4—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. July 1, 1967 From Where We Stand... Sewings Account- For Food? Is it likely that consumers will one day have savings accounts for food as they now have for boats, education, vaca tions. etc.? One authority sees this as a good possibility. Speaking at the recent annual meet ing of the National Live Stock and Meat Board, board secretary and general manager Carl F. Neumann suggests there are two factors that could break the usual procedure of buying food from current income. One. there’s a strong prospect for increased food costs; secondly, consum ers will want to assure availability of money to buy this basic necessity. Although we can’t agree with Neumann that regular food purchases will ever be paid for on a planned savings basis, we heartily agree with his contention that food prices will have to rise if food producers are to continue to feed this affluent nation. As Neumann points out, in the seven years prior to 1966, personal income in the U.S. jumped 39 percent while food expenditures moved up only 22 percent. And, as he notes, a large share of the 22 percent increase was for convenience factors such as special packaging and prior preparation to cut down on home cooking. Most of the increase never fil tered down into the farmers’ pockets. Many authorities in the area of food economics feel that the era of abun dant food supplies at prices below the level of other consumer goods is drawing to a close, Neumann notes. To that we can only say “It’s about time.”! Food has been taken for granted for much too long. The government philoso phy of keeping it ’always at the lowest possible price so consumers will have more money available for more expen sive goods 'and services which return a better margin of profit to their indus- Could This Happen On YOUR Farm? f„ £S4 , g:' f ' "l" &(&{■>-&■<,?■ . t * '7s*'* * ,/S* *> *', '•* *' J * • -:r-..^ F£r <' * > *■*’ - * ', -* *• SO MUCH SILT ran off this corn field in the Penryn area in a recent rain that when the road scr aper pushed it away it nearly buried this mailbox. The field has about a five or six degree slope toward the road, 'and there was no evidence of any applied conserva tion effort. According to SCS coun ty conservationist Orval A. Bass, even a minimum of conservation such as contour strips could have prevented # Granqe them at a party. x „ i> orrA n June is Home Economics _ .. . ~ (Continued from Page 1) month in the Nationa i Grange Believe it or not, there are Lancaster Co Community Fair Centennial ce i e bration and Miss m ° re t han 150 different para- Septemher 20. Agnes Spence, Lecturer, told sites that infect horses These Little Bntam-Fulton 4-H Sew- , ° * c arr i„ a Hall wa« include internal parasites such in? Chib will hold meet- f esponsible for having women as worms and hots, and exter iors at the Grange Hall this in he Grange f ra ternity Mrs nal Parasites such as mange summer. Eichard Nye read <. Evo i ut ion and lice. Foals and young hors- The Youth Committee spnn- of "the Home Economics Com- e ®> and those under unusual sored a hayride June 17 and a m : ttee •• M rs Stanley Stauffer stressare ™ ost susceptible to doggie roast at the Hollwood , . ® ’ P ara9ltes ' Consult your veter- Athletic Field Park. J-.read a poem Mothers Do- inanan for advice on parasite The Peapickers team won in nuts> ’ . _ control the membership contest and The next meeting will be picnic will be held July 24 at the Cornhuskers will entertain held July 10 and the annual the Grange Hall. tries and thus stimulate the nation’s economy has dam near wrecked our farm economy. Savings accounts for food? Not like ly, we think, but increased food prices a must if farmers are to continue in business. Fourth Of July On Independence Day, 1967, it might be well for us to remind ourselves that the freedom which we commemorate is not self-perpetuating. It is something we must work for, conscientiously and continuously, even as did our forefathers. They were ready to die for freedom; can we do less than strive to nurture and pro tect it? Of the fifty-six who signed the De claration of Independence, five were cap tured by the British and executed as traitors; nine others died from wounds or the hardships of the Revolutionary War. Still others saw their homes and planta tions destroyed. For those wh!o lived, the reward was poverty their possessions commandeered, their lands laid waste. These were the men who gave us an independent America one hundred and ninety-one years ago. They are the men who pledged; “For the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of the Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other, our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred hon or.” Through their sacrifice we do have freedom. We do have our unalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Let us not take these sacred rights and our freedom for granted. There are those who would chip away, little by little, these things we cherish most. It’s up to each of us to prove that we will not be deprived of our heritage. A * A J! " V<- / * extensive damage to this field. Terraces would have been even better though, he adds. Not only was soil lost and corn damaged here because of the three-inch plus rainfall in the area, but much of the valuable water itself will never be available to this crop. Strips or terraces could have slowed the flow of water sufficiently to permit its absorption into the ground for later use. ~ $ J L. F, Photo HORSE PROBLEMS No loitering! Lesson for July 2,1967 Rocbgrovnd ScnpHrrr Ach )3 Oovohonai Roaoinfl Ps«lms96. For too many of us, evange lism means welcoming the new church families that move into our community and persuading them to transfer their member ship to our church instead of another. This concern, of course, is legitimate, but it is some thing consider ably less than the proper re sponse to: "Go therefore and make disciples of all nations.." The great ma .... , jority of people Kev. Althouse who join our churches today youth coniir mands the exception are per sons who already are church members. But what of the great num bers who are not committed to Jesus Christ? The command was not to seek letters of transfer, but to win people to Christ. We are to seek, not a change of member ship, but a change of life. Never theless, our evangelism, if we have any at all, seems directed to the "nice” people, the "solid citizens,” the people whose lives do not seem to need much in the way of radical change. Mere Than Welcome i In our city there is a coffe,. • house sponsored by various churches in the area. Its purpose is to minister to the rootless young adults of the area. As I was speaking of this ministry with someone, they wanted to know: "Are there likely to be any hoods or beatniks coming- there?” The words were spoken with distaste. My answer: "I sincerely hope so.” God is concerned about these peo ple too: the alcoholic, the dope addict, the "dropout,” the "hip ster,” the delinquent, the homo sexual, the bearded and the un washed. Too often today we Christians pat ourselves on the back if our hurdr makes an attempt towel- To Irrigate Crops To Plant Cover Crop In Corn enoush haw a If atraz ™ not been used enough to have a supply of wa- to control weeds the nraetiee ter for irrigation should use the of sowing JgJJ p £-> *» varn gr „rcJ™ r r«“ y cu s s stunted fhl m v plants are control both water and wind siumea tney may never give erosion. normal growth or yields. ‘ To Graze Sorghum Hybrids Cautiously Lancaster county* own Form Many livestock producers use Weekly either Sudan grass or the Sudan- p °- Box 206 - Lititz, Pa. 1754* sorghum hybrids for temporary ofLce: 22 e Mam st., summer pasture, or green- D . f jiutz ’ p *- 17543 chopping. To eliminate the dan- ° r ger of prussic acid poisoning, Don Timmons, Editor the Sudan grass should be at Robert G. Campbell, Adventism* least 18 inches high, and the Director sorghum hybrids at least 24 Subscription price: J 2 per year In inches tall, before using m a Lancaster County; s3‘elsewhere According to Established November 4, , 1955. research, the hybrids contain Published every * by higher .amounts of prussic acid Lancaster - Farming, xauu, P*.* than the sudan grasses. * come anyone who happens to; cross its threshhold. Yet, necc*- ssry as it is for churches to re ceive ali who come, our tnirsioiv is not one of sitting and waiting. We are called to reach out, to gu "where the action is,” to theplacci where we will find those who need the Gospel of Christ. We arc too often content to be found when our mission is to go and find. Not Content To Wait This is the strategy we find in Acts 13. The church at Antioch was not waiting for someone to come in; it was willing to be sent forth. When the guidance they sought was given, they set apart two of their own number, com missioned them, and sent them out to find those who needed the. Gospel of Christ They were a congregation that reached out. Once before, when the Mother Church in Jerusalem had come upon hard times, the people at Antioch took up a relief collection for them. Now they were reaching out again. Barnabas and Paul went forth as preachers, for theirs was an era when people still listened eagerly to the spoken word. To day this is no longer true. Ac customed to television, radio, and ever-present loud speakers, peo ple today turn a deaf ear to street comer preaching and even close their eyes to tracts, Bibles, and other media. Word* seem to havei become cheap. Deeds So Loud The most effective commumca* tion today is witness, deeds that speak so loudly that they cannov he ignored, deeds that make peo ple want to know what is behind them. Those who need our mes sage today, for the most part,, will not come to our churches.! Nor will they even attend evangel lism crusades in tents or publio stadiums. We have made it quit* clear that before they are accept able, they must first shave their beards, cut their hair, change their clothes, and stop doing whatever it is they do and w* would not. The "No Loitering” sign should be posted, not for the stranger outside our churches, but the believer within- The “out sider” will not come, so-we must) go. That is how it was for Paul and Barnabas. 1 It it no less true! for us. (Based air atrilinaa capyrifHladby (he DJvWai* al Christian Educatian, NaHanaf Council af >h# Churches af Christ in the (/. $• A* Released By Community frail Sarvica.) Go To Church Sunday NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent LANCASTER E ARMING