Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 300, Decatur, Adams County, 22 December 1958 — Page 9
Monday, December 22, 1958
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
PAGE ONE-A
Surplus Wheal Pile Increases In U.S. Fall-Planted Crop To Boost Surplus * WASHINGTON (UPI) -The record pile of surplus wheat is scheduled to grow larger with harvest of the 1959 fall-planted crop. The Agriculture Departments first report on winter wheat production for 1959 showed a crop at 957,369,000 bushels was in prospect. This was sharply below the 1958 record crop of 1,179,924,000 bushels, yet it would be the fifth largest of record and almost enough to meet domestic and export demands. If such a crop materializes and the 1959 spring wheat crop equals 1958 production, the total wheat crop for next year would be in the neighborhood of 1,240,000,000 bushels. A total wheat crop of this size would add about 200 million bushels to the wheat surplus. Present wheat stocks plus the 1958 record production of 1,462,000,000 bushels are scheduled to create a carryover of more than 1.300,000,000 bushels on next July 1. With the surplus from the 1959 all wheat crop added, the surplus on July 1, 1960, will be roughly 1,500.000,000 bushels. Friday’s report on prospective production in 1959 is expected to add impetus to demands that Congress and the administration come up with a new wheat program that will be more effective in cutting down surpluses. The department based its 1959 winter wheat estimate on 45,063,000 planted acres, almost one million acres more than the 1958 planted acreage, conditions as of Dec. 1, and expected normal growing conditions next year. It estimated the yield for 1959 at 21.2 bushels per seeded acre. This compares with a yield of 26.8 bushels per seeded acre for the 1958 crop. The 1958 crop was enhanced by exceptionally good growing conditions. EQUAL RIGHTS NEW YORK — (UPI) — Foot doctors aren’t necessarily in favor of walking. The Class of 1961 at New York’s Lewi College of Podiatry recently asked the traffic commissioner to grant them the same praking privileges when they graduate as those enjoyed by Doctors of Medicine and Osteopathy.
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