4—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 12, 1966 From Where We Stand... Public Opinion On Cut-Rote Milk Prices Wo know that the image of the farmer in the consumer's eye is net good. Speakers at M mcr banqu,:,ts and meetings tor the past several years have been raving we must improve that imago cr suffer the consequences of more stringent federal control over farm product pnce.». The average consumer probably knows that milk is produced by cows, not by supermarkets, although there’s some doubt whether the next generation will be even as well informed! But the average consumer has no idea of the problems on the input side of milk production. They don’t know, for ex ample, that the advancing costs of producing milk, eggs, pork, or what ever, have continued to undermine even •the best farm prices in recent years. If .the price of milk goes up a cent, con sumers generally figure the increase goes right into the farmers’ pockets. It will be a long, up-hill fight to educate consumers on some of these food prob lems, and to show them that the extra services they have demanded on the processing and retailing end of the food chain accounts for most of the price increases which they protest. This point was highlighted this week, when, on the way to the Live stock Exposition in Harrisburg, we caught the tail-end of a radio man-on the-street broadcast. The interviewer was asking the people what they thought of the cut-rate prices being of fered on milk by two retail stores in the Philadelphia area. And, after tell ing them that the price of milk was controlled in Pennsylvania, asking if they approved of milk price controls. The interviewer was thinking of control on milk prices in the normal consumer sense of price controls that is, as a lid rather than a support Con sequently, he had the people he talked with as confused as most of us are on this milk price situation Most of the people said they would certainly buy the 79-cent per gallon milk being offered in preference to paying the $1.06 price for milk pre scribed by the Pennsylvania Milk Con trol Commission To the second part of the question, however, all agreed the price of milk should be controlled, and favored a state commission to do this' But to illustrate the point that farmers can get their message to con sumers, one woman interviewed said she would not buy the cut-rate milk be cause she felt that it would hurt the farmer. She said farmers have to work hard for their money and anyone sell ing milk that cheap would eventually be taking money out of the farmer’s pocket. What this interviewer failed to make clear,' however, was that PMCC • Groff Named (Continued from Page 1)1 promotion was J Mowery Frey Jr, 401 Beaver Valley Pike, Lancaster Daniel Stoltzfus, Mount Joy Rl, Was reelected secretary, John Kreider, 523 Willow Road, Lancaster, was elected treasurer -to succeed Daniel Martin, Manhelm Rl, who retired fiom the boarjd LANCASTER FARMING! Lancaster County's Own Faim ■Weekly ) PO Box 20(> - Lititr, Pa Office 22 Ij Mam St. | latua, Pa 17242 ’ ‘lPhone ' Lancaster 20 1-2047 dr Lilith 026-2101 Bon Timmons, JCditoi [ Robert fJ Campbell, Advertising Birector i Subscription price: per in La,ncast»i Count', $3 else"here 'Established Mov ember 4, 102' Published iveiv Satin d.iv jbv Lancaster Farming, Patna, ,Pa Second Class Postage paid; at -Bititz, Pa 17543 I controls the minimum price at which milk may be- sold in Pennsylvania; competition and supply-demand control the maximum price. What the final outcome will be ol this challenge to the authority of PMCC by the two milk firms involved, wo don’t know. The courts will have In decide that. It would seem that without the Commission, or some comparable slate authority, the situation could got really chaotic in a hurry. On the other hand, the present supply-demand con ditions on milk would probably discour age much actual price-cutting. The Commission seems undoubted ly the best answer at the moment, but the long range solution to milk and all food prices lies in better com munication and understanding between farmer and consumer. Great- Society Backlash Now that the elections of 1966 are in the record books, all the analysts are busy trying to interpret the results. What does this tremendous resurgence of the “out-party” mean in national terms? While it is undoubtedly true that the Negro civil rights cause pushed aside a lot of friends through the ir responsible behavior of a minority of city-dwelling Negroes . . who even over ran the moderate leaders of their move ment . . . we can’t see the white “back lash” theory accounting for the GOP landslide. Of course it was an impor tant factor in some area races, especial ly those hosting the summer riots . . . California and Illinois, for example. But rather than white backlash, we see Great Society backlash as the voting opinion expressed by millions of Americans this week. We think very definitely the voters have said to the Great Society, “Enough, already!”. Much of the G. S. legislation passed by the 89th Congress did so by slim margins. A gain in House seats of 47 by Republicans has whittled the Democratic majority to its lowest point since 1956. A net gain of three senators and eight governors for the GOP cer tainly adds credence to the theory that Americans are fed-up with the whole free-wheeling Great Society business. How severely this rebalancing of representation will restrict President Johnson’s legislative and spending plans will depend to a great extent on the political and economic philosophies of the new electees. Simply because they are Republicans is no guarantee of their conservatism, but some polling of the individual opinions of these new Congressmen seems to indicate trouble for LBJ’s plans. We surely hope this will be the case, and that the 90th Con gress will succeed in restoring a little fiscal sanity in Washington and in the nation. Paul Zimmerman, Ephrata Rl, along with Kreider and Frey, were the new directors elected during the business meeting. Some 280 members and fnends-i-,, of 'the association heard George J. Morgan, At tomey-at-Law, speak on some of the pioblems and laws pei laimng to wills and property ownership “Whether or not you pass on more of your hard earned money to your children will depend 'on how you work with the tax laws,” he said Morgan urged everyone to make a will “Even if you just make a simple one,' you save money,” he said -“And, if you have a will, you can say how you want it Otheiwise, the state has a' law that ‘will dis perse your property for you, but it may not be done the way you would have wanted it So get a will,” Morgan said Nelvin Enrpet, fiekhnan for ★ ’ the Pennsylvania Holstein As sociation, told the gatheiing that the 206 herds enrolled In the recent classification pio gram conducted in the South eastern district was the larg est such program in the cOjim try Eighty of these herds were in Lancaster County, Empet said Other speakers on the pro gram included Miss Carol Hess, Lancaster County Dairy Prin cess; Elam Bollinger, chair man of the junior project com mittee; and Blvin Hess, Jr,, state director. President Clarence Stauffer served as master of cere monies (See Photo Page 7) WHERE DOES THE MONEY GO? Less than 60 percent of our national income is now spent for essentials; in 1900 about.BB percent went for that purpose. / Irrcfiillblo pSwer of unarmed thX M** truth) the powerful attraction ~f ■ A Jm// Ic'lOStT'by Pnnthcon Rook-, '“ j m| Y - ,,h -- ~ A , 3'&M Tnit * l mn >' n l , l' ( ' ar lo be I. >. ft ’£*&s/ armed nntl it Is In the um 1 ,'I .sense of what w« mean by ”ai n - , I a, i, •■■ . Y'.'Mfi and "weapons” hut it pii- V/i!fiTTkvfl veres with an irnsi-tihle po . 1 1 * ' over which no man. nation. ' elvlli/alion eannltnn.il ly p’e\. •I j ii. . _! Ue may silence the pi oph Unarmed VIC TO r mav burn their books, w. ii | crush truth lo earth atra! . l.esson For N’o\ ember 13,10K(»| but it will re a;a i . anain and nj;aiii lucau'. i. Hod's truth. The CocfcgrtwmJ scriptvr« » Dtvartignol Rtoding ••nt li> c * 6 "I he opponents of truth alwass seem to be by f.ir thebet* n-armed warriors, 'the toes of I’ailandhis gospel had the whole weight of the Roman Empire and thc.lewish nation behind them. Galileo was of one before the combined colos sus of Church and Slate. While volume after vol ume was thrown upon the sinister bonfires of Xa/.i Germany, no one seemed able to oppose Hitler’s brown-shirted Rev. Althouse legions. So it was when Judah’s King lehoiakim determined to silence the troublesome prophet Jeremi ah, and his prophecies. All the power seemed arrayed against truth, its few friends impotent to carry on the fight. Jeremiah, the king ruled, was forbidden to speak any longer in the area of the temple. More Than Prudent A prudent man would have quit right there, but Jeremiah was more loyal to his God than pru dently responsive to good reason. Forbidden to speak the truth m public, he wrote it on a scroll and gave it to Baruch, his sec retary, to read before the minis ters of the king. Equally resource ful, the king cut the scroll into strips and contemptuously burned them. Undismayed, Jeremiah wrote his prophecies on another scroll. Scrolls and books may be burned, but truth, no matter how impotent it may seem in its own self-defense, will be the ultimate victor! In Pasternak’s novel, Doctor Zhivago, Uncle Kolia protests that what man needs is not suppression by force, not the lion tamer with his*whip to hold down "the beast who sleeps in man.” To the contrary, he says, .. what has for centuries raised man above the beast is not the cudgel but an inward music: the Lancaster Farming Ads Pay! Now Is The Time ... By Max Smith, Lancaster County Agent To Check Farm Agreements Partnership agreements between land lord and tenant should be checked annually to operate in a satisfactory maimer This will remind the partners of their obligations and provide a chance to evaluate the various - terms to see that they are doing the intended job. Agreements in writing eliminate many misunderstandings. To Vaccinate Heifer Calves ' A herd of cows -with some resistance to Bang’s Disease is preferable to one without any attempt to prevent the disease. Young heifers should be vaccinated when about 4 month of age to get the greatest amount of resistance with the least amount of un- desirable reactions. Don’t run the risk of not vaccinating. To Finish High School ~ Education . Every once m a while I comg in contact with a teen-age Jad who has quit high school and wants to become a farm er. There are many reasons why a student may not like school and' want to drop out, but not any of them are good enough to justify the failure of getting a high school education, as a te’en-ager With the competition for educated and trained people now and in the future, the high school diploma is the foundation for any career. ' . To Suffer A Season Men of courageous lo alt . therefore, will hnl. them*!. i unarmed truth and sufiei v in for a season, even a hfeti it. i> - cause they know it mi-t in mately prevail in God -gi 1 time. Woodrow Wilson ont. s.i i , "I would rather fail in a cat - I know must ultimately muu , then succeed in a cause j know must ultimately fail.' A f arnu* put it more picturesque! ) rather chase a rabbit a d i < • catch it, then chase a skv ik ai d catch it.” Better to sufft win and for the unarmed tru a tn i prosper with the powci ul ! Truth'may seem to stand alon, a frail, impotent creatuie, b . behind truth there stands t awesome pow’er and purpose < i God. That is why in the lung m i this unarmed warrior is tre victor. Friends of Abraham Lincohi advised him not to make a pct ticular speech during his unsuc cessful bid for the United Staks Senate in 1858. The speech, though true, would be harmf.T to him, they said. But Lined i would not agree: "If it is decreed that I go down because of Ih s speech, then let me go down linked to the truth.” The friends of truth must he willing to "go down linked to (re truth,” to pay the price th s friendship may require. Jeremiah was such a friend, so was Baruch, and so were the king’s ministers who bravely carried to him (re forbidden scroll. The contents of the scroll would likely mfuna.e him and jepoardize their lives, but, confident that truth wouid ultimately prevail,'they wjerelov ?1 friends of this unarmed w arnor. Are you? (latad an •uHmtt capynghtad by tha Diw»«tc*» at Christian Educatian, National Cauncil *1 ♦'•a Churchat af Christ in tha U S. A Ralaasad k/ Cammumty Prass SarvKa) ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE SUNDAY To Protect Evergreens - Freezing weather and cold winds will soon be here and the evergreen shrubs may need sbme protection. A good ground mulch to prevent sud den; changes in temperatuie will help protect the roots; this is especially true of plants that will get the winter sun Screens 'of burlap, canvas, 01 wood will break the stiong winds and keep out the sun rays during the winter. The ■ mpistiire conditions,of the soil should, be very good at this time, and if the plants are pi°' tected as listed, there should be a minimum of winter J»' jury this year. SMITH