AlO-Lancatter Fanning, Saturday, January 18, 1992 OPINION Positions Eliminated In recent years, the long list of markets we cover has provided a special service to our readers as well as a service to the market ing organizations. We mention it here because recently we have been notified that the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture has or will soon cease to report a number of these auctions. While some of these markets provide their own information, the PDA reports have been the source of many of them. But because several peo ple have retired and will not be repl aced, the personnel is no lon ger available at PDA to cover these auctions. Especially hard hit are the western Pennsylvania livestock and hay and grain markets. While we know government is slashing these services to far mers because of budgetory restraints, we think cutting budget in this area is not good. But once a position-has been eliminated, we doubt it will ever be restored. To help everyone involved, we have opened contact with all the markets that will no longer be covered by PDA. Whenever possible, by fax or by phone, we will obtain reports from these markets so that the coverage can continue as it has in the past. We plan to bridge the gap so that you can continue to be informed of auction results and their trends. In more and more cases, we will need to depend on the market’s own reports for inclusion in our market pages. Farm Calendar w [ Saturday, .Unman IS Franklin Co. Holstein Club meet ing, Lemasters Community Center, 7 p.m. Franklin Co. annual meeting, Lemasters Community Center, Lemasters, 7 p.m. Beaver/Lawrence annual meeting. New York Beef Cattlemen’s Asso ciation annual meeting, Com ing Hilton Inn, Coming, N.Y., thru Jan. 18. Delmarva Poultry Industry, Inc. bus trip to Poultry Expo in Atlanta, thru Jan. 24. Susquehanna Valley Dairy Day, Paxtonville United Methodist Church, 9 a.m.-3;15 p.m. Satellite Crop Production Prog ram, Penn State Worthington Campus. Satellite Forage Crops Seminar, Lincoln Intermediate Unit, New Oxford, 9:30 a.m. Ag Education Day, Port Allegany Vo-Tech, 9:30 a.m.-3:15 p.m. Adams Co. forage crops meeting, Lincoln Intermediate Unit, New Oxford. 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, January 21 Dairy reproduction workshop, Ml View Restaurant, Clifford, repeats Jan. 28. Dairy/Crops Day, Ramada Inn, Dußois, 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Lancaster Extension 28th annual banqueL Farm and Hon.c Cen ter, 6:30 p.m. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E Main St Ephrata, PA 17522 by Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Sfanrmn Enterprise Robert G Campbell General Manager Everett R Newswanger Managing Editor Cspyrifht IMI by Lin cm tor Farming Beef producers meeting, Ship pensburg H.S., 7:30 p.m. Pa. Lime, Fertilizer, and Pesticide Conference, Days Inn Penn State, thru Jan. 23. Winter Grounds Maintenance Seminar, Ramada Inn, Allen town, 9 a.m.-3:45 p.m. York Co. Dairy Day, Winterstown Fire Hall, 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Dairy quality assurance meeting. Embers Restaurant, Carlisle, 7 p.m. Area tax meeting, Holiday Inn, Edinboro, 9 a.m.-3:45 p.m. Beef Evaluation Program, live evaluation, Leesport Fanner’s Market, Leesport, 7 p.m. “Improving Swine Production Efficiency,” television short course, downlinked to Berks Campus, Reading. Ag bankers meeting, Lancaster Farm and Home Center, 9:15 a.m. Woody Ornamental Plant Identifi cation Course, Neshaminy Manor Center, Doylestown, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., thru Jan. 22. Warren Co. annual meeting, Sugar Grove Fire Hall, 7:30 p.m. Perry Co. Extension annual meet ing, Perry Valley Grange Hall, Area tax meeting, Days Inn, But ler, 9 a.m.-3:45 p.m. Coping With Labor Problems In me ’9os, Penn State Great Val ley, repeats Jan. 29,9 a.m.-3;30 p.m. WHAT DO THEY MEAN/THE SNOW REALLY DRIFTS INTH/5 VALLEY WHV JUST LOOK, THERE'S AT LEAST A FOOT OF THAT FENCE POST STICKING ABOVE THE SNOW. WHV THAT SNOW CANT BE MORE THEN THREE FEET DEEP. To Prevent Hearing Loss Farm noise levels are extremely high and may cause permanent hearing loss. Research has shown that noise levels above 85 decibels may result in hearing loss when some one is exposed to that level for at least eight hours. Duration and intensity of noise exposure is important to degree of hearing loss. A chain saw at 110 decibels may result in damage after only one half hour. Tractors produce noise levels at 100 decibels or more well above the OSHA standard of 85 decibels for an 8-hour duration. In order to control these expo sures, the EPA has developed rat ings for hearing protection using items such as foam earplugs and ear muffs. These standards are referred to as “noise reduction rat ings,” or NRRs, and range from 0-30 decibels. This rating is the number of decibels being reduced to the operator when wearing the hearing protection device. It is important for all persons who arc exposed to potentially damaging noise levels to wear hearing protection. Remember, hearing damage may occur in both young and old. Hearing aids do not restore hear ing loss, they only amplify sounds. Protect your hearing with the new generation of hearing protection before hearing damage is done. To Consider Hillside Farrowing Pens Woody Ornamental Plant Identifi cation Course, Neshaminy Manor Center, Doylestown, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Bradford/Tioga Dairy Repro Workshop, Sylvania Commun i^HaJL^jSOajnij-^Djin Pa. State Association of County Fairs, Hershey Lodge, thru Jan. 25. Dairy quality assurance meeting, Lancaster Farm and Horn'' Cen ter, 7 p.m. Tax meeting, Ramada Inn, Dußois, 9 a.m.-3:45 p.m. (Turn to Page A3l) C o Dan McFarland, capitol region agricultural engineer, reports that many producers arc finding “hill side” farrowing pens a good way to allow sow freedom of movement and reduce crushing of little pigs. The overall dimensions of the pen range from 6 feet by 6 feet to 6 feet by 8 feet. The pen slopes, along the width, from 8 to 12 inches. An 18-inch creep area is placed along the lower side of the pen. As the theory goes, newborn pigs will slide into the creep area, dry off, and return to the sow to nurse when they have a little more vigor and are in less danger of crushing. Sows lie with their heads up or down, but most always with their udders facing the creep area. When building new farrowing pens, con sider the hillside design. To Purchase Cattle Wisely Good herd health is vital to herd Background Scripture: Song of Solomon 2:8-17, Devotional Reading: I Corin thians 13. Christians and Jews alike have often not known what to do with The Song of Solomon (or The Song of Songs). In this ancient book there is no overt religious content, no mention whatsoever of God. There is no literary or drama tic structure to the book and it uses many Hebrew terms that are rare in the Bible. Just what is this book supposed to be? Is it an allegory? A drama? A Syrian wedding ritual? A Hebrew poem that reflects the influence of Canaanite fertility religion? Or is it a series of secular love songs that got into the Old Testament canon because it was erroneously assumed that they were written by King Solomon? These are some of the answers pro vided by various scholars. Even if one treats it as an alleg ory of the relationship of Christ and his Church—one which is fre quently used by Christians—there are passages of the book which most of us would be hesitant to read in a worship service. There is hardly anything in the book that could be called "devotional" in nature. Let's assume for a moment that these are secular love songs, that their original intention was to cele brate romantic and carnal love. Is there anything that God can say to us through these songs? Can we leant anything about love from them? The very fact that this book is in the Bible should dispel once and for all the latterday Christian notion that sexual union is inhe rently either evil necessary or otherwise or, at best, an experi ence that is essentially secular. The Song of Solomon's presence in the profits. So are good cows. When you purchase cattle, you could be buy ing more than good genetics and good production. You could also be purchasing some unwanted health problems. A good rule of thumb is to con sider all purchased cows guilty until proven innocent and infected until proven healthy. Check on the vaccination and health status of the cattle you arc buying. Consider having some tests done yourself before making the purchase. Purchase from a single source if possible. Transport them in clean trucks. Discuss with your veterinarian the vaccines that might be needed to protect your herd. By taking some precautions, you could eliminate a very serious and expensive situation. Feather Prof s Footnote: "Take time to pray it is the greatest power on earth." Old Testament assures us that sex is a gift of God. Like any of God's gifts, sex can be misused, exploited, prostituted, or serve as a substitute for God. But our prob lem is not in what sex is, but what we make it. The writer of this book says "for I am sick with love" (2:5). That's right, in its romantic and erotic forms, love is a kind of sickness, sometimes even with aberrant physical and emotional symptoms. In the throes of this love, some people can't think straight, lose their appetites, run a slight fever, act obsessively and irrationally, and behave in a manner contrary to their normal state of intelligence. It is one of the few sicknesses of humanity that can be either pleas ant or painful, or both. During the most chronic phases of this being "sick with love," we are governed more by our hormones than by our intellect. Would anyone want to say that, in ordaining this state of affairs, God had done something less than divinely good or wise? We may not understand these overwhelm ing attractions, and some of us may not handle them very well, but that doesn't say that they are not with out their appointed place in his plan of creation. If, then, we are squeamish about reading this book in public worship, if some of its passages make us uncomfortable, the problem is with us, not with those who wrote the book, nor our God who created us this way. If we have experienced love in its deeper dimensions, we know that although love may begin with the hormones of attraction, that is just the beginning of the process. From attraction, we must move to genuine mutual regard and we see some of that in the Song of Sol omon to commitment, and, most of all, friendship, the deepest form of friendship in which love has grown from wanting to giving, from possessing to sharing, and, as Jesus Christ demonstrated for all of us to see, being willing to lay down one's own life for the sake of the other. THAT'S) A o^3° * O o