Aio-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 14, 1992 OPINION Shot In The Foot In Lancaster recently, two brothers with bad blood between them had an argument in a bar. The fight became so intense that one brother went for his pistol and resumed the verbal attack on his brother. To prove he was powerful and meant business, the brother with the gun wasted abullet into the ground as a scare tactic. But in the process he shot his own foot and had to be treated by a loc al physican. Sometimes when we make judgments about people, right or wrong, the criticism we verbalize about others comes back to do us harm. In fact, St Matthew suggests that we should not judge others so that we may not be judged and criticized in return. He says that the same measure we use to deal out to others will be dealt out again to us. A more modem saying is that what goes around comes around again or the American Indian’s proverb that you should not criticize persons until you have walked a day in their moccasins. Sometimes we cut off our nose to spite our face. Or we actual ly cripple ourselves when we try to enforce our wills on others. Farm Calendar Fifth Toastmaster Meeting, Lan caster Farm and Home Center, 8:30 a.m. Regional tree fruit meeting, Schuylkill County. Western Pennsylvania Bred Gilt Sale, New Wilmington Lives tock Auction. Pennsylvania Shorthorn and Polled Shorthorn Association, Garden Gate Restaurant, 6:15 ~i sprayer canu.u Penns Valley Area H.S., Spring Mills, 8 p.m. Sullivan County zoning input meeting. Laporte Meth. Home, ation annual banquet, East Ber lin Fire Hall, 7 p.m. Delmarva Safety Seminar. Wicomico Youth and Civic Center, Salisbury, Md., through March 18. Centre County 4-H Leaders Ban quet, Nittany Lion Inn, Univer sity Park, 7 p.m. Southeast Regional Christmas Tree Meeting, Schuylkill Haven, Morgan Auditorium, 7 p.m. Lehigh County Small Scale Farm ing Workshop, Lehigh County Agricultural Center, 7:30 p.m. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St. Ephrata, PA 17522 , by Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Stinrmn Entorpm* Robert G. Campbell General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Managing Editor mi by LancMta, Farmlnf Chester-Montgomery Local Dis trict 1, Moorehead’s Catering Service Banquet Hall, Trappe, noon. Morgantown Local District 8, Elverson Fire Company, 7 p.m. Agronomy Day, Wysox Fire Hall, 9 a.m. Pennsylvania Forest Stewardship Program, Claverack Building. Montrose, 7:30 p.m. Christmas Tree Growers Meeting, Penn State Schuylkill Campus, 7 p.m. Composting Dead Birds, Adams County Extension Office, 7:30 p.m. Chester County Holstein Club Tour to Franklin and Cumber land Counties, meets Dick Hos tetler farm, 7:15 a.m. Southwestern Pa. Pork Producers meeting, Alwine Civic Center, Greensburg, 9:30 a.m.-2:45 County com meeting, Claver ack Building, Montrose, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Tri-County Agronomy School, Gratz Community Fire Hall, Gratz, 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Dairy Day, Bloomsburg Fair grounds Office Building, 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. PDPP promotional meeting, Northwest District, Clarion Clipper, Clarion, 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Cumberland County Holstein Club annual meeting and ban quet, Penn Township Fire Hall, Huntsdalc. UNCLE one, I'LL BET \ IWI9 HAS BEEN A LON& ) WINTER FOR YOU, I AND VOU'RE REALLY / ready for it y TO END. K %\ S’ To Prepare Pastures For Spring Before long, cattle and other livestock will be turned out to pas ture. Before you do this, you may need to do some preliminary work. You will want to check and mend fences as needed and pick up any debris that has been tossed into the pasture. To improve the pro ductivity of the pasture, you should lime and fertilize according to soil test. Liming will encourage grass growth which will reduce amount of weeds. By liming, not overgraz ing the pasture, and mowing the pasture on a regular basis, should give you a very productive pasture. You might want to consider rotational grazing as a method to improve grass production from your pasture. To Understand Weed Control Robert Anderson, extension agronomy agent, recently identi fied several factors which contri bute to poor weed control. Several of these factors are date of planting and herbicide applica tion date, occurrence of rainfall, and the rate and type of herbicide used. Rain is needed to move most preemergence herbicides into the soil profile where weeds will be germinating. A general rule is that United Dairy Cooperative Service, Inc. annual meeting, Seneca Falls, New York, 10:30 a.m. Pesticide update training, Penn State Fruit Research Lab, Biglerville, 1 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Dairy Computer Workshop, York Co. extension office, 7 p.m. Wyoming Co. com meeting. Dept of Ag, Tunkhannock, 10 a.m. Hort Seminar, Franklin Regional H.S., Murrysville, 7:30 9:30 - ;y pes, tion meeting, Pleasant Acres Complex, 7 p.m,-9 p.m., repeats March 20. York County Farmland Trust sec (Turn to Page A 39) fTUPX'S? ) ( Ristfn.. J 0.25 to 0.50 inch of rain within five days of application will accom plish this and activate the herbicide. However, this may vary depending upon the solubility of the herbicide, date of last tillage operation, soil temperature, soil moisture, and weed species in question. Another factor which cause poor weed control is the lack of a crop canopy. A dense crop canopy will hinder weeds from germinating. To Develop Weed Control Strategies By knowing the reasons why herbicides fail, you may now deve lop strategies on how to improve weed control under adverse conditions. mmmmm Bt IAWKINCt W AIIHOUSL SB2I3ILS SPij WAIT A MINUTE, JESUS! Background Scripture: Marie 7:24-37. Devotional Reading: Amos 5:4-15. The story of Jesus and the Syro phoenician woman in Mark 5 is a troubling one. The problem is how to understand Jesus' sharp rejec tion of the woman and her request for him to heal her daughter who was "possessed by an unclean spirit" Let the children first be fed, for it is not right to take the children's bread and throw it to the dogs"! (7:27). It is bad enough that Jesus turned down her humanitarian request, but we cannot help but be shocked when he likens the woman and her daughter to "dogs"! What is the explanation? Scho lars offer several. One explanation is that Jesus really meant what he said, that he did not want to minis ter to the gentiles and that he shared the common Jewish per ception that non-Jews were "dogs" by comparison. This explanation has the weight of the obvious, for it is precisely what Mark tells us that Jesus said. Another explana tion is that Jesus would not have responded like this not if the picture that we have of him in the rest of the New Testament is at all accurate but these words attri buted to him by Mark represent the prejudice against gentiles that existed in the very earliest church. TO MIMIC & MOCK The third alternative which is the only one that is comfortable to me is that Jesus used these words to mimic and mock the popular sentiments of the day, per haps even the prevailing senti ments of his apostles, or that he used these words to engage the woman in a purposeful dialogue. If a herbicide was applied and rainfall did not come in the five day critical period, a timely rotary hoeing or harrowing may be used to activate the herbicide by moving the herbicide into the soil profile. This mechanical mixing would have also destroyed the weeds which had already germinated. With the poor weed control from last year’s drought, you should expect a larger than average weed crop from the increased number of seeds produced. In fields with poor weed control, use herbicides rated as excellent for control of those weeds and use the correct rate of application. Remember, when using herbi cides, always read the label and follow all directions. Feather Prof s Footnote: "Pray for a good harvest, but keep hoeing." In a sense, he could be baiting her, to see just how much faith could be mustered by this gentile. Her response to his refusal would tell him a lot about her. There are sev eral passages in the gospels in which this playful, badgering style of Jesus is evident and I believe that is what is involved in this incident. And what did Jesus learn through this interchange? That gentiles can be just as persistent and ingenious in responding to the promises of the gospel. Jesus has made several efforts to demons trate to his followers that even believing Samaritans could be closer to the kingdom than them selves if they failed to respond in faith. This woman, a Syrian woman from the Phoenician coast, wasn't even a Samaritan, but a pagan Greek. Although she had not the benefit of the Jewish faith, her love for her baby and her per sonal belief in Jesus made the difference. There are times when we need to do just what she did: to stub bornly persist with Jesus when the answer we're getting doesn't seem to be the answer we should beget ting. Whether or not she realized that Jesus was jousting with her, she persists without bitterness: "Yes, Lord: yet even the dogs under the table eat the children's crumbs" (7:28). A TIME FOR HONESTY I don't know how this woman knew that Jesus was more com passionate than he appeared to be at this moment I know because, when I read of Jesus in the rest of the gospels, I see a Jesus who would not turn her away and who would never regard her and her child as "dogs." So, if from our reading of the New Testament and sharing with other Christian peo ple tells us that the answer we seem to be getting from Jesus is not congruent with what we know of him, it is time for us to be hon est and say, "Wait a minute, Jesus, surely that is not what you mean to say to me!" If we do, Jesus will not be angered by our persistence, nor insulted at our honesty. % i mmw mw m mm m w wrwr nr ill