016192 1299 SlWnl N UNWERB m i COLLEGE 5 Pfi IMO 2-m2 „ H jj-*-;J rB VOL. 35 NO. 26 Teachers Learn Beef Production WOMELSDORF (Berks Co.) Teachers from Berks County got a taste of the beef business recently when they visited several beef farms in the county, along with a family-owned butcher shop and a retail supermarket that fea tures a modem meat department The tour was organized by the Berks County Cattlemen’s Asso ciation in cooperation with the “Ag In The Classroom” program. Poultry Seminar Held For Home Economists LOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Fanning Staff LITITZ (Lancaster Co.) “If we are going to solve the salmonel la problem, we must educate the public on good food handling prac tices,” Dr. John Schwartz, poultry extension agent, told about 90 home economists on Monday night. The poultry industry is tired of being blamed for food poisoning episodes that reveal sloppy food Newly crowned York Dairy Princess Angle Lang and Dairy Miss Jessica Pomraning look forward to dairy promo tional activities. For pageant details, turn to page 813. National Milk Veterinarians Hope To Launch Quality Assurance Program FREDERICK, MD The National Milk Producers Federa tion has joined forces with the American Veterinary Medical Association to develop a plan that dairy industry officials hope will put an end to the negative publici ty sparked by reports of drug residues in milk. The so-called “quality assur ance protocol’’ is designed to further reduce the incidence of violative residues those that 500 Per Copy Twenty educators from 10 dif ferent school districts represented a variety of levels of school curri culum and grades. They were greeted by Sheila Miller, president of the Berks Catdemen, and Geri Gammel, treasurer. After a brief discussion of the beef business and checkoff prog ram by Beef Council’s executive director Dave Ivan, the caravan of (Turn to Pago A 26) handling practices by vendors. “Eggs are safe if handled prop erly,” Schwartz told the Lancaster and Lebanon home economists gathered at the General Sutter Inn for their annual banquet sponsored by the Lancaster County Poultry Association and the extension office. Eggs natural defew Schwartz explained that the inside of a newly laid egg does not (Turn to Pag* A2B) exceed tolerances or other public health limits set by the federal Food and Drug Administration according to John Adams, director of milk safety and animal health for National Milk. Numerous farm organizations, including the American Farm Bureau Federation and the Nation al Dairy Herd Improvement Asso ciation, recently endorsed the program at a meeting in Washing ton. The plan has the blessing of Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 12,1990 What could be finer than a balmy spring day spent with your favorite Appaloosa? "Nothing!” At least that’s what Alison Farrington (right) and her sister Alida Burkholder said Tuesday afternoon when this photographer visited their family horse farm in northern Lancaster Coun ty. Lower Hopewell Farm Is noted for breeding registered Appaloosas and a long list of show winnings. Owned by Mr. and Mrs. John A. Farrington, a number of horses are boarded for other owners as well as a long list of family pets from peacocks to guineas to rabbits to a new spring foal named Patrlc. In fact, the variety of animals that live at Lower Hopewell has prompted a little sign to designate the distance between the old bank barn and the new horse barn as “Zoo Lane.” In the photo, Dancing Demon is with Alison and Inexcess of Straw is with Alida. Photo by Everett Newswanger. Soybean Associations Recognize Farmer ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Farming Staff MT. JOY (Lancaster Co.) All it took was time to fill out a two-page questionairre. But it also required a lot of insight into how to market and distribute soy beans throughout the world that helped net a Mt. Joy dairy and poultry farmer, as well as regional grain distributor, the coveted DuP ont Young Leader Award. Jim Musser was recognized by the Mid-Atlantic Soybean Associ ation and the American Soybean Association (ASA) as this year’s winner of the award. About the questionairre, Musser said, “They asked what innovative production methods you used ... what innovative marketing tools you use to get a better price for your beans . . . and they ask for U.S. Department of Agriculture and FDA officials as well. This fall, the sponsors hope to officially launch a campaign to educate farmers and veterinarians about the program. The National Beef Promotion and Research Board has committed $325,000 to the project, which also involves drug residues in meat, according to Adams. The sponsors hope to receive the remainder of a price (Turn to Pago A 23) your thoughts on how you think beans can better be utilized abroad or at home. I filled it out and I guess they liked my answers.” Keeping busy is natural for Musser, who divides his time between his 130-acre dairy and poultry farm and the full-time grain elevator, M & R Grains, Inc., where he is in business partnership with his father, Harold Musser. Brown Cow Lays Golden Eggs VERNON ACHENBACH, JR. Lancaster Fanning Staff FONTANA (Lebanon Co.) Unlike the goose, the cow that lays the golden egg is no symbolic crea ture of a fable. There’s at least one very real cow in Lebanon County that seems to be providing eggs for embryonic transfer worth much more than their weight Jtn gold. And, funny enough, it’s not a Holstein. In the ever-competitive world of dairy breeding and the search for the elusive perfect animal, a Brown Swiss strain owned by 28-year-old Gary Mase may be holding the magic genetic combi nation every dairyman is looking for. Times have changed somewhat as to what the best cow will look like and what it will do. Most dairymen own Holsteins and have Four Sections Farm 130 acres The Mussers (Jim’s wife Sue and their four sons, Matt, Brett, Dustin, and Cody) farm 130 acres and rent about 260 acres. Musser manages 52 head of Holstein and raises com, wheat, barley, soy bean, and alfalfa. In addition, Musser raises 150,000 hens for his full-time layer operation. The lay- (Turn to Pag* A2O) said, in effect, that the super-strain dairy cows are somehow locked into the Holstein breed. A lot of work and research has been devoted toward the breed. The other dairy cattle breeds, generally called colored breeds, have, over the years, been looked down upon as somewhat inferior. Complaints about too little milk production are largely to blame. Each breed has its advocates, some of them strongly opinion ated; however, milkhouse produc tion and cost effectiveness are usually considered the bottom line in selecting a breed for commercial milk production. Mase’s registered Brown Swiss not only have put an end to that production complaint of the breed, but have a growing number of dairymen taking a second look at $15.00 Per Year (Turn to Pag* A 24)