Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 November 1940 — Page 8

POR ——

er =

a SS J

cheers

‘SAYS PRESIDENT AT HYDE PARK

; Tells Neighbors That Trying

Times Are Ahead, Then Goes to Bed. |

(Continued from Page One)

in-arm on the “home ‘in the flares. | _ Mrs. Roosevelt, in a red

86-year old mother, Mrs. Sara Delano Roosevelt. Next to her was John Roosevelt, the President’s youngest son, and his wife, Ann; Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., and his wife, the former Ethel du Pont, and, finally the President. On the step directly inf front of the President stood Judge! Hardy Steeholm, Democratic| candidate for the Congressional seat held by Rep. Hamilton Fish (R. N.'Y.), ranking minority member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and bitter opponent of Mr. Roosevelt's international programs. : Mr. Steeholm was defeated by Fish. But Mr. Roosevelt declared that in giving the veteran congressman a close race, he had jaccomplished “dlmost a miracle.” | He reached over to pat the back of Van Wagner, who had stood aside after presenting him to the crowd. Some day, he said, if Van Wagner tires of serving as Hyde Park supervisor, “I might take) a shot at that job myself.” The crowd gave three |rousing for the President and marched away behind a uniformed ‘American Legion band. Mr, Roosevelt returned indoors, but within an hour another crowd came over the walls of his’ estate and gathered under the firs of Hyde Park house. When the crowd of several hundred men and women set up a chant, the President came back to

. the portico, where he was joined

by Mrs. Roosevelt. - “This is my second party tonight and I am very grateful for it,” Mr. . Roosevelt said. The President went to bed at 2:35 a. m. without issuing a formal statement on the election. | ——eire ne}

JAN PADEREWSKI, 80 TODAY, REACHES U. S.

JERSEY CITY, Nov. 6 (U. P.).— Eighty years old today, Ignace Jan Paderewski, world-renowned pianist and first premier of the Polish republic after the World War, arrived here on the American export liner Excambion to escape ‘‘the unbearable moral atmosphere on the European continent.” #The Excambion brought 174 other passengers and $3,500,000 in gold from Lisbon, where Paderewski boarded the ship after receiving a transit visa from Spain and permission to cross occupied France from the Vichy government. He had been a refugee in Switzerland before going to Lisbon. !

IH SAME MAN,

portico of their old light of news reel

evening dress, stood at the extreme right. © On her arm was Mr. Roosevelt's

lated:

PROSECUTING ATTORNEY Blue (R) ......

STATE SENATOR

Atherton (R) Cable (D) ...

Sexton (D) .... Brokenburr (R) Weiss (D) ... Chamberlin (R) seeeeesess White (D)

JOINT STATE SENATOR

Green (R) Webb (D) 43,445

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

Abshier (R) . . 41549 Allison (D) 43,576 Baker (R) 41,658 Badger (D) 43,441 Baxter (R) 41,616 Bingham (D) 43,480 Downey (R) .... 41,564 Harrell (D) 43,561 Ehlers (R) 41,683 Kaufman (D) 43,364 Grinslade (R) 41,695 Lahrman (D) 43,395 Johnson (R) 41,673 Mance (D) 43,573 Jose (R) . 41,526 Nicholson (D) 43,638 Lee (R) .. 41,594 Stitch (D) 43,335 Moffett (R) sheesssessts 41,868 Truman (D) ....cesceessenis $3,425 Shaw (R) . 41,263 West (D) 43,738

JOINT STATE REPRESENTATIVE

Williams (R) Haymaker (D) ......cce00 ,. 43,474

COUNTY TREASURER

Tegarden (R) Boetcher (D)

COUNTY SHERIFF

Pett (R) ........ Feeney (D)

COUNTY CORONER

Storms (R) Wyttenbach (D) ..... veseeds

COUNTY SURVEYOR

Brown (R) Ryan (D) . 43,365 COUNTY COMMISSIONER, (First District)

.. 41,501

ess sense ses esesssrEeser re Gessner sssane

ses csssevsevenee see seventeen CORR)

esecsescsccsen csecsessesce ny essences esevsesnse sseecsnvese seesssssssenre es ssssssnrese sss esesessenessse

Ayres (R) Newhouse (D) COUNTY COMMISSIONER, (Second District) BoSSON (R) suvceieaassnee ... 41,601 Brown (D) .....ivvvsnse voes 43321 (119 OF 341 TOTAL PRECINCTS) PRESIDENT Willkie (R) ees. 41,893 Roosevelt (D) . 43,155 UNITED STATES SENATOR Willis (R) Minton (D) GOVERNOR Hillis (R) Schricker (D)

LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR

(119 OF 341 TOTAL PRECINCTS)

cee. 41449 lewis (D) ........:: deieeins 43,674

edsevesnsessss $1,674 Sess seRtRRRr re 42,500 Beveridge (R) «svessseeseess 41,299 sess eves ene 43,571 cssvsvasess $1,370 sean ssnsenseree 33,483

- County Tabulation

This is the official Marion County vote unofficially tabu-

SECRETARY OF STATE

Tucker (R) ........ Donovan (DY) ......... eeeees 43,3711

AUDITOR OF STATE

James (R) .. 41612 Thompson (D) ...... trees . 43,650

TREASURER OF STATE Givens (R) ........... esses 41,626 Robertson (D) 43,464 ~ SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION

Malan (R) ........ dedisiias . 41,464 McMurray D) ....... Saeed 43,618

JUDGE OF SUPREME COURT

y (Second District) Richman (R) Fitzgerald (D)

JUDGE OF APPELLATE COURT

(First Division) Blessing (R) Dudine-(D)

JUDGE OF APPELLATE COURT

(Second Division) Flanagan (R) 41,566 Laymon (D) . 43,522

REPORTER OF SUPREME AND APPELLATE COURTS

Kinnaird (R) . 41567 Scholl (D) 42,513

CONGRESS

(Eleventh District) 24 OF THE 129 MARION COUNTY PRECINCTS IN DISTRICT Robinson (R) 9,730 Larrabee (D) vases 11,003

CONGRESS

(Twelfth District) (95 OF 212 TOTAL PRECINCTS) Collins: (BR) .....cccune cesses 30,046 Ludlow (D)

GEORGE W. RABINOFF TALKS HERE TONIGHT

George W. Rabinoff of New York City, associate director of the National Jewish Council of Federations and Welfare Funds, will speak tonight at a joint meeting of the Jewish Federation and the Jewish Welfare Fund of Indianapolis. The meeting will start at 8:15 p. m. at the Kirshbaum Center. Mr. Rabinoff, formerly of Indianapolis, has been associated many years in social work organizations throughout the country. He was at one

time executive director of the Jewish Federation and Jewish Welfare Fund of Indianapolis. The meeting will also include report of activities of both organizations by H. Joseph Hyman, who is director of both associations. Isidore Feibleman, Jewish Federation president, will be .in charge and Samuel Mueller, Welfare Fund president, will speak.

Lakes are only short-lived features on the face of the earth, being

Dawson (RY ..vveaessveeees. 41577

the results of temporary obstructions to drainage.

Ketchum (D) ........ ceness 43,365

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WILLKIE PLANS SHORT VACATION

Just Grins When Someone Asks if He’s Going to Stay in Politics. (Continued from Page One)

their ultimate adoption in America is indispensable to the preservation of this free way of life. “I end the campaign as I entered it—without any ill will or bitterness toward anybody,” Mr. Willkie added. He said he would spend the next “two, three or four days here.” “Then,” he said, “I'm going somewhere for a vacation and some rest.” Some one asked Willkie if he expected to “stay in politics now that you've had a taste of it.” Willkie grinned and said, “I haven't determined my personal plans yet.”

Mrs. Willkie Not Unhappy

Smiling, but tired after the grueling ordeal of a 26,000-mile campaign, more than 500 speeches, and more than’eight hours beside news service teletype printers and a radio receiving election returns of a growing Roosevelt majority, Mr. Willkie and his wife retired in their hotel suite shortly after 1:30: a. m. Quiet Mrs. Willkie, plunged suddenly into public eye by her husband’s campaign, went to bed not at all unhappy. “I never had a public life before this campaign,” she said. “And I do like privacy. I like to sit behind a post. Or behind a fat lady—like I did yesterday at the movies.” Friends said she was sighing with relief that she was not to be First Lady. Close personal friends and supporters went to the Willkies’' suite from 11 o'clock on last night to congratulate him on his hard struggle and to express regret at his defeat, but the Republican nominee said only “thanks.”

Tears in Supporters’ Eyes

There were tears in the eyes of many Willkie workers who had crowded the nominee’s hotel, anticipating a victory celebration. Many still were chanting “We Want Willkie” after he had gone to bed. He talked to them shortly after midnight when the returns were going heavily against him, and gave them a tired smile which brightened as the “We Want Willkie” chant swept through the hotel’s grand ballroom. “I first want to say to you that I never felt better in my life,” he said, and the crowd of several thousand interrupted with roaring applause. “I congratulate you on being a part of the greatest crusade of the century. That the principles for which we have fought will prevail is as sure as that the truth will always prevail. I hope that none of you is either afraid or disheartened, because I am not in the slightest.

‘Don’t Be Afraid’

“I just wanted to come down and thank you so much for being my fellow fighters in this struggle and to say ‘Hello’ to you .before going back to my rooms upstairs. “I hear some people. shouting to me, ‘Don’t Give Up.” I guess those people don’t know me. I must be going back upstairs, but I did want to come by and thank you, from the bottom of my heart. “Don’t be afraid, and never quit.” Upstairs, Mrs. Willkie, bored and tired with the returns, said: . “I wish Win would hurry up so we can get home to bed.” “Is the election turning out as you expected, Mrs. Willkie?” She shrugged. “I never make predictions,” she said. “I'm like Omar Khayamm. I just live from day to day. I'm a fatalist.”

Future Is Uncertain

Mr. Willkie’s plans for the future, in politics or in private life, were uncertain. He has been in. politics less .than seven months. His last job was president of Commonwealth & Southern Corp. utility holding company, whose struggle with the TVA over a price for its southern properties brought Mr. Willkie into the national prominence that culminated June 28 in his selection as the Republican Presidential nominee. He got $75,000 a year. There was little talk of the future as Mr. Willkie sat with his wife, their 20-year-old son, Philip; his “little brother,” Ed, towering 200-pounds-plus former All - American football tackle, and a few newspaper reporters listening to the voters’ verdict.

‘America , , . Is Better Off’

Mr. Willkie puffed more and more cigarets as the night wore on, and Mr. Roosevelt's lead increased. Toward midnight, his friends and supporters began to drift into the room one by one to express their

regrets. They included New York's District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey, whom Mr. Willkie beat for the nomination: Raymond E. Moley, former assistant Secretary of State in the early days of the New Deal. Private public opinion poller Emil Hurja, who publishes Pathfinder magazine and used to be a Democratic statistical expert, sat beside Mr. Willkie during part of the evening trying: to figure on paper whether the Republican nominee still could win. Hurja had predicted his election. Down in the ballroom, the crowd héard young Oren Root Jr. head of the associated Willkie clubs and one of the first Willkie supporters, say that he was not “conceding any election—that is, not until Mr. Willkie does.” “I feel very profoundly that whatever happens to Mr. Willkie America today is richer, finer and better off because of this campaign,” Mr. Root said.

Lampposts in Shenandoah, Ia., are decorated with hanging baskets of flowers. They are watered from a

‘Montgomery ...

POLIS TIMES ~~ How Counties Yo

FOR PRESIDENT

County

Adams Allen ..........100 Bartholomew ., 16 Benton . 70 Blackford ......100 Ne .........100 Carroll ........ 55 Cass SENN N en 45 Clark . cose 325 Clay Clinton ... Crawford .

cranent 10 Delaware ......100 Dubois ........100 Elkhart ........ 85 Fayette ........ Floyd ....ic0ec. Fountain ...... Franklin Fulion ..ceoeese Gibson ........ Grant Greene .....,... Hamilton ...... Hancock ....... Harrison .... . Hendricks .....100 Henry ...... 95 Howard .... Huntington Jackson

ssseneses

88R38,8828¢8

see esses

Jefferson ...... Jennings . ...... Johnson ..,.... KNOX ..vcaevses Kosciusko ..,.. Lagrange ...... Lake .. LaPorte ....... Lawrence ...... Madison ...,...100 Marion ........ 99 Marshall ,.....100 Miami .. 40 75 69

Morgan Newton ..... Noble .......... 35 Ohio ..........100 Orange ........ 80 Owen secencense 50 Parke ...seeeve 35 PeITY ..ce0tes.. 65 Pike ..vceersven 70 Porter ......... 40 POSEY ...cevee.100 Pulaski 95 Putnam ....... 30 Randolph ...... 32 Ripley 90 Rush 65 Scott 95 Shelby set sncene 33 Spencer ....... 40 Starke 96 Steuben ....... 97 St. Joseph ,....100 Sullivan 40 Switzerland .... Tippecanoe .... Tipton Vanderburgh .. Vermillion ..... Vigo : Wabash ....... Warren ........ Washington Wayne seeceeses Wells escent 97 White ......... 64 Whitley ....... 94

..100

sesesssnne

65 50 90

45 25 60 70 85

County Adams Allen Bartholomew ..100 Benton ........100 Blackford ..... 72 Boone ........100 Brown Ssssnvies oe Carroll ....c... 85 CBS8 seevevnses oc Clark Seer 93 Clay .....esvss 18 Clinton .......100 Crawford .,...100 Daviess .......100 Dearborn .....100 Decatur ....... 97 Dekalb ........100 Delaware .....100 Dubois ........100 Elkhart ssseae 100 Fayette ....... 95 Floyd cessenae +100 Fountain .,.... 93 Franklin ,.....100 Fulton csvsnesse 13 Gibson Sesser 62 Grint .....,.. 90 Greene ...,...100 Hamilton .....100 Hancock ...... 97 Harrison ...... 72 Hendricks .....100 Henry ........ 90 Howard ....... 55 Huntington .... Jackson .......100 Jasper .....,..100 Jay Jefferson ......100 Jennings ......100 Johnson ......100 KNOX ....40::+ 85 Kosciusko ..... 98 Lagrange ..,..100 Lake ....ce00.. 95 La Porte ...... 92 Lawrence ...... 85 Madison ,.....100 Marion ssesvsse 98 Marshall ...... 95 Martin ........100 Miami ......... 40 Monroe Montgomery ...100 Morgan 00 Newton

a

esssseee 9

vei 100 Noble .....s...100 Ohio. cvsesaven 100 Orange ........100 Owen erst Rt 85 Parke ssssenees 60 Perry Sosa 68 Pike veevnacis ss 100 Porter essence 40 Posey ....c000..100 Pulaski ........ 92 Putnam .......100 Randolph .,...100 Ripley ....c....100 Rush savevannee lil Scott ..co000een 90

water wagon each day.

Shelby ........ 98

95

2,636 21,214 122,132 5,854 3,877 6.078 4,660 1,875 2,159 1,685 1,260 3,146 1,731 2,318 3,998 3,104 1,988 5,018 1,712 1,582 2,386 4,380 2,760 2,454 2,211 4,320 2,363 2,425 45,656 3,134 2,447

7,766.

1,789 31,881 1,947 17,259 1,754 1,047 3,131

. 11,492

4,705 2,364

2,992 3,552 3,824 2,080 714 12,398 5,109 1,794 3,448 2,906 6,782 9,934 7,119 4,114 4,608 3,919 4,054 3,478 190 4,687 4,287 8,336 3,448 42,545 10,880 4,301 22,434 123,980 7,477 3,724 8,126 5,920 2,804 3,512 2,782 1,180 4,261 2,304 2,491 3.427 3,071 3,080 4,513 1,970 1,306 2,988

5,536 |

4118 2,138 2,119 5,543 2,810 4,893 36,164 2,430 2,156 12,895 1,984 23,770 1966 14,388 2,082 1,877 2,964 12,648 4,374 2,870 4,408 662,212

is County is Spencer .......100 Starke ........100 Steuben Reessee 65 St. Joseph ....100 Sullivan ....... 70 Switzerland ...100 Tippecanoe ....100 Tipton 55 Union . Vanderburgh .. Vermillion ..... 66 Vigo ...convees 40 Wabash ....... 40 Warren .......100 Warrick ....... 50 Washington ... 70 Wayne ........100 Wells .........100 White .........100 Whitley .......100 Total

ess sane

County

Adams Allen Bartholomew ..100 Benton ... 00 Blackford Boone .... Brown ...ceeeoe +. Carroll ........ 90 Cass veses'sess+ 100 Clark ...co00ss: Clay

Precincts ® Per Cent

ed w

“sees 95 sv s+-100

Crawford ,..... Daviess ...o.00Dearborn Decatur ....... Dekalb ........ Delaware Dubois Elkhart ...... Fayette ........ 90 Floyd ....000...100 Fountain ,,.... 71 Franklin ..... Fulton ........ 30 Gibson .ccveaces 13 Grant ..eeeeees 90 Greene «....s..100 Hamilton .....100 Hancock «.oeee 96 Harrison ....es 72

ceees.100 .100

Henry .cceeoeee 92 Howard .....00 71 Huntington ... 40 Jackson ...s..:l Jasper sensuous +100 JAY teececsascee 59 Jefferson ...:..100 Jennings «.s...100 Johnson ...s..100 Knox .ceecseee 4 Kosciusko ese 97 Lagrange «.s..100 Lake Sess bNS 95 LaPorte assssen 93 Lawrence se... 65 Madison ......100 Marion sevssece 98 Marshall .see00 92 Martin .eseeee.100 Miami esvssses 45 Monroe’ ..eeees 10 Montgomery ..100 Morgan .......100 Newton .......100 Noble ssvsssss 100 {Ohio caiiesness 100 Orange ........100 Owen sess ennre 85 Parke ¢e.eeeees. 33 Perry cvevesuins 68 Pike ...co0010..100 Porter ......... 40 POSEY vssesves..100 Pulaski ...cec.. 95 Putnam .......100 Randolph vores: 100 Ripley ... 00 Rush ...c.000...100 Scott .........100 Shelby ...eev0.. 33 Spencer ,.......100 Starke .....oe00 65 Steuben ....... 96 St. Joseph ..... 60 83

seven

«+. | Sullivan .......

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Switzerland ....100 Tippecanoe ....100 Tipton ....... os 55 Union Vanderburgh .. Vermillion ..... 33 Vigo Wabash Warren ....... Warrick Washington .... 70 Wayne ........100 Wells .'.o000.0.100 White .........100 Whitley ...o00.-100

tod

«oo 785,025 FOR SENATOR

L100

100

Hendricks «...s 33.

|DEMOGRATS ADD

10 IN CONGRESS

Republicans Pick Up Senate Seat, Run Neck-and-Neck fo Another.

(Continued from Page One)

New England, where the Administration captured four Republican seats in Connecticut and two in Rhode Island to make both House delegations completely Democratic. The Democrats also took over two Republican seats in Pennsylvania and .two in New York, but lost one in the Empire State—that held by Rep. James H. Fay, who “purged”

869 John J. O'Connor for the New Deal

4,349 4,530 5,006 774,131

© ; 4,339 30,066 8,026 2,613 3,720 6,169 3,297 10,118 8,270 5,204 7,745 2,305 6,377 5,937 4,390 5,687 20,569 5,856 13,262 4,794 10,749 3,873 3,085 1,006 839 11,661" 8,566 4,645 5,051 4,196 4,880 8,316 6,861 2,624 7,283 2,649 3,478 4,602 2,924 5,690 6,521 5,561 2,068 71,812 11,936 3,385 26,164 115,902 5,211 2,591 3,830 5,113 6,935 4,817 2,174 4,470 1,187 3,948 2,323 2,256 3,517 4,346 1,846 4,833 1,724 5,876 5,626 4,785 4,218 2,614 2,163 4,315 1,720 2,376 36,742 6,034 2,616 12,079 1,747 1,390 38,465 3,859 16,482 2,525 1,847 933 3,038 13,608 5,161 4,087 4,303

Totals ...........754,861 773,950

in 1938. Despite personal efforts of President Roosevelt and some Republican Willkie backers to defeat him, Rep. Hamilton Fish, (, N. Y.) was re-elected. New York picked Kenneth Simpson, former national committeeman, to succeed to the post vacated by Bruce Barton when he ran for the Senate. Rep. Vito Marcantonio, sole American-Labor

3 representative in Congress, won re-

election. Burton Seen Elected

Returns from Ohio and Nebraska indicated that the G. O. P. had

nal elected Mayor Harold H. Burton of

Cleveland and Hugh A. Butler, Omaha industrialist, to succeed Democratic incumbents. In a third state, Indiana, Assistant Democratic Leader Sherman Minton was trailing Raymond E. Willis by 9000 votes. The Republican gain, however, was offset by the defeat of Senator John G. Townsend (R. Del), leader of the Senate forces fighting the Administration’s silver purchase policy. He was defeated by James Miller Tunnell, 61-year-old lawyer. For the 36 seats contested yesterday, 23 Democrats and nine Republicans were successful, with four races still in doubt. Continuation of the trend, which was unchanged as the day wore on, would make the lineup in the incoming Senate 68 Democrats, 26 Republicans, one Progressive and one Independent. Late returns in Wisconsin showed

6! that Senator Robert M. La Follette,

the upper chamber’s lone Progressive, held a lead of 32,000 votes over Frederick H. Clausen, Republican,

Idaho Fight Close

Returns from Idaho and Indiana, however, were too incomplete to forecast definitely. During the

DNESDAY, NOV. 6, 1040

night, Minton held a slight edge, put Willis overcame it in the early morning hours. In Idaho, Senator John Thomas (R.), appointed to the seat of the late Senator Willlam E. Borah, held only a slim lead over Glenn H. Tay= lor, Democrat. Of the 36 seats decided yesterday, 25 had been held by Democrats, 10 by Republicans and one by La Follette. ; Mon C. Wallgreen, Democratic Congressman, defeated former American Legion National Come mander Stephen F. Chadwick in Washington. The seat formerly was held by Lewis B. Schwellenbach, a New Dealer elevated by President Roosevelt to a Federal court post. Democrats apparently re-elected were Francis T. Maloney, Connecti cut; Charles O. Andrews, Florida; James M. Slattery, Illinois; A. B, (Happy) Chandler, Kentucky; George Radcliffe, Maryland; David I. Walsh, Massachusetts; Theodore G. Bilbo, Mississippi; Harry 8, Truman, Missouri; Burton K, Wheeler, Montana; Key Pittman, Nevada; Dennis Chavez, New Mex« ico; James M. Mead, New York; Joseph PF. Guffey, Pennsylvania; Peter Gerry, Rhode Island; Tom Connally, Texas; Kenneth D. McKellar, Tennessee; Harry F. Byrd, Virginia; and Joseph C.O’Mahoney, Wyoming. Langer-Lemke Even Other Democrats apparently elected were Harley M. Kilgore in West Virginia, Abe Murdock in Utah and Ernest W. McFarland in Arizona. They succeed Democrats, Republicans appeared to have off+ set the Delaware loss by picking up Democratic seats in Ohio and Nebraska, where returns favored Harold H. Burton and Hugh A, Butler, respectively. If present trends continue, the line-up in the new Senate would be: Democrats 68, Republicans 26, Progressive 1 and Independent 1. William Langer, Republican, and William Lemke, Progressive-Repub= lican, were battling on almost even ‘terms in North Dakota. Republicans who appeared to have been re-elected were Hiram W, Johnson, Cal.; Warren R. Austin, Vt.; Arthur H. Vandenberg, Mich; Henrik Shipstead, Minn, and W, Warren Barbour, N, J. Others were Ralph O, Brewster, Me.; George D, Aiken, Vt.; Burton and Butler,

CLOCK CASE OF COAL

BOSTON, Nov. 6 (U. P.).—Mayor Maurice J. Tobin owns a clock with a case made of ‘anthracite coal mined 1500 feet underground at Pittston, Pa. It was a souvenir gift from three Pittston American Legionnaires. f

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