AlO-Lancaster Famine, Saturday, January NOW IS THE TIME To Recognize Fertilizer Values Since the cost of commercial fertilizer continues high, we should take a look at other sources of plant food; I am referring to farm manures and legume sods-in the crop rotation. TTie 1965-86 Agronomy Guide gives a very good comparison of these fertilizer values on page fifteen. With the amount of manure that is being applied to some of our livestock and poultry farms, it is quite possible that very little commercial fertilizer will be needed. Alfalfa sod can add as much as 75 pounds of nitrogen per acre. This is one advantage to having legumes in the crop rotation. A complete soil test will reveal the needs to each field. Then the need can be met by using farm manures, legume sods, or com mercial fertilizer. Careful han dling and storage of manure will preserve many of these valuable fertilizer elements. To Attend Winter Meetings This is a time of year that a lot of educational meetings are held. And, they’re held during the season of the year for a good reason you have more time to attend meetings. During the spring, the summer and into the fall, there’s just too much field work that must be done. Take the 1986 PA Holstein Convention (Welcome Reception -10:00 p.m (needed for purpose of refreshments) Friday. February 21 Breakfast on your own - Buffet Continental Coffee Shop Ladies Program and Luncheon -11:00 a.m Bus tour of Pittsburgh - 2:00 p.m. Buhl Science Center Miniature Railroad Show Sale Buffet - 5:00 p.m. Convention Sale - 7:00 p.m. Riverboat Cruise -10:00 p.m. Round and Square Dance on Board Junior Pizza and Pool Party -10:00 p.m Saturday. February 22 Breakfast on your own - Adult & Junior Luncheon -1:00 p.m. Convention Banquet and Reception Reception - 6:30 p.m. Banquet-7:30 p.m. Name Address Phone (. Send Your Order with Check Payable To: “1986 PA Holstein Convention" Lewis Berkley, Treasurer RD #3, Box 57, Berlin, PA 15530 TICKET ORDERS MUST BE RECEIVED BY FEBRUARY 5. 1986. F vations Contact: Sheraton Hotel at Station Square, Carson and Smithfield Streets, Pittsburgh, PA 15219, (412) 261-2000. Be sure to mention it is a Holstein .Convention Reservation. “Deadline to Assure Room - February 5,1986.” Lodging Room Rates: Single, one person $5O Double, two persons $6O Triple (3 over IByrs.) or Quadruple (4 over 18 yrs.) $65 Children 17,.an0 under stay free in same room with adult. Credit card number or deposit of one night’s lodgings necessary to hold a room for arrival after 6:00 p.m. By Jay Irwin Lancaster County Agriculture Agent Phone 717-394-6851 time to become acquainted with the meetings of interest to you and your operation. Some meetings are designed to reach certain production groups such as Dairy Days, March 4 and 11; Cattle Feeders Day, Jan. 31; Crops and Soils Day, Feb. 18 and Poultry Day on March 6; but, others are programmed to reach all farmers and agri-business people like the Estate Planning and Farm Transfer arrangement meetings. Also, many agri-business and lending institutions conduct meetings to keep you abreast of the changes in their organizations. We urge you to mark your calendar as these meetings are announce and attend as many as possible. If you have boys or girls between the ages of 14 and 16 that plan to operate a farm tractor or machinery on a farm, other than your own farm, be sure they have the proper certificate. Under the child labor regulations, the law requires that those boys or girls between 14 and 16 years of age, be certified and carry a certification card before they are permitted to operate hazardous equipment. Some equipment listed under the law as hazardous is: a tractor with over 20 PTO horsepower, com Ticket Order Form (Please list all names as they should appear on name tags) To Be Aware Of Child Labor Laws No Chari Buffet Continental Coffee Shop County picKei , iicaj uuid, iecu grinder, fork lift and many more. Again on your own farm, your children can operate any equipment that you feel is safe for them. The certification process in most areas is through the Vocational Agricultural Department in the schools or through the 4-H Tractor Clubs. Contact either for more information. To Preserve The Top Soil The spring of the year is an excellent time to develop some soil conservation practices on the land. Contour strips, terraces and diversion ditches can all be established before the 1986 crops are planted. These various methods of controlling water will not only prevent soil losses but will help hold more water on the higher slopes and fields. Good topsoil is a precious natural resource, and every land owner should make an effort to keep it from eroding. Farmers who are growing continuous corn should be very careful to keep their soil from washing away. In these cases terraces can be established to help slow down the loss of both water and soil. Addition of extra organic matter in the form of crop residues, green cover crops and livestock manure will help keep the soil loose with a higher water holding capacity. number number Tickets @ $lO.OO $„ Tickets @ $ 7.00 $ Tickets @ $lB.OO $ Tickets @ $ 5.00$ Tickets @ $ 2.00 $ number number Tickets @ $lO.OO $ Tickets @ $20.00 $ TOTAL $ »r Lodgini WHO’S AT THE DOOR? January 19,1986 Background Scripture: Matthew 25:31-46. Devotional Reading: Matthew 18:10-14, There have been many stories parables actually-about people who have been confronted with Christ without recognizing him. Usually, Christ has come to them in the form of'someone needing their help-a beggar seeking a crust of bread, a victim needing shelter, a victim of injustice asking for help. Most often in these stories there has been a later recognition that it was none other than Christ himself who came to them in disguise. Each of these stories has probably been inspired by the brilliant parable Jesus gave to his disciples in Matthew 25:31-46. For, the meaning of the story is that when we serve others, it counts as service to Christ himself. Correspondingly, when we fail to meet the needs of others, it is also Christ who we fail. WHEN, LORD? How many times I’ve read this parable-as you probably have too. Yet, no matter how familiar it is to me, each time I read it I am amazed with how simply and forcefully Jesus puts across one of the great teachings of Christianity: if we would serve Christ as Lord, we must minister Farm Calendar Eastern Pa. Turf Conference and Trade Show, Pa. Turfgrass Council, Valley Forge Con vention Center; contact Tom Watshke at 814-863-1613; con tinues through Wednesday Sire Power’s 1986 annual meeting, 10 a.m., Sheraton-Harnsburg West, New Cumberland. Lime, Fertilizer and Pesticide Conference, Sheraton Penn State, State College: continues through Thursday. Franklin County Holstein Club Annual Meeting and Awards Banquet, Kauffman’s Com munity Center, Kauffman Station, 7 p.m. Wednesday, January 22 Winter Beef Meeting. York 4-H Center, 7:30 p.m. Annual Convention, Pa. State Association of County Fairs, Host Farm, Lancaster. Contact E. Neal Mack at 717-297-3638. Thursday. January 23 Interstate Milk Producers Annual Banquet, District 11, Cochranville Fire Hall. 11 45 a m Reser- Monday, January 20 Tuesday, January 21 SOMETHING JO CROW A80UT.... LOW CLASSIFIED RATES WITH EXCELLENT RESULTS! to “the least of these”-the people in need idiom we encounter in our daily lives. One of the things that makes Jesus’ parable so effective is the element of surprise on the part of both those who are accepted into and rejected from the kingdom. The latter, for example, express their surprise in words with which all of us can identify: “Lord, when did we see the hungry or thirsty or a stranger or sick or in prison and not minster to thee?” (25:44). After all, when was the last time Jesus appeared to you? Probably never, light? But, although most of us have never had a vision of the Christ, that does not mean he has never come to us. It only means that we have failed to recognize his presence in the need of one of our fellow human beings. We have heard the knock at the door and looked through the curtains to see an old man, a tramp in tatters, or a stranger whom we decide will remain a stranger to us. YOU DID IT NOT! One of the other salient features of this parable is the emphasis it places upon judgement for what is not dime, rather than for what is done. Usually, when we con template God’s judgement, we think of sins committed, but Jesus is emphasizing here* the im portance of good deeds not com mitted. Presumably the people in the parable have not murdered, stolen, slandered or cheated. Well and good, but there is more to God’s judgement. Refraining from evil is only a part of what he ex pects from us. Doing good is equally important: feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, visiting the sick and the prisoners. When the knock comes to your door, be careful, lest you turn away the Christ who is always present in our needy neighbor. Saturday, January 25 Witmer Fire Company Turkey Supper, Witmer Fire Hall, noon - 9 Contact Jay Hershey. 291- 9897, or 392-0804 Tuesday, January 28 Pa Vegetable Conference and Trade Show, Hershey Con vention Center; continues through Thursday. Manure storage and handling systems, Ephrata Senior High School Ag Department. 7 45 p.m. Dairy Economics Meeting, Lan caster Farm and Home Center, 9;30a m to 3 p m Wednesday. January 29 Fa Farm Builders Conference. Holiday Inn, Chambersburg; continues through Thursday Contact: Dan Mever. 814-865- 7685. York County Corn Clinic, York 4-H Center. Bair, 8-30a.m to3p.m Mt. Joy Farmer Co-op Annual Meeting, noon. Hostetter’s in Mt. Joy liebanon Valley National Bank luncheon seminar, Prescott Fire Co., Prescott, 9 a.m. to 2 15 p m. Thursday. January 30 Southeast Beef Feeder Meetings. Risser's Restaurant, Stouchsburg (Rt. 422), 10 30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Annual Meeting, Montgomery - Bucks Farm Bureau Cooperative Association, Christopher Dock High School. Kulpsville; contact Michael Zapach at 215-723-4355 Annual Meeting, County Farm and Home Foundation. 0.30 p.m . Farm and Home Center Saturday. February 1 Vork County Sheep and Wool Producers Annual Meeting. 6:30 p.m. at St. John’s United Church of Christ