Farmers May Be Shortchanging Selves By Marketing For Convenience Only WE WERE ALWAYS under the impres sion that farmeis were in business to make money, but it looks like we’ve been wrong all the time At any rate, a recent study by Penn State shows that farmers look first at the convenience factor when buying or selling stock at a market Only 30 per cent said that price is a factor Dr Clarence E Trotter, associate pro fessoi of marketing at Penn State, seems to agiee He says, “This indicates that it is doubtful jif the majority of farmers aie using market information to buy and sell to best advantage When choice of outlet is based on convenience and habit, farmeis may receive lower prices than could be had at other markets ” Convenience can be tenibly costly at times We heard recently of a farmer who felt that he did not have time to market his cattle at the market place So he sold them to a dealer at the dealer’s price Three days later the dealer had run them through the market and picked up two cents a pound Not that we have anything against cattle dealers making a profit If the man is going to study the market and condi tions, he should make a profit But on the other hand there is no reason for any farmer to hand over what was probably half the profit in the group of steers. Tiadition and habit are with us and BY JACK REICHARD 75 Years Ago lot more than 200 s ears 'after the art of printing was invented no poison was allowed to punt anything in England without di iccl pci mission from the govern ment In 1853 a decice was made that no printing pi esses should Pc set up in any place in London, ocepl at the two umveisities No book could then be publish cd except by the Stationers Com oanv Sometime latci special pn i ileges weie gianted to otheis One man was peimilled to pub lish all the almanacs another all the law books a thud all school book'- ami a foiuth the Bibles The monopolists having the pcwei to dial go what thej pleas ed put the pi ice so high that onh the uch could bin a Bible 1 malh the umust svstem wa broken down 1 homas Ciii% a shiewd book llei ot London sent an agent to Holland who bought good t\ pc ,nd fine! papei and employed Dutch pi mtci s to put togclhei well punted Bibles These weio shipped to P'ngland .iiicl sold in gieal number at a low puce The Kings pi inlet see ing his nail in dangei went io |.,w and the impoitation of the ■-jued b iok was discontinued But (an was dctci mined to pin duct Bibles that all could allord He \v< nl to the authonties ol tlv t nncisilv of Oxloid and peisuad id them lo sell then pi allege to Inin ihiK evading the law Mam of these Bibles still in (SisKiue have punted at the bo! tom ol Hu title page Ovloid lunUd at the Lnneisitv Bless Cum Bnvilcgo signilv mg th.u tin published » had obtained pel ■ muon a I the ITmu sitv in old u lo keep within Hu law \l,ss Kate I iclfi well known 'me i lean hetuiei hatK m 1883 had an ( \pt i k ncc in Spam whi( i .ihistiatid the tatt «l the bnl Mai l v Oman "Ui-s 1 it Id uas in li oublt i inn in Spain was limited ni \>,is .niMous to stnl loi Ma the Lancastei iaim ol John Slote (,id Kid he i coin hi inloiPH 1 a mile noilh ol New H illaiul 50 Ik i Ilia) aulbo: iIH >,-of Santand( i teals ago this week lud put he t it mik in (piai.m'ua Sloti was plow mu with two ini tin 11 da's and h< could d) bei sc s wlun (he ground sudden] > nothin-, to bieak the e mbai to "i'e waj linden one* eif the am She icah/ed the eJiflit mtv hid mals elropping it in a sink hole was not to b( bailed Shi went lb ltd deep The othei hoist- This Week* in Lancaster Fanning to the Sanitary Bureau and asked whv she could not have her trunk Because there rs cholera in Pai is, madam” But Pm not fiom Paris’ That made no difference The cholera must be kept out of Spam Had I known the marvels of Spanish quarantine”, said Miss Field ‘T would hare brought my clothes in a newspaper” The suggestion gave the stolid oflicial an idea You can t have your trunk, that would cost my position but jou can have your clothes' Miss Field took the clothes liom the trunk, piled them m a blue and white checkered wrap per and with this big bundle undei her arm she started fox Madud That even chickens are endow ed with keen instinct was demon- Miated on the Lancaster faun ot Fflward McKinstij a mile north of Rohicislown 1 01 a time a hen in his Luge flock had been seueting her eggs but no seaich was marc lor them and the chicken was lelt undis tin bed Then one morning the hen appeared at the dooi ol the laimhouse clucking noisilv No one had taken am notice at first hut thicc limes she picsisled in coming to the kitchen attracitng he attention ol the entne lamilj Fmalh out of cuuositv, Mis McKinsliv lollowcd the hen to the bam wheie it flow up to n Bucket nailed near the 1001 in side the sluictinc A lacldei w a s lioisted lo Ihe location and ncsl - in the bucket was found loui tcon down chicks Hating sutcesslulh hatched out the chicks without the knowledge ol anvone the hen was at a loss t > get hei bi ood dow a to the giotMid and instinctive!} turned ( i its owuieis lor help in the mat ie i i '’ll!\N(.l, UUDKNI OS L VM VSTI'R FARM Ik i and \ slianee ateident ottuieel on are hard to change But the maiketmg procedures of today are vastly different than when Dad was farming For the farm er to stay ahead of the game, he must change too For example the same Penn State sur vey shows that half the slaughter stock was sold through auctions But nearly 60 per cent of the replacement animals and three-fourths of the feeders were sold di rectly to farmers Half ol the purchases of all types ot livestock was from other farmers, making them the most important single source of stock Type and quality of livestock decided 40 per cent of the purchases You can see from this that there are a lot of ways that the price can be changed, played with and perhaps sliced off a bit But the price is the thing That is what makes the farm account books stay in the black. Pennsylvania fanners received over 111 million dollars from the sale of live stock in 1955, which was 15 per cent of all farm cash receipts More than 1 5 million head of stock changed hands during that year. In Lancaster County this information on markets is especially important In 1955 fully 26 per cent of the farm cash receipts were from livestock In that same year Lancaster County farmers netted $25,497,- 800 dollars from the sale of livestock and products 50 Years Ago Lancaster Farming Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly Alfred C Alspaeh, Publisher, Robert E Best, Editor, Robert G Campbell, Advertising Director Robert J Wiggins, Circulation Director Established November 4, 1*135 Published every Friday by OCXORARO NEWSPVPERS, Quairjville, Pa Phone Sterling 6-2132 or Lancaster, Express 4-3047 Entered as Second-Class matter at the Post Office, QuarrjviUe, Pa , ivder Act of March 3, 1879 Subscription Rates $2 per year, three years $5 Single copy Price 5 cents. escaped being diagged along into tuc hole by the breaking of the harness Word ol the accident soon spread and in a short time some 50 neighbors ai rived on the scene to assist m extricating the horse Following a brief discussion on ways and means to get the animal out of the hole it was decided to dig an inclining trench leading up to the imprisoned horse After more than five hours of haid work with pick and shovel the hoi sc was brought to the sm lacc unharmed by way ot the tiench over 20 feet in length In a contest inaugurated by a Chicago newspaper among young women back in 1908 calling lor descriptions of the qualities necessary to the ideal husband, a young ladv from Chicago won the pri/e Some of the qualities oi her ideal husband were He must be a good meal ticket pi ovidcr He must be able to svvcai when the occasion demanded it He must not stay out 100 many nights m the week but he would not be lorced to tel] whole he had been He must be old enough lo know what life is He must have a face that wijl atliact dogs and babies He must have lust monev ciiough to know wheie the next meal is coming from and not enough so that he cqn live with out working He must be an American and a gentleman 25 Years Ago When Wayatt Edwaids neai Rpollsville Ky lelumcd to his home from which he had been omen by a flash flood he found a 27 pound catfish stianded on the living loom floor Arnold Smith a tcenagei ol Indianapolis Ind was sa\ed a Mil sentence foi pettv theft by his promise to go to bed foi three \ears at 9 p m Sixteen\eai old Ma\ Kmdied 4—Lancaster Farming, Friday, May 9, 1958 BlbU M*terUlJ Exodus 35—40 Devotional Reading! Psalm 27:1-0. Gifts and Glory Lesson forJVlay 11,1958 SUPPOSE It were your problem. Suppose you had several thou sand people, all of whom had re cently been slaves, and their an cestors before them for hundreds of years. These people had no Bible, no church Their masters had been very religious people, but the gods their masters wor- | shipped were < fT nearly all anl- -F _ x aB mals, and if not Now suppose you bad these ex slaves off by Dr. Foreman themselves trying to make them realize the tiuth about the only true God. How would you make God real to them? Splendor of God That was Moses' problem God Inspired him not with one answer but with several One way by which he made God real to these very primitive people was in the pro visions for the worship of God Essentially this was very simple. God was provided with living quar ters, the same type of home that all the people had, namely a tent This tent was to be right In the very center of their encampment wherever it might be—for the peo ple now lived the life of wandering desert nomads When vve today speak of the “house of God,” we mean a church building which is filled, we hope, with people. But the Israelite “house of God” was « tent in which nobody at all lived, a tent which only a very few privi leged priests could enter, a tent tor God alone It was so small that even if It had been filled, only a few dozen people could have got in But it was near. “God lives m the midst of us,” they could say And it was beautiful The people themselves gave the materials to-build it, and the very listing of these matciidh suggests a brilliant gleam > beauty,—gold, silver, bronze Now Is The Time By MAX SMITH County Agricultuial Agent TO MAKE RYE SILAGE Winter lye is com monly used for giass silage and should be cut lust aftei heading and before any seed is foimed in the head In the past some growers wait for a • milky kernel” to develop m the rye head which means that the plant is too mature for top silage making One of the common grass silage preserva tives should be added to improve the palatibility of the crop ■ ' ill •# TO KILL CUTWORMS Many com, tobacco, and tomato giovveis have successfully reduced damage fiom cutwoims by ti eating the field in advance oi planting The soil may be spraved thiee to 10 ,days ahead ot planting with one quart of #2 Heptachloi or one pint per acre of V 8 Chlordane emulsion This tiealmcnt maj pi event considciable i e-planting this spring Max Smith TO RESERVE MAXIMUM FEED VALUE Considerable loss is experienced each year by forage crop growers m the pioccss of cut ting and harvesting the crop Many factors contubule to this great loss including the weather It is the feeling that more feed nutnents may be picsoived fiom the fust cutting of hay if part, oi all, is made into glass silage The attempt to field cure hay in this area has resulted in too high loss of feed nutrients The average dairyman could benefit most ol all by having some grass silage of good quality, lathei than pool qualitv hay to leed either this summer in case of drouth oi next vvmtci TO BEWARE OF BLOATING Flesh, succulant image exops should bo handled caiefullv in ordei to pi event seveie bloating in most sheep and cattle Legume crops such as ladino clover, alfalfa, red clover and sweet clovoi have been blamed loi many eases of bloat ing This is especially true when the plants arc wet and when tli£ livestock aie not accustomed to the iiesh forage Permitting thfc animals to gia/c only when the plants aie diy, and giving a feeding ol hav or othei div loughage beloie turning them in the pasture may save Double ol Woi thing England who ia/i Chailes Almcndingcr, of Maii avvay from hei home to woik as a on Ohio, owned a dog that had maid said she was “111011 ot living an extra “tail” several inches long in wealth glowing fiom its forehead twined linen, onyx stones ... By the beauty oUpod's house the peo ple were every day reminded of the splendor of God. The Best For God Moses might have built that tent for God, the Tabernacle as we call it,—he might have built it himself. Very likely he had the lesourees with which to do it But the thin£ was to be done by the people. Everybody was encouraged to con tribute Fuither, they weie en couraged to give the bestethoy had, the most costly materials they owned That was the hist church building campaign on record The house of God was not to be made of scraps left after eveiy one else had been well housed The house of God was to be erected out of gifts which had cost the givers a great deal Theie's an obvious moial to all this Now, as then, if all that people devote to the worship of God is what they can well and easily spare; if God s worship comes from life’s left overs: it will mean very little. Here is a modern church member who conti ibutes to his church— to the building fund or to any other need —only his spare change. He gives to Gods woiship not even an hour a week on an average; he never goes when the weather is bad or when it just "doesn’t suit him ” Glory of God The Old Testament says that the “glory of the Lord filled the taber nacle " Jewish tradition says that this “glory” was a light so bright no man,'not even Moses, could en dure the sight of it Be that as it may, what does It mean in this twentieth Christian century, with all we have learned from the New Testament, for the glory of God to fill the house of God? For so it should be There is dullness, empti ness enough in this world without our having to go to church for it. In God’s house we long to find God’s glory. What Is it we are really looking for? Saint Paul tells ns that the glory of God is in “the face of Christ ” Here is a thought for every one who has a heart interest In the worship of God. When Is a Christian church filled with the glory of God? Surely when Christ is seen there, when he fills the church But in the New Testa ment, the church Is not a building, it is people So a worshipping con gregation Is filled with the divine glory when it is a congregation of those In whose lives Christ himself Is living, when Christ Is not only proclaimed by the preacher but is active In the minds and hearts and service of those who know and love bun. (Based on outlines oopyrlfbted by th# Division of Christian Education, Na tional Coon'SU of the Churches of Christ In th* USA Released by Community Press Sorvlc* > • • »