Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1944 — Page 12
ernor Dewey.
governor did not spare words on the Republican nominee, He termed Dewey “the youthful hope of the Old Guard” and said he was sure the people would not “swap a horse for a pony.” But after Mr. Dewey made his West coast speeches in which he went all-out for the reform legislation passed during the Roosevelt administration and promised expansion of the social security program, the governor had some nice things to say about Governor Dewey. In his second broadcast
OVERLOOKED GENERALLY has been the change of tenor by Governor Schricker, the Democratic senatorial nominee, toward Gov
In his first campaign speech at French Lick after the G. O. P. presidential nominee had opened his campaign by assailing the Roosevelt administration in the time-honored manner, the Indiana
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campaign address at Irvington Monday night, the governor said: “I have been greatly interested in the pronouncements that have come recently from Governor Dewey. I know Governor Dewey quite well. I have a high admiration for his character. In so far as I know, he is making a fine governor of the great state of New York but this campaign, my friends, presents not men but more importantly, I believe, presents great issues, great human problems.” He went on to point out the specific New Deal legislation which Governor Dewey had approved, and concluded by saying that he was indorsing President Roosevelt because he believed him the man best qualified to provide a lasting peace. The governor's Irvington speech was made immediately preceding Governcer Dewey's Oklahoma City address in which the G. O. P. presidential nominee “threw the book” at Roosevelt.
Gallup Record
A CHECKBACK ON the Gallup poll for Indiana during the 1940 campaign is interesting. Here's the way the poll listed Indiana at various stages during the cam- _ paign: Willkie Roosevelt
Aug. 5, 1940 ...... 55 45 Aug. 26 ,......... 60 40 Sept. 21 ..oivuness Bl 49 O01 iecorveviee. 49 51 OCt, 18 uiiasinen.s 53 47 Oct. 28 ...c00nvv.. 52 47 Nov. 4 ............ 55 45
It wil be noticed that the poll showed a fluctuation of 11 per cent for Mr. Willkie, from a high of 60 per cent to a low of 49 and that the poll figures for Sept. 21 were the closest to being correct for the actual election results— Willkie carrying the state by a bare 51 per cent. Dr. Gallup was four points too high for Mr. Willkie in his last pre-election poll. The Gallup poll started off in the present campaign by giving Mr. Dewey 57 per cent of the vote in Indiana, 2 per cent more than was recorded for Mr. Willkie at the start of the '40 race. The second Indiana poll, released this week, showed a 2 per cent gain for Roosevelt, giving Indiana to Dewey by 55 per cent. This is 4 per cent higher than Mr. Willkie's ranking at the same time two years ago—and, it may be noted, it was the poll figures released at this time four years ago that came the closest to forecasting ‘the actual results of the election. A 55 per cent vote for Dewey, based upon the 1940 vote, would give the state to him by a majority of around 180,000. Willkie’s majroity in 1940 was only 25,000. . ”n ” 2 FOLLOWING GOVERNOR DEWEY'’S speech of last Monday night in which he quoted various leaders on the administration’s unpreparedness for war, Indidna Democrats are preparing to “drive home” to the people of this state the anti-preparedness voting records of most of the Hoosier G. O. P. congressmen, The Democrats have something to shout about along this line, too.
2 a ” SOME INDIANA REPUBLICAN congressmen reportedly are sore about Governor Dewey's speech _in which he said the Smith-Con-nally-Harness law was a bad measure and should be repealed. Congressmen LaFollette of Evansville was the only Republican who voted against. Congressmen Wilson, Gillie and Johnson, all Republicans, did not vote but the other five Republicans in the house voted for it. The two Democratic congressmen, Ray Madden and Louis Ludlow, both voted against.
(ON PEACE
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today. ; Supt. Brown broached the subject —An authoritative source predicted | which discreetly tucked it into - today that all controversy within the President's cabinet committee] cn postwar peace policy would be resolved at a meeting which has been scheduled for the near future with the chief executive, The committee members are Sec~ retary of War" Henry L. Stimson, Secretary of State Cordell Hull, and |; Secretary of Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr. Cancel Press Meeting Stimson and Morgenthau, meanwhile, passed up an opportunity for presenting their versions of the in-tra-committee dispute—said to revolve around Morgenthau’s recoms= mendations for a harsh peace for Germany—by cancelling press conferences scheduled for today. A source in a position to know virtually the entire story said the situation would be climaxed at a meeting with the President soon and that all differences would be composed without any “trouble.” ils een man——
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