The Rusk Cherokeean. (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 107, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 25, 1954 Page: 14 of 16
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Stc
An:
Committee Chairman Gives
:e Support Questions
"VI j
h 11!
ill
agreements Mill br1 availflblP for
1055 production, even under (he
new nd.jusl.iblp prire support plan?
Tli? answer is "Yes" says Claude
K. McCan, chairman of the state
ASC committee, who said this and
other questions about price sup-
ports under new farm legislation
are being nsked by farmers.
One common question, says Mc-
Can, is: "Do all basic crop price
supports drop to 82 and one-half
percent of parity for 1055?"
In answer to that, he said tí. S.
Department of Agriculture spokes-
men have emphasized that "There
is no basis in fact to the charge
that price supports would 'drop
out from under' basic agricultural
commodities" in 1955.
"Department spokesmen have
Anderson's Nursery
And
Greenhouse
ALTO, Tvxa*
•LANDSCAPE SHRUBS
•HOUSE PLANTS
Prescriptions
CHAPMAN
DRUG
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Coleman Lumber & Supply
f'h. 12 Rusk, Texas
«aid i hat 'necessary moderate ad-
justments will be made gradually
m l in lino with realities of the
supply situation," he explains. Un-
>¡cr existing law, supports on ba-
sic commodities can be set at or
Anywhere between 82 and one-
half and 90 percent of parity. Sup-
ports will depend on supplies of
'ho commodities involved, but now
th" picture for 1955 looks like
this:
Wheat -Supports have been set
at 82 and one-half percent of par-
ity. or a national average of $2.06
per bushel.
Rice—Under the present supply
situation, 1955 price supports
would be indicated at around 85
percent of purity, or possibly a
little less. However, if marketing
quotas are in effect next year,
lower production in 1955 could
reduce total supplies so that final
price support might be in the up-
per 80's.
Corn—Supports are expected to
be about 88 percent.
Peanuts -Sports «re Rxww'ted
to be at or very close to 90 per-
cent.
Cotton—Supports will remain
at 90 percent of parity.
Another recurring question, Mc-
Can says, has to do with price sup-
ports for 1955 small feed grains
such as oats, barley a n d grain
sorghums. He points out that Sec-
retary of Agriculture Benson re-
cently said no decision had yet
been made in connection with
small grains. Such u decision, he
said, would bo made only when
final crop reports are in, and aft-
er further study of the current
drouth.
Advice For The
Preservation Of
Venison Is Given
Antlereet buck, beware! A corps
of Texas hunters h a s taken t o
brush and mountainside,
Preservation of the meat after
the prii.e buck has fallen is the
practical side of deer hunting,
says R. E. Cullender, extension
wildlife management specialist.
Venison is a palatable substitute
for domestic animal and is proc-
essed similar to beef or lamb, say.
the specialist. \
Bleed and remove the viseen j
immediately after the animal is <
shot in the field, he says. Wipe |
the carcass dry with clean rags
and if the animal is shot badly
it's wise to wash the inside with
water first. In either case, dry the
carcass.
The animal should stay dry and
be cooled immediately. If cold
storage isn't available, prop open
the carcass and hang it from a tree
lo chill at night. During daylight
hours wrap the carcass in a tarp
or blanket and remove to a shady
spot, Cullender adds.
lie says transport the buck in-
side the car or in the trunk- not
on the fender next to the warm
engine. Wrap the carcass for pro-
tection, especially from flies.
The thick, plump rounds of the
carcass process the best. Cullen-
der says. The shoulder, neck and
lower portions of the ribs, when
boned, make good sausage.
If the processed meat must be
transported over long distunccs it
will keep better if frozen solid.
But, reminds Callender, frozen
meat must always be used soon
tter tiwwlng. - — -- -J
o-
The. Rusk C^cralct-ean, Rusl:. Texas
NOVEMBER 25, 1954
LOOKING
AHEAD
by Dr. Goorg* S. Damon
OMCtO* - NATIONAL
EDUCATION MOO RAM
Storey. Aflama
lha revolutionary goals which its
leaders have pushed forward
through every stage of its growth.
Since, in the final determination,
public opinion on the question of
coexistence will be the decisive
force in our government's action,
every citizen should examine for
himself the writings of Lenin, Sta-
lin and Malenkov.
They Proclaim
The following excerpts from of-
ficial writings and pronounce-
ments were supplied to mc by a,
department of our Federal govern-
ment. They are documented and
there can be no question of their
authenticity.
"As long us capitalism and so-
cialism exist, we cunnot live in
peace: in the end, one or the oth-
er will triumph — a funeral dirge
will be sung over the Soviet Re-
public or over world capitalism."
Lenin, the first Russian master of
world Communism, said this in a
speech to the Moscow Party Nu-
clei Secretaries, Nov. 26, 1920. He
stated it repeatedly in his writ-
ings und speeches.
"The object of the party is to
exploit all und any conflicting in-
terests among the surrounding
capitalist groups" and governments
with the view to the disintegra-
tion of capitalism." Joseph Stalin,
in Pravda, Aug, 28, 1021. "Who
will conquer whom? — that is the
question ... the world Is divided
into two camps — tha capitalist
camp, headed by Anglo-American
capital, and the socialist camp,
headed by the Soviet Union." Sta-
lin, May 9, 1925. And here is the
exposure of the Kremlin's present
"peace" or "coexistcnce" offen-
sive: "Revolutionary war of the
proletarian dictatorship is but, a
continuation of revolutionary peace
policy 'by other means'. Stalin, in
'These of the VI World Congress
of the Communist International,"
1928.
Malenkov Too
From Malenkov, thy newest mas-
ter of the world-wide Communist
conspiracy: "This task (of reach-
ing and overtaking the leading
capitalist states) in its turn is con-
ditioned by the impossibility of
| prolonged peaceful coexistence of
the Soviet state with capitalist
(state)." Published in Bolshevik,
November, 1926.
The ¡eccnt snocKing report on
Communist aggression, compiled
by five Republican and four Demo-
cratic Congressmen (House Report
No. 2650), after exhaustive investi-
ga! ions, made this ¡statement:
"The leaders of the Kremlin drink
a toast to coexistence. They ar-
dently hope that the free world
will adopt a policy of coexistcnce
Etta Sinftlctary
CHIROPRACTOR
Office East of Agriculture Ann«>
It ink.
with international Communism . .
all the evidence before our com-
mittee conclusively proves that
the Communists want time — not
to become civilized — but to di-
gest their gains and to mold their
millions of captive peoples into
willing slaves of greater aggres-
sion."
N<
A
S
The Butantan Institute near Sao
Paulo, South America, is a snake
farm where snake bite serum is
produced.
DR. F. W WOODWARD
OPTOMETRIST
r-
L
"yes Examined
Glasses Fitted
Hours 8;30 to 5
Rusk, Texas
To
is I
to
fal
—■mué
Special
Prices
ON
Used Cars
WE TRADE GOOD USED
CARS FOR
CATTLE
SEEÜS
BEFORE YOU
ny or Trad
THE RUSSIANS AND
"COEXISTENCE"
There is a disturbing undercur-
rent of speculation on foreign pol-
icy in the capital city of the Unit-
ed States of America. The specula-
tion is on whether our govern-
ment is toying with the idea of
adopting an attitude of "coexist-
ence" with the world-wide Com-
munist conspiracy centered in
Moscow. Such an attitude would
seem to be almost totally con-
trary to the foreign policy philoso-
phy of the Eisenhower administra-
tion which has help out "hope" to
the peoples enslaved by Commu-
nism.
Washington journalists suy that
two camps on foreign policy are
developing among the government
officials in Congress, t h e State
Department, the Defense Depart-
ment, und the White House. One
camp wishes, the reports say, to
maneuver our nation into a pos-
ture of coexistence with Commu-
nism — which would mean ac-
ceptance of Communism's eon-
quest and enslavement of nearly
half tho world's people; and, at
least in effect, tho ignoring of
world Communism's historic pur-
poses and goals.
The Practical Rtallty
Tho other camp wishes this na-
tion to stand up to the realities
of world Communism, to recog-
nize its true nature, divorce our-
selves from it in every way, and
resist its further advances across
the boundaries of those nations
still remaining free. Aside from
the great moral question involved
in a United States' attitude of co-
existence, there is the practical
reality of Communism's unques-
tioned, historic goal .
The writings of the leaders o£
Communism, since it made its
first conquest in Russia in 1917,
clearly show that Communism will
not accept co-existence with the
U. S. A. — except momentarily
to gain an advantage in its pri-
mary puntóse to destroy this last
citadel of capitalism. And its ev-
ery action through the pages of
recent history loudly proclaimed
its devotion to the credo and to
M A V I
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Whitehead, E. H. The Rusk Cherokeean. (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 107, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 25, 1954, newspaper, November 25, 1954; Rusk, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth150053/m1/14/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Singletary Memorial Library.