.ancaster Farming, Saturday, .Tune 4, From Where We Stand *.. Salute To The Dairy Farmer June is traditionally designated Dairy Month the country over. In Lan caster County we have a special incen tive to salute' the dairy farmers for they, collectively, produce more agricultural income in the county than farmers in aiiv other enterprise Livestock, poultry, tobacco and other crops, are each important to our economy, but none appioach the volume of milk and milk products In 1965. the county's 820 million worth of dairy cat tle produced S2B million in milk, to lead the state Milk production and dairy pro ducts in Pennsylvania account tor about 40 percent of the state s total farm in come. and result in our being tradition ally the fourth ranked state in the coun try in dairy production. Although output per cow continues to set new records, the number of cows has been declining .since 1955, with the largest decreases occurring in the past three years. From 1964 to 1965, the Pennsylvania cow population declined by 33,000. In Lancaster County during the same period our cow loss was about 2100 head. 220 farms dropped from the ranks of commercial dairy farms during that year. A study of the 1965 Pennsylvania Crop & Livestock Report shows that while our dairy farms declined by about 9 percent, the total number -of cows dropped only 3 percent. This supports the generally accepted fact that farms are getting fewer but larger. It would certainly seem to be the case with Lan caster County dairy farms. According to the USDA ( “Dairy Situation” for the first quarter of this year, milk production was 5.3 percent below the preceding year, and 3 percent below the 1960-64 average The report goes on to say that prices of milk cows have strengthened, reversing a trend of several years standing The report also points out that milk prices to farmers, although expected to average seasonally lower during the second quarter, will still be 10-12 per cent higher than a year earlier USDA predicts that 1966 milk prices to farm ers will average 8-9 percent above 1965, thus providing dairy farmers with at least some increased income with which to meet their constantly rising production costs The Right To Soy NO A small news item buried in the in side pages of the daily paper one day this week should have been on the front page It was datelined Downingtown, Chester County, and said simply that the Downingtown School Board had re jected, for the fourth time, offers of federal funds in the amount of $190,000 to build an experimental “educational materials resource center” whatever that is One Downingtown school board Lancaster Farming Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly P O Box 266 - Lititz, Pa, 17543 Offices: 22 E Main St Lititz, Pa 17543 Phone - Lancaster 394-3047 or Lititz 626-2191 Don Timmons, Editor Robeit G Campbell, Adver tismg Director Subscuption price $2 per ye«i in Lancaster County, $3 eisewliei e Established November 4, 1955 Published eveiy Satur day by Lancaster Farming, Lit itz Pa Second Class Postage paid at Lititz, Pa. 17543. ★ Cows Can Withstand Heat If Some Sun And Humidity Relief Provided by Everett Newswanger, Staff Reporter Newswanger above 60 per cent, according to ARS re searcheis at, Reltsvilie, Md Dairy physiologist R E Mc- Dowell and A J Guidry have found that providing protec tion from dnect rays of the sun and reducing the humid- member described it as "foot-in-the door federal intervention”, and he may not have been far off the track. Let’s face it, friends, it takes a cer tain amount of guts to turn down that kind of money. Particularly, when you are an elected official, pledged to do the best by your community. Members of this school board are very much inter ested m the welfare of their school sys tem. apparently. But they are willing and able to look beyond the immediate “good". They are foresighted enough to realize, and old enough to remember the old maxim, you don’t get nothin’ for nothin'. And they are not willing to trade one iota of their school district’s free dom to make decisions for its own best interests independent of the federal government, or anyone else. Every district should be so fortu nate to have a school board with this kind of courage! ★ ★ ★ ★ Milk Makes A Comeback Prior to 1961, the sales of fluid milk were on the decline. Now a whole new generation has discovered that something which is “good” for you can also taste good. Promotional efforts by the industry, strongly directed toward teenagers in recent years, are beginning to pay off. In 1964 and 1965, sales of fluid whole milk held steady at 249 pints per person, a level that hasn’t varied more than one pint in the past five years. Americans are now buying 90 per cent of the total milk solids that they bought in the 1947-49 base period. Milk fat, mainly butter and cream, on the other hand, has been suffering a reduc ed intake. In 1965, sales of fluid nonfat and low-fat milk rose to an all time high of 16 quarts per person. This more than doubles the per capita sales of these dairy foods since 1950. Other dairy products have also been gaining in sales as milkfat pro ducts, like butter, have been decreas ing Cheese is a noble example.' In 1965, the per capita consumption of cheese approached the 9 5 pounds-per person, all-time high set in 1964. This represents an increase of almost one third on a per-person consumption basis. Frozen dairy products also came in for a larger share of the consumer’s dol lar in recent years. Ice cream and. such dairy treats totaled more than 21 quarts per person in 1965. In dollars and cents, the dairy in dustry represents the second largest food industry in the nation, and ac counts for about one-fifth of the total retail value of foods produced and con sumed in the U.S. So when you treat yourself and your family to milk and milk products, you can do so knowing you are doing the best by them and getting the most for your food Hollar at the same time. Maybe that’s why they call milk the perfect food. ity below 60 percent restores as much as 5,000 pounds to the cow’s production at 95 degrees F At less severe tem peratures, these adjustments also piovide relief McDowell and Guidry found that cows adjust well to tem peratuies that rise gradually They withstand temperatures up to 110 degrees F at mid afteinoon without a drop in pi eduction if these highs are offset with shade and cool nights Production, the scien tists found, seems moie close ly related to the number of houis pei day above 80 de grees F, than, to maximum temperatui e ' A cow with a potential of 19,000 pounds of milk per year would yield less than 1,000 pounds with t emperatuie kept at a con stant 95 de giees F and humidity kept TO MEASURE MOISTURE The leseaichers have devel (Continued on Page 9) Faith in Crisis Lesson for June 5,1966 lockgnund Scripture II Chronicles 29 through 32; Iso.oh 30 15 31 1 3 Devebenel Reading I) Kings 19 14*19. When something happens that never happened before, when a danger looms that is bigger than anything you have ever met, when something happens or threatens to happen which you did not start but cannot stop and don’t like even a little bit, brother, that’s a crisis. A lion bursting from his cage just .as the circus parade pas ses your house is crisis. An epi- demic of yellow Dr. Foreman fever is a crises, so is the death by accident of the wage-earner in a family. Rare is the person who in all his lifetime never met with a crisis. King Hezekiah of Judah (a country older than Israel (Samaria) hut one which lasted longer) went through a crisis which, among other lessons, taught him how to take a crisis. The terrible feature of such a combination of circumstances Is that it gives sometimes very little room to maneuver, to do any thing at all. The crisis comes and is past and the damage done before you are well awake. ATTITUDE IN CRISIS Now Hezekiah was a good king. One good feature he show ed was a sense of responsibility for the welfare of his country. But he found his beloved Judah invaded by the mightiest mon arch of that pait of the world at the time, Sennacherib of Nineveh, What could he do? The situation was completely out of his con trol The problem w T as, what to do 9 And the only answer seemed to be- Nothing. But Hezekiah learned (from God’s prophets and specially from Isaiah) that in a time of crisis the best thing to do is all you can do, namely nothing. What is important, as the King found out, is one’s at titude, not actions. BE STILL, AND KNOW ... Now Is The By Max Smith, Lancaster-County Agent To Calibrate Sprayers The importance of checking’ the exact amount of water and materials applied per acre cannot be over-emphasized at this time of the season Both custom spray operators and farmer spraymen are reminded of the importance of applying the exact amount per acre The speed driven, the pressure, and the size of nozzle have an influence on the amount per acre The wear on the nozzles will permit greater amounts per acie than when new We urge that sprayers be cali brated often to be safe To Spray Alfalfa Stubble Growers who harvested their first cutt- SMITH ing of alfalfa without any spray application should apply a weevil-control spray on the stubble, if this is not done, the feeding larvae will eat the new growth as fast as it appears and the second crop will be eliminated or reduced To Control Cutworms f To Fertilize Summer Weather conditions have fa- Forage Crops vored the activity of cutworms Due to the high livestock in corn, tobacco, and vegetable population in this part of the fields Control may be attained state, A the seeding of terapoiaiy by spraying the area with f° ra S e crops such as Sudan Chlordane several days before S rass or the- sudan-sorghum hv planting, do not work the bnds § ets considerable atten - Chloi dane'into the soil for cut- Don To get J quick, maximun worm control; they feed on top growth from _ these crops, v - of the ground at night Neither suggest a complete fertilizer, Dieldnn nor Heptachlor should sucb as 10-10-10, at the ia be used for soil insect control 500 pounds per acre ju because of the danger of resi- P nor to seeding; the fertilize! due in the following crops. , (Continued, on Page.- 9) A word of ft* prophet thil cam* to the King sounds, the first Urn* we hear it, like nonsenss, bm it can be the highest wltdomt" Be still, and know that I am God,* What does .this mean? It can b«, illustrated by a true story, mother and father had been sit ting in a great forest, with their! small son arid a small friend of! his. From some unaccountable Impulse, they all moved down the' stream a few yards. Suddenly lik* the crack of a rifle a sharp sound broke the stillness of the forest. But it was not a gun. It was the beginning of the breaking-apait of a tall and heavy tree, for centuries it had been growing there, then decaying, and on that windless afternoon its time had come. The frightening thing about it was the fact that with the forest cover it was impossiole to sea just where the breaking tree stood. Worse than that, both small bojs had vanished. The grown people shouted but there was no answer from the children. So there weie no more shouts. When the mother was asked afterwards how shefelt at that dark moment, she alwav» said that there came to her mind as if in letters of light, the words: Be still, and know that I am God. It was a call (she and he always believed) from God, a call to tht attitude of faith. (And there wer* no deaths either, as there well! could have been.) FAITH IN MEN Added to faith in God, thereto need also in times of crisis som# measure of faith in men, the right kind of men. We know that thia same king led in a religious ie formation, but not of theone-maa kind. He undertook to lead in aa important and wide-reaching re formation, but he summoned and challenged the Levites to helplujn in God’s name. The attitude ol faith not neccessanly faith that the sun will shine and all will b* well, for the shadows may neveu lift, but faith in men of good will, servants of God, and faith in our selves. God is not going to let you down; don’t you let others dov.n! The time of darkness, of end', is the hour and the opporumlv cf faith. So the king found in days of old; so may yoy. again. Based on outlines copyrighted ty ‘he Dw sun of Christian Education, National Council of t r e Churches of Christ in the U 3 A Re eesed by Comn tmty Press Service } Have YOU Tried , Our Classified? Time ...