— Lancaster Farming. Saturday. March 8,1969 4 From Where We Stand ... Statistics Do Not Show The Cause And Effect It appears statistical population re search has convinced some authorities that diets high in saturated fats are a major cause of heart disease. They show a statis tical link between people with high le\el olood cholesterol and heart attacks . . . low level cholesterol and fewer heart attacks. But statistical studies do not show- Vital iy needed medical evidence. And those us ing them on this fat matter, have selected only the information they want to talk about. By \ olume and number there are at ieast as many and perhaps even more epidemiological studies that “prove” quite :he opposite! The “Irish Brother” study. “Finnish Lumberjack” study, “Masai Tribesmen” study, “Sugar” study, all “pro\e" that people eating substantial amounts of animal fats have no higher in cidence of heart disease. Even the Ameri can Cancer Society has come up with data from a major population study showing fewer heart attacks among people consum ing large amounts of cholesterol. Frankly, we doubt the advisability of counter-claiming with such statistical in formation. But these are among many more cases published in the scientific journals which tell a story different from that em phasized by people who tell us to cut intake of animal fats. The point is, they are statis tics and just statistics not cause-and effect medical research projects. Should such cause and effect investiga tions ever establish that lowering choles terol levels is helpful, it should be noted that there are other methods possibly more effective than dietary change in getting the job done. Of major significance are a num ber of drugs presently in the development stage some of which can reduce choles terol levels by as much as 50%. Diet changes bring cholesterol down in people of U.S. only a modest 10-15% . . . which doesn’t even approach the much lower levels of populations cited by American Heart Assn, and others. If cholesterol is a factor, further investigation in this direction appears to of fer much greater promise than tampering with the national dietary of the total U.S. population. After all, the U.S. population is blessed uniquely with a food supply which provides all the necessary nutrients for good health s s . when consumed in proper balance. The less fortunate peoples in other parts of the world could make good use of such a food supply. At least that's the way it looks from where we stand. Farm News This Week Why Didn’t Farmers Grow Sugar Beets? Page 1 County Fanners Assn. Plans Spring Meeting Page 1 Mrs, Stauffer Sets A Busy Pace With Her Many Activities Page 18 Hac’irr an Receives State Legislative Re'jlv .on. For Conse-ration Work —• Pg. I 7 v:ASTLR PARKING T.'vaca 1 r.fv’s 2wn Farm Weekly P. 0 P, l/043 crfico tA an , Liacz, Pa 17543 Phone I,p" e r S4-C047 or Lititz 626-21D1 E'ereu B Aewswangei, Editor Robert G. .ampbel;, Advertising Director Subscription price- $2 per j-ear m County; $3 else- 'here Established November 1955 Published every Saturday by Lancaster Farming, Lititz, Pa Second Class Postage paid at Lititz, Pa. 17543 Member of Newspaper Farm Editors Assn Intolerable Prospect From time to time, press reports have told of the continuing effort to organize California grape pickers. Since the pickers apparently do not wish to be organized, union pressure has taken the form of a na tionwide boycott against California table grapes in an attempt to coerce grape grow ers to sign contracts whether the workers want to join a union or not. Wholly aside from the merit of the is sues involved in the dispute, which it would seem would be a local concern, the boycott tactics have taken an ominous turn. They involve questions of principle that directly affect all merchants and consumers. By in timidation and threats of voilence, the boy cotters are endeavoring to force merchants to remove grapes from the marketplace. A retailer, hundreds or thousands of miles from California grape fields, may find his place of business under attack and his cus tomers drn en aw’ay if he refuses to accede to the wishes of the boycotters. He is forced to take sides, irrespective of his convictions and his right to carry on his business as he thinks best. By forcing removal of an item from store shelves, boycotters are also depriving consumers of freedom of choice and the right to judge for themselves by their pa tronage the wisdom of a merchant's mer chandising policies. If nationwide coercion of consumers and merchants works in the case of attempts to organize grape pickers, there is little question but that the same kind of coercion will be applied elsewhere. It is an intolerable prospect. At least that’s the way it looks from where we stand. The Coming Of Spring The welcome freshness of the new spring season approaches. Since the be ginning of time, Spring has been nature’s way of reminding man that life is a never ending process. During the spring months of March, April, May and June, as the sun rises higher in the Northern Hemisphere, the trees leaf out, crops flourish, the scent of flowers fills the air and the new young of all nature’s creatures look about them with wonder at the beauty of the land and the blueness of the sky. Depending upon w here w r e live, our thoughts will turn to the pursuits of spring gardening, Easter bon nets. \acations, weekend treks to the coasts, mountains and lakes. One and all, we will enjoy the general state of somno lence known as spring fever that ahvays makes its appearance after a dreary winter. The springtime of life is now, and we should make the most of it. We should ac cept nature’s invitation to enjoy the good things of creation, to lay aside bitterness, tension and prejudice Spring is the time to start anew, and only the foolish will deny it Across The Fence Row Don’t worry about what others think about you they aren’t thinking of \ou they are wondering what you ? thinking if them it’s veiv difficult to leave footprints on the .ando of time wrh bedroom slippers. Local Weather Foi (Fiom the 'I. S. Weather Bureau at the Hai isbui 0 Stai*- Airport) .e fn <--d~y i jrecast for the period Sat urday through next Wednesch r calls foi temperatures to average much 1 oh v nor mal with davtime highs m ‘he 40’s over night lows in the low 20 .. Little day to day change. Normal high-low is 48-29 Precipitation may total less than one tenth inch water equivalent in light snow or flurries mostly over the interior Tuesday i~>" WV O r. . rJ p y THE FATAL LACK Lesson for March 9,1969 Background Scnpturo Mark 10 Dtvaliontl flooding John 15 1-11 A small child of three spent a whole afternoon teasing her mother to give her some grapes. That night at bedtime she ob-1 served her cousin saying her prayers and asked for an expla nation of the unfamiliar proceed- The moth- explained ' it her cousin .s talking to id, asking him bless her, imily and make ■ a good girl, ipressed, the le girl went to r own bed- Rev. Althouse room and shut the door to say her prayers. A little while later upon emerging from her room, she said to her mother: "I talked to God and he said I was a very good girl— and I could have some grapes!” Divine Handyman Like many of her dders, the little girl was trying to use God to serve her own purposes. She was interested in God, but only in terms of what he might be able to do for her. Many adults are interested in him for reasons not much more mature. Religion can very easily become a means to a selfish end. This makes God a kind of divine handyman or, celestial troubleshooter. His func tion may become so stylized that one might expect to find him listed in the yellow pages under "odd jobs,” or some similar de signation. We see this when the so-called ’rich, young ruler” (though Mark simply calls him "a man”) comes to Jesus (Mark 10:17). He wants something from God: eternal life. All of his religion has been di rected toward achieving that goal. He has diligently followed the laws of God in order that he might be found worthy of receiv ing the prize. His observance of these laws has not been so much to c’ease God, but to serve his For Full Market Reports Read Lancaster Farming To Plan For Pasiuie fertilizer is delivered and Fertilization spread in bulk, the danger of Permanent pastures including huge amounts of the glasses, such ts timothy and orchaid grass wdl responc to early spring fcihhzer applies dons On straignt grass mx tures only mtiogcn need to bi ased With grass-legume mix lines ccmph le feitilizers shoMd he used T’ns plant food cippl •’d late March or early Ap.u will increas-e the forage ’ owth and peimit earlier and harder giazing. To Protect Fertilizer Fertilizer that has been de livered and in storage should be protected from the weather and away from children and li\e -71 - ' more own purposes. "What must I do to inherit eternal life?" he asks. What button must I push, what levers must I pull to insure that I will get from God what I want? One thine! The reply of Jesus must have been shattering. ’Jhc man could not think of anything he had left undone. In fact, he had gone out of his way to win the prize. But Jesus said: "You lack one thing , . . ” (Mark 10 21). One thing stood between this man and eternal life. It seems a small matter to lacs but one thing in seeking your goal. What is one little thing? We can quickly and easily change that. Surely you would not deny the gift of eternal life for the sake of one little insufficiency! But it is not a little matter. The barrier is real and it makes all the dif ference between receiving and be ing denied the gift. It was a fated lack in this man’s life. "You lack one thing; go, sell what you have, and give to the poor, and you w ill have treeisure m heaven; and come, follow me.” This may have seemed a strange thing for Jesus to say to the man, for there was no commandment or statute that either required or suggested that a man should give everything to the poor. Does Jesus mean that if men are to become his disciples they must first im poverish themselves? Our obstacles No, this is not what Jesus means. If they are to be his dis ciples, they must have no vital dificiencies. For the man in Mark 10 the fatal lack was a self-cen tered life that was built upon material possessions. He lacked the overriding desire to serve Christ' above all else. For him, money was the obstacle. For youl and for me it may be something else that gets in our way. His possessions were great, but with me it may be an ego that is "great,” with you an undisciplined temper. All of us come'before him with some lack that gets in the way of our discipleship. The question for ■us is the same that applied to him: can we let it go or are we in its grasp? Has that lack be come fatal? (Based en outlines copyrighted By the Oivislen* •( Christian Educohon, National Councit of tho Churches of Christ in the U S. A Reteased by Cemmumty Press Service) Attend The Church Of Your Choice Sunday now is THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent careless storage of delivered complete fer lizer is sii 1 pre sent on many farms. The ban? should not h) placed on the giound or on concrete floors, bt .-ause they will draw moisture and 1 set-up.” To S- w Spring Oats Early Local growers of spang oats are urged tr get the ciop into the ground by the first of April, if weather permits Later nlant mgs usually will not yield as well and the crop will not be profitable. Clintford is an adapt ed variety that is early maturing and should give good results when planted as early as possi ble in the spring (by early a- - n