An Act to tax the privilege of dealing on exchanges, boards of trade, and similar places in contracts of sale of cotton for future delivery, and for other purposes.
Reported by the joint conference committee on July 27, 1914; agreed to by the Senate on July 27, 1914 (146-77) and by the House on July 27, 1914 (passed)
Signed into law by President Woodrow Wilson on August 18, 1914
The Cotton Futures Act of 1914 (also known as the Smith-Lever law) authorized the United States Department of Agriculture to establish physical standards as a means of determining color grade, staple length and strength, and other qualities and properties for cotton.[1][2] It was intended to minimize speculative manipulation of the cotton market.