The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 30, 1971 Page: 4 of 25
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(Continued from page 1)
of tfc’ most n spected economists in the country.
\ve found n easy to follow Mr. Paulson since
we kv e long advocated some of the same things
he i d ocates. On some points we differ but we
ogre.' more than we disagree.
ECONOMICS CONCERNS THE production, dis-
Ca tribution and consumption of goods and ser-
vice*. We could understand economics a little better
if in cur minds we eliminated money as a means
of exchange and resorted to barter.
Our national income comes from several sour-
ces. But the only source of NEW income is nature
— apiculture, oil, timber, and the like.
I’aulson contends that prices should be set by
these sources of new income — and when this oc-
curs, all the other segments of the economy will
get their fair share.
In other words, if the sources of NEW income
are guaranteed a return equal to the cost of pro-
duct in plus a reasonable profit, if they are guar-
anteed 100 per cent of parity, then all segments
of the economv would enjoy parity, their fair share
of the economic dollar.
gUT INSTEAD OF DOING this, we have short
Dean Sees Agriculture
Undergoing Revolution
. .... ....... . . , , . LUBWX'K — For the fourth time ion of “Agricultural in Transition,”
But B*e continues to produce food jn tbls ct.niUry American agricul- answered with a qualified “No’
and fiber year after year! ture i> undergoing a revolutionary the question of whether the family
I! takes only seven minutes to fly over Chicago, h ' farm is on its way out.
but it takes hours to flv over the farmlands and * ’ T h university's fvan of “We shall still have farm and
«- - "" » »•—5S5S bf mS' m “IS A KTiSJ!
siaifDia
.By H. M. BAGGARLY
good).
Oil, coal, iron, other natural resources ARE
United Fund Drive
Reaches Half Goal
More County Fair Results
pAULSON POINTS OUT that our domestic pro- t^hn^ca^a^maM^rialdia^
r pkrms are tied m to our international pro- gM.^ow. be says^ it^i. ;_com.ng tl0n and £roces>ing unit will re-
changed our MAJOR source of NEW income,
agriculture, and as a result, he says we are today
bankrupt as a nation. He says the value of our
annual net income is less than the interest on the
private and public debt.
Agriculture accounts for 70 per cent of our raw
materials or new income. Our net agricultural in-
come- has risen only 8 per cent since 1952, while
the income of other segments of the economy has
risen 600 to 800 per cent!
ms*HEN WE CHEAT 71 per cent of our MAJOR
If source of NEW wealth, we are literally
sabotaging ourselves. _
Insiead of using our NEW wealth as the base
for establishing prices, we use such artificial bases
as labor, interest, corporate profits, and the like.
If a farmer received 100 per cent of parity for
what he produces, he could then pay his laborers
100 per cent *>f a fair wage, he could afford to pay
100 per cent of a fair price for his tractor — and
so it would be that everybody up the line could
afford to pay 100 per cent' of a far price. So says
Paulson.
When a farmer creates new wealth, It’s like
the tide rising in a harbor. Every ship ia the har-
bor rises with the tide But 'vhen labor, for ex-
ample. is singled out for a rise in pay, that doesn’t
au.omatically crea;? an across toe board hike in
income as happe ns viher the hike is applied to new
wealth.
|c|QWHERE DO WE SEE this theory in action
more vividly than here in lulia.
F ern about 1948 until 1952 Swisher farmers
were receiving 100 per cent of parity for what th»;y
rased. It was this money alone that kept the
wheels buzzing here in Tulia. It was our ONLY
sourc. of NEW wealth. And because the farmer was
gcttir.g 100 per cent of a fair price, everybody in
Tuiia was getting 100 per cent 'if a fair price for his
goods and services.
Then something happened.
Fann prices were allowed to drop under Ben-
on. a
. Farmers meekly asked for 90 per celt of par-
khr 90 per cent of a fair price. And today the
^ p/*rm is getting about “BO per cent of a fair price.
our international pro- !!«• Now, he says, it ls ^
fsiraw zjfssm rffi-s ES“iS5
labor. He says the “tree market” is immoral. ‘And the voices of the environ- Klaborating on the issue of en-
He blames American industrialists for moving orientalists are having an impact . ‘' . . K rtiu,.ator
plants to poar countries, exploiting cheap labor, on agriculture that stands to re- „w st“nd jn' 'danti<.r 0f hav-
He said what will work here concerning pay- shape the entire structure of the ’ • , bl ,..k thrown m
ing a fair price for our natural resources will industry.” S ^ath ’’ as agriculture develops
work on the international level If we pay the Dr Bertrand, who this year took jts p()tc-ntial to provide food and
impoverished countries a fair price, according to over duties as doan of the College sht.|t,.r and mat,y 0f th<« raw nia-
our standards, for their products, then they will be Agricultural Sciences, quoted UTials fl)r (.|othinr, and „,hcr things,
able to buy what we have to sell at our prices. Washington economists to the* of- Th, roadblock is coming in th.
Today they can't do it. feet that by 1980 agricultural pro- jOTm 0f stringent regulations and
So we either under produce or build up a sur- ducts quite likely will be the only restrictions fostered by “o v e r-
plus and they go hungry and unclothed. products in the U. S. which will Z(.a|(,us self-appointed protectors of
be competitive in world trade. the environment.”
AMI °* °°* B'6 Probk>ms ,oday is that the ,Tte u- SH £ ,annrn’ Harm has been done to the en-
W poorer countries cannot afford to import climate and the- technology to pro- vjnmm(,nt h(. sajd but * ,miy mj.
American products because our pricy is too high duce food for sale more efficiently nor dama(,e“ j,as bien caused by
and necessarily high due- to our wage scale and than any other major area in the aKrjcuiture “After all, it is the’
other production costs.
world.
agriculturalist who stands to lose
age. The facts do not sustain the
arguments.”
He said insecticides and herbi-
\
ft*1
1
A RESULT OF this short changng (X our
new wealth, the buying power of the farmer
has b«s n reduced so that many of our major in-
dustry are operating at about 60 per cent of car
pacin’, there Ls widespread unemployment, busi-
ness'profits are down, tlv- government is taking in
fewer tax dollars, ihe federal deficint is climbing—
and everybody sutlers.
It is ironic that industry Is operating at almost
the same percentage of capacity as the farmer is
getting fur his produce.
Or is it’
Here in Swisher our farm population has drop-
ped.
Paulson savs so simple' a thing as guaranteeing
a fair profit to those who produce NEW wealth
would reverse ilk' trend.
lift HAVE HEARD so much about the decline
W of the farm population — and it has de-
c linoil — the decline of farm representation in Con-
gress — and it has declined — that we tend to
under-sti mat the importance of agriculture.
Despite big oil and all the other producers of
°"TolL ^Tbe says.' J s»«M bring ibr J-SlnT JSjfSS
world price up to OUR level instead of trying to transportation systems intact and strcams. shifts in land use con-
keep it at a low level by exploiting their cheap functioning.” He places emphasis farming and better’ graz-
labor and their natu’al tesourccs. on “transportation , n managtment have reduced
A*AIM. WR SEE THE same thing in operation requ,ry(.d ^V^rima^1' Queers, f°and'hamTle agrkultuSl
right here in Tulia. If we were able to exploit Dean Bertrand points out, leaving du(.ts °
labor by paying 25c an hour and people had to 94 per cent of our pi>ople free to „The over7palou, txtremi.sts and
work at that price or starve, we might cut down do things that make life better .. DUOjnted environmental pro-
our payroUs considerably. but what would for us. These primary prettacers £fi0rt£ThlS JSSH! firJS^
happen to thosi- new cars we hope to sell, all those provide gainful employment for 30 . f ,U,. Wjtbollt th,.
items found in the super markefs, all the other per cent of the nation’s popula- fac(s ,, Bertrand said “Thcv have
things we hope to sell to Tulians? We’d have a tion who process, store and mark- pjaj^.d (hat agriculture’s use of
handful of m-ople who became rich as a result of et agricultural products. insecticides and herbicide and fer-
this chc-ap labor, but thi’re would be more poor The Tech dean pays tribute to .j.. is dome permanent dam-
people than the handlul of rich. And this handful the revolulion in mass communi- nnz ,s-ao"g- Pemawm aa!n
of rich would neither need nor buy all that we cations which has resulted in ordi-
wuuld hav* to sell to stay in business. nary people all over the world re- ^ ^aiu 11W.V,IVIMC- OIlu
On the other hand, what would happen to the cognizing the importance of agri- cidt.s are now |arm.|y sjyorf jjv<.d
steel industry, the implement manufacturers, the culture and “its race with the an(J bio-dcgradeable. The shift to
automobile industry, and all the rest, if the farmer empty plate.” Agriculture as a re- or„anjC pho-phates away from
was getting parity, or a fair price, for what he pro- suit is gaining support - “Even (hllinnat,,d hydrocarbons largely
duces? the environmentalists are removed the basis for criticism.
■PURINA OUR LUSH vears following World War nlnR ,ec(HIniz!‘ imiKirt.ince T(v> phosphate residin' is quickly
QURNIO OUR LUSH years following World Mar °, protection agriculture.” fixed by the soil and goes no-
II, who cau-ed Tulia merchants to prosper. Dr. BiTtrand, in a recent discus- vvhere unless soil erosion occurs.
Was it the patronage of th** handful of Syria her ~~^ “““ Except in isolated cases, ground
County miiliiaaires and wealthy farmers. . .or __ water has not been contaminated
was it the masses of salaried people, small mer- llAQr hQITOr »'lh nitrates, he said,
chants, and wage earners. Tlk* greatest responsibility rest-
A RNOLD PAULSON represents a school of eco- ^J^/readero whaTyoS saw f mu °" agribusiness is to “set the
A .. . , . , . . _ mK y°ur reaoirs wnai you saw ii r,,cord straight” and to convince
nomics that up to now has not been given you get out and visit W R Stock- lh. nl.b1i.. rnd th4> reeulitinc a-
much of a hearing. Only recently has he gained ett’s farm near Wayside. He sur- mj,s ,ha, agri,ulture can prie
an audience in high plates in Washington. vived the drouth on his dry land d||(,(. wjth t() tho cnviron-
And m recent days he has been summoned to farming — has beautiful sorghum . hllt ,h.lt Jit mu<t ^ m,r.
Washington to help find a solution to some of these right alongside a conventionally mjtt,.’d t0 the changes re-
seri2“ problems. farmed section of drouth stunted (|Ujr.d jp an orderly fashion and
The basic need is some method writereby those sorghum — same soil, same eleva- ni|( j_ panj(.
who produce new wealth by developing our natural tion — about as near a controlled ,)(.«><iict that agriculture will
resources can be guaranteed 1(H) per cent of parity, demonstration as can get outside <llrvi '. thu revolution ind con-
This is not asking for handouts. It is not asking an Ag college. The contrast is up- . . thrj. jn th s b.s.aus<.
for more than one’s share. It would not hike the lifting - shows such hope for th<. othpr segments of thi- economy
government deficit. It is simply asking for the dwindling water supjilie*. in th„ s .mfi W(lr|d afford
farmer and other agriculturists, including the cat- He irrigated his corn once; his " d„ without us”
tleman, that which labor and industry is already neighbors four or five times. ^
getting. And this equity would actually benefit Emgdio Ramos has been moved
labor, business and the other segments of the off of two farms because he built
economy by creating full employment and more the yields up so much his land-
customers. lords decided they wanted to farm
With the farmer getting parity for what he pro- again — he's still somewhere near
duces, there would then be no necessity for soil Happy. He got 80 tons of toma-
banks. no gov* rnment subsidies, because the far- toes per acre, photographed by
mer would be getting a fair price. Soil Conservation Service if you
Our present so - called subsidies are designed remember a Sunday Amarillo fea-
to help offset the present inequities brought about turc story on him
by the agriculturist’s inability to set his price While at Stockett's he'll probably
as does labor and business. fill your trunk with the most de-
He raises his gram or cattle, paying what lk-'ous watermelons and cantalou-
somebody demands for the seed, what somebody P*** y°u h , Koa, J!
There are two kinds of men in
this world: nt< n of words and men
of deeds.
•
“Let not action precede thought,”
or in simple words we might say
“think before you act.”
YOUTH CLOTHING
Senior Best Dress
1st, Terri White,
Senior School Dress: 1. Z a n e
Stark; 2. Terri White.
Skirt: 1. Terri White
Blouse: 1. Deborah Gilleland; 2.
Terri White.
Other Articles: Terri White, 1st;
Deborah Gilleland, 2nd.
Pants Suit: 1. Deborah Gilleland,
2. Terri White.
YOUTH FLOWERS
Flower Arrang ments • Den -
Dried or Veg.
1. Jodi Foster
Miniature: 1. Jeanne Park* r
Others: 1. Bo Foster
Dining Room - fresh: 1. Jodi
Foster
Perennials - others: 1. J o d i
Foster
Bulbs • Dahlia (miniature): 1.
Angie Stark
Bulbs, Tubers, Etc. Dahlia (me-
dium): 1. Angie Stark; 2. Angie
Stark
Roses - large hybrid tea: white
ribbon - Angie Stark; Jodi Fos-
ter
Red ribbon - Lisa Payne
Roses - miniature: red ribbon,
Jeanne Parker
Unusual cut flowers * annuals:
blue ribbon - Deborah Gilleland;
Red ribbon - Gary Gilleland;
white ribbon - Jodi Foster.
Annuals - cosmos: Blue ribbon-
Jodi Foster.
YOUTH PHOTOGRAPHY
Still life: 1 Kim McCasHn
\nimal" - black & white: 1. Joyce
Miller: 2/ Gay Venhaus; 3.* Chris
ty McCaslin
Land apes - black A white: 1
Dwayne McCune; 2 Kim McCas
lin 3 Christy McCaslin.
Buildings - black & white: 1
Dwayne McCune; 2. Kim McCas^
lin 3. Gay Venhaus.
People - color: 1. Kim McCaslin
2. Bo FosW: 3 Nancy Keim.
Animals - color: 1. Dayna Ven-
haus; 2. Jodi Foster; 3. K i m
McCaslin
Landscapes - color: 1. Bo Fas-
ter: 2. Kim McCaslin. 3. Jodi Fos-
ter.
Buildings - color: 1. Bo Foster;
2 .1 idi Foster.
Knlorgt relents - black & white:
1. Nancy Keim: 2. Dwayne Mc-
Cun ; 3 Mike Delluge.
YOUTH DROP COOKIES
1. Gay Venhaus; 2. Janis Vine-
yard: 3. Wayne Reed
YOUTH
Corn Bread: 1. Carla Venhaus
Quick Loaf Breads: 1. Janis Vine-
yard: 2 Aaron Parker.
Banana Bread: 1. Marcus Ver-
melro; 2. Lisa Payne; 3. Dayna
Venhaus
Brownies: 1. Lisa P a y n e; 1.
Refrigerator Cookies: 1.
Wade Littlefield; 2. Nancy Woods;
3. I.r-a Payne
Rolled Cookies: 1. Aaron Parker:
2 I.isa Payne: 3. Nancy Woods
Otht r Breads: 1. Jodi Foster; 2.
Janis Vineyard
Fruit Pies: 1. Denise Reed; 2.
Dana Reed: 3. Lisa Payne
Pecan Pies: 1. Dana Ri'ed: 2.
Dtnis' ReeA, 3. Dayna Venhaus
NEW wealth, still 70 per cent of all NEW wealth .-demands for the fertllixer and insect killer, paying what_ Sftwkelt has done is
comes from agriculture — and agriculture is the ........
only gift of nature that isn’t depletable (we can’t
find this word in the dictionary, but !t sounds
Dear Editor
taxes he is assess’d, paying the dealer’s price for c**
a tractor or combine. . then takes his produce seed, ran affnrU to do. (lod Buster
to market and asks. “W'hat will you give me’” lor th*‘ 'hfiseycar lasting appltca-
_____ _ _ tion in ynur area is an investment
of only $10 or $11 an acre.
The same thing has be. n demon-
by Wayne
by Ray-
ers from Austin. Allan Shivers was on the senator in 19A4 but the
in Amarillo several years ago and U. S. News had a poll in it showed strated~for five* years
rsjpsM ssrss rsxss*
is nr-l « ztvs. tsjtsm wspai'saass! sssss zs&’z&.'i
Can von ffiSSw'SSSfroS «» " »» rould not win any raco anymnrw. \ p,,,*.). and is Mk cfmonitra-
Canyon tha. never ex stea irmn » |rt ba(.w a hell of a lot friend told me he was at the show Ld , n.a||v hr* seal bv Don
^ "qr m ^ «
they i.uiun state pnnung oiw--L R<,n Barnes was thpre He sald tn hag f()Un(J j( h|),h|y profltab|e t0
his ojiinion the crowd was not too appjy more than 300 tons of Clod
enthused with the lieutenant gov- Bu-ter — has 500 acres to go to
ernor- get it on all of his farm land
Thomas Thompson stated Barnes vviiidi he told me Labor Day he’d
belonged to the establishment and do fau
was tied to Lyndon and John. And Photo is Banana squash Mrs.
that the younger voters did not take stockett grew,
to him. I was all out for Ben Yours for better, cleaner farm-
Barnes until I saw proof how that
he will be Johnson and Connally’s
boy. He made too dam many trips LEL.VND B. TAYLOR
to see John. John calls the shots for 701 Madison NE
him. Albuquerque, N. M.
As one editor in Quotable Quotes
DIAMOND HORSESHOE DINNER THEATRE
Announce*
1972 SEASON TICKETS
on sole now throuqb December 31 st
Purchase before November 30th
and have the chance to win
a New Year s Eve foe two.
EIGHT WONDERFULLY FUNNY PLAYS
EIGHT DELICIOUS STEAK DINNERS
DANCING ON WEEKENDS
to keep you in a holiday mood all year long
Season Tickets are $50.00 eoch
Good Any Night Tuesday Through Saturday
Except New Year s Eve
For Further Information Call 352-2782 Collect
or write 7701 Canyon Drive, Amarillo 79105
White Layer Cake: 1. Lisa Payne
Yellow Layer Cake: 1. Lisa
Payne
Chocolate Cake: i. Lrsa Payne;
2. LaRae Sims.
Pound Cake: 1. Lisa Payne; 2.
Carla Venhaus; 3. Deana Finck
Novelty Cake: 1. Lisa Payne;
2. Marcus Vermeire; 3. Deana
Finck
YOUTH CANNING
Whole Corn: Shan Culwell, 1st
Snap Beans: 1. Dana Reed; 2.
Denise Rted; 3. Nancy Keim.
Shell Beans: 1. Jeanne Parker;
2. Aaron Parker
Black-eyed IVas: blue ribbon,
Nancy Keim; Aaron Parker; Jean-
m Parker.
Red Ribbon, LaRae Sims, Jodi
Foster, Shan Culwell, Dee Nix.
White ribbon: Dee* Nix
Tomatoes: Shan Culwell, 1st
Tomatoe Juice: 1. Shan Culwell
Peaches: Jeanne Parker; 2. Aa-
ron Parker
Sour & Dill Pickles: 1. Denise
Reed; 2. Jodi Foster; 3. Dana
Reed; 4. Dayna Venhaus
Sweet Pickles: 1. Marcus Ver-
meire; 2. Jodi Foster; 3. Jeanne
Parker; 4. Aaron Parker; 5. Lisa
Payne.
Beet Pickles: 1. Jodi Foster; 2.
Marcus Vermeire
Bread & Butter Pickles: 1. Dana
Reed; 2. Denise Reed; 3. Sara
Miller; 4. Jodi Foster
Other Pickle- & Relishes: 1. Da-
na Reed; 2. Denise Reed, 3. Sher-
ry Vineyard.
Strawberry Preserves; 1. Twila
Stark
Peach Preserves: 1. Denise Reed
2. Dana Reed.
Plum Jelly: 1. Twila Stark; 2.
Jodi Foster
Grape Jelly: 1. Danny Finch;
2. Chris Finch; 3. Denise Reed;
4. Dana Reed
YOUTH CLOTHING
Junior 13 & Under
Junior Dress: 1. Nancy Woods;
2 Andrea Payne; 3. Sara Miller
Skirt: 1. Keila Cruce
Blouse: 1. Keila Cruce; 2. Chris-
tl Lovvorn; 3. Belinda White
Other: 1. Nancy Woods. 2. Be-
linda White; 3. Janice Vineyard
Pants: I. Belinda White; 2. Jodi
Foster; 3. Deana Finck.
In the Grade Horse Show Jan
Boggs showed th«- champion mare
and Mark Rogers had the reserve
champion.
Brad Bradley showed the champ-
ion gelding and Denise Davis show-
ed the reserve champion. Wayne
Reed placed third: Sharon Stark,
fourth: Sherry Vineyard fifth and
Forrest Mote sixth.
•
Patroniie Herald advertisers!
Two of Grid ...
(Continued from page 1)
listed as Mystery Merchant one or
more times last week. They are
First National Bank, Littlejohn -
Vaughn Agency, Smith Furniture
& Appliance, Mid - Plains Tele-
phone, City Drug, Wallace Funeral
Honk-. Workman Machinery, Pig-
gly Wiggly, Earl Cosby Motor Co.,
Bruce’s Grill, Fid Harris Lumber,
F”irst State Bank, Gale’s Texaco,
Intnan Welding Service, Tulia Cable
Televt-ion, Eunice Elevalor, Gib-
son’s Discount, Tulia Feed Lot,
Prairie Cattle A Grain, Houston
Filevator Co., Production Credit As-
aociation and The Tuba Herald.
Mthough most -qf the entries'took
Dalhart over Tulia, the winner
picked Tulia!
Tuba’s first annual United Fund
Drive has reached approximately
half of its $12,500 goal, according
to Charles Zeeck, fund chairman.
Merchants are being sobclted this
week.
Purpose of the united drive is to
eliminate the necessity for conduct-
ing separate drives during the
year. Citizens are given an oppor-
tunity to make a yearly pledge
and pay it in 12 monthly pay-
ments through bank drafts or to
give the total of what they would
ordinarily give to the various char-
ity drives conducted throughout the
year.
Success or failure of this first
drive will determine the future of
a united drive in Tuba.
•
Patronize Herald advertiser*!
Minit Man
Grocery
Open 7 Days Weekly
9 A.M. • 11:00 p.m.
N. Highway 87 995-3263
SILK
fiNiStf
Color
Snapshots
• f«U hit AMI
• *OIaA* fA*fH
• MU I ATM A tHAiMaf
OMtY FROM
Hi
KODACOLOR
SPECIAL
I
| Each roll of Kodacolor de-
veloped and printed in silk1
| finish at the special price of |
12oxp: $2.49 .
1 20 oxp. $3.49
I Free album page with each I
1 roll. Coupon must accom- ■
| pany order. 1
Coupon good Sept. 30, Oct.|
| 1 and 2.
Story From* &
. Comoro Shop
said a few weeks ago, he went to defeated. I see you are getting
Washington and picked up his or- quite a few new subscribers each
der signed, sealed and deliver- week. Keep up your good work,
ed As he announced for governor jf jt were not for Channel 7 and
when he came back. I will always you we would be in a hell of a fix
b lieve John C. told him not to fbj- fajr news coverage,
oppose John Tower. I also read Yours truly,
in one of the Amarillo papers a
few weeks ago that Lyndon asked JAMES L. HANCOCK
Briscoe not to enter the governor’s Box 814.
race as all the big raooey was go- Canyon, Texas
ing to Barnes. If Barnes is gov- -
ernor, it will be bought with mil-
lions like Bentsen seat in the Sen-
ate, six and a half million dollars.
It is my hopes that every candi-
date that is a Connally and John-
son boy is defeated. I hope Tom
Christian is elected again, and one
of Potter County representatives
elected again.
1 would like to see tke other one
SHED EXCESS
POUNDSI >
tUTT-HAN i
•4 Hoy a*
CITY DRUG
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Baggarly, H. M. The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 30, 1971, newspaper, September 30, 1971; Tulia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth506629/m1/4/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Swisher County Library.