Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 5, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 8, 1954 Page: 10 of 48
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Sunday, August 1, ItM --
THE DENTONRECORD.CHRONICLE
EXPERT SAYS SIMPLER APPROACH NEEDED
KAISER
Farm Program Called ‘Complicated’
SHADE SCREENING
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Keeps The Sun Out
Lets The Breeze And
Light In
REASONABLY PRICED
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REPEATING BY POPULAR REQUEST ...
ANOTHER SENSATIONAL SELLING
must be predicated on the princi- no solution on how to control the
pal of the government helping the production of millions of farmers.
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COLORFUL NEW FALL COTTONS
One of the most outstanding selections of new fall cottons we have ever presented . . . yards and yards of the
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Repeated By
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farmer get a fair income.
Wilson likes to recall the role he
played in selling Roosevelt on the
idea of price supports in exchange
for voluntary production cuts by
the farmers—the idea which be-
ame the old Agriculture Adjust-
ment Act and lter developed into
the present price support system
by gradual stages.
In the early and bleak *30‘s, a
great many people were looking
for a solution to the farm prob-
lem. Farms were being foreclosed
by the thousands. Farm income
had reached a low level. The farm
depression had spread to the cities.
Wilson, then a professor of agri-
cultural economics at the Montana
State College at Bozeman, became
interested in a farm study made
by Dr, John D. Black of Harvard
on a grant from the Rockefeller
WAPLES-PAINTER C9
LUMBERS. BUILDING MATE RIAL
•“ONE STOP SERVICE" • j
Research work on the identifica-
tion and life cycle of little-known
groups of aquatic fungi that cause
tastes nd odors in water is being
conducted this summer at NTSC
by Dr. Archie Roach of the bio-
logy department.
His work is a phase of the work
being done by the North Texas
Water laboratory which was initia-
ted some years ago by Dr. J. K. G.
Silvey of the NT faculty.
Dr. Roach, who has been wott-
ing on the project for two years,
has been given a full-time research
grant to work on the project this
semester.
According to the professor, thia
is the first study ever made of
the aquatic forms of this fungal
group. He will make a report of
■ his findings at the National Bio-
logy meeting in September.
i
Foundation.
In his book, Black explored the
idea of benefit payments to farm-
ers by the government based on
controlled production, but he found
McClintock Eyes
6Vrgent Session9
SAN FRANCISCO « — Robert
McClintock, U.S. charge d’affaires
in Indochina, arrived by plane to-
night enroute to what he described
J
Values to $1.98 Yard
Dark Cotton GINGHAMS
First quality by a famous maker. Dobby and
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777770072
M 4 3
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• ——————
' assessment forms and let each
farmer list his own property, the
number of cattle he had. etc.-
and then he’d print the returns in
the newspaper so that each man
SOUTH SIM SQUARE
You'll want yards and yards when you see this fine quality
especially at this amazingly low Anthony price. Lovely solid
colors that are ideal for Shirts, Jackets, Dresses, Skirts and
ever so many other uses. All 36 inches wide. Plan now to
shop Anthony's and save on all your back-to-school sewing
needs.
Wk --
V
Washington.
He planned to leave almost im-
mediately for the nat'un’s capital.
McClintock said be had been
aummoned to Washington by Sec-
retary of State Dulles. Beyond that
he would make no comment.
5Me
•of 257 oil wells this week boosted
Texas’ total of new wells for thia
year to 7,223,. more than 1,000
ahead of the year-ago figure of
6,175. —
The Railroad Commission’s
weekly oil report also listed 18 gas
well completions and 171 dry holes.
The year’s total of 759 gas wells
compares with 524 at the same
, last year.
* Of the 257 oil wells brought in,
16 vere of wildcat origin as were
four of the gas wells and 87 of the
dry holes.
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| has ever monographed these fungi
before, and some are very hard to
differentiate.”
In conducting his research on
the fungi, Dr. Roach is using 53
different strains. Each of these
strains has been placed in a sep-
arate test tube to be studied and
identified.
Roach is growing the fungi on
several different foods to check
their variability in a number of
ways. He is also studying the fungi
by using microscope photographs.
The fungi are grown on washers
on slides, stained, and then photo-
graphed through the microscope.
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RESEARCH WORK — Dr. Archie Roach and student
assistant Jack Young, check out an experiment run in a
NTSC laboratory.
NTSC Professor Conducts Tests
The total average calendar day
crude allowable as of today was
2,709,297 barrels, a drop of 166,070
barrels per day from last week as
the curtailed August producing
schedule went into effect.
VA
C. A. BUTLER
OWNER . MANAGER
MAKES THIS
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’“This isn’t like identifying a
flower whose parts are easily rec-
-------—---- —
Oil Well Gains
Continue Climb
Jhiring Week
' AUSTIN, Aug. 7 U—Completion
trouble.”
Wilson said he believed the wheel
of history has turned until “thia
farm situation now requires some-
thing new in it just as the situation
did in 1932." But whatecer substi-
tute might be found, he thinks it .
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TEST
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Congress had passed the Mc-
Nary-Haugen bill in various forms
but the White House had vetoed
the bill. The main argument against
it was that while it would increase
prices—it alsq would increase pro-
duction and create more surpluses
and more headaches.
Wilson became convinced produc-
tion could be controlled by the
farmers themselves on a voluntary
basis.
“I was out in Stillwater County in
Montana where a man named An-
derson was running for the office
of county assessor. He told the
people if they’d elect him, he’d
fire all except one of the deputy
assessors and there'd be no more
of this business of snooping into
the affairs of others, with unequal
tax assessments.
“He said he’d send out blank
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years, Wilson said: “The farmer
isn’t going to see, himself pushed
back toward the old competitive
farm market. He will rebel against
it—and he’s got a lot of pressure
he can apply at the ballot box.”
Wilson is convinced farm legis-
lation must cling to the principal
that the government will see to it
the farmer gets his fair share of
the national income.
Although a Republican, Wilson
obviously isn’t enchanted with the
Eisenhower administration’s drive
for flexible price supports to re-
place the 90- per cent of parity
supports on basic commodities such
as corn, wheat and cotton. Parity
is a. figure fixed by law which is
designed to give the farmer a fair
income in relation to the things he
must buy.
“If you pull away from the 90
per cent of parity level and cir-
cumstances remain favorable—you
might get along all right But if
"ea
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are unfavorable eircum-
then it could mean
WASHINGTON. Aug. 7 (-Gray-
haired M. L. Wilson, who helped
sell Franklin D. Roosevelt on the
nation’s first farm price support
system more than 20 years ago,
said today the time has now come
to find a new approach to the
problem of giving the farmer a
fair share of the national income.
“I've got the feeling we are
starting a new chapter in the his-
tory of farm relief,” Wilson said
in an interview.' "We’ve gone
through the phase of developing a
program and the phase of high
price supports. But the present
system has grown so big and com-
plex that farmers themselves can’t
understand it We’ve got to ifnd a
simpler approach.
“Also, there’s so much emotion-
alism and politics involved in the
issue of flexible price supports that
I feel we’re becoming inflexible in
our approach to the situation. A
lack of creative . thinking ismore
dangerous than a lack of price
supports."
Wilsor 68, is on the political side-
lines now after serving for eight
yeara as assistant and then under-
ecretary of Agriculture during the
Roosevelt ■ administration. But he
still has a deep interest in farming
Red Label Inner- $4 E 00
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$4) A 50 and YOUR OLD
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would know whether Ris neigh-
bor had made a fair return.
“Well, he was elected. He aent
out the blank assessment forms
and when the reporta came back,
the voluntary assessment showed
more than three times the number
of cattle listed the year before and
the property value went up to an
all-time high.
“Out of 2500 farmers, there was
only about one per cent found to
have cheated.
“I figured if this could be done
voluntarily in Stillwater County,
then the same idea could be used
nationally, with farmers handling
the allotments in each county."
Wilson and others began thump-
ing for this plan. Wilson tried to
sell his plan to the Republican
leaders during the 1932 GOP con-
vention in Chicago . but fajiled.
Rex Tugwell, then a professor
of economics at Columbia Univer-
sity and later one of FDR’s brain-
trusters, heard Wilson explain the
plan and told him “I think you’ve
got the answer.”
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“0 DENTON, TEXAS
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BOX SPRINGS $4450
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59!
and farm economics which goes
On Taste, Odor Fungi in Water amasmyzrsasoia
• century:
ognized," Dr. Roach said. No one Looking back to the lean farm
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 5, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 8, 1954, newspaper, August 8, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430861/m1/10/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.