Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, December 17, 1994, Image 61

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    Dairy-Map Program To Expand With
UNIVERSITY PARK. (Centre
Co.) —A program to help boost the
profitability of Pennsylvania’s
dairy farms is expanding this year
with help from state agribusinesses.
Dairy-MAP was developed in
1993 by a multi-disciplinary team
in Penn State’s College of Agri
cultural Sciences. The program is
designed to help producers in
crease their competitive advantage
by providing up-to-date business
management information tailored
specifically for the dairy industry.
“Each year, hundreds of Penn
sylvania dairy farms go out of
business,” says Dr. Lisa Holden,
Dairy-MAP coordinator and assis
tant professor of dairy science.
“Dairy farming is a business, and
sharp business skills are just as
vital to the bottom line as getting
the chores done.”
That message isn’t wasted on
farm organizations, creditors, feed
and equipment dealers and other
groups concerned with the vitality
of the state’s dairy industry. Two
committees composed of repre
sentatives of farm businesses are
helping to inform people about the
purpose and scope of the program
and to solicit financial support.
“It is unlikely that milk prices
will rise, so there’s a real need for
a program like Dairy-MAP that
Here is something often overlooked...
Only Mi glvaa you 45 year* of Patz has continued to Improve its
experience with hook-and-eye chain for 45 years with special
cha/n, mulling In a chain so good formula steal, special forging lech
that other* are *tt»mptlng to copy mques and special steel hardening
ft. processes
Many Patz Gutter Cleaner chains **]• lont £ 11 !*
are still working well after more than ch * n ' , P *lif' rovl(aM * ls "*** r p b f n
30 yaara of use warranty because so many chains
After the Patz patent on hook-and- « rB * orkin B w »" lon # 15 >*•«
eye chain expired, some other com- ,
pames have attempted to copy the , your Patz chain warran-
Patz chain Soma promote 10- and * is backebu P *?* •
12-year warranties on chaln-but f om P‘7 ,b ?' h «* »«rving
they have not yet had 10 or I2years arm , ers ,or 4 ®' ,WS w " h ,he s,me
of experience with hook-and-eye ° wne ™ h| P
chain ’ Inalst on Patz chaml
What thouaanda of dairyman know: Patz chain la your beat buy!
Affordable Financing from
Patz Financial Services
8810
The full unloader line....
Patz gives you dual-auger unloaders and gathering
chain unloaders plus choice of surface-drive or ring
drive/center drive.
ALEXANDRIA LEBANON
MAX ISENBERG CEDAR CREST
814-669-4027 EQUIPMENT
BALLY 717-270-6600
LONGACRE Mcru.wircoi ic
ELECTRIC
215-845-2261
iiCFPRP
BENCE'S FARM EQUIP.
814-623-8601
BELLEFWTE
LUCAS BARN EQ.
814-383-2808
BELLEVILLE
MILLER-LAKE Inc.
717-935-2335
helps dairy farmers help them
selves,” says Brenda Shambaugh,
legislative director for the Penn
sylvania State Grange and head of
Dairy-MAP’s finance committee.
“Dairy-MAP workshops drive
home the message that good man
agement is essential for successful
farming,” says Harold Shaulis, a
Somerset County dairy farmer.
Many organizations and groups
have taken an active role in pro
moting and broadening the Dairy-
ROSEMONT, 111. When 18
million people watch a cheese
sandwich being made and eaten,
you know it has to be some kind
of sandwich.
It was. Billed as the world’s
longest cheese hero sandwich, the
75-foot-long creation was the
focal media event of the American
Dairy Associations (ADA) fall
cheese tailgating promotion. The
sandwich also celebrated the 75th
anniversary of the National Foot
ball League as it took shape Octo
ber 9 adjacent to Chicago’s'Sol
dier Field before the Bears/Saints
football game.
Called the Colossal Cheese
Challenge, the charity event
| SEE YOUR NEAREST PATZ DEALER |
QUAfIRYVILLE
UNICORN FARM
SERVICE
James E. Landis
717-786-4158
JOHN JONES
717-766-8582
SHIPPENSBURG
WITHER EQUIPMENT
SERVICE
717-532:6139
MIFFLINTOWN
ZUG FARM &
DAIRY EQUIPMENT
717-463-2806
SALES fIPHj
814-445-6306 aSr
ORANGEVILLE
FRANKLIN D. HESS
FARM EQUIPMENT
717-925-8939
Colossal
|Dom this look familiar? If not, chsck it out.
Frozen silage? No problem!
For frozen silage and hard-packed
haylage, the Patz cutter-and-claw gathering
chain outperforms augers. This time-proven
chain with its chain-saw cutting action cuts out
frozen silage aggressively. Shouldn't your next
unloader have a gathering chain?
The Model RO-820Sik> Unloader features;
RING-DRIVE: With the roller-chain ring drive,
only one motor powers the machine.
AUTOMATIC LOWERING OPTION: A winch
lowers the RD-820 automatically after each
complete revolution.
POWER CUTTER: Spring tension keeps high
speed, self-sharpening blades tight to the
silo wall to shave it clean.
TORQUE LIMITER: Ratchet-pin design pro
tects the ring and drive system while wdrk
mg through tough conditions.
Affordable financing directly from Patz.
HAGERSTOWN. MD
TRI-STATE
FARM AUTOMATION
301-416-7340
KENNEDYVILLE. MD
FINDER SERVICE CO.
410-778-0799
WHITEFORD. MD
ENHELO EQUIP.
410-838-0480
MAP program, including the
Pennsylvania Farm Bureau, the
Pennsylvania State Grange, Penn
sylvania Farm Credit, the Pennsyl
vania Holstein Association and
others.
The next round of Dairy-MAP
workshops will begin in January
1995 and will be held at least
through March. The program’s
core workshop, Managing for
Success (MFS), applies general
business management techniques
to the dairy business.
Cheese
Challenge
involved nearly 100 Chicago
youngsters from two youth orga
nizations who built the monster
sandwich, then had five minutes
to see which team could eat the
most of it. Considering the sand-
(NAPS)—For a free booklet
about cholesterol, “Know Your
LDL Goal,” which was funded by
Merck & Co., Inc., write to Citi
zens for Public Action on Blood
Pressure and Cholesterol, Inc.,
P.O. Box 30374, Bethesda, MD
20824, or call 1-800-637-2530.
For information about that nifty
Remember the winter of ‘94?
" ,an *ngi f
POUND. Wl
PATZ SALES, INC.
414-897-2251
/*\
/SAFETYIX
VH9WAaaqt"i J
DISTRICT
MANAGERS:
Agrl Bee Inc.
■James Qllskl, Pres.
814-696-9447
Fax 814-696-2606
James Smith
717-485-9585
“We want to teach skills, not
give easy answers,” Holden says.
“Participants are expected to solve
problems, make plans and define
goals. They can begin to apply
these techniques to actual farm
problems immediately.”
Each Dairy-MAP workshop
involves six to eight hours of
learning, split over two sessions
held one week apart. Between ses
sions, participants do homework
to help them begin applying busi
ness concepts on the farm.
Draws 18 Million Viewers
wich weighed about 400 pounds
and included four different kinds
of cheese, this was no small order.
Hosted by former Chicago
Bears All-Pro Running Back Neal
Anderson, the Colossal Cheese
Challenge ended in a tie that
Free Things To Send For
nut, the pecan, call the Georgia
Department of Agriculture at 1-
800-282-5832, suggests Edwards
Baking Company.
For free information about
CARE’s family planning program
for developing countries, call 1-
800-521-CARE.
Lancattef Farming, Saturday, December 17, IM4-821
Ag Business Support
Workshops that take a detailed
look at financial management also
will be offered in 1995. Partici
pants in this workshop will prepare
financial statements, analyse their
finances and create a business
plan. “A common thread among
failed small businesses is the lack
of a good plan,” Holden notes.
For a Dairy-MAP brochure and
more information about work
shops offered in your area in 1995,
contact your county’s Penn State
Cooperative Extension Office.
resulted in donations from ADA
to both the Chicago Boys and
Girls Clubs and the Campaign for
a Drug-Free West Side. Individual
team members also received a
package of gifts.
For free information about
ACLA’s Staying Healthy cam
paign to raise awareness about
blood cholesterol levels, call
ACLA at 202-347-2844.
For a copy of a free booklet on
teenage drinking, write the Amer
ican Council on Alcoholism, Inc.,
2522 St. Paul St., Baltimore, MD
21218; or call 1-800-527-5344.