NOW IS THE TIME To Man Legume Seeding It’s not too soon to make plans for seeding clover or alfalfa on winter grains. Many of our good stands have been obtained by making a broadcast seeding in late February or early March. The value for seeding at this time is to take advantage of the alternate freezing and thawing to work the small seeds into the topsoil. Wheat is usually the brat grain to make late winter or early spring legume seedings. Barley and rye tend to develop too much growth and increase the potential for lodging which smothers out the small legume plants. Broadcast seeding when the soil is “honeycomed” in early March works very well, but the use of a band seeder may be a better way to establish a new legume stand. To Plan Your Estate During my lifetime the management of farm labor, livestock, crops and machinery has been very important in order to obtain maximum production. Many farmers have excelled in these areas. Now, as we look into the mid-80's, I feel that money management is of growing im portance to the farmer and warrants more attention and knowledge. The planning of your Farm Calendar Saturday, February 1 York County Sheep and Wool Producers Annual Meeting, 6:30 p.m. at St. John’s United Church of Christ. Ephrata Area Young Fanners annual banquet, Mount Airy Fire Hall. Beaver, Butler, Lawrence County Lamb and Wool Day. Monday, February 3 1986 Keystone Cornucopia, Her shey Convention Center; reception at 6 p.m., buffet dinner at 7 p.m. Tuesday, February 4 Penn-Jersey tillage Conference, Lehigh University; contact Jeff McClell at 215-374-9682. Farm Computer Seminar and Trade Exhibition, Lancaster Farm and Home Center. Regional Manure Management Conference, Chambersburg Holiday Inn. Delmarva Com and Soybean Tech. Conference. Wednesday, February 5 Pa. Young Farmers Association SINCE JANUARY ) IS ONE OF THE J WORST MONTHS / OF THE YEAR... /l <3 <3 c By Jay Irwin Lancaster County Agriculture Agent Phone 717-394-6851 estate, including the making and updating of a will, and also the proper farm transfer are con siderations that are very im portant. Today, the average farmer handles more money in one month than his ancestors did in a year. We urge more attention in estate planning and money management as part of good farm management. We hope you plan to attend the Estate Planning meeting on Feb. 27 and the Farm Transfer meeting on March 13, both at 7:30 p.m., in the Farm and Home Center, Lancaster. Attorney John Becker, Farm Law Specialist at Penn State University, will be the speaker at both meetings. To Protect Your Lungs Be it in the coal mines or on the farm., dust can destroy lungs. Farmers who are exposed to dust over long periods of time risk the disabling disease called “farmer’s lung.” As the dust accumulates in the lung the tissue hardens. This can lead to a variety of respiratory ailments, including bronchitis and tuberculosis. If the condition is not diagnosed soon enough, irrever sible lung damage may occur. Preventing farmer’s lung doesn’t require any elaborate or expensive equipment...a simple Winter Convention, Grantville. Delmarva Com and Soybean Conference, Wicomico Youth and Civic Center, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Farm Computer Seminar and Trade Exhibition, Embers, Carlisle. Conservation Equipment Operators Workshop, Berks County Ag Center, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Regional Manure Management Conference, East Brandywine. Thursday, February 6 S.E. Pa. Extension Swine Day, Midway Diner, 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Regional Manure Conference, Holiday Inn, East, Bethlehem. Lancaster County Beef and Sheep Club Banquet, 6:30 p.m., Farm and Home Center, Lancaster. Friday, February 7 Lan-Chester Pork Day, Farm and Home Center, Lancaster, 8:30 a.m. to 3:30p.m. Delmarva Dairy Days, 9 a.m., Hartley Fire Hall, Hartley, Del. I O " c> mask when dust can’t be avoided... for example when handling dry bedding, sweeping dusty walls or walks or grinding and mixing feed. Keeping the overall level of dust down is also helpful. Regular housecleaning of work areas is another good idea. Not only will the area look better... you’ll feel better without all that dust in your lungs. To Control Wild Birds The problem of starlings and other birds in farm buildings and in feedlots is quite common and one that is very difficult to solve. During the cold winter weather, birds are searching for feed in buildings and feedlots. Some farmers treat V4-inch rope with creosote and place it on roosting areas to irritate their feet, so the birds leave the area. One farmer puts about % inch of salt in a shallow pan, then puts a thin coating of lard over the salt as the bird pecks into the lard it picks up salt. The excess salt is fatal to the bird. The use of window screening over open ducts, win dows and doors is another way to keep them out of buildings. For the open feedlot, control is not easy. Birds not only consume feed, but are unsanitary and carry lice, mites and disease. Regional Manure Management Conference, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Lewisburg. Saturday, February 8 Butler Holstein Club annual meeting. Monday, February 10 Dairy Herd Buy-Out Program, Bermudian Springs High School, 7:30 p.m. Dairy Herd Buy-Out Program, Lancaster Farm and Home Center, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, February 11 Milking School at Troy Citizens and Northern Bank office, 10 a.m.to3p.m. Regional Fruit Growers Meeting, Ramada Inn, Chinchilla. Wednesday, February 12 Milking School at Troy Citizens and Northern Bank office, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Fayette County Dairy Day, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Waltersburg 1.0.0. F. Hall. . A BIGGER NEIGHBORHOOD February 2,1986 Background Scripture: Luke 10:25-37. Devotional Reading: James 2:8-13. And who is my neighbor, Lord? Is it the Indigent sfrMt person to whom my chunk ministers and to which I contribute? Is it the African, Asian or Sooth American to whom my denomination sends missionaries? Is it the hood victim to whose relief I con tributed several months ago, or the Mexican made homeless by an earthquake? Is it the person helped by Goodwill Industries whom I call ones a year to haul away my unwanted goods ? One does not have to be all that perceptive to realize that the question asked, “And who is my neighbor, Lord?”, is not really a question, but a thinly-disguised answer. I’ve asked God to tell me who is my neighbor, but it is ap parent that I think I already know the answer: my neighbor is the person whom I have helped in some way. Thus, it is not a question but an act of self-congratulation. TO JUSTIFY HIMSELF This was also true of the lawyer in Luke 10, Luke indicates that his question was prompted, not out of a sincere desire for enlightenment, but because he desired “to justify himself” (10:29). In other words, he was attempting to impress upon Thursday, February 13 Saturday, February 15 Lancaster Extension Service The Pennsylvania Flying Farmers Annual'Dinner Meeting, Farm Valentine Banquet, Country and Home Center, 6:30p.m. Table Restaurant, Mt. Joy; call David Kruger at 717-867-2384. USDA denies hunger increase Washington - John Bode, assistant secretary of agriculture for food and consumer services, has issued the following statement after a review of the recent report by the Food Research and Action Center (FRAC), Bitter Harvest II: “The FRAC report contends that hunger in America increased in 1985 because the level of emergency food provided in creased by 17 percent. This finding stands in stark contrast to other reports indicating the improving economic condition of low income Americans. “Between 1983 and 1984, the number of people below poverty decreased from 15.2 percent to 14.4 percent, according to the Bureau of Census. Between fiscal years 1984 and 1985, the unemployment rate dropped from 7.8 to 7.2 per cent. And perhaps most important, with no major legislative changes, between fiscal years 1984 and 1985, Food Stamp Program par ticipation fell 4 4 percent from 20.9 XMoa.Qs&tnTeft. Jesus that he fulfilled the duty of loving “your neighbor as your self.” He probably could have ticked off an impressive list of “neighbors” to whom he had been benevolent. So can we all. But, although he was really filing and not truly thing, Jesus nevertheless gave him the answer that the lawyer had neither ex pected nor wanted. And Jesus did it in his inimitable way: he told a story, a parable, through which the lawyer learned more than he had wanted to know. And what he learned was that he had not fulfilled his duty because, although he had in truth loved some of Ms neighbors, his neighborhood was just not large enough. To make sure that there could be no misunderstanding his answer, Jesus chose carefully the ingredients of Ms story. Because he knew that a “neighbor” is not just “one of us,” but frequently “One of them,” he chose a Samaritan as the “neighbor” of Ms parable. Nothing was more distasteful to a Jew than a Samaritan. Samaritans were “the wrong kind of people.” Indeed they wouldn’t be caught dead having a Samaritan for a neighbor. UNCONDITIONAL Furthermore, Jesus made it clear that the only stipulation for someone to be our neighbor is that he or she is in need. Their religion may be different-they may even be atheists!-and we cannot expect that, by our act of benevolence we will make them one of us. In the parable, the Samaritan made no demands or expectations for the help he gave. It was unconditional -the same kind of love to which all of us are called. Oh yes, we all have ministered to various and sundry neighbors, but is our neighborhood large enough? Bated on copyright Outlines produced by the Committee on the Uniform Series and used by permission Released by Community i Suburban Press to 20.0 million people. “FRAC suggests that the in crease in emergency food provided shows an increase in the demand for food assistance. We suspect that it shows an increase in the supply of emergency food assistance. The survey reports that most of the agencies have to place a limit on the number of people they can serve. “This suggests that increases in the number of people served is prinriarily due to the increased supply of food which is available for donation. This increase in the supply of emergency food is at tributable to the increased generosity of American citizens and businesses in donating food and to the high level of surplus commodities provided by the Department of Agriculture. “The FRAC survey was not conducted in a scientific fashion and is not statistically reliable. The sample was not nationally representative of emergency food providers. For example, of 1,000 surveys sent out, 63 percent did not reply. (In general, Federal sur veys attempt to have a 25 percent non-response rate J at the maximum.) Non-respondents may include agencies which once distributed food but which no longer do so. This type of problem . would the effect of creating a bias which probably overestimates the increase in food provided.”