AlO-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, Novambar 18,1995 OPINION Farmers Due Respect An appropriate tie between the nationally-recognized Farm- City Week activities and Thanksgiving Day brings to mind the fact that everyone should be thankful for the important link between between farm and city families. This event runs from Friday, November 17 until the Thanksgiving holiday. “Farm-City Week provides us with an opportunity to share the message that we are all interdependent on one another,” Pennsyl vania Ag Secretary, Charles Brosius said. “Farms and cities are a team, working together to provide our nation with the safest, freshest, most affordable food supply in the world.” Without farmers, there would be no food on urban tables. And without urban residents, farm families would have no markets for their products. In addition to the dependence on the fanner for food, many people’s employment depends on the fanner’s output. One far mer produces enough food and fiber for 129 people. But to get this food to so many consumers, jobs for people in mariceting, transportation, processing, wholesaling and retailing are created. These jobs of distribution are created both by the farmer as his production moves out to the consumer and again as the farm imput products, services, and machinery move back from the uiban factories to be bought by the farmer. Nearly 20 percent of the total workforce owe their jobs to the farmer. It’s time to tell people that both their food and their paycheck depend on one source—the farmer. It’s time to give the farmer due respect And Farm-City Week to Thanksgiving Day is a good time to do this. S;i(unl,i\. Nom’Milht IX Pa. State Beekeepers meeting. Buser Farm, York County, 1 zations legislative meeting, Harrisburg. Vegetable Production School, Carroll County Ag Center, Westminster, Md.. thru Nov. 21. Penn State Income Tax Institute, Country Table Restaurant, annual banquet and meeting, Hoffman Building, Solanco Fairgrounds, 7 p.m. Lancaster County Ag Industry banquet, Lancaster Host Resort, 6 p.m. reception, 7 p.m, dinner. Southwest Pa. Hay Auction, West moreland Fairgrounds, 11 a.m. Penn State Income Tax Institute, Embers Convention Center, Ind.n, No\cinl)ir 24 S.iturdiu. Noutiilh'i 25 NmcmluT 1( i ant, Bi o.m. - - * ■ - •» * ♦Farm Calendar* <■ -r. */ y w' " ~Jl' >"/ >;C7 3r< T l> > ; , , **' -V, ” ' ‘ *■ TtH*'*’ \N t diu sdax. Nou-ihlkt 29 Designing Modem Milking Cen ter, National Conference, Hyatt Regency, Rochester. N.Y., thru Dec. 1. Agway regional annual meeting, Sheraton Liverpool. Penn State Income Tax Institute, Ramada Inn, Wilkes-Barre, _ thm Nov. 30. Editor: One of the things that I always enjoyed about my early ride to school in the morning was seeing the beautiful sunrise above the mountains. The sky was aglow with the colon of pink, orange, yellow, and purple, which illumin ated the rippled clouds. There was a certain spot along my route where at the top of a small hill I could look across the wide, rolling fields and have a per fect view of it Then one day I noticed that those fields -were no longer fields. They had become construction sites for town houses that were to be built there. As the months passed, the town houses gradually jutted upward until suddenly my beautiful sun rise was no longer visible. They had been built immediately off the road at the very spot on {he hill where I had gazed at the sunrise, but now my view was completely blocked by them. a.m.' mV <’ s To Salute American Farmers Nov. 17-23 is Farm-City Week. This is the week we recognize the inter relation between farm and city. As Secretary Brosius states. “Without farms, cities would have no food. Without cities and towns, farmers would have no markets and processing facilities for their products.” Today, one fanner produces enough food and fiber for 129 peo ple. With $3.73 billion in annual cash receipts, Pennsylvania agri culture generates an additional $4O billion in related economic activity each year. Fanners create jobs for 2Q per cent of Pennsylvania residents. Our food is inexpensive compared to food grown in other countries. Americans spend 11 percent of disposable income on food, less than amount spent on health care. We are able to achieve this through cooperation between farms and cities. As we celebrate Farm-City Week, remember American agri culture is the envy of the world and we have a lot to be thankful for. To Price Corn Silage According to Glenn Shirk, extension dairy agent, there are many ways for determining the It seems that development is taking the place of farmland all over Lancaster County. This is something that 1 do not agree with. One of the biggest attractions of Lancaster County is its farmland and scenery, the very thing we’re taking away with development I think farmland should be pre served because if it isn’t develop ers will keep taking it over and then we will end up with little or none left. Lancaster County just wouldn’t be (he same without a lot of farm land and countryside. This would also mean very little land for ani mals to graze. I can’t imagine driving through the country with out seeing our traditional Holstein cows chewing their cuds in the meadows. If developers keep building here, it really wouldn’t benefit us much. It would make the area much more crowded and less en joyable. (Turn to Pag* *27) value of com silage. One way is to look at the value of some other feeds that you might feed if you did not have com silage. Two such feeds might be ear com and gtass hay. One ton of com silage (by matter has about the same feed value as a half ton of ear com plus a half ton of grass hay. If a half ton of ear com is worth $4O and a half ton of grass hay is worth $4O, then their combined worth is $BO. That would be the value of one ton of com silage dry matter. However, one ton of 70 percent moisture silage contains only 30 percent dry matter and is worth only 30 percent of that value or about $24. This is a base to start from. In addition to moisture, prices need to be adjusted for three things: 1. quality (grain content, length of chop. mold, nitrate levels, etc.); 2. transportation, if distance is a factor; and 3. harvest ing costs, if you are buying it out of the field To Study Computer Purchase Buying a computer and its soft ware may be a stressful and eye opening experience, especially for - *x*-jfr/" DY LAWRENCE W. ALTHOUSE 'sasiLß SPf DISTURBERS OF THE PEACE November 19,1995 Disturbers Of The Peace November 19, 1995 Background Scripture: Acts 15:36 through 16:40 Devotional Reading: Acts 15:36 through 16:5 I like peace and quiet as much, if not more, as the next person. Like most people, I tend to equate it with all that is good and desir able and, given the choice. I’d choose it every time. But, although peace and quiet arc generally to be desired, there are times when it is good for the peace to be disturbed. We tend to hibernate rather than grow in the midst of tranquility. So, some times it is only when our peace is disturbed that we recognize that there are needs to be filled, wrongs to be righted, changes to be made. We often make the mistake of assuming that the church is most true to its calling when it avoids disturbing the peace of either its members or the community. Actu ally, if the church never chal lenges us. never disturbs our deep sense of self-satisfaction, can it really be the church? Ist Church Eden I’m not suggesting that the church should diink of ways to disturb either its members or the community at large. But, unless your congregation is composed of perfect Christians and your com munity is without any reproach, just presenting the claims of the gospel will disturb the peace froth time to time. If we never disturb the private and public tranquility, 1 don’t see how we can be faithful followers of Jesus Christ, who dis turbed the peace almost every where he went This was also true of the apos des. Like Jesus, wherever they went they met both positive and negative responses. When Paul and Silas arrived in Macedonia, I’m sure they had no intention of stirring up opposition there. But, the first-time buyer, according to Alan S track, extension farm man agement agent Becoming familiar with compu ter jargon takes time. Take time to understand the terminology. Next identify the prime and secondary uses yon foresee, such as account ing. word processing, electronic spreadsheet, or enterprise management Next select' the software, regardless of brand or operating system, that will meet your needs. Many vendors of software have demonstration disks that will allow you to run the program to see if it will meet your needs before you buy it Talk to other farmers who are using computers for recommendations. Finally, select the computer that will run the selected software and allow expanded uses. Now is an excellent time to buy a computer as prices are continu ing to decline for many models which are not quite “state of the art,” but will be extremely func tional, especially for the novice computer user. Feather Prof.'s Footnote: "The effort we make to achieve our goah magnifies the joy of reaching them." as they went about the city, they were followed and nettled by a disturbed slave girl who was being exploited by her owners. Finally, “Paul was annoyed, and turned and said to the spirit, ‘I charge you in the name of Jesus Christ to come out of her’” (16:18). Great! Paul healed this poor girl! But her owners didn’t think it was so great. Perhaps, up to that moment they had been quite toler ant of these two foreign missiona ries. But now their preaching had touched them where they were most sensitive: their pocketbooks. So, we can understand why they dragged Paul and Silas to the magistrates and cried, “These men were Jews and they are disturbing our city” (Jews were forbidden to make converts of Romans). “They advocate customs which it is not lawful for us Romans to accept or practice” (16:20,21). Touching A Sore Spot Just how much Paul and Silas had disturbed the peace is indi cated by the reaction of the Romans; ‘The crowd joined in attacking them, and the magis trates tore the garments off them and gave orders to beat them with tods. And when they had inflicted many blows upon them, they threw them into prison...” That’s still not an unusual reac tion when today the gospel impinges upon someone’s mater ial wealth or profit Nothing I know will bring a faster, more cer tain negative reaction. People may be all for morality and righteous ness, so long as it doesn’t adverse ly affect profit on the bottom line. Sometimes even. I’m ashamed to admit churches. The Gospel of Jesus Christ takes just a reverse attitude: it is all for profit so long as it doesn’t affect God’s bottom line. When that happens, we cannot help but be disturbers of the peace. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 PQblished Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building IE. Main St Ephrata, PA 17522 —by— Lancaster Panning, Inc. A Stokman Entmprioo Roberta Campbell General Manager Evtntt R. NfwawwiQtr PtlHirf Copyright 1905 by Lancottor Forming