—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 2, 1962 4 From Where We Stand ... Graduates —Your Bargain With Life To the graduates of 1962 May we add our voice to all the messages ot congratulation you will 'receive That sheepskin you carry so proud- Iv does not mean you are “Educated’ . It means that you should now have enough “appreciation” ot education to want to “become educated”. Your intellectual horizons should have now been widened and you should have an appreciation of where you want „o go and how to get there The time has come when, if you have not already done so, you must make your bargain with the world This is something you will have to do for yourself, your parents, your teachers, or your government can not do it for you You have been supplied with the tools ol bargaining during the past tour years, and the kind of bargain you make inay be determined by how well you have learned to use those tools You can be almost anything you want to be. or do almost anything you want to do if you are willing to work lor it and sacrifice for it Now is the time to begin working lor what you really want out of life .Remember those who merely chase happiness in life never quite catch up with it The truly happy person is he who knows what he wants and is con tent to work toward his goals As you prepare to make your bar gain with hie you have to have goals. You must look toward the future, but ; ou must live in the present The toiler without a dream a goal will all his hte moil in the mud _'he dreamer without the will to work _or his dreams is destined to become a frustrated visionary No one will seriously tell you that ; our bargain with life will be easy Bar gains with life never have been easy, out they can be pleasant Each of us, no matter how rich or how poor, how capable or incapable, has a sacred obligation to do the best we can to make this country we live in apd the world we live on a better place because we were here If we may be allowed one little bit ot advice it is this Look back to recall only the pleasant times; look ahead with nope; look to yourself with confidence, and look up with faith. Congratulations, Good Luck, and God bless you * * Artificial Dairy month might not be the most (appropriate time to mention the iollowing, but we believe dairymen ought to be aware of any situation which will directly effect their markets In a recent issue of the trade jour nal, “Printers' Ink”, a publication direc ted to the advertising industry, was the following announcement of a new pro duct. As foods high in poly-unsaturates gain favor among cholesterol-conscious consumers, more attention is being • Twilight Meeting (Continiiod fioin Pi;p I) (Ii is !,i iss si lui his cows i .mu 1 1) 111 111 OCIIICtICHI Ul ojKM.it ions mi Incline Mlo lilline will lio i,oimi; on (’ n i iiu lln moot infi 'l'li Sol.i in () Kiimi is Assoc iit ion issue's ,m nuita i ion to .ill mill ostocl l.niiifis hi conn mil to tin cioinon- 1 1 .i I ion 1 .idii s ,i i o .iiso iii\ nr c] to •In niiiliiu ,nul lotioshinonts i n lln hum .itlii tlio moot inti It.mi (j - hit i|/ p.i OfllCC'S 22 i: Mam St Pint/ I’i Phono - Lam a‘dot 4-lo I 7 or hint/ M \ (,-21 ‘II J.u U Owen hchtor Polar t (', ( ampbcll Adveili-niL, Unector given to developing a larger variety of these foods “A Los Angeles dairy—Beverly Franilla Milk Co—is marketing the ‘first imitation milk made with safflower oil,’ considered to be higher in poly-un saturates than any other vegetable oil “Count-Staff, made from 100 per cent whole milk with the butterfat re moved, is marketed in one-quart 'car tons and is said to have a shelf life of 13 days “Described as ‘tasting better than the best glass of milk you ever tasted,’ Count-Staff is now making its debut in Southern California, promoted via TV, radio and newspapers, and direct mail ” We may be old fashioned, but to us, 100 '< whole milk “with the butter fat removed” is still skim milk whether it be called “non-fat milk”, “defatted milk” or any of the other names dreamed up to try to make skim milk more appealing The thought of an artificial milk, using safflower oil, or any other veg etable oil, to reconstitute skim milk to a product resembling whole milk, is positively nauseating If we are to drink 100 per cent whole milk, we want it with butterfat intact We believe the type of advertising in the above announcement could have a very undesirable impact on the entire dairy industry, but we do not believe dairymen should attempt to have the product outlawed We believe that if dairymen had spent as much effort and money pro moting butter as they expended m lighting oleomargenne, they would now be in a much better position We believe the dairymen should present the fact that NOTHING is bet ter than the best glass of milk you ever tasted At least that’s how it looks from where we stand Exercise in Citizenship Have you ever thought of paying your income tax as an exercise in citizenship 9 That’s what Mortimer Caplin, commissioner of Internal Revenue called it recently at a meeting of the News paper Farm Editors in Washington. One thing told the editors by Cap lin should be of little comfort to farm ers Of the estimated $24 4 billion in come not reported, approximately $l2 billion is in farm and industrial profits. Farmers’ tax reporting habits have improved greatly in recent years, he said and “I am convinced that a large portion of any underreporting or overre portmg b3 r farmers as a group is due to lack of understanding of complex tax laws ” And we can add a hearty “Amen - ’ -to Mr Caplin's concludings tatement, “I am certain that when properly inform ed of his rights and obligations, the American farmer will comply with the tax laws forthrightly and fairly ” At least that’s how it looks from where we stand. it/ Pa Entered is 2n<] (lass niattPi at hitit/ P.i iUKii‘l A<( ot Alai S, IST') Snbsi 11 p! ion Hates S 2 per jear three \oais t", Single copv Pi hi, ", (puis Member Pa Newspapers Pnb lislieis Association National Editorial Assch latioli ★ ★ Bible Material- I John 3 11-18 4 7- SI 2 John, .5 John Devotional Reading; Homans 12 1 5 Love is of God Lesson for June 3, 19C2 'T'HE Apostle of Love, they call *• him; and John deserves the name. Not that love was spoken for by him alone. Paul speaks of love many a time, and indeed the most famous chapter on love is fiom Paul's kill ings, not John’s. And of couise Je sus gave the clue to both of them when he summed up the whole of the Ten Com mandments, the summSry of God s will for man’s life, in two com- Love thy God, love mandments thy neighbor. God is love However, though others had spoken of love, and given it as a kind of Eleventh Commandment, or summary of all the Law, it was left to John to say something winch no one else, not even Jesus, had said; God is love. This is at the same time profound and diffi cult, and also simple and clear. This is not a pioposition which can be turned end-foi-end and still be hue. God is love, but love is not God. Love, John says, is “of God” or “from God” as the New English Bible translate it. That is, God is the source of all the love theie is, here or m the fai thest galaxies Love is not some thing which human beings fiist discovered or invented, and then “thought-into” God. We do not ascribe love to God; we find it there, in him. Now' you might ex pect, somew'here in the Bible, to find similar statements, for in stance that God is power, or jus tice, or joy. But no Bible writer ever said it. We can only thrust our thought in the direction in which that shoit sentence points, “God-is love;” we cannot fathom or fully say what it finally means. But we may judge that love is a better word to expiess what God is, than those other words Power or Justice or Joy or anything else. We may also dare to bjehev e that Now Is The The surampi months bring the annual problem ol (onti oiling house and barn Hies Good sanitation practices at all times are veiy important and eliminates many Ily bi ceding places Dimetlioate is the new re sidua 1 spiay this year tor lann buildings woithv ol wide use Details are included in the new Extension Leaflet Vo 34S “PLV CONTROL ” To Koi lew Fire Insurance (’ovepaße The ne\r see oral months include addi tional lire hazaids in the form of electrical stonns, combustion, and the use ot tractora in or near bains Property owners ate urged A 1 \X M. SAIITH fo (heck their insuiance policies to deter- mine il sufficient coveiage is being earned Replacement eosls hn\e me teased since manv buildings hat e been erected, and it is the feeling that many farm owners are not protect! d enough tow aid replacement costs in case of loss To L'si> Good Siro'i o\ei the present animals Xo one hum will do more To ( ultivate <’orn With to unpune the type and email- Caution tv oi livestock laslei than to Corn produceis are rennml nse outstanding sues on the ed of the dangei of shearing lemale held oi Hoik many loots u the cultivator gets too hieeders (ontmne to use in- close and too deep along (he lei 101 hulls lams, or hoars not i o\v ol cm Many plants are leilizmg that this one animal mimed bv this piaitice inh will have enoi mons intluence Yields aie n dneed Operators on the leplacement stock ol culrivatoi s should check the iManv livestock authoiitics m- position ol their inside culli sist that the sire is hall ol the vatoi teeth when staitmg the held and that the best aie the field As the corn glows the onlj ones to considei HreeJeis rooths spread out further into aie utged to select sues cu c- the i ow, this means that the lullv and he willing to invest cultivators should be set wider sntbc lent dollais to improve at each cultivation love i< God’s basic quality; justice, his glory, his power, ar ; such as infinite and perfect W. brings forth. V| Qod is not sontlmsntal I Perhaps it is wise to put v something here which has otu been said, but which seems tj have escaped the notice of to tt many people. The word “love" as John uses it (not to mention Paul and Jesifk) is not sentunen, tal. It has nothing to do heart-throbs or spells of emotion When the Empeior Titus one at a public appearance granted * request made by a Roman P e u. tioner, a member of the court said to him afterwards, ‘ How could your majesty promise th* man what you did? It is not poj. sible to keep that promise, is if" “No,” the Emperor replied, know it is not possible; but 1 did not want the man to go away du. appointed.” That is kindliness, but it is not love. To take an op*, posite example, the family of a certain victim of polio went to some trouble not to help the boy. They just made him learn to help himself in spite of his handicap. Love, in short, is unselfish concern,—persistent, intelligent, working concern for others. It» a constant and consistent attitude rather than occasional outbursts of emotion It is this that John means when he talks of “abiding” m love—living in it permanently, maintaining this attitude in spite of all discouragements. No room for fear You would expect John to eon trast love and hate They are a real contrast, but that is not what John brings out. There is no fear in love, he says. If fear and lovo seem to live together in the heart, John would say, that is a sign that the love is not perfect; if it were, the fear would vanish. This is not to say that love casts out fear in God—that would be an absurd remark, for a frightened God would be no God at all. John u thinking of oui selves He might even be thinking of our situation in 1962. People are afraid, feai stalks around the globe. But peo ple are afraid because they do not trust God; and they do not trust because they do not love. If somi one asks, “But how can I lov« God 9 ” He does not need my help, he does not need any looking after. John would say this is ask ing the wrong question first. It is our fellow-man who- does nceil help and sympathy. If it seemi too high' a thing to love the God who is love, let us begin by lovmj those around us who are not love 1 (Based on outlines copyrighted fc| the Division #f Christian .Education National Council of the Churches o| Christ In tha V. S. A. Released b| Community Frees Service.) Time . . . MV M \X SMITH To I Tad ice Fl,> Control