4—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 7, 1965 From Where We Stand... Too Much Slush In The Fund? One does not customarily think of the federal government, by nature, as a large “advertiser”. But one had jolly well better begin thinking about it, or else be prepared to accept it as a way of life! The Department of Agriculture, is a case in point. The Department was charged this week by Charles Shuman, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, with the use of government funds to propagandize the Administra tion's pet farm bill, which is now pend ing in Congress. Shuman said in a letter to Secretary Freeman that reports from all parts of the nation “show conclusively the expenditure of large sums of public money in efforts to induce farmers to influence their representatives in Con gress to vote for this ill-advised legisla tion . , the expenditure of government funds to propagandize the citizens is an illegal, immoral, and unethical use of public money and power,” Shuman stated We have no question that Shuman’s charge is accurate and warranted. But it does bring the question to mind as to just how the Department handles and accounts for such expenditures. Is “pro paganda padding” included' m each appropriation as a retailer’s “mark-up” to cover the costs of doing business? We are well aware of the suffocating quantity of USDA press releases that must be sent out daily just by the number that cross this desk. So they own the Post Office, but somebody’s got to be paying the tab Guess who? Are these programs that are being developed for us by Papa- Government so bad that Congress can only be per suaded to pass them by such means 9 Has the Administration so little faith in the products they are “manufactur- GRAND AND RESERVE CHAMPIONS (left to this week posed briefly with their owners, Kenneth respectively 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 626 2191 Don Timmons, Editor Robeit G Campbell Adver tising Director Established November 4, 1955 Published every Satui day by Lancaster-Faiming, Lit itz, Pa ing” that they have to hide each one from public and Congressional view by wrapping it in reams of paper as one might a dead fish whose odor it was desirable to hide? Well, brother, if the programs are that rotten, no amount of paper is going to change their smell! So, wherever the slush money is coming from, and of course it must originally come from your pocket and our’s, isn’t it about time we called a halt to this sort of waste? “Ibj” can coerce all the Congressmen he wants to in person or on the telephone, but it’s about time the Administration, and in this case the Department of Agricul ture. stopped using civil servants and government agencies to propagandize private citizens What Do YOU Think? ★ ★ ★ ★ And The Rains Came A sudden spurt of hope swept over Lancaster County this week hope that the long drought that has plagued us these past three and one-half years has suddenly dried itself out. Through July, it surely looked as though we had at least one more and year to endure. Now well, maybe we’re over the hill. At least in the central part of the county the reports are looking up. We ended July with a rainfall deficit for the year of approximately two inches, even though July put down some very beneficial moisture at a crucial time. Then August was washed in with an other two inches of the welcome stuff. The experts say that if we can get a couple more inches on the ground in August we’re going to have the best corn and tobacco the county has produc ed since 1961 Weather Forecast Temperatures for the five day period, Saturday through Wednesday, are expected to average above normal. Nor mal for the period is a high of 86 and a low of 65 de grees. It will be warmer oyer the weekend, moderating somewhat during the latter half of the period. Precipitation may total more than Vi inch, occurring as showers and thunder storms over the late weekend and early uevt week. So, let her rain, we say! ★ ★ right) at the FFA Hog Show Martin and David Heisey, L. F. Photo • FFA Hog Show (Continued from Page 1) Weaver, Pequea Valley, 6, Dale Hershey, Cloister. Mediumweight —1, Kenneth Martin, Grassland (Yorkshire champion-grandchampion); 2. John Frey (Yorkshire reserve champion), 3, ThomasZaitman, Cloister; 4, Dale Hershey; 5, Robert Fisher, Giassland, 6, Kenneth Zimmerman Heavyweight —1, Terry Myer, Grassland, 2, Teny Kauffman, Cloister, 3, David Heisey, Cloister, 4, Dale Her shey. 5, Bail Hertzog, Cloister, 6, Eugene Rissei, Warwick (Continued on Page 9) God Accessible Lesson for August 8, 1965 Background Scripture: Mark 1 35, Ads 246 47 Colossians 3 16-17, Hebrews 10 19-25. . A , Devotional Reading: Psalm 84 1-10. EVERYBODY HAS a god of *- J some kind. What we worship has all the marks of God, or a god. Even the professed atheist has a god of sorts. Martin Luther remarked once; whatever a man hangs his heart on and depends on, that is his god. Sometimes a man’s god is himself. Henley's poem “Invictus” shows us in a few lines the heart of a man who had been beaten up in the battles of life, but still he thanks “whatever gods there be for my unconquerable soul.” It is quite clear that Henley really hung his heart on himself and depended on himself rather than any god that religious people would be thankful for. Cod in the Dark Human beings are not to be classified into believers in God on one side and non-believers on the other. The division ought to be between those who wor ship and serve the true God and those who worship some other kind. One of the first questions to ask if you want to find out about a man’s religion would be: Is your God accessible? There have been men in all ages, prob ably, who believed in some sort of god but never tried to make contact with him. In darkest Afnca before the white men came, the natives in many if not most tribes had two religions, as a famous missionary pointed out. They had (so to speak) their eveiy-day religion with doll-gods called fetishes, but they were also dimly aware of a high god, a sky god They seldom if ever prayed to this God, they 3ust felt he was there. God in the Light The ai*,ent Hebrews, God's Covenant people, had traces of YOUR CHOICE ON SUNDAY Now Is The Time •.. To Seed Alfalfa Early August is one of the good times to make a seeding of alfalfa; the other time to make a straight seeding without any nurse eiop would be early spring (late March or early April). The giound should be well prepared, fine, and film. The band seeding method is stiongly recommended in order to get faster growth of the alfalfa seedlings. Early August seedings have a much better chance of winter survival than seedings made in late August or early September. To Prepare For Winter Oats Local faimers who are planning to grow a few aeies of winter oats should be plann ing to seed about the middle of September: winter oats will do much better on well drained land with less danger of winter killing. Norhne or Dußois are the two re commended vaueties for this area. To Plan For Extra To Renovate Old- Pastures Silage Storage Many permanent hhiegrass Livestock producers who do pastures will be more produc not have sufficient silage stor- tive if they are renovated and age might consider a trench seeded down to some ot the or bunker silo for extra space, higher producing grasses. The In most areas of the county old sod should be plowed, or the com crop looks promising disced several times, during and the making of the corn August so that the new pasture into silage is the best way to mixture can be seeded during hai vest the maximum number i a t e August or the first few of feed nutrients per acre, days in September. A complete Plans for these horizontal silos SO ii test will show the Kme and are available at the Extension fertilizer needs that ought to be worked into the soil before seeding. Grasses such as Penn- On May 24, 1830, the first late Orchard, Bromegrass, or tram drawn by a steam engine Reed Canary are adapted, and rolled down 12 miles of track ,vill give more growth during on the B. & O. the summer months. the idea of God in the dark. The room where his “seat" was In tabernacle or temple was.*room without windows or lights. No on« w«* allowed to eater that room except the high priest and he only once a year. The mystery and even terror of that God loomed strongly in the wor shipper’s mind. But for all that, God was also a God of light. His people could pray to him. The very fact that they made cove nants or agreements with him, whether he was visible or not, showed vividly in the prophets’ messages and m other ways. God Accessible The writer to the Hebrews, in the New Testament, makes a strong distinction between the accessibility of God as it was m older times (the days of Moses, for example) and since the com ing of Chust. Instead of being a hidden god, to be reached on special occasions by special people, he now lives 311 st bejond the door of woiship Moie than once in Hebiews the tin one of God is mentioned, but no longer a throne in the dark. Christ is the one who has made the Hu one of God accessible God is no longer the silent god, he speaks to us, and what he says can be summed up in one woid JESUS. God does indeed sit on the throne of the universe; but that thione is as near as your next praj er. Once and for all, there has come a Light of the world, and in tune this Light will control and destroy the daikness God had been known as the Creator of men, and as the Judge of men, but now he is to be known, in a trans forming way, as the Companion of men. All persons long asso ciated with one anothei come to be very much alike. So those who aie companions or friends of Chi Ist come to resemble him in thought and action. If a man or woman lives deeply and inti mately with the Father of our Lord Jesus, seeing life as Chust saw it, living as he lived it, Christ will be shared with more and more people. If any man would mastei the art of living, he must meet and live with the Master of Life. (Bai«d on outline copyrighted by th« Division of Christian Education, National Council of tho Churches of Christ in the u. i> A. Released by Community Pros* ATTEND THE CHUKC*tOF