Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 17, 1966 4 From Where We Stand Late But Welcome Hey, how about that rain! It may ■have been too late, but it sure tried not to be too little. It was too late for many tobacco crops and for most of the northern Lancaster County corn crop, but pas tures and hay fields should get a good boost. Also anyone who had his small grain in the ground before the storm should get some quick results. Rainfall amounts reported around the county varied widely Lititz Boro reported 2.85 inches; county agent M. M Smith recorded 3.9 inches at his home in Lancaster. The Harrisburg- York area boasted over four inches. And some quarters labeled it the heaviest one-day downpour in more than a decade. No, it may have been late, but it sure was welcome! ★ ★ ★ ★ What Others Arc Saying During the national airline strike, U. S Senator Frank J. Lausche (D. - Ohio) said: “I think the time is at hand when courage must be exercised by public officials. We cannot continue to • Junior Dairy (Continued from Page 1) by Glengarry Lloyd Royal, her dam is Unicorn Isabelle Es benshade, -the 19-year-old son of Mr and Mirs. Milton Es benshade, also won awards m fitting and showmanship class es. He has been active in 4-H work for the past ten yeais. Esbenshade’s calf also won the junior and reserve grand cham pion titles at the recent 4-H district show. In last year’s jujuor show, county - youths dominated the Holstein classes, but were shut out,in other breed com petition. Three Glovster FFA Chapter members David Zimmerman, Clifford and Daryl Bollinger won every Holstein tatle but grand cham pion and senior champion JAMES R ESBENSHADE, Quarryville R 2, holds his senior calf, Unicorn Royal Queen Isabelle, that won junior champion Ayrshire 4-H honors at the Pennsylvania Junior Dairy Show on Monday. At right is Pennsylvania Dairy Prin cess Carol Ann Stephens. \ # Tobacco LANCASTER PA RHINO Lancaeter County’* Own Fun (Continued fiom Page 1) Weekly PO Box 266 - Lrtit?, Pa 17542 Offices 22 H Main St, 1-atitz, Pa IV>43 Lancaster 394-31)47 LiUU G 26-2191 Phone est crop since 1957. ? Don Timmons, Debtor L'ate planted tobacco in tile Rebel t G Campbell, 'Advertising county IB m touch poorftl Dnector ; • ' » Subscription price - f 2 per \ear In Shape than TOOSt Of the older BstabUshed ToM "c'S ***& the ‘ ported, Published e\er.v Satuide-y by-adding that the season had Lancaster Farming, JAutz, Pa , Second Postage paid at been pushed back several weeks later by the dry weather. « • • tolerate power being ex«. ‘\XfoMhan s n °dEud«S cised by labor unions m defiance of the be fuled wlth the t E p h e . rights of 190 million Americans. More sians 5:18 RSV j than the isolated airline strike is in- Alcohol or narcotics may de volved Involved is the message that come a person’s god and provide goes out to the people of the nation as him »hh .«y ot ™ to whether government is supreme or have a proverb: whether labor leaders are supreme.’ ■ Ciiltiili Inf A Eft r laAll First the man... takes the (NOTE: While we heartily agree H OUDSIIIUI V IUI UUU drink, with the Senator on the need to curb LegsonFor September 18, 1966 Next the drink . . takes the rampant labor union power, we hope Then the drink takathe the only choice for the American people hM ’ * 'man! does not truly between tne two 2134 36 E P h«tan»sis ll. In short, it becomes a substitute supremacies government and labor. Ho»»«4t 3, «•, 11. f or God, occupying the place m Oxie tyranny is as bad as another, In his book, Dare To live our lives that ought toberiserved benevolent or not.) Now!.* Bruce Larson tells of an for God alone, e w « * incident that happened one eve- , n . ning as a men’s prayer group Beyond Drttnkeness “For some time now the food- was meetin g j n a New York of- The moral issue of drK: does population problem has been discussed f ice . a man came in whom no not end with drunkeness alone, as though it were a problem of the one knew. Each man in the group Drunkeness is harmful by itself, , , T ° . , mmed that the but it is even more significant future. It is not a problem of the futu e. ranger had when we consider how dru: :eness It is here now . . . ,’ says Secretary 01 jerl invited by may contribute to other moral Agriculture, Orville L. Freeman. meone else in failures. Drink may leac us to (NOTE: We also agree with this • circle. So they dishonor our father and mothei, ctnfomont but - utp nnlv w(qH the Secre— -d him to pull or it may be the cause of .ie loss statement, but we only wish tne aecre a chair £ nd of such honor before o .r own tary had realized that fact earlier when > n circle of children It may cause us :o take politicians were speaking so glibly of ;n who were the life of another human Doing, feeding the world while Administration eeting for accidentally or willfully. It mav forces were busy reducing the American t L prayer and fel- tear down our defenses against : wcic j & ReV. Alfhouse lov/ship. adultery or cause us to ci eat, he farmers ability to do so.) (* Copyrighted 1965 by Zonder- or steal. It may provide me one - van Publishing House, Grand necessary ingredient to tur coi et- Rapids, Michigan.) ous thoughts into covetous ac- SeveraL of the men talked turns. If a man takes the Lords about their present troubles and name in vain, it is oftei. drink struggles toward becoming whole that loosens his tongue, people and effective Christians. When drink becomes a subsli- Temperatures for the five- The stranger sat and listened in tute for God, we violate the corn day period Monday through silence. Finally, the leader of the mandment, You shall have no Wednesday are expected to group turned to the stranger and other gods before me,” and we averaee below the normal asked him to introduce himself, stand in danger of violating all range of 55 177 degrees The S rou P was not the rest as well. Alcoholism and I*"?* LvL aL what they heard him say. - Christianity are competing reh- Little day-to-day change is « My n ame -is Paul,” he said, gions. Both are a total way of expected, but the weather- « a nd lam a dope addict.” While life- The real answer to aicohol man looks for milder tern- they digested that revelation he ism, then, is not a mattei of hid peratures toward the end wen t on: "I came here to rob this in S the bottle, but in finding and of the period. office to get a fix, but I think 1 experiencing the power of God. Some general precipitation have found something better.” Be- (i „ w .n.u«.r...c. P ,r. t hi.4Wvr*-.0.v,...n is indicated for Monday along cause he had heard a small group .1 chmt..n Mut.h.n n.ii.ml i.l ih u the coastal areas. This will of men being honest' with each- c*«»*h« ?in»t 'aiKV S A k * total 'V2 inch and may.- other about iheir . Christian faith, - camrnuhiiy r ,rvK *' reach inland to Lancaster- - Pmrt stayed to 'pray to God and County. ' ' ‘ , " ’ ask-4iim'to-help-'h&n >vith his - l, 1 problejn;'-, . ? D. -Zimmerman, 3. Jersey: (4-H), Intermediate StMlild B* , Calf, Larry Aaron,-6; ShMsy' pomtslo-a fact that . ’ . . * we often miss: Alochol and nar- Aaron, 7; Stephen, be used as - Arrowjsnuth, 4. (FFA), nond ... -foi% 6od. occupied a ■place, in life that,'should reserved-for tid'd > ■ is,often-triie'of alcohol. Ildflenbe - conies theTpeans whereby people?. -'try-'to '-cope with their problems and. the awesome real-* 5 ""! of I-*- County placings by breeds Ayrshire: (4-tt), Senior calf. junior champion, James benshade, (FFA), none Guernsey: (4-H), Intermedi ate calf, Allan Crider, 3, sen ior yearling, Mark Z. Witmer, 7, two-year-old cow, J Nelson Landis, 4; Marvin E Landis, 8. (FFA), none. Holstein: (4-H), Jumor calf, Marilyn Krantz, 15; intermedi ate calf, Manlyn Harbold, 4; Cindy Hess, 7; senior calf, Benjamin H. Kettering, 13; senior yearling, -Carol Jean, Kettering, Iff, „ two-year old cow, Edwin E. Hess, 2 (FFA)J Intermediate calf, Lester S. Gerhart, 7; senior calf, Earl Stauffer, 3; Daryl Bollinger, 5, junior yearling, S'guffer, 3; Randall Kline,'.ll; senior- year} ling, Linford * L. Weaver} 6; thiee-year-old and over,'David 51.3 million pounds, and IjS percent below the five-year average, ilt will be the smallt Ei- rate of gam, good feed conversion, and; top carcass quality. - * Fortunately, these traits can' be, 1 selected for and a good boar i can transniit these characteristics to v "hi& offspring. A, herd improving boar is seldom too expensive 2 To Fertilize Pastures . .Cattle feeders have beeig ex- With improved moisture con- posed to this suggestion? for The crop reporting service nearly all types of pas- several, years and it continues noted also that.unused Penn-. ures Wl u respond rapidly in' to giyl goqd results. Thej ap sylvama Seedleaf tobacco own- the next several weeks, If suf-' phdation s i .