4—Lancaster Fanning, Saturday. September 12. 1959 For Dairy Cows Good Urea Feeds OK ,Many dairymen having farm-grown grains could re duce their feed costs this by using a high qual ity, urea-containing supple ment, ' says Dr' Richard S. Adams, Dairy Extension Specialist. Others, he adds, could benefit by feeding a good quality, complete feed containing area. ' Many dairy Tanners are still reluctant to use urea containing feeds, but Dr. Ad ams says this fear of formu la feeds with urea is largely unfounded today, because satisfactory performance of such feeds has been reported by reputable feed manufac turers. Possible toxic and other adverse effects of urea on the health of cattle have been grossly over-emphasiz ed by many dairymen. Adverse effects of urea on cattle health have been sub- Bulk Tanks Save Steps When planning to equip a dairy barn for pipe line milk ing Chester County Agent Pmbert A. Powers, Jr. sug gests considering where the millr and air lines are to be placed. . Instead of putting the lines at or near the stanchion yoke or. the lie line he advises putting the lines over the loin of the cow. Suspend the air line about 6 to 6V2 feet from the floor, and p l ace the milk line right above the air line. If the milk hne is glass the airline ■will protect it from being bumped. Powers says this layout is suggested for a barn. He fig uries the difference in steps saved over where the line ■was to be placed, add up in a day’s time (2 milkings) to a bout 250 steps. This saved 625 feet of walking each day. In a year’s tune this eliminates more than 47 miles of walk ing. In planning it is wise, he continues, to consider proper Cows' First Milk Is Vital For Calves' Good Health White scours,* the violent diarrhea which threatens the lives of newborn calves, is best controlled by colo strum, the first milk produc ed by a cow after a ca'f is bom Colostrum is rich in any bodies, substances which are absorbed by the calf and help destroy the bacteria which cause scours, reports ~Dt. Paul J. Glantz, bacter iologist at the Agricultural .Experiment Station, the Pennsylvania State Univer sity. Dr. Glantz says white scours is a baffling disease to control because outbreaks seem hope’essly unpredict able It is known that scours appears in baby calves with in 48 hours of birth Lancaster Farmino Lancaster County’* Own Weekly F. O Box 15M I.ancaste Penna. ' Offices 53 Noi fh Duke St. Lancaster, Penna, FhOne Doncaster Express 4-3047 Dmn McGrow, Editor; Robert G Campbell Advertising Director S’ Business M>m liter Established November 4 IDS’ Published every Saturday by ILan caster Farming. Lancaster. Pa Entered a« ‘’nd class ms”t> at Lancaster Pa under Act of Mar 8, If?' 1 -rM'Homl entry a* Ummt Joy, Fa Subscription Bates- $2 per year; tttirae years $5 Single copy Price 6 O^Pt^ Bfemlu rs Pa Newspaper Publeh ers- apow-i-».nn National r irm la! Association. stantiated in only few instances. Some research indicates that much higher levels of urea than are found in most feeds are not harmful to cat tle when properly used and fed. , bibty between the legislative A number of good quality judicial and- administrative commercial supplements branches of government is with urea are being sold, being tested in Washington When oil meals are high in this week, price, such'as this winter r - The public has been in urea-containing supplements vited to hear and participate are often cheaper sources of in debate over whether an protein equivalent. administrative agency should issue an order having the ef- Dr. Adams believes econ- f ec t 0 f law without the spe omics should determine cifica’ly stated consent of the whether or not a good quali- Congress. ty, urea -containing feed (liQ- Secretary of Labor James uld or dry) should be fed. It Mitchell, will decide on the there is a distant price ad- basis of the arguments, -whe vantage, dairymen need not to make permanent a hesitate to use a good feed tentative order that would with urea according to the delegate to his subordinates feeding instructions given by the power to establish mm a reputable manufacturer hnum wages and working conditions for more than one million hired farm workers. The question, howeve- is much deeper ' and broader ; than that of applying rrrni . mum wages to farm workers. . It involves the whole consent . of the function of an admin istrative agency,- of -vwhch , the/" are hterahy hundreds ’ in Washington. Law By Interpretation Is n 'aw just what Cong ress Says, or is it what the , lawyers in an administrative aeoncv interpret it to Some interpretation fm | onrnt'v is necessary bu+ that : interpretation should r~+ go beyond the Uea L umnt of 1 Cc ng v ess. No agency should over it has any an ’ Ihnn'tv simply because Con ■ gross has not said it doesn't ; have it Tf js conceded that f'on ■ gress never has spec'fto-^llv : pran+eri the Secretary o' Lab or authority to set minimum v/nges tor farm workers But t is ■’rwnje.d by tho e bwk’ug ; ihe o,r!er. neither ha c it er ; m a 'v,"i Le cannot iss"/> su - W - -Ur.v CJq ,•+ ~ ded, issuance of the order • would not be a violation of • anv law rr ’' s we think, Js no f val id reasoning. The order it m,t into effect and not revised, enu’d become a precedent th xat would open the wav for other agencies to, in effect, make laws by interpretation. Lam B. Interpretafiov Months ago Secretary Mit chell an able and tious administrator, asked At torney General Wililam P Rogers for an official ruling on whether he had the au thority to issue the proposed order. pitch of line, one milk cock for every three cows, cut use of risers, and eliminate un necessary piping so proper cleaning can be done. Bulk milk handling is the answer to re'ieving the 40,- 000 dairymen in Pennsylvan ia from the staggering job of lifting a yearly total of 6.7 billion ibs. of milk from the million cows on dairy farms. Every morning, as well as every evening, about nine million lbs. of milk are re moved from the cows to the milk house. Each day he 35,000 farm ers who don’t have bulk tanks 1 ft, carry, tote, roll, shove, and push about 16 million lbs of milk in about 200,000 - 40 qt. cans. The empty cans alone weigh a bout 5V2 million pounds. Use of conveyer systems, pipe line milkes, and bulk milk tanks are relieving da’rymen of untold labor just as ou door farm machin ery has taken the back breaking work out of farm ing. Use of antibiotices, such as aureomycm, must be admin istered almost as soon as a calf is born, Dr. Glantz ad vises, if the dosage is to be most effective Dairymen have found this treatment very helpful, ac- companied by the immedi ate use of colostrum, but it does not take the place of clean and comfortable hous ing The infection is started be fore the digestive tract of the ca’f has become accust omed to any kind of food, Dr. Glantz asserts. At this tune the organism causing the disease passes more eas ily from the in estine into the blood of the calf Unfortunately, not all an tbodi.es in the colostrum will protect the calf against the specific E Coli type of bac teria causing scours. In recent years, Dr Glantz has been able to isolate from Pennsylvania sources several disease - producing strains of E coli Farm Two of these strains are very deadly and hard to con trol Some of these strains have been found in human infants and there is increas ing evidence of their effect upon diseases among many farm animals Lancaster Farming Classified Ads Get Results This Week in Washington by Clinton Davidson Matter Of a very Prmciple The basic philosophy un derlying our democratic sys tem of a division of responsi- After long study Mr Ro gers ruled (1) that the auth ority was “anphed” in the 30 year old * Act winch established the U. S. Employment Service in the Labor Department and (2) that there is nothing in any law specifically prohibiting him from issuing such an or der. The order, if made effect ive, would delegate to the U. S. Employment Service the authority to require that fa rm employers who obtain out-of-state workers through USES pay at least the pre vailing wage in their area The farm employer also would have to agree to mee* housing standards acceotable to the USES, and to pay trans portation of the workers fr om their home and return when the USES determines -that to be a “common prac tice ” The question isn’t whether these regulations are and reasonable, but rather the fundamental issue of the au thority of an administrative aeency to make rules a-' 3 gulat’ons not c’earlv a- A -«-- ized by Cingress This seems to us to be a serious threat tn cu*- constitutional ion of authority - *he legislature and —«t ive branches of gover ■-* Bible Material: Jonah. Devotional Beading: Psalm 67 For All People Lesson for September IS, 1959 JOINAH is. a strange sort of book. It was placed by the early He brew editors among the prophets; but there is nothing to indicate that Jonah wrote a line of it. Jt is a story abput a prophet rather than sermons by a -prophet. It is strange, moreo;* " ' sthing good issaidabou every one. men tioned in thi book—all excep Jonah Furfhei while prop.he' were expected proclaim Goi word and wi this man Jon, argues with Gi and shows_ very , plainly that he does not think well of .God’s attitude. .Indeed, except when inside the fish, where the man was very pious indeed, Jonah’s remarks_ fre, with one exception rather peevish. _ - . Blind Prophet Nevertheless' the reader learns a great deal from this book. Jonah is generally wrong, but God is right. The trouble-With this frac tious prophet was that he could not see things as God saw. them. Maybe this makes him no prophet, some-one will ask. To be sure, he is never called a prophet in this book, but he must be counted one, for he did filially say what the Lord told him to say. And still, his stub born peevishness is much more in the picture than his obedience. Forgone thing, Jonah could not see the repentance of Nineveh Nineveh was the capital of As syria, a nation which brought great disasters on the Israelites. Jonah evidently shared, the general opin ion of his fellow-lsraehtes at that period, that the only good Assyrian was a dead Assyrian. The sins of Nineveh were plain enough to Jonah. What he could not see was the people’s repentance and faith. It is a strange contrast we have here: the people of Nineveh who believed God, and Jonah who did Now Is The Time . .. TO BUY SEED SUPPLY The pla .eason for winter grains will soon bi rand and growers are advised to ordei take delivery of ,the ‘ainoynts needs iroper varie res. In many cases the si of the best var.eties becomes exhausted late-comers have to take what is hf oays to plant clean, certified or rcgis seed.' O USE PHOSPHORUS AND POTAi mall grain producers might reduce t 'ount of lodging by using 300 to 401 per acre of an 0-20-20 or 0-15-30 fertilizer at planting This fertilizer will not encourage more rank grow will aid both root and seed development and streng e straw. Also, pasture fields and legume hay fields J ll ' top-dressed this fall with th's fertilizer in order to s r< en the stand for the 1960 season. MAX SMITH TO RODENT PROOF THE CORN CRIBS— Corn crit storage bins should be cleaned and unde rat 311 proof before the new crop is harvested. These rode 11 reduce the feeding value and the sale value of corn on the ear or shelled. The use of hardware clot shields, and masonry construction will reduce the 1 tion and infestation. TO CLIP THOSE PASTURES—Good pasture manaj includes frequent clipping as long as the gra ss weeds grow; this not only improves the general apP ‘ of ’the areas but encourages new growth, permits n form grazing, and stops weed seed- formation TO VENTILATE THOSE TOBACCO SHEDS— A ll sources of ventilation should be utilized to moving in the tobacco barns and sheds under h ’ weather conditions. The present crop is quite n full of sap ; recent weather conditions have f a%or^ r burning”. Many growers are using large fans to air through the tobacco, special attention to tin s will pay dividends. not; the people 0 f MjA,, pented and Jonah who'r the story goes) never i of his attitude to had what is now called type” m his mind when i! of a Nmevito, that w ” ture which he could' a picture of a hopelcao and wicked man AumJ. vite, weeping f ol hlg n something so strange tn r he could not see it J No lyi for Children At the end of the sto God is explaining to j he (God) took pity on ' capital city, 120,000 mentioned who ”du not h right hand fiom thi W ], generally supposed 1 hit i to children God even sp e cattle, the divine mten mals Comes out m this b, where else in the Old T It,is clear that Jonah 1 thought of the children of the cattle' What he see was fire from heav« - nig city Tliat there woul -cent suffereis m the flj not seem to have occun man. Again Jonah had 1 type of Nifteutes “For Our Instruction" “These things were v. our instruction," said a j ment writer about the ( ment' Certainly the bool has something strong to here and now; so strong hard to take (The Israe did “take" the message o of Jonah ) We also have ite stereotypes, we tlimli in certain fixed ways u dom think they could be Let the reader test him do these woids suggest Negro, Russian, boss, hanker, congi essman, s< A. A. C. P, European, union organ® crat? It is safe to say 1 leaders have fixed ■id some of these, and peii fixed hatieds In wa, we always think of the Jonah did of Nineveh, n the hai m the enemy hi us It is a hai d pill to sw we don’t know whethei ( managed to swallow it, b is, we love everybody ( enemies, but God loves o too Peace will neve'' Gods people begin to people God loves (Bared on outlines cop; ins Division ol Chirtian Nntional Council of the < Christ m the l T S A I Community tfiesb Ser.icc) BY MAX SMITH