10 —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 3, 1972 Milk marketing in Pennsylvania is a subject being hotly debated these days. And there’s no cooling off in sight. Harry Kapleau, chairman of the Penn sylvania Milk Marketing Board is repor tedly working very hard to be fair to everybody "Everybody" includes milk producers, dairies and consumers. Each group has its own special interests. Ob viously, in being fair to everybody, it'll be difficult to please everybody. It might even be impossible to please anybody Kapleau and the Board have a difficult job ahead of them, and we wish them luck and success in the months ahead There are many questions, many sides to each question, and it’s difficult at times to Editor's Note: The Guest Editorial for this week was prepared by Nick Ferrant, Jr, crop specialist with Agway, Inc. Soybeans Get a Good Stand Every crop has its most critical period, and for soybeans, it’s getting a good emergence If we get a good stand, we have an excellent chance for a good crop The soybean is a warm weather crop and should not be planted until the soil is good and warm Planting in a cold soil means a slow germination, giving soil disease organisms plenty of time to invade and rot the seed Seed treatment will help some, but not enough Most growers are aware of the need for seed treatment this year, though, but for other disease reasons. Probably most soybean stands are lost due to a crusting soil than any other reason If beans are planted too early, an early ram, followed by a drying period, allows a crust to form before germination The bean plant must pull its head up with it when it germinates, and a hard crust results in broken necks and poor emergence The sharp grower will be watching carefully, and if a crust forms, move in at once with a rotary hoe or spike tooth harrow One days delay could lose a good part of the stand Later planted beans can crust, but the chances are less, since they emerge in four to five days But if a crust does form, move in a break it fast Reduced stands can be caused by other factors too If your seed has a low ger mination and you did not increase seeding rate, you are in trouble In many fields seed corn magget or seed corn beetle can do The statistics say that the federal government is now a larger dispenser of fringe benefits than private industry In 1970, fringe benefits in private industries amounted to 26 6 percent of basic wages and salaries while the figure for the federal government was 27 8 percent. This con trasted with the last survey made by the U S Labor Department in 1968, when private employer expenditures came to Milk-Part I Guest Editorial Double Burden tell which group is on which side of which question. For example, the Board approved a reduction in milk prices for the Pitt sburgh market. This action is being con tested by, of all people, a consumer group. Quite frankly, we don’t know what to expect. But in this column we hope to take a look, now and then, at developments in the milk marketing situation. We will try to present opinions and facts from all sides. As developments occur, we will try to appraise their effect upon the dairy in dustry in general, and Lancaster County dairying in particular. To that end, we welcome comments from all concerned. Nick Ferrant Jr Crop Specialist Agway, Inc. damage, but seed treatment will control most of them Some growers plant too deep, and the bean just can not struggle the long distance to the surface. Plant at one-and-one-half inches in normal soils and no more than two inches in dry soils. On many farms, a poor stand is often caused by the farmer not planting enough seed We think a good planting rate is 140,000 to 150,000 seeds per acre. If you change row spacing, change size of seed, or your planter is not calibrated correctly, wrong seeding rates can occur. The name of the game is profit, and it's no profit with no plants. So plan on the population you want, and get it, by being attentive to all details. 25 1 percent and the federal government’s were 24 3 percent. The image of government as a progressive employer compared to private enterprise should be tempered by the fact that private enterprise carries a double burden. It must pay for its own fringe benefits as well as put up the taxes that go to support the fringe benefits of those who work for government. It is hardly a fair comparison. now is THE TIME . . Max Smith County Agr. Agent Telephone 394-6851 To Be Alert for Armyworms We have had a few reports of armyworms feeding on corp grown under the no-till methods. This was experienced last year on fields that had considerable mulch or cover. The most severly infested fields were the ones with winter rye being killed by a herbicide, then planted to com. These worms will appear sud denly and may consume several acres in a few days; they may be more severe near woodlands. The control requires a cover spray with Sevin or Dylox as soon as worms are found; one spraying is usually sufficient to remove the problem Growers are urged to be on the alert for these worms in corn fields with heavy mulch or vegetative cover. To Cultivate Carefully In many crops the modern method of weed control includes the use of a herbicide and little, if any, cultivation, however, when the cultivator is used growers are urged to respect the roots of the crop and not get too close to them. The shearing of roots of any crops will surely do more harm than good. When cultivating it is best to dig around several plants by hand to become aware of the root zone and then set the cultivator to stay out of that area. In flower and vegetable gardens with hand cultivation it is also very im portant to stay away from the root zone. Plant roots have a very important function and should not be cut off or disturbed during the growing season. KEEPING THE HOUR Lesson for June 5,1972 ■ackgreund Scripture Psalms 63 1-8 Acts 10 1 8, 30 33 Develienel Reeding Psalms 63 1 8 Every evening at nine o’clock hundreds, perhaps thousands of people throughout the United States and even beyond 30m to gether observing at least five minutes of silent prayer and meditation They are people, for the most part, who are either seeking healing or help for themselves or for others There is nothing sacred about nine o’clock in the evening except that it is I*” those who participate A devout man Whenever someone comes to me for counseling help, I usually suggest that they “observe the nine o’clock hour” for spiritual help and power Frequently peo ple will return saying how much they have been aided through this simple observance Healing, help, guidance, comfort have come to those who have joined with us There is nothing miraculous about this observance The heal ing and help results are the nor mal consequences of a directed life of devotion Too many peo ple never pray except when they are in the midst of an emergency. To Prepare Grain Bini Small grain harvest is ap proaching and we notice that the barley fields are well headed and will soon be changing color; winter wheat will soon follow. Growers that are going to harvest their crop and store as grain should now be cleaning out their grain bins and spraying with an insecticide; old grain should be removed before the new crop is stored. Numerous grain insects may be harboring in the framework of the grain bins and should be eliminated before the new crop arrives. All bin surfaces should be sprayed with either Malathion or Methoxychlor. A thorough cleaning of the bins should precede the spraying of the insecticide. Stored grain insects reduce the feed value of the grain and may cause extra heating and spoilage. To Spray Those Rose Bushes Roses are one of the most common shrubs in this part of the country and need constant at tention during the growing season if they are to be kept in sect and disease free. The first blooms are now appearing and with the liberal amount of moisture during the past month, we should experience some beautiful roses this spring. Weekly spraying with a fungicide such as Folpet or Maneb, and with an insecticide such as Malathion or Sevin,- will help keep the flower vases full of perfect roses If the rose bushes were not fertilized earlier this spring, it is not too late to give them a complete rose fertilizer. Weekly watering during periods of dry leather will also keep the new blooms developing and result in more healthy bushes. Lancaster is known as the “Red Rose County” and we should experience magnificent blooms this year. There is nothing wrong with praying then—Jesus himself pray ed in the garden and on the cross But his prayers there were not for the purpose of establish ing a new relationship with God, but of building upon a relation ship that was already firmly es tablished. The same principle applies to his followers If we want to be able to pray effectively in a cri ses, we need to establish a strong life of prayer before the crises comes “Keeping” some hour of prayer each day may provide just the pipeline we need to re ceive God’s power when we need it most. This, apparently, was the strength of Cornelius, the centur ion in Acts 10 He was “a devout man who . . . prayed constantly to God” (10.2) About the ninth hour It was in the keeping of the ninth hour of prayer one day that Cornelius received an experience that both deeply affected his own life and the life of the early church as well A vision came to him that eventually was to bring Simon Peter, the great Apostle, into his life. In observing a regu lar life of daily devotion he re ceived revelation from God. In George Bernard Shaw’s play about Joan of Arc, the Dauphin (heir to the throne) is disturbed because the heavenly voices come to a poor peasant girl instead of the royalty of France “They do come,” says Joan, “but you do not hear them because you are not listening ” So, many of us would both hear and see more of God’s revelation if we kept some daily hour of prayer and listened for his voice