4—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. June 3.1967 From Where We Stand... Salute To Dairy Industry For the several yr ar». Lancas ter Fanning has devoted its fir*t i-->ue in June to the county's g.ant dairy industry sou v.ill note lhi-> year i-> no excep tion June marks the dairy industry’s bigge«; annual eflort to tell its story, and to cncouiage use of its products Since our aud.ence is primarily Lancaster County farmers, v. e don’t have to tell you of the \ irtues of milk products But. "June is Dairy Month’ is good promotion for the dairy industry, and gives us an opportunity to at least thank our county dairy readers for the fine job they are doing for the health and econo my of tne county, the state, and the nation ★ ★ ★ You Can't’ Stop The World Contrary to the title of a broadway plav of a few seasons ago "Stop the World I Want to Get Off'" the prob lem of June graduates will be - How to learn to live with the world without gett ing off Some sage at some point in history defined wisdom as deriving from accept ing the world as it is Wed like to extend that definition to say accept the world, not necessarily as it is. but as a reality to be reckoned w ilh The youngster graduating into the •world is. generally for the first time, fly ing from the parental nest where he has dwelt in comparative ease and safety for all of his young life Even if he is going on to college rather than directly to work, he will still be beyond the authoritative protection he has enjoyed (he would say endured) for the past seventeen or eigh teen years In entering the confused and con fusing adult world, he will encounter many of the “stop the world types’’. These are generally young people who have refused to accept the reality of life Thev are quite content, apparently, to let others carry the load and make the de cisions They have, in the “hip” vernacu lar. ‘ dropped out” We are led to believe that, particu larly among college youths, the use of drugs has become a widespread means of both rejecting conventional morality and finding physical gratification in that never-never world of hallucination. The king of the drugs these days is LSD (we won't even try to spell out the unpronouncable chemical name i And the selt-stvled leader of the LSD sect is a former man know r n as Timothy Leary. Leary s invitation to all who would join his world “Turn off, tune in drop out” There have always been escapists like Learv and there always have been tools 801581 Penn Springs Moohaven can tes the high hopes of co owners Robert Kauffman and J. Robert Hess, Elizabethtown RI and Stiasburg Rl, i espectively, as she heads for the nation al Holstein Associa tion sale June 29th at St Paul, Minn. \ two-year-old, Bobbi is due to freshen m July. She is the daughter of Oliver dale Inspiration Ter ry, an aged cow with a 2E 92 classifica tion. Her sire is the well-known C r i s s ■ cross bull. • National Holstein (Continued from Page 1) ed by J Moweiy Fiey, Ji , 401 jointly-owned aged cow Olivei- Mis Herbeit Royer, 2025 Ore Beavei Valley Pike, Lancastei, dale Inspiration Terry, an Ivan gon Pike, Lancastei, and a brought a lecoid $25 000 hoe daughtei with a 2E-92 five-yeai old cow owned b;» Call COUNTY CONSIGNMENTS classification Bobbi’s sire is L Mailin, Ephrata HI. The Hess Kauflman heifei is (Continued on Page 6) At last yeai s national sale, Bobbi Penn Spungs Moohaven a young Holsiein bull consign She is the daughter of then with which to escape But the latter are getting more and more sophisticated. Leary himself predicts that one of these days drugs will be old hat; all you’ll have to do is plug in a machine and drop out electrically For those who would rather fight than twitch, we say. “Hang in there You can't be unborn by denying reality; you can be reborn, in a sense, by meeting reality head-on and bending it into a bet ter form than it could ever have achieved unopposed. ' You will follow many leaders along the way. choose them well. Know that their goals and their ideals match your own For those of you who are destined to become the leaders, know that your actions beget consequences, and lead as you would have others lead you Yours is a particularly dire responsibility. Enough advice. Graduates. We con gratulate you on getting this far success fully. and may success and good fortune continue to shine on you forever. ★ ★ ★ Alfalfa On The Increase Perhaps one reason the alfalfa wee vil is gaming m economic importance m Lancaster County is the increase in al falfa acreage during the past four years A comparison of the state's crop and livestock reports for 1963-1966 showed com acreage gaining at the expense of small grains, and corn for silage gaining 70 percent while com acreage for grain declined 17 percent. When it came to comparing forage crops for the four-year-period, we found that, although the “acreage grown in the county held fairly constant at about 90,- 000, the ratio of alfalfa acreage to clover and timothy changed drastically In 1963, county farmers raised 43.000 acres of al falfa and 46.000 acres of mixed hay. By 1966, those figures had changed to 53,- 300 for alfalfa to 37,000 acres for clover timothy' We’re not entirely sure of the full implications of the increasing farmer preference for alfalfa, but we’re sure of one thing; the weevils are happy about the new trend. Cows And Cars One Lancaster County dairyman we heard of lately has an idea that may re volutionize cow sales, he’s going to list them the Way the car dealers do. For example: One Holstein cow, base price, $lOO. Accessories udder, $75; two-tone color, $3O; four spirt hooves, $lO each, extra stomach, $35; dual horns (optional), $5 each Total price, $290. It may not catch on, but you’ve got to admit, it’s different 1 ★ ★ Gan People Ghanp? Lesson for June 4, 1967 BockywrxJ Scripture ' ’ ' ' D«voti*n«t twrfmf 1 u > "Uhat’s the use of trying" No one will bche\e that I’ve changed' - 'i’nese were the hoepless word-, spoken to me by a yoang man sick at heart after days of an swering "want ads" for employ ment. Kvery pro spective employ er gave him an application form; every ap -11 ca 1 1 o n form wanted to know whether he had e\er been in trouble with th 1 law C’onvincec Rev. Althouse that lying could no longer be a part of his life he told the truth each time. Each time he was turned away with something roughly equivalent to "Sorry, we can’t use you No Radical Change Why would no one believe that he had changed 7 He was a good looking bov; despite his histon of arrests for various offenses, he had a "sincere face *’ His ap pearance was neat, clean, and he was courteous in his manner If anything, his appearance should have encouraged trust and a willingness to take a risk on him i’rospectne employers would not believe he had changed be cause there is a basic suspicion that people cannot change radi cally. It is believed that *here is something 'Tixed’ - about a per son’s character, something that remains ever the same. While small changes and minor growth may lake place, these have few consequences. What a strange opinion of human nature for those who count themselves as Christians They tend to divide all people info the "good guys’ and the "bad guys,” these divisions re maming quite rigid and un changing. In doing so, they for get that Jesus taught that all men have potentialities for both good and evil. No one is wholly good Now Is The Time . . . By Max Smith, Lancaster County Agent To Be Careful With Weed Control Sprays Chemical weed control is a very common practice on most faims today Unfortunately, many of the herbicides are non-selective and will kill many kinds and species of plants Us ers of weed control chemicals aie urged to be exti emely caieful about the drift from then sprayer and about the residue left in equip ment To spray coin fields with 2,4-D and then use the same machmeiy foi spraying alfalfa fields is ceitamly very usky Separate equip ment is the safest method To Plant Temporary Forage Crops Late May or eaily June is the lecommend ed time to plant soybeans, Sudan glass, 01 any of the foiage sorghum hybuds We hope that SMITH the soil will become warmer „ . „ in the next few weeks which is ? u I 1 ‘I s 0-20 20 or 0-15-30 It is necessaiy for the proper giowth D , v? appl \ *“ e fertilizer of these plants These tern- ' V len 16 smd *l shoots are dry porary forage crops may be event any bmmng liom used foi pastuie, hay, 01 sil- f pi hhzei age and most of them have the ability to grow well during the one greater than hot summer months Care success 15 ability to stand it. should be used to keep tli t liAncastbh thht-mt-mi ' seeds sepaiate from fertilizers r,anca * ter county* own Far* containing any nitiogen or weekly nntls h PO DCPC 2CG * LltJtz - Psi 17B4 » P ° tdSh Office 22 H If mi st, Tn Fertilivp tlfilli Lilitz Pi It an *° I?" Altana .. . Phone Lane , lster or One of the good times to ap- Luitz 62fi-2m ply fertilizer to an established alfalfa field is immediately af- Dneaor ter the removal of the first 3u T bsur, Ption price- *2 per year In tei tne remuvai ui tne rust La.nt\ster County, $3 elsewhere cutting The common fertiliz- E '£ al ?V s^ e< ?. November 4, issb. . Published every Saturday by er to use is one containing Lancaster Farming, Lititz, P«. both phosphorus and potash Lttitzf P«!*T754f OSt * KS plld ** or wholly bnd. None of u» i»— doomed to bo one or thu otlje What God Can Dc Saul, once the piumlonutc per secutor of C'lirlHt’H followers, en counter! d this attitude after he had Ilia life chnnglng experience r>M the Dam.iHuis Komi. Taken to IJiiniasuiM, I'mi I walled for (iod lo ni.ike known Ins will for him. Wiule he walled the news of hi* experienu* spread tluough the Christian lominuii'v* due gets the inipiession that it was re garded largely with suspicion and outright rejection. "Nobody changes that much,’ seemed to be the general reaction from moat people. I. ven later when he had been accepted by the Damascus church, the suspicion accom panied him to Jerusalem. Once again in the Damascus Road experience of Saul we see how f>od can foil the opposition of men 10 his plans Saul’s per secution might easily have fin ished the early C hurch, but (iod used that danger to accomplish his p - rpose. 1 urthermore, when he encountered Saul on his way to Damascus, he accomplished three thing' in one. (1) raised up someone to take the place of the mam red Stephen; (2) enlisted Saul’s talents for the kingdom in stead of against it, and (3) ended the persecution against the Church In other words, he gained an apostle, lost an enemy, and protected his Church. Yet this might never have happened if someone in the Chris tian community had not been willing to believe that Saul the persecutor could become Paul the apostle There was Stephen who prayed for him as Saul watched him die There was Annanxas, the fearful but obedient man who helped Saul begin a new life in Damascus Finally, there was Barnabas who was willing to risk his own safety to claim a new recruit for tne V\ ay. Unless We Believe How can people change un less someone is willing to believe that they can change? How is conversion possible when we con tinue to doubt the power of God to transform a person’s life? Why should we be willing to believe! that Saul became Paul if we will; not believe that the delinquent; can become a useful citizen? If you were willing, like Barnabas, Annamas, and Ste-' phen, to take a chance on God’s 1 power to transform men, whom do you know that might become a new person m Jesus Christ? (lasad an autlmas copyrighted by (ha Division •f Christian Education National Council of (ha Cnbrchos of Christ in tha USA* Xoloosod by Community frass Sorvica)