West Central Selects Winners CENTRE HALL (Centre Co.) The West Central District 4- H and FFA Dairy Show was conducted Saturday, July 29, here at the Centre Grange Fair grounds. Creedin Cornman, Carlisle, was the type judge and Vicki Ansell, Scottsdale, was the showmanship judge. One-hundred-twenty-two ani mals were shown in five breeds. Grand and junior champion Milking Shorthorn honors went to Melissa M. Wolfe, Northumberland, with her fall calf. Reserve grand and reserve junior champion honors also went to Melissa M. Wolfe, with her winter yearling. Junior champion Brown Swiss honors went to Elizabeth Cloninger, Centre Hall, with her spring yearling. Reserve junior champion honors went to Ben Manheim Dairy (Continued from Page A4O) Best Three Females Ayrshire: 1. James Findley 2. Zinn Family 3. Ken Findley. Milking Shorthorn: 1. James Findley. Jersey: 1. Dice Family. Holstein: 1. Lowell Brubaker 2. Joe Wivell 3. Homing Family. Best Udder Ayrshire: 1. James Findley 2. Ken Find ley. Jersey: 1. Andrew Dice 2. Harold Dice. Holstein: 1. Lowell Brubaker 2. Dustin Homing 3. Joe Wivell. Dairy Hard Ayrshire: 1. Findley Family. Jersey; 1. Dice Family. Holstein: 1. Brubaker. Senior Showmanship (14 Yrs. & Older): 1. Dustin Homing 2. D. Oberholtzer 3. D. Ebeiiy. Senior Fitting (14 Yrs. & Older); 1. J. Zimmerman 2.0. Eberly 3.0. Homing. Junior Showmanship: 1. L. Homing 2. J. Zimmerman 3. K. Wenger. Junior Fitting: 1. B. Brubaker 2. C. Bru baker 3. Jason Zimmerman. John Eaton didn't invent Agricultural Lending, it just seems that way. 1 A Codorus Valley Company ■ Member FDIC ■ Equal Opportunity Lender • Eight Locations In York County To Serve You ■ Call 1-888-846-1970 ■ www peoplesbanknet com Cloninger, Centre Hall, with his winter yearling. Grand and senior champion Brown Swiss honors went to Lauren D. Daubert, McElhat tan, with her aged cow. Reserve grand and reserve senior cham pion honors also went to Lauren Daubert, with her senior 2-year old. Junior champion Jersey honors went to Alanna Judy, Spring Mills, with her summer yearling. Reserve champion honors went to Mary E. Martz, Spring Mills, with her winter calf. Grand and senior champion Jersey honors went to Jennifer Kellerman, Centre Hall, with her senior 2-year-old. Reserve grand and reserve senior cham pion honors also went to Jen nifer Kellerman, with her junior 2-year-old. Grand and senior champion Red and White honors went to Amanda Gates, Warriors Mark, with her junior 2-year-old. Re serve grand champion and junior champion honors also went to Amanda Gates, with her spring calf, and reserve junior champion honors went to Anna Marie Spangler, New Berlin, with her winter calf. Grand and senior champion Holstein honors went to Emily K. Cloninger, Centre Hall, with her senior 2-year-old. Reserve grand and reserve senior cham pion honors went to Ben Clon inger, Centre Hall, with his junior 2-year-old. For more information, con tact Bill Messersmith, Lycoming County Cooperative Extension, 542 County Farm Road, Mon toursville, PA 17754, (570) 433- 3040. (Continued from Pago AM) payability, juiciness, and flavor. “I looked at Certified Here ford Beef for the new century and the improvements that could be made with CHB,” said Vogel. Vogel “went out on a limb” with his new marketing ideas. He contacted both Certi fied Angus Beef and the Red Oak Farms feedlot, an operation with their own branded beef program named Premium Here ford Beef. From these sources Vogel gathered information about their product and market ing ideas already in place. “1 sat down and went through the information and looked at where the Certified Hereford Beef program is now, and thought about what Certified Hereford Beef needed to do to catch up with the competition,” said Vogel, who then related these thoughts and concerns in his speech. Key points included a plan to catch up with Certified Angus Beef. “Certified Angus Beef is ev erywhere and has been around, but Certified Hereford Beef is hard to get,” said Vogel. Ac cording to Vogel, more pounds of CHB need to be produced to increase availability. He also highlighted the advantages of moving the product to the East Coast markets. Selling Itself “The product should be able to sell itself,” said Vogel. He pointed out that for the past two years, according to the Ameri can Tasting Institute, Hereford beef has been named the best- Heard About CHB? tasting supermarket beef and the best-tasting restaurant beef the past three years. Vogel also used graphs to il lustrate Colorado State Univer sity’s comparison of Choice, CAB, and CHB. “Certified Hereford Beef excelled in juici ness, payability, flavor, and tenderness,” said Vogel. During his speech Vogel in cluded his ideas “for whatever we (Hereford breeders) need to do to get commercial cattle buyers to get involved in CHB,” said Vogel. “Ear tags or brands symbolizing Certified Hereford Beef would track calves for the CHB program from the day they are born until they reach the Dairy Expo Names (Continued from Pago A 39) was the overall winner ot the 2000 National Dairy Quality Awards (NDQA) program. Brabant Farms is owned and operated by Joe, Paul, Steve, Phil, and Pat Van Lieshout, along with their father, Henry. “We believe we have an obli gation to provide clean and healthy milk for consumers. That’s what they’re paying us to do,” said family spokesperson Joe Van Lieshout. The Van Lieshouts milk 500 cows with a rolling herd average of 26,050 pounds of milk on three-time-a-day milking. Their herd’s somatic cell count aver age, an estimate of mastitis level in the herd, averaged just 83,000 cells/ml. The herd averages just two cases of mastitis per month, outstanding in a herd of 500 cows. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 21. 2000-A4t slaughterhouse, where they are given a premium,” said Vogel. He believes this tagging and tracking would lead to increased numbers of Hereford beef par ticipation, besides increased consumer appeal. Vogel hopes to improve the market conditions in the sale ring for Hereford cattle. “Today Hereford calves are not given the extra nickel be cause of the belief that Here fords don’t marble,” said Vogel. Taste tests, however, prove the opposite is true. Vogel hopes that his strategies will, however, work to “give Hereford calves equal footing,” in comparison to cattle with black hides. NDQA, started in 1994, rec ognizes dairy producers and their families who do an out standing job of producing high quality milk every day on U.S. dairy farms. The Van Lieshouts represent the very best of the U.S. industry, said Anne Saeman, executive director ol the National Mastitis Council and NDQA manager. NDQA is sponsored by the National Mastitis Council, World Dairy Expo, the National Milk Producers Federation, and Dairy Today magazine. For more information about the NDQA program, contact Anne Seaman, National Mastitis Council, (608) 224-0622. It's rare to find an individual who is knowledgeable about the farming business and the banking business. That's what makes John Eaton, Jr. so unique. ■ York County born and bred, John is a third generation working farmer, as well as PEOPLESBANK Financial Centers' Assistant Vice President for Agricultural Services. As such, he can help you arrange convenient loan terms for equip- ment and livestock; a mortgage loan to finance farm purchases and improvements; a line of credit to meet your capital needs; even a special First Time Farmer loan ■ John Eaton knows what it takes to manage a profitable farm --and the best ways to help you manage all your money. Give him a call at (717) 747-1546, Peqplesßank FINANCIAL CENTERS