Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1940 — Page 40
WALLACE HEADS FOR IMPORTANT
PENNSYLVANIA
Tells Michigan Wall Street ‘Manipulators’ Are Trying + To Sell ‘Gold Brick.’
EN .ROUTE TO PITTSBURGH, Oct. 25 (U. P.).—Henry A. Wallace headed hisPemocratic Vice Presidential campaign into politically strategic Pennsylvania today after challenging Republican charges that the New Deal had failed to lift busi- ' mess from the depression. / His tour into the important Eastern sections followed a quick tour across Michigan that: included 11 stops and a charge at | Detroit last fiight that Wal} Street “manipu=| lators” were attempting to sell voters “another old brick like the ne we got sold in 1929.” Wendell Willkie, the candidate told his Detroit audi-| ence of 3000, can| neither fulfill pledges of jobs for the unemployed nor construct adequate defenses- against the dictators. “We cannot afford to give the wheel to the Republican candidate, who in his campaign: is already weaving from side to side, shouting for defense at one moment and promising not to fight the next, all "in a desperate attempt to collect in one pocket the votes of those ex"tremists who would like to fight the dictators, and in the other, the votes of those extremists who want to surender our country to their power,” Mr. Wallace said. Turning to domestic employment, Mr. Wallace held that President’ Roasevelt’s re-election would constitute the best assurance of national prosperity. The Republican Party,
EH % ! Mr. Wallace
he said, is controlled by financial] -
manipulators who believe that “the way to make jobs is to release the forces of business, as they call it, meaning to rel . the forces of financial speculation that wrecked business in 1929.”
La Guardia Terms Willkie ‘Political Somersaulter’
NEW YORK, Oct. 25 (U. P.).— Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia in a radio speech last night, charged that Wendell Willkie is a political somersaulter who has made nine different statements on = foreign policy, niné on New Deal policies and legislation, and three on the power issue, Mr. Willkie, the mayor sald, “seemingly believes that anything goes in a campaign, that no responsibility attaches to pledge, statement, or promise.” Mayor La Guardia accused Mr. Willkie of changing front on the farmers when he said at one time that they lived on a dole, and later sald he would not change the farm
program unless a better one were evolved.
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EARLY DIAGNOSIS IN
STOMACH ILLS VITAL
By Science Service
CHICAGO, Oct. 25. — Stomach
cancer must be diagnosed while the patient is still well if this killer of 100 persons daily in the United States is to be made a more than 5 per cent curables disease, Dr. Thomas F. Mullen, of the University of California Medical School, , declared at the meeting here of the American College of Surgeons. Stomach cancer is one of the most depressing phases of the whole stomach cancer problem. The gen‘eral impression is that it is hopeless for 95 out of 100 of its victims. The situation is “not so entirely desperate,” Dr. Mullen stated, as shown by the number of reports of cures of 10 or more years after the cancer had been removed by operation, Of the estimated 150,000 persons in the United States now suffering from stomach cancer, between 10,000 and 27,000 have cancers that could be removed by operation, according to fifures Dr, Mullen quoted. : > In order to make stomach cancer a curable disease, the layman must learn that the annoying but apparently unimportant indigestion which comes to a healthy person, especially 2 man, for the first time in his more than ‘40 years of life must be taken seriously and suspected of being due to cancer. Doctors, Dr. Mullen also warned, must learn to persist, with repeated X-ray, gastroscopic and other examinations, to diagnose or rule out accurately stomach eancer in these well persons with “a ‘little stomach trouble” or dyspepsia.
'W’NARY ENDS TOUR, "RESTS IN CAPITAL
PT. WAYNE, Ind. Oct. 25 (U. P.). —Charles L. McNary: returned to Washington today for a week-end rest before he tours the West next week en route to his home at Salem, The Republican candidate for Vice President completed a threeweeks tour of the Middle West last night at Kendallville, Ind., where he told 6500 citizens of Indiana, Michigan and Ohio that the New Deal had brought on the present emergency - “through ifs unwillingness to adopt Wie marketing, price and foreign trade policies.” Ze will leave Washington Tues49y and will speak at Salt Lake City and Sacramento, Cal; en
Bored and Poorly Paid Wallis
NEW YORK, Oct. 25 (U.P.).—The Forrest's income, well taxed while hair in thé back into vertical curls.
Duchess of Windsor’s imported hairdresser, Wayne Forrest, has returned to New York after 49 days in the Bahamas for two reasons: 1. He was bored. 2. He wasn't making money. Mr. Forrest said that Nassau, where the Duke of Windsor is Governor, is all the travel folders say in season, but out of season—that’s another story. is oP
“The hotel accommodations: were vile and the food abominable,” he said. “I lost 14 pounds, which I could ill afford to lose.” i From other sources it was learned that working for the Windsors pays better in prestige than in cash. According. to those in the know, Mr.
enough,
working in Saks swank beauty salon, was roughly eut in half under the Duchess’ budget. Mr. Forrest himself has nothing but nice things to say about his exemployers. He hopes to return to Nassau in January, he said, when the social season opens. Meanwhile, he has trained a Nassau girl, Marie Bethel, to do the Duchess’ hair, in the “Raven’s Wing” coiffure which
-| he designed [for her. . This does away
with the Duchess’ famous down-the-middle part, sweeps the hair up at the temples into two loose transparent curls.
“It gives a fawnlike quality to her
face,” Mr. Forrest said, “and a look’
of surprise which is extremely youthful. Sometimes we bind the
Ladies’ HALF SOLES 49
Sudte ome. : Friday and Saturday Men’s "45-47 W. OHIO ST, [ Milin ol $ DOORS ron
SPECIAL HALF
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sometimes we brushed it into a cluster to form a chignon.” Hg - Mr. Forrest- as well. as arranging the Duchess’ hair twice daily also took care of the Duke's hair. Both were so busy with affairs of government war relief. work and the redecoration of their official residences that no fixed schedule was adhered to, he said. 3 According to. Mr. Forrest, the Windsors will not visit the United States until December at the “earliest. Government House, he said, would not be finished until around Christmas time. Since he has come bdck, countless of his clients have begged him to do their hair like the Duchess’, he said, but he has refused. ’
_ a _
“An Extraordinary Special Purchase of Samples and Better Quality Robes to Sell at Savings of 1/; fo 1/5—S avings Which Will Be Utterly Impossible at Christmas Time. Look at These Four Low Price Groups! Even the comparative prices lean toward understatement. Tomorrow is the last day of this great 3-day event!
’
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES “eee Hairdresser Comes Home
rE
“Why women want to copy each other instead of being original - is fantastic,” he said. “Only a woman who is the prototype of the Duchess —and is there any?—should wear her. hair the/way Her Grace does.”
SUB WITH ALL ABOARD LOST, JAPAN REVEALS
TOKYO, Oct. 25 (U. P.). — The Navy Department disclosed belatedly today that the Japanese submarine I-67 was lost last Aug. 29, with all aboard, including two captains and one commander, *The Japanese Domei wireless broadcast that the I-67 carried 12 officers, 38 warrant officers and an undis¢losed number of ratings.
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AUTO THEFT SUSPECT |
1S SLAIN BY OFFICER
RICHMOND, Ind., Oct. 25 (U. P.). —William Todd, 16, of Richmond, was shot and killed last night by police officer Moses Shores as he and a companion fled from a car allegedly stolen from a local dealer Sunday night. * XE Shores said that he and Officer John Murphy had trailed the car for several blocks before trying to stop it. . When the car stopped, he said, Todd and his companion ran. Shores said he fired one shot into the ground and then shot at Todd. The bullet passed through the
youth’s head and he died whit en route to a hospital. .
sree
x . ° Willkie Shee DES MOINES, Towa, Oct. 25 (U. P.).—~Henry A. Wallace is editor-on-leave of the magazine, Wallace’s. Farmer and Iowa Home” stead, which ‘proved today that it will take printing work from both Republicans and Democrats. But Don Murphy, acting editor while Mr, Wallace campaigns for Vice President on the Democratic
ticket, hopes “no one thinks we
indorse everything they say.” A pamphlet printed by the magazine. for the Associated Willkie Clubs titled, “The Third Term— Why Not,” circulating in Des
Moines, told a parable of a great
and good President whose death during a fourth term- left his
great power in the, hands of a . rascally Vice President.
nstairs Store scoops the town men's clothing sale that rocks
f clothing Yalue. Hundreds of
robes in two, fours and even sixes
transa is clo b
HTH enjoying the huge savings.” Here. f better than its price— in style, quality .
j « « « clothing that creates the impression ng & great deal more than you are. So al are they that 3 DAYS is ail we could
m, and TOMORROW 1S THE
more hours,
15.95 EACH
LAST DAY
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_____ FRIDAY, OCT. 25, 1940
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Wallace Prints JOHNSON SAYS FAITH # | AIDS WILLKIE CAUSE
CLEVELAND, 0., Oct. 25 (U. P.). —The nation’s need for “a return to: honesty, respect for the pledged Iword and faith in the promises on which ‘men live” is sweeping voters behind the Republican . candidacy of Wendell L. Willkie, Gen, Hugh 8. Johnson said last night. ; In' a nationally broadcast radio address, Mr. Johnson predicted that Mr. , Willkie’s “simple, homespun honesty” is creating a wave of popular sentiment which would sweep him to the presidency. . The reason for this, he said, is “a rising distress of the cleverness, slickness and guile .of President Roosevelt £'. . and a growing popu= lar disgust and fear of ‘cleverness,
|slicknéss and guile ‘of politicians as
a tribe.”
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