- Lancaster Farming. Saturday. January 3.1970 4 From Where We Actions Speak Louder Than Words Pollution of man's environment has in recent months become a major topic ol national debate Hopefully, this concern will not pro\ e to lie the kind of ephemeral fad to which modern nations seem peculiarly dis posed. The problem of pollution will be rc sohed only through patient and steady ef fort and bv the full cooperation of e\cryone concerned. Pollution is a national problem, not the exclusive problem of particular in dividuals oi groups Involved in the pollu tion question aie national values, science and technology politics, industry, economic preferences ol consumers and geograph.v That numerous factors conti ibuto to the pollution problem has not pre\cnted critics of the farm industry from exploiting present emotion on the subject The\ ha\e latched onto the issue for the purpose of discredit ing the farmer as a whole Their Holv War is premised on the untenable notion that farmers alone have created the .pollution problem. It is a narrow vision which sees agriculture as a scapegoat. The magnitude of the emironmental pollution problem can be grasped by con sidering the sheer impact of the numbers of people and the unavoidable pollution that they create. Some 200 million tons of gar bage are generated in private homes every year one ton per person. Waste presently discharged into bodies of water exceeds five million tons a year. Columnist Ralph de Toledano states the problem succinctly: “. . . every American contributes his mite even as he drives down to the corner drug store to buy medication for the ills of pollu tion.” In a recent address to the National Agri cultural Chemicals Association, J. Phil Campbell, Under Secretary of Agriculture commented on.the role of Agriculture in en vironmental pollution. He said, “There is a great deal of uninformed talk about maintaining nature’s balance. . . Mr. and Mrs. American Citizen hear a great deal about water pollution. They read in the press or hear over the radio and T-V that 14 million tons of plant nutrients are applied to soils in the United States every year. From there it’s an easy jump to the conclu sion that these plant nutrients, washing off into streams and lakes and feeding the growth of algae, are making the water un usable for domestic purposes, recreation, or tishing Scientific eudence indicates that plant nutrients are quite a minor factor in this development. But rumor has a way of outi unmng fact ” Water pollution studies made by Uni- ersity of Wisconsin soil researchers found that farm wastes run oft unless fertilizer and manuie are applied to sloping frozen ground pose much less of a pollution pioblem than city and industrial wastes Yes, there i& a pollution problem But, Farm News This Week Top Corn And Tobacco Shown By 4-H Bo\ s In Annual Round-Up Page 1 Miss Stoltzfus In Guernsey State Contest 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 Ne.vswanger Editor Robeit G Campbell, Advei Using Duector Subsci iption ;n ice S 2 per yeai in Lancaster Countj SSelsewheie Established Xoicmbei 4 1955 Published evuy Satin das b\ Lancaster Fanning Lititz Pa Second Class Postage paid at Lititz, Pa. 17543 Member of .Vewspapei Farm Editors Assn Stand.., to indict the farmer as the culprit is to grossly misstate the issue. Indications are that the farm industry is doing something • about pollution, while some of its critics, it seem.s. have not progressed beyond verbal abuse. At least that’s the way it looks from where we stand. This Is A Farmer Farmers are found in fields plowing up. seeding down, returning from, planting to. fertilizing with, spraying for and harvesting if. Wn es help them, little boys follow them, the Agriculture Department confuses them, city relatives visit them salesmen detain them, meals wait for them, weather can de laj them, but it takes Heaven to stop them. When jour car stalls along the w'ay, a farmer is a considerate, courteous, inexpen sive road service. When a farmer's wife suggests he buy a new suit, he can quote from memory every expense involved in operating the farm last year, plus the added expense he is certain will crop up this jear. Or else he assumes the role of the indignant shopper, impressing upon everyone within ear shot the pounds of pork he must pro duce in order to pay for a suit at today’s prices. A farmer is a paradox he is an “over ailed” executive with his home his office; a scientist using fertilizer attachments; a pur chasing agent in an old straw hat; a person nel director with grease under his finger nails; a dietition with a passion for alfalfa, animals and antibiotics; a production ex pert faced with a surplus; and a manager battling a price - cost squeeze He manages more capital than most of the businessmen in town. He likes sunshine, good food, state fairs, dinner at NOON, auctions, his neigh bors, Saturday-nights in town, his shirt col lar unbuttoned, and above all a good soak ing rain in August. He is not much for droughts, ditches, throughways, experts, weeds, the eight-hour day, helping with the housework, or grass hoppers. Nobody else is so far from the telephone or so close to God, nobody else gets so much satisfaction out of modern plumbing, favor able weather and good ice cream Nobody else can remove all those things from his pockets and on washday still have overlooked; five “steeples,” one cotter key, a rusty spike, three grains of corn, the stub end of a lead pencil, a square tape, a $4.98 pocket watch, and a cupful of chaff in each trouser cuff A farmer is both Faith and Fatalist he must have faith to continually meet the challenges ol his capacities amid an ever present possibility that an act of God (a late spring, an early frost, tornado, flood, drought) can bring his business to a stand still. You can Reduce His Acreage but you can’t Restrain His Ambition. Might as well put up with him he is your friend, your competitor, your custom er, your source of food and fiber, and self reliant young citizens to help replenish your cities He is your countryman a denim dressed, business-wise, fast-growing states man of stature. And when he comes in at noon having spent the energy of his hopes and dreams, he can be recharged anew with the magic words. “The Market’s Up.” Local Weather Forecast (From the U. S. Weather Bureau at the Harrisburg State Airport) The five-day forecast for the period Sat urday through next Wednesday calls for temperatures to average below normal with daytime highs in the 30’s and over-night lows m the teens Cold throughout the pei lod Normal high-low lor the period is 39- 24 Precipitation rnav total one-fourth to one half inch water equnalent occurring as < mow or ram Satuiday 01 Sunday and snow agam about Tuesday. TWO QUESTIONS Lesson for January 4,1970 ItchgrvunJ Scripture: Genesis 179-M, MotlheW 3, John I 19-36. Ads 19 1-7. Hans Christian Anderson’s story of "The Ugly Ducking” is really a parable of life. We see it enacted around us again and again. As children we concerned ourselves very little over the question, "Who; am I?” because we were quite sure we knew who we were. But then adoles cence steals upon us and all the certainties of the past fly away. Once so sure of our own identity, we now find that we don’t really know. Thinking he was a duckling and an ugly one, at that the hero of Anderson’s story felt un wanted and rejected by everyone. No matter how hard he fried, he didn’t make a very good duck. But then, one day he began to bloom into a beautiful swan and he found out who he really was. Having discovered his true identity, he found also his true vocation in life. “The real me” Of course, the Danish story teller was really thinking about people, not ducks. The adolescent years take away our old self images and we enter into young adulthood confused and troubled. Then, as with "The Ugly Duck ling,” something happens to help us to begin to find out who we are and what we are here for. That is, some of us “find out,” while others of us drift along, still searching for the "real me.” This search and discovery for our self-identity is different for each of us. For some of us it comes early and easily. For others, it is a long, hard search. Some do not search at all, content to play roles and wear masks. Yet, there is no more wonderful discovery than for a man to find out who is this "self” that God has created him to become, to find out his mission and nieho Read Lancaster Farming For Full Market Reports To Store Herbicides Carefully Weed killer chemcials should be given special attention during the winter months They should be kept away from any seeds oi plants because theie may be su fficient fumes to do some dam age The emulsion foims of ma teuals should be kept in non freezing areas for best results next yeai Be sine and stoie the chemicals in the ongmal contain er in 01 dei to maintain identity and application insti notions To Eliminate Rodents The heavy snow covet of le- gains of milk pioduction does cent weeks might easily mean a not pemut f°ed to be all over heaviei lat and mouse mfesla the giound 01 floor about the tion in and aiound faim build-feedeis In life. . . One cannot help but suspect that this it the kina of experience that Jesus had when on that day he went to the Jordan River and was baptised by John. Many scholars believe that this is whoa Jesus truly realized who he wus and whnt he was intended to do. An inner conviction apparently brought him to John to be bap tised in the first place. Then, a heavenly voice confirmed it; "This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased.” The Baptist also helped to confirm it with his own reaction to Jesus’ request for baptism: "I need to be baptised by you, and do you come to me?” and in his later testimony, "Behold, the lamb of God.” The call Yes, on that day Jesus received his call to a messianic ministry, but when did that call first begin. This is like asking for the concise moment when a child becomes a youth, or a youth an adult. In reahtv, the process is long and subtle. The incident in the temple at age twelve indicates that he al ready had some sense of call. Throughout his young years, Jesus had become familiar with the messianic prophecies of men like Isaiah. Though long dead and gone from the scene, these men never the less spoke to the heart and mind of this youth con cerning his mission. Jesus found his cell in voices from both the past and the pre sent. So, as he called Jesus to his work, he calls us too, usingmany means to reveal his will to us. He wants us to find out who he created us to be; he wants us to discover our life task, to know the plan he wants us to follow. Signposts everywhere Too long we have assumed that God called only clergymen and missionaries. He calls all men, though many ignore the call. He puts signposts all around us, yet w r e may pass them by un noticed. As he sent John the Bap tist to Jesus, so he sends people to us to help bear and confirm our call. To things we must know as w r e live this life: Who am I? and What am I here for? Do you know? (lasad on auHlnas eopyrgMrf by tha DrvisTan of Christian Edueahan, Notianal Cauncil af tha Churchas af Christ in tha U« S, At Ktlaccad by, Cammumty Frass Sarvtca.) ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE SUNDAY NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent ings. AH owners are urged to use poison bait station to„ eli minate as many as possible along with eliminating all pos sible nesting and breeding places. Good sanitation is not at ti active to lats and will help keep down the infestation. To Check Self-Feeders Many livestock feeders may be peimittmg too much feed to be thiown out and not utilized; this is one of the common leaks in a feeding pi ogi am and can in ciease feed costs All operatois aie uiged to check their feedeis legulauly to be suie that feed is not being wasted Efficient