4—Lancaster Farming, Friday, March 2, 1956 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 J. Neill C. Wallace Abel Robert G. Campbell Robert J. Wiggins Subscription Rates: $2.00 Per Year Three Years $5.00; 5c Per Copy Application for Second Class Mailing Privileges Pending PONDERING THE PLIGHT OF PORK One of the most productive selling jobs in the meat industry has been done by the pork producer, processor and service agencies of the industry. From the National Live Stock and Meat Board comes word that pork was eaten at the rate of 66 lbs per person in 1955- an 11 per cent increase over 1954. This is still two per cent under the 1947-1949 average; but 18 per cent more than the 1935-1939 Beef remained tops in preference, with 81 lbs per capita consumed last year, but beefs gam was but two per cent for the year, compared to 11 per cent for pork. Consumption of all meats reached 161 lbs per capita in 1955. Here is the per capita consumption of pork in re cent years 1955 66 lbs, 1954 60 lbs, 1953 63 lbs, 1952 71 1-2 lbs, the 1947-1949 average 71 1-2 lbs, the 1935-1939 average 55 1-2 lbs. ~ Pork production decreased for two years starting from postwar high in 1952 The 60 lbs per person in 1954 was the least per capita consumption in 16 years. As pro duction increased sharply in 1955, per capita consumption rose to 66 lbs. There has been a selling job in pork. A greater sell ing job is needed. Retail prices are at the lowest level since 1950, with the composite average retail price running some 13 cents a pound less than at the same time in 1954. To what may this be attributed? The livestock and meat industry is concentrating on giving consumers the kind of pork products they desire through greater produc tion of meat-itype hogs by growers, by the practice of pro cessors and retailers of trimming more fat from pork cuts. There’s a new look in pork, a new “lean trim look” that may help lift the live market out of the doldrums that have made it a most discouraging venture. FOOD EXPENDITURES 1956 What’s the food outlook for 1956? According to the USDA, the nation’s food supply will be about as large as last year’s and prices at retail will be about the same. Ex penditures for food per person likely be somewhat higher than in 1955, resulting from a small increase in overall food consumption per person and continued shifts to more processed foods and more marketing services with food. An increase is forecast in consumption of beef, pork, fluid milk and chicken meat, with small declines likely for veal, lamb and mutton. There’s no guarantee contained herein, but might help serve you as a pattern for 1956 operations. Uncle Sam has just taken stock of his holdings. And he comes up with the title of the country’s biggest land lord. Here are some of his holdings: 384,916 buildings, value Sl4 5 billion, covering 2 2 billion square feet of floor space; $15.6 billion “structures and facilities,” like dams and reactors 408 million acres of land, value $2.4 billion ' The Pentagon, covering 34 acres This inventory covers 11,777 domestic “installa tions” costing $32 5 billions. In 18-months total holdings jumped $2 2 billion. Figures may be incomplete, the General Services Administration admits, but better inventory methods are helping pin down figures. Just an idea of where your tax dollar goes. For ye'” , s medical science was concerned with hereditary factors in humans, until it became a science of its own. Today >he livestock industry has taken a similar look, although the recognition has not been as deep. Selec tion and development of proper breeding stock holds the key to meat-type hogs Selection and development of proper breeding stock produces the best milkers, the best beef producers, the best broilers. It’s a science that is coming down to the farm level fast and applies equally well to the kingdom of plants. STAFF BIGGEST LANDLORD INHERITANCE Publisher • Editor . Business Manager Advertising Director Circulation Director 50 Years Ago This Week on Lancaster Farms (This Week In 1905) By JACK KEICHARD San Jose Scale Controversy Ended J D Herr, of the State De partment of Agriculture,' an nounced 50 years ago this week that the proper treatment for destroying the San Jose scale had been established. The scale, which had plagued orchard owners throughout eastern Penn sylvania ifor many years, was a subject of heated controveTsy between the exprerts, causing much confusion in the--minds of farmers in this section. Mr. Herr’s announcement was made after inspecting a grove of fruit trees sprayed at the Home of Friendless Children; Lancaster, m the fall of 1905. He reported finding every one of the 26 trees sprayed a complete success, stating that 95 to 98 per cent of the scale had been destroyed by a single application, proving the treatment was the proper one for destroying the scale, thus bringing the controversy to an end. Roundup Stolen Cattle in York County Fifty years ago this week, a tenant farmer on the farm owned by Mrs Wise, Springfield Twp., was arrested on a charge of Voice Of Lancaster Farms and farm friends (Readers are invited to write comments on Lancaster Fann ing, about current events, or other topics. Letters should be brief, and must be signed. Names will be withheld if re quested. Editor;. From the Mid-West Adams County, lowa—Weather is cold and dry. It was such a dry snow we didn’t get enough moisture on our ponds to help. Supposed to rain—we are pray ing. We hauled our first load of water yesterday. Do hope we get rain, at least we’ll have a crop if we can’t get a good price for our stuff. We’re going to need all the help we can. You don’t know how things have tightened up in this county. I feel sorry for Secretary Ben son. Every time he speaks he gets himself in deeper. If he would just come out and see for him self firsthand, what conditions are like. He turned more than several good Republicans to Dem ocrats If we don’t have a "crop this year and still no prices—-brother' My son raised 100 head of hogs, didn’t make enough to break even. We also gave our hogs away, likewise our calves. Don’t think for one minute that the small farmer isn’t dying out. Doubt if the son will stay with farming long. There are so many others like him. You should ride along the road and see the empty houses or the houses that are iust rented to people who work in town, five within a radius of two miles from us lowa’s Senator Martin said we should have a factory in the County so the farmer could aug ment his income with factory work. I wish he could spend a little time on the farm. All the farmers who had that little work to do have been gone a long time. Enough said, excepting that Secretary Benson does not know what is happening to the farmers here and in other coun ties Why won’t he try to find out’—A Reader. (Editor’s Note - The writer of the letter above resides in the Countv recently th« scene of Edward R Murrow’s “See It Now —The Farm Problem, a Crisis of Abundance” television ’pro gram This area has been dry several years. One inch of rain would do more good there than one million dollars in government aid, the resident believe. EJN ). stealing six cows and a calf from the Wise farm. Moving to a farm in- Lancaster County that week, he had included 'Mrs. Wise’s herd along with his own belongings After being driven more than 25 miles over mud roads, the .cattle were recovered at WnghtsviUe. New Salem Farmer Critically Injured A M Gladfelter, New Salem, Pa, prominent farmer" and Dem ocratic leader, was critically in jured while adjusting a belt on a threshing machine at his farm- A farmhand said .Gladfelter had slipped and was drawn into' the machine, suffering a fractured skull and severely lacerated legs. One of his legs was immediately amputated by surgeons, and the man not expected to live. 25 Years Ago $5 Million Farm Aid Appropriated by Congress The 71st Congress, adjourning March 4, 1931, set a peace-time record in appropriations, passing the $lO billion mark. The new appropriation allotments were chiefly earmarked for relieving distress resulting from the na tion’s general business decline, the unprecendented drouth and the long' depression in agricul ture. Many GOP leaders felt Buokcroimi Scripture: Luke 19:28-* SO. 47. Devotional Rcadln*; Revelation 21:22 —22:5. Christ and the City Lesson for March 4, 1958 CENSUS takers have,long been dividing us Americans - into “Rural” and “Urban.” The fact is, wherever we may live, if we are not in a city we are in many ways affected by cities. The magazines md papers we read are often pub lished in cities. Most of the things a farmer uses—tractors, combines, fertilizer, tools, came from cities, Our clothes were made in cities, our ■aws were made there. Your casket itiay have already oeen made in some city. There is * state m America which has just one large city. A for- mer resident of that state told the Dr. Foreman writer that very few small towns there amounted to anything, be cause all the young people in the state who had any ambition struck out for that big city as soon as they could. One way or another, we are all becoming “urban” pietty fast. Enthusiasm Is Fragile / The largest city Jesus ever saw brought tears to his eyes, and no wonder Some of the things he saw are true of cities and of urban civi lization today. They are true of our American way of life, 20th-century style. One was the swiftly rising, and as swiftly falling, enthusiasm of the crowds There they came with joyful shouts of welcome on Palm Sunday morning; and by Fri day morning some of the same mob would be screaming, "Crucify him!” City people take quickly to new ideas and new heroes and quickly drop them. They will strew tons of ticker-tape and torn-up tele phone books (for lack of palm branches) on some returning heio, out in six months’ time won’t be able to remember his name. Ex plain it as you like, the fact is that urban enthusiasms are fragile. That goes for most of us. What we live for in our urban America is mostly excitement We live from headline to headline, from thrill to farmers in general were bearing more than the full burnt of the 1931 price decline, and support ed backers of the Federal Farm Board and its recommendation of $5OO million in. new funds to 'aid farmers through cooperative effort, for stability and prosper ity in the agriculture industry. A revision of the tariff, with large increases in the protection of agriculture products, also was backed by the powerful GOP House in the 71st Congressional session Lancaster Farmers Hear Poultry Expert C. 0. Dossm, State College poultry extension specialist, pre sented an illustrated talk at a meeting of poultry raisers, at the Little Britain High School, in southern Lancaster County. Dossm spoke on the subject “Starting and Rearing Chicks. ’ His talk also covered disease control He said “Your profit or loss in poultry depends large ly on starting good chicks right and growing strong, healthy pul lets” Leghorn “Pullet Laid 327 Eggs Ben W Jacobs, Green county, won top place in the 1930’record of performance work conducted by the bureau of markets, Penn sylvania Department of Agricul ture, with his white Leghorn pullet _ laying 327 eggs The bureau reported 890 birds out of 4,600 entered in the work, laid more than 200 eggs as pul lets or 180 eggs as hens during the year The work mcluded seven flocks m nine counties. thrill. Advertise their best te stir us up. They • -of “exciting” new colors, exciting new fashions, even (believe it oi not) exciting new toothpaste. The advertisers know that if we can really be per suaded that a thing is exciting, we’ll buy it! We would rather lis ten to a new idea than a true one. That’s city fever. Mass Man In the -days of Davy Crockett, whose ghost, we trust, will have been laid to rest before these Imes meet the public eye—m the days of Davy C. and of DanT Boone, nearly all Americans were living in the country, as we would call it today. Even the cities were small. Those were the days of rugged individual ism. When a neighbor came within 60 miles of Daniel Boone, he thought the woods were getting too crowd ed, so the legend has it—and moved on. Nowadays In our more urban era, we have come to the time ol “Mass Man” as philosophers call him. The city Is the Land of Fol low-my-Leader. It is the dwelling place of the Joiners. Mr Boone did not belong to many societies; but where is the man today who is hap py without belonging to enough clubs and societies to keep him but every night’. Mass Man is a rather sad spectacle Jesus wept over him there jn Jerusalem. The people of that city were like sheep, doing, saying, even thinking what their Scribes and Pharisees told them to. The men of Jerusalem would not look for themselves, they “knew* not the time of their visitation ” They did not know when God was knocking at their door If Christ came to America today, would Mass Man recognize him? Or would he be under suspicion be cause he would not fit the universal pattern? Qen of Robbers The city over which Jesus wept was the site of a magnificent Tem ple, built as a place of worship. But when Jesus visited it, he found a cattle-market going on in the very middle of it. What should have been worship had turned to money-making. So it is too often with an urban civilization. Built on busmess, on the market-place, it tends to turn everything into ft market-place. Art is commercial ized; so is education, so are ath letics, politics, sometimes religion. If the reader thinks this is exag gerated, let him look a round during this month and see some every day examples of how religion it commercialized In America. We are approaching the joyful Chris tian festival of Easter. How many thousands of people In our land are planning to make money out of it? (Bated -n outline- copyrighted by the Division of Christian Education, Na tional Connell of tho Chnrohet of Chrltt In tho IT. S. A. Roloaatd by C-mmualtf Proas Sorvloo.) ,