—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 29, 1964 4 From Where We Stand... Some Statements On Policy Because of the change in our edi torial management we would like to restate some of our past principles and policies, and perhaps add a few new ones. I—We will continue to represent the interests of farmers in general and Lancaster county farmers in parti cular. 2—We will continue to urge streng thening of your individual farm com modity groups (poultry, dairy, swine, etc.) in the county and in the state. We will vigorously support these groups, and will faithfully report their activi ties. 3—We believe that agriculture, the national economy, and Lancaster coun ty can best be served by the indepen dent, progressive, family farm. We don’t believe that anyone can do that job better, or more efficiently, than you can. 4—ln the future there will regular ly appear on this page a column that you will write. It will be called “The Farmer Speaks”. We want your ideas and opinions on what’s going on in Lancaster county. If we are to truly represent you we must know how you feel on key issues. You can whisper your thoughts in our ear with a letter, and we’ll broadcast them to farmers all over Lancaster county. (Ed. note: It is our policy to accept only those letters which are signed. If you should wish your name withheld from publication we will gladly do that). s—We also pledge renewed effort on news and feature articles aimed at the “business” farmer. This list doesn’t cover everything, of course, but it does cover the main principles that shape our policies. The really important thing to keep in mind is that we’re here to provide a local service for you. It’s a service not obtainable 'thru any other news media available to you. Use it in any way that best suits your needs, but use it. fa Where Was NFO When Prices Were Really Low? Until the day comes when the farmer can place his livestock in a state of suspended animation at times of low prices and market them only when the price recovers, we fail to see how a withholding action of livestock no matter how widespread can lead anywhere but to eventual economic loss for the producer We realize that during the past four or five years there has been an increase in the number and size of feedlot operations, and that the per centage of total cattle fed out on the farm is decreasing This means that there are more cattle concentrated into fewer hands and, therefore, more in dividual control over marketings is possible. But we seriously doubt that such Lancaster Farming Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly P. O. Box 266 - Lititz, Pa Offices: 22 E. Mam St. Lititz, Pa. Phone - Lancaster 394-3047 or Lititz 625-2191 Don P. Timmons, Editor Robert G. Campbell, Adver tising Director Established November 4, 1955. Published every Satur day by Lancaster-Farmmg, Lit itz, Pa. Entered as 2nd class matter at Lititz, Pa. under Act of March 8, 1879. control can be extended 'tßK’lnclude enough cattle marketings to substantial ly effect the price in the market place for any meaningful length of time. And how many farmers are going to bene fit from a slightly higher price for a short period, especially if that brief recovery is followed by an extended period of below normal prices as it surely would be when the withheld cattle were eventually marketed. We’ve been talking about cattle. Let’s talk about hogs. Everything we’ve said about cattle is just as true for hogs. Moreso. Hogs will become overfinished far more quickly than cattle. What do you do with them? What happens to your feed conversion while a hog is going from 200 to 300 lbs? You can imagine^ Let’s look at the other side of the coin. The consumer. Assume a with holding action were effective, and that Mrs. Consumer was not able to get the meat she wanted for her family. Meat not eaten one day is not wanted as an addition to normal consumption on another day. The lost demand for meat during the withholding period does not accumulate. It’s lost. Gone. We feel that the farmers and ranchers who are persuaded to hold back their livestock marketings are being sold a bill of goods. And we don’t like it. We don’t like it because we believe that, as usual, the farmer is going to be the guy stranded on third base after the ball game is over. We don’t pretend to have the answer to this whole complex problem, but we do feel that the answer lies in the removal of some of the external influences such as beef imports and letting supply and demand stabilize the issue, as it must eventually do anyway. What do you think? ★ ★ ★ Know Your Own Mind From now until November the political pots will be boiling in each party. Backstage maneuvering will reach an all-time level in interest and importance. Which once again makes us realize how unfortunate it is that many citizens haven’t taken the time and trouble to find out for themselves who’s who and what’s what. Only by long careful following of events can anybody really discover for himself what’s involved in the decision making, both on the record and off, that goes into making our political systems what they are . . . good and bad alike. If you’re interested in good govern ment, and getting good people involved in it, now is the time to begin thinking about what’s going on and observing how officials function. The choice is your own to make, but you do a disservice to your fellow citizens, as well as yourself, if you fail to base your decision on facts in stead of opinions. They’re not so hard to come by, if you care to take the trouble. • Livestock (Continued from Page 1) earlier this week, by James Dunlap to the effect that the supply of good quality cattle was below normal, and that this was the main cause of the price increase. Mr. Kunz ler believed that some holding action was taking place in the Midwest, and he suggested that this action, if significant, would effect his company more through their hog pur chases than beef. He referred to a release by the Ameri can Meat Institute and said that over the years the In stitute had established an ex- eellent record for accurate analysis of marketing situa tions. The meat of the In stitute's analysis in this cur rent situation was that “the price of livestock is deter mined by basic economic laws that continue to operate de spite all efforts to tamper with them."’ Local opinion suggests that the NTO holding action has not effected the Lancaster market appreciably, but admits that the effects, at least over the short run, are not easily measured, and that it may be some time before they can be accurately evaluated. 4 ! i • I 1 !1 ' ft S Ia i 5 » > WE xoßasas ; \ SPEAKS t —, W-— yf' | UailatM I' r | Surfay Sck»«l LtaiMi [ ' [T Promised Land Lesson for August 30, 1964 Btckeroond Scrip tare: Deuteronomy SI Joshua 1 through 6; 21:43 through 24:51, Derolionsl Beading: Psalm 74:1-11. it PROMISED Land”—'what does Jt that suggest to most people' who read or hear the words? To many it suggests a land of rest, a| perfect* paradise, the Utopia, the never-never land of heart’s de sire. This was not the original j meaning at all. Itj referred to a def-! inite area on the: K „ surface of this Planet, about the. ■ size of the state H of Vermont, land. which most Amer- farmers jH would consider far from the best, •Dr. Foreman a land without good roads, a land of very crude culture compared with our own. It was promised to a rather un promising set of desert tribes, children of slaves. They needed a place in the sun, and the Prom ised Land was it. The land The land is still there, much changed, with the dust of cen turies of misuse thick upon it, and yet a land which today is beginning to blossom again. When the Israelites began to edge their way in, it was a fresher land than now. There were forests in which men might be lost, there were clear streams, there were wild beasts such as lions. Partly, it is still there. You can buy a ticket to places in it. Some of the towns mentioned in the Bible are still in existence. This writer has telephoned to Jerusalem from the top of Mt. Carmel. You can drive the length of the whole an cient kingdom of the ten tribes in an afternoon. But while the cen turies have made many differ ences, and the wars and neglects of man have damaged the land In many ways, the Promised Land is still there, with the same rivers and mountains, desert and sea Now Is The Time . . . To Rent Farm Equipment Faimers should always bp looking for ways to reduce the cost of expensive equip ment required to perfoim some of the fain l operations Present trends in agriculture m dicate further increases in the investment m machinery and equipment Many fainien are over-invested in machinery which mates a high overhead. We suggest the lenting or equipment or the hiring of custom woik for some of the operations. To Fertilize Alfalfa This Fall Alfalfa producers should include hbeioj amounts of alfalfa fertilizer in then tal ; orders. With the possibility of having to w the first crop quite early next spring, « strongly advised to have the crop in a high state of feitihtj■ ■ order to come back faster. After the last crop is removed t > September or October the area should be top-dressed u* 400 pounds of 0-20-20 or 0-15-30. MAX SMITH To Get Most from Corn Silage To Utilize Wheat Crop 5.,. ill™, ,™.e „ approach- fl mg and corn is the crop to crop . Lives tock pioduc«‘> make the sxlo investment pay should realize that wheat '■> off. Growers are urged to per- valuable as a livestock mit the corn to come into the poultry feed; there is * , „ , . , . , , as to the amount m the full dent stage before ensil- but d use of the ci mg. Corn is one crop that un- may b£ r ° alized _ Breeders proves in feed value as it ma- are having some breedi n -> tures; from the milk stage to problems with their herds. the full dent stage the mois- not able to get their foma ture content and the dry mat- to conceive, lect^ , , , wheat in the ration Dev ‘ ter losses decrease, and the lt is b j g jj in vitamin feed value increases. Finely which is helpful to chopped (V*" cut) will pack five organs. The wheat sho better in the silo than longer be coarsely ground cut materials. ' " ' cracked. it . j v ititf; tf'n in in •coast that were there when Joshua was fighting his way m, (v. notable difference between thus* days and these is that instead of 1 being split into dozens o£ ti nv city-states, each city almost \ nation to itself, there are tian only two, Israel and Jordan. Conquist . Palestine is not now a peaceful country, it almost never was. m Jew and Arab are at each other ! throats today, they are only keep, ing up with an ancient tradition Joshua found the cities of the land in league against him, but if they had not been fighting him they would have been fightm* each other. This brings up an old question. Today wars of ester, mination are regarded by all the world as criminal. We have i name for what Joshua tried to do: genocide, the complete slaughter of a nation. Can we today approvi of genocide when Joshua com; mitted it (or tried to—the it. tempt was not wholly successful), while thinking of it as a horrible crime today? One thing we cm say: A Christian,, even a non. Christian in a world which has long had the influence of Chris, tianity, has a light which Joshua did not have. Joshua had never heard of the Sermon on the Mount. , In song and story i The “Promised land” has cap. tured the imagination of people who make poetry out of history. The conquest of Canaan has been idealized, romanticized, spiritual* ized, out of all resemblance to its actuality. One of the oddest uses of the Historical conquest by the Israelites is to take Jordan as a symbol of death, and Canaan (the Promised land) as a type o' heaven. Considering the bloody cruel ugliness of what actually went on, one hopes that heaven is not like what the Hebrew s found and did in the Promised Land! It would be better to take those wars as an example of hoi 1 ' God can bring good out of evil, using “the wrath of men to praise him.” Let us be grateful’that victory came not to the sprawling tribes who worshipped animals, but to a people who for all their faults and sins still were aware of a God of purity and justice, a God of tiuth, King of all the Kings and kinglets of this earth. F. 'r L*, (Based on outlines copvnifhted by tn» Division of Cnnstian Education, National Council of the Ci» '■h's of Curat in tie V S, A. Released hy Commui ity Tress Service.) BT MAX SMITH i .•> * nv • »