Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 November 1940 — Page 13
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Second Section
WARNED
ID MAY BE CUT
of Kansas Advises Search for Substitutes to
Consumers as Most Preferable.
| By FREMONT POWER : Amerigan farmers must begin to look for possible alter-
natives for| direct Government appropriations to agriculture,
Rep. Clifford Hope (R. Kas.) yesterday. | | . 3 | . “Since there is a grave question ag a) how long we can continue to appropriate money directly out of the Treasury to maintain the Administrationis farm program,” Rep. Hope |said, “intelligent though must be given to possible alternatives if the program is to be continued.” A member of the National Farm Bureau organization, Rep. Hope is | the ranking Re- | publican member {of the U. 8S. House agriculture committee. He has served in the House 14 | years. He also |served on the | Republican Ag{riculture Study Commission {which recently made a tour that included Indianapolis, seeking out farmers’ viewpoints on national farm legislation. The preferable
la en Hope's opinion, “of some, kind.”|| “Notwthstanding all that has been done for agriculture in recent years, the objectives of the present program have not Ween achieved,” asserted Rep. Hope. “The farm doll
ar today is an 80cent dollar and eyen when all bene-
Recnsivee “to curaid, in Rep. a consumers’ tax
ceiving far less than their share of the national income. “Surpluses, insfead of decreasing, have increased util today we have more cotton, moreé wheat, more corn and more tobaccojthan we had when the present prognam and its prede-
cessors began in 1933.”
Rep. Hope declared that “recent legislation on beh@lf of industry and labor has proven|more effective in enabling these roups to achieve their objectives han has agricul-
told the Indiana Farm Bureau
1 . tural legislation” in reaching the needs of farmers. | One reason for this is the superior organization of industry and labor interests, Rep. Hope Sofa He urged his audience to ‘get behind” the Farm Bureau in all lits program. Hoosier farmers, who listened closely to his talk, were |warned, too, of the increasing threat of Latin American competition in agriculture markets. “It is unfortunate that our military and economic interests in the Western Hemisphere are somewhat in conflict,” he declared; “It is to our interest to co-operate fully with South American countries in our military and naval endeavors. It is to be feared, however, that there cannot be much economic co-operation unless it is (at the expense of the American farmer. “This must not be, and all of us who are interested in lagriculture should fight every effort which may have that effect.” 3 I The Kansas Representative, trimly dressed, said that he looked “for real price increases in all farm commodities, excepting possibly those which are on an export basis. | “The thing we have to be alarmed about is what will happen when the defense program is concluded and we feel the effects of the|inevitable recession.”
STAFF NAMED FOR SPECIAL COLLEGIAN
Paul R. Squires of Indianapolis will be editor of the special visitors’ edition of The Collegian, student daily newspaper, which will be issued tomorrow at Butler University. The edition will be for high school seniors visiting Butler for Senior Day and for the Indiana Federation of Clubs which is holding a short publicity course on the | Fairview campus. Other staff members |will be: William Shipley, Evanston, Ill., managing editor; Richard Moht, makeup editor; Sam Chernin, city editor,
and Robert Schalk, sports editor,
PEARSON'S
67 Years of Fg Dealing oo» Est,
| | | | 1 _- j |
1873
| i N # § i /
director of organization.
TYNDALL ELECTED TO HIGH GUARD POST
Maj. Gen. Robert H. Tyndall, Indianapolis commander of the 38th National Guard Division, has been eelcted vice president of the National Guard ® Association for the Fifth Corps Area. Gen. Tyndall, who as vice president, also serves as member of the national executive committee, succeeds Adjutant General William Horner of West Virginia. The election of Gen. Tyndall and other new officers of the Association was Held in Washington, D. C., recently. Gen. Tyndall is now preparing to mobilize his Division comprising troops in Indiana, Kentucky and West Virginia, for a year’s active duty and training at Camp Shelby, Miss. to begin shortly after the first of the year. :
GERMANS DECLARE EXPULSIONS ‘LIKELY’
BERLIN, Nov. 15—(U. P.).—Authorized German quarters said yesterday they had .no “precise data” on French reports that German authorities were expelling Frenchmen from Lorraine but, it was said, such expulsions would be “logical and likely.” . It was said that expulsion of the French from Lorraine would “merely be another step in the precise delineation of national
boundaries.” .
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Miss Ann Shanks has had the busy job of helping register delegates to the Indiana Farm Bureau convention in Tomlinson Hall. But here she finds time enough to read some of the literature being distributed to the farmers by the bureau and various Governmental agencies. Miss Shanks is secretary to Larry Brandon, the bureau's secretary and
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STORM BREWED IN ARCTIC AREA
Great Mass of Chilled Air Also Caused Those Tornadoes.
By NEA Rervice ; WASHINGTON, Nov. 15-~—The Armistice week-end storm, that brought the country its first stinging taste of winter, was brewed far up the Canadian map, in the Mackenzie Valley, Principal Meteorologist R. H. Weightman of the U. S. Weather Bureau said. A great air mass hung stagnant in that northern region, losing warmth by radiation into the dark Arctic sky. Then, when thoroughly chilled, it moved down into the plains and the midwest, bringing gales and snow. | The tornadoes that whirled destructively in the South were part of the same picture. Here, the cold air mass met and reacted with the warm air that normally hangs over the southern part of the great central valley area even late in autumn, and the ‘tornadoes were products of that jostling.
fa 43 TREO TEER ad 7 pha MY HAR
The Indianapolis
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1940
Registers Farm Delegates
;
Times
Entered
at
Farmers Hope
Pag Hy
Second Section
Matter Postoffice, Indianapolis, Ind.
as Second-Class
for Better
Grain Price Despite Surplus
While there was a surplus of corn and wheat in Indiana this fall it is almost impossible to buy either
commodity, according to Clyde Loop, Montgomery County Farm
.|Bureau head, who is attending the
Bureau comwvention here. Mr. Loop said the surplus corn on Indiana farms is being held for “hoped for” better prices. Some corn was sold earlier at a profit, he said, but the majority of the farmers believe prices will rise soon. Wheat is being held on tHe same theory. Crops that are not at great demand on the market are being stored for stock. . : A voluntary decreasing of acreage because of surplus, according to Mr. Loop, is out of the question. The farmers naturally want to get as much from the acreage they are allowed by the conservation program as possible. Decreasing of acreage has increased the use of hybrid corn in the state, Mr. Loop added. “Attempting to get as much yield as possible from limited acreage farmers have turned to a wide use of hybrid because its yield is much greater to the acre and its strength against disease, wind and draught have been proven,” he said. : Other farm leaders at the convention believe with Mr. Loop that
the war, at least so far, has had no effect o nthe farmer. Beneficial actions on the agricultural markets have been counteracted by the loss of foreign markets. However ,they believe that the demand for food throughout the
eventually a huge drain on stored grain will develop. | They do not-believe this expected demand will place them in the same situation as after the World War, when they had expanded rapidly and collapse followed as the demand stopped.
FT. WAYNE BUILDING TO BE USED BY I. U
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Nov. 15 (U. P).—Herman B Wells, presi+ dent of Indiana University, said today that a lease-purchase agrees ment had been signed with the Luther Instiute, Inc., of Ft. Wayne to obtain use of the institute's building at Ft. Wayne for the University extension center. The building has been occupied by the Ft. Wayne extension center]
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PAGE 13
EQUITY SOUGHT IN WHEAT PRICE
Canadian Says Farmers in Alberta Favored Over Other Sections. |
OTTAWA, Ont.,, Nov. 15 (U. P.), —Equitable prices for all wheat farmers in western Canada was urged in [the House of Commons
last night by Percy Wright, Mel fort, Sask. Mr. Wright told the House that the Government-set price on wheat ave Manitoba farmers a bonus and does nothing for farmers in other sections. Since Vancouver had also heen made a port of delivery farmeis in Alberta received more for their grain than farmers in Saskatchee wan. “I contend the payments for wheat should be the same for all farmers; that the basis should be for the local point.” He advocated an immediate ree vision of freight rates on grain ase serting that the cost of shipping wheat, oats and barley from west«
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