Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1943 — Page 8

40 shui hex rm LODDY Splits + mre mans \With F.D.R. Regime

SPARS swam In revently at the Ela ps Sot dy AEE EE b nent : LC : a § Ee Re Pilot bution incket stvies. Loinly Wayne. Mary Richmond of the| cighte Anti-Inflation Controls After Years of :Close | - © ee od plaids in sizes for juniors : if : an misses.

Th Miss Marth a = EEE | "| bey. were i Masih _ Association With the New Deal: Lobby iL SS | 1. Pictured Left

R. 3. Sturm, 925 Southern ave. JAVES, and Miss Mary Ann Har- Dates From World War I.

ly, daughter of Mrs. Agnes ‘H. series of articles on the farm Tob and how . anning, 328 Parkway, SPARS, This is the second in a — by

© By THOMAS L. STOKES | uk E Ce 4 wd - a fra \ RN = In. ur- SUIT 0, S rin WARHINGTON, March 10.—The sotinty’ is finding out! WX n © L A how powerful is the farm lobby as it pecks away at .he : 5 4 j

loaned administration's anti-inflation program, thus far with minor|| fe / © | Cw Suits hit the high for spring . .. and we have them to suit

f . ; —- || successes in congress, but with a growing threat of breakOHIO Erez Be ing through the cost of living defenses. u every taste... the best... the longest wearing . . . the

Representatives of the major farm organizations arel] Et ’ pd : 4 nN smartest. Quality tailoring and quality materials, 4-47 W. OHIO sem 5. nL busy at the capitol, pulling : San : . 3 ie.

The farmer had over-extended| Advertisement wires, marshalling pressure, "1nd at high prices dur-

THESE BUTTERMILK from farm: constituents, con-|ing the war boom, and now couldn't meet his mortgage payments on his

sulting’ their friends in con-

ALL-BRAN BISCUITS | : “The farm lobby oR - TS gress. The farm lobby invasion Was re- , A 1 The farm lobby has become big| corded in a little book, “Uncle ReuMAKE ANY MEAL! | business within a ‘period of about|ben in Washington,” by the shrewd : 2 : " 1" % Any ; Yeo © 120 years. It is one of the most|and diminutive Charles Barrett of ; &F Dressmaker : meal mes a feast with | highly organized pressure groups inj Georgia, then president of the Na- Yo : a JSS Lempune-weaure biscuits! Mads Washington and, as events dre prov-| tional Farmers union, Mr. Barrett : : : 19% 2 gos .make a with everyone! y ing, one of the most Sffeeiive. defended the right of the farmers & R&R ’ pe r : 3 a. gail > The farm or-fto organize a lobby in Washington. . : : sl AllgBran Buttermilk Bisouits ; ganizations be-| He paid his respects to the business H Sh : foils : nd Sa Jeshicked % Sup Kelloge's t Jeasnoon baking gan to move into|lobbies, naming names and describ- Ch f bl k. 1 teaspoon salt : Washington just|ing their operations. ; . ; : Si Soe rom navy and blac % teaspoon soda after the first] “We often call attention,” he h NR Sed a : ® izes for juniors, misses, and

: % cup shorteni : bo souk on Se il: sit world war. The wrote, “to the fact that the farmers 2 -f : hy 0 women,

* flour, baking powder, salt and soda to- | &i farmers neededihave an aggregate wealth in excess 2 0) x Pictured Right ; gether, gut =n 8, SROFleRing until nix % help. The artifi-|of the steel corporations, the rail- 4 2 Ad % : ght. g corn-mea 3 cial prosperity of| ways and the lumber interests. . : : Be a es ougn 1 © war days was be-| “Why, then, are they so weak in $19.95 i. floured board, knead lightly a few ginning to crack|political strategy? The answer is ¥ re, roll or pat to 1; ineh thick 3 and crumble. In-| simple. They have not organized ; anh cut S With Soured Sutter, Bake " flated p r i c e s| their forces andashave failed to train | (450° Fy about 12 minutes. Mr. Stokes dropped sharply men for the gentle art of lobbying.” * _ NOTE: Sweet Milk Recipe: If sweet | gs markets dried up with the end| The American Farm Bureau Fedmilk is used instead of buttermilk, | o¢ the war and surpluses of basic | eration opened legislative headquarSint sodarand inorease se baking powder crops piled up. ters here and it was in their offices, poons. : : ; in 1921, that the congressional farm

bloc was organized with a group of

GENTRAL’S ‘SPECIAL! senators and house members. . Balked on Surpluses This Beautiful o'r orate aged] : N U - A R T . President Harding and his adminisOIL PERMANENT Te ie “ Long or Short Style . . . Shin- A Real corridors, were aE of

ing Curls , . . Gay new con-: Value the Farm Bureau; the Farmers .. tour, Soft and easy to manage. ; Union, orggnized in 1902, and the

NO APPOINTMENT ALL W AVES National Grange, the oldest, founded

as: a secret fraternal society in 1867.

(Featuring)

NECESSARY GUARANTEED From the Harding administration — ay SE . Ree 3730 OL they wormed legislation creating 27 REE, 38, eh Bo of CASTILE foan agencies to ease farm credit. Maghitg Maghiveless NU-LIFE | Shampoo & J|But they wanted legisiation to meet : the basic surplus problem. Henry Fingerwave C. Wallace, secretary of agrizulture

$939 $ 49 $ 49 50¢c =60 Cc in the Harding regime, sougnt such

Permanent | Permanent | ceo permanent

a solution.

So did his son, Henry A. Wallace, CE j Ei : 4 " " v¢ CENTRAL BEAUTY COLLEGE 4 | or, tee president, and a groupf [5 130 oy 4 Shetlands “1 2nd Floor Odd Fellow Bldg. Cor. Penn. & Wash. L1-9721 J George N. Peek, Chester fc. Davis] # Feit : : ‘ and M. L. Wilson, alll of whom E 3 : 19.95 ——— - : turned up in Washington finally in ] ; : + a Sa official capacities when their dreams|f §& HAA gp 5 : : : or m— were realized in the Roosevelt ud- m = - 1" Checks"

DENTURES of minitrtion TY i a ; They crusaded in vain through 3 : 24 59 : DISTINCTION en the Harding, Coolidge and Hoover ; : : ia 1h 5 ® 4 . administration. The vehicle of those(f . ~~} : i @ } 0) y ; 4 = ou .. = days was the McNary-Haugen bill, 5 3 J varie 0 ress- : That will give y - twice. passed. by. congress, twice’) Black and brown maker and tailored. e OUTSTANDING SERVICE «2 5 vetoed by Mr. Coolidge. 2 checks in the popular styles in colors of red,

a _ Tie Up With New Deal : iF 3-button . jacket with : blue, aqua, summer ONATURAL, LIFELIKE APPEARANCE lie. isi ati bck ~pleshs in the brown, and gold. Sizes

~~ @ Hard, Dense and Strong—VYet depression spread through the farm : fi frond and back of for Juniors and misses. ] ht in i i ' || country, long ahead cf its inroads ; skirt, Sizes 10 to 18. ! Light in Weight and Compatible § one Ae rans 7 I Pictured Left Get the New Acrylic d the business house was pulled down wd ; wi ~ Pictured Lett $19.95 ? when the underpinnings of agri- $19 95

Eo T R A N S P A R r N T Ww. - {| culture rotted, and the dark days

of the Hoover administration gave

D E N TA i} P L AT = S i birth to the Roosevelt revolution, : : ©

Complete Complete

; Jl

; EASELS so-called. ee : y WITH 3 Formers had much. to do with 3 . TRANSLUCENT TEETH 7% that. The farm organizations had |} ; : A : Ni, Sh . TAKE UP TO ONE YEAR TO PAY ... NO EXTRA COST Sitios gia: ifiee ana ows: In the . el ipmen t! | Open Mondays Till 8:45 P. M. S/—— ington, then, in real truth, They | : : became adjuncts of the New Deal. ; : \ Farmers plumped for President : 5 Sling Sitrap Ox- / Roosevelt at the polls, Swelling 1 his N : hy ford, nl wedge y ENT heel; in beige, ’ 3 sweeping majorities. Pe ies 41 E. WASH AT PENN. : “Uncle Reuben” had really ar- yd g

ND FLOOR KRESGE BLDG rived—a respected, and feared, figPhone FR. 0135 he

Stgrilization and Cleanliness Are Striking Features of Our Service Old Friends Fail Out

Tr He has done exceeding well under rtisement Adve the New Deal. Agency after agency

has been created, most of them DISTRESS ‘OF INDI under the agriculture department, to assist and inform him. He gets service in Washington. His income RELIEVED BY RETONGA, bey Fors red But there came a rift in this

happy relationship with the out-

break of the present war and the necessity for imposing controls in-

cluding price restrictions, upon agriculture. The major farm organizations, with the single exception

Ea : of the Farmers Union, now are o Can Tal My Neighbors and : EE bucking the administration, and

i ; cven the Farmers Union is critical Friends That Retonga Lived ven hie Pare

Up to Every Good Word | The farm organizations have a EA of = : 8 tight grip on congress. . Heard of It,” Declares Lum- a Can President Roosevelt break it

a ¢ 1 |by appealing, over their heads, to| ‘berman. Tells of His Case. | the mass of Americans as con- : 1 r : sumers?

Amon the thousands of wellknown Sen’ and women gratefully 8 | TOMORROW: The ' American : : : TN : praising Retonga for the relief Farm Bureau Federation. : EE sont oY :sbrought them by this noted herbal ; = : : Ee _ stomachic and Vitamin B-1 medi-| : / Ri L ge : Square toe Eine is Mr. F'. N. Johnson, 4117 Polk| ; 4 1 : Toe st., Chattanooga, Tenn. who had PTE: ; : : HOcsasin, cde engaged in the lumber business| ae 5 fi ry 3 : ; ; Semis bine OHALAnIOES for many years. 2 TRS ML o : Tin 1 beige and his relief through : iy N : a a i. elSe a1 “Benge is the first medicibe 1

MR. F. N. JOHNSON *

0 day without feeling tired out. I can tell my neighbors and friends|~ {that Retanga lived up to every good +{ word 1.ever Beard of >

# tong is a purely herbal gastric taiere na combined with liberal quan-| Ba tities of Vitamin B-1. It is intend~| go. led to relieve such ‘distress. when due ., {V0 loss of appetite, insufficient flow | ¢.. Juices in