Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 268, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 January 1936 — Page 4

PAGE 4

HOOVER OFFERS AAR ALTERNATE, RAPS NEW DEAL

Urges Subsidy for Special Crops; Radio Chops Off Speech. (Continued From Page One) of the New Deal and of President Roosevelt, and reiterated his argument that recovery was en route when he retired and had been retarded by his successor. He offered a program of agricultural aid, divided into three groups: 1. “Increase consumption of food by restoring employment. That can come only with a balanced budget, stable currency and credit. Give the farmer our own heme market. Adopt such sane national policies as will again restore reasonable export markets. Out of this group of policies we can restore demand to many millions of fertile acres. 2. “Retire .submarginal lands where people can not make a living. Do it in the more effective and human way proposed by Secrclaiy Hyde in 1932. Retard new reclamation projects until the land can be used. 3. “Encourage co-operative marketing and those marketing agreements which contribute to prevent gluts in the flow to markets. The farm credit machinery established by Republican Administrations and improved by the New Deal should be still further improved.” But such a basic program, although certain to be ultimately effective, he said, must be supplemented for the time being by emergency measures “by which agriculture can get back on to solid ground from the quicksand of the New Deal.” Suggests Direct Subsidy H,e suggested a direct subsidy for (selected crops “instead of trying to find a balance to agriculture by paying the. farmer to curtail a crop.” “If we include this suggestion with the policies I have already mentioned,” he continued, “which would recover our lost acres from foreigners, we would be able to employ more than all the acres put out of action by the New Deal. We would reverse this economy of scarcity to an economy of plenty. “I believe we must be prepared to subsidize directly such special crops until agriculture has again been brought into balance. “I am advised that it can be done within the spirit as well as the letter of the Constitution.” He oH id the subsidy would be borne by the general taxpayer, “not loaded upon the poorest of the country through some tax like the processing tax.” “Otherwise,” he added, with his

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Pane —ful Tim't Special GREENCASTLE. Ind., Jan. 17.—Boys who insist on being boys can do even worse at college. Consider the case of De Pauw's Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house: Two of the Greekletter brethren started a snowball fight yesterday, and their sport soon attracted all members of the order. In five minutes, much snow had been thrown and 15 window panes shattered. Today house president Tom Hamilton, Marion, is trying to collect pro rated damages to lieve a “paneful situation."

recently discovered aptitude for catchy phrases, “this method will again be a suterfuge of pinkish national planning under another alphabet.” He charged that the, Roosevelt plan of farm aid, stopping production of “50,000.000 fertile acres,” bears mast heavily on “15,000,000 workers,” and has “set boiling the witches’ cauldron of class conflict of town against the farmers.” He quoted President Roosevelt in defending himself against the charge that his Administration contributed to the depression. He Feels Better Now “At Chicago, on Dec. 9, 1935, he t-.he President) says, in referring to farm prosperity in the period before the war: ‘They were the last years before the world-wide disturbance, caused by the World War, took place in our economic life.’ “I had been told so often by the New Deal that I did it that I had given up hope of salvation. I feel better.” He won his heaviest applause with his concluding statement, only part of which was broadcast: “I wish to say to you unhesitatingly,” he said, after mentioning Russia and other European countries, "that our country has been following step by step the road through which these millions of people in foreign countries lost their liberties.” 1 KILLED IN MINE FEUD Young Worker Who Returned to Job Slain From Ambush. /{y United T‘rrns MORGANFIELD, Ky., Jan. 17. Violence broke out anew in the Kentucky mine troubles today with the killing ol' Paul Meadows, 24, Morganfield. Meadows, a member of the independent miners union which signed a contract last week to operate the Kingston Coal and Coke Cos. mine near here, was shot from ambush while en route to work. The shaft formerly was worked by men belonging to the United Mine Workers of America.

PRESS ASSAILS GOV. HOFFMAN FORJEPRIEVE Jersey Papers Especially Bitter; One Demands His Impeachment. By United Press Newspaper comment on the 30day reprieve granted Bruno Richard Hauptmann by Gov. Harold G. Hoffman follows: NEWARK (N. J.) EVENING NEWS: “Impeachment? This man (Gov. Hoffman), who makes a farce of his. high office, has impeached himself.” TRENTON (N. J.) TIMES: “Gov. Harold G. Hoffman has sacrificed all moral and legal right to serve as

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

chief executive of New Jersey. He should be Impeached and thrown out of office.” NEW YORK HERALD-TRIBUNE: “The mystery surrounding the Governor's procedure is especially to be regretted. By his frequent changes of mind and his refusal to explain or discuss he has set loose a crop of rumors which detract from the dignity of justice and cloud the mind of the public. ... On the other hand, there will unquestionably be general sympathy with every sound effort to exhaust the processes of justice in discovering the whole truth of the crime.” BOSTON POST: “Unfortunately for the reputation of New Jersey for prompt justice, the Governor is given, to hippoiroming for publicity. He is essentially a headline seeker and has been during all his carer. But this time his passion for the limelight and his political ambitions have gravely menaced the cause of justice.” SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE: “The only good apparent reason for reprieving Hauptmann is a hope of clearing up some of the mystery still remaining in the case. . . .

Hauptmann himself haa nothing coming to him. . . . The only interest to be served is that of the public. That this is Gov. Hoffman’s reason seems a fair deduction from his statement that there will be but one reprieve, unless something important turns up.” , NEW ORLEANS TIMES-PICA-YUNE: “The public should be disgusted with the recent course the Hauptmann case has followed. IT is as though the circumstance of his condemnation suddenly changed the entire nature of the defendant, so that the man who a year ago was considered Public Enemy No. 1 now becomes Public Hero No. 1. COLLECTION OF $1069 DEPENDS ON IDENTITY Negro, Seeking Estate, Told to Furnish Additional Proof to Court. If George Washington Williams, 40, Negro, of 227 N. West-st, can convince Federal Judge ,?x>bert C. Baltzell that he’s the real article he can collect $1069 and go back to

Louisville tnd “get himself an enterprise.” According to G. Washington's story, he disappeared from home when 10 years ni age. Now he has appeared in court to claim the estate of his grandmother. Mrs. Harriet Anne McGruder, whose property was condenmned at Blake and Colton-sts by the government for the local slum clearance project. .Although the supposed beneficiary brought his uncle, Richard D. Williams, from Louisville, to make the identification. Judge Baltzell seemed somewhat skeptical and asked for additional proof.

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NEW POSTOFFICE AT ALEXANDRIA IS READY Building to Be Occupied by Jan. 20, Is Report. Times Special ALEXANDRIA. Ind., Jan. 17.Alexandria s new postoffice is completed and ready for occupancy. Thomas H. Flinn of the procurement division of the Treasury Department at Washington has completed his official inspection of the building and given his approval to

-JAN. 17, 1936

Henry Hines, government engineer in charge. Postmaster Hennefant has been given permission to move into the new building as soon as the remainder of the furniture and equipment arrives, not later than Jan. 20. .

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