AlO-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 9,1989 OPINION Practical Farmer Knowledge A glass of skim milk each day can keep excess cholesterol away. That’s the report summary of several university findings. According to a national tabloid, volunteers drink a quart of skim milk every day for eight weeks. These volunteers for Penn State researchers made no other dietary or lifestyle changes, but when the test was completed most of them had a noticeable improve ment in blood cholesterol levels. Dr. Daniel Cramer, assistant professor of obstetrics and gyne cology at Harvard Medical school, said the switch to skim milk would most likely benefit young people in their 20’s and 30’s but everyone should see some benefit. Evidently, skim milk has components that reduce the body’s ability to manufacture cholesterol. Of course, we*know that the high levels of jalcium in milk help reduce the risk of high blood pressure too. Three glasses of skim milk each day provide enough calcium to cut your risk of high blood pressure by 22 percent. The tabloid called this an “astounding university discovery.” But those of us who have worked on the farm have known for a long time that “milk is fit ness you can drink” and “docs a body good.” The doctors in this world just take a little longer to catch on to our practical farmer knowledge. Farm Calendar Sunday, December 10 Alexander Schaeffer Farm candle light tour, Christmas drop in party, Schaefferstown, 2:00 p.m. Monday, December 11 Salmonella informational meet ing, Clayton Hall, University of Delaware, Newark, Del., 7:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m.; to register, call 302/856-7303. Wednesday, December 13 16th annual Mid-Allantic Conser vation Tillage confernce, Maryland Stale fairgrounds, Timonium, Md., 9:15 a.m. to 3:15 p.m. Newspaper bedding meeting, Weaver Homestead, New Hol land, 10:00 a.m. and Robert Wagner farm, Quarry villc, 7:00 p.m.; call the Lancaster County Extension office for directions. ARHMA executive committee meeting, Penn Slate Fruit Research Lab, Biglerville, 1:00 p.m. Thursday, December 14 Alternative grain crops meeting, Begins Fire Company Hall, Begins, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Mercer County DHI banquet, Mer cer County Extension Center, Mercer, 7:30 p.m. Friday, December 15 Pennsylvania Seedmen’s Associa tion winter meeting, Eden Resort Inn & Conference Cen ter, 9:30 a.m. Pennsylvania Egg Marketing Association dinner, Olde Hick ory Inn, Lancaster, 6:00 p.m. social hour, 7:00 p.m. dinner. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St. Ephrata, PA 17522 by |»r Lancaster Farming, Inc. A SMnrmn Enlt.prk* Robert G. Campbell General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Managing Editor CffVrifM IM hr UnMttor Farmlnf Tuesday, December 19 Farrowing Short Course, 111 Hen ning Building, Penn Stale, Uni versity Park; runs through December 20. Wednesday, December 20 Pennsylvania Forage & Grassland Council meeting and banquet, Sheraton Inn, Altoona, noon. Thursday, December 21 Grain drying and storage meeting, Conference Center, Penn State, Schuylkill Campus, Schuylkill Haven, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, December 27 Lebanon County 4-H Livestock Club Winter Roundup, Leba non Area Fairgrounds, Leba non, pig show at noon, beef and lamb shows 1:00 p.m. Decem ber 28, and sale6:oo p.m. December 28. Monday, January 1 Red Rose Alliance pork and sauerkraut dinner, Churchtown Fire Hall, Churchtown, 11:00 a.m. Tuesday, January 2 44th annaul meeting of the North eastern Weed Science Society, Sheraton Boston Hotel & Tow ers, Boston, Mass.; runs through January 5. Wednesday, January 3 Pennsylvania Dairy Promotion Program second annual ban quet, Holiday Inn, Grantvillc, general session at 2:00 p.m., banquet 5:30 p.m. Lancaster County home horticul ture seminar, Lancaster Farm & Home Center, Lancaster; IGBT UP AT PI VI AAORNIN' Yf* - 'I NOW IS THE TIME By Jay Irwin Lancaster County Agriculture Agent, To Sort Tobacco Tobacco stripping is under way in this part of the state and many hours will be spent removing the leaves from the stalk. The days of special handling and sizing seem to be over; however, it is still very important that growers sort the injured and ground leaves from the good tobacco. This will be required if the crop is being sold on grade. With some “pull off’ crops this is less important. On the other hand growers should be fair enough to sort out the undesirable leaves. If this is not done, the buy er will be unhappy and look else where for their tobacco supplies. Some sorting is necessary with every crop regardless of the method of selling. To Take Inventory An area of our operation that is very important at this time of year is inventory. With the close of the year most of our farmers close out their records for the year. This means that if you are going to have a Farm Analysis made you should take inventory of all your Readers Write Editor: I get your Lancaster Fanning every week and I saw in the “Opinion” column about “Your Right to Farm.” Our farm is located across from a mushroom farm or grower. They have been adding more houses. Also the smell’s awful. I keep my farm clean and haul my manure out What’s the setup on these mushroom growers? How close can they come to your property? John Oleyar Bradenville beginning beekeeping at 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. and home gar dener’s guide to fruit produc tion at 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sunday, January 7 Pennsylvania Farm Show, Farm Show Building, Harrisburg; runs through January 12. Times are 1:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Sun day, 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 8:00 a.nr. to 4:00 p.m. on Friday. supplies. You’ll need this to do any kind of farm analysis, because the amount of grain, hay and other supplies that are in storage will vary from year to year, and unless this is taken into consideration, you cannot have an accurate analysis of our year’s operation. So, as accurately as possible, record the amount of hay, grain, feed, seeds and fertilizer (hat are on hand. This is the first step in an accurate farm analysis. This is the time of year that most people are considering the type of Christmas tree to buy. And, I hear objections to using real trees as being wasteful. So let’s take a look at this situation. Actually, the Christmas tree farmer is raising trees as a crop and a source of income. This is much the same as the farmer who raises wheat, com or soybeans to sell or use on his own farm. Christmas trees are raised on land not suited for other crops -- not even pasture land. It’s mostly roll ing land and highly acid. Also, remember that these Christmas tree farmers are putting this land to good use; by conserv ing the soil and providing an Background Scripture: Devotional Reading: As a boy, I was always skepti cal about this verse: “And this is the judgement, that the light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil” (John 3:19). Because I was some what afraid of the dark, I couldn’t imagine anyone loving it. Today, of course, I realize that, strange as it may seem, people often do choose darkness instead of light because, for some perverse rea son, they love the darkness more. That is the supposition that under lies the newspaper business today: they focus on human darkness crime, corruption, decay, tragedy, and anything that is essentially negative. “Bad news” sells news papers, books, and television advertising time. If your daily newspaper were to focus on “good news” instead of “bad,” people wouldn’t buy it. NEGATIVELY TUNED Unfortunately, many of us are tuned in to negativity. If we are ill, we can describe our feelings in great detail. But if wb are well, we are hardly aware of our wellness at all. If someone has a “juicy” story about someone we know, perhaps even a friend, we are much more To Use A Real Tree For Christmas DO YOU PREFER THE DARKNESS? December 10,1989 John 3:1-21 John 3:18-21 to fix you \ x sometimes \ \]l BREAKFAST WONDER WHO I ' ' IN BED. / . IS THE / t! k m , J INTEU-IGENT, \ j ()/T| CREATURE | excellent watershed. Keep in mind that Christmas tree farmers have a very slow turnover in their capital - from the time they plant the tree till it’s ready for your living room can be from 5 to 6 years for small trees and 10 to 15 years on the lar ger trees. Another fact to consider is there is nothing like the fresh aroma of a real tree in your home during the Christmas season. To Appreciate Farm Labor Farmers should not neglect opportunities to reduce production costs by carefully using family and non-family labor to maintain productivity at a high level. There is more to using labor other than just wages paid or fami ly tradeoffs to run the farm. The returns received from your help should always be based on their productivity. Attention to keeping the farm “labor force” happy and contented will really return more in produc tion than an increase in wages. Put more emphasis on; kindness, praise, respect, concern for the employee’s family, some free time, recognition, fair treatment and other non-cash approaches. These will increase production more than wages alone. likely to listen to it. Even our prayer lives may be dominated by negativity: how much of your prayer time is devoted to asking and how much to thanking? Some people even practice a Christianity that is negatively oriented: seeing and expecting the worst in people and the world. Still others are attracted to satanic religious prac tices that seem to glory in the darkest and lowest elements in our human nature. When Nicodemus, a member of Sanhedrin, the Jewish religious council, came to Jesus he came by night because he didn’t want any one to see him in the presence ot the Nazarene. He also chose dark ness, but in this case he chose darkness to hide, not his sin, but 1 his virtue. The reason, of course, is that his society saw sin as virtue and virtue as sin. Associating with Jesus would threaten his “virtu ous” religious standing in the community. So, he chose darkness. PLAYING “DUMB” We don’t know what he expected Jesus to say to him, but he was obviously perplexed when Jesus said, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is bom anew, he cannot see the kingdom of God” (3:3). Did Nicodemus really not know what Jesus was saying, or was he simply playing “dumb” because he didn’t want to deal with it? I suspect the latter, because it is a lot easier to discuss being bom physically than it is to be spiritually reborn. If the first' seem,' impossible, the other must • seem highly undesirable to others. Tae fact is that all of us need to be transformed so that we will seek the light rather than the darkness. (Based on copyrighted Outlines produced by the Committee on the Uniform Senes and used by permission. Released by Community & Sub urban Press.)