4- Lancaster, Fm mmp. Saturday. April 18.1070 Bust Threat Grows On Mai eh 7. I;a master F.iiminp edi tonally raised the question (if "Mow Many Epps?" Our <|ii» 'lion followed a LM)\ recommendation to farmeis not to mciease epp production m l‘*To We earned the ad \ice ol Poultic and Epp Pioduclion paper to tamuis to po slow But wo left the choice to the individual farmer on how to proceed m tin lace of the caution Haps Since Match 7. the epp maike'inp situa non for most fanners has changed diasti cally The bippest blow came immediately after Easter when epp prices dropped oer cent, to a lew el a national epp market - .ng official mloimcd us was iiM ctboet oreak even. Stability Efforts In the pa«a two weeks, eag pr have stabilized at the new le\el Meanwhile, vari ous poultry organizations are in the process of encouraging farmers to sell off old flocks, cut down on flock size increases, promote eggs, and sell breakers. The effort is to cut oack on egg production so as to stabilize supply and keep demand high In short, the effort is stop prices from going lower. But the egg men are not optimistic about keeping present egg prices pri marily for one reason. That reason is the mushrooming egg hatch which threatens to flood the country with new laying flocks and more eggs in the next several months. Egg hatch w'as up 21 per cent in Janu ary compared to a year ago, and it was up 17 per cent in February, according to tne USDA. We haven't seen any figures for March, yet, but recent statements by poul try officials indicate the March figures won't be an improvement . Some officials already ha\ e said that in order to avoid “a bust” in egg prices, the natch from March through June would have to be held at not higher than the 1969 le\ el. Warning! Just how serious the situation has be come is indicated by the large advertise ment by United Egg Producers in the April 11 edition of Poultry and Egg Production Headed “WARNING!” in large red letters, the ad asks if the egg industry is headed for a massne bust. It continues. “The urgency of the problem is real and upon us. Recent increases in pullet place ments are alarming. The trend started in December when egg type placements rose 19 per cent The Lancaster Mennomte Conference Historical Society has purchased the Hans Herr house, the oldest dwelling house in Lancaster County and the oldest Mennomte meeting place in America Built in 1719, the house is truly historic and the Historical Society desenes commendation and assis tance in the restoration effort Elsewhere m this issue aie pictures of LANCASTER FARMING Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly P 0 Box 266 - Lititz, Pa 17543 Office 22 E Main St, Lititz, Pa 17543 Phone Lancastei 394 3047 oi Lititz 626 2191 Robert G Campbell. Advertising Director Zane Wilson, Managing Editoi Subscription pi ice S2peryeai in Lancaster County S3elsewheie Established November 4, 1955 Published every Satuiday by Lancaster Fanning, Lititz, Pa Second Class Postage paid at Lititz, Pa 17543 Member of Newspaper Faim Editors Assn Pa Newspapei Pubhsheis Association, and National Newspaper Association Hans Herr House "In Jamiarv. aJI per ct*nl inn-v.'. was recorded Pebruaiv lav er tv pc eggs in m cubators vvei i' up I!) per cent ov ci Kebi mu > \i>l•, ”lf tins alaimmg trend continues through June, ilie spectre of a recnnence ol the 191i7-early 1968 nightmare (egg prices remained below cost of production for 18 months) is a definite reality . . and it will happen e\en if July-Dccembcr placements arc held to the 1969 le\els. If the mdustr.v is blessed with unproved pullet survivals the nightmare will be intensified. 18 - 24 Months "The warning signs are dear. A mas sne ■bust’ is building up rapidly and can hit as early as August or September tins vear . . and according to past history, it will take 18-24 months for recovery. “There is only one way to prevent dis aster and that is through enlightened re sponsibility ‘Producer Responsibility.’ ‘Grower Responsibility' and ‘Hatcher Re sponsibility.’ All must act immediately to make responsible placement decisions. “It’s already later much later than you think It’s almost too late!" UEP said. We can’t say it any better The question remaining for each poul trvman is. “What am I going to do about it?” A Real Dilemma For the businessman who has the bulk of his know-how. equipment and capital tied up in layers, it’s a real dilemma. Does he hold off starting the next flock of layers? Does he move ahead and hope that enough of the other guys take correctu e actions to stave off the bust? Does he go ahead and pray the bust won't be \ery long or lery se\ere? Only the mdu idual farmer can answer these questions, but we suggest he do some very serious thinking in the next few days The decisions made could be \ery impor tant for his future. Those farmers who have the flexibility and aren’t committed and who are about ready to get a new flock of birds, might con sider holding off until the rate of hatch be comes more reasonable While idle equip ment and buildings are costly, losses could be multiplied by large outputs of eggs which might ha\e to be sold for much less than the cost of production the exterior of the Hans Herr house and the hand-hewn wooden steps in the house Many prominent persons, including painter Andrew Wyeth. ha\e already lent their moral and tinancial support to the restoration effort The fact that many Lancaster Count lans are descendents of the Hans Herr heightens the local interest m the project We feel sure the proiect will continue to gain the support of citizens in Lancastei County and elsewhere. A Bit More . . . There have been a lot of accidents in Lancaster County this year, far too many, both on the highways and elsewhere. We think these comments by a harden ed news reporter in Missouri sum it up: “It’s not a pretty scene to come upon shattered glass, twisted metal, oozing oil and gasoline, moans of pain and the flow ing of a man’s life-blood don’t gne >ou a comfortable feeling. How can drivers be made to realize that a bit more caution, a bit more kindness, a bit more courtesy and a lot more decency w-ould put an end to many of these scenes.” To ''H Strawhcnj Plants I'aily spnng is the best time lo set stiavvbcirv plants in this p,n t of the (onnliy Rally plants will usually lesnlt in eicaU'i vielcls next spimg be cause the fust few- i miner plants will beai the most stiaw benies the cailici the nm nei plants aie set, the bettor will be the yield Planting dis lances should be foui feet be tween lows and 24 inches on the iow Feitilue in June and again in early August to devel op the maximum numbei and slicngth of plants To Observe Alfalfa For Weevil Waim spnng weathei is slow in coming this yeai but it may amve all of a sudden With the cunent favorable moisture con ditions the giowmg season will get off to a fast stait Alfalfa For Full Market Reports Read Lancaster Farming ALL ONE? lesson for April 19,1970 lacbsmmrf Scripture* Galatians 3. Ocvttfcnal Reatfrng Psofms 67. I’d like to tell you a story about a man named Ivan. Ivan was a citizen of the Sov iet Union. He was much like any other citizen of the U.S S.R., with one notable exception: he was also a Christian, a practic ing member of the Christian Church. This was a commitment that made his life a hardship. Because he was a Christian, Ivan had a very limited future in the lit tle Ukranian Rev. Althouse town in which he lived. He wasn’t abused physi cally in any way for his Christ ianity, but his opportunities in the Soviet society were strictly limited. One opportunity that was not closed to him, however, was the armed forces and so he enlisted. So fine was his record in the army, so great was the in itiative and talent he demon strated, that he eventually be came an officer. Stacked against him When he had been mustered out of the army, he set his heart and mind on going to the uni versity to study for the profes sion of law. Christians were not forbidden to enter the univer sity, but, as the saying goes, “the deck was stacked against him.” On the day of his registration, the school authorities caused him to be arrested on a minor, trumped-up charge and he was put in prison. After months of prison in his home town, he was transferred to what we would call a state penitentiary, one of the most brutal prisons m the country. There, Ivan, a brilliant young student, the kind of self enter prising youth any nation should be anxious to claim, was brut ually beaten and died. This tragic story, as I have told it to you, is true in every detail but these: his name was not Ivan, but Clyde Kinard; the scene of the story was not the NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent gioweis .tic tilled to ob sme tho alfalfa .stands closely for feeding weevil later this month and eaily May It is likely that many ciops may be cut without any spiay until aflei the fiist cutting is made. A leaflet is .nailable on the subject To Buy Feeder Pigs Carefully If you plan to buy feeder pigs fi om out of state, demand ollicial Intel state Health Ceiti ficates beloie the animals aie moved Failuie to buy and move pigs legally is too big a usk; if they come down with the disease, hog cholera, all hogs on the faim and in the aiea may be infected and the dieaded disease spread Don’t be taken by offeis of bargain pigs, they may put you out of business Soviet Union, but the United States; the prison was not in the Ukraine, but in Mississippi; and his offence was not that he was a Christian in a Communist land, but a black man in a white man’s society. I tell this story to you, not be cause it is an unusual story, for it is not; there are many other true stories equally tragic. I tell it simply because I know that I need to be reminded, lest in my comfortable complacency I find it difficult to understand why some people in this nation are so angry, so bitter. And if I need to be reminded, so, I’m sure, do you. Coming apart There is probably no time in the history of this nation when we have been so deeply divided as a people, when the fabric of our society was so deeply in danger of coming apart at the seams. Never have so many people been so frightened or spoken so lashly or asked with more urgency: “What is going on in our nation’” The Report of the United States Riot Com mission has given one answer: “This is our basic conclusion: Our nation is moving toward two societies, one black, one white separate and unequal.” Theie are also other divisions. Theie are the divisions between the poor and the affluent, the have’s and the have not’s. There is the division that exists be tween generations, the young and the old These divisions are so deep, so complex, so bitter, so dangeious. The times demand a ministry of reconciliation so that men may recognize, as Paul puts it in Galatians 3, that we aie “all one in Christ Jesus." Theie axe passages in Paul’s letters where he speaks of the different ministries in the church; some men are called to be preacheis, other teachers, etc. But he says nothing about some being given the ministry of re conciliation The reason: all are to be reconcilers He gives all of us this “ministry of recon ciliation ” The job of bringing us to gether, of healing the wounds of this society, is something that lests upon all of us. We are “all one in Cluist Jesus,’’ and we must both recognize that one ness and make it evident to our divided world. (Bastd an ouHinas copyrighted by thaOivtsian of Christian Education, National Council of lh# Churchas of Christ m tha U. S, A, ftoloasad b/ Community Prass Sarvica)