Lancaster Farming. Saturday*. October 4.1969 4 From Where We Now Credit Cards In The Food Store Easier credit, a stimulant to other blanches oi totalling. is now being intro cuced in food stores. Would \ou behcnc it 0 In Xew Voik. a 4b store chain is reported to t.ave began accepting ciedit cards. The\ sa> business is booming but nothing is re torted on the number ot bad accounts Credit card companies aie happe. of .use. since the\ sec a chance to ciack the u.*i billion ciollai cash-and carrt food '•ore- Held Other stores aie e\ptiimcnling ‘r. :rc idea dcuss the countrv Mime that it the piactice become .c.t'Diead it could possible bate an ct- on cur'.iiintr attitude:? about food i.' ces One leason hunitmakeis ate -up v.i;ec: to comolain mote about food puce-; ■nan othei onces is because tood is one of *ne tew "cash" item-. they rmu-t pui chase n the current "charge-it" economy It ma; help clarify food puces in the homemakers mind if the month-end state ment showed how much of the bill was for tood and how much was for the growing olume of non-food items she buys at the grocery store That's true and if it is good tor farmers helps them get a more fair return for their labor and imestment. we guess were for it It's just that credit buy ing always seems to make people spend more than they make and any savings that might be passed on to the buyer or the larmer always seems to end up in the credit company’s pocket for bookkeeping and bad credit risks tc* Maybe we’re old fashioned, but it still seems better to buy perishables on a cash basis. At least that's the way it looks from where we stand. A Step Toward Independence 1 Everyone kicks about big goiernment. But, no one seems to be able to do anything about it Government, like Topsy, just grows. And, as government grows, freedom diminishes However, the near maxim that the trend toward bigger and bigger govern ment is inevitable and irreversible could possibly turn out to be a fallacy. The largest farm organization in the country, the American Farm Bureau Federation, repre senting well over a million U.S farm fami lies, who have endured more than 30 years of government subsidies and controls, now supports federal legislation aimed at gradu ally unshackling agriculture from govern mental domination. Businesses, professions and other I groups hai e been follow mg the path of ag riculture toward big government domina ■*ion may one day look upon the present ac tion of the Farm Bureau as both a turning point and a guide in the endless struggle to preserve independence The Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1969. which is strongly supported by the Farm Bureau, is a careful iy thought-out program tnat will gradually restore free market principles to agricul tural operation Under it, as Mr Charles B. Shuman, president of the Farm Bureau, points out. “the transition to the market system would be gradual Substantial pay ments would be made during the transition f* * LANCASTER FARMING Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly ■P. O. Box 260 - Lititz, Pa 17543 Office: 22 E. Main St., Lititz, Pa. 17543 Phone: Lancaster 394-3047 or Lititz 626-2191 jJverett R. Newswanger, Editor Robert G. Campbell, Advertising Director Subscription price - $2 per year in Lancaster County; $3 elsewhere Established November 4,1955 Published every Saturday by Lancaster Farming, Lititz, Pa. Second Class Postage paid at Lititz, Pa. 17543. ussy SJo;tp3 uubj jadedsAiaM jo jaquiaj^ Stand. .. period to help farmers make iu c dee! adjust ments. . . At the end of the proposed phase out of acreage allotments, marketing quo tas. base acreages, certificates and govern ment payments . . . each producer would be free to . . . make the best uses of his re sources in the light of the market outlook. Thus, the way would be clear for farmers to earn and get higher incomes in the market place." With this kind ot citizen leadership, it ma\ proie possible to li\c with relatnelv "big go\ eminent" and presene our liber ties at the same time Across The Fence Row One da.\ through the primo\al wood A caif walked home, as good cahes should But made a trail all bent askew. A ciooked trail, as all cahes do. Since then 200 \ears ha\e fled. And. I infer, the calf is dead But still he left behind his trail. And thereby hangs m\ moral tale. The trail was taken up next day B\ a lone dog that passed that wa\ ; And then a wise bellwether sheep Pursued the trail o'er \ale and steep, And drew the flock behind him too. As good belhvethers ahvajs do. And from that day, o'er hill and glade. Through those old woods a path was made. And many men wound in and out, And dodged and turned and bent about. And uttered w’ords of righteous wrath. Because 'twas such a crooked path: But still they followed —do not laugh— The first migrations of that calf. And through this winding wood-way stalked Because he wabbled when he walked. This forest path became a lane, That bent and turned and turned again; This crooked lane became a road, Where many a poor horse, with his load. Toiled on beneath the burning sun. And traveled some three miles in one. And thus a century and a half They trod the footsteps of that calf. The years passed on m switfness fleet, The road became a village street, And this, before men were aware, A city’s crowded throughfare, And soon the central street was this Of a renowned metropolis. And men tw o centuries and a half Trod in the footsteps of that calf. Each day a hundred thousand rout Followed the zigzag calf about; And o’er his crooked journey went The traffic of a continent. A hundred thousand men were led By one calf near three centuries dead. They followed still his crooked way, And lost 100 years a daj . For thus such reverence is lent To well-established precedent. A moral lesson this might teach. Were I ordained and called to preach For men are prone to go it blind Along the calf-paths of the mind And work away from sun to sun To do wnat othei men have done They follow in the beaten track. And out and in. and forth and back, And still their devious course pursue. To keep the path that others do The Calf-Path, by Samuel Foss Hoard’s Dairyman 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 above normal with daytime highs in the 70’s and over-night lows in the 50’s. Seasonable at the begin ning of the period with a slow warming trend thereafter. ■Rain may total less than one-fourth inch as widely scattered showers near the end of the period. Viet NajtfTiWhtf’wie trago cm« land under British edlotalnl rul* has been gcriynaqjlciiMl into tha hostile nations of India and Pakistan. On Formosa, Nation, alist Chinese under Chlang Kai* shek look across the waters to the Chinese mainland under the Communist government of Peking. These people too are moved to muse; "If 0n1y,,, ,*] Changes to be made There were times in the history of the Hebrew people when men looked at the divided kingdoms of Judah and Israclandbroodcd: "If only, • . .I’’ The great united kingdom forged by the genius of King David barely survived ths rule of his son, Solomon. At the , , , . death of Solomon the great Several years ago I stood in Davidian kingdom was split a Thuringian evergreen forest apart, never to be united again, and looked across the Iron Cur- what caused this terrible di ta:n‘s "no-man's-land’ into East vision.’ Pictiue the scene. The time Germany. In an inappropriately ; s t h e vear 922 8.C., almost a Lght-heancd mood, I and several thousand jears before the birth olner Americans wav ed smilingly 0 f Christ. The place is Sheer, cm at two East where Solomon's son, Rehobor.m, German border j s t 0 meet with the leaders of*he guards staring tribes of Israel and be crowned at rom a king succeed his father. When watchtower a he arrives there, however, he finds hundred yards that the people want some awa J* a, . < r? ur ‘ changes to be made before they aged that they w’ill commit themselves tohisrule. had waved back. Your father made our voke £ iri j 6d ro s l heavy. Now, therefore, lighten the Bait Alfhn.icA “order and, hard service of your father and * 7 , stll * •ifngkn’gi his heavy yoke upon us, and we started back through the forest. wi ]i serV e you (1 Kings 12:4). The dividing line In order that Solomon might ine Divining line accomplish his egotistical Minutes later, two shots rang building projects, he had heavily out through the branches above taxed his people and subjected us. In a moment, the apparent many to slave labor. While the peace of the forest was broken people suffered under this great agam by excited West German burden, Solomon and his seven border guards and U.S. Army hundred wives and three hundred pateols. In response to our in- concubines lived in luxurious credulous questions, we were told onlendnri that, just after we had turned p from the border, two rifle shots Wrong advice! ? ad keen fhecl in our direction The request which the people r rC w,tp,? wu • As made on Kehoboam, then, seemed I looked back toward the mine- to be a reasonable one. Yet, after °S 016 three days to think it over, border, fte dividing Imebetween Rehoboam followed the bad the two Germanys seemed much advice of those who told him to more ominous than it had a few ignore these demands and before. It occurred to violently assert his authority. The me that one ought not to be light- result; the united monarchy is terrible 6 a barrier. ° f S ° ™ to two irreconcilable I have seen men and women AnH fhp Heal king this division as the con- ' only ’ * * ,! sequence of Nazi leadership, I . , ...... bavp Tiparr) fhpm «irc« Hm Ja„ on aulnn« co,y njMoJfc* nave nearct ujem_ curse me nay of Omum, Education, National Coined w th« me seeds of division were sown, churchy •« chnst in u. s. a by Today, how many Germans think c * m ' T,unit y **«*= Setvieej. back to those days when the Fatherland was one nation and (F ONLY,... Lesson for October 5,1969 Swi|rMiMlScrvlurc I K'-g s 12 If'c.g’t 16. Dav'ierml Rrading Prcvc bj 16 12 20. Attend The Chord. Of BiShaiS Your Choice Sodoy ■lostile camps. Another line bisects Read Lancaster Farming For Full Market Reports To Apply Lime Winter gram fields that are to be seeded 1o a legume next spring or summer should be lim ed this fall, if they need it. The practice of working the lime in to the soil as the ground is being prepared for the grain seeding is a good one and will give the lime time to sweeten the soil. The practice of spreading the lime on top of the winter gram this fall or winter is not a good one and does not allow the mabamum use of the lime Allow time for the lime to function befoie the legume seeding is made. To Improve Calf __ Raising Practices _ The raising of a heifer calf for a herd replacement is a very im portant factoi m the future of NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent the herd Tnese young calves need special quarters that are warm, dry, free of drafts, and provide a good chance for max imum development the first year. Individual calf pens and special care is needed to properly devel op the calves from the many good cows in this area. To Utilize Corn Fodder Many livestock producers are short of bedding for their ani mals. Since we' have a very rank corn crqp, it is possible, for com that-has been picked to -be the source of many tons o| good bedding The stalks can be shred ed, dried./ and then baled for use later in the winter. "Shredded corn fodder is one* of the most absorbable of the many forms of bedding.