Alo—Utarttr Fanwing, Saturday, May 3,1980 Lancaster Farming says... f There’s an old saw in farm real estate circles that good farmland is cheap no matter how expensive it is and poor farmland is too expensive no matter how cheap it is. Soil Stewardship Week this coming May 11 to 17 reminds us of the need to husband our fine soils. The race to buy that good farmland has driven the price of the average acre of Pennsylvania ground up from $373 per acre in 1970 to $1245 by the end of the decade. That’s 270 percent. Earlier USDA estimates that farm real estate values would increase by five percent or more at the start of the 1980 s now seem trivial com pared to the expected value of good land once the country pulls out of its recession. Experts say land prices may triple in the next 10 years. Pressure comes because there is no more new land, but plenty of new people; and most of our best farmland already is in production. Returns to match the average 27 percent jump over 10 years an in- ON "GETTING IT RIGHT" Lesson for May 4, 1980 Background Scripture: Uohn3:l-18; 4:7 through 5:21 Devotional Reading: 1 John 3:11-18 TO PLAN acreages have been in- GASOLINE NEEDS creased, or if there has been Despite the absence of a a change in the type of crops gasoline shortage in Penn- grown, gasoline allocations sylvania this spring, cu, be changed. Also, it is gasoline continues to be on strongly suggested that an allocation basis for fanners maintain their farmers. Farmers are to be current suppliers. We are guaranteed 100 percent of j n f o rm»d that the Depart their base period gasoline men t of Energy will not purchases; this base period transfer base period was from November 1977 niinretinm from one sup through October 1978. If crop p ij er to another. If needs are RURAL ROUTE (BE CAREFULL HELPING THfSHEEP \ INTO THE DIP, THOSE.BOARDS GET Can farmers afford farmland? vestor could have gotten in farmland during the 1970 s make stocks, futures markets, and the Swiss franc look like poor investments. The question “is farmland being priced out of farming” is being considered seriously by a number of economists. Penn State Farm Management Specialist Virgil Crowley says no single group is responsible for current farm real estate values. That includes nonfarm buyers. Everyone contributes simply because there is a large group of prospective buyers bidding for a limited supply and because farmland is a commodity which is in demand as an alternative to investment in other areas. Nationwide, farmers buy about two-thirds of the farmland sold. Of that, 63 percent goes to farmers enlarging their operation. About a quarter of the purchases are com plete units, and another J 1 percent goes to part-timers. However, in the Northeast, pur- If I bad my way which I don’t I would make die reading of 1 John mandatory in each and every church every Sunday morning until as Christians we “get it right!” Why 1 John? Because this epistle puts the very essence of being a Christian in the clearest, most un compromising language. Of coorae, we “know” that God is love and that, as followers of Christ, we are to love one another as he loved us. But many of us are like the little boy who was disciplined by his teacher to writing on the chalkboard 100 times; “I will not throw spitballs in dass.” He “knew” he wasn’t sup posed to disrupt the dass, but his “knowing” did not keep him from doing it By the time he finished writing this affirmation on the board, I think we can assume that he “knew” it a lot better than before. By nils We Know to a similar manner we also “know” about Christian love, but we don’t frequently enough give the appearance of having “gotten it right.” This is why 1 John is so challenging to us. What is the central “message” of the Gospel which John’s readers not being satisfied, or if amouni changes are to be made, defini' farmers may contact the regulai local ASC office, or in follow' Governor’s Energy Council at Harrisburg, 717/783-1650. Han ahead for gasoline needs in order to prevent costly delays. TO BE CAREFUL WITH WEED KILLERS Many property owners and farmers will be doing con siderable herbicide spraying in the coming months. All weed killers are approved for certain weeds in a stated chase of farmland for enlargement accounts for only 38 percent of the transfers. This may be because dairy and vegetable operations don’t profit as much from big acreage increases as the Midwestern grain units. Some observers maintain the current prices of land pose some serious problems for farmers and agriculture unless there are ad justments either in the price of farmland or the prices farmers receive for their production. But farmers don’t seem to agree. Their purchases of land indicate faith that they can handle the debt load. While high farmland values give an established operator the credit base he needs to borrow to go more deeply in debt, they also can lure the young, struggling operator into selling his high-priced land. - A whole series of costs, debt loads, and potential returns gives a whole series' of break-even points for the farmer. But Crowley, as handy as any have received “from the beginning?” That “we should love another” (3:11). What are the yardsticks by which Christ measures our love for him? “Anyone who hates his brother Is a murderer...” (3:15). “...If any one has the world’s goods and sees bis brother in need yet doses his heart against him...” (4:18). “..he who fears is not perfected hi 10ve...” (4:18). I don’t know about youjjut I don’t do too well with that checklist. I may avoid the word, “hate, for example, but there are some people to and to be applied at times. These ins should be closely However most other shrubs and desirable plants. This is where the trouble begins. Spray ap plicators should keep in mind the danger of drift of the sprays, and the danger of vapors from the herbicide in hot weather. Any of these can cause damage to nearby crops and plants. Fanners operating in sub-urban areas should be extremely careful with, wind direction at the By Tom Armstrong BY CURT HURLER, EDITOR i <1 v - *i. whom I respond with a hateful attitude. To be sure, these people are usually “safe” objects of my hostility: welfare chisders, violent criminals, dishonest politicians (usually of the other*party),' nations and peoples who treat the USA with disdain or contempt, department store clerks there’s really quite a list;' But the writer of 1 John makes it so painfully dear that, in reality God’s reality none of them are “safe” for me to hate. For, “H any one says, ‘I love God’, and hates his brother, he is a liar” (4:20). time of spraying. Many shrubs and trees can be damaged because of reckless applications. TO BECOME PESTICIDE RE-CERTIFIED if you were too > busy to attend a farm meeting this past winter, you may have missed your chance to become pesticide re certified by this summer; this was done at most of our Extension meetings held since January. However, Farm Calendar Saturday, May 3 Penn State dairy day, main campus, University Park. MD sheep breeders and lamb show, Howard County fairgrounds, continues through Sun day. MD Ayrshire sale, Frederick fairgrounds, Frederick, MD. Allegheny County State 4-H citizenship tour. economist with a computer, reached a somewhat surprising conclusion. “The ability of farmers to sup plement income from purchased farmland with income from other farm enterprises rests primarily on their managment ability/’ he says. Management: difficult to define, elusive to put a number on, easy to see in the final analysis. The bottom line, Penn State says, is not the cost of the land nor high interest rates. The bottom line, for both the established and beginning farmer when net cash income from the land fails to meet cash flow demands, will be management. If only it could*be entered into our checkbooks. Prayer, too, may help .. .it seems many X)f our rural churches have forgotten to celebrate Soil Stewardship week. The freshly turned-over ground should remind preachers this week that a good sermon for the next service will be land its management and care entrusted to mankind. In Deed And Truth 1 John also helps us to realize that what God in Christ wants from us to is not necessarily loving feelings and declarations, but loving deeds. The test of Christ’s love was “that he laid down his life for us,” and the test of our love is, not how we fed about those infuriating Communists and disturbing John Bircbers (our angry feelings are more than justified), but bow we act toward them. For the test of our love is the same as our Lord’s: “We ought to lay down our lives for the brethren” (3:16). I’m informed that the State Department of Agriculture has extended the deadline untQ January 1, 1961 to become re-certified; the original deadline was September 30,1960. This will permit applicators more time to attend an educational meeting to become eligible for re certification. In addition, most fanners and gardeners can make the needed pur chases for this season by September 30. The need to (Turn to Pace A2B) MD wool crafts festival, Howard County fairgrounds, West Friendship, MD. Montgomery County tractor safety driving exam at theV'O'Tech. Sunday, May 4 Adams County apple blossom festival, Arendtsville fairgrounds, tours start 10 a.m.-5 p.m. (Turn to Page A2B)