Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, January 01, 1966, Image 5

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    Differ In
Hens.
Drinking Traits,
Scientist Finds
“Thirsty” is a White Leg
horn chicken who can drink
her own weight in water ev
ery day.
“Thirsty” is one of a train
of chickens discovered to
have a genetically-controlled
thirst for water.
The trait which "Thirsty”
owns may be a boon for poul-
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More fanners each
month prefer to buy
their
• HAY • STRAW
• EAR CORN
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from us for better value and all around satisfac
tion. At farm or delivered, any quantity as your $
requirements may be. %
Area Code 717 687-7631
Esbenshade Turkey Farm
t
V*
A Thought For The New Year
tryroen who have been ll*bt-
Ing a clean-up problem In the
nation’s chicken coops.
"Thirsty” and her genetic
strain of parched chickens
was identified by Dr. Edward
0. Buss, associate professor
of poultry science at The
Pennsylvania State Univer
sity. Buss has been toying
with the problem for nine
years.
Thirsty birds may have al
ways been generally mixed in
with the dry strain in poultry
farms, and were simply not
SIKGE 1800
PARADISE, PA.
I BELIEVE in the everlasting beauty of the universe.
in the supremacy of good over evil, the conquering power of
love, the brotherhood of man, and the omnipotence of the spirit.
I BELIEVE in the forgiveness of injury, pardon of
wrongdoing, and judgment without prejudice.
I BELIEVE there is nothing so contagious as happiness.
nothing so healthful as goodwill; and I believe that evil is
the result of misunderstanding
THcREFORE, I am resolved to so live my life that all
the evil in the world shall not make me morose; all the
unkindness m the world shall not make me unkind; all the
unfaithfulness shall not make me disloyal; and all the
injury shall not make me unforgiving.
I shall try with all my soul to be strong and true,
happy and generous, brave and undismayed.
D. E. Horn & Co., Inc.
MA. iFACTURERS of hornco feeds
distinguished before, Bu» ex
plained. Nevertheless, they
have been causing a great
deal of trouble in the care
of poultry.
The “normal” dry strain
drinks about twice as much
water in weight as it eats in
food, he said.
Tho wet strain drinks up
to eight, times ut< much wa
ter us the dry strain, Buss
found, e\«m though they
eat, the sumo amount of
I odd. Tlie excess wilder lH
simply wasted as watery
droppings on the henhouse
floor. This Is especially
troublesome now that most
birds are housed in wire
cages.
Genetic characteristics like
those which “Thirsty” has
are usually caused by one or
two genes which are differ
ent from “normal” birds,
Buss pointed out. The trait
can be bred into or out of
stocks of birds.
Since the trait does not
seem to. affect any other char
acteristic (it appears unre
lated to egg production or
other teatures), it might be
put to good use, Buss said.
Until recently, poultrymen
were concerned with the
problem of getting rid of
watery droppings because
“they were a mess to clean
Helen Rowe
Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 1, 1966—5
up". But recently, chicken
raisers have found that wa
tery droppings are easier to
wash from the cagehouse
than dry feces.
Whether “Thirsty” and her
kind will become dominant
or be bred out of the poul
try stocks will depend on
which way poultiymen view
the problem, Buss pointed
out At least, he said, now
they will ha\e a choice.
The work with "Thirsty”
is only part of a large genetic
study which Buss is conduct
ing on the metabolism of
chickens. “Thirsty” studies
are being paid tor in part
by Hy-Line Poultry Farms,
Des Moines, lowa, America’s
largest producers of stock
chickens for poultry farms.
INDUSTRIAL FATALITIES
NEW YORK Factories
in the United States were
safer than ever in 1964, ac
cording to the Insurance In
formation Institute, as the
rate of industrial fatalities
dropped to an all-time low of
21 per IOO.OPO workers. The
worst year in the past quar
ter century was 1940, when
the rate was 35 S per 100,000.
• Hog Shipping
(Continued from Page 1)
from hog cholera-free States.
The utnucciiiated hows
must not come in contact
with hows from States of un
like status prior to or dur
ing shipment and they must
be tran>-portPd in one u
hide in one continuous move
ment Health cei tifl'cates and
identification will still be re
quired under the amend
ments
States immediately aflected
by the amendments are Ver
mont and Nevada, which are
hog-cholera tree, and Idaho,
Montant, Oregon, Utah, Wash
ington, Wyoming, and Alas
k'a, now in Phase IV De
tails on all shipping rules
c'an be obtained from state
or federal animal disease
control officials.
Dr. G. H. Wise, in charge
of hog cholera eradication
work for USDA’s Agricultur
al Research Service, points
out that the changes do
avv’ay with restrictions that
become unnecessary as the
disease is eradicated. This
lets livestock producers reap
the benefits of eliminating'
the disease in their states ”
he said. “Since hog cholera
is .not known bo exist in
states th'at have reached
Phase IV, shipment of un
vaecinated hogs from these
states shoui’d not constitute a
threat to the health of other
pigs ”
AVha/fc Does “Durum” Moajii
ou Mivca.roiu, Product {Labels?
When you see the words
“made from durum wheat”
on the label ot the macaroni
pioducts \ou buy, you know
you’re getting a product of
the finest quality Amber in
color, durum wheat is a very
hard spring wheat It is
milled by special equipment.
Macaroni products made
fiom durum wheat retain
their shape and firmness in
cooking They don’t leave a
starchy residue in cooking
vater or turn it.a milky col
oi The pioducts cook to a
fii in, jet tendei, texture The
color of the cooked product
is cieamy vellow, suggesting
the golden giam itselt
Landis Bros., Inc,
1305 Manheim Pike (1 Mile
North of Lane, on Rt. 72)
Lancaster Ph. 393-3906