Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 October 1940 — Page 16
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES "===
Paid Political Advertisement
W; K. BRISTOL, FARMER: “I think we should get down to sound business methods, With Willkie we can do it. Taking ‘money out of one pocket and putting it into another has gone far enough. Yes, I get paid for not raising crops, too.”
MRS. GEORGE J. CARPENTER, HOUSEWIFE-MOTHER: “I don’t think any
‘man should be President three terms, no matter who he
is.! That's always been one of our good old American cus-
toms+for the protection of Democracy.”
CHARLES SCHOEFFLER, GAS STATION ATTENDANT: “Hundreds of my
customers can’t afford more than 2 or 3 gallons of gas a week. If that’s Roosevelt ‘prosperity,’ I'll vote for Willkie. We've already had 8 years of want in a land of plenty.”
“FRANK P. McCLELLAN, COPPERSMITH: “Who is going ta pay the ‘national debt — who’s going to make good the billions
of dollars Roosevelt has wasted? You and I, and the rest
of the wage earners. We can stop this waste with Willkie.”
PHILIP NASSF, CAB DRIVER: Your can’t t Bevo real prosperity with jobs scarce as hens’ teeth. We can’t be worse off with Willkie. I voted for Mr. Roosevelt in "32 and ’36. That's enough for any one man.”
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MRS. S. ETHEL STITT, GOLD STAR MOTHER: “I,voted for Wilson to
keep us out of war and I lost my son on foreign soil. I
think Roosevelt is dragging us into another overseas
struggle. Every mother should vote for Willkie.”
WM. A. DOROUGH, ‘BARBER: “What we need is less- class consciousness and more teamwork—industry, labor and leadership. Then, we'll have a real national defense program that'll bring prosperity and insure peace.”
A. B. DIEDRICH, PAINTER: “Congress means nothing when a Roosevelt rules the roost. That's not what I call Democracy! Why should we vote him a third term? Millions, like me, - will vote for Willkie,”
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F. W. KNACK, FARMER: “What we need is horse sense, Unless , men have work they can’t buy what the farmers produce. “Roosevelt and his ‘brain-trust’ are wreckers, not builders. That's why I like Willkie.” .
GEORGE DWORNICK, W.P.A. WORKER: “I was on W.P.A, and I know how it feels to be on relief. Now, I got a job, but thousands, like me, want a chance — not charity. They'll all get work with Willkie as President.”
JACK STOKES, MECHANIC: “Don’t sell America short—we, the people, can still run our own country. All we need is leadegship — jobs — and everybody produce more, so we have more, That's what'll win for Willkie.”
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Lets qo to WORK cwith WILLAVE
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We, the people, are all plain folks. Our pictures are genuine (and not paid for); our sentiments represent the thoughts of millions who
want to eliminate waste in government. We want peace. We believes in a strong national defense. We are -against a third term for any President. And we know that if you give jobs to all those who want jobs, you can raise relief rates to the needy and still reduce taxes.
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Thus ad pasd for by public spirited cinzens,
