Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1940 — Page 4

DOSIER HOPES FD. R. IS FOE

‘Elwood Speech Date Not | Yet Set, He Tells Press Conference. (Continued from Page One)

- with Governor Harold E. Stassen,

Minnesota; who was his convention floor manager, and they will discuss

campaign plans and probably the|}|

- "selection of a campaign manager

Toa

§ : pect”

‘and a chairman of the Republican] ~ National Committee. 8

“I'll tell you something dramatic,”

Willkie remarked, as he hurried into

the press conference room and ges-

tured across Nassau St., which lay

21 floors below. “There is the building where President Roosevelt and his law

'. partner, Basil O'Connor, had offices

when I came to New York. My office was in this building just across the street from them. “I don’t know whether he (Mr. Roosevelt) is going back to practice law over there or not.” Willkie promised an aggressive, vigorous campaign in which he would stump the country from coast to coast.

They ‘Have the Jitters’

Asked if he had read statements of Democratic reaction from Wash-

ington regarding his candidacy,

Willkie replied: “Sure, I've read them all. Those " boys must have the jitters. They sounded like my opposition in Philadelphia where every time my opponents said anything I got- more votes.” Willkie said “I most certainly exto ask District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey to take an active part in the campaign.. “He was very swell about all this,” Willkie said. “Dewey telephoned me half an hour before the balloting was over to offer congratulations. He was very fine about that.” Willkie expected to meet today with . directors of Commonwealth and Southern Corp. and resign his Job as president and also to give up the numerous directorships he holds in other corporations.

Expects to Meet McNary Sometime during the week he ex-

- pects to meet Senator Charles L.

McNary of Oregon, who was nominated for Vice President. Willkie hopes before leaving in two or three days for a two or three-week vacation to announce the date of his Elwood speech. Asked how it seemed to leave New York a private citizen and-return a public figure, Willkie replied: “It feels like this,” gesturing to the crowded room, “and as I said before, I was overwhelmed. But traffic was just the same coming down from home in a taxi this

- morning. We stopped at all the

lights.” He said he didn’t know what he

~ would do for relaxation during his

vacation, but that he is a poor fisherman.

TWO LEGAL BITES PER DOG ST. JOHN, N. B, July 1 (U. P.). Magistrate G. Earle Logan figures every dog is entitled to two botes. He dismissed an application of a woman for destruction of a neigh"bor’s dog after it had bitten her.

7

A squadron of scythe-bearing

be charged for the work. Here's that may be felled.

ingly disquieting to them now, that he will refuse to run. These rumors are to the effect that he will reject the nomination dramatically after it is voted by the convention.

If Mr. Roosevelt has been waiting for a draft, he can get it now—a hurricane load of it. Looking about in the party, Democrats can discern no one else who has the dynamic force to match the Republican candidate. Months ago they might have built up a successor, but such an effort was made impossible by the President's refusal to eliminate himself. It is his responsibility now, they argue bluntly, to carry through. That is the first consideration. The second revolves about the type of campaign to be conducted against Mr. Willkie. They find, in tackling him, that they will have to proceed differently from the manner in which they would have planned a campaign against Senator Taft, Senator Vandenberg or Thomas E. Dewey. Here they have a man who can take care of himself in swapping ° punches. They must deal, in short, with an individual rather than with a party, for Mr. Willkie will make this a campaign of personality, The obvious course is to emphasize the utility issue. Cg The Administration has built up

a record on public power for seven

i

Menacing Weeds Dodmed

Times Photo.

city employees went forth today

to cut high weeds on private property where the weeds are regarded as a traffic menace. Property owners, who have been warned, will

a patch in the northeast section

New Dealers Admit Willkie Is Tough Customer to Handle

(Continued from Page One)

years which will be brought into the campaign. Already New Deal researchers have begun to pore over

the records dealing with the utility man to discover if there is anything that has been overlooked. ' He said himself at Philadelphia that he did not fear investigation since the New Dealers already had gone through his records and papers until they had worn them out. Some who have heard Mr. Willkie speak wonder how effective Democrats can-be with the utility issue, in view of the frankness with which the. candidate raises it, explores it, shows how he has reduced rates in his company and increased consumption. “I am a businessman, yes, what of it?” is the attitude he takes. It is very likely that Mr. Willkie’s nomination will cause a tightening up of some weak spots in the Administration, to make sure of results in its national-defense program, for the Republican candidate is making “competence in government” his chief issue. Thus, part of the Administration's campaign will be to set its own house in order here in Washington; for in dealing with Mr. Willkie they are dealing with a man who can call the turn, and will not hesitate to call the turn. . He knows how to

dramatize adhinistrative weak-

nesses.

I ’ ' ) L | | A k r |

(IN INDIANA)

ILIP MOR

CALL FOR

|

LIP

TRAFFIC KILLS 4 OVER WEEK-END

County Toll Rises to 57, City’s 38; Four More Die in State.

(Continued from Page One)

operated by another inmate of the home. HOBART LEE, Indianapolis, killéd when his car struck a utility pole near Shelbyville. CLEMENT PALKA, 24, South Bend, killed near his home when his motorcycle and an auto colHded.: RUSSELL E. PRIFOGLE, 29, Brookville, Ind., killed when his. truck ran wild down a mountain - road near Altoona, Pa.

\ Trapped in Wreckage

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

In Mother's Role at 11

The Smith accident” occurred |

when cars driven by her husband and D. A. Murphy, 58, of 415 E. 50th St., collided. Mrs. Smith was pinned beneath the wreckage and died less than an hour later in the receiving ward at Methodist Hospital. -

Mr. Smith was uninjured. Their

daughter, Jean, 8, was treated at}

Methodist Hospital. Mr. Smith and the daughter are the only immediate survivors. The family has lived in hdisnapolis for a year and a alf.

Services for Mrs. Smith will be at 10 a. m. Wednesday at the Flanner & Buchanan . Mortuary, with the Rev. Virgil D. Ragan officiating. Burial will be at Crown Hill. : Mr. Hutson, who died late Saturday night at City Hospital, was a passenger in a car driven by Roy Morris, R. R. 3, Box 64D. The Morris car and one driven by Don Reid, 1809 Westview Drive, collided.

Mrs. Hutson also was injured. Jesse Jones, 59, R. R. 3, Box 64T, received severe chest injuries. Military rites for Mr. Hutson will be held tomorrow at 2 p. m. Greencastle where Mr. Hutson had lived for many years. Recently he had been employed by the State Highway Commission. Other survivors are his brother; a son, Maynard Hutson, Greencastle; a daughter, Mrs. F. G. Browning, Terre Haute; five other brothers and sisters, and his father, James Huston, Terre Haute.

Resident Here 16 Years

Mr. Rogers was born in Rushville April 16, 1913, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Rogers. He had lived in Indianapolis for 16 years, was graduated from the St. Philip Neri School and was a member of St. Phillip’s Church. He attended Tech High School for two years and was employed by the Lesh Paper Co. Mr. Rogers is survived by his parents; a sister, Miss Dorothea Rogers; two brothers, Charles Rogers and Frank Rogers, and his maternal grandmother, Mrs, Hannah Connolly, Rushville, Mr. Lee, a World War veteran, is survived by his mother, Mrs. Addah Lee, 1009 Prospect St.; a brother, Howard; four sisters, Miss Nora Lee, Mrs. Grace Berry and Mrs. Thelma Baskerville and Mrs. Hazel Blackburn, Roaring Gap, N. C. Services for Mr. Lee will be g 10 a. m. Wednesday at the J.C. Wilson Mortuary, with buria) in

Kansas Cemetery, west of Edinburg.

E

pays the new National Defense Tax for you —on Philip Morris—America’s finest cigarette—proved better for your nose and throat!

Lett to right, Frances Volk, 11; Yvonne, 3, and Henry, 9 .

Times Photo. « « Orphaned

by accident.

© “Mother” of the orphaned family of John Volk, Ft. Harrison private killed Saturday night by an interurban car near his Lawrence home, is 11-year-old Frances, oldest girl of six Children. Their mother was killed by an auto in 1937 as she walked along Road 67, her arms laden with Christmas gifts. Yvonne, 3, and Henry, 9, and three boys not in the picture also survive. Laddie, 16, and Billy, 14, both are Lawrence High School pupils. John Volk Jr, 18, also in the U. S. Army, is due here today

JOBS ARE FEW NOW, DETROIT WARNS U. $.

DETROIT, July 1 (U. P). — State officials and civic leaders have become alarmed over the prospect that job-seekers from other states will pour into Detroit only to be disappointed by inability to find work and become public charges.: Figures of the Michigan state employment service show that Detroit

residents were being laid off by fac-|

tories in the Detroit area in anticipation of the usual summer slump in industrial production. It was pointed out that these persons probably would be the first called back to work. Although Detroit was exepected to play a large part in producing war materials for the new preparedness program, it was pointed out by business experts that it probably would be mid-summer at least before factories could be geared and tools installed for the increased production. :

WAYNE MORRIS AND WIFE LIVING APART

HOLLYWOOD, July 1 (U.P.)— Wayne Morris, actor, and his heiress wife, Leonora (Bubbles) Shinasi Morris, were living apart today. Mr. orris moved out of their Beverly ills" home Saturday and went to an apartment hotel. Neither would comment. “I feel too badly about the whole thing and I don’t want to sdy anything about it,” Mr. Morris said: The couple married a year and a half ago.

OFFICIALS TO TAG AERIAL VIOLATORS

OAKLAND, Cal, July 1 (U. P). —Aerial traffic is becoming so thick here that the Oakland Board of Port Commissioners has decided that airplane traffic violators hereafter will find a tag pasted on their windshields the same as motorists who violate traffic regulations. Attendants and officials at the airport who have witnessed a violation will be authorized to pass out the tickets. Reasons for tagging include flying low, stunting illegally, illegal taxiing and flying without signals,

China and India are the world’s leading rice producers, with Japan

ranking third, Japan’s crops are : supplemented by imports of the ;

commodity.

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from his New York station. Until he arrives, services for the father will not be arranged. Neither will it be decided what the family of children will do, although they hope to stay together in their home and manage somehow. Mr. Volk was killed when he was struck by an Indiana Railroad interurban car. He was cook for the 19th Field Artillery at Ft. Halvison, His son also is an Army cook. :

NE VIA DL

Regular $42.50

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NEW GRAND JURORS CHOSEN BY MYERS

A new Marion County Grand Jury was selected by Criminal Court Judge Dewey E. Myers today to serve for the next sixmonths’ period. . Members of the jury are Harry F. Hoppas, 2166 Ringgold St., insurance agent; Albert Holman, 329 Ridgeview Drive, telephone comRobert J. Moxey, 408 S. Butler Ave.,, machinist; James H. Carnine, 618 E. 48th St., metal works president; A. W. Antrim, 3444 N. Pennsylvania St., retired ice cream manufacturer,

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BLOOMINGTON, Ind. July l= Dr. W. D. Gatch, dean of the In= diana University Medical School at Indianapolis, today assumed direc= tion of the university's entire medi« cal training program. * Dr. Gatch’s duties were expand by the trustees at their June meet= ing because of the retirement of Dean B. D. Myers, head © School of Medicine here since 1927,

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