—Lancaster Farming. Saturday, January 6, 1968 4 From Where We Stand ... Un-Selling The Cow Won’t Be Easy The idea that the cow is becoming obsolete is being expressed often these days, usually in jest but sometimes seri ously. Promoters of vegetable fats and proteins a 1 e using every possible angle to convince people that the cow is an ana chronism. Feed the crcps directly to peo ple instead of running them through ani mals first, these people suggest. Yet the cow has become an increasingly efficient converter of feeds and forages into what is still nature’s most nearly perfect food milk This process of increasing the cow's efficiency as a converter continues. The cow’s use of forages which man can not consume, of course, means that man has a means of using a good deal of land that can grow grass and little else The benefits of livestock agriculture have been recited often in the past and probab ly Should be recited often in the future to remind the American people just how good they really have it. Cow’s milk is the primary food of American infants and children Studies have shown repeatedly that American mothers have great respect for the pro ducts of the dairy industry, and especially for milk Imitation and filled milk, when introduced into any market, will attract a certain percentage of people because any new product has the advantage of being newsworthy and attractive to those who are seeking out whatever is new The price advantage will also appeal to some people However, there is every indica tion now that a strong selling campaign for milk can offset interest m imitation or filled milk Mothers -are wary about experimenting with the food they feed their children. There is confusion about what the imitation products really are Even nutritionists are beginning to ex press doubts about the nutritional values of some of the imitation products now on the market. There are powerful appeals to American mothers ’that can be used to keep them buying milk, and this ap parently is what dairymen are determin ed to do if we may judge by their reac tion to this problem thus far. Dairymen are 'asking that imitation products be properly labeled, that pricing of milk ingredients should not give an advantage to the imitations, that quality controls for imitation products should be at least equal to those holding for milk, but few dairymen are looking to restrictive legis lation to try to keep imitation products off the market The attitude is - make sure Farm News This Week Gerald Biggs Appointed To Land Committee Page 8 Dog Owners Warned To Get Licenses Now Page 1 County Tobacco Show To Be Held January 11 Page 1 Countian Tours Russia; Brings Moscow Farm News Page 1 USDA Hires 7 5 Additional Inspectors Page 7 Mrs. Thomas Is Elected To State Economist Post Page 1 LANCASTER FARMING Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly P. 0 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 year in Lancaster County, S 3 elsewhere Established November 4,1955 Pub ished eveiy Satuiday by Lancaster F'ai mmg Lititz, Pa. Second Glass Postage paid at Lititz, Pa, '■'43 W-mber of Newspaper Farm Editors Assn. everyone has tp compete on the same basis, and we’ll go into the marketplaces of this country and win consumer votes for genuine dairy products. The year 1968 is going to be an in teresting one in the dairy business It v, ill be a year when a good many deci sions will have to be made Milk produc ers will have to decide if they really are going to put up enough money to do a real rescaich and selling job or if they are smiply going to sit back and take whatever comes their way good or bad All indications are new that pro ducers are ready to fight, that producers in many areas may be far out in front of their leadership. Distributors who have not yet plung ed into the imitation or filled milk busi ness wall be debating what course to take. Competition will dictate the answer for many, although it is always interesting to hear the first distributor who intro duces filled milk into a market explain that he is meeting competition! A good many distributors are seriously question ing the wisdom of adding this new pro duct to their line because they do recog nize its potential for price footballing, for seriously upsetting relationships between milk producers and processors, for per haps setting the stage for non-dairy food giants to take over and sell a wholly imitation milk that would be marketed on a basis much different from the pres ent dairy business. It will be most interesting to watch the reaction that will occur in some mar ket when a wise distributor, after debat ing the pi os and cons of introducing imi tation or filled milk, decides against such a move and then tells his customers something like this: “We are not following the lead of our competitors who have introduced imitation or filled milks into this market recently because we do not believe such products are necessarily in the best in terests of our customers. We have seen generation after generation of children in this community grow strong and healthy because they drank their milk. We do not believe this fabricated milk, even though it may cost a few pennies less per quart, is the kind of product our customers really want for their families. Instead of experimenting with untried formulas, well continue to sell the pro duct that has proved its goodness and its high nutritional value through the years We don’t believe in experimenting with the good health of our customers.” At least that’s the way it looks from where we stand. Across The Fence Row The speed of a runaway horse counts . jr nobiing. Jean Cocteau Foundations are important. Often I have passed by a piece of excavation going many feet into the ground and upon inquiry been told this was to be the site of a skyscraper. To the uninitiated it looked as if they were going in the wrong direction, but they were going down in order to go up. John L. Hill in The Defender Weather Forecast The five-day forecast for the period Saturday through next Wednesday calls for temperatures to average much below normal With daytime highs in the 30’s and overnight lows in the teens. Gener ally very cold Normal high temperature is 39 and low is 24. Precipitation may total one-half inch water equivalent occurring as snow in the north at 'the beginning of the period and snow over the general area Monday night. THE mmCHTOR Lesson for January 7,1968 "The Word became flesh and lodgrwndscKphirr John i ]-42 2050 3 i. dwelt among us.” Revealing him- D.voh.n.l R««diny, Htbr.ws 11 9 self j n so many ways, God made A few days ago I saw this the ultimate self-disclosure by sticker on a car bumper: transposing his divine nature in- GOD IS NOT DEAD. HE to the person of a human being. JUST DOESN’T WANT TO GET As Phillips puts it: "So the expres- INVOLVED! sion of God became a human be- Actually this is the kind of ing and lived among us.” iople believe in: a What this means for us, of deity so remote, course, is that all that man can s o impersonal, ever know or understand about that there can be God is tied up in the person little or no com- whom we know as Jesus Christ, munication be- If we come to know him, we will tween the Crea- know God as fully as man can tor and his crea- know him. If we understand him, hires. He is more we will understand as much of an Absentee the divine mystery as our finite Landlord, a Ce- minds are capable of understand _ ' lestial Spectator ing. When the Christian thinks Rev. Althouse r a ther than a of God, then, he does not have to participant. picture a white-haired old gentle* The greatest challenge to man peering down from theheav- Christianity today, it seems, is ens. He does not have to do the not from those who say there is impossible by envisioning a finite no God or who maintain that he picture of the infinite. He can is dead, but those who, though point to Jesus Christ and say: they believe in his existence, deny "There, that is what God is like his involvement in the world he in human terms, the only terms created. You cannot really know we can understand.” what God is like, they say, be- _ .. . . cause he either chooses to remain •'USS ADOUt J6SUS silent or cannot communicate This, then, is why Jesus Christ with us. Our prayers are assumed is so essential for the Christian, to be like the fruitless radio sig- As a child I used to wonder, nals beeped into outer space to "Why all the fuss about Jesus? communicate with unknown civi- Why not just concentrate upon lizations that might be out there: God?” What I did not realize, no one probably hears them and, however, is that men cannot very if they do, they probably cannot well concentrate upon God with answer. out Jesus Christ, To think about God for any length of time be* God Who Communicates comes a very frustrating experi- Christians, however, do not ence unless our thoughts of God believe in a God who is mute or are focused through Christ "No too remote to care or be involved. has ever seen God;” wrote Ours is a God who can be known John, the only Son ... he has to us because he communicates made him known”. (John 1:18 with us, revealing to us what he BSV) is and what he wants us to be- To believe in a god Is not come. Thus, the Gospel Accord- enough. It is the kind of god you ing to John begins: "In the be- believe m that makes the .vital ginning was the Word, and the difference. The kind of God whom Word was with God, and the Christians worship and servers Word was God.” A l 6 God who communicates to us The "Word” of which John through Jesus Christ, speaks here is not the words of (k,w «n •urim*, by th* civilian scripture nor even audible chmiam nim Cwmit •» spoken words, but the dynamic s ' k/ Read Lancaster Farming For Full Market Reports To Use Pig & Lamb Brooders,. basis for working out iess-cost- The new crop of pigs and ly rations that still meet needs lambs will soon start arriving; for additional, grain and con cold weather creates a problem centrales, for these little animals the first „ , _. . , few hours. Experience has To Segregate Livestock... shown that supplemental heat flood herd management in provided the first few hours eludes the careful handling 01 will pay for itself many times, newly-purchased animals, or This is usually done through animals that have been off the brooders of some type in the returned In all types pen. Local producers are urged livestock the practice of oom to prepare for 'the new animals segregation for the first durm* cold weather. 30 da 3"s ver y important; many ° have learned the value of this To Use Forage Testing... r* -tbod the hard way. With We are aware of the lack of °i n e Farm Show approaching activity in the forage testing where many local animals will woik this winter. The value of be returned, and some punchas this test is to know the feeding ed, we urge local producers to nutrients in the roughage so separata the animals in order that efficient grain feeding may to prevent serious herd con be attained. Testing provides a temlnation. power of God by which he re veals himself and his purpose to men and acts or becomes in volved in their affairs. The "Word” is thus the self-expressive ness of God and the J. B. Phillips translation renders John 1:1, "In the beginning, God expressed himself.” When We Think of God This is not a vague, elusive, unknowable God, but a Supreme Being who communicates him self to men, revealing himself, making himself known. But John goes on to say something else that sounds utterly audacious; NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent