AlO-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, Octobar 12, 1991 / OPINION A Job Well Done With all the activities packed into the five-day KILE in Harris burg over last weekend at the Farm Show complex, we need to say things ran smoothly, hi the largest show ever, animals were housed everywhere. Almost every species and breed had addi tional entries over last year. Fourteen hundred sheep, 12 six-horse hitches and food stands that were constantly restocking because of record crowds are just a few of the statistics that say this was the largest and best show ever. Saturday night at the challenge of the breeds horse show, the large arena was well-filled. And the small arena was well-filled Sunday for the final judging of the Polled Herefords that included genetic data gathered before the show. When you consider the small number of people who made this laige show function, we say it was a job well done. 7^ Farm Calendar Saturday, October 12 National 4-H Week Eastern Pa. 4-H Beef Lamb Sale, Allentown Fairgrounds, 10 a.m. Franklin Co. Roundup, Grcencas tle Livestock Market. Pa. Holstein Association Junior Executive Committee meeting, Pa. Holstein office. State Col lege, 10:30 a.m. Sire Power Open House, Freder ick, Md. Washington Co. Sheep and Wool Growers banquet, Washington Co. Fairgrounds, 7 p.m. Harvest Days Festival, Landis Valley Museum, Lancaster, thru Oct. 13. Harvest Days Festival, Landis try Manage Seminar, Kreider’s Restaurant, Manheim, noon. ADADC meeting, Town of Walk ill Community Center, Middle town, N.Y., 7:30 p.m. ADADC meeting, Tally-Ho Restaurant, Richfield Springs, N.Y., 7:30 p.m. Northeast Pa. Milking Manage ment Seminar, Dept, of Ag Building, Tunkhannock, 9:30 a.m.-3;15 p.m. Sullivan Co. Milking Management Seminar, Millview Wesleyan Basic Arboriculture, Fairmount Park, Phila., Oct. 16-18 and Oct. 21-25. Dillsburg Community Fair, Dills burg, thru Oct. 19. Northeast Pa. Milking Manage ment Seminar, Claverack Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St Ephrata, PA 17522 by Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Stewrmn Entorpm* Robert G. Campbell General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Managing Editor L Building, Montrose, 9:36 a.tn.-3:15 p.m. Lancaster Co. 4-H Swine Club annual banquet, Bird-In-Hand Family Restaurant, Bird-In- Hand, 6:30 p.m. National Meeting on Poultry (Turn to Page A 39) Farm Forum Editor: Fellow dairymen, which brand of supply management do you prefer? An extension of what we already have, with a graduated milk tax according to some reports could go as high as 750 for each hundredweight of milk entering regular market channels. The time for decision is NOW with supplies down partly due to drought in many a r eas. Fellow dairymen, we deserve better than what the government is currently proposing which down the road a ways promises not only economic disaster for many dairymen but serious shortages for consumers. Get real! Not many dairymen can continue to produce milk indefinitely given the current risks and uncertainties including the current drought situation. Without a sizable price increase to $l4 or $l5 per hundredweight, $ll or even $l3 milk just won’t cut it. There are those who are saying consumers will not pay the increased price, but really a $3 per hundred increase to producers fig ures out to just a little over 60 per quart increase to consumers, not an excessive price to pay to insure AL, CAN YOU A winterize: I MV PICKUPj/ To Submit Century Farm Applications Has your farm been in your fam ily for 100 years or more? If so, then you are eligible to receive the Centuiy Farm Award. This program is administrated by the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. To qualify as a Century Farm, the farm must have been owned by the same family for 100 consecutive years. A family member must current ly live>on the farm and the farm must consist of at least 10 acres of the original holding or gross more than $l,OOO annually from the sale of farm products. A lot of counties recognize their Century Farms at Farm-City ban quets. Lancaster County currently has 115 registered Century Farms. a dependable supply for consum ers. And I might add, give dairy men those badly needed dollars to replace old and worn out equip ment providing more jobs for those engaged in the manufactur ing of some. For too many years dairymen have been led down the primrose path of more, more, more. It’s time to organize and adopt a pric ing plan divorced as far as possi ble from government domination and control. We already have our deductions for milk promotions. Let’s review them and make them more effective. We don’t need the added financial drain of a govern ment imposed milk tax. Which form of production con trols will you as a dairyman apt to follow? More of the same, or will you join in a system of producer dominated production controls? A pricing system reflecting costs of production plus a reasonable pro fit for market clearing supplies. In short a base excess plan tailored to market needs with a minimum price for any excess production. Julius Replogle Martinsburg (Turn to Pago A2l) If you are interested in becoming a Century Farm, applications are available at our office, 1383 Arca dia Road, Room 1, Lancaster, PA 17601 or by calling (717) 394-6851. To Be Careful With Ladders Ladders are very useful around the farm to reach high places. At the same time, many serious acci dents may occur through improper use. When using your ladder this fall, keep the following safety tips in mind: • Read ladder weight capacity and use labels very carefully. • Do not use a ladder which is too short or too tall for the job. • Inspect ladders every month and discard unsafe ladders. > Get help when raising and lowering extension ladders. • Always check the area above ladders for obstructions and electr ic wires. • Do not expose ladders to the elements and heat sources. • Do not store wooden ladders where moisture may weaken their structure. REGARDING JESUS October 13, 1991 Background Scripture: Acts 16:16-40. Devotional Reading: Philip pians 1:1-11. Last week I saw a movie entitled Regarding Henry. This is the story of a very hard-driving and successful lawyer who is shot in the head during a robbery. The bullet takes away much of his memory and, during rehabilita tion, while he is discovering who he was, he comes to realize that he doesn't much like the man he used to be. People want him to hurry up and get back to being the old Hen ry, but instead he decides to be the new person that feels so "right" inside him a man not driven by compulsions to "succeed at all costs." a man who appreciates the values of home, family, friends, justice and compassion over the values of the marketplace and his fast-paced society. Reactions are very mixed. Most of his old associates in the lawn firm assume that the shooting has left him a bit brain-damaged. Others, including his wife, daughter and secretary, find the new Henry a much kinder and admirable man. When he decides his law career, they do not feel that he has thus become a failure. The new Henry is a success of another kind all too rare today: successfully human. PUT A HEAVIER PIECE OF CARDBOARD IN THE back WINDOW. ))' To Make Sure Children’s Toys Are Safe Children are very special peo ple. They provide us with a lot of happy moments. However, there are very few things worse than accidents involving children. Unsafe toys pose many serious hazards. Toys with parts that may come loose and lodge in children’s throats are one of the leading causes of choking in children. The holiday season is particular ly critical, since so many toys are sold. Parents and relatives play an important role in protecting child ren from unsafe toys. Never give a child toys that are meant for display purposes only. Examples would include the l/16th scale farm toy tractors. The muffler, air cleaner, and wheels of these replicas can separate from the tractor’s main body and cause a choking hazard. Examine all toys your children play with to make sure buttons, wheels, and other parts will not come off. Taking a few minutes to examine toys could prevent a seri ous and sometimes fatal accident. PAUL: "OLD" AND "NEW" So it was with Paul. The old Paul had a reputation for his zeal ous and relentless persecution of Christians. He was a go-getter. The new Paul, however, they could not understand. And it was this new Paul that caused some people to think about the Christ whom he served. So when Paul and Silas are thrown into jail, it is the new Paul who at midnight is found with Silas, praying and singing hymns to God. The old Paul would have been breathing threats and ultimatums, but the new Paul was a very different man who seemed quite unshaken by his terrible ordeal. Even more, when a great earth quake damages the prison so that Paul and Silas could have easily escaped, the terrified jailer knowing he would be held respon sible finds his prisoners sitting peacefully in their cell. The jailer is dumbfounded: any other captive would have fled, but Paul and Silas remained behind out of con sideration for him and his plight. They don't seem to understand: he is their jailer, but they are obvi ously not his captives. WHAT MUST I DO? These men have something that sets them apart from other human beings. He doesn't know what it is, but he wants it for himself: "Men, what must I do to be saved?” What must he do so that he, too. can have this peace and serenity that has nothing to do with their troubled circumstances. The answer. "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved, you and your household." From that day forward, he was a marked man. He would forever afterward stick out like a sore thumb in Phil ippi, because his life would reflect the life of Jesus, not the life of his society.