Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1940 — Page 8
PAGE 8
REGISTRATION . ENDS MONDAY
L
‘Court House Busy Branches Are- Closed For Last Lap.
~The registration of voters for the Nov. 8 election was in its last lap today as hundreds of voters crowded into the registration office at Room 34, Court House. E Operation of registration branches throughout the city and county was discontinued last night. To date, 29,376 persons are newly
registered as compared with about| § in 1938.
14,000 new registrations Voting officials estimated that the City’s population has grown about
10,000 in the months, mostly here to take jobs. Registrations are being niade at the rate of 1000 a day at the Courthouse and 2400 a day in branches, and officials believe the total may reach 305,000. Voters have until midnight Monday to register or correct their voting addresses. The registration headquarters at the Court House will bee open .from 8 a. m. until 9 p. m. through Sunday, and from 8 a. m. until midnight Monday. Election officials reminded today that anyone who is properly registered need not re-register. Those who must re-register are persons who have moved gince their previous registration or who failed to vote in both the 1936 and 1938 general elections.
as
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END OF JAPANESE SILK IN HOSE SEEN
NEW YORK, Oct. 3 (U. P).— American women may be wearing nylon, lisle and rayon hosiery in place of Japanese silk if the “battle of the embargoes” continues,
Manufacturers suggested today in a news letter. Japan’s entry into the Axis has created no stampede in the local raw silk market, the letter said, but
a consumer boycott of more serious proportions than that of 1937 was said to be likely. .
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4 RAIL UNIONISTS BACK 3D TERM
Claim 90 Per Cent Brotherhood Members Oppose G. 0. P.
A group . representing railroad brotherhoods in Indiana has told the Marion County Democratic Committee that “90 per cent ‘of railroad labor union jnembers in Indiana will support. a third term for President
of
3 Roosevelt.” |
J. W. Dungan, secretary of the | Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, told County Chairman Ira Haymaker that the “railroad workers suffered & 15 per cent cut in pay {under the last Republican adminis- | tration and then gained it back with la ‘10 per cent’ increase on top of | that.” Four Railroad Brotherhood officials presented their written pledge to support President Roosevelt to Chairman Haymaker yesterday.
Clubs Almost Complete
Organization of Roosevelt-Wallace Clubs in every county in Indiana will be completed within the next
few days, Attorney General Samuel | D. Jackson, director of the clubs, announced today. Mr. Jackson said district organizations have beén completed and that | within these groups, county clubs | will work together in a co-ordinated
| program.
Praises Farm Policies
“The present administration has lifted the standards of agriculture. so high that everybody wants to pose as a farmer now,” declared Mrs. Inez Scholl, Democratic candidate {for Supreme Court Reporter, in a speech at Marion last night. She ‘said the New Deal farm program “above all others has brought lus a long way .on the road to better [ living.”
REPORT LINDBERGH HAS BABY DAUGHTER
NEW YORK, Oct. 3 (U. P).—A daughter was born yesterday to Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh, according to a reliable report today. Officials at Doctor's Hospital, where the baby was said to have | been born, refused to confirm or { deny the report and Dr. Everett M. | Hawks, said to have heen the at- | tending physician, could not “be fui Another source, however, said the | baby had beeny born in an 1lth | floor room of the hospital and that {both Mrs. Lindbergh and the baby [res well, The child would | be e Lindberghs’ fourth and their first daughter.
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A woman and children bombed out of their homes in London’s East End drive past ruined buildings as they search for new shelter. Even a cage of birds was included in the household belongings piled high on
Republican Wage Earners Elect
William I. Yager of the United { Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, was elected president of the Republican = Wage Earners League of Marion County at a meeting last night at Republican county headquarters.
Mr. Yager, following his election, said the election of Wendell L. Willkie will “do more to advance the cause of labor peace than any other factor in the country.
“An increasing number of the rank and file workers,” he said, “fear that if the present state of affairs continues, they will become mere cogs in the machine of a statecontrolled economic system instead of free men and women. The thinking men and women of labor are opposed to a third term.” Five vice president were elected at the meeting. They are William F. Wilson, of the Carpenters” Local 60; Mrs. Babel Lowe and Jeannette Wilson, United Garment Workers; Guy S. McCoy, Typographical Union 1; Otis Bartholomew; Leon Worthall, Barbers and Beauticians’ Union. Albert W. Sullivan, Bakery and Confectionery Workers, was named secretary, and Clyde Pierce, Plasterers Local 46, treasurer .
DAVIS HEADS WILLKIE CLUB
NEW YORK, Oct. 3 (U. P.).— John W. Davis, Democratic Presidential candidate in 1924, will be honorary president of the Willkie Clubs of Glen Cove, Long Island, it was announced today.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
lr S Movi ing Day, but Where to Go?
6.0.P. TOWOD FIRST VOTERS’
‘Youth Believes Election Is _ Critical,” John D. : Hughes Says.
By LOWELL B. NUSSBAUM
A statewide campaign to enlist the election support of thousands of first voters was announced today by the Young Republicans of Indiana. “Indiana's youth senses the coming election as one of the most critical in American history,” John D. Hughes, executives secretary, said in a statement issued on behalf of Noland C. Wright, chairman. Mr. Hughes said Young Republican chairmen and vice chairmen in each of the 92 counties will begin enrolling first voters immediately. Each young voter enlisted will receive a special “First Voter” button. Similar campaigns are .to be held nationally. Earl Johnson, Carmel, is chairman of the first voters campaign. Assisting him will be a committee composed of Mrs. Mary Compton, Tipton, vice chairman; Howard Sharp, Kokomo, and Harlan Kays Jr. Princeton, regionil directors.
At Least 341 Meetings
Now that the registration drive is about over, G. O. P. county leaders are preparing for a vigorous fourweek oratorical campaign starting next week. County Chairman James L. Bradford said several hundred meetings will be held, with at least one in each of the 341 precincts. There will be a few big meetings, as in the past, he said, but the organization will concentrate on precinct meetings. A three-county G. O. P. rally will be held at 4400 E. 10th St. Monday night, with Maurice G. Robinson, 11th District congressional nominee, as the prindipal speaker. Mr. Bradford will serve as permanent chairman of the meeting. He will be assisted by party officials from Hancock and Madison Counties. The rally will be followed by two similar rallies, one in Hancock County Oct. 24 and the. other in Madison County Nov. 1.
Willis Pledges Peace Vote
The New Deal administrations in Indiana and the nation were lashed again last night by Republican speakers throughout the state. Raymond E. Willis, Senatorial nominee, accused President Roosevelt of copying the dictators’ tactics in emphasizing war scare emergencies .and foreign affairs to distract attention from domestic affairs. Speaking at Madison, en his tour of Ohio River communities, Mr, Willis declared that “we are traveling the road that leads to war, if, indeed, we are not already at war.” He again pledged he never would ‘vote to send American boys to die on the battlefields of Europe.” Glen R. Hillis, nominee for Governor,. told a Terre Haute audience that “industry will expand and jobs multiply in Indiana” as soon as “extravagant boss-ridden New Deal rule” is driven from the State House Charles M. Dawson, candidate for Lieutenant . Governor, said in a speech at Beech Grove that instead of eliminating the number of boards, bureaus and commissfons, the Democratic Party, since passage of the Reorganization Act in 1933, has increased the number.
Chief Speakers
TODAY—Richard T. | James at Bedford; Glen R. Hillis at Brazil; Raymond E. Willis at Versailles in afternoon and Columbus at night; James M. Tucker at Marion; Robert Lor= ing at Montezuma; Cornelius Richardson at Lisle Station, Gibson County. TOMORROW—Mr. Hillis at Spencer in afternoon and Clinton at night; Mr. Willis at Indianapolis in afternoon and Kingman at night; Marjorie R. Kinnaird at Linton (noon); Mrs. Florence Thacker at Linton (noon); Mr. Tucker at Centerville; Dr. C. T. Malan at Loogootee; George N. Craig, at Ft. Branch; Herbert Evans at Crothersville.
DEMOCRATS |
TODAY—Henry F. Schricker at Portland; Governor Townsend at East Chicago; Mrs. Inez Scholl at LaPorte; Judge A. J. Stevenson at Trafalgar; William Fitzgerald at | Switz City; Anderson Ketchum at Osgood. TOMORROW-—MTr. Schricker at Linton; Judge Fitzgerald at Lake-of- the-Woods near Bremen; Clarence Donovan at Elkinsville; Mrs. Hetie Dunkin at Covington in afternoon and Mecca at night; Mrs. Sanford K. Trippet at Eden; Albert Stump at Brownsburg.
ELECTION IS CALLED ‘AAA REFERENDUM
ABOARD WALLACE | TRAIN, En Route to Missoula, Mont., Oct. 3 (U. P.).—Democratic Vice Presidential Nominee Henry A. Wallace followed the trail of Wendell L. Willkie into the mining state of Montana today for an address at Missoula. He was scheduled to speak at 3:30 p. m, (Indianapolis, Time),
after which his campaign caravan |§
heads into North Dakota. Mr. Wallace arraigned Eastern Republicans as the “enemies. of agriculture” last night before 1500 persons at Spokane, Wash, He told his audience that the November election was more than “a political selection of candidates. It is a referendum on the whole farm program.”
SARAH PALFREY AND MATE TO HONEYMOON
NEW YORK, Oct. 3 (U.P.).—Elwood Cooke and his bride, the former Sarah Palfrey, prepared today to leave for a honeymoon trip to South America following their marriage yesterday. Mrs. Cooke of Brookline, Mass., America’s third ranking woman tennis player, obtained a divorce at
Reno on July 19 from -her first husband, Marshall Fabyan, and was permitted. to resume her maiden name. Mr. Cooke, a native of Portland, Ore., is the sixth ranking American player.
SCHRICKER SAYS HILLIS IS WRONG
Charges ‘Bad Bad Faith’ in 0ldAge Pension State- - ment.
Countering the charges being made by Republican orators over the state, the Democrats this week
admonished their opponents to “stick to the facts.” Last night Lieut. Gov, Henry F: Schricker, Governor nominee, accused his opponent, Glen R. Hillis, of showing “bad faith”. in making charges about the Lieutenant Governor’s stand on old-age assistance. In a speech at Columbia City, Mr. Schricker said my opponent has accused me of taking up the stand in favor of higher old-age assistance plan only since I became a candidate for Governor.” “If he had investigated further, he would have discovered that my stand on old-age assistance has been known -a long time,” he said. “While I hesitate to accuse my oOp-
|ponent of seeming to .resort to
‘small politics, my own conduct would certainly recommend that he obtain the facts first before he brings any false accusations.”
STANLEY, INVENTOR
OF STEAM AUTO, DIES
NEWTON, Mass., Oct. 3!(U. P.).— Freelan O. Stanley, 91, co-inventor of the Stanley steam automobile, a forerunner of modern motor vehicles, died at his home last night. He was a native of Kingfield, Me.
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