_Lancaster Farming, Friday, November 11, 1955 4 Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly Newspaper Established November 4, 1955 Published every Friday by OCTORARO NEWSPAPERS Quarryville, Pa. Phone 378 (Lancaster Phone 4-3047) Alfred C. Alspach. Ernest 1 Neill C. Wallace Abel Robert G. Campbell Subscription Rates : $2.00 Per Year Three Years $5,00 ; 5c Per Copy. « Application for Second Class Matter mailing permit pending Meat production in 1955 will set a record and a,high volume for 1956 is “almost certain,” the Agriculture De partment reports. By the end of this year, about 26.7 bil lion pounds five per cent more than in 1954 will be produced for the United States consumer and export mar kets. Bumper crops of feed, good condition of most ranges, the large number of meat animals on farms, with a likely record number of cattle to be fed and increased hog produc tion, this fall, all support the contention. Further extracts from the report say strong demand likely will support prices of feeder cattle, and margins be tween prices of feeders and fed cattle are expected to be relatively narrow. But with lower feed prices, profits in feeding this coming season may be close to average. For hogs, prices that declined sharply from June highs have continued to work lower, and quotations hit a 13- year low in Chicago. The 1956 spring pig crop is expected to. be larger than that of 1955, but, because of the lower prices this fall, the increase probably will be moderate. Concluding the report is a statement of interest to all livestock producers; “.. . because large output will limit prices of meat animals during the next year, the profit mar gins in livestock will continue rather narrow.” Voice Of 1 Lancaster Farms (Readers are invited to write comments on Lancaster Farm ing, about current events, or other topics. Letters should be brief, and must be signed. Names will be withheld if re quested. Lditor;. Editor, Lancaster Farming i have just received my sample copy of Lancaster Farming, con gratulations on. a line paper well balanced editorially, lull ot useful information, well printed. 1 am not a farmer but would like to receive copies regularly; so here is my subscription Jonn D. Kenderdine, Holtwood. Ernest Neill Have just re ceived the first copy ot Lancaster Farming and it s great You, Wally and Bob are to be congratulated on a terrific job and we tee! as sured that youi new enterprise will become even more success ful with each issue as it comes out The Godfrey Agency, l nomas F Godfrey, Lancaster. Editor Lancaster farming cannot help but be successful. It -has been long overdue. Best wishes. • Jack Reichard, Hoit wood. Dear Ernie Congratulations! I think the first issue really looks great. Best regards, want Heilman, Agricultural Photo graphy, Lititz. Gentlemen Please enter my name on your J’«t ot charter sud scribers. I receii n d first issue to day and enjoyed it immensely. Keep up the good work Wish ing you success in your new undertaking. Harry F Shank, KU Quarryvilie. Lancaster Farming congra tulations upon the first issue ot the Lancaster Farming newspap er Pennsylvania Newspaper Pblishers’ association, Harrisourg. STAFF MEAT PRODUCTION Editor, Lancaster farming: my son took the Ag course at state Colege and knows an auout tne new cnemicais and words witn tne long names that they talk aoout these days, t rank you snouio print more articles so tnat we older fellows can know wnat tne younger people are talking aoout. JRS Landisville. Editor, Lancaster 1? arming: con gratulations on your good start. I pu t samall ad in tne paper and an my mends were teinng me aoout now they saw it in me new taim paper. urO real season will be going in tne spring anu you can oet that l win advertise then. JLJVi. Editor, Lancaster Farming Thanks a million for the copy ot Lancaster Farming delivered per sonally to the office ot the Clerk of Quarter Sessions Court oy tne .publisher, Mr Alfred C. Alspach within an hour after publication of same. Congratulations on a splendid farm newspaper, it has> been said “the pen is mightier than the sword.” Certainly the information and education con tained therein and entertainment provided by the reading ot same should prove the worth ot Journa lism to all Lancaster County tam ers Office of Quarter sessions Editor, Lancaster Jb arming; i m a retired farmer. 1 like to keep up to date on all tnese new ue velopments This taming is moie of a science every day ou made a good start Beep it up. J J. K RD Na 1, Lancaster Editor, Lancaster farming; i am in school and belong to me club activities. My mom ana aaa 4-H Please print more auout our read your paper and would like to also it you have more news tor the young people When unvaccinated hogs go ott feed, a veterinarian should be called at once Other symptoms that demand quick attention are slowness in moving out ot sleep ing quarters or sudden deaths. Publisher ... .Editor .. Business Manager Advertising Director Background Scripture* Luke 8 17-49 Devotional Beading: 2 Peter 1 2-8. The Golden Rule Lesson for November 13, 1955 LIVING Is an art, not a science. ' Jesus did not come to give us a. heavenly rule-book. On the other hand he did not live and die merely to provide us with tickets to heaven. For others, as for himself, he felt the tremend ous importance, here and now, of this present life. He left be hind him not r br broad principle for living in th; world as sons am daughters of th Most High Go< Jesus’ pnriciph were not the stir. fy sort of thini that only philosi phers can unde: stand. His disci- pies, we know, ® r * Foreman were all men of limited educa tion, the plainest of plain people. If Jesus had tried any theological gobbledygook on them, it would have gone clear over theip heads. What he said could have carved on short tombstones, wruien on a postcard,—any one sentence of his teachings. The one the church has nicknamed the “Golden Rule’’ —short, sharp, and In Jesus’, own view very _ important—la alone worth long study. “It’* Too Hard" 1 Luke’s version of the Golden ( Rule (6:31) is clear enough: “As you wish that men would do to you, do so to them.” Words of one 'syllable, but what words! It is saddening to see how many ef forts have been made to by-pass this Golden Rule. One kind of by- 1 passers will tell you this is much too hard.,Some very religious peo-; pie have fancied that ,Jesus did not mean this for here-and-now,j but only for some “Beautiful Isle of Somewhere,” sometime after Judgment Day. Other religious people have said that Jesus really meant to say, “You can’t possi bly do this, don’t you feel ashamed?” Now we can be sure of two things. One is, that Jesus was (to say the least of it) a.man of common se,nse. an honest man. And honest men "do not deliber ately tell their friends to do what they know is impossible. “It’s Too Easy” An opposite way of by-passing the Golden Rule is to think it is too easy,—that it is just a nice sounding bit of advice that is not only easy to do but which won’t do much good. For example: a little girl cues lor candy. The mother thinks: What would I want her to do for me? Why, I’d want her to do as I say. So I’ll do as she says—give her the candy. (And makp her sick, of course.) Or again: a wife’s birth day is coming along. Husband thinks: What would I want for my birthday? New power »aw, of course. So he gets his wife a power saw, which she certainly does not want . . . No, the Golden Rule is not so easy as all that. It calls for imagination, for a wide vision, for a Christian spirit. It is indeed all too easy—for fools and knaves, But Jesus assumed that his friends were neither knaves nor fools. The Golden Rule is not something to save anyone the trouble of thinking. It simply points out the direction In which our actions and decisions ought to go. It often means, not—What does this person want me to do, now? but—What will this person at last wish I had done for him? In other words, If we are to apply the Golden Rule we have to look at it in the light of eternity. Bacon-Pickle Sandwich filling % cup finely chopped am pickles 1-3 cup chopped, cooked Bacon Vi cup mayonnaise or saiaa dressing Combine pickles, bacon ana mayonnaise, leld: 1 cup, or tilling for five sandwiches. 48-Acre Farm $Bl5 Per Acre Totaling $39,206.60, a 48-acre Earl Township farm sold this week to Wilson Martin. Jr, Rl, Ephrata, figuring $Bl5 per acre. Seller was Ivan H. Nodlt, and Frank L. Steller auctioneer. For the first time, researchers recently blended corn fiber with cotton and wool to weave ma terial for clothing. Another way of by-passing the Golden Rule is to say simply that it won’t work. “It is a lovely ideal, the world would be much pleasanter to live in, for all of us, if we could live by it; but we can’t, so let’s get on with the practical business of dog-eat-dog, every man for himself and the devil take the hindmost.” Again let us remember that if Jesus had not lived by his own rule, every listener would have known him for a hypocrite and the Gold en Rule would have perished in a blast of cynical lighter. It worked in Nazareth, it worked in the carpenter shop. To bring it down to our own times in Amer ica, and to take the hardest of ap plications of the Golden Rule,— loving your enemies Will it work? Well, who are today the leaders in the War of the 1860’s who aie most widely and gratefully remembered on both sides of what once was a battle line? Lincoln and Lee, be yond much doubt. And these are the two men who most undeniably loved their enemies. The Golden Rule, in a life devoted to God and map, will work. (Based on out'ineo copyrighted by the Division of Christian Education, Na tional Council of the Churches of Christ In tbe-U. S A. Released by Community Press Service ) 28,000 That’s the number of Lancaster County rural boxholders and their families plus many in boroughs-vil lages-cities receiving this issue of LANCASTER FARMING ... with its full, complete farm news. For a limited time only, char’er subscriptions to LANCAS FER FARMING are being accepted - - $l.OO for one year. Mail your dollar now. T hr kr ; fvfr Farm Calendar NOVEMBER Nov. 12 Closing date. Live stock classes entering Penn sylvania Farm Show. Nov. 14 -18 Eastern National Leivtsock Show, Timonium, Md. Nov. 17-18 State Soil Con servation District Directors Conference Harrisburg. Nov. 22 County Holstein- Friesian meeting, Gap Fire Hall. Nov. 24 Thanksgiving Day. DECEMBER Dec. 1 Entry closing date fop turkeys. 4-H and vocational poultry classes, Pennsylvania Farm Show. Dec. 5-7 Farm Income Tax- Social Security short course, Pennsylvania U. Dec. 5-10 Ice Cream for Sup ply Men Short Course, Penn sylvania U. Dec. 12 Entry closing date for boriler, fryer and roast er chickens, Pennsylvania Farm Show. Dec. 15 (Tentative Lan caster County Farm Equip meent Dalers Christmas din ner meeting, Hostetler's Banquet Hall, Mount Joy. Dec. 17 Entry closing date, 4-H beeves, 4-H sheep, Penn sylvania Farm Show. In spite of the dozens ot vita mins, minerals and otner essen tial elements needed tor a good livestock ration, water ana salt are the two most commonly neglected items in the diet ot livestock.