Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1937 — Page 4
PAGE 4
FINAL ESTIMATE ONCROP STATUS AWAITED TODAY
1937 Surplus Expected to Be Larger Because of Stock Decrease.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 (U. P.) — The full extent of this year's bumper crops will be revealed today when the Department of Agriculture’s Crop Reporting Board estimates grain, feed, fruit and tobacco production. The estimates will be announced at 2 p. m. (Indianapolis Time). Most crops have been harvested and the report is expected to approximate final produastion. The cotton crop already has been estimated at 18,243,000 bales, and alltime record and nearly 5,000,000 bales above the average. The corn crop, although not much shove the 10-year average, still is the largest since 1932. A month age the Department estimated the crop 2,561,936,000 bushels, an increase of 1,000,000,000 over last year.
Livestock Decreased
nt
The surplus, however, will be much larger than normal because uf tne decreased number of livestock on farms. The demand has been estimated at 20 per cent below normal and the probable carryover at 350,000,000 bushels. Corn prices have declined since August from $125 to 40 cents a bushel The Government loan ranging from 44 to 50 cents a bushel is expected to bolster prices later this month. The wheat crop of 889,895,000 bushels—largest since 1931—already has been harvested. Farmers disposed of most of their crop at around $1 a bushel, but failure of export demand to develop has sent prices lower in recent weeks.
Farm Hearings ‘Staged.’
Senator Frazier Charges
WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 (U, P). —Conflict over crop control legislation at the special session of Congress was split three ways today when Senator Frazier (R. N. D) charged that the Senate Agriculture Subcommittee testimony in Western states was “staged” in favor of the Administration's farm bill. His assertions, vigorously disputed by Chairman McGill (D. Kas.) of the Subcommittee, divided the Senate sponsors of farm legislation into three camps: 1. Backers of the bill sponsored by Senator McGill, Senator Pope (D. Ida), the Agriculture Department and the Farm Bureau, providing for payment of parity prices, based on the 1909-14 period, to farmers; for Secretary Henry Wallace's ever-normal
quotas when approved by two-thirds of the farmers involved. Senators McGill and Pope call the bill a “voluntary” measure.
Cost Plus Plan Studied
Sponsors of a newly developed drive to discard the parity price system and substitute an arrange-
Times Photo.
Butler University Journalism Department members are planning a
special issue of the Butler Collegian to be distributed to Hoosier editors
attending the second annual press institute here Friday and Saturday.
They are (left to right):
partment head.
overcome Administration support for the Pope-McGill measure, 3. Senator Smith (D. S. CJ), chairman of the Agriculture Committee, who last session blocked the Administration demand for passage of a farm control bill. Senator Smith, who is not due here until late this week, was in charge of a subcommittee that studied cotton control problems. It was understood that a majority of his committee, angered by his failure to act last session, had agreed to press for speedy action this month regardless of the Chairman's attitude,
14-Point Program Placed
Before National Grange
HARRISBURG, Pa, Nov. 10 (U. P.).—Louis J. Taber, Master of the National Grange, placed before 10,000 delegates to the farm organization’s Tlst annual convention, a 14-point program today, comprising “basic principles that any workable agricultural policy should contain.” The Columbus, O., farm leader praised President Roosevelt “for calling the Congress in special session and in ample time to give statesmanlike study to the pledge of the the Congress and the Administration to enact a permanent farm
| program.”
Such a program, he said, should: 1. Increase the farmer's share of the nation’s income and give to agriculture parity of income; (2) build coming farm legislation on voluntary co-operation, rather than a “governmental straight-jacket.”
Prof. Donald D. Burchard, Clay Trusty Jr., Collegian editor, and Prof. Russell J. Hammargren, Journalism De-
with continuing farmer control; (3) grant basic exemptions and give maximum benefits to the familysize farm, placing regulation as far as possible on the commercial and large-unit operation, and (4) devise framework for a long-time land policy that shall provide for the retirement of submarginal land and for the increase of forestry, water and wildlife resources.
HOLDS BUS OPERATING CODE NOT VIOLATED
Indianapolis Railways, Ine. did not violate any of its operating rules on Oct. 20 when 12-year-old Hope McClure was crushed to death beneath the wheels of a trackless trolley, Ray Gilbert, Indiana Public Service Commissioner inspector, reported today. Miss McClure, 533 S. Harding St., Theodore Potter Fresh Air School pupil, was the first Indianapolis child killed on the way to or from school in three years.
TWO YOUTHS NAMED COUNTY 4-H CHAMPS
Times Special ROCHESTER, Nov. 10.—Wallace Calvin, Union Township, and Dick Tobey, Rocnester Township, named grand champions in the Ful-
ton County 4-H corn and potato
show. The former won the corn contest and the latter was named champion potato raiser.
were
Al granary | plan, and for compulsory marketing |
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MORLEY FIRST ON KIRSHBAUM CENTER FORUM
American Author to Lecture Sunday on ‘Streamlines In Literature.
Christopher Morley, an outstanding figure in American literature, will speak at Kirshbaum Center at 8:15 p. m. Sunday to open the 12th season of the Open Forum series sponsored by the Indianapolis Jewish Community Center Association. Mr. Morley’s lecture on “Streamlines in Literature” will be the first of six to be presented each month during the winter season. At the close of the lecture, members of the audience may question him. Dr. Louis Segar, series committee chairman, is to preside. Mr. Morley, known throughout the English-speaking world for his stories, plays, poems and essays, was born at Haverford, Pa., in 1890, of English parents.
Father Cambridge Graduate
His father, Frank Morley, was a graduate of Cambridge University who went to Haverford College in 1887 as professor of mathematics. His son, Christopher, lived on the campus of the small, Quaker college until he was 10. In 1900, Prof. Morley took the chair of pure mathematics at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. Christopher returned to Haverford
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
in 1906 and was graduated from the college in 1910. That year he!
was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship at Oxford and spent the next three years at New College. Mr. Morley returned to America in 1913 and during the next four years was employed in a publisher’'s office, meanwhile writing his first novel, “Parnassus on Wheels.” Since that time his works have been many and varied. Other Forum speakers this season will be Dr. A. L. Sachar, Dr. No-Yong Park, John T. Flynn, William Seabrook and Paul H. Douglas.
3 KILLED, 4 HURT IN QUARRY EXPLOSION
BELLEFONTE, Pa. Nov. 10 (U. P)—Three men were killed and four others injured when an explosion ripped through the Whiterock lime quarry at Pleasant Gap, four miles from here late yesterday. Three other men escaped injury. The dead were Melvin Scott, 30, Pieasant Gap, a “shooter”; Curtis Heeman, 56, Pleasant Gap, a helper, and William Corrigan, 30, of near Pleasant Gap, a helper.
649,000 LISTED IN INDIANA FOR JOB INSURANCE
18 Per Cent of Employees on Books Live in Marion County. +
Clarence A. Jackson, Indiana Unemployment Compensation Division director, announced today that nearly 20 per cent of employers and more than 18 per cent of employees subject to the State Unemployment Compensation Act are residents of Marion County. Division records show that 8626 Indiana employers now are filing reports on approximately 649,000 workers under the act’s terms. It is estimated, Mr. Jackson said, that by April 1, 1938, whene benefits be
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come payable, the fund will contain about $25,000,000. Employers of eight or more persons generally are subject to the law, Mr, Jackson said the plan's administrative expenses are being paid by the Federal Government.
RETIRED ADMIRAL NAMED
CULVER, Ind, Nov. 10 (U. P.).— Admiral Hugh 8S. Rodman, U., S. Navy, retired, has been named to the board of directors of Culver Military Academy’s Educational Foundation, it was announced today.
BOY SCOUT TO GET AWARD
Thomas E, Bair of Troop 80, sponsored by the Church of the Advent, is to receive an Eagle Scout award at the November Boy Scout court of awards at 8 p. m. in Cropsey Auditorium of Central Library.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 10, 1937
OVERSEAS WORKERS SCHEDULE REUNION
The annual reunion of the Y. M. C. A, men and Y. W. C, A, women who served overseas during the World War is to be held Satur« day night in the Y. W. C. A, 329 N. Pennsylvania St. Dinner is to be served at 7 p. m., followed by music and singing.
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