Pa. Angus Assn. Reports Successful Field Day at Twin Oaks This is the Berks County team which awarded an Angus calf from the Twin Oak' placed first at the livestock judging event at herd. On the left is Kathleen Muth, Alburtis Twin Oaks Farm last Saturday In addition, On the right is Jim’s sister Kathy and father Jim Holcombe, Mohrsville RDI, second from Paul left, was the top junior individual and was More pork in less time. Time and again RED ROSE PROGRAMMED HOG FEEDING produces healthy lean hogs going to market at 200 pounds . . . in less than 150 days ... at lowest feed cost! These PROGRAMMED are the money-making feeds you can use to get these results! Red Rose Farrowing Pellets high nutrient farrowing and conditioning ration for feeding to sows be fore and after farrowing. Red Rose Pig Pre-Starter Pellets a complete feed with sugar concentrates and high antibiotic levels for young pigs. Red Rose Pig Starter Pellets supplement the sow’s milk and accustom pigs to pellet feed. Red Rose Pig Grower Pellets - contain vitamins and antibiotics for complete feeding to pigs 50 to 100 pounds. Red Rose Porker for complete feeding to pigs 100 pounds to market. Red Rose Hog Supplement a vitamin, mineral and antibiotic fortified feed for feeding with your grains. Walter Binkley & Son 6. R. Mitchell, Inc. Lititz Refton, Pa. Brown & Rea, Inc. Atglen Elrerson Supply Co. Elverson L. T. Geib Estate Manheim I. B. Graybill & Son Chas * E - Sauder & Sons Strasburg Terre HiU E. Musser Heisey & Son Ammon E. Shelly E. D. #2, Mt. Joy, Pa. Lititz Heistand Bros. Elizabethtown Red Rose Farm ' ,ne * H. M. Stauffer & Sons, N. Church St., Quarryville Inc. David B. Hurst Bowmansville Mountrille Feed Service Mountville Musser Farms, Inc. Columbia Martin's Feed Mill Ephrata, Pa. E. P. Sports, Inc. Honey Brook Witmer New Beef Carcass Inspection Slated Inspection of beef carcasses for cleanliness—a program devel oped by the U S Department of Agriculture to expand current surveillance of beef carcasses— becomes mandatory in Federally inspected plants August 2 Officials of USDA’s Consumer and Marketing Service said the new beef carcass inspection re quirement is an effort to provide increased consumer protection It is a quality control program using statistical sampling to de tect defects that may result from improper handling, cleaning or tnmmg of animals on the kill * « Lancaster Farming. Saturday, July 31,1971 (Continued from Page 8) development of testing pro grams so that the industry can better determine how to de velop the type of animals it needs. He also said that the bigger cattle have more frame, more feed efficiency and a little high er lean-to-fat ratio He said the Angus industry must improve both birth rate and size, “but otherwise the breed is very sound.” Lester Burdette, Penn State University livestock specialist, stated, “If you’re not in the An gus business to make a profit, that’s all right, but don’t come to me for management assist ance.” To increase profits, cattlemen must, according to Burdette, sell more calves, use a good bull to increase the growth rate of their animals, improve the quality oi the animal, neither underfeed nor overfeed, have a small corral for ease of hand ling animals and use a set o f scales floor and in dressing areas of the plant The new program will provide inspectors and plant operators with specific standards on how beef carcasses should be handled to avoid contamination It will also give inspectors definite cri teria for accepting and rejecting beef carcass lots, based on nat ionally uniform statistical samp ling procedures Beef carcasses must pass this inspection before they can be shipped to processing plants, retail outlets and other commer cial channels Richard Whaley, Queenstown, Md., explained his farm cow management program. Fred Frey explained that the Twin Oaks operation centers around 200 cows and the farm has about 500 to 600 head on hand at any given time. The herd is a purebred An gus herd sold strictly to other breeders as foundation stock The farm has been breeding purebreds since 1948, but has gained national prominence on ly in the past two years, Frey noted Some of the laxm’s outstand ing bulls have been winners in recent years in top national shows. Lost. Anyway First losing presidential candidate to poll over 20 million votes was Wendell L Willkie, who polled 22,- 304 755 votes in 1940, when ne ian against Franklin D Roosevelt Officials said many cattle slaughtexing plants already con duct quality control programs which may. under USDA guid ance, be adapted for this inspec tion program Such leview by a plant of its own pioduct must meet C&MS requirements and v ill be subject to regular Fed eral monitoring Nearly four years of planning pioceded the enactment of the new program, officials said Studies conducted in plants across the country demonstrated the need for it Statistical sampling procedures were de veloped Federal inspectors re ceived special training in samp ling techniques and m techniques for observing and evaluating de fects An in-plant “dry run” was con ducted for more than eight months to assure that inspectors were adequately trained and to correct problems that had not been recognized during planning An official instruction detailing procedures and requirement of the program will be sent before August 2 to all Federal inspec tors and plants slaughtering cat tle •mow milk •more mht • MOM PROFIT WITH Madison Silos Div. Martin Marietta Corp. 1070 Steinmetz Rd. Ephrata, Penna. 17522 Ph. 733-1206 LOCAL DEALERS Frank Snyder Akron 859-2688 Caleb Wenger Quarryville 548-2116 Landis Bros. Inc. Lancaster 393-3906 Carl L. Shirk Lebanon 867-3741 Sollenberger Farm Supply Centerport, Pa. Ph, 215-926-7671 9