14—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. April 13, 1974 , » , » , »VrtVtVAW*V«WAV«VAV*V»V*V*%V»V»V» , iViV/AV»»VAV*V«V*V* , iV* ORGANIC LIVING By Robert Rodole Soon you will be able to buy butter that spreads easily even when cold. The technology for that new-product advance has >been perfected. Cows will be fed special foods, changing the •character of their milk so it can be made into cold-spreading •outter. All that remains is for the practical application of the • echnique to be worked out. Already, you can buy commercial'chickens that have a 'olden-yellow color, just like the farmyard chickens of venerations ago that used to scratch for wild foods that gave heir flesh a deep, healthy pigment. Advertisements for these tew yellow chickens claim that the color is natural - from narigold petals added to their rations. Neither one of these changed foods is harmful to our health, ■md possibly the added cost of these changes is reasonable *nough to allow such modified products to fit easily into the amily budget. Yet frivolous technological improvements - 1 ike butter that spreads when cold - are deeply disturbing to iome observers of the way our lives have been changed by irogress. They are symbolic of our inability to see progress is anything other than increased material prosperity in all ireas. Bernard Levin, a columnist for the London Times, views 'old-spreading butter and similar inventions as a positive hreat to the survival of society as we know it. “If our society *annot stop itself spending its labour and its treasure on Dutch School Natural Foods LARGEST SELECTION OF NATURAL FOODS AND VITAMINS IN CENTRAL PENNA. RT. 222, AKRON, PENNA. PH. 859-2339 ISEW HOLLAIXD team t for haylage!*