1 Lancaster Farming. Saturday. July 25.1970 Choke Off Hog Cholera With nt least four Lancaster Count.x fauns alreadx quarantined for hog cholera within the past two weeks, following an out break a few weeks ago in Chester Count.x. Southeastern Pennsxlxamn Swine produc ers are and should be concerned. With outbreaks of the dreaded disease m so mans locations, there is real concern about how far it w ill spread before it can be stopped. Because of the importance of the swine industry to so many area farmers, the im portance of taking excry possible precau tion cannot be overstressed. Isolation of new animals from existing swine for at least 60 days should be observ- On Corn and Change The corn that ripples across our land these summer days is an enduring gift from the Indian. Cher the centuries, the first American took a wild grass and brought it to aristocratic rank among the cereals. The Indian lacked the white .man's science, but patiently and with no known tools save the unaided eye, bare hands, imagination, and dedication he shaped and domesticated a crop of value to the w r hole world. It was corn that sustained the Pilgrims at Plymouth when their wheat crops failed. Then friendly Indians taught the settlers how to plant, cultivate, and harvest this New World grain. So important a staple was corn in colonial days that a law required dogs to be tied by a leg to prevent them from digging up the fish often planted for fertilizer in each corn hill. As settlers pressed westward they planted and improved the Indian's corn, and before long it became our Number 1 crop. But corn is much more than food for people or feed for livestock. The products of its versatile kernel constantly touch our lives. In a typical day we encounter corn products, often unknowingly, in the shoes and clothing we wear, the paper we write on, the rug on our floor, in our medicine chest, the car we dri\ e, indeed in a multi tude of ways. Scientists have turned the organic raw material of corn into many products for in dustry. Even so, science has only begun to exploit the possibilities of the starch gran ule, according to the USDA What of the future? Perhaps the most ambitious woi k underway is the de\ elop ment of varieties containing the mutant gene opaque-2. The increase in lysine con tent brought about by this gene could make the protein of corn as nutritious as that ot milk, says the USDA. Change Benefits While the food \alue of ccrn is under going change, so is much else in agncul tuie Most crops aie undergojftg change in some form in the quality ot seed or Salute to Victor Plastow The passing of Victor W E Plastow, associate Lancaster County agricultural agent, from the local farm scene was noted with sadness by many Lancaster County farmers and agri-businessmen P] as tow’s speciality was dairying He LANCASTER FARMING Lancastei Countj’s Own Faun Weekly P 0 Box 266 - Lititz, Pa 17543 Office 22 E Main St Lititz, Pa 17543 Phone Lancastei 394 3047 oi I»ititz 626 2191 RobeitG Campbell Advei Using Director Zane Wilson, Managing Eclitoi Subscuption puce S 2 pei jeai in Lancaster County S 3 elsewheie Established No\ embei 4 1955 Published e\en Satuidaj b> Lancaster Fanning Lititz Pa Second Cla l -b Postage paid at Lititz Pa 17543 Menibei of \cv «n.m r ‘i in l Fditois Assn Pa Peniuhc 1 and Natlon,i 1 i\iv \s<-ui ialion cel carefully. Any suspicious illness should result m a prompt call to a \etennnriaii. There have been reports elsewhere of some animals suspected of cholera being unloaded immediately on the market. The irresponsibility of such action should be ob v mus to e\ eryonc. Such action, if it becomes widespread, could literally destroy the swine industry. The federal government pays for animals which must be destroyed because of the disease. The individual farmers and the entire swine industry will benefit greatly if every one closes ranks and obeys the rules that will stop the spread of hog cholera. plant, in management of the plant, in the equipment and chemicals used to care for it, and in the ways in which the final pro duct is used. The result is a better product in greater quantity and larger variety of forms for the consumer. Everyone benefits from this continual process of upgrading agriculture except the farmer who refuses to change. To prosper in the changing agricultural scene often need not involve dramatic & partures from what the individual farm* has always been doing. Often it’s a math of making a few simple changes. It may involve adopting the plant varl ty which is resistant to a particular disea: or which is more suited to particular grow ing conditions that prevail. It may involv shifting emphasis from one crop which ' no longer as profitable as it once was one which is more profitable. It may in volve finding a new crop. It may mean using new and better chemicals" to -control weeds that sap the energy of a crop. The individual farmer need not panic because scientists are tampering with the corn he has always taken for granted. - Meeting Change Change is not an enemy of the farmer. Farmers who exist today are the product of a long process of competitive elimination; they have successfully survived change. So it is not change, but how he meets change that will determine the future for the individual farmer. The farmer who recognizes that change is inevitable and makes little changes from day to day and year to year to make sure that his farming operation is always a little better and fin ancially stronger today than it was yester day will be ready when conditions change. When the scientists find a workable new \anety of high-protein corn that will improve the ciop’s feed value and profit ability, the farmers who has been changing and improving all along will plant the new corn without breaking stride while keep ing a sharp watch for the next major scien tific bieakthrough which can benefit him. worked hard to get Lancaster County dairy men to improve their management prac tices and upgrade their herds. He was al ways available to help the individual dairy man. He believed strongly that the dairyman should start in the business at an early age and should start right with a quality ani mal. He helped many 4-H dairy club mem bers make that right start. He believed in the importance of a sound milk testing program and backed the DHIA. Through his monthly and special re ports in Lancaster Farming to area farm ers, he helped keep dairymen abreast of the latest knowledge about good manage ment practices. Wmle his health was not always the best in recent years, his desire to be of son ice to the dairy industry ne\ cr quit His contribution has been significant He will be lemembeied in local dairy and farm cu cles NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent _ _ . . „ . . used during the same season. In To Order Small Grain Seed bam dairymen may Small grain growers should be choose horn diazinon, malathion, oidcung then needs of winter borlan. ordichlorvos On the cows oats, barley, or wheat With the thc . Ust includes diodnn. DDVP. ban on thc use of mercury fun- malathlon methoxychlor. or a gicides to treat small grains pro- P> le thnn spray, duccd on the farm, it will be be;t J-se Strict Sanitation to order certified seeds from The local outbreak of hog your supplier It will be very cholera demands the very best risky to sow home-grown seeds sanitation_ measures on e\ery hog, without any fungicide treatment. * 2rm \° beep the disease from Ceilifted seed of thc desired spieading Swine mo\cments variety has always been a good niust be kept to a minimum and investment. be certain of the health of the animals. The traveling of farmers To Alternate Fly Sprays or farm workers between hog With the ample amount of farms and livestock markets moisture this season the fly pop- must be done carefully. Different ulation will be on the increase footwear, or strong disinfectants unless insecticides are used In on clean boots, is suggested, order to prevent the flies from Stray dogs, cats, or birds should developing a resistance to a cer- be kept away from the hogs. Re tain insecticide, which has been port sick hogs immediatel> to past experience, it is suggested the local veterinarian in order that more than one material be to prevent Serious outbreaks. ADAM AND EVERYMAN Lesson for July 26,1910 BecfcfreunJ Scripture: Genesis 3; luke ISt 11*32, Roman* 1 through 3. Devotional Reading: Romans 3 9-22 a. ' Man has it made! Just take a look at the scoreboard: —created in the image of God —God’s greatest and highest creation —appointed to have dominion over all God’s creation —blessed with the power to be “fruitful; and multiply” Who could ask for anything more? The other side of man the whole story. Rev. Althouse is it? We know that in addition to man’s divine potentialities there is another side to his na true, a side which gives us far less cause to be optimistic. Let us remember once again that in these early chapters of Genesis we are concerned pri marily with the why of creation, rather than the how. This is also uue in the story of Adam and Eve. It is not just the story of the first man and woman, but much more the story of every man and woman. The name “Adam” itself means “man” or “mankind.” Thus, it is not sim ply the story of some other fel low, but the story of you and me and all of us. Biblical scholar Bernhard An derson suggests that the story of Adam is composed of three dra matic episodes, like scenes in a play. Each of these helps to formulate an answer to the ques tion, “What is man?” Scene I —Adam the Gardener (Genesis 2-4-25). Adam and Eve are placed in a beautiful garden tliai supplies all their needs. Ti ev have a god-given task— they are to faithfully keep and tend the garden entrusted to them (just as all men have the Godgr.en task of tending the wiole of creation which has been eetrusted to them.) Today man is Still dependent' upon God’s gifts. All that we have—food, clothing, shelter, family, love—all these come from God’s hands. Like Adam we have a stewardship in - this world and, also like Adam, there are certain restrictions which he has laid upon us. Too good to last .Scene Z— Adam The Fugitive (Genesis 3:1-7). “It was too good to last,” we might say. The won* derful picture of Adam the gar dener was hound to be marred by something, and it was. We allknow the story of what happened in the garden. Much more to the point, however, 4s that we realize that this too is our story. Though Eve had a whole garden of trees from which to pick fruit, her appetite and temptation led her to the one tree from which she had been forbidden. Isn’t that true of us too’ It is not because God hasn’t given us much to fulfill our needs, for no matter how well we are supplied with his gifts, we always seem to want the one more he has forbidden to us. Eve disobeyed God because she wanted to step into God’s shoes. She wasn’t satisfied with being just another one of God’s creatures—even the highest of them—she wanted to stand on the same level as God. That’s our problem too. Our rebellion is just as willful as Eve’s, just as deliberate. But that isn’t Scene 3—Adam the Fugitive (Genesis 3 8-24). It is inevitable that the rebel becomes the fugi tive. Like Adam, we seek to hide when we hear God’s voice, but we find that we cannot hide from him. It is then that his judge ment falls upon us and we lose the peaceful life in the garden. When Adam is driven out of the garden it is everyman who shares the tragedy of Paradise Lost. Thus, life is full of conflict and insecurity, not because a man. named Adam once rebelled, named Adam once rebelled but because every man continues to rebel against the Creator. Who* we look at Adam and Eve, vw know who we are. (Based on outlines copyrighted by Division of Christian Education, National Council of the Cfu/rchos of Christ in fhW U. S A Released by Community fnii ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE SUNDAY