Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1940 — Page 4
*. PAGE 4
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BOBBITT § | ELECTION GUARD
Asks Attorney General fol | Have G-Men ‘Prevent
/ ecurrence of ’38. | A request that the uy . General assign G-Men| . recurrence of events
. election” was made to » N. Bobbitt, Republican ; man. . The chairman said .. Possible is being doné by the Jeph ; lican state and local canmiice to! ‘ prevent fraud” but that aid of the | -dustice Department would be wel-! i
1 |
|, come. He specifically ie Sia aid |
S. Attorney | to “prevent of the 1938 ay by Arch | tate chair- |
“everything
in such counties as. La e, Madison, | Marion, Vanderburgh and Vigo. His | letter to Atty. Gen. Rob rt H. Jack- | Son was announced as follows: . “It. recently has come to my at- | tention that you have appointed a | - member of your staff to have special{ #7 charge of election fraud complaints | Sn . In an effort to insure 4 clean and _ honest election this year. | “Numerous accusations of fraud | ‘were made in certain counties in| Indiana in relation to the election ..of 1938. Everything possible is be- | sing done by our Republican state | and local committees to prevent any | _ recurrence of the things which happened. in 38 which resulted in a Special petition being filed with the ; i ‘United States Sens, requesting al. Howard Goayich 31, Mooresville, thorough investigation of the elec-|is on his way today by air to the bon in Jndiats. J Philippines. Difficult as that “In order that nothing may be maneuver is for the average man overlooked to assure the people of |jt was even more difficult BS Mr. Indiana a fair and honest election Goodrich, even though his business ih this year, I earnestly 5 that | is air travel. .you assign men from the Depart- | To begin with, he works in the ment of Justice to assist | local elec- [local TWA office here and in comton fraud committees in Indiana petition with all other ticket sellers Sones, such as Lake, Madison, in all other offices of TWA in the -Y arin, yanderiurgh and Vigo, oi country, he sold, over a period of a : ion day.” | de year, the most tickets for clipper En mm ——s ship travel. : Wako, Japan, is a bridge over | The. prize was to be clipper ship : ich only members of! the royal trip to Hongkong, China. Mr. Good- _ family may cross, ; Irich won,
Howard Goodrich Jr, v
A Philippine Deal
« « on his way to the Philippines,
| About the last place, next to London, that Mr. Goodrich wanted to g0 was Hongkong, China. Moreover, if he returned on the same clipper
plane, he would have only an overnight stay there. If he stayed over, he would have. to wait a week for the next clipper ship. Mr. Goodrich, on the other h d, did not want to give up the Tree tri So he made a deal with the pan to stop over in the Philippines. This will leep him out of the world situation—that is, the world situation as it is of today. And he
will have a nine or 10-day stay. |lasts.”
NO NEED OF WAR, Arranges Dinner LUDLOW CLAIMS
Pledges Efforts to Build Defenses, Oppose U. S. Involvement.
There is no need for our country getting into the war if we keep our heads, Rep. Louis Ludlow, Democratic nominee for re-election trom | the 12th District, said last night In his only speech of the campaign. Speakng at an Eighth Ward rally at 966 Ft. Wayne Ave, Rep. Ludlow asserted “the Atlantic seaboard 1s today rocking with war hysteria, and I anticipate that before long inter- | véntionists and warmongers will try to force us into the war.” “As I believe there will soon be terrific pressure to drag us into the | war. I desire Bhetore the election to make a clean cut, straight-forward statement of my position. 1 will work untiringly to build up our defense to the highest point of perfection so that we will be sate from attack, by any foreign nation or any combination ot foreign nations. “But I want it undefstood that I will not vote to send our American boys into the ‘slaughter pens of toreign wars. On the contrary, 1 will do everything I can to Keep America out of war and to build up our economic sufficiency at home, so that we may battle successtully the ghastly evils of unemployment and poverty. “If ever there was a.time when we needed members of Congress {who have heads on their shoulders and their feet on the ground, and who can be depended upon to stand for the best interests ot Amgrica, that time is now. Congress nas its (J, duties and responsibilities in £oy=| nection with international relations. { The imperative duty ot Congress is [to remain in continuous session as long as the international crisis
Horace B. Kemper « oo in charge of arrangements.
The Bruce Robinson Post, American Legion, will have Walter C. Gingery, Washington High School principal as its speaker Monday following a 6:30 p. m. dinner at the Central Christian Church. The Ladies Auxiliary iary and Sons of the Legion will take part. Horace B. Kemper is in charge of arrangements. The Post’s annual membership dinner will be held Nov. 8 at 6:30 p. m. Paul F. Ritter, third vice commander is in charge,
BACK WILLKIE, 'IS ROBB'S PLEA
I. 0. Chieftain Calls on Labor to Follow Lewis in Repudiating F. D. R.
If the New Deal continues, “every-
‘Heavyweight Champion to
|will serve and the Junior Auxil-
LOUIS PARADE, RECEPTION SET
Tak at Y. W. C, A. | Tomorrow Night.
“Champ” Joe Louis is coming to] town tomorrow night. The world’s heavyweight title- | holder will be welcomed with a street parade before he makes a] brief talk in support of Wendell] Willkie at the Y. W. C. A. on N.| West St. | He will arrive at 9:45 p. m. at, the Municipal Airport and will be greeted by a special reception committee. The parade will proceed from the airport to Road 40, east to Pennsylvania St., north on Pennsylvania to Market St., west on Market around the north segment of the| Circle to Illinois St., north on Illinois to’ Indiana Ave., northwest on! Indiana to West St. and north to] the Y. (W. C. A. There he will greet friends at a! meeting in the gymnasium. The | Rev. David C. Venable, chairman of the Colored Speakers’ Bureau of the G. O. P. County Committee, will be in charge. . Frank R. Beckwith will be the! parade marshal. Nathaniel W, Mad- | den, president of the Young Negro Republican Association, has ap- | pointed the following members to] comprise the reception committee: Robert | Lee Brokenburr, Shores,! Dr. Sumner Shirly Goudy, Arthur Dodson, Sam | Johnson and Ethel Patterson, | The “Brown Bomber” spoke last | night. in Harlem, where he is cam- |
CHAPLAINS TO GET
» pared with the Army’s 1940 model
FT. BENNING, Ga. Nov. 1 1. P.).—The old-time circuit riders were stay-at-home parsons com-
“motorized chaplains.”
|
Ruth | { A. Furniss,|
IT'S A 5-TUBE SUPERHETER
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Under the new War Department orders, each division chaplain will use a one and one-half ton truck and trailer with a mobile public address system for use in recreational and religious meetings. Each truck will carry a field desk with typewriter, filing cabinets, a small safe and a Portable altar.
one will shortly be working for the {Government,” James Robb, Indi|ana’s No. 1 C. I. O.| chieftain, warned {in a radio speech last night in | which he urged election of Wen[dell Willkie. | Mr. Robb, speaking only “as a | citizen” and as “ore who in the past [always voted for| the Democratic | Party,” urged labor to follow the {lead of John L. Lewis in supporting Mr. Willkie “to stop experimentation, |to end all evils of the New Deal, [to the end that our United States, #8 | 2s we love it shall continue and en{dure.” If President Roosevelt is re-elect-ed, Mr. Robb will “prove my sin{cerity,” he said, by resigning as president of the Indiana State Infj | dustrial Union Council, as director ‘of the Steel Workers Organizing |Committee in the Indianapolis dis- | trict, and as director of the Packing House Workers in Indiana.
Lists “Public Enemies”
Mr. Robb listed Public Enemies { No. 1, 2 and 3 as unemployment, foreign wars and dictatorship. “The problem of unemployment {faced this nation eight years ago when President Roosevelt was elected,” he said. “It was thzn and is {now Public Enemy No. 1. Instead
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of solving that problem by bringing {about a closer co-operation between | industry and labor, which alone can | create gainful jobs, those two fac- | [tions were set at each others] throats. “Instead of aproaching the problem | of putting men and women back to work through the channels of productive industry — industry which paid its due share of the public debt —the New Deal attempted to solve the problem through experimentation and unproductive employment, which made no contribution to the payment of thie public debt.” The New Deal's lack of progress Lin solving unemployment, Mr. Robb said, is evidenced “not merely by the staggering nature of .our national debt, but also by the fact that the nine mililon unemployed of March, 11935. are still with us in November, 1940.”
LODGE RINGS
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Says No Jobs Created
The present administration, he said, has not “created a single permanent gainful job over and above the gainful jobs which existed when the present administration took office, unless we are to consider that the workers in our present preparedness and defense program are permanent employees.” He quoted President Roosevelt as saying about six months ago that Government workers cannot strike. “This,” he said, “means that men and women on WPA, PWA and CCC are deprived not only of the rewards of the workers, but of the weapons |; of the worker. In Russia, Germany and Italy, neither the weapons nor the rewards of the worker have been evidenced for many long years. If the New Deal continues, everyone will’ shortly be working for the Government.” Declaring there is no adequate substitute for gainful employment, | Mr. Robb said:
Cites Russia
“In Russia, under the Communists, the attempt to substitute nationalized labor for gainful employment has resulted in lives which are individually barren of personal achievement. “In Germany and Italy, the regimentation of workers, who create only for the benefit of the state under fear of the terrible punishment a state can impose if there is dis'ebedience, this .has resulted in the death knell of personal liberty, of freedom of speech and of freedom of action.” Mr. Robb said that the President, failing to “solve the problem of unemployment by public spending” now is “flirting with the second falsé remedy,” a foreign war. Mr. Robb was introduced by James F. Frenzel, state organization director of the Indiana Willkie Clubs.
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