—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 24.1971 4 On Making Da Dairjmg is the largest farm income producer in Lancaster County and ranks \ er\ high in most of the neighboring coun ties The thousands of cahes the lo- cal dairy cou s produce each \ ear is of ma jor economic importance But w e w under it all danw men ha\ e put some reallj serious thought into how to achiei e the best returns from these cah es? The alternate es are numerous Many of the bettei calves are held as replacement stock or for sale to other dairj - men A few of the better bull cah es are held as breeding animals Many are sold at an early stage as i eal cah es And some are held for varying lengths of time as feeder stock. How main farmers have seriously an alyzed which of these alternatives or com bination of alternatives can make them the most profit? The answer for the individual farmer will depend in large part on his present farm set up Whether he wants to hold them beyond the vealer stage will depend on such factors as housing space, feed availability and cost, and labor, including whether or not he can take on additional work neces sary to keep the dairy beef stock or dairy replacement animals and still maintain his existing farm program It all boils down to what system the farmer can use to make the most money from farming. On the Farm The USDA recently released some farm labor statistics which confirm other reports we receive on this topic and indicate what farmers can expect in the future. Overall, the report showed the number of persons in the hired farm working force declined during 1970 w'ith most of the drop in the migratory group. The report by USDA's Economic Re search Service states further utilization of farm labor-saving technology was mainly responsible for the cut in the number of hired hands from 2.6 million in 1969 to 2 5 million last year. In 1970 about eight per cent, or 196,000 persons, were listed as domestic migratory workers. Tins was a sharp 24 per cent de cline from the previous year when there were 257,000 persons m this category. The remainder of hired farm workers declined by only one per cent ERS stated that of the 2 5 million per sons in the hired farm work force, only 22 per cent or 539,000 weis engaged chiefly for wage work Only 12 per cent or 306,000 persons were year-round farm workers. These persons averaged 318 days of work and annual earnings of S 3 467 The ERS study also renorted Mem bers of the 1970 hired fain working force were mostly joung with a median age of 23, some 78 per cent wei r w h.te and 73 per cent lived in non-farm places As a group, they averaged 81,640 in cash wages, including SBB7 for 80 da\s of farm wage work at Sll 10 a da\ and 5752 from 46 days of non-farm woik at an a\er age of Sl6 35 per day. Among the trends and facts this go\ em inent analysis shows, we beheie. are Despite rising unemployment and in- LANCASTER FARMING Lancaster County’s Ov i< ram Weekly P 0. Box 266 - Lititz, Pa 173-13 Office 22 E Main St, Lit , \ 17543 Phone- Lancaster 394-3047 oi Lititz 626 2191 Robert G Campbell, Ad\ei ang Director Zane Wilson, Managing F' m i. Subscription puce S2pm. ,n Lancaster County. S 3 elsewhere Established November 4,1955 Published every Satin day by Lancaster Farming, Lititz, Pa. Second Class Postage mud at Lititz, Pa. 17543 Member of Newspaper Fa.m Editors Assn Pa. Newspaper Publish."'<• Association, and National Newspaper A r """’'’ f ion iry Calves Pay But we would suggest that while veal cah es may be the easiest and fastest meaps of disposing of the new 7 calf crop, perhaps more farmers should consider the alterna te es. Obi louslj the farmer who has cows with good blood lines, good production, and a high classification is in a position to raise dairy replacement stock or stock for sale. But many farmers also are finding that dairy cattle held as feeder stock can be profitable. Because of the large numbers of these dairy cahes available locally, we think farmers who raise these animals have some natural competitn e advantages in relation to conventional beef growers. These advantages include, ready ac cess to the dairy feeder stock from local farms, possibly a lower initial cost for the feeder animals, possibly reduced transpor tation costs. In addition, many local per sons familiar with dairy animals should al ready know how to handle these animals for best results. There have also been reports that in dicate the trend toward a meatier type of animal may actually benefit dairy beef production, because dairy animals have a relam ely high proportion of meat to fat. While many dairymen already hold a few ot their cahes to fatten as beef ani mals. we think there is room for more of this and possiblv even for some beef pro ducers who specialize in dairy animals. Labor Trends creasing numbers of persons needing jobs there were fewer farm workers in 1970. This trend probably surprises few farmers, who are faced with relatively stable or declining prices and rapidly rising costs. Because labor costs are rising faster than any others, this is the first place the farmer looks to cut back, particularly as the cost of unskilled labor in many instances rises beyond its return. Increasing paper work required by law and by fringe bene fits hastens the squeeze on labor At the same time, rising welfare bene fits and growing non-farm employment op portunities increasingly divert labor away from the farm. The experience of the California grape and lettuce producers was a deep shock to farm employers nationally. To see large farming operations totally dependent on un skilled workers boycotted at harvest time compelled farmers across the country m a similar condition to begin to take action to assure the same thing would not happen to them. One result has been a major new trend toward mechanization of some areas of ag riculture, particularly key fruits and vege taoies, wmcn preuouslj relied very heavily on large numbers of unskilled farm work ers This trend likely will continue and even accelerate The report shows there is now only somewhat more than a quarter of a million of farm workers w’ho are engaged '‘year round’’ or full time Compared to the coun try’s total population of around 200 million, that is relatu ely small, about the size of the total population in Lancaster County or a little more than one tenth of one per cent of the national population. The report shows most of the farm labor force is young, white and living in non-farm places a combination which probably is sharply different from the image most persons ha\e gotten from the news media. While the individual can be hurt if he needs labor and it's not available at the price he can afford. v\e do not think the trend overall necessarily represents a set back for the farmer. As farm laborers become scarcer, those who remain, particularly those who are both hard-working and competent farmers, become more valuable. The labor of the farm owner will also, we believe, become more valuable. To Plant Corn Many acres of corn have al leady been planted in the south eastern counties of the state and we feel this is the thing to do this year Many local groweis aim to plant corn the eaily part of May under normal conditions, however, this year with the thieat of the southern leaf blight, u is suggested that the corn be planted a week or 10 days earlier in order to try to get maximum maturity before the leaf blight appeals We have no way of knowing the time of the last kill ing frost in this area, but plant ing corn now does not appear to be too big a gamble To Be Careful With Pesticides ihe stoiage of all kinds of chemicals and spiaj materials r verv impoitant during the growing season In the first place, these pesticides should be kept avvav fiom childien pets and livestock, this is very im portant and needs the attention of everv gaidenei and farmer Emptv containeis mav contain sufficient materials to poison AN OUTSIDE AGITATOR Lesson for April 25,1971 Eockfround Scripture: Amos 1:1; 2 4 through 3 15 6 8 84 7 Devotional Reading Ezekiel 13 19 27, We’ve been asking. “Who’s a prophet?” and one of the answers that we might g*ve is; someone who appears to be an outside agi tator, if Amos is any example. We need to remember that in dr thr were two Hebrew nations, not just one. The twelve tribes had been joined together briefly under Da vid and Solomon, but after the lat ter’s death,the kingdom split into two hostile na tions Isiaelinthe Rev. Althouse North and Judah in the South. Although the people of these two nations had much in common, they also differed in many ways. They were constantly acting like two biothers who might stick together when threat ened by others, but quarrel in cessantly at all other times. O seer, go away! Amos, thus, was an outsider when he went to Bethel, the ic ligious center of Isiael He was a citizen of Judah, not Israel. Who did he think he was, criti cizing Israel when everyone knew there was so much conuption in Judah? Why didn’t he stay home and prophecy among his own peo ple and concern himself with their sins’ He was also an outsider in that he was not a professional proph et. He was a layman, a shcphei d and dresser of sycamore tices by trade. Where did he get the au thority to presume to speak the Woid of God? Who was he to criticize the legitimate religious leaders of Israel? Thus, it is not surprising that the high piiest of Bethel, Amaziab, greets him with. NOW IS THE TIME.., By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent some youngster or some animal. Keep all materials in the or iginal containers and be sure that weed killers (herbicides) are not stoied near any seeds, plants, feed, or food items To Be Alert For Termites This humid climate is favor able for the activities of the te/mite, all property owners are urged to be on the lookout for these small insects that can weaken the wooden parts of any building At this time of the year the termites may swarm and be found on or near sunny windows of the building; they are sometimes confused with winged ants that also collect in these warm places The termite may be identified by having only one section to its body with four laige wings, the ant has a two section body and two wings are larger than the other two. Ter mites live in the soil and travel to and from the infested build ing Effort is needed to locate the colony in the soil and treat it with materials such as chlor dane Commercial exterminators may be needed to complete the job. “0 seer, go away, flee away to the land of Judah, and eat bread there, and prophesy there” (Amos 7.12), When God says “Go!” Peter and John, Jesus’ disci* pies, were also regarded as “out side agitators.” Warned to cease preaching Jesus Christ, they had said to the Jerusalem authorities: “Whether it is right in the sight of God to listen to you rather than to God, you must judge; for we cannot but speak of what we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:19). And later when again they were hauled before that same Council: “We must obey God rather than men” (Acts 5-29). What had been said of Amos was also applicable to Peter and John. They were from Galilee, not Jerusalem or Judea. In fact that had been true of Jesus too. Jesus and his disciples, like Amos, were laymen, not recognized clergymen. These northerners, it seemed to the Jerusalem Council, had come to their city simply for the purpose of stirring up the people and creating a crisis situa tion. In his Pulitzer Prize-winning book, GHANDI’S TRUTH (W. W. Norton & Co, 1969), Erick H. Enkson tells us that as the great Indian leader went throughout the vast nation of India, identifying and assisting the causes of the op pressed and victims of injustice, he was often denounced as an “outsider.” But it was Ghandi’s conviction that “a man who takes it upon himself to redress a local injustice even m a place remote from his own ‘home,’ if he could only prove welcome as a helper to the victims of that injustice, may consider himself a native theie, provided only he is willing to accept the suffering thus in vited and to play the game with the fairness dictated by a more inclusive identity.” Ghandi did not feel himself an “outsider,” just as Amos had refused to be turned back by that charge. Neither had Jesus regarded himself as an “outsider”—though others did I —for wherever sin, evil, and coemption exist, no man with God’s message is really an “outsidei”! ’• (Based on outlines copyrighted by the Division of Christian Education, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA# Released by Community Press Service*) * -<