The Dublin Progress (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 68 TH YEAR, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, August 10, 1956 Page: 2 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Will It Stick?
+ EDITORIAL +
The Dublin Progress _ Friday, August 10, 1956
Soil Bank and the Drouth Farmer
In its clamor to relieve the bad situation of our na-
tion’s farmers through the recently adopted and inaugurat-
ed Soil Bank Program, the administration is all but by-
who needs help iW—the drouth
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passing the very farmer
Payments have already begun, for those who choose to
relieve surpluses by plowing under crops or letting potent-
ially productive soil remain idle. But, for the farmer whose
lonA refuses to grow crops because nature's water supply
has been temporarily withdrawn, very little help is forth-
coming.
The intent of the program passed this year bv Con*
gross is to base soil bank payments on normal production,
with the main purpose being elimination of surpluses.
A realistic interpretation of the measure would base
consideration on production from a normal 10-year period.
As it stands now, payments are being based on this season s
potential production. This leaves hundreds of drouth-
ridden Texas farmers out in the cold with a small token crop
failure sum, plus the right to graae their grassless land.
Are the drouth farmers whose crops failed to come up
relieving the surplus problem any less than those who set
aside productive land for the same purpose? Our parched
but otherwise fertile farms are just as idle as any soil
“banked" in producing areas this season.
The soil bank system should not reward a man for
plowing under a productive crop and then penalize a man
for having a crop failure. The results an? the same In both
eases. Neither produces a surplus of goods, if that’s what
DON'T G4^b
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Mora/ Iniquities
Some time ago Cameron Hawley, author of the cnor- an<, k»-*j
■ mously successful btmmm novel, “Cash Met'a 11, made a
Ulk before the Pennsylvania Bar Associatsm. It was en- Uu~*'1 n
titled "Our Tax Uws Make Us Dish.>nest." and was s very ^
unusual speech indeed as it attested by the fact that The poon
Saturday Evening Post broke a tong tradition agamst us- up mi
ing other-than-original material, and reprinted it- **»mwn«_
Mr. Hawley observes, as have many others, that there
an grave financial inequities in our U% system But he ^7^*^
goes not belabor that point. He writes "What is apparently wo--.- ^ “
1«M obvious, but in my view even more important, is the
plain fact that our Federal tax structure is responsible for
a progressively more and more serious deterioration of the
moral and ethical standards of a substantial segment of our
ettbenery. To me. the financial inequities of the tax struc-
* tore are far outweighed by moral iniquities that it encour
Mr. Hawley specifically describe* how tmntnessea and
g ^dividual* have found way* to take advantage *rf the tax
Ihwn and. to avoid payment of taxro These stratagem* may
be iagal.....but. in Mr Hawley's view, they are ethically and
morally wrong, and lead to “the eroding of our traditional
|5p node of commercial morality."
No stronger reason could be advanced for a complete
overhaul erf that system For. to quote Mr. Hawley again.
* . . there is one truism that history teaches us-- when law
loves its respect for the individual, the individual lose* hi*
respect for the law.’*'
Bible Commgnt
Peace of Soul
Is Reward for
Righteous Life
'I'ltKRt it Murk IS id* Out
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Tha rrtonte «f «s a«4 samite
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.ready vuhuns.
Hs* dHtwrsal to Cw way <t
U,« ri«mm*M. and haw aril tt>-«
far Mm
and JUV
Then tw touts to get
Trip Insurance
For around th* dock cos*
era#* wtrit* m your trip,
•rhrw-ver you go, tnp mm*
dent and pstwonal effect*
««»ur»;ww give* you com-
plete p*’oto*tk*i tor.yM
and rmt tomfljr Ut t«
ahow you h«r ht»W thia
Prayer for the week
O God, who declare*! thy almighty power chiefly in
mowing mercy and pity, mercifully grant unto ua such *
measure of thy grace that we. running the way of thy com-
pmuidments, may obtain thy gracious promise*, and be made
partakers of thy heavenly treasure; through Jesus Chnst
Shop with e*
... shop will
Confidence!
LmUtmwmi
Insurance Agency
iM
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Jackson, Albert S. The Dublin Progress (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 68 TH YEAR, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, August 10, 1956, newspaper, August 10, 1956; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth592688/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.