Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1939 — Page 5
TTT —
oe ———
2 NEW COLISEUM
~ WILL BE READY FOR STATE FAIR
Bu Shift of C of Carpe Speeds Work; Other Pp Pfojects Pushed.
A double shift of carpenters will make possible the completion of the new Coliseum at the Fair Ground in time for ths State Fair openin Sept. 1. officials said today. | Construction. wa# delayed last
month when a labor dispute arose
and work was haltéd_temporarily. The ovening event in the new building will he the Society Night Horse Show. The ‘exact date of this event has not heen announced.
Other Projects Listed Other construction expected to be
- completed in time for the Fair will -be a new incinerator located in the
“Tent City,” and area reserved for campers ahd trailers visiting the Fair, a new pedestrian foot bridge lo.ated at the tunnel leading to the infield: parking space and anosher entrance to the Women’s Building. Adding to the safety of those in the grandstand will be a concrete slab along the racetrack fence, ex, tending west to the Indiana University Building. More than 2000 persons used the camp andjtrailer “Tent. City” last year, o Is estimate. * A. nearby market re for: the. residénts and free parking is provided at all
_ times,
Lieut. Gov. Henry F. Schricker is head of the committee on arrange-. ments for the Farmers’ and Farm Organization Day to be held Sept. 7. A meeting of the committee is to be held Tuesday at: the Indiana State Fair Grounds: Administration Building and the day’s program will be completed.
INQUEST ORDERED IN
'BROWNSTOWN : DEATH
BROWNSTOWN, Ind. Aug. 2 (U. P.) —An inquest will be held today into the death of Carl Ott, 39-year-old harness shop proprietor, whose body was found yesterday with a .38caliber bullet in the temple. Relatives said he had been despondent over ill health: '
Try Murphy's - First
|MURPHY'S 5810
Cor. Ill. and Mkt. Sts,
The Gallup Poll—
Second and McNutt Third. By DR. GEORGE GALLUP
Director, American Institute’ of Publis Opinion
linois, which went Democratic in the last two Presidential elec tions, is leaning toward the Republican side at the present time, judging by surveys conducted
throughout the state by: the Amers ican Institute of Public Opinion. A small majority of Illinois vot= ers, the survey indicates, would prefer to see the Republicans win the 1940 elecs | on. A large | mp jority, more t Bp si SE n every 10, they would vote against President Roosevelt : if lhe ran for a PUBLIC OPINION t ird term: he Illinois surveys were condiicted by the same methods which have been accurate in state jand national elections, The, voters were asked: * If President Roosevelt runs for a third term in 1940, de you think you wil vote for him?”
Yes ',...
“Which party iwguld you like to see win the Presiden- - tial election in 19402»
Want Republicans to Win|..... b... 54%
Want Demberats
2 |
ios is the| third most populous State in the Union. Recent surveys in the other two, New York and Pennsylvania, also have revealed a Republican trend, with slight majorities saying ‘they would [like to see a G. O. P. victory in 1940. Thus, in the three most important states the Republican Party symbol appears to be slightly more popular “today than the Democratic symbol, though of course the selection of candidates in 1940 and events of the campaign might alter this sentiment. In another large state, California, on the |other hand. Institute surveys have found Democratic sentiment predomi-
| nating, with 60 per dent of voters wanting a Democratic victory ‘in 1040. |
df F. D.. nm Doesn’t Enter "Race, Democrats Would Back Garner, With Farley |
RINCETON, N. {I., Aug. 2.—H-’
Although Illinois went Democratic in the last two Presidential elections, a majority of the state's voters (54 per cent) today say they would like to see the Republican Party win the election in 1940.
How Four States Line Up
New York, Pennsylvania, Tilinois and California account for one-fourth of the electoral votes in a Presidential election and cast | more than one-third of the popular vote in 1936. The Institute has already reported political sentiment in New’ York, Pennsylvania and California and today reports on Illinois. The attiffide of the voters in these four large states toward a third _ term and toward the 1940 campaign is summarized below.
1. “If President Roosevelt runs for a third term in 1940 de you think you will vote for him?”
New York ...... sohes Pennsylvania lineis California
2. “Which party would you like to see win the Presidential
election in 19402”
New York ..... sees vis nest cies AY 539% 54
Pennsylvania Illinois
B35
- Would Vote for Bim
Would Vote Against Him 58% 54 ) 61 57
Want Democrats’ Want G. O. P. to Win to Win
54 40
Virtually all the Republican voters (meaning those who voted for Alf Landon in 1936) in the Illinois Survey oppose a -‘Roosevelt third term and want to see the Republican Party win in 1949. A Roosevelt third term is not overwhelmingly popular even among Illinois Democrats, 40. per cent of whom say they would vote against the President if he ran again.
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cratic voters of 1936 want to see -another Democratic victory in 1940. - Approximately one-fourth of them (28 per cent) say they would like to see the Republicans win. The rural and small town areas of Illinois continue to be more Republican than the cities. Whereas a slight majority of voters (52 per cent) in the urban sections want to see the Repub- | _ licans win in 1940. the ratio i in the
T0 OPERATE AUTOS:
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (U. P.).— The City of Stuttgart, Germany, is running its autos on sewer gas, the Commerce Department said today. Quoting from a report from an American consul .in Germany, the department said that Stuttgart has successfully recovered clarified sewer gas and in 1938 supplied approximately 1,000,000 cubic meters for use
Savings effected in fuel cost have enabled the City to amortize the costs of converting ite vehicles from gasoline to clarified sewer gas consuming types, according to the report.
SEWER GAS IS USED STATE IS ALLOTTED -
Shows 54 Per Cent in 1 linois ator G. 0. P for 1 940: 61 Per Cent Say ‘No’ to T hird Te erm for Roosevelt
State’ S$ Resublicans Favor Dewey for - Candidacy, Put Vandenberg Second And Taft Next.
rural and. small town - areas is more than 3 18 3
rtiomas "E. DEWEY of New York is thé favorite choice for 1940 of Illinois Republican voters with opinions ‘on eandidates... Among other Democratic voters the leading choice, in case Mr. Roosevelt: does not run, is John,
| N. Garner, with James A. Farley
second and Paul V. McNutt third, Tiinois Republicans Favor: Dewey P00 nesnssvetnsese 429% Vandenberg ®es essere 32 Taft @eesscesessssssenns 14 Landon Ges 00everenesnee 5 * Borah jesse ss erNensnn ans 2 - Others 0 a0 000000000 be 6 Illinois Democrats Favor: (In Case F.'D. R. Does Not Run) Galler «..ieiveiiivices 49% . Farley $sscesssssssssene i McNutt PE RN ah Hull sess geetcsssenvene Hopkins e0s00sse0sssace Others ..seceseescnsee.. 4
France Added to
Institute Surveys Throughout France this week
Mand next, a small army of in-
vestigators interviewing a crosssection of people in all sections of the country will complete a survey of French public opinion on one of that nation’s mest vital problems today — the declining birth rate. Her population decimated by the World War, France's government is drafting a series of positive measures to deal with the problem. It is the public attitude toward these proposals which the survey will measure. Three years ago the American Institute organized an affiliate in England—the British Institute of Public = Opinion, whose” regular monthly surveys are published by the London “News Chronicle.” Through the American Institute, the British Institute and the French Institute it is planned to measure sentiment in the three democratic countries on the same questions at the same time. : Thus readers of The Indianapolis Times will be able to follow,
for the first time in history, what |
the masses of people in England, America and France are thinking and saying about the probiems of today:
$715,896 NYA FUNDS
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (U. P.).National Youth Administrator Aubrey. Williams aliocated $27, 465,319 of Federal Funds, including $715,896 for Indiana, today for student aid which he estimated would furnish part-time employment for 450,000 students during the 1940 fiscal year. The allocations, he said, will be divided among 1650 colleges and universities and 25,500 Secondary schools. NYA allows undergraduate college students to earn between $10 and $20 per month and high school pupils from $3 to $6 in the work-aid program, College graduate students may. earn from $20 to $30 a month. The ‘jobs are limited to persons between 16 and 24 Years old.
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