Its Our Birthday Gift - To All of YOU In launching the fourth year of Lan castci Farming’s history the staff has found need foi improvement in the paper’s ability to serve Lancaster County’s farm eis As is pointed out on the fust page of this first issue of om fourth year, next ■week will see some new additional fea- tures These include a new office in Lancaster, placing us closer to the center of county agriculture, moie extensive and intensive coverage of farm news in the area and a greatly improved mechanical operation. All of these changes reflect the fact that Lancaster Farming is growing, and in its giowth is better able to serve its ieaders Lancastei Fanning came about because there was a need foi its services. County farmers, faced with the fact that many community and area news papeis were becoming more and more centered, m their news coverage and ad \ertismg aiound the steadily growing town populations welcomed a local week ly which specialized m their needs for pi inted communication Advertisers—faced w ith the desire to tell their specific customers, the farm ers of new services and products wel comed Lancaster Farming’s ability to pre sent messages quickly, efficiently and economically By cairying only news and advertis ing of interest to farmers and their families, and pioviding farm “dealeis” with an effective adveitising medium, Lan $%,, , - | Davidson - '/> / > *■*>' EOS ANGELES Calil No\ 10 j m no teen-agei bj almost ha u a cfcnturv, but I’ve nisi spesl one ot Ihe most enlightening and en joyable davs I can remember with the idol of millions of young ladies The pleasant eneigetic and tuclcss young man is oi com sc Pal Boone I had a special leason foi anting to spend a typical wOl King dav with Pat In Washington I have heaid Mc.m discussions on what to do in leducc juvenile delinquency lucre have been many coni cr imes by cducatois social woil ciPand law enloicement oflicials is the subject The usual complaint was tha< voung loIKs lack ambition and v illingncss to do haid work Youth they aid is lacking in the s cong moial qualities upon which t« ih lorefatheis built this nation 1 don t believe it \ Example .\ioie voting people admue Pat L'j» ne than peihaps am olhei i'l'son In mg 1 wanted to know nat the finalities in him weie N-bal atli acted so mam voun2 on thusiasts to line! out what he icmlH is like His television show is \o 1 < all half-hoin musical pi o Hi has made onh three movies in two vtais but he tanks \t 3in movie bo\ oilitc attiac t,ons He is estimated to have an audience of 23 mdbon on TV al< ne Pals dav at 20lh CenUiiv-Fo' Naan at Bam making a movie < ilk (1 Maidi Gras The scene a- a palk m New Orleans Ten ★★★ ★ ★ THIS WEEK —ln Washington With. Clinton Davidson Pat Boone 1 iIK, coloied children each with a musical instmment, were in a cmi pulled by a donkey This formed the oichestra Pat sang a song and ashe clane eci he Jell backwards ovei a small hedge The day was hot, the don ke' was stubborn the children weie diJlicult to conhol, and the scene had to he taken and re taken trom Sam until 3 p m The 36th National Agricultural Outlook Conference, sponsored by the USDA, will be held in Wash ington, D C dunng the week of Nov 17-21 On hand lor the Conference Will be state extension agricul tural economists and home econo mists fiom thioughout the con- Ile aimed home at 630 and an (mental United Stales Hawaii horn iatoi he was at the Dot Re- end Puicto Rico, and representa coiding Studios to record some Fees of USDA’s Maiketmg, Ro il, w songs At the end of two £'’aich Foicign Agnculture For boms the lust song had been le osuav, Commodity Stabilization, coided seventeen times and Fedcial Extension Services The director Randy Woods During the fix e-day meeting, vho is President of Dot Records, pmuupants will the lia ble , avvs diflicull to satisfy Final- t, mal and international econo- Iv at 930 pm he said he would mu outlook longtime agncul use (he lust hah of the 11th ie- t.nal trends and the immediate cm ding and the last hall ol the outlook lot agncultuie including 17th Pat continued to work on specific agricultural commodi othci i ecoi dings until 1130 tcs i doubt if any adult m the Unit- Nathan M Kotlskv, chiel. P’aim id Slates vho criticize piesenl- Income Branch Agi icultuial Mar da\ young people woiks as haid keling Seivice. ill present the «s Pat He held down three lull ‘national economic situation and tune obs while attending Colum- outlooks ’ bia Umveisity and still graduated One of the highlights ol the among the lop 50 of his class last mornings conleicme will b<> TO USE CAUTION IN BUYING SEEDS Duung the next several Jjo lias continued lus studies heie a fane] discussion by agncultuial month many fanners will be ordeung their seed supplies for 1959 in Hollywood c o \ernmental and business in some cases weed seeds are puichased along with the upphes and If vou w'ant to encoiuage and spokesmen The Monday after- planted on the land This is often true in the case ol home grown red n .pne am voting people \ou n,)on sesslon Wlll bc devoted to clover seed Pioduccis of seed could have a tet made to determine c iniiot do It bellei iti m In u,-; c,i ‘- cus ‘’ lon ol lht! national econo- the weed piesent and huyi of seeds should insist on knowing exactly |v >ic situation and outlook foi what they aie buying and planting Certified seeds cairy insurance gcstuig they emulate Pat Boom 1959 against this problem -tiusic Makei At a time ot clav when most business men aic headed tor home 01 the soil couise, Pat dash ed Irom the movie scone to a sound stage to iccord musical numbeis until 6 pm caster Farming has insured its growth dur ing the past three years By continuing to provide better cov erage of FARM news and any other serv ices possible, for our readers, the staff of Lancaster Farming hopes to continue that growth. With our physical improvements, we ask the opportunity to provide the serv ices you need and want This includes providing “social news” coverage of meetings, for the farmer, his wife and family It also includes reporting new de velopments in which you are interested. If jou hear of something new and would like to know more, write or call our office and ask us to print the information. We’ll do our best to obtain the facts and report them for you and your neighbors If you have suggestions, don’t hesi tate to present them Qur future success depends on how well we serve the fann ing industry of Lancaster County Our value to the reader is the sole standard for how well we serve that industry. Next week we will appear with a slightly different face, but the same desire to be your Number One hired hand, bring ing information to help earn or save on your farm Our new business address is 53 N. Duke St, Lancaster Don’t hesitate to call if you have something to say to us, or think that we might be able to help you 01, especially if you wish to point out a mistake Lancaster Farming Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly Alfred C Alspach, Publisher, Dan McGrevv, Editoi, Robert G Campbell, Advertising Director; Robert J. Wiggms, Circulation Director Established November i, 1975 Published every Friday by OCTORARO NEWSPAPERS, Quarry ville. Pa Phone STerlmg 6-2112 or Lancaster, Entered as Second-Class matter at the Post Office, Quarryville, Pa, u»"ler Act of March 3, 1879 Subscription Rates- $2 per year, three years $5, Single copy Price 5 cents. Express 4-3047, 4—Lancaster Fanning, Friday, November 14, 1958 , above all m people, and people aie Bible Sl.ifcn.il: Matthew 8 1-17, Ma.k ™ le than souls, they aie souls-m -1 29-3 la - bodies Devotional Beading: Matthew 9 35-38 Bcdy and Soisl Lesson for November IG, 1958 DRIVING thiough the typical American community, the vis itor gets the impiession that healthy people live hpre. All the persons he sees aie able-bodied and active But if you laid out on the courthouse lawn all the sick, the lame 01 the incapacitated, who be- long to that com munity, you might think it a ' pietty sickly & town Nowadays *?***" we keep our sick '■? folk caiefully out But is is differ- gadjpjT ent in the Oi lent, sSp, wheie people S**»a *31... I with all sort of - Foreman diseases aie to be seen on every stieet It was diffeient in Palestine in Jesus’ time One late afternoon, we lead, they biought all the sick people in town (including some mentally ill) to the house wheie Jesus was staying, and collected aiound the door, a melancholy sight. People are More Than Souls That happened to be a Sabbath day and Jesus had been fas we would say) to chuich and had taught there He had also icstoied a man who had been under the in fluence of a sci eammg devil, if in deed he was not one himself, and moie quietly and privately he had healed his host’s mother. In the morning she had been too sick to go to church, after Jesus had cuied her she was able to get a meal for the family (Jesus’ cures weie not half-way staits ) You might think he would be tiled, and piobably he was; but this yard-full of sick people, out under the twilight sky, moved him to action He did not say, and he never said on any occasion of lecoid, to the sick that their sickness was doing them good, just accept it! He did not say, “I am a physician of souls —my mtei est is in the spmt of man, not his body ” And above all, he did not say, “All youi pain and ★★★ ★ ★ Now Is The Time . . . By MAX SMITH County Agncultuial Agent TO TOP-DRESS NEW LEGUMES The applica tion ol strawy manure to a new legume seeding •T that did not get too much fall growth is recom mended during November or December The new plants should have some protection from the con i, slant fieezmg and thawing duung the winter. New sepf^ln ss that leached at least 6 to 8 inches of growth may not need this application on fertile vjni sml, TO PROTECT LATE CUT LEGUMES Some H forage pioduceis have icnioved the last cutting ■B AvJHHB of alfalfa or clover too late to permit the desired 6‘ to 8 inches of growth before ficezing weather Max Smith This means that the legume loots will be more exposed to freezing this wmtei The application of 6 to 8 tons per acre of trawey manuie this fall should help protect the plants TO PLAN CHICKWEED CONTROL The pioblem of chickweed contiol exists on many local farms, this is especially tiue in new seeding!, ol legumes or pastures With ideal growing conditions this fall we can expect rank growth ol this wmtei-time weed One of the best moans of control is to spray during late November or December with ehloio-IPC at the late ot 2 pints (one pound) per acre when the tempciatuie is below 50 degrees One ot the watei-soluble Dim tros spiays mav be used at the rate ol 3 pints per acre when the outside tcmperaliuc is 65 degiees or above The important thing to i eep in mind is to sprav this fall ox early winter when the plants are young rather than next winter or spring when the plants are matin e Buffeting, your biokon legs, your ulceis, are not leal, they are only mistakes in your moital mind. Think you aie well and you will bo well, for pain and illness do not exist” Quite the contiary. Jesus was conceincd for these people’s physical health, he made cures of leal diseases Foi he was interested Body Supports Soul The Chnstian chinch today is coming awake to this fact Wo knew it all the time, but now we aie doing something about it The gieat intei est m healing which is now being shown by even the “old line” chinches, the giowth of hos pitals opeiated by the chinch, and the contribution the dun dies make (as in Boy Scout woik, in play giounds and in good health msti ac tion towaid preventive medicine, are evidence of this ) A man who has been raising funds for a Chus uan hospital in the southern moun tains wutes, “The appeal ... is meeting with almost unbeheveable success, thanks to the Gieat Gali lean whose spa it is the challenge ” One of the reasons why Christ first, and the chinch after him, have been mteiested in physical health is that if we are interested in the human spuit—as indeed we must be —we cannot afford to ne- gleet the body as if it did not mat ter Bodily illness affects the mind and the soul A healthy body sup poits a healthy mind and soul. Soul Supports Body On the othei hand, Jesus himself moie than once showed that he knew this woiks both ways If body suppoits soul, so soul suppoits body Some doctor has calculated that moie than half the patients in Amencan hospitals on any given day, would not be theie if they had a dilfeient attitude to waid life A young man lay dying of pneumonia away back BP Befoie Penicillin—with a nuise on duty, when there was a knock at the door No one thought the pa tient was conscious, but he was, and all set to die, till he heaid the visitor whispei, “How is he 9 ’’ The nurse answered, “He won’t last till morning ” The physical disease was not touched by those words, but the young man’s spirit was “I made up my mind I’d get well.” he said . and he did Long ago it was a proveiD - “A meny heart doeth good like a medicine, but a bioken spirit dneth up the bones ” (Bimml on outlines oop'v righted by the BiMsion of Christian Education. Nition il ( oimr I of the Chinches o< Christ m tlie T T S. A Released by Commumt\ Pi ess ben ice )