4—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 26, 1966 From Where We Stand... How Clean Is “Clean''? If a stream is not dirty, ds it then a clean stream? If a stream is not clean, is it then a polluted stream? Qur legislators talk about a “Clean Streams Law”. But who can properly define the terms in which we measure and discuss stream cleanliness and dirti ness? This may seem trivial but lest the national drive to unfoul our communal nests bogs down in linguistics, we had better be able to define our problem in clear cut not just technical lan guage. For example, the Board of Health, authorities may examine a stream, sam ple its contents, and say “this is a clean stream” A farmer looking at it may see billowing ladders of detergent foam trying to scale his dam; he may find that fish don’t thrive there because of an extremely high sift content in the water, and he says, “this stream is un clean” Obviously, the Health man means one thing and the farmer another. But what is a clean stream? According to the accepted Board of Health definition, pollution is ‘ noxious and deleterious substances rendering water unclean' to the extent it is harmful to the health of people or livestock’". This is a definition that a technical man can measure and can live with It does not satisfy Mr. Average Citizen He wants to think of a stream as either clean or unclean. Whereas, technically, the authorities are concerned with the degree of cleaness, or the degree of pollution A sanitary engineer, speaking at a community meeting on stream pollu tion this week, said. “If you are thinking of ‘clean streams as your great grand parents knew them, forget it. A small degree of pollution is one of the prices a civilized society must pay for ‘pro gress’ ” He is saying that the sparking, pure streams of yesteryear have no place in our “great society”. And he is right Un fortunately Today, we have too many Farm Calendar Febiuaiv 2& 7 30 pm, IVlanheim Young Farmei Assn at Manheim Cential High School Suhj “Soil Feitility’ speaker Wame SOS county con sei vationist —7 30 pm Ephiata Adult Fanner Welding Comse at Ephiata High School —S pin Red Rose DHIA diiectois quaiteilv meet ing at Faint Ciedit Bldg 411 W Roseville Rd , Lan castei Maich 1 —') 4 5 am to 3 p’in Lanra'stei CounOt Hany Day at Guemset Sales Pavilion Lincoln lliahuax East Lancaster Mauh 2 XEPPCO Hid- Atlantu 'liukec Conlei eme at Holiday Inn Get- ts shin g Lancaster Farming Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly P 0 Box 266 - Lititz, Pa. 17543 Offices: 22 E Mam St Lititz, Pa 17543 Phone - Lancaster 394-3047 or Lititz 626 2191 Don Timmons, Editor Robert G Campbell, Adver Using Duector Suhsc nption price —%2 per year in Lancaster Countj, $3 elsewhere Established November 4, 1955 Published every Satur day by Lancaster Farming, Lit itz, Pa. people, too much sewage, and too few streams. A low-level pollution both air and stream is one of the facts of civilization with which we have to learn to live. But no one, least of all the Boards of Health, is saying that we have t 6 live with our streams as open sewers, or pur air as soot-filled chimneys. This is be coming a concern, more and more, at state and federal levels. Money, interest and technical help are available for communities to 'take action to clean up their environments. But the action must be initiated at local levels. It was encouraging to see such an exploratory “first step” being taken this week by a small community in Lancaster County. That first step is adult education, and it was appropriate that it was instigated by a local school district one of the tiniest districts in the county, as a matter of fact, but one that regards its job of education in the broad sense of community betterment. This fight to make one’s communi ty a better place in which to live is a worthwhile fight. But let there be no delusion here. We are not going to roll back the calendar to the year 1900 All that can be hoped for in both air and water pollution is that we stop the clock at this instant and say “here is the point beyond which we will not go” Our efforts must be directed toward discouraging continuing sources of pol lution of -our most precious natural re sources, air and water, and toward cor recting the existing extreme cases of each. We have to arrive at some realistic compromise as to the degree of resource contamination with which ”we are will ing to live. As was said at the water pollu tion meeting this week, there is no point to cleaning up the big streams and rivers until we clean up the creeks and trivial tributaries that feed the rivers. This means local interest and local ac tion The government can help, but the initial step is ours alone. Would you have it otherwise? —4 30 i) m Lancastei Count;, Vo-Ag Teachers < A«yn . at Wanvi'Ch Union High School Maich 3 10 15 am, Southeast Pa, DHIA dilec tors meet at Trexleitown Grange Hall. Lehigh Comn- —1 ip m Chester County DaDy Clinic Woi kshop at Ru'sselkv ille Giange Hall —8 pm . Lancastei Coun ty Swine Producers Assn , at Farm Ciedi.t Bldg , 411 IV Roseville Rd . Lane —S pin , Chester County Haiiv Clinic Workshop at Ortoiaia Area High School Raich 4 4th and sth, S p m Annual 4-H Play, “Heie We Go Again’ at Mu nil ei ni Twip High School —l2 noon, County Exten sion hoaid ot directois ■lnniclieon meeting a.t Mead ow Hills Dining Room New Danville Pike Lane —1 pin Ohestei County Danv Clime Woikshop at Konev Bi ook Fire Hall. —8 pin Chestei County Daily Clime Woiksliop at Owen J Robeits High School Weother Forecast The promise of near normal temperatures for the next several days is the best the weatherman has to offer this week. We can expect seasonable days with the overnight lows dropping into the mid-20’s. Not much change from day-to-day. Precipitation is expected to total between V*-Vi inch, probably occurring as rain along about Tuesday or Wed nesday. • Anderson & Joines (■Continued from Page has taken part in thd agri business and young farmer pro grams Jomes is shown on the far right of the other photo, in structing vo-ag shop student Duane Weaver in the tricky process of figuring the propei angje in forming a triangle by using a square In this case the students are constructing a ladder Also observing this in stiuction are students Leroy Eshelman, left, and Claude Miller, in back Jomes, too, has gotten a variety of teacher experience at Penn Manor, in cluding adult farmer classes The teacher training pro gram is of ten-week duration Both future teachers began practicing January 3; they will complete that phase of their tiaimng by March 3rd. Jomes hopes to get a teach ing job in southeastern Penn sylvania following graduation in June Anderson would pre fer to locate near his home in noi theastern Pennsylvania He will graduate in Maich, 1967. • Dairy Day (Continued from Page 1) ers of dairy products D'any Day 'is the combined etfort of the Lancaster Coun ty Extension Seivice, ‘the nVilk distributors, milk mar keting cooperatn es, and the dairy breed associations. Lancaster Farming Classified Ads Get Results "You were. ransomed (re- writes St Peter, “not with pefishaßle things such as silver oil gold but with’the prec ious blood of Christ.” What is the price Jesus paid for being a redeemer? Years ago m the days when the white man was pushing the red man back and back away from their old homes, tsome U.S.'soldiers were murdered fcy Cherokee Indians. Tim Jioops, thirsty for vengeance, were about to destroy the Cherokces. men, B.ck,r*un4 Sctfcto.. Roman, M-Ili women, and children in revenge. EchMian. 2:UOt Tltu. I Pet.r At this point (so the story goes) a S„.a 2 on«I R«.An 9 . Roman. .chief named Junaluska -got the . , i . . ,> , .ear of the leader off the soldiers, Tl/’HfAT '.QANNOT be put In(oi a nd offered to bargain.' If you * “ words can be attempted in W ill let my people go, he said, a picture. Every language is sup- and give us a safe conduct across plied with picture words we the Mississippi, I oiler my life may ,call them drama words or for -The soldiers agreed; story-words —• not so much to and so Chief Junaluska died compass, the whole truth as to for his people. How would the point out the di- Cherokees have felt about their rection in which chief? And what was the market we may look for value of the lives he saved? You truth. The more do not offer money to one who important a truth has saved your life, is the more nec- _ . , ... essary these Conquest and Liberation story-words are to Another meaning wrapped up express it. The in that word Redemption is de- Bible is no excep- liverance, conquest, freedom. In Dr. Foreman tion. Most of our the last days of World War 11, words about God are such words, probably the most wretched hu and when we come to what God man beings were Germany’s war does for men in redemption, only Tortured, on the edge story-words will do. Let us see of starvation, those living corpses what we can make of the word cheered when they heard the used in the title above the sounds of air raids. America various words “redeem”, redeem- ruled the skies. Freedom was at er”, redemption”. hand. Freedom came to those men so long shut off from hope. Back in the family again This isransom-by ; conquest. Christ is the freedom-bringing champion • Man Redtemed Lesson for Frtrusry VI, 1908 ir*r These words are fair transla- of those who are enslaved tOi tions of words found in both Old evil, the devil’s prisoners, so Testament and New. The Old to speak. But can you imagina Testament “redeem” referred to one of the men thus set free, ablo a custom now passed away but to live where he liked and to dot then very important and familiar what seemed desirable— can you l to all. When an ancient Hebrew Imagine such * man throwing! got into trouble, let us say got away his freedom hy clinging tot into debt so far he could never the old barracks of the prison pay his way out, his creditor or camp and refusing to leave? Op creditors would take him over as can you think happily of a freed) a slave. That he might have a prisoner cherishing his new free" wife and children made no dif- dom hecause it would give him ference to the creditor, who had an opportunity to carry on-a life no other way of getting his money of crime? Saint Paul makes much back except *to make a slave of of the truth that those who have the debtor. Now it was the duty been set free (redeemed) have of the next-of-kin, if it was at all an obligation to live as men whose possible, to go to the creditor and lives so to speak have been given buy back his relative by paying back to them, his debt and thus restoring him „ . ..... .. to his family and friends. This buying-back was called redemp* Council of th» church**oi.Chwiin tk« tion and the self-sacrificing rela- ** Cw “‘* tive was called the redeemer, - Now Is The Time ... By Max Smith, Lancaster County Agent ) To Inoculate Legumes Alfalfa and red clover growers are re minded of the importance of inoculating the seed with the proper nitrogen-fixing bacteria before broadcasting this spring These bac teria will make it possible for the legume plants to form root nodules and to extiact mtiogen from the an for the more rapid growth ot the plant The seed should be inoculated just prior to seeding To Reinforce Manure Many county farms continue to be low in phosphorus, complete soil tests have verified this condition for many yeais Dairy men who use super-phosphate in the barn gutteis, or cattle feedeis that apply super- SMITH phosphate on the manuie pack befoie each bedding, are doing the light thing to attempt to coirect this shortage. This extra phosphate not only adds moie available phosphorus but helps tie up some of the nitrogen in the manuie Tins practice is not getting the usage that it deserves. To Plan For New Pasture Seedings Early spring is the sevond best time to make a new pasture seeding (late sum mer or earlv fall rates best). tSeedlngs made during late Ifthrch or eailj .Apnl will have a much better chance to get well stalled befoie hot, diy iveathei arnves A nurse crop -such as spring oats may be used (one bush el per acie) to help get the seedlings stalled and then removed for hay or silage at heading tune. I* Mil* 1 fhe coi.r To Spray For Wild Garlic Control D'anymen that .have been having a problem ot wild gar. lie in their pastures might be on the alert for spring growth ot this weed and have it sprayed when 4 to 6 inch es high, this growth will us ually be attained during ear ly to mid-March. When, sprajed at this time, and when there is very httia giowth ot the pasture leg umes, a dosage of 1 to 114 pounds per acre of tiie ester form of 2,4-D will help elim inate the garlic without do ing any damage to the leg- umes,