Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 October 1940 — Page 7

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TUESDAY, OCT. 8, 1940

DEMOCRATS SET RALLY OCT, 17

Minton Is Among Speakers; Parlor Meetings Are Arranged. a fest vis Demos te cam-

County will be Oct. 17 at Tomlinson Hall where U. S. Senator Sherman

Minton and Lieutenant Governor.

Henry F. Schricker will headline the speaking program. County Democratic Chairman Ira P. Haymaker said the mass meeting next week will mark the beginning of the party’s “home stretch” offensive in Indianapolis. The drive will be climaxed with a series of major rallies during the last ‘week before the Nov. 5 election when Federal Security Administratot Paul Vv. McNutt will speak.

Plan Parlor Rallies

Meanwhil¢, Mr. Haymaker said the county organization would conduet a house-to-house campaign with precinct workers holding meetings in the parlors of residences. Democratic speakers carried their | campaign into the Wendell Willkie “native son” strongholds at Elwood and Rushville last night. - Mr. Schricker, speaking at Elwood before a crowd that was said to have included many of Mr. Willkie’s former neighbors, assailed the Republican Presidential nominee for carrying on what he termed as “a campaign of hate” against President Roosevelt. At Rushville, the national headquarters of the Willkie campaign, Attorney General Samuel D. Jackson led a Democratic rally meeting at the American Legion hall, outlining the Democratic issues in Indiana. : “It Is Democracy”

Mr. Schricker at Elwood pointed to a long list of New Deal programs which he said “saved banks, saved

homes and farms, gave pensions to |’

the aged and insurance for the jobless.” “Is there anything of hate in these programs?” Mr. Schricker asked. “It is democracy in action, reminding us how close the government has come to you and me.”

IS WELSH RABBIT A BUNNY OR-?

Question Goes Unanswered In Hearing Over Hiel Crum’s License.

Is a wild Welsh rabbit a cheese dish or a bunny? That question proved of principal interest in the hearing on Dr. Hiel Eugene Crum’s appeal of a State Medical Board order revoking his license to practice which he has taken to Circuit Court. Dr. Hiel Crum testified’ that among the varied diseases which he

ices are en” on (1: of © sand cn out loss ©

UR serv! aged over becau etenes |

| |

| could treat through his ‘“etherator” was “wild Welsh bacillus.” Deputy Attorney General Albert

| Stump asked:

“What is wild Welsh bacillus?” “It is one of the 5000 bacillus

| which comes from wild Welsh rab-

pits,” answered Dr. Crum. Mr. Stump asked what a wild Welsh rabbit is and Dr. Hiel crum replied, “I don’t know any more about 1t than you do.” “Is: it a fact that it is a cheese

|dish and that the word rabbit’ is a

corruption of rarehit?”

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asked Mr. Stump. “Maybe,” replied Dr. Crum. Earlier, a 40-year-old girl, who has been nearly blind since chiid“feel” Dr. Crum’s absent treatment for her eyes and that her sight improved. Two Butler University physicists testified for the State Medical Board fat the opening session of the hear-

ing yesterday and called the “ethera-

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of the machine re-! of wires, a radio dial, | but “that as far as I box has no power to receive an electrical wave.” The hearing is expected to continue through to-

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Willkie “Storms

.

wide network of the National Broad= casting Co. The assault appeared to be producing results, especially during the nominee's 100-milé auto trip yester=day through the vast mill and factory area dominated by Mr. Hague. He went after the Jersey City Mayor hammer and tongs for his ‘vicious” pelitical bossism and his “puny Hitlerism.” * Collective bargaining, social security and wage-and-hour legislation he cheered, but he warned that the benefits of these reforms will be lost in chaos if the New Deal continues to lead the country “down the road to| bankruptcy.” He slapped at Jimmy Cromwell, running for the U. S. Senate in New Jersey on the Democratic ticket, as the “playboy Ambassador” who “should go back to Honolulu.” He told the people that the long, long lines of empty storerooms he saw as he passed through the New Jersey industrial area were the result of New Deal policies. He decried the loss of civil liberties that goes with the kind of bossism northern New Jersey has known. These were not abstractions or broad theory, but the plain statements of issues the people understood. Most observers think they gained him votes in an area where he must make gains if he is to go anywhere in November.

-

Given Friendly Welcome

In Jersey City, where some speakers have feared to lift their voices, he was received with courtesy. The

| Indianapolis Police Department Ra- [12,000 who heard him gave him a | dio Division head testified that his | friendly, | examination |vealed a lot a test ‘tube, lcan see the {give off or | magnetic

sometimes enthusiastic, welcome. As the candidate crossed over to Hoboken from New York, it seemed at first that he was in for a chilly time of it. He drove for miles through streets where few persons saw him, where the cheers were anemic and the only apparent reaction was mild curiosity. There was little of the booing he got in the West, but here and there a call of “fine chance he’s got!” as the caravan passed.

Newark Crowded

At Hackensack a crowd estimated at 10,000 cheered his short speech. At Paterson, city. of ‘silk mills and airplane engines, 12,000 persons packed an armory. Eight thousand cheered him in a school football field at Kearny. As he drove into Newark just before dinner for his night speech, the downtown area was thronged with thousands, and ticker tape showered from many buildings. In his Newark speech Mr. Willkie asserted that Mr. Roosevelt is seeking to “perpetuate his power through petty Hitlers right here in our own land.” He named Mayor Edward J. Kelly of Chicago, Mr. Flynn and Mr. Hague as “bosses” in the New Deal campaign, and asserted: “The New Deal relies on political bosses; the Republican Party relies on the people.”

Audience With Him

The nominee said “it is a tragedy” that President Roosevelt, as leader

bof the liberal democratic movement

which swept the country in 1932, “should have among his closest lieutenants a man whose machine had to burn the voting records in order to hide crimes.” As Mr. Willkie asked the crowd who had burned the poll books; who suppressed civil liberties; whose leadership had corrupted democracy in Jersey City—the audience answered each time with “Hague” and then booed vigorously. He attacked Mr. Roosevelt's position as a national leader at a time “when’ the world is aflame; democracy is crushed upon the continent of Europe, and the men and women and children of Britain are defending democracy with their lives.” “We are ranged in battle against threatening forces. We are fighting against. the forces of Federal spending, Federal patronage, corrupt city machines and smear propaganda. “But we are not afraid of these things because we have faith in the American people.” Mr. Willkie made - eight speeches and was seen, it was estimated, by 250,000 persons.

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The constant: threat to his election as President, Franklin D. Roosevelt, hangs over Wendell L. Willkie, as he campaigned under this Democratic banner in J ersey City.

Ramparts of

Tammany and 'Boss Flynn’

(Continued from Page One)

If he was bothered by the newest

polls, he didn’t show it. His speeches

were staccato, his manner fighting. Observers reckoned it one of his

best days. Always he talked of plain things well understood — “ballot boxes stuffed with illegal votes obtained from fraudulent registration lists”; “election books burned”; “political machines just like the Nazi party”; “doctrine of bitterness preached in high places—and I mean high places.”

PHE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Willkie Campaigns Under Foe's Banner

SEES VICTORY IN GALLUP POLL

Tucker of G. 0. P. Points to Possible Error, Number Called Doubtful.

By LOWELL B., NUSSBAUM

The Gallup Poll, Elliott ‘Roosevelt’s captaincy and the problems of agriculture featured the talks by headline Republicdn speakers in the state last night. Secretary of State yamer. M. Tucker, at Akron, said that despite the Democratic majority shown byl the Gallup Poll, Republican Party leaders and the rank and file are “primful with confidence.” “Republicans,” he said, “see victory in the light of the nation-wide poll made public today. They point to the possibility of a 4 per cent error in the calculation and the statement that 9 per cent of the voters polled reported themselves ‘doubtful.’ ” The senatorial and gubernatorial nominees, Raymond E. Willis and Glen R. Hillis, both touched on the

| farm problem.

Mr, Hillis, speaking at Huntington, charged that the Indiana Democratic administration has done nothing for the farmers, leaving the problem up to Washington. ¢ He suggested expansion of the Purdue experimental station, employment of the university’s laboratories in more extensive research for use of agricultural products in industry, and further control of disease and development of the livestock industry. Mr. Hillis was in Lafayette today conferring with Purdue officials. Mr. Willis told a Tipton audience that the New Deal, despite some inroads, has failed to solve the basic problems of agriculture. Elliott Roosevelt’s acceptance of a captaincy was denounced by Robert H. Loring, Young Republican national committeeman, in a talk at Charlottesville.

DESCRIBES SNAKE DANCE The Hopi Indian Snake Dance was described by George L. Clark at the “Y’s” Men's Club luncheon

today at the Central Y. M. C. A. John Jones presided.

Rebuked Pupil Hangs Himself

CANTON, Ill, Oct. 8 (U.P). — Loyal Widger, 8, blushed and some of his second grade classmates tittered when his teacher reprimanded him. Miss Geneyieve Shepley ordered him to leave the room and Loyal, his head hanging in shame, walked into the cloakroom. Class was dismissed a few minutes later and the children dashed to the cloakroom for their coats and hats. They stopped suddenly and screamed for Miss Shepley. She found Loyal dead. He had hanged 1 himself from a himself from a coat hook.

ROTARY HAILED FOR GOOD WILL

Clubs Help Keep Wesiern Hemisphere United, Speaker Says.

Rotary clubs are acting as a bond of friendship to unite the Western Hemisphere, H. Roe Bartle, Kansas City, Mo., Rotarian told the local club today at a luncheon meeting at the Claypool Hotel. Mr. Bartle, a Rotarian for 20 years, was invited here by the Indianapolis club’s committee on International Service. Because of war abroad, many of the Rotary clubs of the world have disappeared. “Hitler banished the Rotary clubs in Germany because they were too international,” Mr. Bartle said. “But while many clubs have been banished in Europe and in Japan, nevertheless many of those exmembers are still loyal Rotarians. “We are not interested in governments but in people,” Mr. Bartle said. “Rotary can serve as an organization which strives to bring a better understanding among the peoples of this world. In the Western Hemisphere the clubs will work to unite the Americas and all the people in this region.” An open forum was held following the luncheon talk at which members of the International Service

_[6.0.P. ORATORS BUSY TONIGHT

Eleven Meetings Scheduled In Eighth Ward Alone, 10 in Fifteenth.

\ Republican county candidates and party workers prepared to release a flood of political oratory tonight at the first of -a series of nearly 500 precinct campaign meetings. Eleven meetings have been scheduled for the Eighth Ward, under the direction of Ward Chairman Leo T. Brown, while Mike Caito, 15th Ward chairman, will supervise 10 meetings. Similar meetings are to be held nightly in each precinct in the city and county between now and the election Nov. 5. County Chairman James L. Bradford has decided on numerous small, precinct meetings rather than a lesser number of big rallies, although a few" rallies are scheduled.

Hold Rally in Tent

An 11th District rally honoring Maurice G. Robinson, Anderson, the district’s Congressional nominee, was held in a tent at 4403 E. 10th St. last night. Mr. Robinson took “dictatorship” as the text of his talk. The dictatorships in Europe ‘were set up, he ‘said, because the people of those countries were willing to surrender political freedom for. more economic security. He took issue wifh the statement by Henry A. Wall: ice on his visit here that “only by conquest from outside are we in any immediate danger of dictatorial government.” The New Deal, he asserted, offers economic security, “but only on the terms of a loss of our political freedom.” Meetings Listed

Eighth Ward meetings scheduled tonight include 1512 N. Meridian St., 228 E. 13th St., 1127 Park Ave., 1407 Bellefontaine St., 708 E. 9th. St., 721 E. 9th St., 409 E. 12th St., 955 N. Pennsylvania St. 1121 N. Capitol Ave, 809 E. 12th Si.

include 814 Bates St., 605 Fletcher Ave., 20 S. Alabama St., 725 S. East St., 717 Lexington Ave., 1008 S. Alabama St. 504 S. Alabama St., 722 S. Illinois St., 904 S. Missouri St., 915 S. Noble St. : A birthday dinner in honor of Charles M. Dawson, Washington Township trustee and G. O. P. nominee for lieutenant governor, will be held by Washington Town= ship Republicans tonight at the Riviera Club.

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