—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 4,1970 10 I EDITORIAL COMMENTS By .DETER KRIEG, EDITOR One little mistake, no matter how innocent, is all it takes to cause a disaster for yourself or your neighbor. Generally it can be boiled down to just plam carelessness or even irresponsibility. Like a match dropped in the straw mow, carelessness can cause a lot of grief. Take the case of a careless entry into a quarantined chicken house, followed by a visit to a disease-free facility. That's all it takes to infect a flock of birds. Or consider the milk from a cow which has been treated for mastitis. Just a few pounds of milk from the treated quarter and an entire tank full of milk can be ruined. Worse yet, THE GIFT OF PATIENCE Lesson for March 5,1978 Background Scripture: Actsl. Devotional Reading: John 16:4-11. I am grateful for the gifts TO PROTECT hold their body heat. Aftei SMALL FEEDER PIGS the pigs reaches 60 to 71 The swine feeding pounds, they can stand more hand without a label or business is growing in this cold; however, in some open- identification, should not be part of the country; many fronted barns even the used. It is very important to pigs are put on feed here each week. During the cold weather these small pigs should be given some protection; due to the long penods of very cold weather the past two winters we have noticed more losses and more poor-doing pigs due to the cold. At the recent Swine Day, Dwight Younkin from Penn State, stressed the importance of supplemental heat for these small pigs, or the covering of their pens to Farm Calendar Monday, March 6 Annual Maryland Cooperative Extension Service Conference, Hunt Valley Inn, Cockeysville. Red Lion Young Farmers’ banquet, 6:45 p.m. at the high school. Wood and Coal burning safety meeting, 7:30 p.m. Ironville Fire House. Extension Capitol Days, Extension board mem bers and staff meeting in Harrisburg with legislators. Tuesday, March 7 Lancaster County Dairy Day, at the Farm and Home Center, 9am to 3 p.m Home Vegetable Gardening meeting, Lancaster Farm and Home Center, 7 30 p m Hmkletown Adult Farmers meeting, at the Hmkletown Alternative School, 7 30 p m Take your warnings seriously it’ll affect all the other milk in the truck that hauls it, and eventually an entire silo of milk at the dairy. Somebody stands to pay for the loss of such carelessness. So far it’s been covered by either insurance or the marketing association’s owri savings account. This seriously jeopardizes the flow of good will, beneficial ad vertising, and wholesome farm products. Back to the poultry disease situation Lancaster County poultry producers can't be overemphatic in their drive to urge all poultrymen -- large or small -- to take precautions. (See page 1) If something isn’t done immediately to halt the spread of the that God has given me. Like most people I probably have considerably more of those gifts than I realize and use. Yet, there is one gift which I often wish had been part of my God-given endowment: the gift of patience. I would rather fast for 40 days and 40 nights, go on a long pilgrimmage, ascend the penitential steps in Rome on my knees, give away my worldly goods (a somewhat cheap offer, I’ll admit!), take on a benevolent project or quest, or wear sack-cloth and ashes for Lent, and probably almost anything else you can think 0f... than be patient. because they are too cold. Pig comfort during the winter will mean faster and more efficient gams. TOINSPECT PESTICIDE SUPPLIES The supply of left-over pesticides from last year should be inspected and mventoned for this season. In many cases these materials may be used with goodresults. However, if the dusts or powders have gotten damp and are lumpy, they York County Pomona Grange visitation at Dillsburg, 7:30 p.m. Adams County stone fruit demonstration meeting, 9 a.m., contact Extension office for details. Adams County commercial vegetable growers meeting, Fruit Research Lab, Biglerville, 7:30 p.m. Adams County Home Im provement Clime, Adams County Extension Office, Gettysburg. Follow-up meetings scheduled for March 14, 21. All at 7 30 p.m Ephrata Area Young Far mers Poultry meeting, 7:45 p.m Chester County Farmers Association holds J-ames Day Out at the Stone Barn, Unionville, 103 rn. Wait for the promise Of course, God doesn’t usually offer me any of those alternatives. Instead, it seems his customary requirement is that I wait for his promises to be fulfilled. The only comfort I take in that fact is the realization that I am not alone in my dilemma. Throughout the Bible there are numerous stories of people who have had to learn to wait for God to keep his promises, some of them successfully, some of them rather un successfully. So I can easily appreciate should be discarded. Also, any materials that are on [, in on the material, and to be able to follow instructions. Don’t make the mistake of guessing as to the identity of the Material and the dosage. Follow instructions carefully at all times. TO MEET MARKET DEMANDS The producer should make every effort to produce the kind of a feed or food product their market wants. Most farmers have regular outlets RURAL ROUTE HEY DOC AS LONS AS YOUM HEIfE, HOW ABOUT SOMETHING FOH MV COLD ? fyoo KNOW VETS CANY PO THAT L LUKE Wednesday, March 8 Celery Growers meeting, Hodecker Celery Farm, East Petersburg, 1:30 p m. Home Vegetable Gardening meeting, Lancaster Farm and Home Center, 7 30 pm Grape Growers Educational Meeting, 7 30 p m at the Penn State Fruit Kescaich Lab. B'gler - :l'e disease, slim profits could turn into heavy losses. it is time that farmers take their responsibilities very seriously in order to protect themselves against disease outbreaks or serious con sequences if drugs in milk are traced back to their farm. The risks are too great. Everything a family worked for could be lost in one bad move. Consider having to pay $lOO,OOO for milk that contained penecillm and had to be dumped. Or consider having your own flock of chickens go through a disease period which can be ov'ercgnite, but somehow your flock infects others what must have been in the hearts and minds of the disciples when they are told by the risen Lord: “wait for the promise of the Father” (Acts 1:4). Their impatience at this prospect is obvious, for they ask him: “Lord, will you at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?” (1:6). How anxious they are for the promises to be fulfilled NOW! The people of Israel have waited for centuries - surely the time of waiting was at an end! But once again the admonition was one to patience: ‘ ‘lt is not for you to know times or seasons which the Father has fixed bv his own authority” (1:7). for their animals or their buyer and between products. When the farmer localities, knows exactly what the TO PLAN FOR buyer wants, then an effort TOP-DRESSING should be made to produce WHEAT with regular outlets for products farmers would make an effort to visit the buyer’s place of business and get a better un derstanding of what is desired. There may be times when the buyer will pay a premium for a certain type or quality of product. We’re suggesting that producers become more familiar with their buyers and try to meet the market demand. This could vary from buyer to WELL THERE MUST BE SOMETHIN® THAT'S LfffflL, I CANT WASTE TIME SITTIN' IN A DOCTORS office Adams County Grape Pruning demonstration, 4 p.m. at Tyson’s Vineyard, Flora Dale, along Route 34, north of Biglerville. Lebanon County Con servation District board of directors meeting, 8 p.m at the Lebanon County Municipal Building, South Eighth and Oak Streets, Room 207 Lancaster County Con- around you because someone was careless. Strict precautions should be taken by all farmers. At this time that's particularly true of poultrymen and dairymen. They should also see to it that their employees follow in structions. And in the case of poultrymen, they should make sure no unauthorized persons enter their poultry houses. And those who must enter, should take every step to insure that disease organisms aren’t carried m or out, whatever the case may be. 'Precautionary and security measures to be taken by popltrymen are contained in the page 1 article. It’s suggested they be' seriously considered The times and seasons That’s my problem: I want to know the times and seasons. It’s not so much just the waiting, but not knowing when. It is my insistance on “knowing when” that is indicative of both my im patience and my lack of faith. For that’s what im patience with God amounts to: lack of faith. It means I still want to substitute my judgement for his, that I still do not really trust him to keep his promise. Impatient as his disciples were, they responded in the best possible manner: “They returned to Marcl irst ol :or tl later this month the winter wheat fields will be starting to grow; this will be the time for an apphcation of nitrogen fertilizer if maximum yields of both grain and straw are needed. In the past this special treatment has been very successful especially on sand, gravel, or shale-type soils. With the current prices of straw, it might be even more profitable to try to get maximum straw yields TAKE TWO /ASPIRIN, SET PLENTT OF REST ano prink Lots a LI QUIPS. w /» x - servation District holds meeting on irrigation water needs, 11:30 a.m. at the- Good’n Plenty Restaurant, Smoketown. Pennsylvania Farmers’ Association tour to Washington, D.C to meet with legislators. York County Milking School today and tomorrow, at the 4-H Center at Bair, 10 a.m.-3 pm. Codorus Fertilizer banquet, Jerusalem...to the upper room” and WAITED! But that didn’t mean they weren’t doing anything. Luke tells us: “All these with -one accord devoted them selves to grayer” (1:14). They waited...but they did it prayerfully and expectantly. They lived each day in an ticipation of the fulfilment of the promise and it was probably _ this expectation that made it possible for the promise to be fulfilled. I suspect that the disciples were not particularly gifted with patience, but if they learned and mastered this art, so can we! along with good grain development. Fields seeded down to alfalfa or clover should not get more than 25 to 30 pounds of actual nitrogen per acre. Ap plications of 50 to 60 pounds of actual nitrogen per acre on un-seeded fields should give greater returns on both grain and straw. By Tom Armstronj DON'T BOWER J' Biu roe for that bit o' IH FORMATION 1 (i/unufaa Jefferson Fire Hall, 6-30 p.m. Thursday, March 9 Wine Grape Growers meeting, Lancaster Farm and Home Center, 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Farm Transfer meeting, Lancaster Farm and Home Center, 7:30 p.m. Elizabethtown Young Farmers meeting, at (Turn to Page 33)