- Lancaster Farming, Saturday. .Kino (». 1070 4 We Salute It'' impossible im o\ei eniphasi/e tin jmpu! tain i’ o' (1.11 l \mg to am icullin e in Sou'heastei n Pemisy i\ ania Milk it'dl puk'iih's about one loiuth ol fcUni unenues in tlu> ngh aKnculuir.il aica Mi aiui .mnuid Lanca'lei Count v But main ollu r ciop .uul livestock cn terpnses aic closely ulated to dairy me In many instance', crops ate produced to iced dairy animals. Other farm animals oitcn are bought by proceeds from dany ng and mctely icpresent a torm of ducrsi 'ication from the mam (arm enterprise dairying The success ot the Lancaster CounU Dairy Princess Pageant appaicntly has been assured by the entry of eight lo\ely, mlk fed. Lancaster Counts lasses We re iroud to introduce them this week Everyone we haie talked to has been hterally tickled by the response so far to "he Pageant, not only because of the num ber of entries, but also because of the hieh calibre of the girls. The elation o\er the response is particularly understandable be cause the pageant had to be cancelled last • ear due to lack of interest. The feeling is that we can’t fail to have an outstanding Dairy Princess this year. Which is as it should be Dairying is by far Lancaster County's On Stopping Imitations Concerned mothers ask. ’‘Are the new r imitation milks nutritious for children?” Dr Philip L White answers the ques tion in his column, "Let’s Talk About Food": "Tw r o different kinds of imitation milks ha\e been added to the dairy cases m many markets in the last y ear or so One variety is a filled milk, a product in which the milk fat of whole milk has been replac ed by a vegetable oil.” "The other kind of imitation milk is a concocted product made to look and taste like milk but otherwise bears little re semblance to it " Laboratory tests show that milk has 26 per cent less saturated fats than do the filled milks In addition, the consumer should know :hat whole milk is highei in polyunsatu rated fat Laboratoiy tests ie\ea! that 28 5 per cent of the milk fat is the polyunsaturated type, wheieas, filled milk has an unsatu rated fat content of only two per cent, and imitation or artificial milk contains only fhe per cent of the unsatuiated t\pe of tat The consume! s aie concerned about the total sugar in then diet The total sugai in .thole milk is 4 8 per cent, filled mdk has 5 3 per cent, and imitation milk has 6 7 per cent Shouldn’t Replace Milk Dr White desenbed topical ingredients of the imitation and then added "Unless one is sure that the nutntite talue is equi valent to whole milk, such products should not be depended upon to replace milk in the diets of children " In the next se\eral vears. dairvmen probablj can expect increased efforts by imitation products to break into the dairj market LANCASTER FARMING Lancaster Count’s Own Farm Weekly P 0 Box 266 Lititz Pa 17543 Office 22 E A'fain St Lititz Pa 17543 Phone Lancastei 394 3047 oi Lititz 626 2181 RobeitG Campbell AcheiUsing Dnectoi Zane AVilsoi, Managing Eclitoi Subsci iption pi ice S 2 pei ceai in Lancaster Countv S3elsew.heie Established Novembei 4 1955 Published e''erv Satuiciai b\ Lancastei Fanning Lititz Pa Second Class Postage paid at Lititz Pa 17543 Membei of Xevspaper Fa'm Editois Assn Pa Newspapei Publish sis Association, and National Newspaper Association Dairy Pageant Fun Dairying! In this edition, om first dm me .Turn D.inv Month. we devote neailv ail cm space I" tins vital laim enleiprise In the wide varietv ol material on m.mv .\'peu ol ciair.vmg. we think there’s somethin*.' informative, new. interesting and v.ialh’iL' mg for everv farmer Wo une special thanks to the mnnv individuals and organisations winch con'ii buted material and helped make the issue a success And a special appreciation to our marj advertisers, who make our Dair.v issue nos- sible largest farm income producer Dairung brought more than S 3? million to County dairymen in 1969 That was about 30 per cent of the 5123.650.000 of total- countc fai ni income. Dairying is big business here. It is also a Mtal and dynamic wa> of life for a large proportion of the area’s more successful tarm families. But we think dairying is and ought to be something else, too FUN' The Daily Pageant, beginning at 6:30 p.m June 23 at the Farm and Home Center, will empha size the fun side of dairying. Let's go to the Pageant and ha\e some fun The point is that the dairyman needs to know his own product better in order to de fend his product against imitation products, most of w’hich are inferior to milk. Sometimes the best defense is a strong offense In this respect, we note the growing trend to ad\ertise and promote milk on television and in magazines. Milk Can Win This account from another part of the country gives an example of what can be done and is proof that when farmers decide to fight back, they can win against the imi tation products. According to the milk administrator of the-central Arizona milking area, the high point of filled milk sales in the marketing aiea was reached January 1969 when the total was 3,930,300 or 10 4 per cent of Class I milk sales Filled milk sales declined to 1,963,000 pounds in July, 1969 or 6 2 per cent of the Class I milk sales. The filled milk sales were seveiely cut by a campaign put on by the American Dairy Association. United Dainmen of Anzona. Arizona Milk Incorpoiated and the National Dairy Council. The etfectue ness of the campaign was revealed in ire decline of filled milk sales Attei a study had 'been made of the Central Arizona milk on the buying habits of consumers, it became evident that an important percentage of the consuming public was not aware that they were buying filled milk rather than real milk Upon completion of the study, an mten sne advertising and educational campaign was planned to inform the public of tne difference m the products In addition to the campaign, a giouo known as Consumers on Watch was or ganized to set the public straight with reference to filled milk. The campaign pointed out that con sumers were contused by the display a: d labeling of the se\eral filled milk brands cn the market This made the campaign p» > gram necessary. Milk is a quality product. An effort is building to sell milk as a quality food and as a fun and enetgx beverage We suggest that Southeastern Pennsxi vania farmers should stay alert to deteioo ments in this battle by the milk industry for the support ot the consuming public In the long run. this market battle .r. the communications media ot the cities can be as important to the farmer as his o*n individual battle to keep quality and pro duction high To Practice Farm Pond Safetj -Schools aic out aiut the hot minnici (lavs make the f.um pond moic and atti active to ma.iv vounqstcis All pond ovvneis aic uiped to pi ovule wa tc. it scut equipment such as in flated innei tubes, rafts, wooden laddeis and Ion? boaids at the of the watei and in pood icnd.t.on \o one should evu be peimitted to swim alone Ponds pi ovule excellent summei ’ce cation but watei safetj should be piacticed To Spraj Alfalfa Stubble G owers who haivested the nis T cutting of alfalfa without -t.\ insecfide spiay will benefit : om a spiav on the stubble, in For Full Market Reports Read Lancaster Farming DOWN WITH WALLS Lesson for June 7,1970 kcksnund Scripture: Ephesians I through 2. Devorienel Heading: Ephesians 3:t-10, Several years ago an African student who was studying in an American college told me of an experience that happened to him shortly after he arrived in this country. been more than fifty miles from his own home and this country was so strange and different and the city in which'he was attending col lege was so large that he felt very lonely and home- sick. As a Christ- Kev. Althouse ian (] le h a( i been born into a Christian family) he looked forward to his first Sun day in this country as an oppor tunity to meet some new Christ ian friends. Sunday arrived and he set out for a nearby church he had not iced earlier in the week. “Every one welcome!” a sign had pro claimd. “The Friendly Church,” promised another. With a sense of happy expectation he ascend ed the steps in front of the church. Your church “Good morning,” he said cheer fully to the usher at the front door. Instead of a similar re sponse, however, there came a heavy hand on his arm, a re straining hand, and a cool, “Where do you think you’re going?” Tne man was smiling so the student assumed he had made a mistake “Isn’t there going to he a service at 11 o’clock?” he v anted to know. “Nigger,” said the man with a humorless grin, “there's no service for you here at any time 1 Your church is down near the ra.j oad station.” “Your church,” the man had said as if some churches be longed to some people and other churches belonged to others. For the fr * u -ve since he had joined NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster Count) A cent man) casi ■> ‘ ic e were some wee vil at cutl.ns time and these must be k.llod in oidei to get maximum giovvth for file second g.owth Weevil infestation was heaviei than anticipated on many fields and this stubble spiay needs attention at this time. To Prepare Grain Bins The new cop of bailey and wheal is de\t loping rapidly and all old giain should be lemoved fiom the bin In Older to be cei tam that msec's aie rot waiting theie foi the new c;op the bins should be thoioughly cleaned and spiajed w»th insecticides such as malathion or methoxj ehlor the Christian Church, he felt ft strange sense of being divided off from some of his fellow Christian. The churchdoor had become a wall. The wall of alienation The wnten of Ephesians calls this dividedness “alienation.” Itt addressing Christians in Ephesus who were regarded as Gentiles before their conversion, the writ er is reminding them that until the coming of Christ there had been a wall dividing them from the “people of God” (the com monwealth of Israel, Ephesians 2:12). The promises that had been made to the Jews (the cov enants'of promise) had oeen be* yond their reach because of this wall. It was true that there had been a strong barrier between the Gen tile and the Jew, The Hebrew laws called upon the Jew to keep himself at a distance from all unnecessary contact with Gen tiles. Such contact, it was thought, made the Jew impure in God’s sight. The greatest segregation was in the house of worship. Gen tiles who entered the temple area could be summarily killed for violating the sanctity of this holy place with their impurity. Thus the wall separating Jew and Christian Gentile was not just a legal wall, but a wall of dis trust, suspicion, and hostility. An eternity of space The wall, however had been broken down now and things could never be the same. Actual ly, several walls had been de stroyed by Christ: Down came the wall which had separated them from Christ. Down came the wall that sep arated them from the people of God. Down came the wall that made them strangers to the promises which God had made with the people of Israel. Down came the wall that had shut them off from God and hope. Once an eternity of space had separated the Greek and Jew; now that eternity had been bridged because a man named Jesus had laid down his life. There are still so many walls today: walls between races, walls between regions, walls between classes, walls between ,genera tions. To all of us who stand on either side of these walls' Christ commands as he did to the Jew and the Gentile, “Down with walls!” (Based on outlines copyrighted by the Division of Christian Education, National Council of the Churches of Christ 'fn the U. S A. Released by Community Press Service}