Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 October 1940 — Page 4

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

. Both Sides of the National and State Political Bar A

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"WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 1940

PARTY PROGRAM AIDS RECOVERY. SCHRICKER SAYS

Willkie ‘Wisecracks’ Could Send U. S. Into War, Minton Charges.

A charge that Wendell Willkie's “wisecracks” would throw America into war within three months and claims that the New Deal is rapidly restoring prosperity were high Joints of Democratic speeches toay. Lieut. Gov. Henry F. Schricker, Governor candidate, speaking at Jasper, declared that ‘prosperity has returned to Indiana and the |

_ nation as a result of the progressive |

legislation enacted by the Demo- | cratic leadership.” | He cited a long list of statistics | “pros- > perity has been returned to the | ik nation by the New Deal.” 1% “Investments in building and loan | institutions increased at the rate of | $1, 000,000 a month during the last| year,” he said. “Deposits of Hoosters | in 507 banks today are greater than | ever before in history.”

First Ward Ra ly

Mr. Schricker will be the prin- | tipal speaker at a First Ward meet- | ing at Brightwood Hall, 2345 N.| : Station St., at 8 p. m. tomorrow. | Speaking with him will be E.| Curtis White, candidate for the] State Senate; Walter Truman, can- |

Wendell Willkie, Republican

Willkie Speaks at Gary

Presidential . candidate, is shown

speaking to thousands who gathered in Buffiington Park, Gary, Ind.

didate for the House of Representa- | during his tour of the Gary-Chicago steel mill district.

tives and Alex Gordon, legislative | representative for the Brotherhood | of Locomotive Firemen and Engine: men.

U. S. Senator Sherman Minton, in | 1 TH- 2TH GET 8 speech at Oaklandon, charged | that “jingo utterances and sensa- | tional remarks of Wendell yan)

would throw us into war.’ He said “all the diplomatic corps | of the United States couldn't keep this nation out of international Must complications if Mr. Willkie, sitting! in the White House, should decide it was time to hit the front page with some new wisecrack.”

Tobin at ‘Anderson

Be ion on Hod for Emergency Although Voting Is Done by Machine. A total of 62,150 ballots for the

Daniel J. Tobin, president of the [11th and 12th Districts will be de-|

International Brotherhood of Team- |livered today to the Clerk's Office! sters and Chauffeurs, will be thelat the Court House. principal speaker at a Democratic ithou labor meeting in Anderson tonight. Au ee a! His speech will be broadcast OVer | dditional ballots must be in readithe Anderson radio station at 9 p.m. ‘ness in case of emergency. Te | There has not been a breakdown ; in the machines since 1930, accordVETERAN LIVESTOCK: ling to Charles R. Ettinger, County | Clerk, but ballots are being prepared for this exigency. DEALER DIES HERE Tally sheets and return sheets also will be coming off the presses . in for use on election day. The tally A veteran livestock commission sheets are used in abundance in dealer here, Robert Endsley, 3240 each precinct, especially during priBroadway, died last night in Meth- 1a. i65 when machines are not used, odist Hosphial, 5 : but only one will be used in each Mr. Endsley, 71, had lived in In- precinct Nov. 5. dianapolis 30 oh He had been ill | Nevertheless, the work of planonly three days. ted with Cob ining the talliess and the return He was associated wit ODUIM, [sheets is as complicated as if thoufirm, and had been in the livestock sands i in iad. 22.350 balbusiness Since soming hee in lots have been ordered. There will Be RE acolo Jane: {ne 36.800 ballots ready for the 12th 2 ae olis: a Sister. Mrs. Daisy E. District and 3000 sample ballots in Olwin pe Westfield ny vi a different color from the regular balgranddaughter, Jane Shaw. (lots have also been printed. Funeral services will be held at eT ER 2:30 p. m. Friday at Flanner &| SOUTH BEND MAN NAMED Buchanan Mortuary. Dr. Roy Ewing] WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 (U, P.).— Vale of the Tabernacle Presbyterian William A. Wilson, South Bend, Church will officiate. Ind. today was appointed market Burial will be at Crown Hill Cem- administrator for the La Porte County milk marketing program.

== Smashing All Records for Radio Value! =~— (are the Ye Wie ates

saying

LCETR GE RLU CIARA

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"PUSH A BUTTON

«+.There's A Your Station

State Speakers

DEMOCRATS

TODAY—Henry F. Schricker at Brookville and Jeffersonville; Senator Minton at Terre Haute; Senator ' Theodore Bilbo of Mississippi at | Cambridge City; Daniel Tobin at | Anderson; Governor Townsend at | LaGrange: = Anderson Ketchum at | Cayuga; Clarence Donovan at Tipton; William Fitzgerald at Montezuma; Fred F. Bays at Boonville; Olive Cannon at Worthington; Earl Crawford at Orange; Mrs. Hettie| Dunkin ‘at Burlington; Glen Gris-| wold at Bedfrod; Ralph Hanna at] New Lebanon; Clarence Manion at Indianapolis; Willett Parr Jr. at New Palestine; Judge W. D. Ricketts at Stinesville; Judge A. J. Stevenson at Elizabethtown; Albert Stump at Shelbyville.

REPUBLICANS

TODAY—Charles M. Dawson at LaFontaine; Glen R. Hillis at Mt. Vernon, Elberfeld and Princeton; Raymond E. Willis at Spencer and Martinsville; James M. Tucker at Batesville; George N., Craig at Oolitic; William E.: Jenner - at Petersburg; Mrs. Mary E. Benadum at Auburn; U. S. Senator Robat A. Taft at Columbia Club, Indianapolis; Richard T. James at Dillsboro; Clarence Schlegel at LaFontaine; Robert H. Loring at Martinsville; | L. OQ. Chasey at North Liberty; Mrs. Marjorie Kinnaird at Whiting; Russell I. Richardson at Lafayette; Judge James A. Emmert at Ft. | Wayne; Edgar Blessing at Indianapolis.

TUNE 00D, BUT IN WRONG PLACE

Sound Truck Campaign Across State Line.

—Ralph L. Carr, seeking his second

Colorado, was campaigning in northwest Colorado a few days ago. His | Wray, Colo. pulled up in a small town and the

lively tunes.

A crowd gathered. Mr. Carr got

{plain at some length why he should be re-elected, one man called out: “Aren’t you out of your territory,

Benkelman, Neb.”

cident:

hunt votes for the Colorado Governorship.”

NAZI CHILDREN TO FLEE

HILLIS, COLLINS,

Carry Republican Fight to Dozen Areas in Southern Part of State.

By LOWELL B. NUSSBAUM Republican candidates and party officers carried their campaign throughout southern Indiana last night with speeches in nearly a dozen places. Headlining the evening's programs were Glen R. Hillis, nominee for Governor, who spoke at Evansville; Raymond E. Willis, candidate for the U. S. Senate, speaking at Marshall, and James A. "Collins, nominee for Congress from the 12th District, who addressed a Third Ward rally here. The target of Mr. Hillis was what he called the “indiscriminate spending” of license fees paid into the state treasury by Indiana sportsmen. Willkie Critics Hit

Mr. Willis charged that President Roosevelt is a candidate of the “Solid South,” Federal job holders and corrupt political machines in large metropolitan centers. Mr. Collins, in his address, criticized attempts of “paid pelitical’ advertisers to malign the character and patriotism of Wendell Willkie.” Speaking at Lebanon, James M. Tucker, candidate for re-election as Secretary of State, criticized the speeches of Federal Security Administrator Paul V. McNutt in Indiana as “empty gestures” because “a third

Colorado Governor Takes

HOLYOKE, Colo., Oct. 23 (U§ P.).

term as Republican Governor ef

caravan was en route from to Holyoke when it

sound truck opened up with some

term for President Roosevelt means

(the death knell of the former Gov|ernor’s ambition to become Presi-

dent of the United States.” The term ‘“humanitarians” as applied to New Dealers was called “amusing” by Robert H. Loring, Indiana Young Republican committeeman, who spoke at a Scott County rally at Scottsburg.

2000 at Rally

More than 2000 persons gathered at a six-county rally in Plainfield heard Herbert K. Hyde, platform chairman of the Republican National Convention, charge that the New Deal has deceived the farmers

'that the payment of $3,200,000,000 in benefits has solved their problems.” Speaking in- Indianapolis, R. Lowell . McDaniel, national vice president of the Corn Belt League, charged that Henry A. Wallace, Democratic Vice Presidential nominee, has “broken faith with the American farmer and the corn allotment program is a preconceived scheme for personal profit.”

Urges Willkie Election

State Senator William E. Jenner carried the G. O. P. campaign to Knox, the home of Henry F. Schricker, Democratic nominee for Governor, declaring at a rally there that Mr. Schricker as Lieutenant Governor disregarded the wishes of teachers of the state in voting for the adoption of text books. At Ellettsville, “Charles M. Dawson, nominee for Lieutenant Governor, declared: “The greatest assurance that we will not become involved in a foreign war is the election of Wendell Willkie for President, Raymond E. Willis for Senator, a Republican Congress and the entire Republican ticket in Indiana.”

CRASH INJURIES FATAL VINCENNES, Ind: Oct. 23 (U. P.) —Silas Cunningham, 35, Lawrence County, Illinois, died from injuries received late yesterday when the car he was driving crashed into a fruck 10 miles west of here.

Anniversary Week PERMANENT WAVES

out of his car and starved a speech. | After listening to the Governor ex-|

Governor? This isn't Colorado. It's

“Said the Benkelman Post and. News-Chrenicle in reporting the in-

“Governor Carr and his party then headed west in high gear to find a more fertile spot in which to

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of America with the “false belief ,

Townsend Urges Re-election

Governor Townsend, speaking at Goshen last night said that “America’s best insurance policy for peace and domestic security is the re-elec-tion of Franklin Roosevelt.” “In a world charged with. fury and danger, President Roosevelt has steadfast] ysteered our ship safely through the shoals of war and violence,” he said. Clarance Manion, former State Director of the Bureau of Government Reports, in a speech at a 10th Ward meeting, said “nobody is better able to administer the New Deal agencies than the man who created them.” “Wendell Willkie is for the agencies but against the money it takes to run them.” Anderson Ketchum, candidate for Lieutenant Governor, speaking at the Claypool Hotel, said the big decision the people must make at

the polls Nov. 5 is whether or not they wish to retain the social, hu-

of F.D.R. as Peace "Insurance"

manitarian and economic advances of the last seven years.

Maps Stretch Drive

The State Démocratic Committee was called into session by State Chairman Fred F. Bays at the Clay-

pool Hotel today to outline details of the final week-of the campaign.

Bedwell Sees Jobs

Charles H. Bedwell, Democratic candidate for Congressman from the Seventh District, declared that the election o af Democratic Congress is necessary to “maintain industrial gains,” in a speech at Jasonville last night. “The improvement in business conditions will end unemployment by next July 1,” he said.

Hutson Answers Willis

Charges made by Raymond E. Willis, Republican Senatorial candidate, that the Guffey Coal Act “will ruin the coal business in Indiana,”

brought sharp rebukes from Demo-|can hardly brand Mr. Willis as a cratic leaders today. friend of organized miners who Thomas R. Hutson, State Labor |sought and sponsored. the Guffey Commissioner, said ‘such remarks| Coal Act.”

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