4 —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 27, 1962 From Where We Stand... What Is The Worth Of Confidence What is the worth of confidence? How much is it worth to have con fidence in your country, in your elected officials, in the producers and processors of the food you eat. Immediately you will answer that it is of utmost importance to have faith that the country is strong and that she is right a good portion of the time You will say that trust in elected officials is a necessity, or the officials should be replaced. But have you ever had any thoughts about the producers and processors of the food you eat Secretary of Agriculture, Orville Freeman, said recently in a speech in California, “On the plane, as I was traveling from New Orleans to Los Angeles, it occurred to me that those air passengers who ordered milk did so without the slightest concern as to whether it was put on the plane in New Orleans or at some other place. “Whether it was produced in the South, West, North or East— they cared not I doubt if one passenger in the several dozen even read the brand name on the carton “You might say that air passengers must have confidence in the air line that flies them and feeds them, but the fact is that this confidence extends to all American travelers No matter how' they travel or at what obscure cross loads they find themselves they can and do buy dairy products without the slightest worry “The housewife opening a bottle of milk or a package of cheese or butter anywhere assumes that the product wail be wholesome, safe and of top quality This is true even though no food is more perishable and none is easier to contaminate.’’ It is true Anywhere in the United States a housewife can pick up dairy products with confidence a confi dence built on a continuing supply of pure products in the past. If the dairy industry is to continue to merit the confidence of the American housewife, it is up to each and every dairyman to help maintain that supply of pure products We have said before, and we believe it bears repeating, health requirements have done more for the dairyman than any other one thing in building the con fidence of consumers It is true there are those dairymen who would produce milk of the highest quality even if they are not forced to, but there are always those others who would destroy the buyer’s confidence by putting on the market a product of in ferior quality. If you, as a dairyman, would like fo complain about health requirements, we believe you should complain that the health code is not inclusive enough, that it does not put stringent enough restrictions on milk moving from one area to another We believe dairymen Son Kiesh Seeds Lancaster Farming St'tt columbine pansy poppv , , , , , , ~,, Lancaster County’s Own Farm mil de'plinmiin wliilt they aie 1 1\ eekly P. O Box 1524 Lancaster, Penna. P O Box 266 - Lititz, Pa. Unices- I’Knuie adequate diamaae and 22 E Mam St till uitli w i 11-pi t pai ed i, uden Lititz, Pa. Phone - Lancaster EXpress 4-3047 or Lititz MA 6-2191 1 1 ( sli lennndsA J Giantagna, J*'mi State extension tloncul- Ise Hats 01 seed pans I n i ist soil are hurting no one but themselves when they complain that health laws are too strict At least that’s how it looks from where we stand “I suppose you get loads of letters every week,” she said “I read the edi torials every week, and often think about writing a letter, but you probably get so many ” We have heard this or a similar statement so often that we get the feeling there must be hundreds of fru strated letter writers around the county. We do get letters, but not loads of them We, as do most editors, wish we could hear from readers more often. One of the most common concerns among writers is, “Is anybody reading the stuff’’’ Sometimes we begin to be concern ed, but then we remember the many times we, too, had an urge to write an editor when we agreed or disagreed strongly with something in the paper Usually we just put it off until the urge died, and forgot all about letter writing again until another editorial “got to us” So when we remember that we are not so instant with the letters to other editors, we know why so few come across our desk To you, we issue an invitation Whenever you agree, or disagree with the theme of an editorial, or whenever you particularly like or dislike a news story, or whenever you think of some thing that could in any way improve the service of this newspaper to its readers, drop a line to the editor. We assure you, all letters are carefully read and grate fully received whether they contain a boquet or a brickbat. At least that’s how it looks from where we stand. The average Irishman eats 45 lbs. of butter annually the U S per capita use is down to 7 4 pounds A recent Harvard University study of Irishmen indicated they weigh less, had- one-half as many cases of high blood pressure, and lower cholesterol counts than blood brothers in Boston SAFFLOWER NOT THAT GOOD Some 60 cases of “safflower short ening” were seized by Food and Drug Administration in late August on charges of false health and diet claims FDA charged the promotional literature falsely represented that the product is adequate and effective to prevent athero sclerosis, heart attacks, strokes; to con trol the blood cholesterol; to reduce body weight; to stay fit and active, and to improve health and vitality. >❖❖ ❖ ❖ ❖“■>-<► -?--4 # & # Stacks Of Letters BUTTERING UP THE IRISH # m Jack Owen, Editor Robert G. Campbell, Advertising Director Established November 4, 1935. Published every Satur day by Lancaster-Farmmg, Lit- Itz, Pa. Entered as 2nd class matter at Lititz, Pa. under Act of Mar. S, 1879.. BlbU Malarial: John 14:16-17. 25-26; 16 4-15; Acta 2, 4.7-10, 13; Homana i. 1-27. Devotional Heading: Romani 8:14-27. God Within Lesson for October 28, 1962 COMETIMES it looks as if tha Church made it harder in stead of easier to believe in God. The church talks about the Trin ity, but we don’t understand that. It talks about the Holy Spirit, but that seems very hard to un derstand. On the contrary, the Church’s teach ing about the Holy Spirit (all the good of which we owe to the Bible in the first place) makes God much nearer than we would otherwise dare to think about Him. In fact, a definition of the Holy Spirit which many Christian teachers have express ed is just this: The Holy Spirit is God at work in the hearts of men. The Holy Spirit is God-withm. You will never be any closer to God nor He to you, than you are to the Holy Spirit. Ht will send ... I will send .. • Of course no reader will sup pose that he can find out all there is to know about God, in one sin gle column in a newspaper. God cannot be shut up iij a million books,- and,of coursejmt in a few lines of, pnh£. The Bible material for this week’s study gives much more than we can deal with in so short a space. AH we can do is to point out three truths, all of them from the teaching of Jesus. First of all is that apparentcon tradiction: Jesus tells His disci ples first that the Father will send them the Holy Spirit, and then that He (Christ) will do so. We are intended to put these two truths together. The Holy Spirit comes from the Father and comes from the Son of God, from Jesus Christ. Now if you insist on puz zles, there are puzzles in that simple statement. But let’s by-' pass the puzzles, and look at what is plain. The least this can mean is that the Holy Spirit is like the Father and like the Son, we Now Is The Modem weed control methods include the spraying in late fall or early winter tor the contiol ot such weeds as winter-ci ess, shepheids puise, ground i\y, and chick weed Most ot these weeds aie found in grass-legume stands and will choke out the legume and i educe the quality ot the forage ci op MCP is lecoiuiuended for the yanter ciess after a killing fiost, and either a di mtio spiay or chloro IPC should be used on the otheis into silage this fall, the delay ot a killing MAX M. SMITH fiost is permitting nianj additional acres of late-planted corn, to reach silage stage, if not maturity All livestock men should .recognize the greater amount of feed nutrients fiom an acie of coin by making it into silage rather than bj picking for grain For either dairy or beef cattle feed ing corn silage has a definite place in an economical feeding pi ogram. To Comport Those I..eaves All farmeis and property T <> o«‘t Farm Machinery Under owners can use a well-rotted Cover compost pile each -sunimei When field work is complet- Kathei than burn the leaves ed this fall all pieces o£ or have them hauled away it machineiy should be cleaned, is suggested that they be nn\- gi eased, and put under cover ed with topsoil, lime, and a against weather elements, complete feitilizer this fall and Rust is one of the greatest allowed to rot down into a enemies of farm machinery and compost by ne\t sumniei This ieduces the life-span of use pile 01 organic mattei is veiy -fulness All farmers are urged for flower or vegetable to protect their investment by guldens 01 around foundation Keeping then farm machinery shiubbeiy plantings. diy at all times. might (using human terjps ol course) say that the Holy Spirit is in harmony with, and repr«< sents, both the Father and thf Son, both the high Gqd and our Lord Jesus. (One is no more and no less God than the other is.) Well, what is this? Another pus) zle? No; this truth gives us a way to distinguish between alleged Spirits of God and the true Spirit, If the “Spirit” leads a man to do what is not Christ-like, then we may be sure that whatever he haaj in his heart, it is not the Spirit whom Christ has sent. , , Truth and Consclanc* ’Wf! Jesus furthermore call* the Holy Spirit the “Spirit of Truth."' Some Christians understand this to mean that wherever men arsj moving in the direction of truth —any truth, scientific, economic, intellectual, religious—there the Holy Spirit Is at work. Now <4 course, if God Is a god of truths his Spirit will never support ■ lie. And we may well believe the! God is concerned with truth oj every kind and in every aspesl of life. But it is also true that the Holy Spirit is most especially com cemed with truth about God and about his relation to the world and particularly to man. It H quite possible, it happens even day, that men who have no rein gion and do not believe in God at all, make scientific exploration* and discoveries that are true and even valuable. But no one is likely to learn much about God wha does not seek the help of the Holy Spirit. To put this another wajV only God can introduce us to God. What a normal human being wants, however, is not mere bare truth, he wants not only to know, he wants to do. This is particu larly true in the Christian reli-i gion. Like its mother-religion ol't Judaism, Christianity has been interested in action. Rights living is quite as important ast right thinking, the two cannot be " separated. So the Holy Spirit is'T called the “Counselor." This is ' a better translation than “Com-i forter” or “Advocate” though it“- may include those other means-, i ings. The word suggests that God within is not a presence only, but ! a guiding presence. Put into sim-ij* pie language, this means that more Godlike, the more Christ* < like, a person is, the more he will, do what is right in the sight or, God. We can’t live with people without learning their ways; snd . we cannot live with God without * learning—humbly but truly—more and more of His will. (Based on outlines copyrlrhted feff the Division of Christian Education* National Council of the Churches of Christ In the V S A Released hr Community Press Service.) Time . . . BY MAX SMITH To ('ontiol AVmtei-Time Meeds To V tilizc Corn Silage Many acies of corn have been made