Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1940 — Page 6
= A me en el A I ry
~ CRIES ‘MAMMA’
But His Mamma, Killed by Auto, Cannot Answer. (Continued from Page One) the path of his car, and then con-
Mr. Mason
tinued on.
them, he said, his car struck a ear
Douglas St., parked cars.
Mr, Paul told police he did not see a car strike the three persons before the Hopkins car hit them.
and then hit two
Hopkins is held on $1000 bail on al
Vagrancy charge while the investigation proceeds. Mr. Faulkner, who is employed at! Eli Lilly & Co.. is reported by doctors to have a fractured skull, a broken arm and possibly internal injuries, David has a | fractured skull and broken shoulder. Besides Mr. and Mrs. Benner and her husband and child, Mrs. Faulkner is survived by a sister, Miss Annabell Benner, 19, and a grandmother, Mrs. William Hock, Winamac, Ind.
psychological uncertainties
probably Tokyo as well.
War Moves Today!
Indications that Russia is not satisfied with her recent territorial gains and remains suspicious of possible future attack are contained in the address delivered today at Moscow’s celebration of the Soviet Union’s 23d birthday by Defense Commissar Marshal His appeal to the army not to remain “content” and his warning against “tricks of our foreign enemies” have direct association with present events in Southeastern Europe. Marshal Timoshenko's frank statement is the first formal Russian pronouncement since Italy invaded Greece and possible Turkish involvement in the war became a subject of pressing interest for Moscow. His Swerving in an effort to miss emphasis that the entire Russian) »| People must maintain 8 state of mo- | lof surprise. driver bilization and preparedness because non.Communist states to be potenBy Thoms Paul. {20, of 529 0 f the danger of military attack un- [gia] enemies hut more specifically doubtedly is designed to produce ‘only, Germany and Italy in Europe in the and Japan in Asia call for continucapitals of the Axis powers and| lous
Timoshenko.
The Russian Army has shown no| such sympathy for German and Commissar’s | Italian military operations in the | | clearly that« Russia remains suspi-|
By J. W. T. MASON United Press War Expert.
Moscow considers all
alertness by the Russians
lagainst tricks and surprise.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1940
200,00 000 Cheer as F.D.R. Returns to Capital in Triumph
Tired bt Gov. | Gay, He Faces Peace or War Issue Next Four Years.
(Continued from Page One)
Henry A. Wallace. waited almost a half hour in tne early morning chill of the station platform to greet the President. The Navy band struck up “Happy Days” as his private car was slowly wheeled to where his open touring
car waited. An informal reception was held aboard the President's train,
Mrs. Roosevelt, in a wine-colored
The whole tenor of the Defense declaration shows
present war as would imply mu- cious of her powerful neighbors and
tuality of interests.
tary publications have frankly ex- guard.
Moscow mili- does not intend to let down her]
It is apparent that while |
pressed skepticism of a is in this mood, proclaimed |
ability to conquer Great Britain and more recently have indicated doubt | forces,
{publicly by the director of her armed the Axis dictators cannot
the results of Italian ambitions in| ‘place unreserved trust in assurances
Greece.
that Moscow is indifferent to fur-|
Now Marshal Timoshenko reiter- ther expansion of German and! ates Stalin's instructions for Russia Italian influences.
to continue on guard against tricks | ‘of foreign enemies,
and the danger to find
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Nor will it be possible for Japan satisfaction in Marshal Timoshenko’s sharp words of gis trust of Russia’s “enemies.” Whatever agreement Moscow may i (with her oriental neighbor will have {to be accepted with reservations, just as Germany and Italy cannot afford to base a future major military policy on a belief that Russian compliance will remain unbroken. It is wholly impossible to believe that Russia intends to respond with permanent amiability to the new triple alliance. That military pact requires some eventual form of reprisal by Russia as the dangerous game of high politics is played in Europe. It is impossible to know what Russia is planning to do, but the totalitarian leaders cannot expect permanent meekness in Moscow.
GALLUP MAKES CLOSEST GUESS
Final Pre-Election Report Within 3 Per Cent of Popular Balloting.
Times Special PRINCETON, N. J., Nov. 7.—Despite the closeness of Tuesday's presidential election, it was apparent today that the Gallup Poll had scored the best state-by-state
jand section-by-section record in the {history of national election| polls.
| Not only did the Gallup Polls {final pre-election report—published in The Times Monday—come within less than 3 per cent of the actual {popular vote for the nation, but in 14 states the Gallup Poll's figures nose apparently either “on the |
ose” or within 1 per cent of perfect accuracy. { The Gallup Poll reported Presi- | dent Roosevelt could have a maxiimum of 472 electoral votes, which
| the Capitol roared its approval.
tweed suit and a simple hat to match, was the first to go aboard. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace were next. They were followed by Secretary of State Cordell Hull, Secretary of War Henr wy L. Stimson, Secretary of Navy Knox and other Cabinet or
President Tired, but Gay
The President appeared tired but was gay and patient as he posed for {Photographers and waved greetings to the cheering throngs. Attired in a light gray doublebreasted suit and a soft tan felt hat, {he slipped into an overcoat only {after he had entered the open car for the ride to the White House. Remaining seated in the car, he smiled broadly as he expressed his appreciation to the massed thousands. “I think this means a great deal to Henry Wallace and to Mrs. Wallace and to my wife,” Mr. Roosevelt said. Mr. Wallace sat beside him and the Chief Executive threw his arm over the future Vice President’s shoulders. Mrs. Roosevelt and Mrs. Wallace sat in the forward seats.
Happy to Be Back
“Being here all these years means that we and you get on pretty well,” Mr. Roosevelt said. “Wg are very happy to be back here for a little while longer. “We like farm life pretty well, but of all the cities I can think of we like Washington the best. “I want you to know how glad we are of the results of two days ago and of the chance to stay here just a little while longer.” The crowd, extending in an unbroken mass from Union Station to Mr. Roosevelt waved and the procession started.
Drive Takes 20 Minutes
The drive along the mile-long route required 20 minutes. The White House police force, clad in new uniforms, stood at attention as the President’s car entered the grounds. The White House staff gave Mr. Roosevelt a cheer as he entered the building, his home again for the next four years. More than 5000 persons took advantage of the first time since July that the public has been admitted to the White House grounds to jam inside the iron fence. The group remained there for almost half an hour. - Responds to Cries
Finally, in response to cries of the crowd of “We want Roosevelt,” the President, accompanied by Mr. Wallace, Mrs. Wallace and Mrs. Roosevelt, stepped out on the portico. The
lis exactly what the President had.
; | Indicated Close Election |
| Analysis of the Gallup Poll’s final ‘election report showed that only
jd eight states, with a total of 59 elec-
{toral votes, might be considered sure | |for Willkie, In this morning's fig{ures . Willkie was leading in just | |these eight states, and had just 59] electoral votes. | Another fact indicated in the Gal} 'lup Poll and borne out by the elec-| ‘tion returns was that this election | would be the closest since the Wil- |
son-Hughes contest of 1916. | On the basis of incomplete returns | | President Roosevelt received 54.5 per cent of the vote as compared |with the 52 per cent found for the rosident in Monday's Gallup re-| | | on 1928—the closest election be-/ |tween 1916 and the present—Her-! bert Hoover received 58.6 per cent! over Alfred E. Smith,
Aim Reached, Says Gallup The closeness of the race was also
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borne out by the neck-and-neck! races in such states as Indiana,! Illinois, New York, Pennsylvania, | Michigan, Ohio, Minnesota and! Wisconsin. : “The poll more than succeeded in| its announced aim—which was to| reduce the average state-by- state | error shown in its presidential su: - | vey pfour years ago,” Dr. George Gallup said. “At that time the poll had an javerage error of about 6 per centage | points, ‘as compared with a likely | | average of about 22 points Tues-| | day.” |
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Mr. Roosevelt waved repeatedly but made no remarks. . A thin piping voice of a young girl shouted, “Here Mr. Roosevelt.” The President laughed, looked in the direction of the call and waved. Mr. Roosevelt received a roaring farewell from his Hyde Park neighbors last night when he boarded his train. . Standing on the rear platform with his 86-year-old mother at his side, he observed that he was returning to Washington for another four years, “but I'd much rather be living here.” He said that pressure of international affairs would force him to forego his custom of celebrating Thanksgiving at Warm Springs, Ga., this year because that city is 24 hours from Washington. Instead, he said, he would spend Thanksgiving in Hyde Park. Acclaimed personally and as an epochal political figure because of his re-election to an unprecedented third term, Mr. Roosevelt begins his new term with his majorities in both houses of Congress strengthened by the election returns. Only Mr. Hoover and Mr. Roosevelt in his three successful Presi-
dential attempts before topped 20,000,000 votes. But Mr. Willkie won
only 63 electoral votes. The division of the electorate was approximately 55 per cent for Mr. Roosevelt and 45 per cent for Mr. Willkie. But the division of government power is far different with the executive branch 100 per cent New Deal, the Supreme Court containing a five-to-four majority of young New Deal blood and only Congress a political arena where Administration bulwarks might soon be broken either by a coalition anti‘New Deal movement or by vote of the electorate in 1942.
The Democratic Party organization has been taken over by the New Deal. Vice President John N. Garner is self-exiled in Uvalde, Tex. James A. Farley, who aspired to the national ticket this year, is out of the Cabinet and of the party chairmanship. The President has checked the conservatives and moved them far from the seats of party power. He pledged that this would be his last term, but as of today he is in a
able for renomination n Chicago last July. No vital changes in New Deal policy are indicated. Mr. Roosevelt's few words since his re-election portended merely “some more of the same.” But the tempo of did to the
British, the sternness of disapproval of Japan's activities seem due to increase. The matter of loans to Great Britain and 'of legislation which would make them possible is just around the corner. And it is notable that some of our military observers
are soberly reporting that they be-|
lieve it will be necessary in the long run to give Great Britain naval aid and at least the assistance of trained American flying personnel if the totalitarian powers aye to be de= feated. Mr. Roosevelt is known to feel that social security provisions including old-age pensions, fall short by millions of reaching as many people as they should. And he may be depended on to seek to remedy that. And hot in domestic politics is whether social gains which Mr. Roosevelt regards as vital, should be
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surely as he made himself avail-'tion would step up national defense.
He has promised that they won't be.
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