4—Lancaster Farming, Friday, March 22, J 957 |anc?ster farmin^ Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly Newspaper Established November 4, 1955 Published every Friday by OCTORARO NEWSPAPERS Quarryville, Pa. Phone STerling 6-2132 Lancaster Phone Express 4-3047 Alfred C. Alspach . Robert E. Best Robert G. Campbell ... Robert J. Wiggins Subscription Rates: $2.00 Per Year Three Years $5.00; ot Per Copy Entered as Second-Class matter at the Post Office, Quarryville, Pa., under Act of March 3, 1879 The Weather Bureau said that Spring arrived at 4:20 p. m. Wednesday. But driving "around the Garden Sppt the last couple of weeks, we are inclined to think that the Bureau is a little late. , . , The week of warm weather we’ve had has allowed a lot of farmers to start their spring plowing. The winter wheat and barley is losing- that winter yellow and early flowers have made their arrival in the flower beds. As we look back, it has been a busy, but not bad, winter, But no matter how mild the winter, Spring and the be ginning of a new growing season is always a new and exciting event. Our Expanding Com Belt The Corn Belt is being let out a couple of notches, fet year, by designation ol the Department of Agricul tttpe 53 morecounties will be included in the area so called, bringing the -total to 893 counties in 24'states. And most pf these additions are outside,the old, established commpr cialcorn area which has long enjoyed the distinction pf being the'principal feed grain production area., ( v Primarily, the‘new additions are counties in the South, where grain and livestock are making rapid strides in replacing the old one-crop economy. For the first time, Georgia has a stake in the Corn Belt, with 14 counties to be included. Kentucky and Maryland are in with three coun ties each. Tennessee adds nine, North Carolina five, Ala bama four, and Mississippi one. Other additions to the Corn Belt are two more counties in Indiana, three in Minnesota, one in Missouri, three in New Jersey, three in Ohio, two in Pennsylvania and one in Wisconsin ' The inclusion of more counties m the South is the most significant addition, of course. For a number of years the South has been working toward a more diversified agriculture. In fact, it was more than 25 years ago that folks in an Alabama city put up a monument to the cotton boll weevil in recognition of the role it had played in showing the South the folly of the one-crop philosophy of farming. But it is only in recent years that this change-over has been so marked as to attract nation-wide attention. As a trade paper pointed out recently, “the South has good reason today to consider itself the second Com Belt.” Then it adds: “The first, 10,states, in corn are still, to be sure, those midwestern commonwealths whose tradi tion in the gold grpin is almost century-old. Illinois, lowa, Minnesota, Indiana, Ohio, Missouri, Wisconsin, Nebraska South Dakota and Michigan rank one to 10 in that order, as of the Nov. 1 estimates. , ~. “But following closely upon the heartland bloc ot corn states is another contiguous area in the southeast. Kentucky is number 11 in corn, North Carolina is number 12. Pennsylvania, ranking’ 13, cuts into the South’s solidity, but the next five states in order are Georgia. Tennessee, Alabama, Virginia and Mississippi. Note that all of them are ahead of Kansas (in 19th), a state whose eastern half has long been eminent in corn. . . . “The South cannot yet match the big Corn Belt m average yield per acre- It has greatly boosted its yields, however, through the extensive planting of hybrid seed and better farm-management practices as taught by the South-’s wide-awake agricultural experiment stations. . . . “Those of us who wonder, now and then, whether our mushrooming population will get ahead of our ability to produce grain and meat, may well look to the South for reassurance. Progress in corn, poultry and livestock below the Mason-Dixon line, is projected in the same ascending scale into the future, supports the belief that the good American diet will still be enjoyed by the 250 million or more who will constitute the United States population in the year 2,000.” STAFF Spring’s Here The Com Belt Farm Bailies . Publisher Editor Advertising Director . Circulation Director BY JACK REICHARD 50 YEARS AGO (1907) Half a entury ago the old Mennomte denomination adopted evangelism, with the movement in full swing in Lancaster Coun ty. Prior to 1907 this denomina tion mot only declined to sanction evangelistic campaigns, but op posed it. The Rev. Noah Mack, whose work in the Welsh mountain mis sion gained popularity, was one of the first to take the lead in the new move, and his meetings held at 'Elizabethtown made church history, where crowds gathered an hour and a half be fore the services began. Many came from the surrounding rural districts, who drove over long distances. The scenes presented that of an old-fashioned love feast, many of the worshipers bringing their lunch. Elsewhere in Elizabethtown Mrs. E. E. Coble, wife of the local jeweler, had 'trouble with a hen which had hatched a brood of chicks and took a dis like to three of them. But Mrs. Coble also was the owner of a pet pigeon which noted the for lorn and motherless conditions of the three chicks, and took the outcasts under her spreading wings just like the 'mother hen should have done. i* > * WILD GEESE PLAGUE FARMERS Fifty years ago this week, farm ers in Lehigh County were having trouble with wild geese which were feeding upon their sprout ing wheat fields. The farmers re ported tremendous, flights of geese, far exceeding anything known in that section before. Charles J. Andrews, in Lower Mil ford, declared his entire field of wheat was laid in ruins by a flocjc numbering several hundred. •r ■} *1 LITITZ FARMERS PROTEST PIPE LINE Another oil pipe line parallel with two already planted was con* templated by the Standard Oil Co. The line passed just south of Lititz. Farmers in the area were anything but pleased, especially those who had not been remun erated for pipes laid two years be fore. - When the land owners released for the laying of the first pipes they were under the impression that they released for only one line but they learned the releases gave the oil company the privi lege of laying as many lines as they needed. * * ♦ In Manheira that week, Harvey B. Graybill had good luck while opening oysters at his home, when he found a foreign object embedded in one of the bivalves which he carefuly dug out with a knife. The object was incased in a thin isinglass-like shell, which he peeled off and a pearl the size of a current rolled out. Graybill carried the pearl in his pocket until bis son took it to Weber, the Lancaster jeweler, who paid him $l5. 25 Years Ago Many Lancaster countians joined with Moravians in the moss-covered “God’s Acre”, at LHitz, to greet the Easter Morn in a sunrise service, despite an overcast sky' which prevented the sun from casting its rays over the worshippers as they shouted the glad tidings of the Resurrec tion. It was the 172nd annual sunrise service in the little Moravian cem etery, the event being just as impressive as it was when held two centuries before by Morav ian brethern-in Hermhut, Sax- Week :er Farming * # * ony, across the sea. The Rev. Edward S. Crosland, the paster, was in charge of the services, assisted by the Rev. Henry J. Heydt, pastor of the Lancaster Moravian Church. At Bowmansville, that Easter Sunday, fire broke out and dam aged St. Paul Lutheran and Re formed Church to considerable extent. No estimate of the loss was given. i 40 JERSEYS PERISH IN FIRE The entire herd of 40 registered 'Jersey cattle perished when the large barn on the farm of Deakin & Coleman, breeders of prize Jer seys, about four miles south of Rising Sun, Md., burned to the ground. The blaze of undetermined ori gin, was discovered about 12:30 a.m., but had made such headway that nothing could be done to save the herd or much of the machinery. ,*W * 1 10,000 HOMELESS IN SOUTH Death claimed a total of 343 persons as a result pi tornadoes that swept through five Southern States, 25 years ago this week. Three thousand were injured, of which 1,300 were in hospitals and emergency relief stations. Baekffronnd Scripture: Matthew 23. Devotional Beading: Isaiah Hypocrites Lesson for March 84, 1957 THE word “hypocrite” can be thrown around recklessly. Some one asked Dr. W. L. Lmgle once why there are so many hypo crites in the church. His reply was tjiat there are really not so many as some people think. The church, he says, is full of half-way Kris tians, stupid Cl 'stians. '<•” | n d w e a Christians even 2Vi% Chris- tians. But a gei uine hypocrite « person who bad and knows and pretends be good in o: der to conce bis badness. Such persons, Dr - Foieman •ays Dr. Lingle, are few. How ever, we should not sit back and suppose that _ all the hypocrites were Billie characters. Still less should any one imagine that to day all the hypocrites are in the church. People who are at least temporary hypocrites can be found all around us. Perhaps in usl Family Hypocrlta* We don’t have to gq to church to be hypocrites. We can practice right at home, and some of us do all too well at it. The word Originally meant simply “actor.” We are all hypocrites when we-act better than we know we are; or When our preachments fly at a higher level than our practice. When Father gives the children a lecture •on honesty, the very day when he sells a piece of real estate for more than he knows it is worth; when he spanks the children for losing their tempers— but doesn’t spank them till he has lost his own; when Mother tells the childrlb at table to be patient, though she wouldn’t wait in line at the post office but squeezed in out of turn; or when she greets the visiting Mr». Jones like a long-lost sister, only tp say before the visitor gets in tp her car, that she hopes that bore never comes again;—Father and Mother are being play-actors The number of homeless was estimated at 10,000. They were be ing'cared for in Army tents and other temporary quarters. The number of dead in Ala bama reached 281; Georgia’s toll was placed at 38; 19 in Tennessee; three in South Carolina, and two in Kentucky. «♦ - * JUVENILE DELINQUENCY, * 1932 J Sociologists in general were puzzeled as to the best way to handle juvenile delinquency back in 1932. But a New Jersey judge did not burn any mid-night oil while trying to determine what he should do. He sentenced two boys to ten licks apiece with a strap, arose from his seat of justice, and carried out the sentence himself. The legal profession was of opinion that the dignity of the court may have suffered, but that the community should restore it by a vote of thanks. queen of hoarders In a nation wide drive to bring money out of hiding, 25 years ago, a woman in Chicago v/as unoffi cially named “The Queen of the Hoarders”. > She went into a store in that city, tok a fat roll of money from the deepest corner of her hand bag, counted off 99 one-doHar bills and ordered a washing ma chine delivered to her home. All of the 99 bills were the old-time large ones. ‘Out in Los Angeles, Joseph Kiordan had Frank Curran > rested for assault, then sent him a Bible to read in jail. Even the children may be play acting when they take their par ents’ lectures or discipline as if they heard every word and meant to do better next time, when all' the while they are thinking about something else; and they may I terrible little hypocrites about school—how riiean the teacher is, and how all the children pick on me, and so on. Business Hypocrites 'Dwight L. Moody admitted the church harbors a good many hypo- 1 crites, but—he said—there are a lot more outside the church. Thera are indeed. Take business for in-, stance. Listening to the high priests of big business in Amerp ca, reading - the advertisements; the man from Mars 'might taka it seriously and believe that tha main object of business is serv ice. The jolly fellowship at lunch edn clubs might be taken in tha same- way; how can these people be deadly rivals? The. answer is, they aren’t. jThe club rules allow' admittance of only one* person, fjom each "classification.” But in each classification the man may be a ruthless rival of otlLf men in the same line mot in this club. And as for service, it is .quite true this is an aim of busi ness, but the aim is making mon ey. "Even men in “professions” which have a long and honorable record of service, may be there for the simple reason that there is more money in it than in anything else they w6uld find con genial. When a town finds itself year after without a resident d tor or minister simpjy because It is a town of poor people, the-citi zens are a little dubious about the "Service" profession*. HypoorDis in Church • Which brings up the kind of hypo crites who drew Jesus' fire—tha hypocrites in church. Aren’t wo all hypocrites when we tip our heads back and sing, “Jesus, I my cross have taken, all to leave and follow thee”—when decline even the small oppat tunities for service the church offers us? Isn’t a minister a hypo crite w,hen he exhorts his peopla to virtues which in his position are very easy but which he would find pretty hard if he were in their place? (Temperance, for in stance.) Isn’t the church member a hypocrite who hastens to dust off the Bible when she sees the minister coming up the frc\t walk? Isn’t the churchman ' A hypocrite who is extra careful of his language around the preacher? And aren’t we all hypocrites when we pray, "Thy Kingdom come,” —and back the prayer up with one thin quarter? (Based on outline* copyrighted by the Division of Christian Edncatlof, Na tional Council of the Churches of > Chris! In the U. S. A. Released by Com|punlcf Fre.T Sirflc*:) ~ ~ ** 1 ♦ * * * *