—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 23, 1974 48 From Local Ag Teachers: Ronald J. Althoff Thoughts In Passing By: Ronald Althoff Agriculture Instructor Splanco High School Being a teacher of agriculture is a very rewarding career. Teaching agriculture is not an eight to four job. I recently spent nine days and eight nights with six FFA members on a round trip to Kansas City, Missouri for the National FFA Convention. We traveled in excess of 2,500 miles. One might ask, “what is so special about a trip to Kansas City.” If you are a high school student and a member of the FFA, the trip to Kansas City might be a highlight of your life. For many FFA mem bers it is the first time they are away from home for any length of time. The trip is an opportunity to see a different part of the country and the agriculture there. It is also a In our feeds WUHUBh Helps you control ★ ATROPHIC RHINITIS ★ SCOURS ★ CERVICAL ABSCESSES ★ STRESS AUBEO S«P 250* has proved to be the one feed additive that provides a wide range of benefits to pork producers. No other an tibacterial in feed does so many things to help produce fast gains - improve feed efficiency - and provide superior protection against the major diseases that threaten sows and growing hogs. AUREO S.P 250 helps save feed - reduces labor and medication costs - by keeping hogs gaining in the presence of atrophic rhinitis, controlling bacterial scours, reducing cervical abscesses - and helping prevent these diseases during stress. AUREO S«P 250 is beneficial at every stage of growth and production *AUREO 3*P 250 is the registered trademark for American Cyanamid Company's premix of AUREOMYCIN® chlortetracyclme, SULMET® sulfamethazine and penicillin Withdraw seven days before slaughter available Ai hennfield Feeds i L iu r.L . an 711 Kohrerstown Rd. John W. Eshebnan & Sons Lancaster, Pa. Red Rose Feed, York, Pa. Cphman FePif Mill Inr A Division of Carnation Co. hßnm ™ reeu mill, IRC. . Denver, Pa We sf ef s Mill Stevens Feed Mill, Inc. Rheems, Pa. Stevens, Pa Thoughts in Passing chance to meet many in teresting people. It is an opportunity to have some freedom in a big city, probably for the first time. The educational value of the trip is almost limitless. Besides the things such as the Indianapolis Speedway, the Arch at St. Louis, the Ralston Purina Research Farm, and the Harry Truman Library and Museum. The education doesn’t stop here, with the sightseeing. The students had some new respon sibilities. They had to budget the money they had so that it would stretch for the entire trip. They had several times, for short periods when they were free to' do as they pleased in Kansas City. As a teenager in a large city, what to do with free time can be a challenging question. The students also had an opportunity to meet other young people, from different parts of the country. An FFA member from a 2,000 acre wheat farm in Kansas has a different opinion of the Russian grain deal than a Lancaster County boy from a farm that milks 75 dairy cows. The National FFA Officers were in charge of the con vention. The chance to hear these young men speak and conduct a meeting was an inspiring one for myself as well as the boys in at tendance. Of course the fact that President Ford, Secretary of Agriculture, Earl Butz, and other distinguished guests at tended the convention made it even more memorable. After seeing these young agricultural leaders per form, one can only have complete admiration for the outstanding job they are doing. I think it was easy to see the way in which the FFA is developing agricultural leaders for the future of our nation. There were over 17,000 registered members and guests at the convention. Of course these were only a representation of the thousands of FFA members across the country. However, it 'was a con spicious group of well behaved, polite, and responsible young people. While in Kansas City, I was happy to see only a few people wearing FFA jackets displaying that undesirable habit of smoking. The language and morality displayed by these young men and women were beyond reproach. They showed respect for the teachers and all the adults attending the convention. Throughout the trip I heard many favorable comments about the behavior and appearance of the FFA members I was traveling with. These comments were heard from other teachers, from people in restaurants, from tour guides, and from motel owners. In conclusion I would like to say, maybe the hair is a little shorter and the clothes a little neater but I am very proud to be associated with members of the FFA.- Order Up 17 c The base milk price was $8.65, excess was $6.91, and the butterfat differential was 7.9 cents. Producers shipping to plants located within 55 miles of Philadelphia receive an additional .06 per hundredweight. Butterfat differential is 7.9 cents per point above or below 3.5 percent. The October uniform price for base milk in federal Order 4 increased 17 cents from the previous month. Excess milk showed an increase of 13 cents, ac cording to Andrew A. Marvin,, Ephrata, fieldman for Interstate Milk Producers Cooperative. In comparison to October levels one year ago base milk was unchanged and excess decreased 20 cents. The weighted average price for the market was down 8 cents a hun dredweight compared to Oct. 1973. “Don t BBUY A PIG IN A POKE!" A "poke" is a colloquial term for a bag. This common expression advises buyers to buy only after looking at the mer chandise. To give you a better look at the bacon you - buy, the U. S. Department of Agriculture has a regulation that requires all bacon packages to have a tran sparent area at least l-% inches wide revealing at least 70 percent of the length of a representative slice. To meet this requirement, many bacon packages have a new “back window;” some simply show a full slice in a front window. Here’s what you should look for when looking through the window: Look at the representative slice in the window to see how much lean and fat it contains. These drawings show slices with different amounts of lean. Select according to your taste, but remember that most of the bacon produced has a lean to fat ratio about like slices two or three. Do you like your bacon crispy? or chew? Distribution of lean, thickness of slice and cooking time are factors that determine whether bacon will be crispy or chewy. When fried, bacon with several strips of lean distributed throughout the slice in fewer but larger sections will tend to be more chewy. Slices five and six show the same amount of lean distributed differently. Here again, select according to your taste. Paprika Paprika should be sweet plus it should add a vibrant red to your dish but it shouldn’t taste too strong. 4 Milk in Oct. pounds of producer milk was pooled in Oct. of which 66.47 percent was sold as Class I, showing an increase of 3.13 percent of deliveries made in Sept., and a 1.58 percent decrease under Oct. a year ago. 7662 Order No. 4 producers provided 12.48 million pounds per day to dealers during Oct., averaging 1630 pounds per day per farm. Total value of producer milk was set at $32,526,066.61 for the month. 'NJECTABI- 6 solution _ 18 2%_ Takes the guesswork out of worming AVAILABLE FROM YOUR FAVORITE ANIMAL HEALTH SUPPLIER Don’t Buy A Pig In A Poke Thick slices-unless cooked be buying what is called longer-wili be chewier than ‘fresh side pork,” and It thin or very thin slices. A would taste like other fresh one-pound package of bacon pork cuts rather than like tot average thickness usually bacon, contains 20 to 22 slices. A To make bacon, pork sides one-pound package of thickly are trimmed, and squared, sliced bacon usually contains Then they are cured In a 12 slices. brine mixture consisting of Bacon is commonly sold in salt, sugar, and sodium one-pound single packages, nitrite and nitrate. After However, it is available in curing, the sides are hung on two-pound packages or the racks called “bacon trees” smaller 12-ounce or half and taken to a smokehouse pound packages. When where smoke from a hard comparing prices, check the wood such as hickory or we'ght of the package, apple adds its characteristic Bacon is also sold unsliced- aroma and flavor, and usually with the skin not After it comes out of the removed. This is referred to smokehouse, the bacon is as “slab bacon.” chilled and “formed” so that Some bacon buyers might finished slices will come out be surprised to know that nice and even. Then the bacon comes from a pig’s slicing machine cuts the side that is processed in a formed side into slices of special way. If you were able uniform thickness, after to buy meat trom a porx siae which it is packaged as the that hadn’t gone through this product we all know as sliced special process, you would bacon. New scientific dairy herd record system! Continuous chart with plexiglass cover lets you see at a glance all the details and condition of each individual cow You can immediately check for heat pregnancy service and gestation Also gives you a permanent visible health record of treatment and other important data Write or telephone for complete information on this inexpensive new system We have it in stock, now! 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