Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1943 — Page 14

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Ohio

Author Thinks Goebbels Couldn’t Have Devised

Poorer Program.

By CARL F. MORRISON Times Special Writer

NEW YORK, June 18—If the New Deal had hired Nazi Propaganda Minister Goebbels to think up a U, 8S. farm policy, he “couldn’t have done half the damage that has already been done by the administration,” Louis Bromfield, the farmer-author, said here today. President Roosevelt's decision to back a- farm subsidy rather than appoint an all-out food administrator, he said, was “another fumbling way of using the taxpayers’ money to buy a way out of more blunders.” “No one wants subsidies,’ declared Mr. Bromfield, who is here for a food forum sponsored by Dairymen’s League

‘association.

In an interview, the Ohio “champion” of the small farmer commented on an episode which took place when he addressed the forum Tuesday. He showed the dairymen a long prepared speech and then ripped it in two. ‘I Am Tearing Mad’

“Since preparing that,” he told them, “I have read a vast amount of nonsense and misleading, if not lying, statistics by administrative spokesmen about the food crisis. I am tearing mad.” He told his listeners that his planned remarks had become “too tame” compared to what he now thought of the administration farm program. “The new deal,” he told them, is “continually asking the farmers to grow more and more food, but is making this more and more impossible. Every kind of obstacle is placed in the way.” Asked what he thought about the administration’s farm policy, he interrupted: “What policy?” “They haven't any real farm policy,” he charged. “One little word can describe the one big mess they've made.” He said the word was ‘“bedlam.”

Recalls Own Experiences

“Then I told the forum about my own experiences,” he recounted to the reporter, referring to a trip he made to Washington six months before Pearl Harbor. He said he had then warned Secretary of Agriculture Wickard and others that farseeing farm experts were worried about what might happen to the farmers as the war progressed and expanded. “They laughed at me,” he said. “They bragged that the U. S. was raising more food than could be eaten.” . The reporter called attention to the president’s declaration that the subsidy plan was the best .he had heard of and that anyone with “anything better to ‘offer” should speak up. Mr. Bromfield was asked is he still favored a plan he had outlined three months ago, for raising farm-machinery quotas. 50 per cent. “No,” he replied. “I now think it ought to be 100 per cent. And 30 does every farmer who is crying for equipment to give us more and more food.” Critical of OPA

Asked if he had other suggestions, he replied: “Yes, we want to see the OPA stop its jumping up and down.” He said the OPA had “fumbled around so much on prices” that a farmer couldn’t plan ahead more than a day or so—‘“if that long.” “One day they advise us to turn to raising chickens,” he said. “The next day they slap on some ceiling that would make us grow poultry at a loss.” . The farmer, he said, should be encouraged to count on a fair, regular margin of working profit so that he would go ahead and expand his food production. Most farmers, he declared, believe President Roosevelt's subsidy idea

specific

a scheme to hold the union vote in line,

JUL : UBSID C IK. of IRK BROMFIELD

the |, Co-operative |

is just “another sop to labor,” and

Clarence R. Hole, a member of

the newly elected head of the Indiana Knights of Pythias.

office of grand vice chancellor to grand chancellor at the close of the

day. He succeeds Q. Austin East, Bloomington, whose term e Courtland M. Ch , Bloom field, was named grand vice chancellor; Reuben L. Robertson, Indianapolis and Salem, was re-elected grand keeper of records and seal; Henry=Kammerer, Logansport, was named grand master of exchequer; George B. Hall, Rising Sun, is grana prelate, and Otto R. Shuman, Waterloo, is grand master of arms. * Milburn Holmes of Richmond is the new grand inner guard and Chester A. Davis, Bedford, grand outer guard. William P. Qualls, South Bend. was named to the grand council for three years, while Paul Hunter, Worthington, and Fred Ratliff, Marion, were named supreme representatives for two

years. Frank K. Miller, Indian-

Welcome lodge No. 37, Muncie, is

Mr. Hole was elevated from the °

75th annual convention here yester-

arence Hole

of P-Eiesrs as Session Ends ]

Clarence R. Hole

Mr. Chambers were elected directors of the Indiana Pythian corpora-| tion, each for three years. ' Mr. Robertson was named a director’ for two years.

EDUCATORS ASK NEW PEACE PLAN

Usual Ceremonials Held

To Be Obsolete

By Committee.

BOSTON, June 18 (U, P.).—Educators representing .27 colleges and universities throughout the United States believe traditional peacemaking ceremonials must be scrapped and new machinery used in settling with the axis, the universities committee on post-war international problems announced today. Results of a survey disclosed that the educators believe the traditional mechanics of peace-making obsolete. The following steps were. suggested for settlement of world war II 1. Preliminary conferences among the united nations to settle as many issues as possible in advance of military victory. 2. A victor-dictated armistice or preliminary peace treaty with the defeated barred from making .decisions.

Agencies for Problems

3. A transitional period varying in length with the countries concerned during which special problems might be handled by appropriate agencies. 4. Final negotiated = settlement either by a peace conference or by a permanent international body with possible participation by “new” government of defeated countries. 5: The So-called final settlement, either in a formal treaty or in decision rendered by an international body, would merely be’a part of a larger system for adjusting internationa] problems. The universities committee chairman is Prof. Ralph Barton Perry of Harvard university. Its 17 members include James Phinney Baxter III, president of Williams college; Prof. George ‘H. Blakeslee of Clark university, president of the world peace foundation; Prof. Quincy Wrigth of the University of Chicago and President Ernest H. Wilkins of Oberlin ‘college.

Kentucky Short Of Blue Grass

WINCHESTER, Ky. June 18 (U. P.).—Well, anyway, there are still lots of colonels in the state. With Kentucky still shuddering over the shortage of mint julips on Derby day, word comes that the Blue Grass state is getting short of blue grass. R. P. Taylor, head of the old seed pool, said that the present blue grass seed crop. was the worst in 50 years. A bare 10,000 “bushels will be harvested in Clark county, which a few years ago

‘produced 250,000 bushels.

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P.).—Indiana Farm Bureau Oil Co. officials ‘said today that a second: 10,000-barrel. tank of crude. oil at its; Ohio river shipping terminal at! Alzey, Ky. had been destroyed by | fire.

$40,000. The first tank was destroyed by lightning-caused fire yesterday, | and a shift in the wind caused the second one-to blaze, they said. |

in the fire ‘but-no one was injured, the company said. The terminal is six miles from Mt. Vernon.

Tabernacle A.- M. E. Zion chureh, will present a request song service at 8 p. m. The public is invited.

organ accompanments. Mrs. Mamie Logue will direct the music, and the |S Rev. I. Albert Moore, pastor, willl preside.

SECOND OIL TANK DESTROYED BY FIRE

MT. VERNON, Ind. June 18 (U.

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Two other. tanks were endangered

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