16—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 21,1968 The New Jack Sprat will eat no fat. His wife will eat none either. And so lean meat is all they eat, And fat is sold to neither. This version of the old nurs ery rhyme is suggested for to day’s children by Robert Lev erette, USD A No modern child is going to believe that Jack Sprat’s wife would eat no lean. In fact, the average Amer ican consumers a\ersion to ex cess fat on meat has excited a significant influence on the U S livestock and meat industry. At livestock shows and on faims and feedlots around the country, the stress these days is on a new look leanei, thick er-muscled animals that yield a higher percentage of retail cuts Rapidly disappeaung are the livestock buyeis who tradition 9 MONEYMAKING ALFALFAS DuPuit Vernal Buffalo Ranger Cayuga Narragansett Haymor Northwest Common Northwest Grimm 8 MONEYMAKING CLOVERS Certified Pennscott Select Pennscott ' Penna. Medium Red Midwest Medium Red Mammoth Alsike Yellow Sweet Tall Sweet Fresh seed mixed and Inoculated (FREE) Save with HEIST’S SEEDS REIST SEED COMPANY Finest Quality Seeds (Since 1925) Mount Joy, Pa. 653-4121 FEWER TRIPS UP THE SILO Jamesway Distrlbutor-Unloader assures pos!< ttve delivery - under all conditions! That’s be cause the Big J Volumatic doesn’t depend on •ilage traction. Power Circle Drive and true 3- Point Suspension give you dependable operation that eliminates unnecessary trips up the silo to make adjustments. Simple operation! No weights to adjust, no drive drums to manhandle. No need to ride the •hroud to keep the auxer euttinf. JM. E. SNAVELY 445 Sooth Cedar St., Litltz, Pa. 1754 S Ph. 626-8144 Look In Meat Animals ally select blocky, “fat” cattle; now they look for high quality, thickly muscled animals, with a minimum of excess fat. This change is primarily due to consumer demand for a close ly trimmed meat product. To please their customers, retailers have discovered they must trim away moie and more fat before placing meat cuts in the meat counter So letailers are demanding carcasses with less excess fat fiom the packers, and many packer buyers in turn now se lect livestock which have a large percentage of lean meat. This doesn't mean that con sumers aie willing to accept a lower quality of lean meat. US DA Choice is still the grade most widely sold at retail and produced m the greatest volume. Retailers have found that this level of quality pleases most of their customers. Since the Federal Meat Grad ing Service was initiated in 1927, U S Department of Agriculture grade standards for meat and livestock have been instrument al in tiansmitting consumer preferences back through mar keting channels to producers Administered by USDA’s Con sumer and Marketing Service, the voluntaiy meat grading pro gram has grown to the point where last yeai Federal meat graders quality gi aded almost 13 billion pounds of beef about 85 pei cent of the beef sold as retail cuts The meat giadmg program has been successful for many reasons Consumers learned they could be sure of getting high quality beef when they saw the USD A Choice or Prime grade maiks, so they were encouraged to buy more meat Retailers dis covered meat grades helped them to consistently provide the uniform quality of meat their STOCKADE BRAND Livestock Equipment • 8 Models all steel welded farm and feedlot gates • 2 Models all steel welded head catch gate O All weather salt and mineral feeder/face fly control • All steel hay and silage bunks • Grain troughs 4 models • Pickup stockracks • Lifetime free stalls: "unequalled in quality" • Ritchie Woterers and Behlen Steel Buildings For prices, contact: Fred Frey, Mgr. 786 2235 (7,7) FREY BROS. R. D. #2 Quarryville, Penna. 17566 customers wanted, without the necessity of a personal inspec tion, which helps hold down marketing costs And producers felt the impact because more buyers began bidding for live stock to supply the increased consumer demand. USD A grade standards for livestock and meat provide the only nationally available means of reflecting consumer prefer ences for meat back to the live stock producer, and consumer demand for leaner meat prompt ed probably the most significant innovation in grade standards since Federal meat grading be gan—yield grades for beef adopted in 1965 Yield grades indicate the amount (yield) of trimmed re tail cuts expected from a beef carcass Yield Grade 1 repie sents the highest expected yield of trimmed cuts, Yield Grade 5 the lowest yield Dm mg the three yeais since yield grades were introduced, the livestock industry has be come increasingly “cutability (yield) conscious ” In a recent four-week period, a total of 202 million pounds of beef were yield graded, almost 20 percent of the volume quality graded— compared with 4 percent in 1966 C&MS Livestock Division offi dais believe yield grading a C&MS voluntary, fee-for-service program like quality grading will become increasingly popu lar in the future. A USDA live stock marketing specialist noted: “Last year, an estimated 2 bil lion pounds of fat were removed from the fed beef portion of our cattle production. It costs money to put excess fat on cattle and it costs money to ship it around the country only to have it trimmed off and sold for a fraction of the total cost of pro duc 1 1 o n and transportation. Clearly, excessive fat is an eco nomic waste the beef industry can ill afford Yield grades should be veiy effective in bringing about changes which will eliminate much of the waste fat now present in the produc tion and maiketing of beef.” The livestock industry is obvi ously awakening to the possibil ities of identifying carcasses and live (slaughter) animals for cut ability, oi yield, differences In the last year, industry maga zines have carried numerous articles, such as “Cutability Not Just Theory Smart Feeders Can Make It Pay.” USDA Livestock Division per sonnel point out that meat-type steers, which are thickly mus (Continued from Page 17)