—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 3, 1962 4 From Where We Stand... Conserving The Sixth Resource Fear was one of the prime movers oi the early conservationists Fear was one of the principal reasons conserva tion became such a widespread and going program Conservationists feared that soon the population would overtake the pro ductive ability of the land unless sorae :hing were done to bring about a halt to the destruction of the land. Conservation caught on because the pieople began to fear that the conserva tionists might be right and soon famine might come upon the land. This fear was based on experience and founded in truth If landowners had gone on treating the soil as they did in :he first few decades of the agricultural revolution, the productive ability of much of our soil might now be so low that it would now require extensive re lovation by drastic and expensive means If conservation of our natural re souices had not "caught on" with land owners, we might now be_ in a food situation where the fear of famine would be greater than the problem of surpluses But latest estimates now indicate that bv 1980 ve aie likely to need about hO million less acres than are now in production to teed a vastly expanded population It now appears that techno ogv in the business oi farming is going ihead faster than the population is in creasing Now does this mean that we have iversold conservation 9 Does this mean ■ hat there is no further need to con serve 5 Not at all In the past most of us thought of mnseivation in terms of saving our na cuial resources We have had the ‘tree savers” who did not want to see any tree cut down, oven if it were ripe and ready to rot We have had the “bird lovers” and die lovers of other wild animals who did lot want to see any game laws that vould allow killing of wildlife even when that wildlife ovei populated its nabitat and began to staive to death in great numbers We have had the “stream lovers" who did not want to see any change in ihe natural waterways even though some lands nearby could be made pro- • War Against Waste'' 1 ,!u “ Uuu ,sUI r ° mm J ( oiiscM mion Distinr is cli i- i Com mm <1 li om J i ■1 i Hu I '-I a 111 isli (‘(1 N(n ('in Ik I I I'i'i'i I ’util lulled cun S.ilm f .i \ li\ I. ui( isi ii - I'.m mm -i Lit - i / I'.i I.Mil II (I l~- Jlld ( l.iss 111 111 ( I I Lit il/ I’.i ilii(|( i V( I ol Mll f- I s?'l s.inn Him pluttins Miiuif In Ids up and down lull built ,i li idilion ol soil plosion in to tin uniiint, s>sfcin Emhv plow lin low ,iml diltnitoi 111,11 b (liuniii led ,1 mi\t«ro ot rain and soil switllj down the slopes I IJ>l 1011 UU< S s 1 I><*l till* « \ p.i is s", Siiuh '(.II Ws/h p,lv lll , el f ld ' ceb t,ie 00m " „ J ,3™ Wmm monesl forms of theft in Amor of irrigation water. ')*lii'lM ma is beating the government out We have even had those who havef*> • W o f j ax mone y Business firms complained about plowing and tilling muir Matrriti Exodus. 20 is Luke would even make a joke of it, cx the soil because the “natural beauty” ism ° s UJJ pcnse accounts were known as disturbed thereby . -2 lirvotloi>al Itradlnn Ephesians 4 2a- ‘‘swindle sheets ” About the only natural resources-- ..... —— Another common form of steal we have not had fanatics screaming for »» '"i S ls . to i! a n m « n ey from people , 1 , i j u. sj. - , ran NTAalin? who are helpless. Ta be sure, few us to save are the mineral deposits un- O grown Americans would actually der the surface We suppose this is so Lesson for March 4, 1962 take money ftom « child; but because it is rather difficult to wax ro-| some Americans have slow and mantic over a puddle of oil or a vein of--TS HTTr , p ., . haH Wl)r .i Nn creaky consciences when it comes iron ore. * . T f ody w .nt. to be caUed one. taking advantage of their post- But true conservation is not justEven,a thief himself will complain nce S^ ng nu C a Ses ° we ut al i saving natural resources. True conserva-about other thieves. Ive been . . , ~ .. . . . tion entails the wise and intelligent use^^ e^Jw Col |' n \°" complaint woUk , have to pay enormous sums of the resource in the best interest .'?f e for electrical equipment, because the greatest number of people \a| robntheis To be the blds were ‘ r ‘SSed” and not Now we believe it is way past | sure, there aie c ° m P elltlve A landlord will time to begin thinking in terms of con- twisted nunds, servation of the sixth resource We be- % 4 J busy , ln devis ’ the tenant has nowheie to go A heve there is great need for us to con- in 7 - Ol^ hones r union will chaige its-mcmbeis, tmue to use wisely the five natural sciemcs and ( >r a surgeon his patients, or a sources of soil, water, wildlife, timber, J& su °cess when l )lun,ber I ,IS customers, with a bill and mineral deposits, but of what value they do work lbat ls ./ b out . of tca ‘ ,on ’ lust be ‘ ,+ , „ 4; 1 . n r n.rMiiii r> cause the workman or patient or are all five it we fail to conserve our 01 - oreman B ut hen theie ulstomei hjb no choite bui to human resources are twisted minds clever in all Within the past few years several™ 1 s °/ tume , jnd Sl , n J' hat « e L „ ood callse , , v tan call noimal people cion t like n goon cause , \ our yocabu-, 0 jj C ca u ec ] (jueves It is a fatal The incident of the money iary A generation ago we had never objection to a man (hat he is dis- thangeis in the Temple (Mark heard of ‘Uiban Sprawl”, “Suburbia”,honest Nothing else makes up 11 1)19) illusliates two fmms of “Ruiban”, (or as it is sometimes wntt-fm the lack ol honesty He is dealing at once The temple taxes en, Rubanl or “Megopolis ” a gmieious, haul vvoiking man—had to be paid in a special cur- Growmo up in these areas is a bllt 1011 bave to walch him cver y lenc > r Thcsc money-men would J? n q minute ” ‘ He's a pleasant gentle exchange (say) Roman money b , Op p e who will never see marij but don’t have any business into temple money, chaiging a wide open spaces and vast uninhabitedclealings with him ” Those aic not veiy high fee for the service Now areas on this planet They may never“lecommendalions” any cl us hey weie cheating the public on sit beside a pure mountain stream, orwould enjoy ovei-heaung about sacied piemiscs, but stealing is walk through a tract of large timber, O r ourselves dealing no matter wheie it’s learn to appreciate the life and habits of® lll are wo honest? ,one AmeliCa uncounted sums i , , , , AT , , . ~ are lost even tear in gambling wildlife unless we begin to plan right Ncveilheless, such is the , in celtaln ehlll . ch now to conserve the natural resources- strai , 1 “ e natuie of the sell dece.v- flvals .. and “picnics” ami the like, for the human resources ? ng , , llll .V an mlnd ’ that ulb ® 3i,y not to mention double priced white We must keep water supplies near^° c molf honest ° than we ’‘ lephdnts al chulch bazaais I 1 t ’ s centers of oooulation rmre and dp an ' C u‘ le mole honest Ulan we dl tor a good cause, we axe told, centers 01 population pure and clean ically ate One way we deceive . even nromment mibhc lead- We must preserve areas of trees and ourselves is bv taking lefuge in , b d examnle of eambhnff grass—not just in out-of-the-way places, " ha ( is undeniably a fact It does ” Nun fo a t h e benefit of a and not just for the sake of saving them malve a rlhlcience where (he L , ancei fun[l or some charitable but we must provide areas near the ! 110ne 14 ta^ ken honi 11 15 ;, w .°, rse atgam/ation But it’s still steal cihes where people caught up in the ”, ' a b.J "’r mW Vn '° Sf ( than T °„ to fast pace of the space age can rejuvmate ,1 is woise to take money ft om a ‘^LrZfjanJors their tiled bodies and minds We knowpoor man than Horn a rich one and other sexvants eten the mim a nation must be healthy both bodily 0 / but stea'mg is std mum stjndaid Wd „ es i A church and emotionally in older to be a strong s , tea , 8 ’ e ' en 110 ! a ! of has no more right to underpay nation «stealing aie equally had. allloims &mplo>cos than any mdivulual F°r this reason we must learn to'V”e KrVft'm lo K “ t p, oTlh?r'“h.m| l s "ifstS USE every square inch of our land to whom we withhold what is their beir banc s 15 the utmost ot its potential for the con-nghtiul due is rich enough- 5 on oullin(s cop}rlehled bjr servation 01 our most precious not a person at ali but a the i>iMsion of Christian Eduoatfon, people coipoiation or a goveinmcnt, / h V!“ t n -‘ 1 l l> s' ' bsi««" bj At least that’s how it looks irom thenall «B ht to do them lor where we stand TiMiit oik* One imu lnc.t r In sjms C mci ends on the l.ii ni Ii 1 1 n lies oat into the < t onom n life o| non m Inin ■in (I siilhii hin well < oiiiiiuiml \ \\ li\ Soil ( ons< i\ at ion * r j Ik plumloi inv ol (.t n uui.il (s is a l.i- n'll n si 01 \ Oni loi e-1 n Ikm s s.u\ on tins i out Hunt in m ixhmsiihU soiuce ol ( iHh 'I ho' hi let in (lie ve.n it tins is not done now the e\.n 1 ai ea niav b< moie dilln nit to loiate and (oik v> ill pav dividends in this (vpe ol soil To establish Contour Strips Spi inis one ol the best i ines to btait a svstcm ot ton- tom stnp-i loppma; on a slope oi hillside Them is little e\- (iise toi the continued loss of soil fiom a slope if it is still boms; tanned m one larjfn field Alternate strips of row crops and sod crops are The Time . . . MW SMITH f lo HrU'iif' Ol >s.n a*m> To M.uk \\