Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, September 07, 1968, Image 9

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    Young, .Atglcn; Jerry Jackson,
UonCdtttr rdny Club Horieybrook, arid Sharon Voice
Lancaater Pony Clu 1 * member! as- Stable Manager, They won
-eccntly participated in a one-'first in the competition-of Dress
jay rally hosted by the Middle- age, Cross Country, Stadium
lown Pony Club in Middletown, Jumping, Written Test and Sta-
Del. ble Management.
The local D-l team consisted Howard Fair. Unionvillc, has
>f Tony Gibson, Drumore; Mai- been invited to instinct the club
>en Little, Cnmargo; George on Sept. 15th.
n
AVAILABLE NOW
FOR FALL SEEDING
• Cert. DuPuits • Cert. >iaik (I Alfalfa
• Cert. Cayuga Alfalfa • Cert. Ladiuo Clover
• Cert. Saranac Alfalfa • Cert. Climax Timothy
• Cert. Vernal Alfalfa fc Pcnnlate Orchard Glass
• Cert. Buffalo Alfalfa • Pastures Mixtures
• Celt. Pcnnscott Red
Clover
ORDER YOUR FALL
SEED GRAIN NOW
• Balbo Rye • Cert. Pennrad Barley
• Cert. Norline Winter Oats • Cert. Redcoat Wheat
Smoketown Ph. Lane. 397-3539
and "Stop and Go"corn harvestl
Mounted
SUPERPICKER
has theworid's
biggest appetite
for corn!
another good idea for profit-minded farmers
Landis Bros. A. L. Herr & Bro.
Lancaster Quarryville
Chas. J. McComsey
& Sons
Hickory Hill, Pa
Roy H. Buch, Jnc
Ephrata, 'R. D' 2
Wilbur H. Graybill
Lititz, R. D. 2
Superpicker fs tops
in big capacity, non*
stop picking. You
keep moving acre af
ter acre, without
plugging. Universal
subframe makes
mounting easy, fast,
simple. Less than 15
minutes to lubricate,
Full year written
warranty.
Exclusive Fiexf*
finger presser
wheels align ears
and keep them mov*
ing for unbelievably
clean husking.
WIDEA
OUIPMEPtIT
Longenecker
Farm Supply
Rheems
A. B. C. Groff, Inc,
New Holland
Allen H. Matz
Denver
Batch Pasteurization System For
Small-Volume Liquid Egg
A "mini” pasteurizer and p:o
cess has been developed for
small-volume pioduccrs in she
liquid egg industry.
The new system, an ARS-Uni
versity of California coopei.itnc
effort, costs less than $12,000.
Over 66 billion individual
shell eggs are produced in the
United States each year. Most
aie destined for table use. but
many don’t make it, particularly
those that aie too small, cracked,
thin-shelled, or of low interior
quality. These eggs, slightly o\ er
14 percent of the total produced.
are marketed as liquid egg prod- The rese archers tested four
ucts foi commercial users such pasteurizers- one laboratory
as bakeries and noodle and may- built and thiee comnle rcial
?u na lfor.? ani ] fac , turers ’ Unde j' units The laboratoiy-built unit
the USD A voluntary egg piod- consisted of a 3-gallon stainless
ucts inspection piogiam, all egg s t ee j bucket sunounded by a
pi oducts must be pasteurized and water bath that could be heated
sevei al States require that egg and coo j ed a t a Wlde i- an g e 0 f
products be free of Salmonella temperatures and time periods,
bacteria The most popular Sal- An electncally-dnven impeller
monella treatment is pasteunza- £or agltatlon was mourned on
tlon 1 the cover
Until this year, only HTST
(High-Temperature Short-Time)
tj pe pasteurization developed
by the USD A was used Equip
ment available was designed
foi operations involving several
hundred gallons or more of liq
uid egg per hour, and required
more than $25,000 in capital in
vestment,
Small-volume producers, con
cerned with only a few hundred
gallons or less a day, account
for about 2 percent of the liquid
egg product industry’s output
They could neither use HTST
efficiently, nor could that justi
fy the large investment Al-
_now
BE-CO-NURSE
is even BETTER
To help prove Beacon's
Calf Milk Replacer is bet
ter than ever we are giv
ing a heavy duty 12 qt.
plastic bucket with each
100 lbs.*
The new Be-Ce-Nurse
• Mixes easier
• Leaves cleaner pails
• Steps up gains
• Comes in zip-open bags
* Offer expires October 19, 1968
GERMAN FEED
MILL, INC.
Denver
I. B. GRAYBILL
& SON
Strasburg
EARL SAUDER, INC. H. JACOB HOOBER
New Holland
though some of them relied upon
large plants for pastern nation,
many weren't located close
enough to warrant transposing
their liquid eggs for tieatment.
This segment of the industry
needed a batch (small volume)
process that i educed bactcua as
effectively as HTST, and which
caused minimal damage to the
functional properties of liquid
eggs. The process would also
have to be adaptable, both in
cost and capacity, to the i equip
ments of small volume pioduc
ers.
The second unit was a 50-gal
lon kettle with side-wall heating
and cooling and swept-wall agi
tation The third was a 130-gal
lon kettle with side- and bot
tom-wall heating and cooling and
impeller agitation. The fourth
was a 100-gallon horizontal ket
tle with rotary coil heating and
cooling Both the 130- and 100-
gallon units were modified to in
clude head-space heaters to as
sure pasteurization of surface
foam.
The batches of liquid whole
egg were inoculated with Sal
monella typhimurium. Samples
BOMBERGER'S
STORE
Elm
''''
BEACON FEEDS
Lancaster Farming. Saturday. September 7.1968
O. KENNETH
McCRACKEN
Manheim
Intercourse
Producers
were drawn for functional prop
erty tests and Salmonella kill
rales at vanous intoval.s dining
heating, holding, and cooling.
Each of the commercially
available pasteurizers, after mi
nor modifications, pioduccd sat
isfactory results A major factor
in the process is the pioper ap
plication of time and tempeia
tures. Researches concluded
that a batch process utilizing a
heating time of about 30 min
utes and a hold lime of 10 min
utes at 135 degrees F. for liquid
whole egg conti oiled Salmonella
as adequately as the time and
temperatuies specified for HTST
pi ocesses.
Ag Inspectors
Start School
School staited this week for
28 prospective meat inspectors
of the Pennsylvania Depaitment
of Agriculture
They constitute the first men
recruited to implement the
state’s new mandatory meat in
spection law which requites in
spection of meat and livestock
before and after slaughter and
for inspection of slaughter
plants and packing houses.
The future meat inspectors
are being trained by repi esenta
twes of State and Fedeial De
partments of Agriculture, and
by staff members of the Col
lege of Aguculture of The
Pennsylvania State Umveisity.
Sessions are being held at Penn
State, where technical and la
boiatoiy facilities are available.
When class work is finished
September 17, the group will
receive six to nine months of on
the-iob training in fee'si ally in
spected plants wheie they will
obseive all phases of slaughter
ing and piocessmg
“Their most impoitant as
signment will be to learn to
lecogmze the noimal and the
abnormal,” said Dr John C.
Shook, duector of the State Ag
riculture Depaitmcnfs Bmeau
of Animal Industry
Additional classes will be
trained until full complement
of 140 inspectois aie at woik.
Old Reliable 'I
“Let them eat glass” said the
old Fiench anstociacy when
told their people were staivmg.
They did not lealize just how
apt their wmids would be until
dairy pioducts became the by
word of the woild
The daily cow is the best way
to maiket glass She is the most
efficient conveitei of cellulose
to human food that man knows.
Fuitheimoie, she doesn’t limit
her ability to glass alone
As an example of the veisalil
itj of the dauy cow to pioduce
human food, scientists at Penn
State Umveisity fed cows news
papers and uiea The cows may
have shaken their heads a bit at
the silliness of man but they ate
and went light on producing hu
man food milk
Humans cannot eat grass,
newspapers or coin cobs Cows
can and still produce a high
quality human food It will be in
this way we will be able to en
joy a rich animal-food-pioducts
diet The old cow has been the
“foster mother to the human
irce” for many centuries and it
looks like she will continue to
do so despite the population ex
plosion.
Homeowners spend about $750
on home remodeling, to every
$l,OOO spent on new home con
struction.
9