Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 26,1969 4 From Where We Margarine On The Door Step The July issue of Changing Times notes that a new era m advertising is here. You'll smell ads as well as see and hear them. The idea is that the odor for example of butter, would be released when you scratch ed the paper the ad was printed on. It sounds a little far removed from reality. But so did flying to the moon ten years ago. Anjway. the thing that scares us is that the dairies would most likely put margarine smells on their ads rather than butter. That’s right! We said dairies selling mar garine. Just this morning on this editor’s door step along with the regular cartons of milk from a local milk bottler w as a slab of mar garine with a gimmick to get us to buy more of their “wonderful’’ margarine. With all the money farmers spend to get their barns and milk houses ready to produce and cool milk, isn’t it a shame dairies must stoop to cutting up farmers by promoting and selling margarine and synthetic milk products? We think it is. Sometimes we even wonder if the dairies who practice this two-facedness really know which side their bread is buttered on. At least that's the way it looks from Inhere we stand. Work Or Starve An editorial in The Christian Science Monitor comments on a contemporary form of oppression that has no place in the United States. It says, “The Supreme Court has agreed to decide whether a labor union has the power to fine members for (what the union considers) overproduction on the job. What an amazing and saddening com mentary on affairs today! In a land which, perhaps more than any other on the face of the earth, has always prided itself upon hard work, and upon what hard work can accomplish, how chilling it is to find that there are those who believe they have the right to require laziness and time-wasting.” Am one who feels a deliberate slow down on the job is irrelevant to today’s soaring prices should be interested in a brief item from the publication Steel Facts which reports: “Hourly employment costs for production and maintenance employees in this country’s steel industry during the past -two decades have been rising more than three times as rapidly as output per man-hour of all employees.” Machines have done much to offset the growing laziness of people But there is a limit beyond which a fundamental law of nature must take over work or starve. At least that’s the way it looks from where we stand. Farm News This Week Group Of 120 Local Farmers Attend State Livestock Day Page 1 Lancaster Breeder Developing Small Broiler Breeder Hen Page 1 Breeders Told They Have Not Kept Pace W ith Moon Age Page 1 LANCASTER FARMING Lancaster County's Own Farm Weekly P O Box 266 - Lititz Pa 57543 Office 22 E Main St Lititz Pa 17543 Phone Lancastei 394 3047 oi Lititz 626-2191 Evei f tt R Ne.vswanger, Editor Robert G Campbell Advertising Director Subscnption price $2 per year in Lancaster County, S 3 elsewhere Established November 4 1955 P’lbVhcd every Saturdav by Lama'ter Panning Lititz Pa S.cona CLss Postage paid at Lititz, Pa 17343 Meml c: of Newsnapei Editors Assn. Stand. .. Faith In Our Youth A new type of youth group is roaming the streets of Ann Arbor, Michigan. It calls itself the Gillnet Gang. Its members de scribe themselves as “guerrillas for good.” As the Altoona, Pennsylvania, Mirror ob serves, “. • . the Gillnets roam Ann Arbor streets at night doing some rather odd things for a youth gang. On one recent night they painted a bridge, which had been co vered with obscenities. On another, they boarded up an abandoned house, which had been a dangerous but popular rendezvous for neighborhood children. They made a number of adults ashamed of themselves by filling downtown planters, which had re mained barren of flowers because of a squabble over which group was responsible for them.” An assistant professor at the University of Michigan is frequently consulted by the gang for advice. He concedes that some of their activities are “extralegal.’’ To this, the Mirror concludes, “Some will undoubt edly say any extralegal approach smacks of the vigilantes of old. But who will argue that the Gillnets are not providing a community service no one else seems capable of giv ing?” Perhaps there’s ground for retaining a little faith in humanity after all. Across The Fence Row "America gives its ear, heart, con science and front pages to the protesters. But. below the din. . . Each day your mail is in your box; the bread is on the rack; the fireman answers your call; the teacher heads her class: the soldier answers mus ter; the waiter brings your soup; the copper gets mined, and the cars get built. While critics go merrily down the river intoning, ‘We’re heading for Armageddon, ‘human beings of high character and many back grounds do their jobs, pay their taxes, edu cate their children, invent, patch, scratch, plan, plow 7. . . And make this country tick!” Temple, Am., News. A young mother was paying a visit to her doctor. She made no attempt to re strain her five-j ear-old son. who was ran sacking an adjoining treatment room. But finally an extra-loud clatter of bottles did prompt her to say. “ hope, doctor, you don’t mind Jimmy making a little noise in your treatment room. - ’ ‘’No,” said the doctor calmly. ‘‘He’ll be quiet in a moment —when he gets to the poisons.” Historians tell us the past. Economists tell us the future. ONLY the present IS confusing. The best things in life may be free, but don’t forget that gossip and eavesdropping are also free. Whenever you put your nose in some body’s business, generally >ou get your foot in, too. Happiness seeems to be a by-product of helping others. How one enjoys a second 40 years of life generally depends on hou he lives the first 40. Local Weather Forecast (Trom 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 below normal with daytime highs in the BG’s and over-night lows in the low 60" s. Seasonable tempera tures are expected Satmday through Mon day turning cooler Tuesday and Wednesday. Rain may total one-half inch or gi eater most sections as showers Monday or Tues day. THE DELIVERER Lesson for July 27,1969 SaclgrMiMl Scripture: Exodus 2 23-322, 5 22-6:?, 12-15. Dcv«(i*n«l Rt«4lnf: Hosm It t*9# Four score and seven years ago our father brought forth upon this continent a new na tion, conceived in liberty . . • In the dark hours of the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln stood in the little cemetary on the battle field at Gettys burg, Pennsylva nia, and spoke these words, calling his coun trymen to look back to thebirth hour of the nation, 1776. It Rev. Althouse was his way of reminding Americans from whence they had come and why. The Lord heard our voice What Lincoln did at Gettys burg was frequently practiced by many of the biblical writers. The birth-hour to which they pointed was the exodus from Egypt under the leadership of Moses. Deuteronomy recalls: A wandering Aratnean was my father; and he went down into Egypt and so-journed there, few in number; and there he became a nation, great, mighty, and populous. And the Egyptians treated us harshly, and afflicted us, and laid upon us hard bondage. Then we cried to the Lord... and the Lord heard our voice, and saw our affliction, our toil, and our oppression; and the Lord brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand and an out-stretched arm, with great terror, with signs and wonders... (26:5a-8) Today in the Feast of the Pass over the Jews continue to cele brate the Exodus and look back to the birthday of Israel. The Hebrews had been captive for a long time three hundred years! That is roughly To Renovate Pastures u*ed if upright silo storage is Livestock and dairy producers not sufficient. The making of that utilize pasture during the high moisture corn for all types summer season should legard of livestock feeding is gaming laie August to early September popularity. Rat infestation as the veiy best time of the and con tiol becomes a major year to ienovate an old area or , . J to seed a new pastuie field ® “* em when ear corn is piled Prstuie matures that are start- at several places in faim budd ed at tins '.me of the year will mgs. Advance plannings for get es'abMhed quicker and have g ood storage is needed a better cnance of withstanding the hoi, dry weather of next summer lime and fertilizer needs should be met accoidmg The piopei disposal of empty to a complete sod test pesticide containers is verj mx- poitant and one needing atten- To Prepai e For Corn Harvest tion towaid the end of the grow- Indications point for another mg season Many of these con good corn oop foi many paits tamers still contain some chemi of the strte, soaking rams at cals and may be toxic to human trsselmg tune aie very impoi- beings and to livestock Wlmn tans for ma>irnum yields Grow- discaided into an old junk pile ers should plan aheei for proper o t quany hole, they can be the stoiage mi hvi’ mop, silage is cause of water- contamination the very best use to be made of ana the poisoning of livestock, an acre corn more feed D'sposal pits dug several feet fUtiiems will be hu rested by into the ground away f.om iTmkin* n into co u silage Kon- su earns and watei supplies is zontai or bench sues may be- one. .good, method .of. disposal. comparable lo the time that has elapsed In America »lnco the coming of the Pilgrims. Suppose that after three hundred years we still hadn’t gained out independence! The wrong question If any of the Israelites In Egypt remembered the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, w* can imagine that they wondered: "Doesn’t God care?” The answer to that question was to come from a very unlikely leader. His nam* was Moses, a rather common Egyptian name. Confronted by an encounter with the God of Abraham, this man asked, "Who am I that I should go to Pharoah and bring the sons of Israel out of Egypt?” To that question of "Who am I . . there were a number of answers that might have been given: an orphaned Hebrew adopted by the Pharoah’s daughter, An Egyptian noble brought up in the culture and education of the royal court, A Hebrew deeply disturbed over the persecution of hi* people, The murderer of an Egyptian taskmaster, a fugitive from Egyptian justice, a Midianite shepherd, the son-in-law of a Midianit* priest, an eighty-year old man, a descendant of Abraham who knew little, if anything, about Abraham’s God. Doesn’t God care? Who was this man Moses? Hei was a prodigy whose early great expectations had turned to tragid disappointment and drab reality. Yet it was this same man through, whom the Lord would answer* that question, "Doesn’t Godcare?* I have seen the affliction of my' people who are in Egypt, and have heard their cry because of their taskmasters ... And I have come to deliver them... When God made it apparent' that it was Moses who would lead the Hebrews, Moses asked his "Who am I . question. But it was the wrong question. Instead he should have asked God, "Who are you?”, for the Lord tells him that it is not be cause of who Moses is, but be cause of who God is that the task will be accomplished. "I will send you,” he said, " and I will be with you.” Moses would be but the instrument; God would be the Deliverer. (Based on outlines copyrighted by the Division of Christian Education, National Council of th* Churches ef Christ in the U« S. A. Released by Community Press Service} NOW IS THE TIME... By Mai' Smith Lancaster County Agent To Be Careful With Pesticide Containers