AlO-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 27, 1995 M hWK opesion Dairy Day At Veteran 9 s Stadium We often second guess milk promotion programs by asking if they really do what they set out to do; that is, sell more milk and get consumers in the habit of drinking their milk. But the Middle Atlantic Milk Marketing Association’s dairy day program at the Phillies/Mets baseball game last Saturday night and the corres ponding educational efforts in the Philadelphia School District in March leaves no question about effectiveness. In visits to the schools, the Phillie Phanatic ballclub mascot, delivered a message of “drink your milk” to the youngsters in 22 schools. In addition, 120,000 other children in Philadelphia’s 186 elementary schools received pocket folders for their school work that carred reminders to eat breakfast and drink milk. Because of who the Phanatic is, the children listened—and drank their milk. And for the second year of MAMMA’s school district campaign, milk sales increased. In research work done by several Harvard medical professors, the MAMMA/Phanatic promotion was labeled “one of the most powerful methods for increasing school meal participation used by the Philadelphia School Food Service.” Therefore, it can be said that not only was the dairy industry served by the promotion, the youth who were “cowed" into more healthy diets were also served with an increase in overall health. It’s hard to question this kind of use of check-off dollars. Of course, the grand finale came at the ballgame when the cows were milked between home plate and the pitching mound. Year after year, the Andy Stoltzfiis family from Morgantown make the effort to bring cows to the stadium so these young milk drinkers (and their parents and thousands of other baseball fans) know where milk comes from. No questions need to be asked here. Everyone involved with the MAMMA/Phanatic milk promotion program deserves a lot of credit for their efforts that climax in Dairy Day at Veteran’s Stadium. Handicapped Riders and Drivers Event of the Devon Horse Show, Devon Showgrounds, Devon. Keystone Beef Classic, Crawford County Fairgrounds, Meadvil le. S p.m. Quarryville Farmers’ Market Container Recycling Program, dropoff site, Benjamin L. Land is, Strasburg, 9 a.m.-11:30 a.m., also June 27 and Aug. 29, and Sept. 21, 12:30 p.m.-3 p.m. Lancaster County Plastic Pesticide Container Recycling Program, dropoff site, P.L. Rohrer, Smoketown, 12:30p.m.-3p.m.. also June 27 and Aug. 29. Clean and Green Educational Seminar, Donegal High School, Seminar, Conestoga Valley Middle School, 8 p.m.-10 p.m. Twilight Fruit Growers meeting, Frecon Orchards, Boyertown, ing and Strawberry Breeding Showcase, Rutgers Fruit Research and Extension Cen ter, Cream Ridge, NJ. Clean and Green Educational Seminar, Columbia Borough Show, , State Fairgrounds, Timonium, Md. Changing Habits In American Ag Seminar, Lake Farmpark, Kirt land, Ohio, thru June 4. Grazing meeting, Harry Nolt dairy farm. Union County, 10 a.m.-noon. Fulton County dairy princess pageant, McConnell Park, McConnellsburg, 6 p.m.-7 p.m. Huntingdon County dairy princess pageant, Juniata Valley Elementary School. Alexandri- versity, Ithaca, N.Y. Farm Safety Day Camp, Oregon Dairy Farm, Lititz, 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Landis Valley Fair, Landis Valley Museum, thru June 4. Bradford County dairy princess pageant, Harlan-Rowe Middle School, Athens, 8 p.m. Wayne County dairy princess pageant, Belmont Fjre Hall, Pleasant Mt To Understand Reassessment Notice By now most farmers have received their reassessment notices. However, there is some confusion on what the notices mean. The increase in property value is not how much your taxes will be going up. Since all properties were reassessed, the total tax base in the county increased. Based on preliminary informa tion, this increase was six. times. Thus, if your property value went up six times, your taxes will be similar to what they were. If it went up lest than six times, your taxes will decrease and if they went up more than six times, your taxes will increase. To estimate your new taxes, divide your new market value by old market value and the result by six. Then multiply this number by your 1993 taxes. The result is your estimate of 1996 taxes. Example: $600,000 (new market value) divided by 50,000 (old market val ue) divided by 6 equals 12 divided by 6 = 2 times increase. Clean and Green value for this farm was $294,800. Using the above formu la, the taxes decreased. (294,800 divided by 30,000 divided by 6 equals 0.98). Most farms I have reviewed have seen an market value increase between 12 and 15 times. With Clean and Green, the increase is 0.10 to O.IS times. With Clean and Green, the taxes on the land have declined. However, the taxes on your home and buildings have increased more than the decline on the land. If you have any questions on your reassessment, contact the Lancaster County Cooperative Extension office at (717) 394-6851. Remember, the deadline has been extended to September 1, 1995 to file for Clean and Green. To Call Before You Dig This past week, a backhoc dug up a gas line that caused personal injury and loss of service to several families. This should remind us to call before we dig or drill. ! ucsd.n. I mit (> Grazing meeting. Black Run Farm, Buckhom, Columbia Co.. 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Cambria County dairy princess Holy N; Cht container recycling program, Gideon King, Kinzers, 12:30 p.m.-3 p.m., also Aug. 9. Lancaster County plastic pesticide container program, Moyer & Son, Inc., Honey (Turn to Pago A 27) The number to call at least 72 hours in advance of digging but no more than 10 days before is (800) 242-1776. This will keep you from accidentally hitting cables and pipelines and causing problems. With summer being a major construction time around farms, you need to make this important phone call. By calling and seeing if any underground utilities have been installed could save you a lot of money. It seems like every year we have an incident of a cable or pipeline being damaged. So do not become the next news headline. Call before you dig or drill. To Scout For Corn Cutworm Damage When com emerges, the first insect to be looking for is the black cutworm. The cutworm larvae usually begins feeding about mid-May in Lancaster County. The black cut worm will damage plants by cut ting either above or below die soil surface or by tunneling into the plant. Soil conditions usually influ ence where the larvae feed. Under BY IAWRENCE W ALEHOUSE ""ffIBBWI MISSING LIFE’S BEST-OF-ALL May 28,1995 MISSING LIFE’S BEST-OF-ALL May 28, 1995 Background Scripture: 1 Corinthians 13 Devotional Reading: John 15:9-17 Few New Testament chapters are more revered and remembered than I Corinthians 13. And few biblical passages are more secretly disbelieved or ig nored! What do I mean by that? I mean that, despite what we say about love, we do not often act as if we believe Paul when he says. “If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, 1 am a noisy gong or clanging cymbal” (13:1). Without the gift of love, says Paul, none of the other gifts really count. Love is “the greatest of these” (13:3), but often we do not act that way. Unfortunately it is very seldom that I see the gift of love in a per son recognized and honored in the church. Ministers arc generally not chosen because the gift of love is evident in them. Their perceived giftedness is more likely to do with their setmonic gifts of elo quence or entertainment, adminis trative skills or ecclesiastical con nectedness. But rarely, if ever, are they selected for their love. MOST CONSEQUENTIAL This also applies to lay people in the churches. I have-seen many lay people recognized for their gifts financial, leadership,, or prominence but seldom for their love. Even granting that I may be overstating the case a bit, who would want to contend that love is regarded as the greatest gift in the church? So if there is anything at all in what I have been saying why is this so? Maybe one reason is that human beings tend to overvalue the things they can see or touch. A spellbinding sermon is very visi dry conditions, the feeding is nor mally below ground level. Under moist conditions, the feeding is usually above ground level. The com fields with the highest risk of damage from cutworms are those that had weeds in them with in seven days of planting. The eco nomic threshold in Pennsylvania is three percent of the plants cut off or 5 cutworms per 100 plants. In many fields, growers attempt to control both rootworm and cut worm with a planter application of an insecticide. This will control most of the cutworms. However, scouting should not be neglected in case the planter application fails to control the cutworms. Under dry conditions, the effec tiveness of Lorsban as a rescue treatment may be improved with the use of a rotary hoe to slightly incorporate the material into the soil where the larvae is living, according to Dr. M. E. Rice, lowa. If one of the pyrethroids insecti cides such as Ambush, Asana or Pounce is used, they should not be incorporated. Feather Prof’s Footnote: "Suc cess is a dream turned into reality." ble and audible. A benevolent lay person’s financial gift is also very tangible and produces tangible re sults. But love rarely shows up un der a microscope, on a radar screen, or on a profit-and-loss statement. Often it is intangible, but we must not therefore con clude that it is inconsequential. Actually, as Paul tells us, it is the most consequential force in the world: “Love never ends.” I first preached on I Cor. 13 some 40 years ago. With my mind I believed Paul when he said “the greatest of these is love.” Today, however, I know with my heart that Paul was right. Love is the greatest gift of all and without it all other gifts pale in our lives, in our churches and in the world. BEING AND DOING Looking back today, I don’t think I really knew then what love is. I thought that love was synony mous with feeling loving. But no tice that nowhere in I Cor. 13 does Paul talk about love as a feeling. He talks about being and doing. Love is not jealous, boastful, irri table, resentful, arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way nor rejoice at wrong. There have been times when I have tried to have one or more of the above and love. But it doesn’t work. Love is patient and kind, it rejoices in the right, bears all things, believes all things, endures all things. And it never ends. It does not end because we do not feel loving nor because the ob ject of our love is no longer meet ing our conditions. True love the love that Christ demonstrated for us in his life and in his death and to which he calls us out lasts everything else. If we really believe that, then our churches will become fellow ships of self-giving rather than cir cles of self-congratulation, of for giveness and reconciliation rather than of judgment and separation. Otherwise, we will be missing out on God’s greatest of all gifts. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building lE. Main St Ephrata, PA 17522 —by— Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Stohman Ertwpri— Robert GLCempbeN Qenoral Menogor wmi n* NVNnmQVi MrapnQ Muor Copyright 1888 by Lancutar Fanning