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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • Page 9

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TOLEDO BLADE, END OF QUfiragn SaUtf Slrtb'uttp Friday, October 19, 19S6 Parti Page 9 Democrats Share a Joke at Toledo Gathering G. O. P. 121 INDORSES ADLAI isoners HQ mm Toledo, Oct 18 The Toledo Blade came out for NSON tion has not tackled the nation's problems with vision and vigor during the last our years," the Blade said. NEWSPAPERAT FREEPORT PUTS DY player, noted Lauscho's bronzed and leathery visage and made it the subject of a wisecrack about President Eisenhower's addiction to golf.

"I told Frank Lausche he had no right to look so well in the middle of a campaign," he said. "I'm sure he didn't get that healthy looking sun tan playing golf." The crowd laughed. In Ohio it is well known that Lausche plays golf two or three times a week and shoots in the middle 70s. In his Youngstown speech tonight, Stevenson said his O. K.

ON ADLAI Adlai E. Stevenson for President today as the Democratic nominee's special campaign train pulled into town. The newspaper indorsed Mr. Eisenhower in 1952. In its editorial the Blade noted that this is the first time in its 121 years of publication that it has backed a Democrat for President.

The editorial conceded that President Eisenhower has given the nation honest, efficient government. is Adlai Makes Appeal for Voluntary System 1 BY CHESLY MANLY Chicago Tribune Prs Service Youngstown, Oct. IS Adiai Stevenson, addressing a rally from the steps of Freeport, 111., Oct. 18 The Freeport Journal Standard today indorsed Adlai Stevenson for President. The newspaper lists itself as politically.

It supported the Republican Presidential nominees in 1940, 1948, and 1952, and the Democratic candidate in 1944. proposal to end the draft at Youngstown's Stambaugh au-! ditorium, defended his conten-1 the earliest date consistent with national safety had been deliberately misconstrued as "But on the other hand it the Eisenhower administra a proposal for weakening our armed forces. Adlai Stevenson (right) in Toledo, for Presidential campaign speech joins in laughter "In the Best Dressed Circles" CLOTHIER HATTER HABERDAiiHER with Michael Di Salle (left), candidate Ohio governorship, and Gov. Frank Lausche, who ine point," ne said, "is simply that we need more and is seeking U. S.

sens.te seat. tAuocutt presi wirephoto 101 W. RANDOLPH ST. IN HOTEL SHERMAN more of a type of military personnel experienced and professional which our present draft system does not give us. The draft means a tremendous turrioved in our military personnel, and a resultant high proportion of inexperienced personnel.

And there is ample evidence' that this inexperienced personnel is not meeting today's needs." Stevenson's party moved into a Youngstown hotel for the night, and tomorrow will fly to Kentucky for a series of rallies. Newest Imported Tone-on-Tones! had previously announced his support of Stevenson but never in such generous terms as he used today at Toledo and the other Ohio rallies. It would be difficult to find two men in the Democratic party who were "farther apart in the political philosophy, for Lausche. voted for the late Sen. Robert A.

Taft in 1950 and Stevenson's entourage is loaded with leaders of Americans for Democratic Action, representing the left wing of the party. After Lausche had lauded Stevenson at the Elyria whistle stop, the Presidential candidate discoursed at length about his program for federal aid to education. Elyria.he said, is having a "desperate struggle" trying to provide adequate school facilities, all because the Eisenhower administration had neglected this problem and Republicans in Congress voted down a Democratic bill for school aid. Standing near the speaker was Gov. Lausche, who told the Eisenhower administration that Ohio could build its own schools and wanted no help from the federal government.

A reporter told Stevenson that many people in Ohio don't know whether Lausche is a Republican or a Democrat and asked him for comment. "I have always considered him a Democrat," Stevenson said. "Love of Feliow Man" In his Toledo speech, Lausche said he became acquainted with Stevenson when the latter was governor of Illinois. As governor, he said, Stevenson disclosed those innermost qualities that have to be weighed" in selecting a candidate for high office. He continued: "I believe his outstanding quality is his love of his fellow men.

He is possessed of a humanity which makes him want to help those who are oppressed and need help. When Nov. 6 comes and I go to the ballot box it will be my privilege and my honor to cast my vote for Adlai Stevenson for the high office of President of the United States. He is a fearless man. He loves humanity.

He loves his country. He is a great American." Stevenson, returning the compliment, declared that Lausche is known all over the country for his integrity and his independence. As Ohio's senator, he will command a nation's unmeasured respect," ho said. Stevenson, a tennis IN OUR OWN-MAKE SHIRTS You'll find fhe new jacquard designs in our imported tone-on-tones as superb as the finest whife-on-whifes but in their own rich colors of blue, grey and bamboo. Styled in our own collar and our own shirt-crafting, single-needled throughout, treated uon tonight that military conscription should be replaced by a voluntary system to obtain the kind of experienced, professional personnel that modern fighting forces require.

He supported his arguments vith recent testimony by Maj. Gen. Donald P. Booth, assistant deputy chief of staff of the army for personnel, and Gen. Nathan F.

Twining, air force chief of staff. He insisted that sueh witnesses know more about his proposal than Republican politicians who have derided it. "What is involved here is the security, perhaps the life cr death of this nation," Stevenson said. What is involved here is the use that should be made of two years of our sons' lives. What is involved here is whether there should be new ways of more effectively meeting new problems.

And I say that these are decisions that must be made not by one man not by one general rot even by one man as President but by the American people." Campaigns with Lausche Stevenson's speech in Youngstown tonight was his fourth and last in a day of campaigning with two popular Ohio Democrats Gov. Frank J. Lausche and former Mayor Mike Di Salle of Toledo. Both gave Stevenson their enthusiastic support as he campaigned for the 25 electoral votes of this normal Federal Jury Subpenas 20 in Voting Pr obe Federal grand jury subpenas were issued yesterday for 20 persons listed as registered voters in the 38th and 40th precincts of the 1st ward. French cuffs.

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3. Sizes 10-18, 12-In House and Town Fifth Floor, South State. Also Evanston, Oak Park, Lake Forest, Park Forest polyestcr fiber Each $1795 ly Republican state. Lausche and Di Salle, candidates for senator and governor respectively, met Stevenson at Toledo, where he addressed a rally of, some 15,000 in the courthouse square, and pledged their utmost support of his efforts to carry Ohio. Then they joined his special campaign train and appeared with him at a whistle stop in Elyria and at rallies in Akron and Youngstown.

The crowd at Toledo, thanks to Di Salle's organizing skill, was one of the best of Stevenson's whole campaign and was considerably larger than a Republican rally addressed by Vice President Nixon on Monday. Stevenson carried Toledo four years ago but President Eisenhower carried Lucas county. Hem Depressed Spirits Lifted Stevenson's reception in To Or IT ledo and the other Ohio cities lifted the spirits of his en tourage, which had been depressed by two events yester day. One was the candidate's failure to draw as large a crowd as had come out to hear former Gov. Thomas E.

Dewey of New York in Flint, a stronghold of the United Auto Workers union. Stevenson's hones of carrying Michigan are based principal ONI WITH DELICIOUS ly upon the efforts of tne UAW and other unions. The other discouraging event was the announcement of early returns in the New York Daily News poll, giving President. Eisenhower 59 per cent of the vote in New York state. While the -Stevenson managers have been saying he could win without New York, as Truman did in 1948, they have insisted that the popular vote there would be close.

Ohio Democratic leaders state privately that Lausche, Di Salle, and Stevenson will run in that order. Most observers believe that Lausche will defeat Sen. George H. Bender but will not help Stevenson enough to carry Ohio. In 1952, when Lausche was reelected-with a plurality! of 425,000 votes, President Eisenhower carried the state by 500,000.

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