Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 November 1938 — Page 5
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THURSDAY, NOV.3,108 =
- Willis to Make Final
Appeals Today for
~ Support
in County
Senatorial Candidate Schedules Two Addresses; Kealing Pledges to Co-operate With Police Wolff Charges Democratic Carelessness.
Raymond E. Willis, Republican final plea for support in Marion C
Senatorial nominee, will make his ounty today with addresses to ward
chairwomen at the Hotel Antlers at 2 p. m. and a Wayne Township meeting at the Hawthorne Community House at 7:30 p. m.
The meeting tonight includes the 12th, 14th, 19th and 24th Wards and Wayne Township outside Indianapolis. Mr. Willis will be presented by George L. Denny. Other speakers will include Charles 'W. Jewett, 12th District Congressional candidate; Louis R. Markun, candidate for State auditor, and Herman C. Wolff, mayoralty candidate. Mr. Wolff will be introduced by Carl Vandivier, County chairman.
Speech to Be Aired
Mr. Willis’ address to Ward chairwomen in the afternoon will be broadcast over radio Station WFBM.
For the remainder of the afternoon, Mr. Willis will greet supporters in his headquarters on the seventh floor of the Claypool Hotel. His speech tonight .is scheduled for . 8:40 p. m. The Senatorial nominee will leave Indianapolis tomorrow for his final . campaign address at Ft. Wayne tomorrow night. He will end his 15,000-mile campaign trek through the State at Angola, his home town,
Saturday. nl Plan Mass Meeting Marion County Republicans, meanwhile, completed preparations for their mammoth mass meeting at Cadle Tabernacle tomorrow night.
Alvah C. Waggoner, candidate for State Senator, will serve as temporary chairman of the meeting and will introduce Harry E. Yockey as permanent chairman. Mr. Vandivier will introduce candidates. Russel Richardson, County speakers’ bureau chairman, will present City, County and Congressional candidates. Principal speakers will pe Mr. Jewett, William O. Nelson, 11th District Congressional nominee, and Mr. Wolff. Ushers will be named by the Marlon County Republican veterans’ bureau with Jack Schlott and Harry Van Devender in charge.
Democrats Haven’t Denied Charges, Royse Says
Democratic campaign speakers have failed to deny .charges of “crime and vice in this city” made by Democrats in the primary, Wilbur Royse, Republican judiciar candidate, asserted in a talk last night at Compton’s Hall. Mr. Royse cited this as proof of the truth of the charges. “Let me remind you,” he said, “that not one word has been uttered by any speaker speaking in behalf of our opponents denying the the postive statements regarding the wide open gambling and vice prevalent in this city made by Sheriff Ray, Andrew Jacobs and Judge Frank P. Baker. “The reason for this is that these charges were absolutely true and have been proved beyond any question of doubt. “It is well to remember that the deplorable conditions existing in this community were originally brought to light by public declarations of prominent Democrats who no longer could endure the prostitution of our local government by the Clauer machine.” The candidate charged that power of the electorate “has been usurped by a powerful few” and that “the Democratic bosses were being supported by every gangster, hoodlum and racketeer in this county.”
Veterans Ask Special
Deputies for Election
The Marion County Republican Veterans have aodpted a resolution asking special arrangements by the _ Sheriff to assure fair treatment of all voters next Tuesday, it was announced today by F. E. Livengood, chairman of the group. The resolution asks that the Sheriff swear in enough special deputies to “insure preservation of law and order” at the polls.
Nonpartisan Election of Judges Is Advocated
Election of judges on a nonpartisan basis, or at a special election, today had been advocated by William D. Bain, Republican candidate for Circuit Court Judge. Mr. Bain, speaking at a “party meeting last night at 1907 E. 46th St., said the judiciary has been “neglected and relegated to the background” in recent years. “And now a victim of the ‘purge,’ ” he said, “the judiciary has offered and now offers another fertile field for exploitation—and the New Deal has not hesitated to exploit it.” Urges Repeal of Law
The speaker commented that few voters even know the names of" the judicial candidates. : “The law which now requires their (judges) selection at a general elec_tion on a partisan basis should be repealed,” Mr. Bain said, “and appropriate provision made for their election on a nonpartisen ticket— or at a special election. “Opjnions may differ as to ways and means, but all agree that it should not be possible to say of one judge that he is a ‘Republican’ judge, or of another that he is a ‘Democratic’ judge.”
Willis Sees Evidence for F.D. R. Third Term
Times Special KENDALLVILLE, Nov. 3.—Raymond’ E. Wilils, Republican Senatorial nominee, today had charged that Secretary of Commerce Roper came to Indiana yesterday to send up & Roosevelt third-term “trial balloon.”
ne thought the answer to the third .erm question should be delayed antil after the election. «If Mr. Roosevelt was not considering running for a third term,” Mr, Willis said, “there would be no need to delay the answer to the third term question until after the election next week. “The very thought that they wish to delay the answer to this question is sufficient evidence that the President is seriously considering the third term, which is in violation of the precept laid down by the first President of the United States, George Washington, 100 years ago.
Intimates G. 0. P. Victory
“Mr. Roosevelt has said, I believe, that no day was complete without a broken precedent. Well, that is one precedent that I do not believe the American people will permit him to break.” : He said that any vote for the New Deal in this election “is an open invitation to Mr. Roosevelt to run for a third term,” adding: “I have traveled 20,000 miles over Indiana’s roads during this campaign. I have talked with the farmer in his fields, the mechanic in his garage, the filling station attendant, the waiters in restaurants, the businessmen in their stores, and judging by what they say, I am convinced that the voters of Indiana will answer that third term question for Mr. Roosevelt when they go to the polls Nov. 8—and that answer will not be in the affirmative.” =
Kealing Pledges to Work With Police Department
Edward R. Kealing, Republican nominee for Sheriff, told voters at a meeting at 1907 E. 46th St., last night, if elected he will co-operate with the police department. “Any friction between these two departments results in both not being as effective as they should be in doing the job of law-enforce-ment,” Mr. Kealing said. “I believe that the people want these two lawenforcement departments to work hand-in-hand.” : : Attorney Emsley Johnson, speaking on behalf of Edwin Haerle, Republican nominee for prosecutor, charged that vice and crime are A EE
rampant in Marion County, and said “such lawless conditions exist only as a result of special protection and privileges on the part of the Democratic machine in power.” Mr. Johnson declared that “ministers and Parent-Teacher bodies” have had to take the lead in eliminating gambling and vice, a job that “the proper law enforcement agencies” could handle if they wanted to, and quoted ‘Methodist Church ministers as saying “our problem is not laws, but enforcement.” : Mr. Haerle, Mr. Johnson continued “has pledged an ‘honest, fair and impartial administration of justice” and “deputy prosecutors will be named to give a law enforcement in Marion County that will be efficient and impartial.”
Promises Correction of Liquor Law ‘Evils’
.Republicans will correct “evils” in liquor traffic by changing the State Liquor Control Law if they are elected to the State Legislature, Joseph Carson, Republican nominee for State Representative, told a meeting of the Perry Township Republican Club at Southport last night. Democratic nominees “haven’t stated their position” on the liquor act “because they will not be able to exercise any freedom concerning the type of legislation for which they will vote,” Mr. Carson charged. Voters want the liquor law changed to remove “graft and illegal liquor traffic,” he continued.
Democrats Want Only Negro Vote, Hines Says
Times Special NOBLESVILLE, Nov. 3. — Democrats want only the votes of the Negro, not his friendship, Fred E. Hines, Republican candidate for Appellate Court, declared at a meeting of the Colored Republican Club here last night. /
He said that the Antilynching Bill introduced in Congress by Senator VanNuys failed to pass ‘due to opposition by the New Deal party.” : Republicans have championed the rights of the American Negro more than 80 years, Mr. Hines continued, while “the New Deal has pretended to be a firm friend of the Negro by offering him charity.”
Change Demanded in City Government, Wolff Says
Indianapolis citizens will vote their disapproval of the “master attitude of the present regime,” Herman C. Wolff, Republican Mayoralty candidate, predicted today. “Whenever any single group, regardless of its political affiliation, remains so long in power that it becomes careless of that power and forgets it is the servant and not the master of the people, then the people themselves can always be depended upon to take matters into their own hands,” he asserted. Mr. Wolff reviewed his plaffrom and made these predictions in a series of Republican meetings last night. “1t is all too unfortunate,” he said, “that in the heat of a cam-
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paign and particularly in its final stages, the main objectives some= times become lost to sight.
‘No Personal Issues’
«I wish to repeat now that there are no personal issues involved. Neither dées the idealistic philosophy propounded six years ago by the President enter this campaign. “The issues involved are wholly local issues and they call for sober and considerate judgment. Only once in four years have the citizens of Indianapolis the opportunity to say for themselves who shall manage their city governmental affairs and who shall spend their tax money. «An aroused citizenry is demanding a -chénge in our City administration, a change that will insure
~ |careful and deliberate management
of affairs, rather than a political management of these affairs.”
6. 0. P. Claims Vote Of Foreign-Born Citizens
Sixty per cent of sndiana’s for-eign-born voters will support the Republican ticket in next week’s election, John Zazas, in charge of the Republican Naturalized Voters’ Bureau, declared in a talk at a workers meeting in Republican headquarters yesterday. He estimated there are 165,000 foreign-born persons eligible to vote in Indiana, and of these he believes 125,000 will' cast a ballot Nov. 8. He estimated there are 15,000 in Marion County. Naturalized citizens will “vote Republican,” Mr. Zazas said, because “they feel that the Democratic Party has had an opportunity to pull the country out of the bad conditions and has failed.”
Bedford Speaker Pleads For G.0.P. Victory
A plea for a Republican victory next Tuesday was made by Chester A. Davis of Bedford in an address before the McKinley Club, 2217 E. Michigan St., here last night. Declaring that “the fundamental issues in this campaign are . . . shall we live according to the American plan of life or shall we sink completly to the socialistic conditions found in some European countries?” Mr. Davis said that a Republican victory is the only answer. He. charged President Roosevelt with seeking and obtaining dictatorial powers under the guise of “emergency,” and said the New Deal is piling up an incalculable tax burden for future generations. “Is it not time that we, as Amerjcan citizens,” Mr. Davis concluded, “arise ‘en masse and strike down the viperous head of this New Deal serpent before it is too late?”
Robinson Calls New Deal
Policies Menacing
GREENFIELD, Nov. 3 (U. P)— New Deal policies are menacing America’s constitutional government, Arthur R. Robinson, former U. S. Senator from Indiana, declared. last night in his first campaign address this fall.
He asserted that the Constitution
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Contends Democrats Are on Defensive
“Revelations of the abuse of power by the Democratic political machine in Indianapolis have got the Democratic organization on the defensive,” James L. Dilly, former publicity “director of the clubs division of the Republican National Committee, charged this afternoon. Addressing a meeting at the Wolff-for-Mayor Club headquaters, he added: “The Democrats have insisted that they have aided the poor and needy. ey have pretended to be the champions of the underprivileged. At the same time, here locally they have permitted wide open gambling places to honeycomb the entire city and lure away from the poor man the few paltry dollars
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JET TO SPEAK “AT TOWN HALL
Edna ‘St. Vincent Millay Will Read Own Works at English’s Saturday.
Edna St. Vincent Millay, American woman poet, will present the third in a series of Town Tall lectures at 11 a. m. Saturday in English’s Theater. . Miss Millay, a Pulitzer prize winner for poetry and one of the most popular and widely read contemporary poets, will read some of her own works at the lecture. Her first book of verse, “Renas-
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lished the year of her graduation from Vassar College in 1917. “The Harp Weaver,” published in 1923, won for her the Pulitzer prize, and the libretto, “The King’s Henchman,” for which Deems Tay-
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