4—Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, October 24, 1959 FROM WHERE WE STAND - Economize Does Not Mean Skimp Currently making tire rounds is an old story about the fellow -who took Such long steps to keep from wearing out his $lO.OO shoes that he split his $2O. pants In these days of high production costs and lowered margins of profits we are all looking for ways to cut expenses and achieve the same results. Wise use of resources and not squan dering or wasting what is available are principles no one can argue with, but there is such a thing .as false economy. We believe that taking materials out of the soil and not'putting them back is an example of false economy. At a recent com demonstration plot our County Agricultural Agent stated that soil test results from the Pennsylvan ia State University show that our county is at the bottom of the list of counties in the percentage of organic matter in the soil. This is, we believe,, a serious indict ment against the farmers of the Garden Spot of the world. Soil concervationists tell us that soil low in organic matter is more subject to erosion from-woter. They also tell us ’ that one of the most effective soil conser vation measures is covering the soil with a close-growing crop, and still year after year we see com fields cdl over the county standing bare to the ravages oi rain, snow and ice from October to March. During the past week a very good Lan caster County farmer was overheard to say, as die was talking about seeding rye in his com ground, "fertilizer comes pretty high, so we go a little easy on it." We believe this is a case of false econo my. Rye and ryegrass planted for winter cover crop to be plowed under in the spring will go a long way toward replac Davidson Suppose you invited every body in the world for din ner some evening, how big a table would you have to set? The U. S Department of Agriculture has figured out the answer and has provided you with it, just in case it seems like a good idea to you. It is in the 1959 “Year book of Agriculture’' called “Food.” First you'll need a table three feet wide. It will take two feet of space along each side to seat each of your It wou id be a mistake to guests. You’ll have approxi- the invitation off until mately 2,800 million who un- your grandchildren are old doubtedly will want to ac- enou gh to extend 'it. That cept your kind invitation. would be about the year of If you set your table up at 2000, and the USDA thinks the equator they will extend more than twice as many 22 times around the earth would accept the invitation. If. you plan on such a party One third of them would be for this week-end, don’t put Chinese, and goodness knows it off until next week If you how many communists there do 200 more miles of tables might be. will have to be added just to The guest list, in 2000, take care of the increase in probably would include 400 million Americans, the De partment estimates. If you seated all of the Americans I anracfor c. rm ; n . at one table, it would extend Lancaster harming three times around the earth. Lancaster County-. Own Farm wfaat Jo Feed Them p o. Box 1524 Finding enough food to offices:** r ’ Penna ’ give everybody in the world 53 North Duke st. a square meal in only 41 Lancaster, Penn*, years from now may be Ron EXprM« c tm7 quite a problem, the Depart- Jack Owen, Editor ment warns. At present the Robert G Campbell. Advertising World has 1.25 acres of Usab- Director & Business Mbn.iger j e so j] f or eac h person. Established November 4. 1955 By drainage of marsh land. Published overy Saturday hy Lancaster Farming. Lancaster, Pa irrigation and remOraßgtOf all Entered as 2nd class matter at trees We Can eXjHjjHL OUr Pa under Act of Mar food producing acr'iHß by Jot Pa ftddltlonal entry at Mount only about by Subscription Rates: *2 per ye»r;£tho year 2000, there' ivilfT be 6 1 c?nts earB ,5- SlnßlB C ° PT I>rlc *|only a little more than,half Members Pa Newspaner Pubieh acre per person. ' yc-. era- Association; National Editor ■ Of course, W 6 expect to ui Association. B earn a great deal more a- ~ _ i. _ B*>out increasing yield per population, THIS WEEK —ln Washington With Clinton Davidson Food For Everyone Dinner for 30 Cents It need not be an expens ive dinner if you give the guests only the food for which they are .accustomed. The cost would be only about a billion dollars roughly 30 cents each. One out of four of your guests would be a Chinese and one out of' three would be from a communist coun- try. More than half of them would prefer rice as their main dish at the meal. mg the humus lost from.the soil through - a good crop of corn, but why deprive a crop of the plant food it needs to make dll the growth possible in the growing time allotted to It Tests show that al most all the plant food applied to a crop to be plowed down is recovered by the following crops. Farmers sometimes plant a crop' with the idea of plowing it down but decide that it would be a shame to do 'that without taking off a crop for hay or pas ture* -This too is false economy. Many of’ our neighbors could well afford to - plant a green manure crop, especially those without livestock in their farming . program since they do not have barn yard manure to replace the used up hu mus. But some people will point to the pro duction records in our county and say . you can’t argue with success. Lack cf organic mgtter in our soils will not abso- itely prevent a good yield, but agronom ists point out that soil high in humus ■ will hold plant food In much more readily available form. High amounts of organic ■ matter will increase the water holding capacity of the soil thereby making _ more water available to plants in dry weather and at the same time reduce the chances of erosion. We feel thaf in our intensive farming region we need more grass crops fertiliz ed just as hard as we fertilize the row crops that bring in the immediate cash returns. Plant foods can not be cOntin uglly mined year after year without even tually running out. Farmers must learn that they can stretch their fertilizer dollars just so far without splitting their cash returns. 'At least that’s how it looks from where we stand. acre through new and im proved plants varieties, in sect and pest control, and a bout increasing meat and milk yields per animal. We have approximately doubled our U. S. food pro duction per acre in the past 50 years, and we’ll need to double it again in the next 40 years just to keep up with the population increase. Our greatest contribution to the world peace, USDA thinks, may be in helping other countries expand their production of food at least as rapidly as their population grows. Cancer Society Awards Funds To U.S.D.A. With a recent grant of $lOO,OOO from the American Cancer Society, the USDA plans to intensify research on avian leukosis, a cancerous disease of chickens. With these additional funds, the research now being done on poultry cancer by USDA scientists at the Regional Poultry Research Laboratory at East Lansing, Mich., will be stepped up. Most of the work will be devoted to vis ceral lymphomatosis, or “big liver, one of poultry’s big gest killers and the most dif ficult of any of the avian cancers to detect. Poultry cancers cannot be transmit ted to man, but since all can cers are caused by uncontrol led cellulan growth, and sig nificant findings on poultry cancer or new laboratory techniques may be adaptable to human cancer research. STORE GARDEN TOOLS Store garden tools by stic king-them in a tray or box of sand mixed with a small amount of crank case oil. The mixture cleans the tools and keeps them rust free. The sign of wisdom is one's willingness to listen and learn. Bible Material: Acts 4 1-31. Devotional Beading: I Peter 6 6-11. Brave Men Lesson for October 25, 1959 CHRISTIANS have always had a tradition of courage. But there is a special quality about Christian courage that gives it distinction. Two of the original Apostles, Peter and John, demonstrated''a specially Christian variety of brav ery when they bearded the San hedrin The expert iuld hi frightened al most nny one. The men whom Peter and John faced at their trial were the very same who had '‘legally” murdered JTesu j only a few weeks before this time. The Sanhedrin was a combination of „Pope,, 'Su preme Court They were the supreme authority in the land. They could get people killed. Nobody would think of "bucklfig” them. Yet P-ter and John did ex actly that. Thar* It Or* Higher One special feature of Christian courage Is that It IS not fngbtened by high authority. When asked how he managed to have thenerve to defy Hitler, Martin NiemoeHer (who had been a naval officer un der Hitler) said, “It was simple. I had a higher Fuehrer, a higher Leader." Christiana alwayaknow that above every human, earthly authority they have an allegiance to the All-Highest. They may real ize that human can make it very unpleasant f6r them; but that makes no difference. 1 Take the case of Ambrose, a bishop of Milan nearly seventeen centuries ago. Emperor-Theodosius appeared one morning at the bishop’s church, expecting the red carpet treatment as usual. But not this time. For Ambrose was at the door and would not let the emperor in. Theodosius as emperor had Just been in a war. Ambrose was not a pacifist, but he knew that his royal highness Theodosius had sltugh- Now Is The-Time ... TO COOPERATE WITH CENSUS ERS —-An Act of Congress calls for i sus of Agriculture every five y eaK last one was taken in 1954 and the one will soon get underway throu the country. Information gathered v useful to farm planning for the nes years. Farmers are urged to cooper TO TEST FARM GROWN SEEDS seeds offered for sale in Penna mi' 5 ' beled &s. to'- variety, kind of seed, MAX SMITH germination percentage, and noxioi count. Contact the Seed Laboratory, Bureau of dustry, State Department-of Agriculture, Harrishu They will furnish the proper blanks and give testu cedure. TO PROVIDE DAIRY CALVES WITH QUALITY & All dairy calves should have free access to high P ll3 * 1 at all times. From a few weeks of age the average ca eat hay and should have liberal amounts each dry alfalfa or clover hay are excellent sources of feed nU and will develop depth of body and a large feed cap fil TO VENTILATE DAIRY BARNS—Most barns arc » capacity and need some means of forced air manual control of doors and windows is not satis most instances. The ugc, of an electric _fan exhaust is recommended in order to keep the ai» more fresh to cow comfort, and increase the quality of the mdk cd. Pamphlet on Dairy Bam Ventilation is a%ailab le Extension Office. terod over 7:000 p eoh . of'Thessalonics, were- non-combatants °i war-crime, Bish on pointed out. It was mi tera of old King D a ' must do penance as said, "or I will never«, ray chuich ” The e J have killed Ambrose h many for less; but Am age conquered him n e public penance, too. and no more slaughters 0 £ t Two Thousand Tumult, "I have put down t w tumults,’’ said anothe preacher, at the close which had been packed row escapes. His nan, Calvin. Starting out a and writer, a shy sort he had been drafted mt a virtual dictator of needed a dictator if 0 i The city threw him out, long they discovered ' not get along withoui persuaded him to returi different kind of couiag age needed by a man n in high position. Against Madnm If one kind of Chilsti !a to stand up against thority in the name of t If another kind is to sti the crowd for what a to be right, there Is t of Christian courage needed sometimes It losing kind, at tha tins thrilling all the same Chinese "mob, one diyat nlng of this century, »n der in their hearts am their liands,-surrounded ary named Horace Pit you anything to say be: you’” they sciearned he. “Tell my son to c< China and take my p eniperors can be pers crowds can be contro mob with the taste < simply mad; and wit there is no aigument Pitkm to pieces. Yet seemingly hopeless com reward. When Horace 1 went out to take his fat as he did, he found, as first converts, a man w had watched that mlsi "From that moment,” t said, “I wanted to 1 about the religion of i would not be afraid " \ 1 (Based on outlines coj the Division of Chrivtia National Council of tha Christ in the C. S A Community Tress Service * «. BY MAX SMITH