Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 October 1938 — Page 10
DEMOCRATS OF
OKLAHOMA GO ANTI-NEW DEAL
NATIONAL AFFAIRS
OKLAHOMA due to elect conservative Democrat. WISCONSIN third party worries Barkley. G. O. P. may gain 15 Senate seats, chairman says. MISSOURI WPA soliciting charge denied.
(Local and Indiana Politics, Page 24.)
BY RAYMOND CLAPPER Times Special Writer
OKLOHOMA CITY, Oct. 28.— Oklahoma Democrats will almost certainly elect their candidate for Governor in the coming election and the Democratic Party by the same token will continue to control Okla-
homa. Yet there will be a change, almost as marked as if the state was turning over from a Democratic to a Republican regime. Oaklahoma’s New Deal Governor, Marland, will be replaced by a conservative Democrat, Leon C. Phillips, a —dheaded hulking, two-fisted hea\yweight sometimes referred to here as King Kong. ~ Such changes as this are significant because they mark a shaking
down of the Democratic Party into|
its more conservative, pre-Roosevelt ways. When the Oklahoma Demo- _ crats held their primary last sum- . mer, they rejected the New Dealer who was running for Governor, William S. Key, who had been State WPA Administrator. Instead they chose \Red Phillips, the bitter foe of the outgoing New Deal Governo Marland. i .~ Mr. Phillips doesn’t like Mr. Wallace’s AAA. He doesn’t like Mr. Hopkins and WPA. In his primary campaign he promised to co-operate 100 per cent with Mr. Roosevelt. He let it go at that without further elucidation. Now in the election - campaign, he doesn’t mention the New Deal. He attacks ‘one-man rule. He says thére has been too . much one-man rule in Oklahoma and too much in the nation. Mr. Phillips used to be a Republican. Some of his intimate advisers are former Republicans. They have changed their party labels and now vote as Democrats. They think as Republicans. One of the first tasks Mr. Phillips has set for himself is to turn back the threat of Federal control of the oil industry which is coming up as an acute issue. Low prices and overproduction are putting oil into the same class® with wheat and cotton as chronic economic invalids. Mr. Phillips is dedicating himself to keeping the Federal doctors out before they put a Wallace crop control plan into the oil industry.
Barkley ‘Concerned’ By Third Party Move
MILWAUKEE, Wis, Oct. 28— (U. P.).—Senator Barkley (D. Ky.) Senate majority leader, told a gathering of Wisconsin Democrats last night he is “concerned” by third party movements. “We recognize,” he said, “that there can be only two national political organizations.” Wisconsin is the testing ground of Governor Philip LaFollette's new party, the National Progressives of America. “It will be a sad time in the history of our nation if our people, like those in Europe, divide into groups without any group having a majority capable of assuming the responsibility of government,” Senator Barkley said.
Indiana on G. 0. P. ‘Possible’ List WASHINGTON, Oct. 28 (U. P.).— Chairman Townsend (R. Del.) of the Senate Republican campaign committee, said today the G. O. P. is gaining ground and may win Senatorial battles in 15 states. Townsend also predicted Republican gains in gubernatorial races. “I think we're decidedly on the upgrade,” Senator Townsend said. “We're gaining ground. “To my surprise conditions in New York look very favorable. I believe it is possible we will elect the Governor and one or two Senators. “I believe that if this trend keeps up we might win in Connecticut, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Ohio, and with the continued upsurge we might possibly get Indiana and Illinois.
Farmers Dissatisfied
“In the West I think we have a very decided advantage in Kansas, South Dakota, North Dakota, Iowa, Wisconsin, Oregon, and California. “In the farm states farmers are very much dissatisfied with farm conditions and the low prices of grain. In industrial sections many persons: are disappointed because they cannot get jobs. “I think also that there is a great deal of dissatisfaction with the manner in which relief has been handled, especially the political use of relief funds. From the fact that so many evidences have come to light of corruption in the handling of relief it appears to be bordering on a national scandal.”
Missouri WPA Soliciting Denied JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. Oct. 28 (U. P.).—Matthew S. Murray, State WPA Administrator, said today his investigators found no evidence that WPA officials had been asked to contribute to party campaign funds. Mr. Murray made the statement in connection with charges by Barak T. Mattingly, Republican State - Chairman, that a letter signed “Phil Graves, by L. L. R.” had asked P. S. Ferguson, a nonrelief WPA foreman in Newton County, for $30 for the Democratic Party. Graves denied that he had written the letter or ever seen it, and W. R. Garrison, Newton County Democratic Committee chairman, said the man to whom the letter was addressed had been dead for more than a year.
EVA TETRAZZINI DEAD SALSOMAGGIORE, Oct. 28 (U. P.).—Eva Tetrazzini, contralto, was dead here today at 76. She was a sister of the illustrious Luisa Tetrazgini and widow of Maestro Cleofonte
Campanini, who died in Chicago in
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