—Lancaster Farming. Saturday, July 28, 1962 4 From Where We Stand... Winning Is “Have Your Heart In It” “Having your heart in it is a big part of winning, and I love to plow.” That’s the way Everett Kreider ex plained his championship in the Lancas ter County Plowing Matches Now we all know that a certain a mount of skill and preparation goes in to any contest, but we think that this business of having your heart in it is sometimes overlooked or at least overshadowed It reminds us of something Dr. William Henning, Pa. Secretary of Ag riculture used to tell his students in Animal Husbandry at the Pennsylvania State University. “You can not make a champion out of a poor calf, but you can take the best calf ever born and ruin him by poor feeding, fitting or showing.” he would say. *.4* To say it another way, we believe a contestant can never finish higher in a contest than he has a desire to finish. We believe that many farmers make no more money in the business of farm ing than they have a desire to make. We believe there are many farm ers on the land today who have no feel ing for the land or the crops and ani mals that grow from the land. Too many times the unsuccessful farmer is on the farm because he inherited the farming business or other circumstances pushed him into the business without too much choice on his own part We believe, for the most part, the successful farmer is one who conscious ly chose the business of farming as his way of life and has a sincere desire to make it the best business he is capable of making it We believe the successful farmer is one who considers farming a business as well as a way of life and does not think it is undesirable to learn all he can about the business We be lieve the successful farmer is not afraid to try new ideas in his business whether they be proposed by his next door nei ghbor, the county agent, the teacher of vocational agriculture or the professor at the state Land-Grant University. We believe the successful farmer loves the land and his animals and will do all he can to make them earn a comfortable living for him and his family even when it means abandoning some of the tried and true ideas of yesteryear and substituting some newer methods There are still those who are trying to keep the farmer and his family living in ignorance, but they are not succeed ing While farming is still, a way of life, it is also a business, and it must be conducted like a business We do not believe a farmer can ‘'have his heart in farming” without wanting to learn all he can about his chosen way of earning his daily bread. And we do not believe a person can learn everything about any business if he is going to be prudish about the source of his information. At least that’s how it looks from where we stand. ★ ★ ★ ★ Come to The Fair Heigh Ho Come To The Fair! Fall fair season begins next week in Lancaster County. Every day of the NATIONAL FARM' I ft! SAFETY WEEK > P"~< * r i « « ft 7 * 1 ' Lancaster Forming Established November 4, Lancaster County's Own Farm I&SS. Published every Satur- AV eeltly day by Lancabter-Farming, Lit- PO. Bov 1021 !(; Zj p a- Lancaster, Penna. ’ , ’ „ . , P O Box 2GG - Lititz, Pa. Entered as 2nd class matter at Lititz, Pa. under Act of itar. 8, 1879. Offl(es; 22 E jMcim St. Litit?, Pa Phone - Lancaster EXpiess 4-304 7 or Litit/ UA C-2191 - Jack Owen, Editor Robert G Campbell, Advertising Director '.V' week will see a dairy cattle exhibition on the grounds of the Southeastern Ar tificial Breeders Cooperative grounds on Route 230 Bypass Following one fairly quiet week in the show rings, the 4-H swine round up will be followed by the 4-H and FFA dairy shows and we are" almost in to the local Farm Show and Fair season. While the number of local exhibi tions has dwindled in recent years, the quality of exhibits and the keenness of competition have not lost any of their appeal. We would like to urge support of local shows and fairs as one of the best methods of teaching young people the business of farming and the fun of do ing something worthwhile in a spirit of friendly competition. At least that’s how it looks from where we stand. ★ ★ ★ '★ Solids Not Fat Like liver before nutritionists ex plained its worth, the solids that are not fat in milk may be greatly underval uated, according to T. J. Claydon, dairy manufacturing professor at Kansas State University, Manhattan. Dairy processors long have been concerned about the, solids not fat in milk as they affect the quantity of che ese, powdered milk and condensed milk that can be manufactured from milk The sohds-not-fat are primarily proteins, minerals and lactose The pro tein in cottage cheese, for example, is as good nutritionally as the protein in T-bone steaks Lactose is the sugar m milk but it also contains elements used in medicines Milk is an important sour ce of calcium. Nutritionists more and more are stressing the nutritive value of the solids-not-fat in milk, and in dustry is putting less stress on fat con tent and attaching more importance to the solids-not-fat, so producers soon should be paid for solids-not-fat (S.N F.) Claydon thinks that dairymen will be paid partly according to the solids not-fat in their milk as soon as a satis factory method of measuring them has been accepted Sjmple methods have be en developed and tested and appear to be suitably accurate. They are being used by cattle breeders to select lines high in solids-not-fat. In California, some milk is being marketed on this basis Like fat content, solids-not-fat gen erally are highest in milk from Jerseys and Guernseys and lowest from Hoh' steins. Many, but not all, of the same conditions that lower fat content lower solids-not-fat in milk As cows get older, the solids-not-fat in their milk decreases winter increases, summer decreases sol ids-not-fat; diseases lower S.N.F.; low temperatures increase theim, high tem peratures decrease them; and inadequate ration decreases S.N.F. Claydon thinks it not unreasonable to visualize the time special feeding and. special care will be used to produce milk low in fat content and high in solids-not-fat, for a product tailor-made for nutritional standards.— Subscription Rates $2 per year, three jears $5. Single copy Price 5 cents Member Pa Newspapers Pub lishers Association National Editorial Association. The Farmer’s Exchange Bible Material 2 Kings 24 11-16; Jeiemiah 28 1-14, 30 18 24, 31, 32 38. 42, S 3 14-26 Devotional Reading: Psalm 36 6-U, Beyond the Tears Lesson for July 29, 1962 WHEN « disaster falls which you have long predicted, when your warning* have been cast aside year after year, wheh the thing comes to pass that no one but yourself would believe wa» possible, it is a strong tempta tion to lay, or even shout: I TOLD YOU SO!! Jeremiah had too good a heart tit say any such thing. His dark and dire predic tions came true, and he Was not surprised, though every one else was more than surprised, they were thunderstruck. But he did not rub it in. What the people did not realize was that he grieved over the tragedy and the tears of his people more than the people themselves, if possible. His fel low-citizens had long since typed him as a man who looked on the dark side of things by choice, in deed a man who enjoyed being gloomy, and took pleasure in other people’s distress. Life Goes On A major disaster fell on the city of Jerusalem and the surrounding territory of Judah, when the army of Babylon marched in Or rather when they marched away; for in returning to Babylon the army took with them a notable roster of V.I P.’s. Think of it- -Not only the king, the high executu e, and all the palace stag both of officials and servants; hut all the classes of the common people who had Intelligence, strength and skill. Those who would be interested in seeing how a poet of those days 'ooked at the desolation of his city, should read the “Lamenta ,ions” which are anonymous in he original, but which tradition iscnbes to Jeremiah himself. It ooked-like a completely hope ess situation. Yet the prophet wrote a letter to the exile*, with out a word of condemnation in it* mcouraging them to settle down Now Is The crops later this fall and early next spring! During August or September such crops as winter rye, domestic ryegrass, field brotne grasb, and both Dual and Redcoat wheat may be seeded for livestock grazing; all ot these forage crops will inake excellent fop« age late into the fall and early next spring l . Some plans should now he made to fufnish, roughages to help take the place of the ail age and hay fed during these summer ibon* ths MAX M. SMITH TO PEKTIbMK GRASSLANDS August seeding of alfalfa and Both Dasture ahd hay fields a late August seeding of fed should be fertilized to produce dover. If more rams do colfte, their maximum -when soil these August seedings should moisture improves Straight tie fertilized and limed acdbr grass areas should get 50 ding to a complete soil lest, pounds of actual nitrogen per The hand seeding method is acre and grass-legume stands the very best means of estab treated with 800 to 400 hshmg a summer stand. TO OBDER SEED SCPPLffiS add several -weeks to the graz- The grower who obtains his mg season this lall ahd make supply of seeds early usually a late hay cutting possible gets the variety ahd quality that he wants The quantity of some varieties of winter grains is limited and there- TO INSPECT NEW IjEGUME ST.V NOS Many fields of new alfalfa fore, it is advisable to £et and clover have dried up due your needs on band just as to the dry weather A good soon as possible. Store the hay crop for 19G3 may still seeds in a dry place away be secured by making a mid- from all livestock and rodeilts. ' where they were, to build house*, plant gardens, hve normal happy lives. "A Future and a Hope” One difference between dogs, cats and other beasts on the one side, and mankind on the other, is that the lace of man lives much in the future and in the past. We aie particularly unhappy when we see no future. Ours is a dark time for this reason; many shud der at the danger of the atomic age looming with sinister horror over the heads of all the little children of the world. The young er generation is peculiar in being the first younger generation in recorded time that was not en vied by those who are older. What we desire, what we can scarcely find, is (in Jeremiah’s word*) a future and a hope. That wet the , two-fold promise that the prophet made to his defeated people: Can God make us the saihe promise today? Only a prophet could an swer that question for certain. But one thing we may notice: The future for Israel, bright an .it was destined to be (and this in regarded as one of the great Biblical prophecies yet to be ful filled) was a future with in IF in it. tho iNiw Covmnt; the New Uriel The prophets of the Bible sel dom explain their prophecies. They left it to the Holy Spirit, S He will/ to illumine the minds of those who in future centuries would read these ancient proph ecies. Now there are two proph ecies of Jeremiah in particular, both of them messages of hope, which the Christian generally un derstands as not ever completely fulfilled. They are partly fulfilled in each generation; but complete ly in none. One of these prophe cies is that of the New Covenant . (Chapter 31). Have we reached * the time, has the world ever reached a time, when the law of : God is written in all men’s hearts," and when all men from the least to the greatest, shall know th* , Lord? No, we are a long Way •- from this blessed future, to aU" appearances. Then that prophecy anout the Branch: Has any Uhl person ever fulfilled the- wotdaj . about the “righteous Branch/’,?j«" Has any earthly monarch merited i the title? The Christian Church ' thinks not; and so as the “NeW Israel’ 1 bound to God through th* r “new covenant” in Christ’s blood? ~ looks forward still to a new heav en wherein dwells righteousness. (Sited on outlines copyrighted >r the Division of Christian Education* National Council of the Chhreheil of Christ in tho U. S. A. Released hr Community Rrtsa Service.) Time . . . BY MAX SMITH TO PDAX TEMPORARY FORAGE CHOPS Reduced supplies of hay and silage may be supplemented with extended grazing