AlO-Lancastsr Fuming, Saturday, Fabmary 7, 1998 OPINION Be Careful With Children The pain and suffering a child experiences from an agricultural injury is easy to appreciate. That’s one reason farmers should be careful that their children who play and work around the farm arc kept safe from animals and equipment that may harm them. While a child may have developed the skills and mental knowl dege to do many jobs around the farm, the physical strength often has not been developed sufficiently. Sometimes we see a small child driving a tractor cm- handling a team of mules or draft horses. Because the child and the farm family are so close to the situation, they often see no danger. However, if the tractor hits a hole, an unexpected mound of dirt, or a stone, the child may not be heavy or strong enough to keep the machine under control. If something spooks die mules, they may take off on the run with the child in no way able to reign in the runaway team. After the child is hurt, it is too late. Now is the time to reassess what jobs you allow your child to do. Give each situation the ben efit of the doubt. It may be better if he or she grew a little more before taking on this work. There are many testamonies of families who wish they would have done things differently after their child was permanently maimed or killed in a farm accident. Do everything possible to not let this happen in your farm family. EAYF Banquet, ML Airy/Durlach Fire Hall, 6:30 p.m. Pa. State Rabbit Breeders Associa tion Annual Convention, Leba non County Fairgrounds, thru Feb. 8. Susquehanna County 4-H presen tations and public speaking workshop, Montrose govern ment office building, Montrose, 9:30 a.m., also March 9, 7:30 p.m. Field Crop Meeting for Producers, hosted by Rutger’s Cooperative Extension, Monmouth County Extension, 9 a.m.-noon and Hunterdon County Extension, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. Southern Maryland Agriculture Breakfast, Jaycees Community Center, Waldorf, Md., 8 a.m.-10:30 a.m. Northern Fruit Growers Meeting. Ramada Inn at Chinchilla in Lackawanna County, 9 ajn.-3:30 p.m. Capitol Area Turf and Ornamental Association annual meetings in conjunction with the New York State Vegetable Conference and Trade Show, Four Points ITT/Shcraton Convention Cen ter, Liverpool, N.Y., thru Feb. 12. Ephrata Area Young Farmers pes ticide meeting. Family Time Restaurant, 6:45 p.m. Lancaster County Crops Day, Farm and Home Center. Southeast Fruit Meeting. Schuy lkill County Ag Center, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. New York Stale Vegetable Con ference, Four Points Sheraton/ ITT, Liverpool, N.Y., thru Feb. 12. Southwest Pa. Breeders Forum, ❖ Farm Calendars Somerset Vo-Tech School, Somerset, 10 ajn. Soil Fertility School, Lebanon and Dauphin Ag Centers, also Feb. 11. 17. and 18. Pa. Allied and Industrial Nursery Conference. Hershey Lodge and Convention Center, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., thru Feb. 11. Maryland/Delaware Peach School, Wye REC, Queen- stown, Md., 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Pesticide Test, extension office, E bens burg, 9 a.m.-noon. Western Potato Meeting, Tata’s Restaurant (formerly Bonan za), Lyndora, 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Empire State Potato Club Meeting, Four Points ITT/Sheraton. Reducing Risk On Farm, Morrison Cove Memorial Park, 10 a.m.-3 p.m Milking School, Berks County Ag Center, also Feb. 17. Soybean and Small Grain Meet ing, Gettysburg High School, 7 p.m. Crop Information Management County Ag Center, Leesport Regional Vegetable Grower’s Pro duction Meeting, York County 4-H Center, Bair Station. Keystone Pork Expo, Lebanon Valley Expo Center. Cambria-Somerset Potato Meet- ing, Imperial Room-Mini Mall, Ebensburg. Johne’s Disease Meeting, PDA Office, Tunkhannock, 1:30 p.m. Northwest Pa. Livestock and Grazing Management Work- meeting, Farm and Home Cen ter, 9 a.m.-3;30 p.m. Venango County Crops Night, Venango County Extension Office, 7 p.m.-9 pjn. Franklin County Crops and Soils To Be Alert to Carbon Monoxide Whenever combustion takes place without sufficient oxygen, carbon monoxide is produced. Since less fresh air is entering homes due to conservation meas ures, it is doubly important to be alert to the dangers of improper venting. Exposure to carbon monoxide may cause any or all of the following symptoms: head ache, dizziness, ringing in the ears, seeing spots, nausea, vio lent coughing, irregular breathing and ultimately, unconsciousness. If you suspect carbon monox ide poisoning, get into fresh air quickly. Call an emergency squad or ambulance and get medical help. Give artificial respiration if victim is not breathing. Loosen clothing, keep victim warm and place head lower than feet. Con sider installing carbon monoxide detectors in your homes, espe cially near sleeping areas. They could save your life! To Prevent Winter Storm Damage to Trees The recent winter storms have demonstrated the hazards they pre sent to trees, according to Dr. Timothy Elkner, Lancaster County Extension Horticultural Agent. Accumulation of ice and snow may increase the branch weight of trees by 30 times or more. This causes breakage and high winds during and after a storm may cause even more dam age. The amount of storm injury that occurs depends on several fac tors First, different tree species vary in their resistance to injury. Generally, the fast growing spe cies of trees such as silver maples, willows and poplars seem to suf fer the most damage because they have soft, weak wood that will not support much snow or ice. The age and maintenance of trees are other important factors. Large, old trees are particularly Day, Lemaster Community Center. Franklin-Cumberland Vegetable Growers meeting, Penn Town- ship Fire House, Huntsdale, 8:30 ajn.-3:30 pjn. Start A Small Business Workshop, Penn State Berks Campus, Reading. Milking Management Workshop, Firth Learning Center, Mercer, 12:30 pjn.-4 p.m. Dairy-MAP. Gutshall’s Corner Restaurant, also Feb. 19. Lancaster County 4-H Livestock Clubs Annual Banquet, Coun try Table Restaurant, Mount Joy, 6:30 p.m. Cenex Local Membership Meet ing, Seven Valleys Fire Hall, Seven Valleys, 10 a.m. Milking School Lebanon Ag Cen ter, 9:4S ajn.-3 pan., also Feb. (Turn to Pag* A 43) susceptible to damage. Trees that Trees deemed salvageable but have been neglected or improperly with broken branches, jagged pruned in the past also may sus- stubs or torn bark should be re tain more injury than those care- paired immediately rather than fully managed. waiting until spring. Since re- Finally, improperly training moving large tree limbs may be young trees may increase the dangerous, this work should be probability of storm damage years left to trained arborists, later. Consult a professional arborist if: 1. the work requires climbing or chain saws, 2. when cabling or large branch removal is called for and 3. if the injured tree or branch is leaning on another tree or struc ture. To Clean Up Storm Damage Trees Dr. Timothy Elkner, Lancaster County Extension Horticultural Agent, reminds us that after a storm, hazardous trees and branches should be removed im mediately to ensure safety and prevent additional property dam age. Trees that have lost more than 50 per cent of their branches, those with splits in the main trunk or large trees with their tops broken are generally poor risks and should be removed from the landscape. ?rsr; ''/;';• \\'X\\\v., v \ //////v// BY LAWRENCE W ALIHOUSE ARE YOU A SLAVE? February 8, 1998 Background Scripture: II Peter 2 Devotional Reading: Ephesians 4:7-16 One of the two main purposes of n Peter is to warn the readers against false teachers. “But false prophets also arose among the people, just as there will be false teachers among you, who will se cretly bring in destructive here sies, even denying the Master who bought them, bringing upon them selves swift destruction” (2:1). I have read a lot of religious books and sermon titles in the past 40-plus years since I entered the ministry, but I don’t remember coming across one addressing the problems of “false teachers” and “heresy.” Is that because “false teachers” and “heresy” are no lon ger threatening to the Church? No, I think not, but the terminology we use today is different Further more, II Peter may seem irrelevant also because the “false teachers” and the “heresies” they were con cerned about are different than the ones that plague us today. So who are the “false teachers” in the Church today? For what shall we be cm the lookout in look ing for and identifying them? II Peter 2 gives us some guidelines. For one thing, he says, the false teachings are “destructive here sies.” When we examine what he read and hear today of preaching and teaching in the Church, one way we can spot that which is false is to note teaching and preaching that are destructive to the Church. Heresy always wean down the Church, never upbuilds it. DENYING THE MASTER Some people today are nega tively obsessed with those with whom they do not agree. They condemn them continually and unmercifully because their con ception of the Gospel is different from their own. “From of old their condemnation has not been idle, and their destruction has not been asleep” (2:3). Their orientation is destructive and negative. For them, condemnation of others has become a way of life. The writer also tells us that these “false teachers” deny “die Master who bought them.” When ever you hear leaching or preach- Any tree damage occurring around power and communication lines should always be handled by the utility company. Proper tree management including pruning on a regular cycle will lower a tree's susceptibility to winter storms. Feather Prof, 's Footnote: "Sometimes you must do the thing you cannot do." ing that persuades you to believe or behave in a way that is contrary to the way of Jesus Christ, that is “false teaching.” Jesus was not afraid to speak out against sin, but he did not found his gospel on condemning the sinners. Any teaching that entices us to be less compassionate, less forgiving, and less loving is false teaching. Any gospel that derides us for being the peacemakers Jesus calls us to be is not the good news of Jesus Christ sn The writer of II Peter also tells us that the “false teachers” are li centious people: “They are blots and blemishes reveling in their dissipation, carousing with you ... They entice unsteady souls.” (2:13b, 14b). Anyone who teaches you to live licentiously is a “false teacher.” LICENTIOUSNESS We need to realize, however, that that includes not only “pas sions of the flesh” sexual li centiousness. gluttony and drunkenness but any kind of behavior in which we are out of control, where something else, not the Lord, is in charge of us. An ad diction to violence can be licen tiousness. An obsession with ver bal abuse can be living out of con trol. Lying about other people, demeaning their character can be compulsive. Self-righteousness is equally addictive and destructive. What makes these “false teach ers” and their “heresies” so dan gerous is that they are so persua sive, particularly when it comes to using the Bible to support their de structive teaching. Tlicy promise a lot, but when people think for themselves and are open to the leading of God’s Spirit, they can realize that they do not and can not deliver what they promise. These people finally, promise “freedom, but they themselves arc slaves of corruption; for whatever overcomes a man, to that he is en slaved.” Lots of people who think they are free are really slaves to persuasive charlatans and their teachings which appeal, not to the love of Christ, but to our most selfish and destructive natures. Are you a free person or is there something or someone to whom you are subtly, but surely en slaved? Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building IE. Main St Ephrata, PA 17522 -by- Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Stelnman Enterprise Robert 0. Campbell General Manager Everett B. Newewenger Managing Editor! Copyright 199 C by Lanouur Fanning