The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 331, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 30, 1929 Page: 4 of 16
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M ‘ C- '
Co-operative Plan !
Endangered By Farm
Relief Experts Say
_ «i» ..—....
YAKIMA. Wash. May 30—Co-
operative growers would do well to
scrutinize the present movement
lor legislation along the line of
farm relief according to J. W. He-
bert. general manager of the Yak-
ima Fruit Growers' association. In
discussing this subject of the Big
Y Bulletin. Mr. Hebert said:
"In these days when cooperative
marketing is being laid down as
the fundamental basis on which
farm relief Is predicated by con-
gress and all those who have this
matter in hand from President
Hoover down. It behooves the ex-
isting successful cooperative asso-
ciations to 'Stop. Look and Listen*
before endorsing the type of legis-
lation which is being proposed.
Wholesale credits to cooperatives
which may be formed under the
stimulus of government aid and
with the mistaken ides that by
some peculiar legerdemain sur-
pluses will be absorbed without de-
pressing markets may or may not
be a good thing for existing co-
operatives which have by hard ex-
perience finally established them-
selves firmly In the commercial
activities of their respective indus-
tries.
"Are we to have a mushroom
crop of hot-house cooperat ives
most of which must eventually fail
is a question we may well ask our-
selves. If so. is It a good thtng for
the advancement of the co-opera-
tive movement? Or does it hold a
grave danger of setting back this
great economic agricultural de-
velopment which is slowly but sure-
ly winning Us way? To discredit
the cooperative form of organiza-
tion in the eyes of the business
world by numerous failures would
be a serious thing: to discredit it
in the eyes of the producers would
be fatal.
"Even now with the government
departments lending their influence
to furthering the cause of coopera-
tives. with state and national legis-
lation ind the courts favoring and
fosterirg the movement with the
United States Chaniber of Com-
merce and industrial and educa-
tional leaders throughout the
country endorsing the plan of-col-
lective marketing for agriculture
we still have a great part of the
public rho look upon cooperative
marketing as somethink akin to
socialism or at best something
which isn't just right.
"Where do they get this idea?
Probably from the wide publicity
which is given to every mistake or
failure which occurs in the coopera-
tive field and probably because the
private corporation is accepted ev-
erywhere and glorified as the one
way of doing business successfully—
or both. The cooperative being a
semi-public institution is constant-
ly placed in the limelight by the
daily press—usually in an unfavor-
able light if the publisher is
schooled in the old order of things
as is mast likely
“The public and the dailv giress
lightly overlook the fact that 95
per cent of private enterprises fail
within a short time although they
have more than a century of ex-
perience in corporation methods to
profit by and the average corpora-
tion only attains a dividend paying
basis after seven years of opera-
tion.
"While public opinion is an im-
portant factor and it takes courage
and a fighting spirit at times for
the struggling co-onerative to carry
on in the face of it. the respect
of the grower for his co-operative
is even more essential to Its suc-
cess. Without the high regard of
the producer for his co-operative
organization or his respect for this
method of marketing no coopera-
tive can succeed or probably even
be organized in an antagonistic or
indifferent community. And no co-
operative can rse higher than th»
common level of the respect of Its
membership.
"Congress can legislate a thou-
sand co-operatives into temporary
existence which Is just the begin-
ning but It cannot make them suc-
ceed even with the wealth of the
United States government behind
them Too much credit is as often
destructive to economic endeavor as
too little Experience and a trained
personnel and th» adoption of
sound business principles which
have proven thslr worth in private
business are as essential in co-
operative marketing as in corpora-
tion systems of trading for a pro-
fit on dollars invested in capital
stock.
"The existing successful co-opera-
tive organizations which have be-
come strong only as a result of
long years of experience and pains-
taking work and after many trials
and tribulations have cause to
watch the trend of farm relief
legislation now pending with no lit-
tle concern lest we have another
•surplus* In this ease of coopera-
tives so-called whose uncertain
tenure of life may prove a menace
to the great economic agricultural
movement of which they are the
pioneers.
"The government virtually washes
Its hands of all responsibility and
passer the buck to the cooperative
association by giving them $500.-
000.000 with which to stabilize the
industry. If they fail as probably
they will for the provisions of the
law go against established economic
laws the cooperative movement
will bear the odium of that failure.
“They will fail because the gov-
ernment has laid down in the law
provisions which in fact say that
the government fund? shall be
used to buy surpluses and sell them
presumably at a profit on the do-
mestic and foreign markets prefer-
ably on the foreign markets. The
inevitable result will be that prices
must be stabilized at a figure that
will dispose of the surpluses which
means that the price for the entire
production must of necessity seek
the level fixed by the stabilization
corporations for the surpluses.
‘The ridiculous feature of the law
is the provisions that they shall not
be fixed so high as to be objection-
able to the consumer and yet high
enough to return a profit to the
producer if the trouble Is over-
production brought about by exten
FORMER - FUTURE I
I
Flashes of Life
(By The Associated Press.)
(By The Associated Press0 j
NEW YORK —John D. Rocke- j
feller desires to handle his Swiss j
great-grandchildren on his knee. To
Max Oscr and Mrs Mathilde Rocke- ■
feller McCormck Oser. now visiting]
New York he has sent a telegram ]
of welcome expressing the wish that
they and Anita 4 and Peter. 2. visit ]
him soon.
ARUNDEL. Eng —Nobility ten- j
ants and townsfolk Joined today in j
a great fete at Arundel Castle Jn ]
celebration of the 21st birthday of j
Bernard Marmaduke Fitzlan-How-
ard. sixteenth duke of Norfolk. Pre-
i mier Peer. Earl Marshal hereditary
! marshal and chief butler of Eng-
; land. For a week there will be!
! celebrations centering in the castle. J
which dates from the time of the
i Norman conquest.
BOONTON. N J —Whether or j
not anv man is a hero to his valet i
Thomas A. Edison is one to his
secretary sometimes railed his
“prime minister.” William H
Meadowcroft. the wizard's rieht
hand man for 48 years has Just cele- j
hrated his 76th birthday. He says
that dailv he is thrilled bv Edison’s
wonderful personalitv. fertility of
thought and tireless persistence;
his Job is a constant source of pleas-
ure and mental enjoyment.
NEW ORLEANS—If policemen
must have their faces powdered or-
ders are that It shall b» done pri-
vately end not in public places.
Julius O. Relngart has been fined
six davs pav because a woman used
a rieintv pink puff on him at a soft i
drink stand.
GRADE ‘A’ DAIRYMEN
WILL MEET THURSDAY
"1 ' _
A meeting of all grade “A” dairy-
I men in Cameron county has been
called for Thursday night by R C.
Graham county sanitarian. The j
meeting will be held at the city
hall beginning at 8 p. m.
Matters of particular nterest to ;
dairvmen of this class will be dis- !
mssed. Graham stated He urges
that all fce present that can possi- [
bly attend.
■-- “ !
sive use of farm machinery then
to increase credits on a wholesale
basis will simply act to further In-
crease production and aggravate [
the situation. The whole scheme ;
is in effect on attempt to have the |
farmer pull himself out olthe mire
by his boot straps.
“In spite of the fact that practi-
cally every co-operative organize- j
tion in the states of Washington
and Oregon and all the large fruit1
interests of the Northwest are op-
posed to having apples included in ;
the bill and have expressed their :
wishes most emphatically to repre- 1
sentatives in congress and in spite
of the fact that they have gone j
on record opposing the stabilization J
features of the bill nevertheless |
the senate voted by an overwhelm- j
ing majority aginst taking apple? ]
out of the bill. In other words the 1
apple industry is to have this bill ;
crowded down its throat whether It
wants it or not."
HOT CHECKS
Every merchant receives his share j
of hot checks. Some get their money
out of them . . . others do not. As
collection specialists we are capable
of obtaining the money from any
hot checks you may hava on hand.
We are rendering this sendee to
clients in all sections of the Valley.
Our charges are not high. Let us
go into the matter with you. Na-
tional Collection Agency. Harlingen.
Texas. Over the First National
Bank. Phone 63L W. B. Read
j Manager.—Ada.
1032-34-36 Elizabeth Street — Brownsville j
We Serve You Best
and Save You Most^
*
t_ With Dependable Values
A Feature Value
26 Pieces of Silverware I
in the Grace Pattern
^ /^\ rm»
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Consists of: Opportunity
The homemaker or gift
6 Tea Spoons 8ecker ^ "****•
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o 1 able 2>poon» ^ wirr to ■ plciit tit of
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6 Dinner Forks 25 Year
Sugar Shell Gu*r*ntet Certifleet*
Gutter Knife _ jriflk etch Mi
“Gladio” Percale
A Favorite
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I - s
It comes in pretty patterns
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■
White Batiste
Mercerized
Sheer and dainty for sum-
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Dimity Check
For Dainty Undies
Always popular for cool
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A Dependable Muslin
36 inches bleached and 3!
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A dependable household staple
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For chanting colorful sun-
nier hangings ... for gay
protectors of upholstered furni-
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for porch cushions I Delight-
ful patterns . . . yard—
_15c. to 49c
Silk Hose
For Men
Silk leg mercerised top toe
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40/
Absorbent I
Be tore yoa hsve >Wy for
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What Better for Summer Wear than—
White Shirts
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thusiastically than ever 'this Jki* Wg
being stylish ours sre distinctive for
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The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 331, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 30, 1929, newspaper, May 30, 1929; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1380798/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .