HUSBANDRY
Halterophora Capitata
(TIME, May 6, 1929) -- In an orange grove near Orlando, Fla., last month, a
U.S. Department of Agriculture employee cut open an orange, prepared to sink his
teeth into it, halted at a horrid sight -- maggots! He fairly ran to a
laboratory where, under a microscope, he made a terrible discovery: the grubs
were larvae of Halterophora capitata (Mediterranean fruit fly), most vicious and
destructive of dipterous pests, never before found in the U.S. Out went the
alarm over Florida. Inspection showed that the infestation had spread through
three counties -- Seminole, Orange and Lake American. Legionaries volunteered as
fruit inspectors.
In Washington, President Hoover described the appearance of halterophora
capitata as "a grave emergency." He called upon Congress to authorize the
transfer, from the Department of Agriculture's boll weevil fund, of $4,250,000
to fight the Florida fly. The House complied promptly, last week. The Senate
took its time.
Senators v. Hoover
Campaign speeches are written to mean a lot of things to many men. Candidate
Hoover's were no exception. Last week the more incongruous of his campaign
supporters arose in the Senate to decry what they called "inconsistencies"
between the Hoover position on farm relief before the election and after.
Candidate Hoover discussed husbandry and its problems in his closing campaign
speech, at St. Louis. President Hoover recommended to Congress a farm relief
plan, consisting of tariff revisions and the creation of a Federal Farm Board
with "adequate working capital" to reorganize marketing, to assist co-operatives
handle surplus crops. Later, he opposed the export debenture pan produced by the
Senate, whereby exporters of farm produce would receive a bounty equal to
one-half the tariff rate on the same commodity.
Deserters. First to square off at the President's farm program was florid,
blinking Senator Smith Wildman Brookhart of Iowa. A vociferous champion of
radical farm measures, Senator Brookhart had pleaded the Hoover cause in 200
stump speeches last autumn. He had shouted to rural audiences that the
Republican candidate was "progressive" on farm legislation. "Progressive" in
those days meant much more than it does now.
Last week Senator Brookhart called the Senate's attention to quotations from
Mr. Hoover's campaign speeches, contrasted them with his official statements as
President:
- Candidate Hoover: "The most urgent economic problem . . .
is agriculture. It
must be solved."
- President Hoover: "The difficulties of agriculture cannot
be cured in a day
. . . by legislation . . . by the Federal government alone."
- Candidate Hoover: "The traditional cooperative is . . . not
a complete
solution."
- Senator Brookhart: "In his (Hoover's) message to Congress
there is not
method pointed out for a solution except loans to co-operatives."
- Candidate Hoover: "Another part of the solution must be to
secure greater
stability in prices."
- President Hoover: "No governmental agencies should engage
in the buying and
selling and price-fixing of products."
- Senator Brookhart: "This is where the price-fixing
proposition comes in and
that dogma of price-fixing now rises up to nullify the pledge the President
made, the one that perhaps influenced more farmers than any other in the
campaign."
- Candidate Hoover: "We give the Federal Farm Board every arm
with which to
deal with the multitude of problems."
- Senator Brookhart: "This Senate Bill gives it no arm to buy
and sell the
surpluses of farm products . . . cuts out the very pledge made by the President
so distinctly."
Tactics. Despite Senator Brookhart and friends, however, President Hoover's
opposition to the Senate bill began to show results. Support of the debenture
plan began to crumble. Informal Senate polls predicted its probable defeat. Its
advocates schemed how they could transfer it from the farm bill to the tariff
bill, explaining that its location there would be more logical. In the tariff
bill they thought it would muster more House support, would be harder for the
President to veto. Nebraska's Norris drafted an amendment to reduce the bounty
on crops over-produced.
Many a Senator put aside his own opinions in favor of the President's to
hasten action on this legislation. North Dakota's young Nye, usually
troublesome, saw the futility of wrestling with the Hoover bloc in the House.
Said he: "There is no use wasting time. . . . We ought to agree upon a bill
promptly so that the farmers will get assistance in this year's crops."
More potent support for the Hoover position came, unexpectedly, from Frank
Orren Lowden, mightiest of Farmer's friends, the man who withdrew his candidacy
at Kansas City when the Republican National Convention refused to endorse the
equalization fee, and sulked on his Illinois estate through the campaign. Mr.
Lowden said: "It becomes the duty of all sincere friends of farm relief to
cooperate with the Administration in giving effect to its program." Reports
filled the capital that Mr. Lowden might be asked to head the Federal Farm
Board.
The House Bill. -- The full force of Hoover authority was plainly exhibited
when the House, docile and well-pledged, passed the administration's farm bill
367 to 34. (The House passed the first McNary-Haugen Bill 214 to 178; the
second, 204 to 122.) Fenced off with the barbed wire of special rules which kept
out all amendments including the debenture plan, the measure was practically
unchanged by eight days of debate. It provided for: A Federal Farm Board,
supplied with $500,000,000 to advance to farm co-operatives for marketing
purposes, to stabilization corporations for buying and holding surplus
crops.
June 24, 1929 HUSBANDRY End & Beginning
Farm relief last week actually began its journey from the field of
legislation to the husbandman's acres. The Congress, straining and wheezing,
passed an administration bill, minus the export debenture plan and President
Hoover, signing it with a smile and two pens, called it "The most important
measure ever passed by congress in aid of a single industry." It was an end and
a beginning.
Much legislative maneuvering was necessary to get the measure through to the
White House. First the Senate, full of ill temper, refused by a vote of 46 to
43, to accept the conference report in which the export debenture plan was
stricken from the bill. President Hoover was openly flouted by those who either
honestly believed in this plan or felt that honestly believed in this plank or
felt that the House, heretofore gagged, should be given a chance to express
itself. Speaker Longworth and other leaders had refused to give the House a vote
on the debenture pan for two reasons: 1) it would force mid-western Congressmen
to go on record on a politically troublesome issue; 2) it would be a backdown by
the House on its claim that the Senate had no constitutional authority to
originate such a "revenue-raising" plan.
Not until President Hoover called House and Senate leaders into conference
was the way cleared for the bill's enactment. Exerting himself as party chief,
the President virtually ordered that the House vote on this question as the
Senate's price of recession. So the House voted 250 to 113 against the debenture
plan. The next day, as gracefully as possible, the Senate acquiesced.
When President Hoover picks the members of the now authorized Federal Farm
Board, there will come into existence an agency for agriculture comparable in
scope and authority with the Interstate Commerce Commission for transportation,
the Federal Reserve Board for finance.
The board will be composed of eight members selected by the President and
confirmed by the Senate, plus the Secretary of Agriculture ex officio. It will
have a working capital of $500,000,000 supplied from the U.S. Treasury. With
this cash to lend, it will try to induce farmers to forego some of their normal
independence, to join co-operative marketing associations. These associations,
with money borrowed from the board, will attempt to move food from farm to
market more cheaply, with less spoilage and waste, than is now accomplished by
scattered and individual private effort.
Less than one-third of the 6,500,000 U.S. farmers are now members of joint
selling organizations. Success of farm relief now depends almost entirely upon
the extent to which the farmers will now cooperate. Many experts believe that
more than two- thirds of the farmers must join co-operatives before any
appreciable bone-fit will accrue to husbandry as a whole.
A second important task of the new board will be to help organize and finance
special stabilization corporations among farmers to purchase surplus farm
products from glutted seasonal markets and hold them in storage pending better
prices. In the past such large-scale grain corporations on private capital and
under private control have failed. It remains to be seen whether federal cash
and supervision can make them successful. Critics of the new farm relief
legislation predict that the Federal Farm Board will loan large sums to such
corporations which in turn will buy in surplus commodities on a falling price
market, be forced to sell them at a still lower price and, in the end,
completely exhaust the board's capital.
Last week the Great Question on many a farm throughout the land was: Will
there be federal relief for this year's crops?
Wheat men, dubious of such relief this season, pricked up their ears at a
suggestion from North Dakota's Senator Nye that the U.S. should buy up 50 or 100
million bushels of surplus wheat, ship it to famished China as a gesture of
goodwill.
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