Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 October 1936 — Page 22
Roosevelt's St. Louis Talk
By United Press : . ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. 14.— The full text of President . Roosevelt's address here today follows:
You and I join here with the rest of the nation in dedicating this site as a memorial to the valiant dead of the World War. Here will rise ma fitting structure—a symbol of devoted patriotism and unselfish service. We in America do not build monuments to war, we do not build monuments to conquest, we build monuments to commemorate the spirit of sacrifice in war—reminders of our desire of peace. The memory of those whom the war
called to the beyond urges us to
consecrate the best that is in us to the service of country in times of peace. We best honor the memory of those dead by striving for peace, that the terror of the days of war will be with us no more. In what we have done during the last three years to promote national recovery at home, to extend the hand of the good neighbor to the nations of the world, to break down the barriers of commerce which divide nation from nation, we are promoting the course of peace throughout the world. Here at home is the call to servfice too. Inequalities in our social order call for correction. A true patriotism urges us to build an even more substantial Amerfica where the good things of life may be saved by more of us— where the social injustices will not be encouraged to flourish. The many different occupations in our economic and social order can be tied more closely together for their mutual advantage and for ‘ the advantage of America. It is significant that the site of this memorial to the veterans of the World War is also the site of the beginning . of the old Oregon Trail.
Here those pioneers of old left |.
to begin that long trek across an
unknown country.: They faced the |
dangers ahead of them with stout heart and determined mind. They carried the civilization of their day to new outposts. They carried the spirit of America to a broader destiny. We seek tb follow their example along another trail. They turned not back. Let us not turn back in what we seek in these years—a sounder and more permanent wellbeing in America. We honor them and we will carry on. May the beauty of the monument which will rise on this site cast a beneficent light on the memories of our comrades, may its substantial structure typify the strength of their purpose and may it inspire future generations with the desire to be of service to their fellows and their country. All major wars have brought major disturbances in our social and economic machinery. The late war has been no exception. New problems arise to take the Places of the old.
We rejoice here that those prob- |:
Jems are being met and solved with-
HOLIDAY FOR ELECTION ___ DECLARED BY. UNIONS
By United Press SOUTH BEND, Ind, Oct. 14.— "The Central Trades and Labor Union today adopted a resolution declaring a labor holiday for 20,000 union members here on election day, Nov. 3. “Sufficient time for casting a ballot is not provided for by law,” the resolution stated.
out impairing our faith and confidence in the people’s ability to do it themselves by the peaceful process of Democratic representative goverffment. No place ‘could be more fitting to reaffirm that faith and confidence than a monument to those who have died in a ’gallant effort ‘to save democracy for the world. No place could be more fitting to renew our resolve that faith will guide us and direct these our efforts of today. May we keep the faith,
EVANSVILLE CHURCH DESIGNATED IN WILL
By United Press LOS ANGELES, Oct. 14.—The will of the late John G. Wartmann, who died Sept. 27 at the age of 73, leaving an estate valued at $145,000, was on file for probate today. Bequests included $5000 to the Trinity Methodist "Church, Evans-
ville, Ind.; $2500 to the Rathbone
Home of Evansville: $5000 to the Evansville Public Health Nursing Association; $500 each to 11 other religious or charitable institutions of Evansville; $2500 to Freda L. Fox, La Porte, Ind.; $7500 to Josephine Sardemann, Winnipeg, Manitoba, and $5000 to Richard Graham, Evansville, Ind.
As in 1932— Times Special GREENCASTLE, Ind. Oct. 14—Co-eds at De Pauw University - favor the election of Gov. Alfred M. Landon by a 4-to-1 majority, according to a poll of the De Pauw, student newspaper. : Combined with a straw vote taken recently among men, the De Pauw campus favors the election of the Republican presidential nominee 3 to 1. However, a campus poll taken on the eve of the election in 1932 was a landslide for Herbert Hoover, with the Democratic Party relegated to a third party status. Of the women polled, 152 were for Gov. Landon, 36 for President Roosevelt, and one for William ‘Lemke, Union Party nominee.
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