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INVESTIGATION OF THE PRODUCTION,
TRANSPORTATION, AND MARKETING
OF WOOL

HEARINGS

BEFORE THE

SPECIAL COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE

THE PRODUCTION, TRANSPORTATION, AND
MARKETING OF WOOL

UNITED STATES SENATE
SEVENTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS

SECOND SESSION

PURSUANT TO

S. Res. 160
(74th Congress)

AND

S. Res. 278
(75th Congress)

RESOLUTIONS PROVIDING FOR AN INVESTIGATION OF
THE PRODUCTION, TRANSPORTATION, AND
MARKETING OF WOOL

PART 3

JULY 3, 7, AND 8, 1942

Printed for the use of the Special Committee to
Investigate the Production, Transportation, and Marketing of Wool

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SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON THE PRODUCTION, TRANSPORTATION, AND MARKETING OF WOOL

H. H. SCHWARTZ, Wyoming, Chairman

CARL A. HATCH, New Mexico
JAMES E. MURRAY, Montana
DAVID I. WALSH, Massachusetts

II

CHAN GURNEY, South Dakota

PRODUCTION, TRANSPORTATION, AND MARKETING

OF WOOL

FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1942

UNITED STATES SENATE,

SPECIAL COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE PRODUCTION,
TRANSPORTATION, AND MARKETING OF WOOL,

Washington, D. C.

The special committee met, pursuant to call, in room 224, Senate Office Building, at 10 a. m., Senator H. H. Schwartz (chairman) presiding.

Present: Senators Schwartz (chairman), Murray, and Gurney.
Present also: Senator Thomas of Idaho.

The CHAIRMAN. The special committee will come to order. Several of our members are out of the city, but others I think will be in later. In view of the fact that we have present witnesses who come from a long distance, we will proceed at this time.

I wish to make a preliminary statement. Prior to the untimely decease of our former chairman, the late Senator Alva B. Adams, this committee held extensive hearings covering the production, transportation, and marketing of wool. For some time prior to his death Senator Adams had given serious study to the sum of information collected by the committee with a view to proposing needed legislation. That subject will be pursued further.

However, the present sessions of the committee will consider more particularly, in view of the war, what wool producers and the general wool industry can do to best promote a speedy and victorious end of the struggle. To that end the committee, among other matters, will consider:

First, shall the Government purchase and take over our own wool clips for the duration of this war and 1 year thereafter, as was done for the war period in the first World War, and as the British Government is doing for the duration and 1 year thereafter, as to wool under their control;

Second, would the suggested Government loan on American wool be of aid of equal service in our war effort;

Third, shall there be a mandatory blending of wool with other fibers during this emergency, what shall be its scope, and how best administered; and

Fourth, what relief may be secured for the producers of short wool and mohair, and can we secure a greater use of these products in the manufacture of our civilian needs during the war.

In the absence of Mr. Haskell, attorney for the committee, we have Mr. Roger Gillis, Assistant Wool Consultant for the War Production Board, to act for Mr. Haskell.

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