—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 25, 1963 4 From Where We Stand... Wheat Farmers Have Spoken Farmers have had their say, In a democracy, this is as it should be. Farmers had every right to vote thejr own convictions in the wheat referen dum or any other referendum, and this apparently, is what they did. We sincerely hope they were not misguided. It is our belief, based on conversa tions with legislators in Washington, that the congressmen will take the over whelming negative vote to mean that farmers do not want a wheat program. If the vote had been close, we believe, some sort of wheat plan with less con trols would have been devised, but the tremendous voice with which wheat growers turned down the program will be an indication to legislators to keep “hands off” for at least a year. Farmers have said they do not want tight controls with high price supports, and we do not believe it is fair to tax the general public to continue paying high supports and high storage rates on a commodity that is produced without controls. Undoubtedly there will be some program devised and some effort to have it passed, but none has yet been proposed that has anywhere near enough support to becoipe law. The opponents of the bill said farmers should- vote “no” in the referendum and hope for better legislation, but that “better” pro gram has not yet been devised. We sin cerely hope that it will be, but we can not be optimistic at this point. With only eight per cent of the voting strength in this country in the hands of farmers, it is becoming more and more difficult to pass any legislation that benefits the farmer at the expense of the urban consumer. Legislators with wholly or largely urban constituiencies are less and less anxious to be asked continually to vote on farm legislation. It is now up to the wheat producers to come up with a workable program for all sections of the country, or fight it out on the open market in competition with each other. In the opinion of many, this is the best approach, and perhaps it is. It is al most certain that many producers would be forced out of the business under such a system, but perhaps this is what -the farming economy needs. Perhaps there is some merit to the old saying, “If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.” Farmers were nearly solid in op position to the program as offered. If there is a better one available, farmers had better be solid in backing it, or there will be no program. At least that’s how it looks from where we stand. ★ ★ ★ ★ Dairy Regulations The news this week that many dairymen in this county might be forced out of the dairy business by regulation has drawn a variety of comments. There are those who feel that it is unfair to expect certain farmers to mo dernize their barns if it violates reli geous principles. Others feel that it is unfair for some farmers to be required to remodel barns and milk houses while # Elizabethtown FFA >❖ (Continued from Page ii Loncoster Forming be the market hog show and , , _ . . _ _ . . . _ “ Lancaster County’s Own Farm Bale at the Green Dragon auc- Weekly tion barn on July 30. Four boys from the Elizabethtown Chapter are fattening a total of 29 head of hogs for the show and sale. ol^l? S w ~ • . . 22 B. Mam St. Eivm Hess is teacher of to- Lititz Pa eaiional agriculture at the phone Laacaster school and advisor of the chap- Express 4-3047 or ter. ’ Ldtitz MA 6*2191 others continue to produce milk aS it has been done for fifty years. We have often said that dairymen barns may work a financial hardship on some small operators, but this does not seem to be the major objection to the order. W ehave often said that dairymen should be thankful for the health re gulations in this area since it is our belief that health regulations are the one thing that has kept out of state milk from taking part of our markets. There is no farm product that en joys a more universal acceptance among consumers than does milk. No farm com modity is taken more for granted than are dairy products even though few products are more prone to contaminants or spoilage. Very seldom does the con sumer question the' freshness, whole someness or cleanliness of the milk of fered for sale in the state, and this is as it should be We believe that this ac ceptance must be maintained if we are to retain our markets. We do not maintain that pure milk can not be produced in a barn without electricity, and we do not believe that all milk stored in coolers without auto matic controls is of poor quality, but we do believe the chance of producing a high quality product is greatly increased with modern methods. Furthermore, we can not see the purpose of requiring some producers in a milkshed to abide by one set of rules while others are governed by another set. We do not mean to sound harsh, and we respect the farmer’s right to decide, but we believe that a dairyman who does not wish to abide by the rules governing all other dairymen should look for another business. At least that’s how it looks from where we stand. Speedy Sour Cream The Wall Street Journal reports the Battelle Me morial Institute has developed a method of producing sour cream in 30 minutes instead of 18 hours. Instead of the cen- turies-old method of letting bacteria cul tures grow in cream, then souring it with lactic acid, a stabilizing chemical and then an edible acid are used. The same method is reported applicable to buttermilk and yogurt. ★ ★ ★ ★ tie old aerosol can that contains every- thing from shaving cream to paint has ■i-done i^agah^—,now they’ve come put with a cheese spread which can be" shot onto a piece of bread at the press of a button. ★ ★ ★ ★ Home Delivery Declines Home delivery of milk dropped from nearly 51 percent of all milk sold in the St. Louis, Mo. market in 1952, to around 21 percent in 1961, a recent report showed. Each year since 1952, whole sale sales to retail outlets increased until they now reach 78.22 percent of total max m. SMITH sales. Nearly 63 percent of the milk sold is sold at wholesale in half-gallon con tainers, said the report. ★ ★ ★ ★ A Bottle of Laughs Foremost Dairies hopes to enliven breakfast time and any other milk drinking time by printing .comic strips on its milk cartons. P. O Box 1524 Lancaster, Penn*. 1855 - Published every Satur- P. O. Box 266 - Lititz, P*. lay by Lancaster-Farmlng, Lit- Itz, Pa. Chee.se Under Pressure That lit- Jack Owen, Editor Robert G. Campbell, Advertising Director Established Entered a? 2nd class matter at Lititz Pa. under Act of Mar. 8, 1879. ★ ★ Novemher Worship At Church Lesson for May 26, 1963 Blblt Material! Psalms 24; 84: 121; 122, II Chronicles 5 and 6 Devotions! Bending: John 4:19-28. WHERE were you at 10:45 , A.M. last Sunday? If you were going to church, you were doing something pretty special. You were going to pray and sing and listen to the Word of God. You short, to worship. People have been worshipping God for no one knows how many thou sand years; but most of the wor ship ha? not been done m church. So it was pretty special after all. If you are a good Dr. Foreman run-of-mme Chris tian, you worship the heavenly Father every day of life; only about one day in seven do you worship in a church. If you got to church and found it empty, you probably wouldn’t stay. You need some one else to be with you when you worship at church. You can’t worship in church just any time the fancy strikes you. Such worship has to be planned ahead. You don’t dress up for your pray ers at home; but most church goers even put on special clothes which in the country used to be called “goin-to-meetin’ clothes.” If you were in a plane that landed in a tree, you would do some praying then and there no matter if your clothes were ripped half off you. But you wouldn’t go to church in torn clothes. It’s too special. A testimony So, what where you doing at 10:45? For one thing, church-going is a public testimony. You were saying, without opening j'our mouth, *‘l believe in God, I be lieve in prayer, I believe in Chris tian fellowship, I believe in the kind of life the church stands for.” You do not sneak to church (as some of our ancestors had to'), you ride or walk in open daylight, you would not object if some one took your picture. (Would you be willing to be photo graphed everywhere you go?) Now Is The Time . . . BY MAX SMITH To Make Quality Forage In the coming weeks many tons of sil age and hay will be made throughout ifhe country. All livestock producers are remind ed that the feed from quality for age are usually cheaper than those from grains. The most important factor in making top, quality hay or silage is to cut it at the proper stage of maturity bud to eai;ly blossom stage tor the legumes and at head ing time tor all grasses don’t lose feed nutrients by waiting for maturity. To Wilt Grass Silage The wilting of hay-crop silage to remove extra moisture is very important it’ the best quality is desired. Wilting down to the 60 ! to 70% range is desired for wilted silage and down to near the 50% moisture content results in low-moisture silage or The direct-cut method should be dis-continued for best ire suits; if this method must be used because of available equip ment, then some feed additive such as beet pulp or corn and‘dob chop (100 to 200 pounds per ton) should be added at she blower to increase dry matter and soak up the excess juicesj about 4 inches deep; for pit should he worked into the [soil worms spray the area andj'do not cultivate it in for at Ipist 3 or 4 days. Be careful that atnzine is well washed from all sprayers before using E on tobacco ground. [ t TO CONTROL CUTWORMS AND WIREWORMB Tobacco growers are remind ed that one of the good ways to prevent cutworm or wire worm trouble in the field is to have the area sprayed 3 to 7 days prior to planting. Chlor dane may be used at the rate of 3 quarts per acre for wire worms or one quart for cut worms; another insecticide is heptachlor at the rate of 6 quarts per acre for wirewonns or 2 quarts for cutworms. For -wirewonns 4he. insecticide wqiA, "church-goer’’ /able word, but some people ’Me it,,as they shouldn’t. K aim tru^,' hypocrites go to 'h? 1 We have seen dogs in :h, and idiots. But that does idvout the fact that most ol wficfare in church are there irship, and even the dog, th« idiot and the hypocrite would not be there it there were no sincera worshippers. Confession Another thing; at 10:45 last Sun day you were confessing yourself a sinner. Yes sir; you didn’t go with a list of your sins la you pocket or pinned to your coat; but you were going to confess you sins. It’s done differently in differ ent churches, but they all do it. Tell me where else in all the world you can find any group of people who publicly admit they are not what they know they ought to be? Most other organiza tions love to tell the world how good they are. At worship in church the people say right out loud how bad they are. It may be in a Catholic church where the priest exclaims in Latin, Mea culpa, mea maxima culpa—“My fault, my most grievous fault!” ox it may be in a Baptist church where the minister prays, “Thou knowest that we [he means the people sitting there] are sinners and evil in Thy holy sight;” or in an Episcopal service where all the kneeling people say together, “We have left undone those things which we ought to have done, and we have done those things which we ought not to have done . . For better living If a man goes to church in the right spirit, if he thinks of what he is doing, if he feels the thrill of knowing he is worshipping not only with the other people he can see around him, but with the mil lions of others around the world praising God this morning in a thousand languages, and especial ly if he has felt, ever so faintly, the touch of the Holy Spirit on his heart, then such a worshipper can not go out and be quite the same. All the week he will be a better man for having gone to church bn Sunday. So at 10:45 next Sunday morning you will be saying with out words as you head for church, “I want to be a better person next week than I was this. And I am going to the only place where I can get the help I need —the mercy-seat of God.” (Bated on outlines copyrighted by the Division of Christian Education, National Council of iho Churches of Christ In the C. S. A. Released by Community Press Servlet.) TO CLIP PASTURES Proper pasture management is necessary for top production. Recent rains should give : iw growth to v all pastures.. M ny of the grasses and weeds Ire about to shoot seed heads.and Page .s)!^