Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, May 12, 1984, Image 146

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    DlO—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 12,1904
Breeder feed panel introduced
MILFORD, Ind. Good broiler
egg producers recognize that
uniformity in a broiler breeder
flock is the result of good feeding
practices. They also know that
uniformity is the most important
factor influencing hatchability
percentage and eventual per
formance of the chicks produced.
To help achieve that uniformity,
Chore-Time Equipment Inc.,
Milford, Indiana, has introduced a
new Broiler Breeder Feeding
System Control Panel, according
to Dale Boyce, the company’s
Product Manager for Floor
Feeding Systems. The control
panel is designed to operate Chore-
Time’s Breeder Feeding Systems
and includes a time clock.
“The new control panel can help
broiler breeder producers to
automate their feeding cycle while
also providing them with a new,
more accurate means of weighing
each day’s ration,” Boyce ex
plained. He also pointed out that
the control panel is designed to
allow feeder lines to run until the
weigh bin and feed hoppers are
empty or until deactivated by
the system’s time clock.
“While the new control panel is
engineered to be simple to operate,
it is also just as important that the
system make it ‘difficult’ for the
operator to make a mistake,” he
added. “To weigh and feed one
day’s ration with the Chore-Time
system, the operator must follow a
SADDLE
UP!
To Better
Equipment...
Find It In
Lancaster
Farming's
CLASSIFIEDS!
NEW YORK
Roy L Doane
607/587-8876
Raymond E
Johnson
518 / 692-705C
PENNSYLVANIA
Alfred Station
Schaghitocke
Red Wing Farms
215 '944-0402
William E Ramer
412/548-2317
Triple H
Farms
717/548-3775
William Beebe
717/746-3435
Fleetwood
Kittanning
Peach Bottom
Wyalusing
simple five-step procedure. This
procedure helps to assure ac
curacy delivery of the pre-selected
amount of feed to the birds.”
Boyce also noted the complete
Chore-Time Breeder Feeding
System consists of a feed storage
bin, the Chore-Time Weigh-Matic
Weighing System, hieh eaoacitv
Computer programmer named
TUNKHANNOCK - John
Stefanik, of Swoyersville, has been
named to a newly created position
of Computer Programmer for Sire
Power, Inc.
Stefanik is located at the
Tunkhannock headquarters and
has had considerable experience in
the computer field. He will be
assigned to help maintain existing
i
CALL US FOR FREE ESTIMATES
on TOP QUALITY BARN SPRAY & BRUSH PAINTING
Try Our New Concept In Penetration And Adhesion.
In 1984
To earn a dollar give a dollars worth of work Pay only $750 for the
best kind of barn painting on an average barn if you pay more you paid too
much
On barn siding painting temperature and timing are factors as well as
penetrating kind of quality for adhesion are helpful guides for long lasting under
average conditions of siding type and age
it I will share helpful guidelines on roof maintenance of steel roofs by brushing on
S' at prime time
The farmers in Lancaster Co. are lucky because of the amount of
competition in barn painting.
Check with us for the best deal!
PHARES $. HURST Years of experience plus self
RDI, Box 503, Narvon, PA 17555 employment gives you quality
215-445-6186 work for less expense.
The Limitation of Warranty and remedy appearing on the label
is part of the terms of sale
• Registered trademark of Pioneer Hi Bred International Inc
Des Moines lowa USA
Model 125 Flex-Auger Feed
Delivery System, and feeder lines
with the company’s Model C
Feeders. The system is capable of
delivering 35 pounds of feed per
minute at a rate of 90 feet per
minute and will accommodate up
to 15 birds per pan.
programs and assist in the
programming of new applications
and systems.
He received his A.A.S. degree
from Kings College in Information
Systems and Business Ad
ministration in 1982. He also
served in the United States Air
Force as a weather technician with
related responsibilities.
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Available From: Your Pioneer sales representative.
BRUNING
PIONEER.
SILAGE INOCULANT
MAKES GOOD SILAGE EVEN BETTER
distinguished service award
COLUMBUS, Ohio - “Dr. Tony
Ernstrom has kept more Jersey
breeders in business with the
current economic situation than
any other man.”
For his monumental efforts in
milk marketing, Dr. C.A. “Tony”
Ernstrom, Utah State University,
Logan, Utah, has been selected to
receive the 1984 Distinguished
Service Award from The American
Jersey Cattle Club. The award will
be presented in ceremonies at the
AJCC Annual Meeting June 30 in
Monterey, Calif.
At the 1974 annual meeting of the
Western Jersey Breeders
Association, the Utah native in
troduced the Jersey world to a
revolutionary concept of
marketing milk on the basis of
product yield. In his remarks as a
guest speaker at that meeting,
Ernstrom pointed out that Jersey
milk was not receiving a fair and
equitable return under any of the
then existing pricing systems.
Ernstrom challenged Jersey
breeders at that meeting to
promote the value of their milk in
making cheese and to work toward
a system of cheese yield pricing.
The milk processors and the in
dustry as a whole, as well as
Jersey dairymen, would benefit
from that system, Ernstrom
believed.
Emstrom was the first to come
up with a practical and realistic
solution to the problem. As a
cheese researcher, he realized that
there was no relationship between
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DIESELS
12-36 bhp
'J
BRAND
Emstrom to receive
TS2/TS3
AIR
COOLED
DIESELS
the price cheese factories were
paying for milk and the amount of
cheese the milk would yield.
Ernstrom was able to show that
for the cheese yield, Jersey milk
was grossly underpriced, while low
fat, low protein milk was
unrealistically overpriced. He was
instrumental in developing a
pricing system for cheese milk
that fairly represents the value of
milk to the producer and the
processor.
Working closely with The
American Jersey Cattle Club to
demonstrate the sound economics
of end-product pricing, Ernstrom
has substantially increased the
value of high protein, high fat milk.
End-product pricing, with its at
tendant improvement in the value
of Jersey milk, has spreawd to
many manufacturing plants in
most dairy areas of the country, in
addition to attracting national and
international attention.
The researcher is co-author of a
chapter on Milk Clotting Enzymes
and Cheese Chemistry in “Fun
damentals of Dairy Chemistry”.
He has authored or co-authored
more than 50 scientific
publications. In 1968, Ernstrom
was awarded the American Dairy
Science Association Pfizer award
for cheese research.
Ernstrom has served on many
dairy-related boards of directors
and has been associate editor of
the “Journal of Dairy Science”
since 1974.
1177
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PIONEER.
SEEDS and INOCULANTS