.ancaster Sftturdciy >M&y #7 From Where We Stand *.. Do We Need A State Administered Pullet Growing Program? In the past we have had few occa sions for disagreement with the State Department of Agriculture. But the current question as to whether the De partment should get into the business of administrating and supervising pri vate pullet growing operations promises to be an exception. We want very much to see the vari ous state departments of agriculture be come stronger and more active in their own areas so that the federal depart ment will have less and less reason to usurp authority which rightfully rests with the states. But activity for acti vity’s sake alone is nothing more than “busv work” For the Department of Agriculture to offer a “Pennsylvania Approved Re corded Pullet Grown Program” at this stage of the game would be meaningless and economically wasteful. However, this is what the Depart ment is proposing A hearing date on the question has been set for 1 'p.m. Tues., May 10, at Harrisburg. This we learned’ only inadvertently. To the best of our knowledge, no notice of the hearing came to this office from the Department. Since Lancaster Farming is the farm newspaper for the state’s richest poultry" county, one could draw certain implica tions from such an oversight But hope fully it was simply an oversight that proper notice of this hearing .was not publicized That is a minor objection. After examining the proposals of the pro gram, our main objection is that it spells out needs which no longer exist. For example, “This program will make available to the buyer, flocks of pullets with a certified management and grow ing record which is not available on today’s market ’’ Unless Lancaster County supervis ed pullet-growing programs are unique in the state, that statement is, to say the least, false Several large hatcheries who generally have an economic stake in the flock which the state would not have are doing an ex tremely thorough job of supervising pul let growing in this county. Many of the hatcheries now market their chicks in the form of ready-to-lay pullets. They Cieek The company is re- Water for the plant’s potable qiured to maintain the flow supply is pumped- to a water of Clarke Creek at a rate of treatment center by two-small Potable Water Supply 252 gallons per minute, or at (300 gallon per minute) pumps Clarke Cieek supplies the whatever rate water may be Theie it is treated and pump-* potable watei for the plant entering the pond from the ed to a 150,000-gallon storage This is jdiawn fiom a 3-million- creek at any given time tank In the treatment' process, gallon capacity, man-made pond naturally, in summer this flow the water is dramatically con formed by damming Clarke would be reduced. (Continued on Page 6) • Waste & Water (Continued fiom Pag e JAMES H RUNYON OF GRACE MINE points out how chemicals are meter ed into pond water as part of the process which purifies the potable water supply for the plant. The other two metering devices behind Runyon are for alum and carbon. , L. F. Photo have a great investment in these flocks, and they supervise them accordingly. Detailed records are kept by the grow er, and management details are noted by the flock supervisor. Going on down the list, the pro posal shows item after item which the good growers have been doing for quite some time. There is no justification for the state to enter into such a program as the department has proposed, and we hope that poultrymen will turn out for the hearing and make this point very clear to the Department. ★ ★ ★ ★ Color It Green Green, the life-giving color of Spring time, has to be everyone’s favorite shade. Certainly it is Nature’s own color. Even the brilliant hues of the most beautiful flowers become brighter in a setting of lush green. And green is also the favorite color of government these days no, not money, although that too we refer to a brand new program announced this week by Secretary of Agriculture Free man. It is called “Color It Green With Trees”, and Freeman has invited home owners across the country to join in. Color It Green is described as a pro gram to encourage the people to beauti fy their gardens and communities by properly planting appropriate trees. It is not quite clear from the USD A release on the subject whether this thing, described only as a “program”, is available in literature form to interested persons and communities, or whether the Department simply sends Mrs. John son and a shovel along to do the job. (No offense intended, ma’am.) We are certainly all for trees, and more trees. But we tend to wince any time the government makes a federal project out of something The costs have a strange way of becoming buried be neath the enthusiasm of the moment, and often some of the voluntary aspects of the original program become less im portant than the program’s application. So if all goes according to plan, perhaps about twenty or thirty Springs from now America will have the green est, most beautiful, and most expensive landscape of any country in the world. / *. * r- . < i^ Kr 7h'*i'• Serving Bed Imonfoc May 8,1966 Ncl|r«unrf Scrlfriurr It Chronlclii 17 through 20« D«v*li*nal Rtarfini: fitlm 1 5* Every man, woman and child is important in the sight of God, hut some persons are more im portant than others. That is, it makes no great deal of difference what old John Doe, sitting on a fence and talking out of pure ig ■MMM||norance, thinks country ought Ito be doing. It does make a tre- differ ence what Richard thinks, not because he the brains John Doe Dr. Foreman never had, but be cause people who listen to Mr. Roe and take him seriously will find that their choices are in. many ways affected by Mr. Roe’s ideas, be they what they may. The important people in any gen eration, then, are those whose decisions affect the decisions of others, perhaps millions of others. EVERY SPHERE IS GOD’S The most important people of all (though they may not realize it themselves) are those whose own personal decisions are ori ented to GOD always, and who in fluence others for God. One thing should be made clear to begin mth: A person can serve God squally well in church or state. \n officer in the church may be a man of God, but so may an official m the state. David was not even a priest, but he was a man of God. Who shall deny the title "God’s man” to the Emperor Constantine, or fhe scientist Louis Pasteur, or the poet Browning, or Doctor Grenfell, missionary on the Labrador coast, or to Lord Salisbury who did so much to make life livable for workingmen in England, or to William of Or ange and Gusatavus Adolphus, military heroes of the Reforma tion, or - the unknown artists in stone,' who conceived and pro duced the great cathedrals of Eu rope, or great musicians like J.S. Bach/ or a .many-sided genius such as Albert Schweitzer? These were' "secular” men, that is to say Now Is The Time .. • By Max Smith, Lancaster County Agent To Be Alert For Alfalfa Weevil Insect control on alfalfa refers mainly to the weevil at this time of the year Adult weevils have been noticed for several weeks and the laivae can be expected to start feed ing on the tops of the alfalfa plants most any time depending upon weather conditions. Growers are mged to check their fields daily to know-when the weevils begin feeding on the leaves, the decision can then be made whether to haivest the ciop and spray the stubble, 01 to spiay the crop and wait from 7 to 21 days before harvesting To Make Silage From Winter Rye Local danymen or cattle feeders that are planning to make silage fiom winter rye SMITH aie reminded that heading to eaily flower stage is the best time for maximum feeding value If one of the ground cereal giains, or some form of a molasses feed, can be used with the rye as a piesmvative it will make a better silage feed for all kinds of livestock Other small grams can be made into silage in the floweung or in the dough stage To Stop Using Dieldrin secticides The use of chlor- Or Heptachlor dane as a soil insecticide is The control of soil insects suggested for row crops, should be piacticed without the use ot either dieldim or To Be Careful With hopUchlor; some gioweis ot Excess Seeds coin and tobacco haie con- Excess supplies of seed tinned to use these mateiials giains that aie left over a£- to kill cutwoims and wire- ter the planting season worms Due to the danger of should be stored carefully a residue in the soil, \\ hich away from children and live can be picked up bj the fol- stock. Since nearly all of the lowing crops, vie do not rec- seeds are treated with chem oannend either of these m- (Continued on Page 9) , th« most ptitunordaßM,** ith atrooftr influmoa tor CM ',n most mlnlitin, rabbit at (eiti. IWER OF APPOINTMENT The Old Testament (Ives a* i picture of the good king Je> ishaphat. He deserves the ad» -tive good, And showed how good he was by using wisely the greatest opportunity for truly in*, portent people, namely the power of appointment to important posts men of character and influ ence. We give a thought today to fudges in particular. This king was specially careful about get* ting able judges for the country. What the Bible tells us about Judges is as wise today as the day it was written. Let us run down a list of qualifications or duties a« we find them in II Chronicles 19. (1) The good judge will know ihat beyond all human respon sibility he is first and always responsible to GOD. (2) A good Judge is available. To put that another way, a too-crowded docket, or too few judges for the population, slows down and de feats the purpose of the courts. ;3) The purpose of the law (thia should go without saying) is Justice. Not to make the judge rich, not to make the courts fear »d, not to use up the tax-payers' money, but to see that all parties get a square deal. Justice has various forms. Cynics will tell you that'laws and courts exist to mtrench the rich and powerful end keep the "little man” in his place. On the contrary, justice, real justice, means protecting the weak from the strong. One acid test of courtroom justice is: Can « poor man get justice here? SOURAGE IN COURTS It takes courage to be a judge. Some times he needs physical -ourage, and always moral cour age. He needs courage to stand by a ruling he knows to be right. He needs courage to make what he knows will be an unpopular decision. He needs courage to change his mind, too, if he comes ',o be convinced that he wasi wrong. It takes courage to admifcl It. The glory of incorruptible men this is the great reward ot those who appointed them. {lossd on «uHmo« copyrighted Ity tho Divistal of Chrutisn Educsiton, N«tt«n«( Council of tho Churches mf Christ in the USA* Xpleesed bp Community Press Service} ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE 1 SUNDAY .jmsems*