4 Lancaster Farming, Friday, 'flovemaer in, 1955- Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly Newspaper Established November 4, 1935 Published every Friday by OCTORARO NEWSPAPERS Quarryvilje, Pa. Alfred C. Alspach. Ernest ]. Neill C. Wallace Abel. . Robert G. Campbell Robert J, Wiggins . Subscription Rates : $2OO Per Year Three Years $5.00 ; 5c Ret Copy. Application for Second Class Matter' mailing permit pending This year’s food bill will be a record-breaking $66 billion ox more, some 1.5 million greater than that ot 1954. Add to this bountiful supplies, stable or declining prices, and the outlook for the consumer is rosy. Meat is plentiful. Despite flood and drought, msjny sections are recording the greatest harvest since 1948. High er retail prices in the lines of apparel, household appliances and 1956 model automobiles are also predicted by experts. Paul S Willis, president of the Groceiy Manufactur- America, a rising volume of business, plus vast improvements in production; processing and packaging foods has enabled the food industry to offset sharp increases in wages, taxeaand transportation costs. .Americans now are spending 25 cents of each after tax dollar for food, compared to 22 cents in I9By on a total food bill of but $l6 million. Food preparation has been simplified, by canning, freezing, dehydration, pre-packing and concentration, uaxe mixes have -spurred the sale of that type flour to new rec ords The outlook is encouraging, and the role ot the to,od producer is-more important than ever. He’-s producing more per acre, feeding more people per acre today than ever before, with reduced agricultural labor numoeis. Pennsylvanians by the hundreds this year moved their cooking outdoors. The result? Some mighty delicious food some underdone food, some overdone lood, some ex cellent hospitality, a few burned fingers and spark-burned slacks Not only has this phenomenon ot cookery nacl its effects in Pennsylvania. It’s nationwide. Escoiiiers oi tne Barebecue have developed by the hundreds, and every man is master of the grill pit or spit. Modern as Hie idea is, costly as it sometimes may be, -today’s -barbecue specialist is re verting back to the old tale of the Chinese, who tnousands of years ago started outdoor cooking on a more expensive basis. There, the story is, pigs shared the homes. One home with its complement of pigs —'burned. In pulling char red carcasses from the ruins, one Chinese licked his-tmgers. He was pleased. Thence cam'e a rash ot home burnings r and-roast pigs. ‘ ' 1 True or not, the Chinese method was expensive. Probably as expensive as the $lB millions Americans spent last year for grills, barbecue equipment, braziers and allied “essentials”. Then there’s the bill tor charcoal ana newiy developed anthracite cooking fuels. No mention of barbecue sauce, oceans of lotions and Unguentine for burped lingers. Most offside of all the Barbecue Specialists we can throw names at is the one who 1. lashes choice steans wnn dashes of barbecue sauce; 2. who cooks the hte out ot a choice steak, or serves it equally under-done; 3. ne wno cooks chicken too quickly, ending up with burned exterior, ultra-rare interior. Fall’s here, a mighty good season tor barbecuing, am soon winter will come, barbecue equipment will be silently folded away, cooking will return to the regime of the haus frau, tongues will no longer burn with the overzeaious uasn of pepper and hot sauce. But it’s a safe bet there’ll be a yearning'for returning to the back yard, the smoke and flames, the overdone, the underdone; while the nation toies up a 1955 barbecue bill of $3O millions or moi e. ’ FARM SAFETY No matter what the season, farm machinery can aeai a mighty deep injury to the individual. -Careless, you say.' Accidents do happen, and you need but check the dalily headlines to see. Not always is carelessness a factor. “Boy Catches Finger in Saw.” “Farmer’s Arm Caught in Picker.' “Farm Hand’s Finger Amputated.” “Wounded by Pitchfork.” No need to write yojir own headline. Just reraemper the National Safety Council’s slogan tor the year,-men THINK. “Safety isM) Accident,” (Lancaster Phone 4-3047) STAFF FOOD BILL RECOKU COOKING OUTDOORS “NO ACCIOENT” Phone 378 Publisher ... Editor ... Business Manager , Advertising Director Circulation Director Nimrods Be Sure to Use Safety Rules Shotguns are booming and rifles crack mg as an army of hunters take the field again in search of game. W- A. Caldwell, of the National .Grange Mutual Liability Company, urged Nim rods to make sure they had plenty of fun by observing all the safety rules with guns- Mr Caldwell citea the tal lowing figures from the Penn sylvania Game Commission of the hunters killed in the hunt- ihg field by sporting arms in , Pennsylvania in 1954; nine were self-caused, two died .because guns were placed in a danger ous position; two pm not see victim in line of fire; one hunt a ertiropped gun; guns accidental ly discharged in the hands of hunters kilted six persons; in the “hunter slipped and fell J Iwtfi thei'eafety off” Category, ■ were five de' hs; while five were shot to ciath m mistake' for gaffie. ' As far as Pennsylvania rural residents wea’e concerned, the insurance’ man stated there were no deaths from gun acci dents this year and none in 1954- Three were killed in 1953; three in '1953, and one in 1951. This on the basis of accidents reported to the Division pi Farm and Home Safety' Educa tion, State .Department of Pub lic Instruction- * Mr- Caldwell urged 'hunters to heed the following safety rules this year 1. Always consider'your gun loaded. 2 Be sure of your target 3 Do not hunt hear roads or buildings ~ 4. Know where the other members of your party are belore you shoot- 5. Always unload your, gun before’putting it in the car o>- attempting to clean it. This is the law. it. Farm Calendar NOVEMBER Nov. 22 County Holstein Friesian meeting, Gap Fire Hall. -Noy. 24 Thanksgiving Day DECEMBER f)ec 1 Entry closing date for 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 sylvama U. Dec.-12 Entry closing date for -bohler, fryer and roast er chickens, Pennsylvania Farm Show. Dec. 15 —■ (Tentative Lan caster County Farm Equip meent Dalers Christmas din ner meeting, Hostetterls Banquet Hall, Mount Joy. Dec 17 Entry closing dale, 4-H beeves, 4-H sheep, Penn sylvania Farm Show. Many Angles to Be Studied Tenancy is most common in .productive farm.ng areas This is because the farm has to pro vide a living for-both the tenant and the landlord, -according to Jerome K Pasto, associate pro“ fessor of farm management, and Murray W. Fisße, in Pennsyt vania State University’s “Science foi the. Farmer”., There' are many angles to the Question of renting a -farm, but only the financial side of a study of 300 Lancaster count?/ farm, ac counts is-considered hare. These records covered the 30-year period, 1921-50 years of wide ferent effects on incomes of ten swings in business .activity.' Changes |ri Price Levels - Conget in price, tovg|s"had Jif Background Scripture: Luke 7; 8-22- 80. Devotional Reading; Romans 8-31-39 Powers o! God Lesson for November 30, 1955 JESUS no doubt did many'ordi nary things, such as paying his bills and eating his breakfast. It ■may well be that he “never dis an ordinary tljing in an ordinary way.” (How would he pay you what he owed for lumber for his carpenter shop’ How would he rhe as a break!' But it is also trui by all the rec.ord; that he did soitai e*xtr*ordfnar things, so extraor binary in fact'tha no' one wof(T cot® quite descnb them. The Gospel writers, all o whom of course used Greek, used Dr - Foreman sometimes a word meaning "Sign,” sometimes one meaning “wonder, miracle," and some times one that means "power.” The same Greek words is trans lated in different ways. For ex ample; the Greek word "dyna mis” (power) is translated in .the old King James'version “power” in Luke 5:17, "virtue” in 6:19, "mighty works” in 10:13, "mira cles” in Acts 2:22. No Show-off You can get into all kinds of stupid and endless- arguments over the “miracles” of the New Testament They are not always labeled as such, or labeled with any word. The Gospels will just tell -what Jesus did, and let the reader draw h«s own conclusions. . What they all agree on is that Jesus performed acts of power which no one else could match. He did these things as naturally as you would pick a blackberry —as naturally but perhaps not so easily. As he himself expressed it, he could perceive "power” go ing out of him. (Luke 8:46, R.S.‘V.) . However hard it may he to un derstand Jesus’ miracles, we can -confidently say three things about them. One is that he did not do them “just to be doing them.” They were never aimless, or at random. Further, they never tfad the aim of showing off To the end of his days Jesus was beset by demands from the Pharisees and others, to show a “sign from heaven ’’ One of his early temp tatxons was to cast himself down from a pinnacle of the Temple and expect God or his angels, to see that he did not get hurt in the fall. "But he did not yield to that temptation. Never Too Much Another striking fact about his miracles is that he never wasted power. -He never did \vhat others could do. When be fed the five thqusand, he got the people to sit down In orderly fashion and got his disciples "to help distribute the food. One would suppose it would have been just as easy for him to arrange -for -every person -present to find a loaf and a fish suddenly in his hand; but Jesus did pot work that way. Or again, after the tremendous miracle of. restor ing to life the little daughter of Jairus, Jesus —instead of produc ing lunch for her himself by a miracle—gives orders to the fam ily to get the little girl something to eat When he healed the paia.- lytic, he told him to pick up his pallet and go home. ants -and Owner-operators. In the depression years, 1930-34, the fafinly labor incomes of ownfers .was only $35 per year, while ten ants averaged $726. Owners’ fix ed costs, such as taxes, insurance repairs - and - interest continued at fairly high levels, hut tenants ex penses dropped. A. tenant is bet ter able to adjust to falling prices than is the owner. But as the de pression „was left behind, owners’ incomes fteppedjjp Wsr-an4 t 0 higher levels .than did the, - in comeof -tenants'-ia GOVERNOR OF PENNSYLVANIA IN PROCLAMATION Thanksgiving Day - Noveni 24. 1955 Since (the Pilgrim Fathers ci brated the first Thanksgn Day at Plymouth in 1621, a d sense of gratitude to- Ailmig God for His endless gifts to has 'been a basic and abiding fluence on our lives Those early settlers at han time offered their jbhanks •God’s gifts to them, the si® gifts of food, shelter, and sal Today at harvest time we ; inowledge 'much more. We the fruition of their' hopes freedom—to live, to work, to i ship, in a land of opportunity all At harvest time let us cr with humMy -grateful hearts give thanks.to the Giver,of th gifts: In this time of tension i (strife, it is more than ever ne< isary -to remember the myr JMessings given us and ren fervent thanks to God. It is fj ,Jlim that-we receive the strep we need' to face the day and ihapewe must have to meet future. In' keeping with the 'he warming spirit of Thanksgiv November- -has been chose Given under my tend and Great Seal of the State, at City of Harrisburg, this te day of November, in the year our Lord one thousand n hundred and fifty-five and the Commonwealth the one Ji died and eightieth. George Leader, Governor. STOEE EGGS ißiefrr { rate egg't. 'promt They lose their freshness rap at room temperature,-or w saya Elsie Bamesberger, Pj IState extension consumer edq ition specialist. Simon Peter, who was far mi impressed by Jesus’ fhirsi| than by what he said, Bumr| up a great deal when he said ® Jesus, endowed with divine p| er, “went about doing goi (Acts 10:38.) Our Lord’s acts power were always done for J help of other persons. This is I great distinction between Chr j miracles and those done, oil legedly done, by magic. typical magic-worker make® doll and sticks pins in it,, hog by this means |p inflict pain* death on some one. Whetbei| not magic is anything real, m| is malicious by intention. Je| miracles on the contrary J never malicious, but the exaci posite—they were acts of m ness and generous help. 5 J| neyer called up genies out nil ties, he never created fire-fer J ing tfragoris, he -never prbdi potions of love or death. Alls miracles simply restored- hei life, strength, gave food to| hungry, eye* to the blind . . I and good news to'the poor. I In listing for John the Bap® benefit the acts of power he I doing, he names as. climax I the raising of the -dead, 4>ut| coming of good news to the i That is a miracle we *tfll tool dom see! I (Bbm« #nr o«tUn»» cjiyiUJiUd bl DltW*» *f Oh rJmttan KW»»tlon tl«»»r Co«noH of lh« Chmrtlit* ot C