4—Lancaster Farming, Friday, July 12, 1957 Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly Newspaper 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; 50 Per Copy Entered as Second-Class matter at the Post Office, Quarryville, Pa., under Act of March 3, 1879 The Changing Tobacco Market “How will the increasing popularity of processed binder-type cigars affect the price the grower gets for bind er-type tobaccos?” askes C. I. Hendrickson of the Market ing Research Division of the Agricultural Marketing Ser vice in the July issue of the Agricultural Situation. He answers his own question by saying that the to tal amount of money received by growers from the binder types would be somewhat reduced if the processed binders continue to grow in popularity as rapidly as they have un til now. But there are offsetting factors. The reduction in price for binder types would not apply to all the crop of those types. That part of the binder type tobaccos that is sold directly for scrap chewing tobac co would continue to be sold for that purpose. The growers market would be widened if the popu larity of cigars with processed binders continues to in crease. In that event, the total of tobacco used in cigars would be increased • Grower’s production costs would be reduced be cause it would no longer be necessary to take such extreme and expensive care in harvesting, curing, and preparing the high-grade binder types for market. And the new developments will affect the relative advantage of areas and growers in producing tobacco today. Growers who best adapt their production and marketing practices to lowering their costs will be in the best position to profit from the new situation, regardless of the area. In April 1957, 20 per cent of all cigars had process ed binders. It’s expected that 30 per cent will have the binders the latter part of this year. Customers who prefer imported, all-Havana or hand made cigars with natural binders are very much in the minority. It appears reasonable to expect that essentially 80 per cent or more of all cigars will have processed bind ers. I Pointing out that the use of processed binders re duces the weight of binder leaf required by 38 to 44 per cent, Hendrickson says that a year’s supply of binder for the six million cigars produced domestically per year would amount to about 18.1 to 18.9 million pounds if half the cigars used processed binder. When half the cigars are made with processed bind ers, the half made with natural binders would use binder types only. Lower-priced cigars now having binders from nonbinder types would have processed binders in this kind of future. All of the stemming tobacco used for scrap chew ing would have to come from binder types. This would take the place of the cuttings and throw-outs that would not be available if processed binders were used. It seems logical, then, that growers of the type of tobacco used mostly for scrap chewing could look forward to higher prices because chewing tobacco manufacturers would have to buy more of the whole leaf. The significant change you might expect would be reduced returns from tobacco to be sorted, from $18.7 million to $11.7 million. But tobacco sold that is not sorted would be expected to increase in value from, say, $3 mil lion, to $6.9 million or $7.1 million. The way that growers compete to supply the chang ed market for their product will determine the level of prices and the differentials for each use. Adjustment of the supply to this new development will depend not only on the factors already considered, but on the ability of the growers to reduce production costs under the new conditions. This should be possible. Increased mechanization and other changes in production methods new varieties, for example will affect these costs. Established November 4, 1955 Published every Friday by OCTORARO NEWSPAPERS STAFF Publisher .Editor Advertising Director Circulation Director BY JACK REICHARD 50 YEARS AGO (1907) For the first time in the history of America apples had been im ported from Australia during May and June in 1907. Although do mestic crops were apparently large enough in the fall of 1906 to supply all demands, the late spring of 1907 found the supplies so depleted that prevailing prices justified the importation of ap ples from Australia, some 10,000 miles away. * « NEW HOLLAND SHOEMAKER IN TROUBLE Jacob Diffenderfer, once a New Holland, Lancaster County, shoe maker, was in trouble in Chatta nooga, Tenn., back in 1907. He had been married to six wives; four being divorced, one deceas ed, and now remarrying No. 6 in order to cancel pending charges. The brother-in-law of wife No. 5 started court proceedings to have the shoemaker punished for his unfaithfulness While drunk Dif fenderfer informed his wife that ho had a wife in Pennsylvania, then disappeared to evade the relatives of wife No. 5, who were about to bring charges against him, when she died ICE CREAM FROZEN WITH HAILSTONES On the Chester County farm of James McConnell, near Russell ville, it was declared the family was enjoying ice cream every weekend, frozen with hailstones W'hich fell in that area May 19, 1907 The hail was gathered with wheelbarrow and shovel the fol lowing morning and buried in sawdust in the orchard. During the middle of July McConnell stated there were enough hail stones left to freeze another can, or two of ice cream In Florence, Italy, a half cen tury ago, a snail’s rate of travel was determined by experiments officially conducted A half-dozen snails were peimitted to craw be- tween two points ten feet apart. Exact time was kept from start to finish. The figures were arranged into table of feet, yards and fur longs, and it was found that it took exactly 14 days for a snail to travel one mile. r Back in 1907, Lancaster Coun ty’s Landisville Camp Meeting activities were set to open July 25 and continue through August 7. Governor Stuart of Pennsyl vania was scheduled to make an address on the camp grounds July 30. •I P. A. D. MADE WAR AGAINST SAN JOSE SCALE War against the deadly San Jose scale was being waged by inspectors for Pennsylvania Agri culture Department. Orchards throughout the state were being examined, and applications made to kill the parasite wherever traces of it were found. State authorities was making every ef fort to stamp it out before a foot hold was secured. The inspectors not only de stroyed the scale in the field where it was found, but instruct ed farmers in the best methods of preventing its appearance + . * In order to carry out a notion which proved to be better in theory than in practice, an lowa farmer fed the carcesses of hogs that had died of cholera to a pen of hogs which had the disease, but had recovered, in order tv prove that having had the disease rendered them mmune. A report on the outcome of the farmer’s theory stated: “Every hog in the pen but one died as a result of the experiment". * * Garden parties were fashion able and popular in the East half a century ago, but not so in the West, where jack rabbits were the chief concern of garden grow- Week* ter Farming ers. Near Beloit, Kansas, as many as 100 rabbits were oberved gath ered in a garden one night. Two. men shot 40 in one night in a gar den. Their antics were calledi “Jack Rabbit Fandango”. » * 25 Years Ago During the summer of 1932 there was one little gleam of sun shine in the nation’s economical picture, and it came from the farm. Prices of livestock took an up ward turn. Hogs had advanced in. prices from May 28 to July 15 an average of $2.20 per hundred weight, 'and cattle in general showed improvement. Two dollaars a hundred more for hogs back in 1932 meant to many farmers the difference be tween reasonable prosperity,, '■with payment of mortage, and losing the farm. Fancy heavy steers were selling at S 9 per hundred But more im portant, farmers feeding corn to hogs at the current prices got 40 to 50 cents per bushel for corn selling as grain from 18 to 24 road workers and increased freigh cents. Following the upturn of live stock prices to farmers, in 1932, preliminary budgets of American railroads indicated an expendi ture of $1,000,000,000 for supplies B*ckfround Scriptural Exodus 2:15b -22 4:18-20, 18 1-27 D«Totlon*l Kesdinrt Psalm 119:33-40. To Give Advice Lesson for July 14, 1957 TO GIVE advice is easy; to give advice that people will take is not so easy. To give advice that people will be glad they took, is hardest of all. Besides, some people are harder customers for advice than other people."old peo ple sometimes are more stubborn than young ones; successful people may hot listen so readily to criti- clsm as will those who have failed; and mem- bers of one’s own family may pay less attention than anybody Dr; Foreman else, Old Man Jethro There is a story in the Old Test ament of a very old man who gave advice to another man who was younger than he, but still an old man too. The younger man had been tremendously successful, ■ much more so than his father-in law had ever been. Yet it was the father-in-law who gave the advice. His name was Jethro and he lived about as far oil all the beaten tracks as a man could go. When the young Moses had fled from a murder charge, naturally he had gone as far from civilization as he could; and there he came across Jethro, priest and stock-raiser. Moses had married one of his daughters, a somewhat stupid girl, no match for the brilliant Moses. Now, forty-odd years later, with all the glory of the great escape from Egypt fresh upon him, Moses had brought his grumbling people (most ungrateful for their free dom!) out to this same remote region to get organized for their march to-Canaan. All day long old Jethro watched his son-in-law, sit ting in the midst of a swarming crowd, all talking -at once,- no doubt, asking- questions, -demand- . ing attention, complaining.of grievances, accusing- their bors, wanting Moses to s^* setting the pace for recovery of business in general in the nation. The acceptance of a 10 per cent reduction in wages by the rail road workers and increase freight rates, placed the leading rail roads on a sound financial basis and permitted purchases of sup plies which had been needed but deferred due to the depression. At Reading, Pa., officials of the Reading Iron Company an nounced that the finishing mill and charcoal plants at their Oley Street Mill would resume operations July 18, with more than 200 workmen called back to work $25,000 FIRE ON EXPERIMENT AL FARM Twenty-five years ago this week a disastrous fire destroyed the crop-filled barn on the Chester County, Pa, Experimental Farm of Prof. John R. D. Dickey, of the Pennsylvania State College, with a loss estimated at $25,000. A Holstein bull, which had been rescued from the model barn, charged the crowd of spectators and drove them to shelter behind trees and buildings before it was ‘driven off by fanners armed with pitchforks. ♦ « According to a report issued by the state bureau of lire pro tection, Pennsylvania State Po lice, during the period of one year a total of 4,630 farm fires re sulted in a loss of $7,902,529, ap proximately 28 per cent of the ag gregated loss for the entire state exclusive of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh The majority of the fires were caused by seasonable conditions in the form of light ning during the summer months and spontaneous combustion and thrasing activities during the har vest season their quarrels. It was too much for any man, even a Moses. Old' Jethro gave him a simple piece of. advice: Set up a graded system of judges Don’t try all the cases yourself, only the hard ones. So Moses took the advice . . . and it woiked so well that, forty years or so later, Moses seems to have be lieved that he himself had thought of the bright idea first. - Character Why did Moses take the advice' of Jethro so quickly? Of course the mam reason, no doubt, was that having lived with Jethro for' nearly forty years, Moses had listened to the old man before and' knew he did mot talk nonsense. But what was it that made Jethro worth listening to? To put it Into terms of our own problems: What do I need, to get my own advice taken by other people’ How cam I learn to give advice that people, will follow and line? The first thing needed, in ordef to give advice wisely, is character. Jethro was a man of God. Possibly his idea of God was not up to the Christian standard, perhaps not even up to that of Moses. But the God he knew, he revered and served. Then he was not only religious, he was practical He knew what would work and what would not. A man of deep faith and conviction, who is also solidly practical, is the best kind of counselor, and people know it. Acquaintance Another thing: Jethro and Moses had lived side by side for forty years. Jethro knew Moses like » book, he knew his ability and his limitations. Advice is not best given by total strangers. Some times people in trouble will appeal to complete strangers for advice, but that is only because they don't like to tell some local man (or woman) the whole truth. In giving advice, the counselor needs to know as much as possible about the whole background of the per son be is advising. Concern More than acquaintance is need ed, to be a welcomed adviser. The •fed Jethro could see that Moses was wearing down, under the im possible burdens he was trying to carry. If Jethro had not cared, he would hardly have offered advice." But he did care; and Moses knew it. Advice is not best when served cold. A good counselor advises from the heart not less than from the head. With the head, one can analyze a situation; but only with the heart can the adviser put him. self in the place of the one h* helps. (■■••* •Btlinu eeprrlfkua ly tka DlvlaUa if Chrlatlw ElmtlH, No Masai Cilmll if tkt Ckarokaa •( Christ la Ike- It. S. A. a«buii bj Cwaullv fim Ihtlm.)