUTIES
OF THE PARTIES HERETO, SHALL BE CONSTRUED AND DETERMINED IN ACCORDANCE WITH
THE INTERNAL LAWS OF  THE  STATE OF ILLINOIS, EXCEPT TO THE EXTENT PROVIDED
IN SECTION 11.20(b) HEREOF AND  TO  THE EXTENT THAT THE FEDERAL LAWS OF THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA MAY OTHERWISE APPLY.

    (b)  NOTWITHSTANDING  ANYTHING  IN   SECTION  11.20(a)  HEREOF  TO  THE
CONTRARY, NOTHING IN THIS AGREEMENT, THE NOTES, OR THE OTHER LOAN DOCUMENTS
SHALL BE DEEMED TO CONSTITUTE A WAIVER OF ANY RIGHTS WHICH THE COMPANY, THE
AGENT OR ANY OF THE BANKS MAY HAVE UNDER THE  NATIONAL  BANK  ACT  OR OTHER
APPLICABLE FEDERAL LAW.

SECTION  11.21.  LIMITATION  OF  LIABILITY.  NO  CLAIM  MAY  BE MADE BY THE
COMPANY,   ANY  SUBSIDIARY  OR  ANY  GUARANTOR  AGAINST  ANY  BANK  OR  ITS
AFFILIATES,  DIRECTORS,  OFFICERS,  EMPLOYEES,  ATTORNEYS OR AGENTS FOR ANY
SPECIAL,  INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES IN RESPECT  OF  ANY  BREACH  OR
WRONGFUL CONDUCT  (WHETHER THE CLAIM THEREFOR IS BASED ON CONTRACT, TORT OR
DUTY IMPOSED BY LAW)  IN  CONNECTION  WITH,  ARISING  OUT  OF OR IN ANY WAY
RELATED  TO THE TRANSACTIONS CONTEMPLATED AND RELATIONSHIPS ESTABLISHED  BY
THIS AGREEMENT  OR ANY OF THE OTHER LOAN DOCUMENTS, OR ANY ACT, OMISSION OR
EVENT OCCURRING IN  CONNECTION THEREWITH.  THE COMPANY, EACH SUBSIDIARY AND
EACH GUARANTOR HEREBY  WAIVE,  RELEASE AND AGREE NOT TO SUE UPON SUCH CLAIM
FOR ANY SUCH DAMAGES, WHETHER OR  NOT  ACCRUED  AND WHETHER OR NOT KNOWN OR
SUSPECTED TO EXIST IN ITS FAVOR.

SECTION  11.22.  NONLIABILITY  OF  LENDERS.  The relationship  between  the
Company and the Banks is, and shall  at  all  times  remain, solely that of
borrower  and  lenders, and the Banks and the Agent neither  undertake  nor
assume any responsibility  or  duty  to  the  Company  to  review, inspect,
supervise,  pass  judgment  upon,  or inform the Company of any  matter  in
connection  with  any  phase  of  the Company's  business,  operations,  or
condition, financial or otherwise.   The  Company  shall rely entirely upon
its own judgment with respect to such matters, and any  review, inspection,
supervision, exercise of judgment, or information supplied  to  the Company
by  any  Bank  or  the Agent in connection with any such matter is for  the
protection of the Bank and the Agent, and neither the Company nor any third
party is entitled to rely thereon.

SECTION 11.23. NO ORAL  AGREEMENTS.   THIS WRITTEN AGREEMENT, TOGETHER WITH
THE OTHER LOAN DOCUMENTS EXECUTED CONTEMPORANEOUSLY HEREWITH, REPRESENT THE
FINAL AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE PARTIES AND MAY NOT BE CONTRADICTED BY EVIDENCE
OF PRIOR, CONTEMPORANEOUS OR SUBSEQUENT  ORAL  AGREEMENTS  OF  THE PARTIES.
THERE ARE NO UNWRITTEN ORAL AGREEMENTS BETWEEN THE PARTIES.


     Exhibits A through N, inclusive of the Credit Agreement shall  each be
amended,  and as so amended shall be restated in their entirety to read  as
set forth in  Exhibits A through N hereto, respectively, and Exhibits O and
P of the Credit Agreement are deleted.

     The amendments reflected in the above and foregoing Second Amended and
Restated Secured  Credit  Agreement  shall  not become effective unless and
until the following conditions precedent have been satisfied:

    (a)  The Company and each of the Banks shall  have executed this Second
Amended and Restated Secured Credit Agreement (such  execution  may  be  in
several counterparts and the several parties hereto may execute on separate
counterparts).

    (b)  Each  of the representations and warranties set forth in Section 5
of the Credit Agreement shall be true and correct.

    (c)  The Company  shall be in full compliance with all of the terms and
conditions of the Credit  Agreement  and  no  Event of Default or Potential
Default shall have occurred and be continuing thereunder  or  shall  result
after  giving  effect  to  this  Second Amended and Restated Secured Credit
Agreement.

    (d)  All legal matters incident  to  the  execution and delivery hereof
and the instruments and documents contemplated hereby shall be satisfactory
to the Banks.

    (e)  The  Agent  shall  have received (in sufficient  counterparts  for
distribution  to  each  of the Banks)  all  of  the  following  in  a  form
satisfactory to the Agent, the Banks and their respective counsel:

          (i) a Secured Revolving  Credit  Note in the form attached hereto
     as Exhibit A payable to the order of each Bank in the principal amount
     of its Revolving Credit Commitment;

         (ii) copies (executed or certified  as  may be appropriate) of all
     legal documents or proceedings taken in connection  with the execution
     and  delivery  of  this  Second  Amended  and Restated Secured  Credit
     Agreement,  and  the  other  instruments  and  documents  contemplated
     hereby; and

        (iii) an opinion of counsel to the Company substantially  in a form
     as  set  forth in Exhibit E hereto and satisfactory to the Agent,  the
     Banks and their respective counsel.

    (f)  The Agent  shall  have received for its account and the account of
the Banks all fees payable by  the  Company  to  the Agent and the Banks in
connection with this Second Amended and Restated Secured Credit Agreement.

    (g)  The  Company shall at the time all other conditions  precedent  to
the effectiveness of the above and foregoing amendments have been satisfied
be able to comply  with  the conditions precedent to borrowing set forth in
Section 6 hereof.

     The Company, by its execution  of  this  Second  Amended  and Restated
Secured Credit Agreement, hereby represents and warrants the following:

          (a)  each  of  the  representations  and warranties set forth  in
     Section 5 of the Credit Agreement is true and  correct  as of the date
     hereof,  except  that  the  representations and warranties made  under
     Section 5.3 shall be deemed to  refer to the most recent annual report
     furnished to the Banks by the Company; and

          (b) the Company is in full compliance  with  all of the terms and
     conditions  of  the  Credit  Agreement  and  no  Event of  Default  or
     Potential Default has occurred and is continuing thereunder.

     The  Company agrees to pay all costs and expenses incurred  by  the
Agent and the  Banks  in  connection with the preparation, execution and
delivery of this Second Amended  and  Restated  Secured Credit Agreement
and  the  documents and transactions contemplated hereby  including  the
fees and expenses  of  Messrs.  Chapman  and  Cutler with respect to the
foregoing.   No reference to this Second Amended  and  Restated  Secured
Credit  Agreement   need  be  made  in  any  note,  security  agreement,
instrument or other documents  making reference to the Credit Agreement,
any reference to the Credit Agreement  in any of such to be deemed to be
a  reference  to the Credit Agreement as amended  and  restated  hereby.
This  Second Amended  and  Restated  Secured  Credit  Agreement  may  be
executed  in  any number of counterparts and by different parties hereto
on separate counterparts, each of which when so executed shall be deemed
an original, but  all  of  which  to  constitute  but  one  and the same
instrument.

     The  Company has heretofore executed and delivered to the  Agent  that
certain Security  Agreement  Re:   Accounts  Receivable,  Farm Products and
Inventory dated as of May 27, 1993, as amended (the "SECURITY  AGREEMENT"),
and  the  Company  hereby  agrees  that  notwithstanding the execution  and
delivery hereof, the Security Agreement shall  be  and remain in full force
and  effect  and  that  any  rights  and remedies of the Agent  thereunder,
obligations of the Company thereunder  and  any liens or security interests
created or provided for thereunder shall be and  remain  in  full force and
effect,  shall  not be affected, impaired or discharged thereby  and  shall
secure all of the  Company's  indebtedness,  obligations and liabilities to
the Agent and the Banks under the Credit Agreement  as amended and restated
hereby.  Nothing herein contained shall in any manner  affect or impair the
priority of the liens and security interests created and  provided  for  by
the  Security  Agreement  as  to  the  indebtedness  which would be secured
thereby prior to giving effect hereto.  Without limiting the foregoing, the
Company  acknowledges and agrees that all of its indebtedness,  obligations
and liabilities to the Agent and the Banks pursuant to the Credit Agreement
as amended and restated hereby, including without limitation, all principal
of and interest  on the Revolving Notes (as defined in the Credit Agreement
as amended and restated hereby), all Reimbursement Obligations and all Bond
Reimbursement Obligations,  in  each  case  whether  presently  existing or
hereafter arising, shall constitute "Secured Obligations" as defined in the
Security  Agreement  and  shall  be secured by, and entitled to all of  the
benefits of, the liens and security interest created and provided for under
the  Security Agreement.  In furtherance  of  the  foregoing,  the  Company
hereby  grants to the Agent for the benefit of the Banks, and hereby agrees
that the  Agent  for  the  benefit  of  the  Banks shall continue to have a
continuing security interest in, all and singular  of  the  Company's  farm
products, inventory, books and records, documents, accessions and additions
to  all  of  the  foregoing  and  all  products and proceeds of each of the
foregoing, and all proceeds or collection  of  any of the foregoing and all
of the other collateral described or referred to in the granting clauses of
the Security Agreement, each and all of which granting  clauses  are hereby
incorporated  by  reference herein in their entirety.  The foregoing  grant
shall be in addition to and supplemental of and not in substitution for the
grant by the Company  under the Security Agreement, and shall not affect or
impair the lien or priority  of  the  Security  Agreement in the collateral
subject thereto or the indebtedness secured thereby.

     THIS  SECOND  AMENDED AND RESTATED SECURED CREDIT  AGREEMENT  AND  THE
RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF  THE PARTIES HERETO, SHALL BE CONSTRUED AND DETERMINED
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE  INTERNAL  LAWS  OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, EXCEPT TO
THE EXTENT PROVIDED IN THE NEXT PARAGRAPH HEREOF AND TO THE EXTENT THAT THE
FEDERAL LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA MAY OTHERWISE APPLY.

     NOTWITHSTANDING ANYTHING IN THE IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING PARAGRAPH HEREOF
TO THE CONTRARY, NOTHING IN THIS SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED SECURED CREDIT
AGREEMENT, THE CREDIT AGREEMENT, THE NOTES,  OR  THE  OTHER  LOAN DOCUMENTS
SHALL BE DEEMED TO CONSTITUTE A WAIVER OF ANY RIGHTS WHICH THE COMPANY, THE
AGENT  OR  ANY OF THE BANKS MAY HAVE UNDER THE NATIONAL BANK ACT  OR  OTHER
APPLICABLE FEDERAL LAW.

<PAGE>
Upon your acceptance  hereof  in  the  manner  hereinafter  set forth, this
Agreement  shall be a contract between us for the purposes hereinabove  set
forth.

     Dated as of November 5, 1999.


                                 PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION
                                         /s/
                                      Richard A. Cogdill

                                 By
                                   Its Chief Financial Officer

     Accepted and Agreed to as of the day and year last above written.

                                 HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK individually
                                   and as Agent


                                 By
                                   Its Vice President

                                     Address: 111 West Monroe Street
                                             Chicago, Illinois 60690
                                     Attention: Agribusiness Division

                                 U.S. BANCORP AG CREDIT, INC.


                                 By
                                   Its

                                     Address: 950 Seventeenth Street
                                             Suite 350
                                             Denver, Colorado 80202
                                     Attention:

<PAGE>
                                   COBANK, ACB


                                 By
                                   Its

                                     Address: 5500 South Quebec Street
                                             Englewood, Colorado  80111
                                     Attention: Brian Klatt

                                 SUNTRUST BANK, ATLANTA


                                 By
                                   Its

                                     Address: 303 Peachtree Street
                                           Atlanta, Georgia  30308
                                     Attention:  _______________________

                                 CREDIT AGRICOLE INDOSUEZ


                                 By
                                   Its


                                 By
                                   Its

                                     Address: 55 East Monroe Street
                                             Suite 4700
                                             Chicago, Illinois  60603
                                     Attention:
<PAGE>
                                 EXHIBIT A


                        Pilgrim's Pride Corporation


                       SECURED REVOLVING CREDIT NOTE


                                                 November 5, 1999

     FOR VALUE  RECEIVED,  the  undersigned, PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION, a
Delaware corporation (the "COMPANY"),  promises  to  pay  to  the  order of
________________ (the "LENDER") on the Termination Date (as defined  in the
Credit  Agreement  referred  to  below),  at the principal office of Harris
Trust and Savings Bank in Chicago, Illinois, the aggregate unpaid principal
amount of all Revolving Credit Loans and Bid  Loans  made  by the Lender to
the  Company  under  the  Revolving  Credit  provided for under the  Credit
Agreement hereinafter mentioned and remaining  unpaid  on  the  Termination
Date,  together  with  interest  on  the principal amount of each Revolving
Credit Loan and Bid Loan from time to  time  outstanding  hereunder  at the
rates,  and payable in the manner and on the dates specified in said Credit
Agreement.

     The  Lender shall record on its books or records or on the schedule to
this Note which  is  a  part  hereof the principal amount of each Revolving
Credit Loan and Bid Loan made under the Revolving Credit, whether each Loan
is a Domestic Rate Loan or a Eurodollar  Loan  and,  with  respect to Fixed
Rate Loans, the interest rate and Interest Period applicable  thereto,  and
all payments of principal and interest and the principal balances from time
to  time  outstanding; provided that prior to the transfer of this Note all
such amounts  shall  be  recorded on a schedule attached to this Note.  The
record thereof, whether shown  on  such books or records or on the schedule
to  this  Note,  shall be PRIMA FACIE evidence  as  to  all  such  amounts;
provided, however,  that the failure of the Lender to record or any mistake
in recording any of the  foregoing  shall not limit or otherwise affect the
obligation of the Company to repay all Revolving Credit Loans and Bid Loans
made under the Credit Agreement, together with accrued interest thereon.

     This Note is one of the Revolving  Notes  referred  to  in  and issued
under  that  certain  Second  Amended and Restated Secured Credit Agreement
dated as of November 5, 1999, among  the  Company, Harris Trust and Savings
Bank, as Agent, and the banks named therein,  as  amended from time to time
(the "CREDIT AGREEMENT"), and this Note and the holder  hereof are entitled
to  all of the benefits and security provided for thereby  or  referred  to
therein,  including  without  limitation  the  collateral security provided
pursuant to the Security Agreement (as defined in the Credit Agreement), to
which Credit Agreement and Security Agreement reference  is hereby made for
a statement thereof and a statement of the terms and conditions  upon which
the Agent may exercise rights with respect to such collateral.  All defined
terms used in this Note, except terms otherwise defined herein, shall  have
the same meaning as such terms have in said Credit Agreement.

     Prepayments  may be made on any Revolving Credit Loan evidenced hereby
and this Note (and  the  Revolving  Credit  Loans  evidenced hereby) may be
declared due prior to the expressed maturity thereof, all in the events, on
the terms and in the manner as provided for in said  Credit  Agreement  and
the Security Agreement.

     All  agreements  between  the  Company,  the  Agent (as defined in the
Credit  Agreement)  and  each  of  the  Banks  (as defined  in  the  Credit
Agreement), whether now existing or hereafter arising  and  whether written
or  oral,  are  expressly  limited  so  that  in  no  contingency  or event
whatsoever, whether by reason of demand or acceleration of the maturity  of
any of the indebtedness hereunder or otherwise, shall the amount contracted
for, charged, received, reserved, paid or agreed to be paid to the Agent or
each  Bank  for  the  use,  forbearance, or detention of the funds advanced
hereunder or otherwise, or for  the  performance or payment of any covenant
or obligation contained in any document  executed  in  connection  herewith
(all  such  documents  being  hereinafter  collectively  referred to as the
"CREDIT  DOCUMENTS"),  exceed  the  highest  lawful rate permissible  under
applicable law (the "HIGHEST LAWFUL RATE"), it  being  the  intent  of  the
Company, the Agent and each of the Banks in the execution hereof and of the
Credit  Documents  to  contract  in strict accordance with applicable usury
laws.  If, as a result of any circumstances  whatsoever, fulfillment by the
Company of any provision hereof or of any of such  documents,  at  the time
performance of such provision shall be due, shall involve transcending  the
limit of validity prescribed by applicable usury law or result in the Agent
or  any  Bank  having  or  being  deemed  to  have contracted for, charged,
reserved or received interest (or amounts deemed  to be interest) in excess
of the maximum, lawful rate or amount of interest allowed by applicable law
to be so contracted for, charged, reserved or received by the Agent or such
Bank, then, IPSO FACTO, the obligation to be fulfilled by the Company shall
be  reduced  to  the  limit  of  such  validity,  and  if,  from  any  such
circumstance,  the  Agent  or  such  Bank  shall  ever receive interest  or
anything which might be deemed interest under applicable  law  which  would
exceed  the  Highest  Lawful  Rate,  such  amount  which would be excessive
interest shall be refunded to the Company or, to the  extent  (i) permitted
by  applicable  law  and (ii) such excessive interest does  not exceed  the
unpaid principal balance  of the Notes (as defined in the Credit Agreement)
and the amounts owing on other  obligations  of the Company to the Agent or
any  Bank  under  any Loan Document (as defined in  the  Credit  Agreement)
applied to the reduction  of  the  principal amount owing on account of the
Notes or the amounts owing on other obligations of the Company to the Agent
or any Bank under any Loan Document  and  not  to  the payment of interest.
All interest paid or agreed to be paid to the Agent  or  any Bank shall, to
the extent permitted by applicable law, be amortized, prorated,  allocated,
and spread throughout the full period of the indebtedness  hereunder  until
payment  in  full of the principal of the indebtedness hereunder (including
the period of  any  renewal  or  extension thereof) so that the interest on
account of the indebtedness hereunder for such full period shall not exceed
the  highest  amount permitted by applicable  law.   This  paragraph  shall
control all agreements between the Company, the Agent and the Banks.

     The  undersigned   hereby  expressly  waives  diligence,  presentment,
demand, protest, notice of  protest, notice of intent to accelerate, notice
of acceleration, and notice of any other kind.

     IT IS AGREED THAT THIS NOTE  AND THE RIGHTS AND REMEDIES OF THE HOLDER
HEREOF SHALL BE CONSTRUED IN ACCORDANCE  WITH  AND GOVERNED BY THE INTERNAL
LAWS OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT NOTHING IN THIS NOTE
SHALL BE DEEMED TO CONSTITUTE A WAIVER OF ANY RIGHTS WHICH THE COMPANY, THE
AGENT OR ANY OF THE BANKS MAY HAVE UNDER THE NATIONAL  BANK  ACT  OR  OTHER
APPLICABLE FEDERAL LAW.

                                 PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION


                                 By
                                   Its Chief Financial Officer
<PAGE>
                                 EXHIBIT B

                               L/C AGREEMENT
<PAGE>
                                 EXHIBIT C

                         ENVIRONMENTAL DISCLOSURE

     1.

<PAGE>
                                 EXHIBIT D

                              PERMITTED LIENS



LIEN DATE                 LIEN HOLDER                          COLLATERAL


<PAGE>
EXHIBIT E

LEGAL OPINION


(To Be Retyped On Letterhead Of Counsel
And Dated As Of Date Of Closing)





<PAGE>
                                 EXHIBIT F


                        Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

                          COMPLIANCE CERTIFICATE

     This  Compliance  Certificate is furnished to Harris Trust and Savings
Bank, as agent (the "AGENT"),  pursuant  to that certain Second Amended and
Restated Secured Credit Agreement dated as of November 5, 1999 by and among
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation (the "COMPANY"),  Harris Trust and Savings Bank
and  the other Banks parties thereto (the "AGREEMENT").   Unless  otherwise
defined  herein,  the  terms  used  in this Compliance Certificate have the
meanings ascribed thereto in the Agreement.

     THE UNDERSIGNED HEREBY CERTIFIES THAT:

     1.  I am the duly elected _____________________________________ of the
Company;

     2.  I have reviewed the terms of  the  Agreement  and  I have made, or
have  caused  to  be  made under my supervision, a detailed review  of  the
transactions and conditions  of  the  Company  during the accounting period
covered by the attached financial statements;

     3.  The examinations described in paragraph  2 did not disclose, and I
have  no  knowledge  of,  the  existence of any condition  or  event  which
constitutes a Potential Default or Event of Default during or at the end of
the accounting period covered by the attached financial statements or as of
the date of this Certificate, except as set forth below; and

     4.  If attached financial statements  are  being furnished pursuant to
Section 7.4(a) or (b) of the Agreement, Schedule  I  attached  hereto  sets
forth  financial data and computations, evidencing the Company's compliance
with certain covenants of the Agreement, all of which data and computations
are true, complete and correct.

     Described below are the exceptions, if any, to paragraph 3 by listing,
in detail, the nature of the condition or event, the period during which it
has existed  and  the  action  which  the  Company  has taken, is taking or
proposes to take with respect to each such condition or event:

          _______________________________________________________

          _______________________________________________________

     The foregoing certifications, together with the computations set forth
in  Schedule  I  hereto  and the financial statements delivered  with  this
Certificate in support hereof,  are made and delivered this ________ day of
______________________, 19___.

                                 PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION



                                 By
                                   Its
<PAGE>
                                SCHEDULE I
                         TO COMPLIANCE CERTIFICATE
                        PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION

      Compliance Calculations for Second Amended and Restated Secured
               Credit Agreement Dated as of November 5, 1999

SECTION 7.8    LEVERAGE RATIO

    (a)   Funded Debt ..................................$________

    (b)   Funded Debt ..................................$________

          Net Worth ....................................$________

                         TOTAL..........................$________

                                   (a)/(b)..............________*

*Required to not exceed 0.625 to 1.

Compliance                     Yes_______   No________

SECTION 7.9    TANGIBLE NET WORTH

    (a)   Net Worth ....................................$________

    (b)   Intangible Assets ............................$________

                                   (a) - (b)............________*

    Tangible Net Worth .................................$_______*

*Required to be no less than $___________ during this compliance period.

Compliance                     Yes_______   No________

SECTION 7.10   CURRENT RATIO

    (a)   Current Assets ...............................$________

    (b)   Current Liabilities ..........................$________

                                   (a)/(b)..............________*

*Required to be no less than ____ to 1 during this compliance period.

Compliance                     Yes_______   No________

SECTION 7.11   NET TANGIBLE ASSETS TO TOTAL LIABILITIES

    (a)   Net Tangible Assets ..........................$________

    (b)   Total Liabilities.............................$________

                                   (a)/(b)..............________*

*Required to be no less than 1.3 to 1.

Compliance                     Yes_______   No________

SECTION 7.12   FIXED CHARGE COVERAGE RATIO

    (a)   EBITDA .......................................$________

    (b)   Operating Leases (determined in accordance
          with generally accepted accounting principles,
          consistently applied).........................$________

    (c)   (a) + (b).....................................$________

    (d)   Interest Expense..............................$________

    (e)   Current Maturities of Long Term Debt..........$________

    (f)   Non-Cancellable Operating Lease Payments......$________

    (g)   Capital Lease Payments (determined in accordance
          with generally accepted accounting principles,
          consistently applied).........................$________

    (h)   (d) + (e) + (f) + (g).........................$________
                              (c)/(h) $________*

    *   Required to be no less than 1.5 to 1.

Compliance                     Yes_______   No________

SECTION 7.13   MINIMUM NET WORKING CAPITAL

    (a)   Current Assets ...............................$________

    (b)   Current Liabilities ..........................$________

                                   (a)-(b)..............________*

*Required  to  be  no  less  than  __________________________  during  this
compliance period.

Compliance                     Yes_______   No________


<PAGE>
                                 EXHIBIT G


                        Pilgrim's Pride Corporation


                        BORROWING BASE CERTIFICATE
                        as of _____________________
                             ($000's omitted)

     This Borrowing Base Certificate  is  furnished  to  Harris  Trust  and
Savings  Bank,  as  agent  (the  "AGENT"),  pursuant to that certain Second
Amended and Restated Secured Credit Agreement dated as of November 5, 1999,
as  amended,  by  and  among Pilgrim's Pride Corporation  (the  "COMPANY"),
Harris Trust and Savings  Bank  and  the  other  Bank  parties thereto (the
"AGREEMENT").   Unless  otherwise defined herein, the terms  used  in  this
Borrowing Base Certificate  have  the  meanings  ascribed  thereto  in  the
Agreement.

     THE UNDERSIGNED HEREBY CERTIFIES THAT:

           1. I am the duly elected Chief Financial Officer of the Company.

           2.  I  have reviewed the terms of the Agreement and I have made,
     or  have  caused  to  be  made  under  my  supervision,  the  attached
     computation  of  the  Borrowing  Base as defined in Section 4.1 of the
     Agreement.

           3. No change of name, corporate identity or address of the chief
     executive office of the Company has occurred.

           4. I have reviewed the terms  of  the Agreement and, pursuant to
     such review, I have no knowledge of the existence  of any condition or
     event which would constitute a Potential Default or  Event of Default,
     except  as set forth below (detailing the nature of the  condition  or
     event, the period during which it has existed and the action which the
     Company has  taken, is taking or proposes to take with respect to each
     such condition or event):

          _________________________________________________________________
     _________________________________________________________________
     _________________________________________________________________
     _________________________________________________________________

<PAGE>
           5.  The  information  above  and  any  attached  exhibits do not
     contain any untrue statement of material fact or omit a material fact,
     either  individually or in aggregate, that would make the  information
     or any attached exhibits misleading.

                                 PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION




                                 By
                                   Its

<PAGE>
                        SUMMARY OF COLLATERAL POOL
                      Dated as of ___________, 199__


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              INVENTORY               ADVANCE
                                    UNITS       VALUE                  VALUE
<S>             <C>                  <C>         <C>                    <C>
  1.)
            Live Broilers       __________  $_________           $__________
  2.)       Breeder Hens        __________  $_________           $__________
  3.)       Breeder Pullets     __________  $_________           $__________
  4.)       Commercial Hens     __________  $_________           $__________
  5.)       Commercial Pullets  __________  $_________           $__________
  6.)       Grain Feed (Field)  __________  $_________           $__________
  7.)       Eggs (Hatching/
            In Transit)         __________  $_________           $__________
  8.)       Dressed Broilers    __________  $_________           $__________
  9.)       Prepared Foods      __________  $_________           $__________
 10.)       Eggs (Commercial)   __________  $_________           $__________
 11.)       Grain (Feedmills)   __________  $_________           $__________
 12.)       Branch Inventory
            of Packaged Items               $_________           $__________
 13.)       Packaging, Vaccines,
            Supplies                        $_________           $__________

            SUBTOTAL(lines 1-13)__________  $_________           $__________
 14.)       Less Grower Payables Greater                        ($__________)
                than 15 days
 15.)       Less Bond L/C Exposure                              ($__________)

            TOTAL COLLATERAL POOL           $_________           $__________

            Less O/S Indebtedness
            as of:               _________                       $__________

         TOTAL AVAILABLE CREDIT:                                 $__________
</TABLE>

COLLATERAL VALUE COMPUTATIONS
Dated as of __________, 199__
COLLATERAL POOL:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                              GROSS VALUE COMPUTATION         ADVANCE VALUE
<S>           <C>                     <C>                      <C>     <C>
1)  Live Broiler Value:
      Number of Head                  __________ Head

      (-) Death/Reject Rate (4%)      __________ Head

      (x) Avg. Weight per Bird (2     __________ Lbs.
                 Lbs.)

      (x) _______   _______ cents/lb.

            as of ___________         __________ x 65%        ____________

2)  Breeder Hen Value:
      Number of Head                   __________ Head

      (x) Loan Value @ $1.50/bird      ________ @ 100%         ____________

3)  Breeder Pullet Value:
      Number of Head                   __________ Head

      (x) Loan Value @ $1.00/bird      ________ @ 100%         ____________

4)  Commercial Hen Value:
      Number of Head                   __________ Head

      (x) Loan Value @  $0.70/bird     ________ @ 100%         ____________

5)  Commercial Pullet Value:
      Number of Head                   __________ Head

      (x) Loan Value @ $0.40/bird      ________ @ 100%         ____________

6)  Grain Feed Value (Field):
      Number of Head (NET)             __________ Head

      (x) 0.75 Lbs/day (/) 2,000       __________ Tons

      (x) Feed Cost/Ton ____________  __________ x 65%        ____________

7)  Eggs (Hatching & In Transit):
      Number of Dozens                __________ Dozen

      (x)          $1.25/Doz           ________ @ 100%         ____________

8)  Dressed Broilers (All Locations):
      Number of pounds                  __________ Lbs

      (x) Price/Lb. computed_________  __________ x 65%        ____________

9)  Prepared Foods (All Locations)
      Number of pounds                 ___________ Lbs.

      (x) Price/Lb. computed_________  __________ x 65%        ____________

10) Eggs (Commercial)
      Number of Dozens                 __________ Dozen

      (x)          ____________/dozen  __________ x 65%        ____________

11) Grain Value (Feedmills):

    Corn:      ______ x ______         __________ x 65%        ____________
                       Cost/Ton

    Soybean Meal: ______ x ______      __________ x 65%        ____________
                          Cost/Ton

    Feed Supplements: ______ x ______   __________ x 65%        ____________
                              Cost/Ton

    Finished Feeds: ______ x ______     __________ x 65%        ____________
                             Cost/Ton

    Total Tons:       ______            __________ x 65%        ____________

12)  Branch Inventory of Packaged Items
       (@ Cost)                         __________ x 65%        ____________

13)  Packaging, Vaccines, Supplies
                (@ Cost)                __________ x 40%        ____________

Total Collateral Pool                   __________              ____________

</TABLE>

<PAGE>
                                   EXHIBIT H

                          PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION
                          SUBSIDIARIES AND AFFILIATES


<PAGE>
                                   EXHIBIT I

                             INTENTIONALLY OMITTED
<PAGE>
                                   EXHIBIT J

                                LABOR DISPUTES

<PAGE>
                                   EXHIBIT K

                             EXISTING INVESTMENTS

<PAGE>
                                   EXHIBIT L

                     COMPETITIVE BID REQUEST CONFIRMATION

[Date]

Harris Trust and Savings Bank as Agent for the Banks parties to the Second
  Amended and Restated Secured Credit Agreement referred to below

Attention:

Ladies and Gentlemen:

     The undersigned, PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION (the "COMPANY") refers to the
Second Amended  and  Restated  Secured Credit Agreement dated as of November 5,
1999 (the "CREDIT AGREEMENT"), among  the  Company, the Banks named therein and
Harris Trust and Savings Bank, as Agent for  the Banks.  Capitalized terms used
herein and not defined shall have the meanings  assigned  to  such terms in the
Credit Agreement.  The Company hereby confirms that it has, on the date hereof,
given  you  notice  pursuant  to  Section 2.2 of the Credit Agreement  that  it
requests a Bid Loan under the Credit  Agreement,  and  in  that connection sets
forth below the terms on which such Bid Loan is requested to be made:

          (A) Date of Bid Loans {1}

          (B) Aggregate Principal Amount of Bid Loan {2}

          (C) Interest Periods{3}

     Upon  acceptance  of  any  or  all of the Bid Loans offered  by  Banks  in
response to this request, the Company shall be deemed to affirm as of such date
the representations and warranties made  in  the Credit Agreement to the extent
specified in Section 6 thereof.

                                 Very truly yours,

                                 PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION

                                 By
                                   Its


**FOOTNOTES**

{1}  The Competitive Bid Request Confirmation  must  be  received on a Business
      Day by the Agent not later than 11:30 A.M., Chicago  time,  one  Business
      Day  before  the  date of the proposed Bid Loan (which must be a Business
      Day).


{2}  Not less than $3,000,000 and in integral multiples of $1,000,000.


{3} Which shall be no more  than 180 days or less than 7 days and shall end not
      later than the Termination Date.
<PAGE>
                                   EXHIBIT M

               CONFIRMATION OF NOTICE OF COMPETITIVE BID REQUEST

[Name of Bank]                                            [Date]
[Address]

Attention:

Ladies and Gentlemen:

     Reference  is made to the  Second  Amended  and  Restated  Secured  Credit
Agreement, dated  as  of  November  5,  1999  (the  "CREDIT  AGREEMENT")  among
PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION (the "COMPANY"), the Banks named therein and Harris
Trust  and Savings Bank, as Agent for the Banks.  Capitalized terms used herein
and not  defined  shall  have the meanings assigned to such terms in the Credit
Agreement.  The Company made  a  Competitive Bid Request on _____________, 19__
pursuant to Section 2.2 of the Credit Agreement, and in that connection you are
invited to submit a Competitive Bid by    [DATE]   .{4}

        Your  Competitive  Bid must comply  with  Section  2.3  of  the  Credit
Agreement and the terms set  forth  below  on which the Competitive Bid Request
was made.

    (A)  Date of Bid Loan               ___________

    (B)  Aggregate principal amount
            of Bid Loan                                ___________

    (C)  Interest Periods ___________

                                 Very truly yours,

                                 HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK, as Agent for
                                   the Banks



                                 By
                                   Its


**FOOTNOTES**

{4}  The Competitive Bid must be received by the Agent not later than
8:45 A.M., Chicago time, on the proposed Borrowing Date.
<PAGE>
                                   EXHIBIT N

                        CONFIRMATION OF COMPETITIVE BID

[Date]

Harris Trust and Savings Bank,
  as Agent for the Banks
  parties to the Second Amended and
  Restated Secured Credit Agreement
  referred to below

Attention:

Ladies and Gentlemen:

     The undersigned, [NAME OF BANK], refers to the Second Amended and Restated
Secured Credit Agreement dated as of November  5, 1999 (the "CREDIT AGREEMENT")
among PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION (the "COMPANY"),  the Banks named therein and
Harris Trust and Savings Bank, as Agent for the Banks.   Capitalized terms used
herein and not defined shall have the meanings assigned to  such  terms  in the
Credit  Agreement.  The undersigned hereby confirms that on the date hereof  it
has made  a Competitive Bid pursuant to Section 2.3 of the Credit Agreement, in
response to  the  Competitive  Bid Request made by the Company on             ,
19   ,  and  in that connection sets  forth  below  the  terms  on  which  such
Competitive Bid is made:

     Date of Borrowing:                     {5}

PRINCIPAL  AMOUNT{6}                   INTEREST  PERIOD{7}   YIELD{8}
                                   Very truly yours,

                                 ______________________________________

                                 By
                                   Its


**FOOTNOTES**

{5}  As specified  in  the  related  Confirmation of Notice of  Competitive Bid
Request.


{6}  Principal amount bid for each Interest Period may not exceed the principal
      amount requested by the Company.  Bids must be made in a minimum amount
      of $3,000,000 and in integral multiples of $1,000,000.


{7}  Up to 180 days and not less than 30 days, as specified in the related
      Confirmation of Notice of Competitive Bid Request.


{8}  Specify rate of interest per annum computed on the basis of a year of 360
      days and actual days elapsed.




                                 AGREEMENT
                    BETWEEN PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION
                        AND PILGRIM INTERESTS, LTD.


     AGREEMENT  MADE  effective as of June 11, 1999, by and between PILGRIM
INTERESTS,  LTD.,  a Texas  limited  partnership  (the  "Partnership")  and
PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION,  a  Delaware  corporation  with  its principal
offices  at  110  South  Texas Street, Pittsburg, Texas (herein called  the
"Company").

                           PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

     In order to meet its continuing business needs, the Company will incur
certain indebtedness after  the  date  of  this  Agreement and has incurred
certain  indebtedness  prior  to the date of this Agreement  by  reason  of
credit  extended  to it by certain  creditors  who  will  require  or  have
required the Partnership  to  guarantee such indebtedness as a condition to
extending such credit ("Guaranteed Indebtedness").

     As a condition to the Partnership's  being  contingently  liable  as a
Guarantor on any Guaranteed Indebtedness, the Partnership requires that the
Company  shall  pay  the  Partnership  a  reasonable  fee for such guaranty
undertaking.

                                 AGREEMENT

     In  consideration  of the premises and the mutual covenants  contained
herein it is understood and agreed to by the parties hereto as follows:

1.   GUARANTY OF GUARANTEED INDEBTEDNESS.

     1.01. GUARANTY.  In  reliance  upon the representations and warranties
herein and subject to the terms and conditions  hereof,  during the term of
this  Agreement  the  Partnership  shall,  when  required  by the  Company,
guarantee any Eligible Indebtedness to be incurred by the Company  in  form
and  substance  satisfactory  to  the  related  creditor ("Guaranty").  Any
Eligible Indebtedness so guaranteed is herein referred  to  as  "Guaranteed
Indebtedness."

     1.02.  ELIGIBLE INDEBTEDNESS.  The term "Eligible Indebtedness"  shall
mean (i) any  indebtedness  to be incurred by the Company after the date of
this Agreement and required by its business needs by reason of credit to be
extended to the Company by a  creditor who shall require the Partnership to
guarantee such indebtedness as  a condition to extending such credit to the
Company; and (ii) any Indebtedness  incurred  by  the  Company prior to the
date of this Agreement and guaranteed by the Partnership  pursuant  to  the
terms therein.  For purposes of this Agreement a resolution by the Board of
Directors  that  such indebtedness is required by the business needs of the
Company is and shall  be  binding  and  conclusive upon all parties to this
Agreement.

     1.03. CONDITION PRECEDENT TO ISSUANCE  OF  GUARANTY.   The Partnership
shall not be required to issue a Guaranty after the date of this  Agreement
until  it  has been furnished a certificate of the Secretary of the Company
certifying (i)  the  Eligible Indebtedness (including the maximum amount of
indebtedness, the name  of  the  creditor  and  the  terms  and  conditions
thereof)  to  be so guaranteed; (ii) a resolution of the Board of Directors
of the Company  authorizing the Company to incur the Eligible Indebtedness;
and  (iii)  the  principal  amount  of  all  Guaranteed  Indebtedness  then
outstanding.   Notwithstanding  the  previous  sentence,  any  Guaranty  of
Eligible Indebtedness prior to the date of this Agreement guaranteed by the
Partnership shall  not  require  satisfaction  of  the  condition precedent
contained in this Section 1.03.

2.   GUARANTY FEE.

     2.01. GENERAL.  So long as a Guaranty shall be outstanding the Company
shall  pay  a  fee  to  the Partnership for the undertaking herein  by  the
Partnership under a Guaranty  issued on or after the date of this Agreement
and  any  Guaranty issued prior to  the  date  of  this  Agreement  by  the
Partnership,  computed  and  subject  to  limitations  as  provided  herein
("Fee").

     2.02.  DETERMINATION  AND PAYMENT OF FEES.  The total Fees which shall
accrue with respect to any calendar  quarter  shall  be  an amount equal to
1/4{th}  of  a  percent  multiplied  by  the average daily balance  of  the
principal  amount  of  Guaranteed  Indebtedness   outstanding  during  such
calendar quarter.  All Fees shall be paid quarterly  within  45  days after
the end of each calendar quarter.

3.   REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES.

     3.01.   REPRESENTATIONS   AND  WARRANTIES  OF  COMPANY.   The  Company
represents and warrants to the Partnership that:

          (a)  GUARANTIES REQUIRED  BY  CREDITORS.   Certain  creditors  or
     proposed creditors  of  the  Company  (including certain lessors) have
     advised the Company that they will not  extend  credit  to the Company
     after  the  date  of  this  Agreement  without  the  Guaranty  of  the
     Partnership.

          (b)  CREDIT  REQUIRED  BY  THE  BUSINESS  NEEDS  OF COMPANY.  All
     Guaranteed Indebtedness will be required by the business  needs of the
     Company.

     3.02 REPRESENTATIONS   AND   WARRANTIES   OF   THE  PARTNERSHIP.   The
Partnership represents and warrants to the Company that the Partnership now
owns of record or beneficially such number of shares,  $.01  par  value, of
Class  A  common  stock  and Class B common stock of the Company as is  set
forth with the signature subscribed at the end of this Agreement.

     3.03. REPRESENTATIONS  OF  PARTIES AS TO REASONABLENESS OF FEES.  Each
party  hereto  represents that the  amount  of  Fees  to  be  paid  to  the
Partnership as provided herein is reasonable under the circumstances.

4.   MISCELLANEOUS.

     4.01. PRIOR  AGREEMENT.  This Agreement shall supersede any obligation
to issue a Guaranty  in  the future as shall have been required by any such
prior agreement, if any.

     4.02. NOTICES.  All communications  and  notices hereunder shall be in
writing and shall be mailed or delivered to the  Partnership at its address
as  it  appears herein below in this Agreement or to  the  Company  at  its
mailing address,  P.O.  Box  93, Pittsburg, Texas 75686 or delivered to its
principal office, 110 South Texas Street, Pittsburg, Texas.  The Company or
the Partnership may change its  respective address where all communications
and notices may be sent hereunder  by  addressing  notice of such change in
the manner above provided.

     4.03. EXPENSES.  Inasmuch as this Agreement is for the primary benefit
of the Company, the Company shall pay all counsel fees  and  other expenses
incurred   in  connection  with  the  preparation  and  execution  of  this
Agreement.

     4.04.  SURVIVAL   OF   REPRESENTATIONS   AND   WARRANTIES,  ETC.   All
representations, warranties and covenants made by the  Partnership  or  the
Company  herein  or in any certificate or other instrument delivered by and
pursuant hereto or  in  connection  herewith,  shall be deemed to have been
relied upon by all parties hereto, and shall survive throughout the term of
this Agreement and for two years thereafter regardless of any investigation
made by or on behalf of any party hereto.

     4.05.  CONTROLLING  LAW.   The  validity of this  Agreement  shall  be
governed by the laws of the State of Texas,  and  this  Agreement  shall be
construed and in force in accordance with the laws of the State of Texas.

     4.06. BENEFIT.  This Agreement shall be binding upon and inure  to the
benefit  of  (i)  any  successor  of  the  Company  by  statutory merger or
consolidation; and (ii) any successor or assign of the Partnership.

     4.07.  PERFORMANCE.   Time  is of the essence in this Agreement.   All
obligations of any party are performable in Camp County, Texas.

     4.08. ENTIRE AGREEMENT.  This instrument contains the entire Agreement
between  the  parties  hereto  with  the   respect   to   the  transactions
contemplated  herein.  No  modification,  alteration or amendment  to  this
Agreement  nor  any  waiver  of  any provision hereof  shall  be  valid  or
effective unless in writing and executed by all parties hereto.

     4.09. SEVERABILITY.  If any part  of this Agreement is judicially held
to  be invalid, unenforceable or void, such  holding  shall  not  have  the
effect  of  invalidating  or voiding the remainder of this Agreement not so
declared, or any part thereof, the parties hereby agreeing that the part or
parts so held to be invalid,  unenforceable or void shall be deemed to have
been stricken here from with the  same  force and effect as if such part or
parts had never been included herein.

     4.10. TERMINATION OF AGREEMENT.

          (a) GENERAL.  Unless sooner terminated  by the consent of all the
     parties hereto this Agreement shall terminate upon the earlier of:

               (1) EXPIRATION OF TIME.  Expiration  of  10  years after the
          date of this Agreement.

               (2) NOTICE OF THE PARTNERSHIP.  Expiration of  30 days after
          the Partnership shall have given written notice to the Company to
          such effect on or after the date of execution of this Agreement.

          (b)   EFFECT  OF  TERMINATION.   Upon  the  termination  of  this
     Agreement  the  obligations  of  all  parties  hereto  shall  then  be
     discharged in  full  except that all Guaranties then outstanding shall
     remain  in  full  force  according   to  their  respective  terms  and
     conditions, and the Company shall pay the Fees to the Partnership with
     respect to Guaranteed Indebtedness outstanding  after  termination  as
     provided in Article 2.

     This  Agreement  is  signed  and  delivered on the date and year first
above  set  forth  in multiple counterparts  each  of  which  shall  be  an
original.

                                *    *    *
<PAGE>

                              PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION

                                    /s/
                                   David Van Hoose
                           By:
                              David Van Hoose
                              Chief Executive Officer



                              PILGRIM INTERESTS, LTD., a Texas limited
                              partnership
                              P.O. Box 93
                              Pittsburg, TX 75686
                              Shares  of  Class  A  Common  Stock  Directly
                              Owned:
                              7,197,692

                              Shares  of  Class  B  Common  Stock  Directly
                              Owned:
                              14,395,385

                                     /s/ Lonnie A. Pilgrim

                              By:  ____________________________
                                   Lonnie  A.  Pilgrim,  as trustee of  the
                                       Lonnie  A.  Pilgrim  1998  Revocable
                                       Trust
                                   General Partner

                                     /s/ Lonnie Ken Pilgrim
                              By:  ____________________________
                                   Lonnie Ken Pilgrim
                                   General Partner


                        PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION
                    BREEDER AND PULLET GROWER AGREEMENT



THE STATE OF TEXAS

COUNTY OF NACOGDOCHES

THIS AGREEMENT, MADE AND ENTERED INTO THIS, THE   27TH      DAY

OF   OCTOBER , 1999 , BY AND BETWEEN    DAVID VAN HOOSE ,

HEREAFTER CALLED "PRODUCER", AND PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION,

HEREAFTER CALLED "OWNER".

WITNESSETH

     The "PRODUCER" located at Timber Lake Farms            in the County

Of  Nacogdoches , State of Texas, for about 66,000 breeder hens and pullets
and 6,900 cockerels under the conditions set forth as follows:

A.   "PRODUCER" AGREES TO BE SOLEY RESPONSIBLE FOR AND TO SUPPLY AT   HIS
OWN EXPENSE THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY AND SERVICES:

     1)   If Breeder hens are raised, "Producer" will furnish proper
          housing and equipment as deemed necessary by "OWNER". Properly
          insulated, "pad- fan" ventilated are required for breeder hens.
          A stand-by generator with capacity to run entire farm in case of
          power failure is required for both breeder hens and pullets.

     2)   To be present when birds are being moved onto farm, and to
          provide help for the unloading of birds.

     3)   To provide approved rat bait stations.

     4)   If Breeder hens are raised, "Producer", will provide an egg
          cooler mechanically cooled and heated so as to maintain a
          temperature of 65-68 degrees and 75 percent humidity.

     5)   If Breeder hens are raised, "Producer", will  provide a shavings
          storage warehouse.

     6)   Grower agrees to dispose of all dead birds and poultry house
          liter in accordance with the best Management Practices provided as
          Attachment A to this contract. Further, grower agrees to dispose of
          all dead birds and poultry house litter in accordance with
          applicable federal, state and local laws, rules and regulations
          where more stringent than the Best Management Practices provided
          in Attachment A.

     7)   To supply all water, electricity, fuel and litter for nests as
          directed by the  "OWNER".

     8)   To follow all management recommendations as stated in written
          instructions by the "OWNER".

     9)   To abide by, and enforce quarantine regulations prescribed by the
          "OWNER".  This includes keeping all unauthorized people off the farm
          and to assure that anyone that works on the farm does not own any fowl
          or visit any other poultry farms.  "PRODUCER" is not to visit any
          other poultry farms or work on any other farm.

     10)  To keep daily and accurate records as required by the "OWNER".

     11)  To grade, clean and care for eggs produced.

     12)  To make houses ready for catch-out.

     13)  After birds have been removed from the farm, "PRODUCER" agrees to
          remove necessary equipment and all manure from the house and
          provide for proper washing and sanitizing of house and equipment, and
          to provide necessary water for these purpose.

     14)  To provide and maintain a road on and to farm that is accessible
          in all weather conditions.  "PRODUCER" will be charged for wrecker
          bills if a wrecker is required to pull any company or contract
          vehicles out because of poor road conditions.

     15)   "PRODUCER" agrees to reinstall sanitized equipment into houses.

     16)  To provide fences, wash areas and clean up areas for employees
          working on the Farm.

     17)  To keep houses and equipment in good repair and maintain adequate
          roads.

     18)  To allow no other fowl or hogs on the premises.

     19)  If pullets are being raised and in the event pullets are not
          available for "PRODUCER'S" farm, "PRODUCER" agrees to accept
          broilers in lieu of pullets at the "OWNER"S" current boiler
          contract price.

     20)  If pullets are raised "Producer ", will be present during bird
          handling and moving and to remove growing equipment as directed
          by the "OWNER".

B.   "OWNER" AGREES TO BE SOLELY RESPONSIBLE FOR AND SUPPLY AT HIS
OWN EXPENSE THE FOLLOWING:

     BREEDER

     1)   Owner will furnish the chickens, feed, medication, vaccines,
          labor for blood testing and debeaking and other items necessary for
          production of a flock.

     2)   To supply labor and supervision of vaccination, blood testing and
          moving.

     3)   Make routine visits to the flock and provide recommendations as
          to proper management and feeding practices.

     4)   After manure and equipment have been removed from the houses by
          "PRODUCER" for clean out, to provide equipment and disinfectants
          needed for proper washing and sanitizing of houses and equipment.

     5)   To supply adequate litter for the scratch area of the poultry
          house or houses. This does not include nest litter.

     PULLET

     1)  To supply breeding stock chickens, all feed, medication and
         vaccines needed by the flock and to provide rat baits and insecticides
         as needed for control of rodents and insects.  To provide "PRODUCER"
         with pesticide use information and medication use information.

     2)  To supply labor and supervision for vaccination, blood testing
         and bird moving.

     3)  To make routine visits to the flock and make recommendations as
         to management and feeding.

     4)  To supply birds in `PRODUCERS" house for a minimum of forty-two
         (42) weeks each year.

     For the above mentioned services and use of property, the "OWNER"
agrees to pay the "PRODUCER" as outlined in Attachment B, which may be amended
from time to time.

C.   IT IS EXPRESSLY AGREED AND UNDERSTOOD BETWEEN THE PARTIES   THAT:

     1)  Title to all poultry, feed, eggs and any other item of cost is
         the property of the  "OWNER".

     2)  In the event the "PRODUCER" shall fail to comply with the terms of
         this agreement, the "OWNER" shall have the right, at his option, to
         enter upon the "PRODUCERS" property and take possession of said
         poultry and to care for said poultry during the remainder of the
         production life without court order to writ.

     3)  It is expressly agreed and understood the "PRODUCER" is not an
         employee of the "OWNER", but rather is an "Independent Contractor"
         utilizing his own facilities, utilities, and employees.  "PRODUCER"
         further warrants to hold "OWNER" harmless from and indemnify "OWNER"
         against any and all claims,suit demands or actions arising in any
         manner from the operation of said premises, save and except those
         arising from the acts of "OWNER", its agent and/or employees.

     4)  There is to be no other poultry, fowl, or swine on the farm.

     5)  It is expressly agreed and understood between the parties that as
         long as the pullets and cockerels covered under this contract remain
         negative for PPLOS-6 and or MS disease and as long as the "PRODUCER"
         will keep the birds for which this contract covers in production of
         eggs for a minimum of 30 weeks, this 30 week period commencing at the
         time that 10% of the flock is producing eggs.

         In the event that a flock is sold, the "OWNER" will place birds
         back into the  "PRODUCER'S" facilities as soon as practical for both
         parties.

        If pullets are being raised and in the event the flock does become
        infected and is determined to be positive by the "OWNER"S" testing
        procedures, the "OWNERS" shall have the option to sell the entire
        flock at any time.

     6) The "PRODUCER" will use no pesticides, herbicides, or fungicides in
        or around the poultry houses without the "OWNER'S" approval.
        Pesticides would include insecticides or rodenticide.  No other
        chemicals or materials can be used by the "PRODUCER" will follow
        "OWNER'S" recommendations as to the use ofpesticides.

     7) The "PRODUCER" will use no pharmaceuticals or feed unless
        furnished by the "OWNER".  Pharmaceuticals would include medications,
        vaccines, vitamins, etc.  The "PRODUCER" will follow "OWNER'S"
        recommendations as to the  use of pharmaceuticals.

     8) This agreement is non-transferable and shall remain in effect until
        such time as either party gives the other party fourteen (14) days
        notice of their desire to terminate the contract.

THIS AGREEMENT SHALL BE BINDING ON THE PARTIES HERETO, THEIR HEIRS,
SUCCESSORS, REPRESENTATIVES AND ASSIGNS.  ANY SALE OF THE PREMISES
DESCRIBED HEREIN SHALL BE SUBJECT TO THE RIGHTS OF THE "OWNER" AS SET OUT
HEREIN.

AGREED AND EXECUTED, THIS THE 27{th} DAY OF October, 1999.

"OWNER"                            "PRODUCER"
    /s/ Bob Hendrix                     /s/ David Van Hoose

SIGNATURE                          SIGNATURE

ADDRESS:                           ADDRESS:


PHONE#                             PHONE #




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