4—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. September 28.1968 Prom . Where We Stand ... Meatless “Meats” Are With Us Back on "substitutes” again. From time to time new products, new informa tion available. We think you should know about it . . . keep alert to developments. Presently about 15 U.S. firms in some phase of manufacturing "meatless meats.” These are true substitutes because they’re simu lated to look like real stuff. Products in clude ham, sausage, franks, luncheon loaves, meat loaves, chipped beef, fried chicken, bacon, even steaks, other "fresh” cuts. Technologists say this is a beginning. Subjective analysis of products; some very tasty . . . some mushy, off-flavors and pretty blah. Vegetable protein products also used as principle “meat” source in soups, chili mixes, casseroles, potpies, baby foods, TV dinners, other convenience foods. In terms of tonnage, non-meats today are fraction of one percent of real meat tonnage produc ed, consumed by Americans. (That was true of margarine, too.) One thing our industry should remember; Every manufacturer has right to produce what he pleases. If it’s high quality, palatable, priced right, he probably can find a market for it. Perhaps a big mar ket. We just don’t know yet to what extent Americans will* insist on real meat. Most consumers are pretty fickle. (Remember that margarine!) Well, what is present market? Where’s non-meat being sold? First, there’s small number of consumers who won’t eat meat for religious or other apparently bona-fide reasons. They’ll buy ersatz. Health-food stores also carry lines of non-meats . . but these products usually merchandised under quackery or fad banners Still, it’s a place to sell . . . and they’re selling along with tiger’s milk and seaweed. Industrially, growing use of vegetable protein, especially spun or extruded soy bean products. As binders or extenders in highly comminuted sausage products, for example, the protein can increase nutritive quality, help control fat content economi cally Looks attractive to some processors. Also significant, meat-like products be coming direct competition for consumers’ attention in retail store. If she’s sharp-eyed and not too price-conscious, the lady of your house can find all the products mentioned at beginning of this article in one store or an other. As ingredients in other products, ap pears to be growing use, particularly in peanut butter (bacon), dried mixes, etc. Here’s place to watch burgeoning growth. Could you tell if that's really beef in your Farm News This Week Glenn Livengood Has Swine Champion At Lampeter Swine Show Page 1 Hess Shows A Hereford Steer To Championship At Lampeter Page 1 Bollinger Tops Ephrata Market Swine Show Page 1 J-H Livestock Team Wins At Virginia Page 17 Junior Dairy Show Entries Set Record 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, Advei Using Director Subscription price $2 pei year in Lancaster County,- l^elsewheie Established November 4 1953 Published cveiy Satuiday by Lancaster Farming. Lititz, Pa. Second Class Postage paid at Lititz, Pa. 17543 Member of Newspaper Faim Editors Assn. beef pot pie? We doubt it. May be growth institutionally in hospitals, other big feed ers, including restaurants. Like other con venience foods, -non-meats invalve less kitchen work, little or no waste and some are highly nutritious. Substitutes, analogs, invitations, alter natives . . . call ’em what you will. They’re here. Won’t go away. Industry must re double its efforts in qaulity improvement, production efficiency, marketing aggres siveness at all levels from farm to con sumer. (Industry could try protective legis lation. But somebody keeps handing us the margarine when we say, “please pass the butter.”) Stepped-up research, including market research development and sell ing of real meat is the answer. Le't’s get at it.- $2lO Doorknob Only 20 years ago, an emnlover in New England challenged the constitutionality of withholding taxes on the grounds that an employee’s full wages belonged to him until the taxes were due, at which time he could pay them himself. This point of view was never brought before the Supreme Court for a ruling, and nobody has challenged withholding since. And so, all businesses have become tax collectors for the govern ment, whether they like it or not. The horror stones of senseless waste in federal spending are legendary and include everything from $152 billion in foreign aid down to $2lO doorknobs for the Pentagon. An article appearing in an Esco Corpora tion publication makes the suggestion that, “If we have neither the courage nor the money to contest a tax system of quesion able legality, the least we can do is to take some action regarding the ways in which our money is spent ” It is pointed out that if we haven’t written the people who con trol federal spending our Congressmen, our Senators and the President of the United States lately, perhaps it’s time we got at it, or an alternative might be to register our protest in the polling booth this Novem ber. Across The Fence Row What’s A Billion’ Not many people can really appreciate the immensity of the $lB6 billion federal budget for 1969. Watchmaker Arde Bulova has a novel way of explaining what a billion amounts to He asks his guests for their estimate of how many minutes have elapsed since Christ was born Would you say trillions? No As of right now, only little over one billion min utes have passed. Mankind is working hard to improve everything, except people. Knowing that you don’t know much is knowing more than most people do. Little things in life often annoy us more than the big ones. We can sit on a mountain, but not on a tack. We can fight elephants, but mosquitoes are sometimes impossible. The wise man does not judge till he sees clearly. When people see clearly, they seldom Judge. Local Weather Forecast (From the U. S. Weather Bureau at the Harrisburg State Airport) The five-day forecast for the period Saturday through next Wednesday calls for temperatures to average near or slightly below normal. Daytime highs are expected in the'6o’s to 70’s and overnight lows in the mid 50’s Cool during the first half of the period and mild the latter half Normal high-low temperature for Harrisburg is .73- 51. . : ' Rain may total between one-fourth and one-half inch .falling near the end of the period. UVINI IN NIPE Lesion for September 29,1968 BeuVfrtumlScriphiw tilth tlj UVt2 22*32. Otvtbtnal Rtttflnii Rsolmi 91 1*6,14*16. Some time ago I was asked if I was an optimist or a pes simist. I found the question dif ficult to answer because it might be said that I am "provisionally pessimistic,” but "ultimately op timistic.” That is, in the short ■MM run I am like ly to conclude that a situation 'JiM run I can see the » same situation more brightly because of my Rev. Althouse' haps like little "Lucy” in the Peanuts cartoon I can say that I am "very optimistic about my pessimism.” One who hopes Yet, the more we consider these two terms, the more it becomes clear that neither is particularly a Christian perspective. As fol lowers of Christ, we are not called to be either optimistic or pessim istic, but to live in hope. There is a considerable difference even between "optimism” and "hope." Hope implies trust, reliance. The optimist’s expectations focus on the inevitable goodness of the present, while the man who hopes place his trust in the assurance of the future. Man, said Thomas Carlyle, "is based on hope. He has no other possession but hope.” Others are somewhat less en chanted with it. H.L.- Mencken, for one, called it "a pathological belief in the occurence of the im possible. ” Philosopher Friederich Nietzsche said it "is the worst of all evils, for it prolongs the tor ment of man.” Ogden Nash writes it off as "dope” and Langdon terms it "a more gentle name for fear.” To Allow Corn To Dry elements and will i educe the „ , „ . work-load of a bus} farming Corn has matured rapidly in program next summer. The the past two weeks because of practice of applying nitrogen the good weather However, fertilizer to established alfalfa whether it is ready to be put in- 13 questionable with the , u . ~ ~ , , feeling that the nitrogen will to cribs without additional dry- bg m * re beneficial when used ing is questionable in many on other crops cases As long as the corn is standing, field drying is one of the most economical methods of getting rid of the moisture Heat drying is becoming more popular but is more expensive Growers are urged to check the moisture of the corn before cribbing it to make sure of not carrying excessive moistuie which will cause molding To Top Dress Alfalfa Following the cutting of the ; ‘ last crop of alfalfa is a good -'time to apply a phosphorus pot ash feitihzer to establish stands This will provide 4ime for the plant to'take tip the fertilizer Materials of victory There le a tense in which Its detractors ace 'quite right By itself, hope it empty, but tha Christian’s trust it not in hope alone, but In God. This in differ* ent than a conviction that "every thing will work out a'J right* Hope always allows for the many situations that turn into disap pointment and tragedy. It does not deny their reality. It simply asks that we look beyond and trust in the ultimate fulfillment of God’s purpose. Even the trag edies of this world can become the raw materials from which Christ can fashion his eventual victory. We see this again and again in the life of Israel. The He brews returned from their Baby lonian captivity to restore the na tion of God once again. But in time, the restoration went sour. The high intentions of the people got sidetracked along the way like those of their forefathers. Thus the prophets began to look for the coming of the Mes siah who would bring to fulfillment the hopes of Israel. Isaiah was one of the prophets who taught Israel to hope. What about present? Like the aged Simeon (Luke 2: 25-32), we see Jesus Christ as the fulfillment of tha f messian ic expectation, & fulfilment that began with his coming and will continue to unfold until he comes again. Yet, some may say (as perhaps the people in Isaiah’s time said) "Well, that’s all very nice, but I’m living now. I ap preciate what God has done in the past and what he vull do In the fhture, but what about the pre sent? That’s where I am,” The answer is that those who live in the hope of what God will do in the future are freed to live victoriously in the pre sent. Assured of the ultimate outcome, we can go about the business of living here and now. Even though we are unsure about tomorrow, we can be confident about eternity. By hope, we can on a rainy day in March look ahead to the glory o: summer. That hope does not keep us from getting our feet wet or muddy, but we End in it the power to see that day through because we know that, beneath the silent earth, God’s wonders are s.lrring un seen. Hope in the future fulfillment of God’s purpose is medicine for the present. As Isaiah’s vision of a Christ to come erabled Is rael to continue, so the reality of a Christ who has coma enables us to live in hope. (Bcsml •n auHinas capyriflhtaJ a/ *ha Division •f Christian EWocafian, Natiana Council of «ha Churchas af Christ in tha U. S. A. Palaasac! by Cammumty Prass Sarvica) NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent To Dehorn D air> Calves With the coming of colder weather, dairymen may want to be sure the horns aie removed from all replacement heifer calves If this is done by caustic or electric .treatment, then the time of t year has little beaung However, when the small hoi ns aie removed mechanically, the colder weather usually means less danger of fly problems Most dairymen prefer hornless cows in the milking string un de? modern management -methods.