The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 11, 1937 Page: 7 of 8
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1937
THE PADUCAH POST
Page Seven
OUR RURAL HOME and FARM PAGE
FARM RELIEF BILL EXPECTED TO
BE PUT INTO EFFECT EARLY NEXT
YEAR; MARVIN JONES IS JOCKEY
The following article taken
from the Star-Telegram, and writ-
ten by their special correspondent
in Washington, is of timely in-
terest to every cotton farmer in
the South:
An only partially quieted and
rested Congress will return to the
capital next week to face the per-
ennial and most difficult problem
of them all—farm relief,
Although the Senate and House
Agricultural . Committees have
been working on a farm relief
bill, which Congress solemnly
promised the Nation and the
President before adjournment last
August, final agreement on a
new agricultural control program
today appears as far away as it
di,d at that time.
If you are a gambler, however,
you could probably not get bi t-
ter than even money against final
enactment of a bill which will
meet general approval and be put
into effect early next year.
The bettors here realize the
horse is a long shot, but they are
banking on his jockey to bring
him in. The man who will be
riding that bill front the day the
special session opens Nov. 15 until
the President signs it some weeks
later will be Representative Mar-
vin Jones of Texas chairman of
the House Agricultural Commit-
tee.
Enjoys High Respect
For seven years Washington
and the farmers of the Nation
have watched Jones whip and push
farm bills around the legislative
race track. He has been returned
the winner, often on the longest
shots, so many times that the few
losers are buried in the records.
Today the Texan enjoys the
highest respect and confidence of
the farmers, the Administration
and his colleagues. It is generally
conceded here that if anyone can
is the fact that the majority of
the acts carry in their bodies the
marks of his ideas and work.
Jones is no colleke agricultural
theorist. He learned about the
problems of the farmer as a boy
living on a typical American farm,
as a young tenant farmers and
later as a farm owner. What he
did not learn through actual ex-
perience, he has acquired through
the closest association with the
farmers themselves.
He eats, sleeps and lives with
the hope of eventually placing
the American farmer on the fi-
nancial level of the American
business man. When Congress is
in session, he works night and
[day. When it is out of session,
he is traveling through the agri-
Meat Supply Expected Be Much Larger
In 1938; Shortage That Now Exists Is
Due To 1936 Drouth—Secretary Wallace
Secretary Henry Wallace said
Wednesday of last week that the
meat supply situation and factors
behind it demonstrate the value
and necessity of the over normal
granary principle.
He pointed out that the total
supplies of meats, excluding poul-
try, are expected to be larger in
1938 than this year and added
that the smaller meat supply thi-
Fewer Eggs To Be
Marketed in 1938
Accordng Bureau
cultural areas, either in his own [year has been a hang-over effect
State or those near by, talking. ‘
arguing and watching the troubles
at first hand.
Three Primary Causes
He believes the ills of the farrn-
|er can be traced to three pri-
mary causes. They are (1) high
protective tariffs on industrial
goods without equalizing benefits
for agricultural products; (2) im-
proper and inadequate credit fa-
cilities for the average farmer;
and (3) unjust and prejudiced
freight rates which have prevent-
ed the farmers from marketing
their products at a reasonable
profit.
Impression or not, Jones feels
that the farm income can never
Prices of chickens and eggs will
be higher the early part of next
year than in the same time of
U37, the Bureau of Agricultural
Economics announced Friday in
the outlook for the poultry in-
of the 1936 drought.
As in 1935, following unpre- j dustO’-
cedented drought, nearly all the j Heavy production of broilers
reduction in supplies this year I this fall and winter was forecast,
J tU., . Lilt tn»j Kuraaii ctiirl nricnc
..no dust no ashes
heater is not only troublesome, dirty and
messy, but it is actually unhealthful.
Give your family clean, healthful, safe
heat by installing a Sun Flame Oil Burn-
ing Heater. Here's a heater that is eco-
nomical to operate. It bums low priced
fuel oil and is built to deliver the heat
to your rooms rather than to waste it up
the chimney. Come in and investigate.
We have a size to meet your needs.
Sun. Flams
Oil Burning Heater
bring1 order and legislation out of , . , . . . -
the chaotic conflict of opinion 1 )e ^ a parity with industry
upon the farm question that exists I un*“ these three causes can be
..... corrected. He has seen the ne-
Ends Aching
Sore Muscles
For longer lasting, quicker relief, use
Ballard’s Snow Liniment which contains active
ingredients to give a more than local action,
thus bringing a surge of warmed blood to
scatter congestion and more quickly soothe
away the pain from aching muscles, sprains,
strains, backache and lumbago. Ballard’s
Snow Liniment. 30c and 60c.
Big:..till !>rug Co. and other drug
stoio%
today, it will be Jones.
Although this quiet, soft-spok-
en man who has spent the greater
part of his life in Congress, will
he the key figure of the special
session, he is not as widely known
as many a lesser person in public
life.
There are two very real reas-
ons for this. Jones, since he as-
sumed the chairmanship of the
committee in 1930 on the eve of
the depression which hit agricul-
ture even harder than industry,
has been working so steadily and
Home
Demonstrations
By Hattie Tacker
was in pork and the better grades; hut the bureau said that prices
of beef, since hogs and fat cat-! '•'’ill not be correspondingly de-
tle depend mostly upon grain for; pressed, since there is a small
feed. ’ Supplies of lamb and the j supply of other meats,
lower grades of beef have been Above average storage stocks
reduced very little since the pro- of poultry were forecast for the
duction of these meats is not so [first half of 1938 because of the
dependent upon grain. , heavy summer carryover of poul-
Top Grade Supply Short [try storage stocks in 1937—but
In a press statement analyzing smaller.stock than in 1937.
factors responsible for high meat ‘ lZf. °{ laying tlocks Will reach j
prices, Mr. Wallace said: a cyd.cal low point in 1938; rate
I of egg production per hen m 1938
During the last two months expected to be less than in
much emphasis has been placed marketings will be
on the very high top prices tor; ]ess
cattle, as high as $19.90 per 100 i Y. ,
pounds at Chicago. This tells,, 1 he bureau expects a morel
only part of the story. The supply favol'able .*r lrrtion of feed prices
of top grades has been consider-!l" "*f Wcea »’ ^ 5 a8
ably larger than average. This Pared with early 1937 and an in-'
has caused the spread between I the spring hatch as[ com-
the top price of finished cattle I',ared with the spring of 1937.
and the general run of cattie to i A marked increase in the froz-
be the widest on record. The j on egg industry in recent years
record shows that the average ! was noted, as well as new develop-
price paid for all cattle slaughter- [ ments in poultry marketing. More
ed at Chicago .during September full-drawn poultry is being mark-
as only $7.50. J cte,d and many retail stores are en party.
“Most cuts of pork have been|poultry parts—breasts,; Miss lacker gave a discussion
somewhat higher than during cot- jle2s’ back> win^s and tbe llke- | showing the importance of daily
broadest and most liberal credit responding months last year and' “Breaking up the retail pack-j nutrition per person, including
facilities for farmers in history [not greatly different from prices [age into smaller parts may make | leafy vegetables, starchy vege-
. , • . • * * : 1 n.in nni. ___ .it. ' . . if t li n iivaro rrn oAnrn m nn**r>V>o
MOWREY FURNITURE CO.
SATISFIED
PATIENTS
cessity for emergency crop con-|oaly Part the story. The supply
trol and other legislative action
because of the depression and un-
usual crop conditions during the
past few years an,d has generally
gone along with the Administra-
tion program. But throughout
the emergency, he has not lost
sight of the primary ills which
he hopes can be cured before
many years roll by.
The Farm Credit Administra-
tion as it stands today, with the
NORTH WARD CLUB MEETS
The North Ward home demon-
stration dub met with Mrs. M. W.
Bragg Wednesday afternoon at 2
o’clock.
A short business session was
presided over by Mrs. Zana Sand-
erson, vice president. A short
period was devoted to recreation
including reports of the Hallowe’-
Iarge part of its existence' >n 1929. 'The smaller supply of'the average consumer’s purchase | tables, fruits and meats.
___ rr> l „ i ... 1 1 1 ■ ,1 1 , • 1 1 1 I /•>»« Ktlf ;*1 f Un lnn» n i »- , .• I nil 111 P<1 f 1 11 (r 11'' I C til ■ 1 / I
so hard that he has had very lit-1 owes
'ight^He^lso^eliberatelv shuns Ito Jones**" The ^‘ fu”nd*'whlch'pro-! pork “may be directly attributed smaller but in the long run it is The meeting was made complete
pubheity and the limelight wWch I vide’d the mo"ey for the present | to the billion bushel drop in the Probable that this consumer serv- with lovely refreshments of hot
naturally atUehes to his' posHion! the! coTsumTSve^VS c^’o^iooUmeS'T* * m°r? ^°Ia^...Uth. murshn.allows and
ar"dP without0 tanf areW°rbeHeving jan, “dment s^cureifTy'* Jones ' “ com cropP“ ° blower-income
can secure greater results.
No Farm Theorist
[and Senator Connally to the Farm1
j Act of 1935 putting aside a por-1
f 1 An ..11 i. . ‘ 1* /* *
Lamb Supplies Larger
“Supplies of lambs have been
small-family and cake served to the following
groups,” the bureau Mesdames Zana Sanderson, J. Q.
report concluded. Xinr'' “ ^ ”*
Tion nf nil + * " .......w supplies oi lanius nave ueeu 1
Jones is no college agricultural t- ^a'tan“ revenue to aid,larger this year, and prices have:I oHon ( Onfm
expoitation of agricultural been only slightly above last year, CAM.IU11 V^UIJtllUl
knowledge of agriculture and its j “le. , e*P°rtat'on
problems with an ability to con- SUIP"*f®s' , land considerably’below the prices
vince aitd persuade his colleagues Jones n?.y?r, bls Plea for 0f 1929.
in Congress to perfect his formu- f 01 e eQu|tab e freight rates on, “The reduced supplies of the
:i of successful legislative riding, j but he faces better grades of cattle and beef!
Virtually every major farm act1 task of securing long and 0f hogs and pork this year,
which has been adopted in the i„Yf®T?ar0'J,s and decisions by the I as two years ago, was most pro-i
vast 6k> years bears his name joterestate Commerce Commission. I nounced during the summer and
in tile title. Rnf wir»m i mnr\t*+ onf tile past teW vears. hnwownt' . ..1__ x*_n n’t.: . . n/.i-in/l
Measure Is Much
Better For Farmer
The cotton control measure now
year’s livestock j being drafted by congressmen in
BE ENTERTAINED -
BE INFORMED -
READ
The Dallas
Morning News
“Texas’ No. 1 Newspaper”
Associated Press news service and
Wire-photos, seven days a week, bring
to readers of The Dallas News stories
and pictures from all over the world.
An unsurpassed editorial and report-
ing staff in Dallas and The News’ own
bureaus in Washington, Austin, Fort
Worth, Waco and East Texas give ad-
ditional local and State coverage.
Special writers deal with politics,
amusements, sports. Interpretation of
the news is found on a forceful edi-
torial page and in John Knott’s fa-
mous cartoons.
PLUS exclusive features of the
Big Sunday News:
ROTOGRAVURE Picture Section
“THIS WEEK” Colorgravure
Magazine
“AMERICA SPEAK S”—The
Weekly Poll of Public Opinion
_Clip Thi» Coupon_«oj_Maij_ToJ«y
But more important .V1 ule Past few years, however, Lariv fa]]. This is the period I
numberTf^ bas. .o«te«¥jla just before the year's livestock j ...
have favnveJ f„ffeVIS1°nf wblcb! production comes to market and Washington is expected to take
shinmenia ^cotton and wheat when meat prices are usually the [a different course in the reuue-
pro ducts ’ e as otber farm highest of the year. Since mid-Jtion of the acreage and the crop, y. than ...... 000 bushels nf I ’ "v .....------r' ’ i-vr "w”’ jT—
P 0dUCt3’ September, however, both live- according to preliminary reports from bpufJcer hose; Mts- L' KK- Wardlow,
stock and meat prices, have de- j drifting into.the fanning 4istricts. Xehxa originating in electors at
Instead of restricting the acre- Lubbock and Lamesa, have been
Price Of Milch
Cows Expected To
Be Higher In ’38
Conditions in the dairy indus-
try are likely to average better
in the next three years than dur-
ing the last four, the Bureau of
Agricultural Economics predicted
last week in its annual dairy out-
look report.
This is of interest to North and
East Texas farmers who the last
five years have turned to dairy-
ing in a diversified farm program
that promises increased income
annually. Several milk processing
plants, turning out cheese and
butter, have located in this region
and are buying all the milk sup-
plies produced by farmers in their
territories.
The bureau looks for rising
prices of milch cows in 1938 and
1939. It was further stated that
during the next two years, at'
least, the relation of feed prices
and other costs of production to
prices of dairy products seems
likely to be rather favorable for
dairymen.
This winter prices of dairy
feqds will be lower and milk pro-
duction per cow will be higher.
Increases in consumption of fluid
milk and cream in cities and vil-
lages will tend to offset in part
the effect of increased production
of milk on the' production of
manufactured dairy products.
Principal increases in commei>
cial dairy production during the
next few years are expected in
specialized dairy sections and in
some of the newer areas where
there has been a marked upward
trend in production. Increased
consumption of fluid milk and
cream during the next five years
also was forecast.
The long-time up trend in pea
capita consumption of manufac-
Dr. REA, Specialist
COMING TO TEXAS
PADUCAH
PADUCAH HOTEL
Monday, Nov. 15th
ONE DAY ONLY
HOURS— 9:30 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.
Dr. Rea, visiting Texas profes-
sionally for many years, legally
authorized by the state. Many
satisfied patients: P. M. Mitchell,
Texarkana, Liver: W. H. Baker,
Gainsville, Kidney: Mrs. Ida Davis,
Mt. Pleasant. Stomach; Mrs. C. M.
Baughman, Crockett, Stomach.
Mrs. C. F. Knowles, Abilene,
Pellagra: Tom McNeil, Richland
Springs, Cancer Growth; Mrs. B.
R. Richardson, Palestine, Pellagra;
Rudolph Kohl, Ellinger, Sciatica
and Rheumatism; John Turnbow,
Shamrock, Stomach; Mrs. Norman
Tozer, Amarillo, Pellagra; C. R.
Hibbs. Wichita Falls, Ulcer Stom-
ach: Mrs. W. T. Morris, Lubbock,
Pellagra: H. J. Blasehe, Schulen-
berg. Colitis; C. M. Mathis, Stom-
ach Ulcer.
Mrs. Thomas Rogers, Douglas,
Leg Ulcer; Mrs. B. Randall. La-
mesa. Stomach: Grace Marie
Brown. Richland Springs. Appendi-
citis; Mrs. J. P. Reynolds, Borger,
Gall Stones; Mrs. Sarah West,
Skidmore, Piles; Mrs. W. J.
Franklin, Heavne, Obesity; Mrs.
W. P. Dane, Bowie. Pellagra;
First Time YearsHallettfviile’ stom"
Mi-15 Anna Miller, Muldoon, Can-
Rasbury, Walter Martin, C. W
Simpson, J. B. Brothers, T. M
►'‘•’imps, A.. A. Clements, Sam
Whitner, Clyde Horn, J. H. How-
|e.i. .ixiss i untie ’lacker and the
hostess. New members, Mesdames
I iv. 1. Fondville and Jim Stanley.
The club will meet with Mrs.
Charlie Fondville Nov. 17.
Texas Wheat In
Export Channels
dined somewhat as market sup-
age
on the basis of what the
plies have increased, as they us-
ually do in late fall. |
“increases in employment, pav j acreage reduction will be on the
rolls and in the national income j total amount of farm lands in
| farmer has been growing,
exported from Galveston and
Houston this season.
This is the first season in .veal's
well as short supplies due to j cultivation without regard to what Ion channel hfrom'°Texas "'^Chtef
drought are resDonsible for h«« been grown on the lands in P° f chan?fIs J,om ieXas‘ thlef
the drought are responsible for
the higher meat prices. An analy
sis of the figures shows that tne
rise in meat prices since
has been greater than the rise in
national income.”
Much Money Now
Available Use Of
Corn Farmers
Jesse Jones, chairman of the
Reconstruction Finance Corpora-
tion announced on Wednesday of
has been grown on the lands in outlet aside from Texas milling
the past It is believed this at- points ha, bepn tl, the Northwest
tion wi» be more acceptable to and Midwest for flour manufact-
thlJrutalI?elS' , , ure. South Plains wheat averages
The farmer who has 100 or about 20 cent protein con-
1,000 acres in cultivation will be ■■■ - -
, , , ... tent, millers declare,
asked to limit his cotton acreage__0______
to between 40 and 60 per cent of .......
the cultivated acreage. Under;, rvrnFW •
this plan, 60 per cent of the culti- ,,,,, ^.Y. -r
vated land is to be devoted to ........ Mr*' Wah<,r Teel,......
cotton the small farmer will have Mr. and Mrs. Fonch iaulken-
60 acres while the 1.000 acre-; berry and children from the Plains
farmer will be permitted to plant spent Thursday night with Mr.
600 acres. ' and Mrs. Arthur Walling and
Under this plan each farmer children.
last Week" that $75,0~o"ojoO(rTad | will be permitted to raise a reas- Mwa nafoa S™‘th /Je°ln
been made available to the Com-, «"able acreage cotton on his 11 her parents. Mr. and
cmo°rn loans Corporation for(total acreage in^ultiv^t.on.^Undei |^ Ah,n Smitg.
• rwxvvnif fnn + r\ nvnrill/io n □ m lion /‘At.
The*""loans will bear interest at' permitted to produce as much cot- Mr. Alvin Joe Harrison left
1 ne loans vviu ueai uiieitst at nossible This means the Monday for Cheyenne, Wyoming,
the rate of 4 .per _cent. ^ Other| ‘on ^1 Miss' Annis Clements' spent
Santa Anna. Gall Bladder: J. B.
Svvanev, Rosebud, Gall Bladder;
Emma Kate Kuyava, Mexia, As-
thma: John McClain, Spur, Mal-
nutrition.
Drs. Rea Bros. Medical Lab-
oratory. Minneapolis, MJ nesota.
Since 1898, - *-
Dr. P. A. Preslar
Optometrist
Eyes Examined—
Glasses Fitted
PRESLAR DRUG
CHILDRESS
terms and conditions will be pie- j small farmer would use every op-
scribed by the Secretary of Agri-1 poriumty ^ improve his_ cottor
culture.
Banks and other leading agen-
cies may make the loans to the
producers as in former years,
with the definite understanding
that the Commodity Credit Cor-
poration will take them up on
demand at any time prior to Sept
30, 1938, at par and accrued in-
terest at the rate of 2 Vi per cent,
■a
THE DALLAS NEWS,
Dallas, Texas.
Gentlemen:
Herewith my remittance $............... .................. to cover subscription
to The Dallas News (oneyear by mail) (six months by mail).
Name
Post Office
R. P. D_______
..... State-
Subscription rate: By mail, daily and Sunday, one year
»9.00; six months, $5.00; three months, $2.60; one month,
86c. These prices effective only in Texas
tured dairy products during the
last forty years was attributed
mainly to increased consumption
of ice cream, concentrated milks
and cheese. Since the 90’s there
has been no consistent tendency
for the per capita consumption of
butter to increase or decrease.
Improvements in processing
methods and in refrigeration and
transportation facilities, together
with advertising and educational
programs have tended to widen
and expand the outlets for dairy
products.
—--o-
A real old-timer is the man
who can remember when women
were too bashful even to look
into a barber shop as they passed
by.
-o-
Mistakes happen on a narrow
thorofare where traffic is pre-
mitted to move in only one di-
rection.
Several Thousand
Miles Rio Grande
Basin Is Mapped
The United States Bureau of
Agriculture Engineering has just
completed mapping 2,000,000
acres of the Rio Grande Basin
by a new and fast method—scales
and celluloid, combined with air-
planes. The job was done for
the National Resources Commit-
tee.
Practically the entire basin was
mapped by air photos on a scales
of two inches to the mije in the
open country and four inches to
the mile in more congested areas.
On the photo prints the fields
were numbered or colored ns to
18 crop or other vegetation clas-
sifications.
Outlines of the fields and other
areas were scratched with a sty-
lus on sheets of celluloid one-
hundreds of an inch thick placed
over the photostatic maps. Classi-
........ .... cotton Thursday night in Paducah with
acreage. Terracing, deep plow-[her sister, Mrs. Howard Sikes,
ing and fertilizing would be car- j Miss \ elmarine Burns spent
ried out to the limit. [Saturday with Miss Alene Teel.
Thus the farmers of small acre- . Miss Betty Sue Norman spent
age, or what is now .designated as Friday night in Paducah,
family farming, say from 160 to Mr. and Mrs. Arvil Stepplcy
320 acres, would be cultivated to and daughter, Patsy Ruth, from
increase the fertility of his lands, the plains visited Mr. and Mrs.
Cotton would be planted on dif- T- w- Faulkenberry and other
ferent land each year, the newly I relatives the past week,
planted tract having been ferti- [ Miss Reba h aye and Jean Lee
lized as much as possible. Results from Acme, Raymond Marshall
would be shown by an increased
crop yield within a few years.
Trees and Seeds
To Be Distributed
By S. C. Service
Soil conservation service camps
operated by the United States
Department of Agriculture all
over the United States will distri-
bute more than 1,600,000 pounds
of trees and shrub seeds and 700,-
000 pounds of native grass seeds
before next July in a Nation-
wide erosion control program.
Collection work is under way
in most of the 374 Civilian Con-
servation Corps camps assigned
to the service. Nearly all the
native grass seed will come from
west of the Mississippi River.
Large quantities will be needed in
the Southern Great Plains—Kan-
sas, Oklahoma and Texas—where
wind erosion is a serious problem
and native grasses are needed to
tie down marginal crop lands.
and Elvin Wilson from Quanah
visited Alene and Lovonia Teel
Sunday afternoon, and attended
the singing Sunday night.
Sufferers of
STOMACH ULCERS
<o HYPERACIDITY
DEFINITE RELIEF OR
MONEY BACK
THE WILLARD TREATMENT has
brought prompt, definite relief la
thousands of cases of ttMHMtl aaa
Duodenal Ulcere, due toHjdmMH*
■ty, and other forms of Stomach Die-
tress due to Etcess Acid. SOLD OM
IS DAYS TRIAL- for comptoM In-
formation. read “ Willard's Meeeaaa
of Relief." Ask for it—Wee—ah
BIGHAM DRUG CO.
____ ... . . Why it is that mother always
fication numbers were scratched worries for fear some girl will
into pieces, which were then sort-.marry her son, and for fear
ed as to numbers. The acreage aome boy won’t marry her daugh-
in different crops was- then ob- tsrT
tained by weighing the piles ofi _
celluloid on an accurate balance. J You never can tell. Some day
_ —---o-. . the big city drug stores may ac-
For best results, use Post wont'tually stock up with s sample
ads. ,of drugs.
Several Cheap Cars At Bargains
1936 FORD DELUXE TUDOR, Motor overhauled
and new paint. A good clean car. —
1934 FORD DELUXE FORDOR SEDAN, good tire*,
good paint and a good buy.
1933 FORD TUDOR, motor overhauled, new paint,
a good looking car.
1934 pHEVRLET MASTER COUPE, good condi-
tion with new tires and new paint.
1933 CHEVROLET MASTER FOUR-DOOR SEDAN,
completely reconditioned and looks like now.
1932 CHEVROLET COACH, a good clean car priced
to sell.
1933 PONTIAC COACH, good condition, good paint,
and new tires. \
We are anxious to dispose of these cars to mate
room for new trade-ins on the 1938 Chevrolet, and
will sell them below their actual value.
Wood-O’Neil Chevrolet Company
1 '■4TS .
L
V J w
i
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Carlock, E. A. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 11, 1937, newspaper, November 11, 1937; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth723214/m1/7/: accessed May 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.