12 —Lancaster Farming. Saturday. November 10. 1973 At Shaver Seminar Poultrymen Get Info "It’s becoming inueasmgJy important for growers to select breeding programs that allow them to keep in step with market changes,” Dr. Peter Hunton told a group of poultrymen meeting last week at Lancaster’s Ramada Inn. Hunton is research coor dinator for the Shaver poultry breeding concern in Canada, and was speaking at a Shaver seminar sponsored by Greider Farms, Mount Joy. Hunton said it takes about five years for breeders to breed new characteristics into their birds. “As breeders, we’ve got to do an awful lot of guessing about where the market is headed in the years ahead,” Hunton said. Hunton discussed the history of hybrid chicken development and went into the several methods of breeding better stock. He also commented on the changes in demands from pullet buyers. “I’ve seen tremendous changes in what our customers are asking for,” he said. “Ten years ago, most people would have con sidered egg numbers the most important factor in choosing a bird, with size running a close second. “Today, we get as many complaints about eggs being too big as we do about their being too small. And a lot of birds are approaching a physical plateau in their production. It’s just not possible to improve very much on an egg a day. Customers today INEW HOLLAIND i 4” * irSX // BALER \\ // BUILT TO WORK \\ II HARDAND \| * * 1 1 Roy A. Brubaker 700 Woodcrest Ave Lititz Pa Tel. 626-7766 A.B.C. Groff, Inc. 110 S Railroad Ave "New Holland 354-4191 want better shells, better interior quality. Automated processing has forced these changes on them. They also want more Stiff Poultry For Form Show Exhibitors The threat of a possible out break of exotic Newcastle disease has prompted the Penn sylvania Department of Agriculture to require stiffer vaccination regulations for poultrymen who will enter exhibits at the 1974 Pennsylvania Farm Show, January 7-11, it was announced by Agriculture Secretary Jim McHale. Newcastle disease is a virus infection of poultry and other birds. It cannot be transmitted to humans through the consumption of eggs or other poultry products. In the past few years, Newcastle disease has been responsible for the destruction of many poultry flocks in Califor nia. Dr. E. T. Mallison, chief of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture’s Poultry Health Division, said the disease had been brought under control nationally. However, he said, “a resurgence of exotic Newcastle anywhere in the United States remains a distinct possibility” We'll be happy to demonstrate the "276" in a hay crop of your choice. Call us! L. H. Brubaker 350 Strasburg Pike Lancaster 397-5179 C. E. Wiley & Son, Inc. 101 S Lime St., Quarry ville 786-2895 On Feeding, Breeding economy in feed utilization, and they want chickens that will eat more exotic forms of nutrients." Ray Delano took the speaker’s Regulations because of recent outbreaks in Canada, New Jersey, Tennessee and Kentucky. Mallinson said these outbreaks indicate the existence of “the exotic Newcastle threat and of the hazards posed by transport and movement of all kinds of poultry or birds.” This means the danger of new outbreaks par ticularly exists in poultry exhibitions such as those scheduled for the Farm Show. Therefore, poultrymen who plan to exhibit at the Farm Show must; - Prove their entries have been vaccinated against Newcastle disease not more than 90 days and not less than 10 days before entry in the show. - Show their entries are from flocks in which no new birds have been added. Also entries must not have been exhibited during the three week period before the entry date, January 5-6. - Have entries that are free from evidence of contagious diseases and that were not recently exposed to such diseases. - Prove their entries originate from flocks or breeders officially tested for pullorum disease within the 12 months preceding entry. CELEBRATING HARVESTORE'S 25th BIRTHDAY NOVEMBER 19th & NOVEMBER 20th Stop and register at Penn-Jersey HARVESTORE Office You may be a winner of Any qualified Livestock Farmer IV2 M. West of Blue Ball on Rt. 322 lectern when Hunton had finished. Delano is general manager of the New England Egg Marketing Association and Egg Clearinghouse, Inc., in Durham, New Hampshire. He explained the workings of Egg Clearinghouse, a trading center for producers, packers and marketers, and spelled out the need for more cooperation bet ween industry members. “There’s a proposal now to provide a marketing order for eggs,” Delano said. “The in a 2030 HARVESTORE or Microwave Oven. Is Eligible to win. dustry has lost 28 percent of its per capita consumption over the past years because eggmen have never been willing to pay for promoting their product.” Delano also charged that the industry’s present ■ price , discovery system is victimizing producers. “The present New York quotation is too far removed from the actual market value of the commodity,” he said. “The industry is the victim of an out dated price discovery system that is based solely on one man’s opinion. I think it’s time_for a change.” Other speakers for the day included Dr. John Summers, professor of animal science, University of Guelph, Ontario, and Doug Bundle of the Shaver staff. Phone 354-5171