—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 13, 1963 4 From Where We Stand... One Man’s Meat - Another Man’s Poison One man’s meat is another man’s poison, as the saying goes. And nowhere is the saying so applicable as. in wildlife preservation. Ask the Vermont dairy farmer about his deer problem and be pre pared for a half-hour outburst of anger and frustration over damage to his crops. But the West Coast gamekeeper can give you twenty different reasons why deer should be protected. The West Virginia cherry grower can lose thousands of dollars of fruit to but the Dallas suburbanite quails at the thought of the effect his neigh- insect spray may have on a passing robin. It all boils down to the fact that a bird, mammal, or tree wildlife, in general which is valuable one place by one person is a pest someplace else. There’s a big hue and cry at the moment about the alleged damage done to “good” or “bad” wildlife by agricul tural chemicals. Yet- the facts prove otherwise. Such immediate damage to wildlife as there may rarely be is quick ly overcome by the forces of Nature. Results of research carried out at Mississippi State College indicate that birds and other vertebrates (animals with a backbone) can become immune to pesticide chemicals and probably do. Tests made on frogs showed that those which had been exposed naturally to pesticidal chemicals had become im mune to damage from repeated ex posures Take the bobwhite quail, Georgia’s top game bird. The Georgia Game and Fish Commission has recently showed that bobwhite quail populations have suffered no bad effects from a pesticide used to eradicate the fire ant from large areas of the state. Bird populations, in fact, have shown a seven-fold increase over the past 20 years, according to annual bird counts made by the National Audubon Society and the U S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Robin populations have multi-, plied nine times, cardinal numbers have doubled. Flickers, mockingbirds, kill deers, redwing blackbirds all have in creased. Even the very destructive crows and starlings have multiplied two- and' eight-times respectively. Most organic pesticides have been developed and in troduced and widely used in the last 20 years. Several states in which pesticides have been used extensively in agricul tural production and large-scale pest control projects have reported that hunt ing “has never been so good.” Pesticides have actually done much good for “the great outdoors.” They’re used to make fire breaks and fire roads for forest protection, kill rodents in tree nurseries, eradicate pond-choking and -duck-starving aquatic plants, conftrol eels which prey on trout, and make land ing strips for geese in dense forest. Right around home pesticides rid your garden of grass and protect the grass in your lawn. They knock the Japanese beetles from your roses and save the bees in your apple trees. They kill pesky poison ivy, and protect your shade trees from insects and disease. “Good” or “bad”, wildlife is here to stay with pesticide chemicals. National Agricultural Chemical A,ss’n. Bnjing Basic Dress Because a basic dress should last a long time, buy a dress in the best quality fabric you can atford That’s a lemmder tiom Bernice Tharp, Penn Slate extension clothing spec ialist A plain fabnc with sub dued texture and no design is a wise choice Sele. t a weight fabric that is suitable to al most any season Lightweight wool, wool blends, 01 silk bl ends aie desnable fabucs. Congratulations To FFA A kingsized bouquet is due the lanco Chapter of Future Farmers a, their energetic advisor William Fredd. Winning the top prize in either the public speaking contest or the parlia mentary procedure contest is a feat wor thy of praise, but this group brought' both honors to the county and to their school. The win by Solanco is even more noteworthy when you realize that the department lost one of their teachers on February and is operating with one teacher on a temporary basis. In our position we have been forc ed to sit through so many dull, drab, uninteresting speeches and so many mis handled business meetings that we anti cipate with pleasure the day when these young Future Farmers will take, their; places at the head of farm organiza tions. The training and encouragement they are getting in the FFA should go a long way toward making farm organiza tion business meetings shorter, more businesslike and more enjoyable for all concerned. Congratulations Solanco, and con gratulations Mr. Fredd. We can all be proud of your accomplishments. At least that’s how it looks from where we stand. Advisors Or Specialists? Some folks will tell you that farm advisors should specialize. There is a feeling in some circles that teachers of vocational agriculture, county agents and others who advise farmers should be highly trained in one specialty. Some people have proposed that we should have one agriculture agent in poultry, one in corn, another in beef, another in dairy, and so on and on, with each serving several counties. Modern agriculture is a complex business with new methods, materials, equipment, medicines and chemicals'be ing developed. It is impossible for any one farm advisor to have all the answ ers. It requires an engineer to lay out a modern farmstead. Feeds are being for mulated with hormones and drugs to do all sorts of things to livestock. And more and more the farm leaders are being called on to diagnose the trouble with a sick rose bush. But will technical help solve the farmer’s biggest problem. The engineer can tell a farmer how many inches’of insulation he needs under the roof of a chicken house. A feed expert can tell the farmer which additive in the feed will bring a desired result, but could he help the farmer decide if he should build "the chicken house or feed the livestock in the first place. Where can the farmer turn for To 186 Careful with Chemicals training toward being a better manager? max m wiiTH AH farmers - and cust °“ We believe technical advice is im- - sprayers are remmded of the danger ln tUe portant, but we believe the county improper use and storage of agricultural chemicals. With the agents and teachers of vocational affri- growing season at hand and the wide interest in the proper use u. lulT , "of chemicals, we must be very careful All sprayers are urged . . ure nee( * be more than mere tech- to rea( j the labels and the directions, and to follow them care nxcians. fully. You are responsible to protect the pioduct and the At least that’s how it looks from consumer, where we stand. *J™ e ” a complete soil test is very mended practice of plowing important in determining tie down most of the nitrogen for needs of a soil for any crop! this year s crop, this may be m in many cases dollars are spent the form of granular or liquid . , ■ established November 4, terbhzei. or barnyard m M - of tha 8011 elem f at3 1955. Published every Satur- ure ’ each ton of manure that « not needed to produce lay by Lancaster-Famlng, Lit- &hould add approximately 5 a good crop. Corn and tobacco pounds of actual nitrogen. If t ie ids should by all means be ’ f sreen manure crop is to be tested as a gmde m maklnff Entered as 2nd class matter turnedfl then it is advisable to application Soil , T .... „ , . , . apply the nitrogen to the cover lert nizer application. sou ar ° l3 ’ dl3C tdoloUgldy ’ and th ® testl "f does not cost U Lancaster Farming Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly P. O. Box 1524 Lancaster, Penna, P. O. Box 266 - Lititz, Pa. Offices: 22 E. Mam St, Lititz, Pa Phone - Lancaster EXpress- 4-3047 or Lititz MA 6-2191 S“J > i "N W ■I ★ ★ ★ ★ Jack Owen, Editor Robert G. Campbell, Advertising Director 16.5. Devotional Rending: Matthew 28:1- 10, 16-20. /"'’HRIST is risen! That will be said countless thousands of times this Easter day. If the hu man, race has not wiped itself nut by this day, there will be millions of Christians throughout the world who say this amazing sentence /ith thankful joy. The words should 'ver become tmmonpiace. msider what the ly Christians ;ant by this. All e first Christ dievers jyere 'Ws;, at that ic they all bp zed that some how, somewhere, many if not all human beings who had died since the human race began, would come to life again. “Many of those who sleep in the dust shall awake,” was the way they put it. (Daniel 12:2.) As we would put it, they believed in a kind of delayed im mortality. If you had asked the ordinary pious Jew of Jesus’ day, “Where are the dead, now?” he might have said, “Asleep in the dust,” or “Among the others in the shadow-world of the grave.” He lives! But after the first Easter Sun day, the Christians did not go around saying, “Christ is asleep in the dust! Christ is a ghost among ghosts!” Those are far from comforting thoughts. What the Christians said was, “He is risen!” which means, if it means anything, “He lives!” And they didn’t mean “in heaven.” They meant right here, where they had seen Him and spoken with Him, It is true, after a time He disap peared and was seen on earth in the old way no more. But that did not depress those Christians. They never knew how to explain it, and they did not try. But what they had seen, they had seen, and noth ing ever shook them out of the conviction: Jesus lives! To put this in another way; The charac teristically Christian way to think Now Is The To Plow Down Nitrogen To Mnkc Coinl)let e Soil Test He livesl Another way to look at thii Easter-faith of the church is td emphasize that little pronoun HEi He lives. The early Christians could see a difference between tlw Jesus they knew before Calvary and the Jesus they knew after resurrection. The difference was great enough so that they some-j times did not recognize Him at first. Nevertheless when they did break through their hesitations and believed what they saw, i| was never as a stranger that they saw Him. If the man next door ta you is a man you know little ol except that he is a friendly greyj haired man who always has a pleasant word for his neighbors and works on his yard - op Satpri days,—and then nne day you dis« cover he is a superior court judge, 1 you may be taken aback; you qiay not recognize him with his robes on up there on the bench. But it’d the same man. So the Jesus, whose living-forever the church celebrates at Eastertide, is the same Jesus we read about in the pages of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Not somebody better or different, but Himself. HE lives! “Risen in you” “If-Christ be risen in you,—” so begins a famous chapter in Colos sians. This seems at first like a strange way to think about the Resurrection. Not as a historic event outside us, like most events, but an event that happens inside us. Is this a miracle? Perhaps it is. But perhaps it is what God in tended for us all along, that we should not be burial-grounds in' which the thoughts and the love of Christ are laid away, but resur rection places, from which Christ rises every day, not once in a life time,—rises to think in ouy thoughts, hope in our hopes, work in qur work; or rather rises in us so that we have to say at la|t, All the good in me is not mine but His! ‘ (Baud on outline* oopyrlehtei fey the Dlrlelon of Chrlotlsn Eluoatlffl Nation*! Council of tho Chnrohts of Chriat la the tJ. 8. A. Reltaied Community Broil lerrlco.) Time . . . BY MAX SMITH To Be Alert For Termites Many buildings in southeastern Penn sylvania are infested with the wood-eatms termite. During early spring they swarm and may be found at or near windows; these ter mites are often confuseji With flying ants, that are not so destructive The termite will have one elpngated body with four large wings, while the ant will have a two-section body with two pairs of wings different in size. All home and farmstead owners aye urged to be on the alert for tremites at this time of the year.