L.inr.rlii 1 ‘.n nnng. Sutui d.i\. Mart h 7. 1070 4 IVipll iiMi’t Ml il MlmillMl ill ( oldlUg to flow It I'fli < t- 'iicm Tlics s.n 'I depends on whose os is gi (ling goted A lecenl poult r.\ meeting Jit tile Farm anti Home (’enter illustrated the point. A speaker noted she, as a housewife, has been quite concerned about the high cost of eggs m recent months e.ntl asked a grocer, “Do the chickens gel more money now ’’’ The grocer was stumped. Grocers tend to know a great deal about how to price eggs, but tei.v little about the chickens which produce them. But a Lancaster County egg producer wasn't at a loss on the question: Do chickens get more money now? "The chickens get more than I do.’’ he mutteied. Eggs Convenient Amwa>. it was noted. egg> are still one of the housewife's best protein bins. on a cost per unit basis. Eggs were also reported to be vein "conveniently packaged" in their natural shells, a point which housewnes should keep in mind when deciding what should go into the family food budget. In a time when increasing numbers of women are w orking or engaging in activities outside the home, it’s only reasonable to Egg producers should note the USDA’s recommendation last week against a large egg production increase m 1970. There’s no way, of course, that the USDA can enforce the recommendation and it’s really up to the individual farmer to de termine if he’s going to boost his egg pro duction. n But the producer who goes against the USDA’s recommendation should be aware that he’s going against the finding and recommendation of officials who study the egg market. Newspaper Backs USDA A recent edition of Poultry and Egg Production newspaper strongly backed the USDA recommendation. Its editorial, in part, went as follows. "Conversations with mdustrymen in the past several months have indicated much optimism for the year ahead This optimism is justified, it restraint in chick placements is forthcoming But to produce to the limit is sheer folly "Some people operate on the theory that if the doctor's prescription calls for one tea spoon of medicine, a double dose is twice as good This same inane reasoning seems to be in force with egg producers who act as if a 10 per cent increase is twice as good as a 5 per cent boost in the laying flock "Every time the egg industry goes through a depressed period and then ap pears to be coming out of it slowly and again begins to garner profits, we hear statements that the industry is beginning to achieve maturity The larger and fewer operators are going to provide the stability that the many small ones never could achieve. “Somehow this maturity does not ap pear to be tery evident ” Egg Prices Dow n Egg prices literally shot through the LANCASTER FARMING Laneastei County’s Own Farm Weekly n 0 Box 266 Lititz Pa 17543 Office 22 E Main St Lititz Pa 17543 Phone LancoMei 394 3047 oi Lititz 626 2191 Robeit G Campbell A.clv ei tismg Dn ector Zane Wilson Vam cmg Eclitoi Sub-ci iption puce S 2 pei xeai in Lancaster Countj S3eKewheie Established Noiembei 4 1955 Published e\eiv Satuidas b\ Lancaster Fai mm 2 Lititz, Pa Second Postage paid at Lititz Pa 17543 Member of \evsnapfi Faim Edito>s V r n Pa IXewspapei Pubbshus Association, and National Newspapei Association The Egg How Many Eggs? Consumer c\|)c( t lln’j'll haie less I mu' to spend ,n I hi’ hlihi ;i So. a peat rr need lor both rt ficicnt kitflu'n- and foods. Convenience loods Mich as freeze dried products have a bright future. It’s a hopelul smn for cptf producers that epps should rank in the comcmencc food catcporj. Egg Marketing But poultry men must recognize the need to keep the housewife aware ot just how comenient the egg is. The woman of the house is constantly bombarded with new products, new packages, new gimmics. She must be reminded occasionally that some of the best and most com enient products are those which she has used the longest. In today's consumer-oriented economy, the farmer must make sure his message gets to the consumer. One of the themes which run through speeches and talks to county farmers is that the farmer must learn more about market ing his product. It doesn’t do much good to raise a superior product it it can’t be made to hold its own in the market place. Eggs are comenient Tn.s is -old hat 1 to manv faim- Sounds good, doesn’t it? Egg producers eis bat still icy essential to ought to say it often. successful fanning today i not And add, for a clincher, that they're priced low in relation to competing pro ducts roof for a period last 5 ear and thej 're still good, though on the way down. It's no secret that many Lancaster County egg producers ha\e really cleaned up financially during the high egg price period. Some of them, however, thought the good times were long overdue. As one egg man stated at a poultry meeting at the Farm and Home Center, “The producers got tired of subsidizing the consumer ” $2O Million-plus Eggs and layers, more than a $2O mil lion a year business m Lancaster County even in 1968, certainly increased its stature in county agriculture in 1969. Even in 1968, eggs and layers were second only to the dairy business in terms ot agricultural production lalue in the coun ty In 1968, eggs and layers accounted for about one-si\th of the $124,000,000 county agricultural products income These are some of the facts which make the USDA recommendation and how county egg producers react to it is Mtally impor tant Supph Volatile One factoi making egg prices so volatile is the rapidity with which the supply of lay ers can be increased or decreased This isn’t true, for instance, with beef cattle If one farmer increases egg production, he may have made a wise move But if every other farmer made similar increases, they may all be wrong because they glut the market. The real enforcer in the matter of pro duction ultimately is the consumer and the price he’s willing to pay for eggs. That’s in fluenced strongly by how many eggs there are, however Will 1969 Repeat? One thing the egg producer and farmers in general will ha\e to guard against in 1970 is the natural tendency of many ot us to become o\ erly optimistic after a good y cai Because egg prices were high in 1963 doesn’t mean they will be in 1970 What will the economy do to poultry puces in 1970'’ Wouldn't it be woith a foi tune to know lor sure? But we don t know, so we lea\e it to you farm manage!s to do as you'te always done make your own decision. We iea,\ e it to \ ou to determine that the USD A will be as wrong on eggs m 1970 as Moore was on beef in 1969. or to decide that maybe the USDA is giving a word to the To Plan For Quality Forage The haiNesting of top quality haj oi silage doesn't just happen. I. has to be planned along with good management There is a \ast difference between average ha% and excellent quality hay. the latter k nd of forage is need ect to obtain maximum pioduc tjon with peak efficiency Fite dom from weeds, stage of ma in it>. and low’ hr.uesting loss e, will de.e.mine the vdue of the cion PioJuceis aie lit ged to make e\ei.» cffoit to get top qual ity 11.. J o. sila = e this summei To Keep Accurate Records cross are quickly forgotten. Jesus himself made it clear that there could be no cut-rate discip leship; “If any man would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.” And that’s the way it was foe his disciples. Peter, tradition tells us, was crucified head-down on « cross in Rome. Andrew was also crucified. Bartholomew was cru cified and beheaded. Thomas was martyred in India. James the Less was stoned and clubbed to death. Jude and Simon met violent deaths, and even James, tho brother of Jesus. There was noth ing marked-down about their dis t-cVgr-unrf Scripture Marie 134 3t luke 14 25 33 I Cipleship, 4 Kings 22 1 36 Ala the// TO 16 39 Acts 6 through 7, £ Dev«ti»n«l Resting Jeremiah 20 7 12. “Cheap grace” r NO CHEAPER RAIE! Lesson for March 8, 1910 Singer Sarah Vaughn’s little neice was having prayer ex plained to her. Prayers, she was told, are like telegrams to God. The little girl thought that over and then asked: “Oh, is that why we send them at night to get the cheaper rate?” Out of the mouths of babes and infants come some of the most profound thoughts to chal lenge the mind of man. Why the little girl said Rev. Althouse that, I do not know, but perhaps she had al ready learned that a great deal of adult attention seems directed toward getting the cheaper rate, regardless of the commodity. Everyone wants a bargain, some thing marked down from its orig inal price, a discount, a deal even in religion! An Easter without Lent Just as a Christmas without an Advent is quite meaningless, so is an Easter without a Lent. The resurrection, great and glorious news that it is, cannot be either understood or experienced apart from the passion and cross of our Lord. An Easter without the Pas sion of Christ is a bargain-base ment ichgion that is really no bargain. It is a tiagic attempt to get tne cheaper late. Last spring immediately after Easto. I saw a sign in a stoic win dow “POST-EASTER SALE . . . CROSSES AND BUNNIES ONE HALF OFF. ’ The “dosses and banmes, ’ of course, weic choco late, but I couldnt help feeling there was a fair amount of un- conscious nony in that poster, i??” - •■>«">« «p yr «hi»d by Divm«i TT-cln,- 1C a timo nf oi-ant Chmtl,n Education, National Council of Hio While EcStei is a time of gieat C} . urch „ ~ chm( U- s K R^.atK i by e>citement and joy, the post-Eas- Community hn Stivko.) ter season seems to be a time of marked-down Christian disciple ship. The pain and agony of the NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent only i efer to financial iccords but especially to the u«e of all kinds of pcst.ctdes The place of chemicals in food and feed pro duction is getting considerable attention MI produceis should keep accuiate lecoids of all ap plications. lecoul blanks are .-nailable at om Extension Office. To Shear Sheep Many Rood shepheids will get their sheep out ot the fleece dur ing Maich and tally Apnl This might seem earl\ to the average peison, but the ewe flock will piodute inoie milk and be better* mothers without their current crop of wool The fleece should be diy when sheaied and stored in a clean, dij place until sold. Nor for us. The cost of disciple* ship for us Is still a cross; if nqt of wood and nails, it is still a cross of some kind. There is no point ia trying to seek a cheaper rate, fop there is none. It does not neces sarily mean that each of us must die for our faith though it might but that we must he willing to live or die for it, which ever is required. Sometimes it is more difficult to live for some thing than to die for something. Dietrich Bonhoelfer was a Ger man pastor who was put to death for his active resistance against Hitler and the Nazis. He has writ ten a book which has become a modern classic. It is entitled, The Cost of Discipleship, In it he calls “cheap grace” the “deadly enemy of the Church.” By “cheap grace" he means the bargain-counter ap proach to Christianity that as sumes that because Christ has paid the price for us, the love of God costs us nothing. It pictures the Church as a benevolent wel fare organization that has too much grace on hand and must give it away indescriminately, and God as a senile philanthrop ist whose gift of grace costs him nothing. Without A Cross “Cheap grace,” says Bonhoef fer, “is grace without discipleship, grace without a cross, grace with out Jesus Christ, living and in carnate.” We can congratulate the woman who by careful shopping is able to feed her family well for less money, but the family that tries to get the cheaper rate in its religion is doomed to disappoint ment. There is no “cheap grace.” All grace is expensive. It cost Christ a cross to win a crown. It demands no less of us.