4 ■Lancaster Farming. Saturday, November 11,1967 From Where We Stand ... More Grateful A Peace Corps volunteer and his wife who served in Guatemala. Central America, had something to say about the “apparent apathy” of the average U.S. citizen living in the richest society in the world. Writing in a national farm maga zine. this technical advisor to a United Nations milk plant said. “Perhaps it v ould be good for the striking auto work ers to live lor two years m Guatemala where a good wage for a factory worker is SI a day try and feed a family on 17 percent of that! “Pei haps it would be good for the NFO milk dumper and the people who ciove him to it to watch a child wither to nothing from malnutrition and even tually die for want of ... . (rmlkl.” After raising a question as to the future endurance of the American So ciety as we know it. he concludes. “If V e are too proud to thank God for our countless blessings and replace the greed i i our hearts v. ith genuine love and ap prec.a::on the end may be closer than we ell lealize " We can’t help be reminded of the l.rrls say mg wmcli goes something like "t 'll5 4 1 complained in my misery For I had no shoes. Until I met a Man Who had no feet " We should be more grateful, espe cially as we appioach the Thanksgiving season At least that's the way it looks from where we stand Youth Winners At yd Harrisburg Just a few lines to say the Lancas ter County youth showing steers at the 11th Annual Pennsylvania Livestock Ex position did very well this week. As re ported on page 1, we had the best group of five and a grand champion. We under stand quite a large number of our local boys and girls will be going on to the Eastern National Livestock Show at Tim cmum, Maryland, today We certainly hope they do as well there. ie a ts ms About Trading Stamps A report came across our desk this week, telling of a study that was made of the trading stamp industry It seems stamp redemption across the nation re quired stamp companies to procure mer- Farm News This Week Broderick Speaks To The Conservation Convention Page 1 Guernsey Men Set Annual Meet For November 17 Page 19 Lancaster County Group Is Best At Exposition Page 1 Farm-City Week Creates Better Rural-Urban Unity Page 13 Farm Women Help Health Group With Christmas Seal Campaign Page 1 LANCASTER FARMING Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly P O Box 266 - Lititz, Pa 17543 Office 22 E Mam St, Lititz, Pa 17543 Phone Lancaster 394 3047 or Lititz 626 2191 Everett R Newswanger, Editor Robert G Campbell, Advertising Director Subscription price $2 per yeai in Lancaster County, $3 elsewheie Established Novembei 4, 1955 Published every Saturday by Lancaster Farming Lititz Pa Second Class Postage paid at Lititz Pa. 17543 Member of Newspaper Farm Editors Assn. “V chandise from some 64 different indus tries about $250 million worth of pro ducts. In one state alone (Missouri) the report showed the trading stamp indus try accounted for approximately $lO mil lion of the manufacturers’ sales and em ployment for about 1500 workers count ing the stamp companies and the suppli ers. Now we realize the stamp compan ies pay taxes and the jobs and sales creat ed bj r the use of trading stamps amount to a considerable contribution to the na tional economy. But we still can’t help think the farmer is blamed for the in creased prices added to Mrs. Consumer’s weekly food purchases by the stamp gimmick. If the trading stamps were discon tinued say in the super market, they could lower food prices and consumers could take the money saved and buy the "stamp" merchandise from a local mer chant. In the end the same amount of trading could occur but the farmer and the food industry would not be charged for the extia unrelated merchandise. At least that's the way it looks from where we stand. Spending Brakes Needed The proposed surcharge on corpor ate and personal income is supposed to be a temporary measure needed largely to finance the cost of the war in Viet Nam But, there have been temporary taxes enacted before, 'and a good share of them are still with us. If the rapid ex pansion in the size and cost of govern ment now under way is not checked, any tax boost made will have little effect on budget deficits or the course of inflation. Both will remain with us to undermine the economic stability of the country and depreciate the income and the savings of the people. It is time 'to reconsider na tional fiscal policy. In the final analysis, it must be recognized that governments too have limitations on their ability to spend. Across The Fence Row THE QUIET TRUTH. Self-respect cannot be hunted. It cannot be purchas ed It is never for sale It cannot be fabricated out 'of public relations. It comes to us whien we are alone, in quiet moments, in quiet places, when we sud denly realize that, knowing the good, we have done it: knowing the beautiful, we have served it, knowing the truth, we have spoken it. —A. Whitney Griswold in a speech IT’S THE COST of living high, not the high cost of living that causes all the groans at the grocery checkout counter. Then there’s this story A little city boy in the country for the first time saw the milking of a cow. “Now you know where the milk comes from, don’t you?” he was asked. “Sure,” he replied. “You give the cow some breakfast food and water and then you drain the crankcase.” Weather Forecast The five-day forecast calls for tem peratures to average near normal with daily highs in the upper 40’s to the mid 50’s The low is expected to be in the low 30’s to low 40’s. Mild at the beginning To Control Cattle Parasites... and cooler toward the end. Normal high wint ® r seaB ° n 18 is 54 and low is 36 ly a PP roachin S- Man y strin S s is 03 ana low is oo of feeder cattle have been Rain may total Ato inch occurr- brought into the county this ing as showers Saturday and as general fall. Many of these cattle are rain end of thejieriod^^ SUBTLE IDOLATRY Lesson for November 12,1967 Kflcbfrcund Seriplurr Hosea 4 8 through 10. Kt«ritn|.Mark 12 28 34, A patient in a hospital for the mentally ill thought of himself as a "God-maker.” In his locker he kept a block of wood, a cube whose surfaces had been pain stakingly smoothed and edges carefully squared. When some one came to see him, he would take it from his locker and dis play it, saying: "This is my God. I made him. I worship him dai ly.” One of his doc- „ ~,, tors tried patient- Kev. Althouse ]y ex pjain to him that man does not create God, but God creates man. When at last the man grasped this, he be gan to recover his sanity. A Thing of Wood The prophet Hosea grieved over the national madness of the people of Israel. It too was the result of idolatry. '’My people in quire of a thing of wood, and their staff gives them oracles.” (Hosea 4:12 RSV) The people of Israel found strangely beguiling and fascinating the idols of their pagan neighbors. Though they did not formally renounce their loyalty to the God of Abraham and Isaac, they preceded to make idolatry a part of their lives too. Why? For one thing, a god made by our own hands is really an extension of ourselves. To worship a man-made thing is to worship man and his powers of creation. It is a matter of human pride: "See what I have made 1 .” It is but the visible representation of something in ourselves that we desire to make dominant. This is why pagan idols often represent a sexual motif. The idol is revered by those who long to set free all restraints on their sex ual drive. Similarly, a god ofwar is worshipped by those who de sire to give free reign to their own violent impulses. Idolatry is actually the worship of something For Full Market Reports Read LANCASTER FARMING To Support Farm & Home Center. For the past two months the officials of the Lancaster Coun ty Farm & Home Center have been conducting a money-rais ing drive among the farmers of the county Funds are need ed to pay for the building nearing completion This is a project that should benefit our county for generations to come; we need this Center for Farm & Home activities. All folks are urged to again sup port this worthwhile effort. wlthln'ounelves, aomethlag that take* the place of God. Infidelity and Decay Hoiea had seen a leuon for his nation In the fall of his own wife. She had become attracted to another man, had broken her vows to Hosea. In time, she be came a prostitute, going from one man to another. Eventually, no longer attractive enough to be a harlot, she sold herself into slav ery. When at last Hosea redeemed her from slavery, she is hardly the same woman either physically or spiritually. Infidelity has made its mark upon her. The prophet saw the same process at work in the nation of Israel. The moral decay had be gun with their allurement to the worship of idols. As Comer’s in fidelity had broken her marriage relationship with Hosea, so the. unfaithfulness of Israel was de stroying her covenant relation ship with God. Like Corner, the people of Israel sold their her itage for sensual and material pleasures. When the inner life of a nation or person deteriorates, there are outward signs. As the prostitute’s body becomes prematurely old, so an unfaithful nation begins to show the outward signs of the decay within. "There is swearing, lying, killing, stealing, and com mitting adultery,” observed the prophet. / Even More Dangerous This is not ancient history! Today, as then, idolatry is an ever-present danger for the people of God. Our idols are even more dangerous because they are more subtle. We do not call them "gods” or build temples for them, yet these are the things, the man made objects that we let become foremost in our lives, that moti vate us, that receive the wonder' and adoration that should belong, to God alone. Have you never noticed the adoring, loving care people lavish upon man-made things? The lure of other gods is nc> less a problem for us than the people of Ho sea’s day. Man- 1 made things are still god’-s greatest rivals. The subtle idola-' try of today’s society is still the greatest threat to man’s sanity. (Based on outlines copyrighted by the Dmstin i •( Christian Education, Notional Council of th# Churches of Christ m the U, S A. Released kf ’ Community Press Service.) - Go To Church Sunday NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent the outside and stomach worms on the inside Either of these problems will reduce gams and decrease profits. Feeders are urged to give prompt at tention to the elimination ofi all parasites from their cattle. To Control Winter Weeds... Many hay fields will include new growth of winter weeds such as chickweed, winter cress, and shepherds purse All' 1 of these weeds start growth ihc the fall and continue to d6-'| velop until next spring. All of; , them are much easier to kill when small this fall than when mature next spring. Growers are urged to spray during No vember and December and. eliminate the problem in ths 1968 hay crop, f