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...intensively worked ranch of 80 acres, Henry Sakemi, a Nisei farmer, raises tomatoes, peas, corn, beans, romaine lettuce and squash. His overhead is steep: four tractors, cultivators, disks, plows, subsoilers, harrows, planters and bed-shapers, besides the cost for water and labor (up to 90 field hands during harvest). But his yields are immense: 200 crates per acre of sweet corn, each crate holding five dozen ears, and tomatoes that net a steady $500-a-year-profit per acre. On his relatively small ranch he grosses $100,000 a year. "In a good year," says Rancher Sakemi, "my profit margin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The American Desert,1955: A new way of life in the U.S. | 7/25/1955 | See Source »

...prospect of the big harvest, prices went down. Cotton sold for about 34? a lb., 11? less than it was four years ago, while wheat sold for less than $2.15 a bushel, off more than 85? in some eight years. Last year, even with parts of the nation suffering from a drought, the Department of Agriculture had to buy $7,198,000,000 worth of surplus commodities under the price-support program. This year, it looked as if the bill would be still higher...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AGRICULTURE: Good Year, Big Bill | 7/25/1955 | See Source »

...afternoon the results of visiting Flower Arranger Sofu's harvest were ready for display in Paris' Bagatelle chateau. Withered leaves on a dead branch suspended from the ceiling had become a mobile titled Dance of the Dying Leaves; tiger lilies, hydrangeas and irises blended into a scarlet-and-gold Japanese Landscape; a moss-covered oak branch was part of a tableau, On the Edge of the Lake...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Grass Moon Master | 7/11/1955 | See Source »

...year for storage fees). Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft Benson cut the planted wheat acreage from 79 to 55 million, while the support price dropped from $2.24 a bushel to $2.06. To qualify for support payments, farmers had to accept quotas and acreage restrictions. They complained but complied. Result: the harvest fell from 1,300 million bushels in 1952 to 839 million this year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AGRICULTURE: Farmers' Choice | 7/4/1955 | See Source »

...state and county fairs years ago, the crowning events for U.S. farmers were such contests as corn picking and husking and a tug of war between horses. A fast-working champion could harvest corn at the rate of 100 bu. a day. But today's farmer has little interest in such events; with a mechanical corn picker, he thinks nothing of picking and husking 1,500 bu of corn a day. For machine-age farmers a big event at fairs is the tractor rodeo," in which farmers compete at starting tractors attaching implements, plowing the straightest, fastest furrows. Merely...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: AUTOMATION ON THE FARM | 7/4/1955 | See Source »

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