lO—Lancaster Farmlng. Saturday, September 8~ 1973 mm “Luggage inspectors at airports en counter surprise, clanger on the job. A Houston security man, “reports The Wall Street Journal, . .rammed his hand into a plastic bag containing a dairyman’s ‘messy’ boots A female guard at a Florida airport found a boa constrictor inside a young passenger’s bag. In Chicago, the coffee can in one woman’s luggage turned out to contain the remains of her recently cremated husband. Searchers at Los Angeles’ airport fret about set mousetraps they’ve come acorss. Razor blades pose a major hazard, a Pinkerton’s spokesman reports. Wackenhut, another security services firm, says some injuries are bad enough to require stitches, tetanus shots. Delta concedes turnover among its security workers has become a ‘serious problem,’ climbing to almost 50 percent a year. Pacific Southwest Airlines equips its guards with a 16-inch ‘security wand’ for safer probing of passengers’ luggage. But the growing use of X-ray devices at Chicago’s O’Hare and other airports will eliminate most luggage searches-and eventually the jobs of some guards." QUAKERTOWN, PA, FREE PRESS; “A staggering statistic has come before our eyes from the state of Michigan. It seems that since Michigan lowered the age limits for drinking to 18 years the increase in ‘young adult’ drunk driving arrests has increased 99 percent. We.. .should learn from the experience of Michigan. In our opinion 18 througn 20-year-olds are not yet ready to accept the responsibility of handling alcohol." . doing business efficiently is a social contribution in its own right, for life is better when quality goods and services are available to consumers at a fair price. Jobs are created through the production of these goods and services . .economic health provides the only base from which we can truly hope to rebuild our cities, protect and enhance our environment and uplift the disadvantaged ”--Mr R 0 An derson, chairman and chief executive officer of the Atlantic Richfield Company. COLUMBIA, MISS, COLUMBIAN PROG RESS. “One of the perversities of "Grassroots Opinion" human nature is that often individuals blessed with many things in common, disagree violently and unmtelligently upon the merits of a realtively minor matter. There seems to be a trait in many in dividuals that compels them to be fighting about something all the time. If no major issues appear, they virogously pump up minor questions, arousing ill-feeling and promoting them in positions of seeming importance. Much the same characteristic is evidenced in our attitude toward the institutions of mankind. Without giving proper proportion to the great and overwhelming good many of us incline to hunt up minor irritations and, in the ex citement of the search, we often lose sight of the tremendous good that exists." SMITHVILLE, TEXAS, TIMES: "Most people made it to the table at meal time regularly during the rationing days of World War 11, and I can’t remember anyone going barefoot, or too many times doing without tires, gasoline, meat, and canned goods, sugar, etc. We accepted the rationing as something we had to do because we had a war to win. I guess our mam incentive today is to get Watergate out of the news.” RED BLUFF, CALIF., NEWS; “Politicians, editorial writers and others unblushingly refer to our country as ‘this great nation.’ No doubt it is a great nation, and we have every reason to be proud of it. But couldn't we be just quietly proud, as we are of our own personal achievements, without bragging about it so much? And work just a little harder to make the description true, even if we don't shout it so loud and so often?” “Western civilization and the American experience draw heavily upon the idea of ordered liberty as reflected in our law and politics. The freedoms which built our society derive from the recognition of the necessity for restraints upon political power and the insistence that only private, voluntary cooperation can build a sense of true commumty."--Dr. George Charles Roche 111. | NOW IS I THE TIME . . . Max Smith County Agr. Agent Telephone 394-6851 TO ADD PROTEIN TO CORN SILAGE Corn is maturing rapidly and many silos will be filled in the coming weeks. Corn silage is one of the most economical feeds known today but usually is a bit low in protein content. The ad ding of a non-protein-nitrogen such as urea or anhydrous am monia has some merit and has been getting good results. Con sidering the high cost of vegetable and animal proteins, it is termed as very economical to use one or the other forms of protein at the silo blower. Care should be used relating to the amount applied in order to prevent loss of palatibility and avoid the danger of toxicity. Animals being fed this treated silage should be slowly in troduced to it in order to avoid digestive upsets TO CONTROL WEEDS IN NEW ALFALFA Local alfalfa growers who were fortunate to get their August seeding made and up should keep in mind that weeds are usually a problem when a nurse crop is not seeded. The use of a herbicide such as 2,4-D,B when the small plants are one to two inches high is strongly suggested. Don’t make the mistake of not spraying because very few weeds are noticeable; later in the fall the weeds will come and then it will be too late to spray successfully. Spray when both the weeds and the alfalfa plants are small. WISE AND OTHERWISE Lesson for September 3,1973 lockground Scriptura I Corinthians 1 II through 3-23 Oovotlonol loading I Corinthians 3 IQ -23 There is an old East Indian saying that says; “You can con vince the wise; you can convince with more difficulty the ignorant; but the half-educated you can never convince.” There is no one more difficult to teach anything than the person who already be lieves he knows a great deal. To most of us, the word “Sopho more” generally denotes a second year student. This word is actually derived from two contrasting Greek words, sophos and moros. Sophos means wise, as in philosophy and the love of learn ing Moros means fool, as in mor on, one whose mind is not fully developed. So the sophomore is really a “wise-fool” who knows enough at least to realize that he does not know everything Thinking we are wise • Thus, Paul, in writing to his problem-church, Connth, advises “ Let no one deceive himself If any among you thinks that he is wise in this age, let him become a fool that-he may become wise For the wisdom of this age is folly with God” (3 18,19). There is nothing more decep- TO SEED COVER CROPS Fields from which tobacco or silage com have been harvested might benefit from the seeding of a cover crop this fall; that is, if the ground is not to be seeded to winter grains such as barley or wheat. Domestic ryegrass -or field-bromegrass can be seeded during September and will give good growth before cold weather arrives. This cover will protect the soil from both wind and water erosion this winter. After plowing down next spring, the cover crop will add organic matter to the soil. Don’t permit the soil to remain open over the winter months. TO IMPROVE CALF RAISING METHODS All cattle are in strong demand and every producer should make a special effort to raise more of the calves. One of our extension dairymen at Penn State, Don Ace, reveals a survey of Penn sylvania dairymen in which 19 percent of the dairy calves did not live to be one year of age. Most of the losses happened the first month. Space does not permit details of proper calf raising practices, but local dairymen are urged to evaluate their calf raising methods, in case there have been a number of losses. Lancaster County con tains many excellent dairy herds; the offspring are in strong demand for distant herd replacements and foundation animals. Better calf raising results will mean increased in come to dairymen. tive than our own illusions of wisdom It is when we are puffed up with our cleverness, our crafti ness, that most often we are our most foolish We fail to make that vital distinction between knowl edge and wisdom. We may have lots of knowledge, yet without the wisdom to use it, that knowledge is useless Socrates, the great Greek phi losopher who lived before the time of Chnst, once said- “As for me, all I know is that I know nothing ” This may sound strange coming from a man who is still remembered for his great knowl edge and wisdom Yet, the con clusion to which he came has been shared by many of the great thinkers of all time. The famous preacher Spurgeon once put it this way: “The door way to the temple of wisdom is the knowledge of our own ignor ance” He had discovered that the more a man learns of this life, the more knowledge he ac cumulates, the more wisdom he attains, the more he discovers how little he really knows. It is this recognition that can often open a person to receive far more understanding and wisdom “I have observed one thing" There’s an old legend about a flock of crows who were fre quently chased from a certain cornfield One day, holding a council of war, the crows were addressed by a young crow who said according to the facts, they could drive the men from the cornfield. “Fact number one, there were more crows than men Secondly, men can’t fly as crows do” Finally, an old crow rose and said, “That is all very well, but in my lifetime I have ob served one thing where there are no men, there are no more corn fields.” This is why many who feel they are wise, are really otherwise It is God in all his seeming foolish ness who is really and truly wiser than men (lased on outlines copyrighted by the Division of Christian Education, National Council of the Churches of Christ m the USA Released by Community Press Service)