JT8 —Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, November 5,1966 |» Net Energy (Continued from Page 13) gfoslted in the body as meat and fait; and how much is fi nally available for milk pro duction. He found that 'two feeds equal in TDN might differ in the proportion of nutritive val ue going to productive use. A fanner would obviously pre fer a feed with more milk making power to one resulting in more urine or gases. Flaftt calls this milk-making power the net energy (NE) of « feed. For beef cattle, NE can also express a feed’s po tential for meat production. A dairy farmer, for example, Blight want to calculate the energy produced by a feed when replacing part of 'the concentrates in a ration witn forage, Since NE is more accurate fftscn TI>N the farmer, by us ing NE for his energy calcu lating, would be more sure of maintaining high milk produc tion. Determining the NE of a feed under Flatit’s system of sealing a cow inside a cham fcea* requires much time and Jahor even with computerized equipment. Van Soest devel oped his new method to sim pSfy this process. One of the traditional sys tems which Van Soest’s meth od may replace, the 100-year old Weende system, attempts to imitate an animal’s diges tive processes by chemistry. It yields two fractions called “imtrogen-free extract” (NFE) and “crude fiber” (CF). NFE is relatively digestible, CUT FUEL BILLS uptoso%! SUPER FLOOR L H. Brubaker #S$ Strasburg l*ike, Lancaster R.D. 3, Lititz, l*a. Hin. At farm or delivered, any quantity as \out quirements may be. ,Ask Code 717 687-7631 Si l Esbenshude Turkey Farm team •• « t ..c FOR SUPERIOR COURT :• EAR CORN “America's Oldest ** PARADISE, PA. Lancaster Co, - Republican .CAftKs** , i. L, Slfirt lr., chairman - George C. to pinpoint Hie feeding of their tttagea. And the detergent works esstly on mlxtm* s different feeds such a> thou in pellets. A me«nin»fui ]} gestlbility estifwrte on nm?, from a Weende analog •: much more difficult to o >tai n 1