New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 23, 1928, Page 16

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1928 OVERNOR SMITH, IN ACCEPTANCE SPEECH, TAKES STAND , FOR AMENDING OF 18TH AND PLEDGES AID FOR FARMERS 3 Herewith is printed in evidence of party guilt. country has adequale quarters for|tions deserve as much respect as amendment and all other provisionsthe accomplishment of fundamental |ing and warehousing of surplus farm | this country than that disclosed by The democratic — party asks the | the transaction of federal business. |those of the great empires. We pre- of the federal constitution and all | programs for the nation. 1 may | products is essential just as coordin- | the investigation into the methods full the text of Governor‘elwmme to withdraw their confi- | The government pays Tent in the city |tend to no right, privilege or power 'laws enacted pursuant thereto. | fairly say even to those who disugree |ated, cooperative control of the flow (0f certain utility corporations. i Alfred E Smith's accept- dence from the republican party and |of Washington alone of more than that we do not freely concede to The president does not make the | With me that the solution 1 offer is | of capital was found necessary to the Private -corporations to gain con- o9 e i \r:pos« it with the democratic party |cne million dollars annually. 1t iscach one of the American republics.” | laws. He does his best to execute|one based upon the historic policy |regulation of our country's finances. |trol of public resources have pro- ance speech mn which he {pledged to continue those standards | estimated that the government is| The present administration has | them whether he likes them or not.|of the democratic party, to assure to ['n. accomplish financial stability, the |cured the writing of textbooks for ealls for the sale of liquor of upblemished integuty which | paying rentsls of LWeuy million dol- | been false fo that declaration of one |The corruption in enforcement ac- |cach state its complete right of local | Federal Reserve system was called |the public schools; have subsidized s | characterized every act of the ad-!lars in the nation. True cconomy |of its greatest party leade The | tivities which caused a former re- | self-government. I believe it is a so- [into being by a democratic adminis- | lectures pretending to give to (he under state l'egulatlon, & ! ministration of Woodrow Wilson, | would he effccted by the ercetion of |situation in Nicaragua fairly ¢x- publican prohibition administrator |lution which would today be offered ‘t"uum ‘The question for agriculture | country their own honest and un- survey of farmer condi- A Constructive Campaign federal buildings, especially in the |emplifies our departure from this 1o state that three-fourths of the by Jefferson, or Jackson or Cleve- jis comple Any plan devised must | baised advice; have employed as & Y T | But I would not rest our claim for | numcrous instances where sites ac- high standard. The administration |dry agents were political ward heel- | land or Wilson, if those great leaders {alse be coordinated with the other |their agents former public officials tions and quick relief fOr (he confidence of the American pro- |quired many years ago have been has intervened in an « K ection dispute ers named by politicians withomt | Were with us. | phases of our business institutions. |and have endeavored to mislead the agriculturists: ple alone upon the misdeeds of the | left vacant because the adwinistra- betwen two conflicting factions, sent |regard to Civil Service laws and Agriculture Our platform declares for the devel- | public opinfon by the retention of , opposite party. Ours must be a con- tion did not desire to have these ex- [our troops into Nicaragua, main- |that prohibition is the “new polit- | Publicity zgents of the republican |opment of cooperative marketing | the services of leaders of the com- . ! structive campaizu. penditures appear in the budget. 1t tained them there for years. and this |ical pork barrel” 1 will ruthlessly |&dministration have written so many |and an exrnest endeavor to solve the | munity in various parta of (he coun- ; Upoa the steps of this Uapitol False Prosperity is not onomy 1o refuse to spend | without the consent of congress. To stamp out. Such conditions can |drticles on our general prosperity, |problem of the distribution of the|try, Highly paid lobbyists. pene- “here twenty-five years ago L first| o SRR EEORERS L L nioney and to have our soldicrs liv- [settle (his internal dispute. our [not and will not cxist under any | that they have prevented the average |cost of dealing with crop surpluses |rated into every state and into the s came into the service of the State, | F PRI (LB inat | 08 In barracks which the chief of marines have died and hundreds of gdministration presifed over by me. | 1an from having a proper apprecia- |uver the marketed unit of the crop |jegislative halls of the nation itself, ! 1 receive my party's summons tof l o e B Nl e volent adminis. |SIAf Of the army recently stated | Nicaraguans in turn have been killed| The second constitutional duty 1100 Of the dugree of distress existing | whose producers are benefited by Public Ownership : lcad it in the nation. Within thig |O11¥ RATE the benevolenl adminds: |\ (. jngecent and below the stand- by our marines. Without consulta- |imposed upon the Dresident is “To |loday among farmers and stock- | such assistance. Only the mechanics | A5 against propaganda, it is the building, 1 learned the prineiples, | T8 pmm‘m‘{ \"\';'f.,‘ o g0 ’]'I‘ ™Y 2 or the meanest type of housing |tion with congress, the adiministra- |recommend {0 the ongress such |1aisers. Iorom 1410 fo the present |remain to be devised. 1 propose 10 | quty of the democratic party to set : the purposes and the functions of |PHIRY PrESRirIt - BB | ‘l"_'“‘ fon | 1 Fmitted anywhere. And the wise, |tion entered on this long continued | measures us he shall judge neces. | fme the farm debt has increased by |substitute action for inaction and |yp truth. The ownership of some 1 b government and to know that lhc\‘h'_”i va!‘m]h»; 2 mr‘_ ‘.‘I-;“' =“P{>0r' properly timed construction of need- occupation of the territory of a sup- |sary and expedient.” ;.m“mn upon | the striking sum of ten billions of | riendliness for hostility. In my ad- | of these great water powers is in ] greatest privilege that can come to | (T8 CIE S B :unvoh::;;uir: |ed public improvements would sub- posedly friendly nation bY our prohibition cuts squarely across Gollars, ov from four billion to 14 |ministration of the government of |ine nation, of others in the sev :ral p any man s to give himselt to a|SNPIOYRCRt theve 18 fery OO 18 |stantially tend to lessen the evils of |ariied troops. The tno great political mrtics. “fhere | Dillion doilars. The value of farm |y state, Whenever 1 was confronted | giates, These sources of water pow- _\ nation which has reared him and| 3 : ract fynemployment. | To no declaration of our platform (are thousands of so-called “wets | PFOPErty between 1420 and 1825 de- | with u problem of this character, Tl op jyst remain forever under pub- 1 raised him from obseurity to be a |[them and the millions dependent | ¢ he people commission me to do | do I more heartily commit myself |ung drys” in each. The platform |CTeased by twenty billions of dollars. | called into conference those = bust|jic government, they should remain ; contender for the highest office in | UPOM them. it, 1 snall with the aid of the con- |than the one for the abolition of the lar my party is silent upon any | IS depression made itself felt incquipped on the particular subject in under federal control. Where they i the gift of its people. In the year 1926, the latest figures | grogs «ifect a real reorganization and | practice of the president of entering | question of hange i m»? law, ]| €normous increase of hank failures hand. 1 shall follow that course |,po owped by an individual state, Siere 1 confirmed my: faith in the a;ml;«hlfi" show that 1-20th of 1% consalidation of governmental activi- |into agreements for the settlenent of | ;i yrsonallybelieve hat there sheuld | i the agricultural districts. In 1927 | with regard to agriculture. Farmers | ypov should be under control of the principles of the democratic party |°F (he 431,000 - corporations in this | tics upon a business basis and insti- |internal disputes in Latin American o S hinge and 1 shall advise the | there were 530 bank failures, with [and fzrm leaders With such — con- | gtae “or whers they are owned by i %o eloquently defined by Woodrow | COURLIY €arned 40; of their profits: |iute the real cconomy which comes |countrics, unless the agreements (ongress in accordance Nith oy | total liabilities of over 270 millions | structive aid as will come from | . oc jointly, they should be under - Wilsons “irst. the people as the |4'% of the corporations actually lost | from prudent expenditure. 1 shall have been consented to by the sen- | .ongtitutional . duty of what ever |Of dollars, almost entirely in the sound economists and fair minded |y, gontrol Rl ; source and their interests and de- |MON®Y: 1-4 of 17 of these corpora- aid programs for the relief of uncim- ate as provided for in the constitu= | changes | deem ¥ oessary or . |4gTICUIUTAl sections, as against 49 |leaders of finance and busjness must ktrever the dcrelasment.. i b sires as the text of laws and msmu-‘::z o "’I‘I”‘;":h‘“‘0-”""ds of the prof- | ployment, recognizing its deep, hu- tion of the United States. I person ‘I_n;“(‘m’ T then be for the |such failures during the last year of | work out the detail. There are vary- gow::::'::: “:ncy n“pe or federal : tions. Second, individual liberty as ™ e em. Specific industries | man and social significance and shall |ally declare what the platform de- | gt G A 4 | President Wilson's administration. |ing plans for the attainment ot the h . ( the objective of all law." With a|4r® Wholly prostrate and there is |strive to accomplish a national well- |clares: “Interference in the purely ”",::",:a””"‘:l 'J'"d Pt ;;‘l:;:’(“;s tal" The report of November 17, 1927, |end which is to be accomplished. l“‘;x_;::;h :2:‘;2:':‘1”?‘;:;?“:'::: f : gratitude too strong for words and “‘]“"::sv(rfutd business difficulty and |being resting upon the prosperity of internal affair of Latin American |yifo il whother these changes O & sbecial committes of the Asso. [Sach pians should be subjected at | O ot mpanies the right : with humble reliance upon the aid discontent among the individual the individual men and women who countries must cease” and I speci- | qy ., yag B¢ | ciation of Land Grant colleges and fonce to seurching, able and fair D rovidence. T accept vour | Pusiness men of the country. | constitute the nation. fically pledge myself to follow this | S ¥ e S L e my | Miversitics states: “Incomes from | minded wnalysis, because the inter- 12 ‘:'h"e":f‘I::;:";;:‘m‘:“‘l:d":;: : summons to the wider field of ac- | Prosperity to the extent that we | The Tariff declaration with regard to Mexico [, 0 "0 P LS T 4 its Orie | farming since 1920 have not been jests of all require that the solution | 2“8 o o insist upon fair and . Bon. have it is unduly concentrated and | Acting upon the principle of A5 Well as the other Latin American | o\ ccontly called T e, | Sulficient to pay a fair return on the | shall be cconomically sound. e d!‘strlbutlon 2 ’tm e . Progresive Government has not equitably touched the lives |“Equal opportunity for all, special |Lountrics. | James 'C. Carter. one of the leade ;| current value ot capital used and a| 1¢ 1 am elected, 1 shall immediate- TL‘:: can be secured only by the ab- Government should be construc- |Of e farmer. the wage-carner and | privileges for none,” 1 shall ask con- The Monroe Doctrine Lot Carof thih: country, wrote | FiT wage for the farmer’s labor, of |1y after election ask leaders of the | (o) ™ oention by the people of - e o destructive; progressive, |\h¢ individual business man. The |gress to carry out the tariff declara-| The Monroe Doctrine must be of the conditions which exist “when || Perinit {410 “people fo maintain |type 1 have named irrespective of | SIS retention By the PICBS D £ not reactionary. 1 am entirely un- f'B:m of governmental economy is [tion of our platform. To be sure maintained but not as a pretest forly Jaw is made declaring conduct |? standard of ““”‘",“m,",p" able ‘jr':]l' party to enter upon his task. l!mg and controlling the site and 3 willing to accept the old order of 2% PaSeIess as the claims that gencral | the republican party will attempt in | meddling with the purcly locan con- | widely practiced and widely re [other groups of like ability.” The | shil join with them in the discharge | 18 #0500 C8 (00 o fuvion, : things as the best unless and ugtil | /'*11®SS Prosperity exists and that | the campaign to misrcpresent demo- | cerns of countries which even|garded as innocent fo be a crime. |Pusiness men's commission on Tfr_ {ot their duties during the comiug |yp. government,—federal, state or | p 1 begome convinced that it cannot |, €aN €Xist only under Republican |cratic attitude to the tarifl. The though they be small are soccreifn | He points out that in the cutrce- culture said in November. 1927 winter and present to congress im- | i’ SUG ke representing joint | . be made better. |administration. Acocratic party. doss mot and un-|and entitied to deniand and receive |ment of such a daw “trials bagome | Since the war, the prices of farm {ycdiately upon its convening, the |ciovoc” niuse control the switch that | f It is our new world theory that \Vhr:?}:"“;( to l‘gmom‘lmo | der my leadership will not advocate |respect for their sovereignty. And {scenes of perjury :\ndsuhcx'n:diunol"'“_Z;::“:'s(‘ lv:z‘\‘w vl;n’(g.‘::.’!h\‘:‘ 1:\“':::: solution recommended by the body | turns on or off the power 80 iy | i government exists for the people as |, - i "P?”hvm\ Party came |any sudden or drastic revolution in |1 shall certainly do all that lies iniperjury; juries find abundant Frel el e N0 e vrwvs‘u( men best fitted to render this i1y sought by certain private groups i against the old world conception power in 1521 it definitely pro- | our economic system which would lmy power fo bring about the fullest ‘..u_m\ for rendering acquittal or per- | MMt 10 dhesgensra o gnq | SiBNAl service to the nation. I shall | yjthout the least regard for the that the prople exist for the gov- |Mised reorganization of the mach- | cause business upheaval and popular |concerted action between {his coun- | sisting in disagreement contrary to ?:)‘:\()d:".KOmlshf.l:i‘m:'r\:;yj\:;n an |support the activities of this body | public good. : ernment. A sharp line separates| = 60“‘: xzlmf-rmnvm_ and abolition | distress. This principle was r\;\‘og‘ {try and all the Latin American | their oaths” and he concludes Eol ”'“‘_m”‘\ h”\s Y until a satisfactory law is placed I shall carry into federal admin- 1 those who believe that an elect o‘"lamil ation of unnecessary and [x:\zed as far back as the mssvev‘oi | countries with respect to any S(¢p ihaps worst of all is that general ”"‘;ilmwm- o noas bt SRl the statute books. istration the same policy which I i class should be the special objcct of |OVCTIaPPINE akencies. A committee |the Underwond tarift bill. - Our plat- | which it may ever be necessary 10| gard and reverence for taw are im- | GEPS U SRIEEEE Ty o | Adequate distribution is necessary | have maintained against heavy odds 1 the government's concern and those | ppointed. A representative of | form restates it in unmistakable | tuke to discharge such responsibili- | paired, a consequence the mischief |y e of farm land and farm to bring a proper return to produc- | in my own state. Under no circum- || d who believe that the government is|the President acted as Chairman. 1t [language. The democratic party ities to civilization as may he placed |of which can scarcely be estimated.” | e et heasilyin the |lon: Increascd efficiency of rail- |stances should private monopoly be | £ the agent and servant of the people ,'IL';:"”“C‘ a plan of reorganization. |stands squarcly fo: the maintenance jupon us by the Monroe Doctrine. | These words written years before the | B deflation® and “large num- 102 transportation and terminal | permitted to capitalize for rate- s who create it. Dominant in the re- | LN® Plan was filed in the archives, |Of legitimate business and a high | The Arbitration Treaties 15th amendment or the Volstead act |} e have lost all their Mandimg means lowering of cost | making purposes water power sites 5 Timican party today 1s the element |1t Stll remaing there. After soven standard of wagcs for American ld-| The ewil effect of the administra- | were prophetic of our situation today. | S which in turn reflects itself in the |that are the property of the people L which proclaims and exccutes the |eore of Republican control the [bor. Both can be maintained and at |tios policy with respect to Latin| | believe in temperance. We e | i dnoes {ferm of increased purchasing power | themselves. It is to me unthinkable ¥ politcial theories against which the (MMICtIre of government is worse | the same time the LS ot b el i A neni i e dended ool sunali ol achisied {smpardnng: tindes the | Y aively & probtem of |{hroush reduction in the cost of | that the government of the United ; party liberals like Roosevelt and La had" it was in 1921, 1t is fully as [OUL Of the reaim lflv‘] R ,L |tions with the rest of ti world. 1| prosent system. The mothers and | e RS RO SRR IR Honl. | every-day necessities of life. Staten o Wiy stels tiassht will phes d Follatte and their party insurgents P24 s the system which existed in | treated on a strictly busincss basis. |am not one of ~thesc who contend | fathers of young men and women | (5l ono of the most individualiz K50 46, Tailvoads exhaiict maeaos | it Alther diEact or inditect slsrE 5 have rebelled. This reactionary cle- | N€W York State hefore we secured | Fordney-McCumber Tariff |that everything republican is bad |throughout this land know the anxi= | 4" 0 Shgependent of enterpri of transportation. 1 believe in en- |ation of water power sites. ment seeks to vindicate the thecry |PY constitutional emendment the| A leading republican writing M land everything democratic ls good. |cty and worry which has beehliy gy the report of the Business|COUrMEINg the construction and use Colorado River t of benevolent oligarchy. It mumu‘lhk slation which consolidated more | CTiticism of ”,". | b .r}:fl aaw. |1 approve the effort to renew and |brought to them by their children's |\{1. S iction points out, “Agri- | Of modern highways to carry the | Electrical energy generated from H that & material prosperity, the very [th&n one hundred offices, commiss. |Siid: "It stands as one If‘ LR | oxend g arbitration treaties ncgo- |use of liquor in a way which was | \oloiceccentialy a public function, Short haul of small bulk commodi- | water power as an incident to the p tniene ot which 1o challenged, is |1on% and boards into eighteen o, Ul drawn picces of Iegilation in re- |tiated under the administration of |unknown before prohibition. 1 be-|SroiCy i1\ 'n clear and unquestion- | 1175 4nd 0 aid in effective market- | regulation of the low of the Colo- i an excuse for political inequality. |OTdinated departments, each respon- |C°Nt Political history. It is ‘proln; vk) | President Wilson. But the useful-|lieve in reverence for law. Toda¥ |,yj0 nuplie interest.” The country is iNg of arm products rado river is the common heritage & It makes the concern of the govern- Sible to the Governor. In contrast | NeAT the actual truth to say that tak® Inis of those treaties as deterrents | disregard of the prohibition laws ,n " conomic whole. 1f the buving | Julond ‘Waterways of all the states through which the i e hot people, but material | ith this, the Republican party (I8 for granted some prineiple of |of war is materially impaired by the is insidiously <appng respect for all |10 (00" L iiure s impaired. the | Of great importance and st river flows. The benefits growing i control at Washi ey protection of American business and | yogirvations asserted by various na- | law e et M| power of agriculiur np | 0f great importance and still in a | T Y t things. | hington when faced (| =, Sl B na- [law. 1 raise, therefore, what I pro- | gon o 50 veq fower trips to Main | highly undeveloped state are our | {0 such development should be 5 Ropctiy e [ Brogeoanim [ With the aliernative of loss of pa. |INGUStTY: the country has prospered ftions of the right to wakw defensive |foundiy believe 10 be a great moral | ey, The shop owner suffers he- | transportation routes by waterways, | €AUtably _ distributed among the ! I have fought this spirit in my [\ONRES for (he faithrul or more | 1% o PostwAr COMULIIS £ ICCS | wars as those reservations are inter- iseue involving the righteousness of | yyq, he has lost a large part of his Commoditics of great. bulk, shore | SAtes having right to ownership. t own state, 1 nave had to fight it |°fficient and economical manage. |40 in SPI? G arel ;’rv . “1“(‘““ Boz{metedin dis lail pC L pUEN] S 00l- | our national conduct and the protec- 4. 1o rppe manufacturer who sup- |the freight cost is a large part of | \ne duty of the fedcral govgrnment B Ao tinu hts Wl Edes ho- ilacel| 1N8DL ot ehelkobintment permitted | o0y, 0k dhe [ L orlual ettt |1dgok gecordabatondiug his polisien tionafiouri childiko i msials, f R il ikl o uttars os Jioe ificdcia 40k o e Jarge bart of | s confined to navigation. 1 am of ¢ tman 'to atatute books every one of | /e o4 order to contlnue for the |11 What 1 have .v-dt avoted 15| e announced on April 25, 1021, the | Jeftersonian Principles B et er b cariat the P | ard rone e e anen St the opiniSn St (¥ha ekt trENIOH y e Ter e ribvs, ¢ Namana laws rar|DADENt of the patandge neakera,s | 0 PAILOC 8 CAMPLEN BRGNS i dootyine that the peraon and meap. | Thelremedy, gel isaiatated. 08 e o nallan Tbe tonetedl LIS | ta) tedt Mo canie aantania B e O would ow: eroi cthis AuUing Wb el i whose enactment T assumed respon- | 1Mcreased Federal Appropriations | A5 wriftan o fesy Q'(“"'j ‘“"F"( bY|erty of a citizen are a part of the | the fearless application of Jefferson-| "y o “And the banker cannot | selves most chindily to water trans. | & Colorado river authority, ~repre. - Sibility, iy JesIalative aud sxesus | The appropriationaiforiindendent)| Lo coor WAL, S8 AL SIS (¢ [national domaip, esen when abeadyjlan mrinclples, Jefterson Snd hia (ol ooriact) i debts fon sifcly extend e ater trans- . contagive equally of all the stats . five career. 1 shal know how to|bureaus and offices not responsible | ETinCeton univer ty. writing the his- | [ 4o not think the American prople |Iowers foresaw the complex activities | {ilior orodit, This country cannot | Cortain arcas of i p I concerned. The development should pe fight it in the nation. to any cabinet officer fincreaseq | '°7Y Of his own parcy. {ive | WO approve a doctrine which [of this great, widespread country. [yc o poaithy, strong economic body | dec 2 1»‘- :““]" our country are |y |,y (h. states through the agency £ It In (o nallon, @ ere i incon | (1O §5.400.000 in o141 s1gs | AEUINSt the practice of IeEIIatve | would give to Germany, or France,| They knew fhat I rural, sparsely ifon o lthy. strong ccononiic hous |decply interested in opening WP & | of (his authority by treaty ratitied A et e B falacy A e e roms [000.000 In 1921, and fo $3sa 000, |I9F FOUINE: Woodrow Wilson polnted | or gingland. or any olher comnirs: sitied districts people would develob | yyii"{mportant as asriculture, is sick it e SR R S 2 s (R Eievte ot tha| 00 in 1925, No wonder fhat a can. |1® Way to & remedy. It provided |ihe right to regard a citizen of that |ifferent desires and customs from | juost to the point of economic SR the Great Lakea s Shid . Deople. including the poor and the |Inet officer of the Republican pres. | fO7 the creation 2N, malnlanange 8 (sountiy ox tha propatiy of & citiniithosd in densely populateds sRoliohs | geaph. and adfacent waterways. Controv-| 1t will be the policy of my ad- 5 e P e Bentiot 1021 s\ Wit o o |2 200 Roilical, s gudicial et} it country s)tuated WIthin the |ana that I€ e ward to Le winaflon | S sl masket. among. he|C, JA8 Aclsen aver fhe relative | mipistration whlle wetaining goversy ) B e ihualiss s overiment s ey b L0 comitisslon s eBichicould n of the United ates & part | united on truly national Matters, | o, me, o e e ovo. | 121l of the &t. Lawrence route or | ment ownership and control, to de- d oF small, Therefove, whils'T empha- |iness or administrative unit, you | cSliEsle and advise ' the PResiill|of he national domain of the forelsh jthere had o be a dfterentlatlon in | gucts of industry ia ten billions of fhe All-American route. As Gover- | velop a _method of operation for by O ettt boet. | WOUId sre omething Tike onc of |#N CONEress as to the riff duties |country. Our unwarranted IBerYeD- |ocal faws to allow for different 1ocal | yoilara, Our export market accordin nor of New York. 1 have heretofore | Muscle Shoads which will reclaim e mess promotes the national welfare, |those grotesque spectacles of = big |I*2LY, Teduired fo protoet Smerican jtion in internal affairs in 1afin pepits. It was for this reason that |to jatest available figures, Is ex- txpressed a proference for the All-| for the government some fair rev- ¢ T s forces. of corrup. |OVster shell to which in the |Industry and safeguard = the high| smerica ad this specious reason for(he democratic platform in 1§84 an-| qygive of agricultural products. ap- American route, hasing my view on | enue from the cnormous expendi- 1 tian ah Tavoritim, that Memocratic |course of years, big and’ irregular |22ndard of American wages In a0 4t constitute the basis upon whichinounced “We —oppose SUMPUUAIY|proximutely one billion, six hundred engineers’ reports mads to me. The | ture aiready made for its develop- \ictory means that they will ‘be|masses barnacles have attracted |20 inistration anxlons to meet BO-|other countries may seck to Jusllly ljaws which vex the citizens and Il | millions of ~doliars. These large | correctness of these reports and also | ment and which 18 now a complete relegated to the rear and the front |themselves without symmetry or rel- litical obligations, the f“"‘“"“'-"‘)“ | Imperialistic policies which threaten | faree o \ith fndividual therty,” and | (o 088 o0 & indication of |°f those favoring the St Lawrence | waste. 1In this way the original A weats will be ocoupled by the friends |evancy. And the Chamber of | 128 ceased to function and It Baslworld peace and matertally letsen it was for this reason that Woodrow | the serious blow to national pros route has been challenged. As presi- | peace-time purpose of the construc-| i St ‘eGuat. OnpOLURIy Commerce of the U'nited States said | e Tt i ey s former M- | e otctivenese which might 0| Wilioh Veroed the Volsiead act. | piriey e a whote which i strick [dent of the United States, therefore, | tion of this plant will be achieved, K e Y e People |10 115 annual Teport {hia years “No |VorS 0 It that he work of the comv: |crwice lie in the multiateral trea-| " Nioafcation of Voktend Law | hen the buving power of the tarmer ||| O be ¥ cleat 4ty to vestuly ) T Ration, w14 be SRS, MECCI o Likewlse, government policy |Progress has heen made on the plan | GE 0 0" bootar interests. To | Y pear outtawry of War || Yzanoniance g EmERt 5 el e R e e ten o1 - should spring from the deliberate |Of —reorganization of the govern- |pg ol o T e a matte of | Rioal MUESwDy. tic principle, some immediate relicf Relief for Agriculture s' reports the accuracy of which | cheap pi ction .of nitra n action of an informed electorate, |ment's departments as advocated | rne, ' WUOWE B R S T et | The real outlawry of war mustwould come from an amendment to| When. therefore, T say that T am must be above question. When the | fertilizer and the surplus power will 1t Ot all men, T have reason to helieve [Py the Chamber.” The administra- | {* %0 (A% 1he, PERREE0C (TN come from a more substantial en- \the Volstead Inw giving a slentific in accord with our platforni declara- resuits of such & study are given to e dmntuliils he mecne o e that the people can and do grasp |tion spokesman answers only: “We | e Undatel resieration of but 8 U8 | dcavor to remove the causes of war |definition of the alcohalic content of | tion that the solution of thia problem | (TR | R0 entirely willing to : i P o the problems of the government.|have given an economical adminis- | i L £ o ALy s th e Fapiibioan | o Wb} ALING GeHaTaRE Tha rds= | tbst & he oa. grIidEt avia i nediats | SLIaBAbY the accislon Tof icorgrens (| Hourvesiinan: MRder-santey (pCUCHE b Against the opposition of the self. | tration.” and that has been repeat. |POMMNE L e |administration has signally failed. | ent definition is admittedly inaccur- | concern of the democratic adminis- | Flowl Control federal government must be admin. ‘o eetker and the partisan, again and |°4 5o often that some people begin | o o FaWMARI TARIL L Han neither militarist nor jingo: 1late and unscientific, Each statc|tration, I make no class appeal. 1/ With the development of inland istered in the interests of all of the b again. T have seen legislation won |0 belleve it without the slightest |, p8 " TR T LLARL oy | believe that the: people of this coun- | would then be allowed to fix its OWN jam stating a proposition as vital to waterways goes the control of floods 'wffi];" i t L Dy the premsure of popular demand, | Proof. T assert that there is no |y &R evel upon Which (EIEERt liry wish to live in peace and amity |standard of aloholic content, subject | the welfare of business as of agri- |thereon. — The Mississippi flood ef Hitenise (% pomplte e and P exerted after the people had had an |Proof. (o et e nes the | Wilh The world. Frecdom from en- |always tothe proviso that that stand- | culture Iast vear brought home to the na- | e *remoren of tand, coul oil w honest, frank and complete explan: | The appropriation bills signed by | PTORTIY manncd, it may PrOANER LR ungiing alliances is a fixed Ameri- jard could not exceed the maximum | With the exception of the admin- lon the Imperative need for a na- ol ,"m"“","l e h ation of the issues. Great questions [the President of the United States ,' - o the purchasing | €40 bolicy. 1t does not mean, how- | fixed by the conzress istrations of Cleveland and Wilson, | tional policy of flood control. The | o il cserled ce il e of finance, the issuance. of millions |for the lst year are just one-half a | 0% \W° Ay nerease the purebasing | .. "that great nations should not| I believe moreover that there (he government of this country has lict {wo administrations waited for "".‘,‘.h‘,h;’."l-f :;’S““d";fke“‘ % 2 of dollars of bonds for public pro- |billion dollars more than they were r\:-m: T ment of thoge |M#have o one another with — the |should be submitted to the People heen in republican hands for half a this calamity and for universal de- | 1o vs e late; then 3 afie"' » jects, the complete reconstruction |for the first year of his administra- | (5008 0 GE QT E L ey | Same decent friendliness - and fair | the question of some change in the contury. For nearly eight years the ‘mand that something be done in- :,'"9 ,,‘,',fihm,:r{h:,a:me m?)r:“Zevand: " of the machinery of the state gov- [tion: The appropriations for the ex-| \% o/l 1 o5 4" (hich upon their | Play that self-respecting me and | provisions of the 1sth amendment. | president and congress have been re- | stead of taking leadership in this im- | n on the forest than any other] ir enment, the institution of an ex- |ccutive department itself (the prest- ¢ 2% TOEE B0 K S innoces. | Women show to one another Certainly no one foresaw when the | publican. What has been done to | portant work. Forethought. courage, | creat nation. At the same time wi + ecutive budget, these are but a few |dent and vice president) have fn.| G0 ¢ G &l Limitation of Armaments |amendment was ratified the condi- | solve this problem” Many promises and leadership and knowledge of | are the it Wi Gl eon) t of the complicated questions which [crcased more than 10 per cent un- 16 attention to the republican| 1n 1921 there was megotiated a|tions which exist today of bootleg- | were made which have never been | what real ultimate economy means |in the demcmn of our forest re. ir 1. myself, have taken to the clector- | der President Coolidge. ".mp,,’v,‘ndu 1nd accept my assurance | treaty for the limitation of the con-|ging, corruption and open violation | fulfilled. Certainly the promise of |would have done much to prevent |gources. ate. Every citizen has thus learned | The figures for expenditure as @is- | the leader of our parly that dem- |struction of batfleships and batlle jof the taw in all parts of the coun- | relief by tariff has not been fulfilled. | this calamity with its ensuing waste | The use of ‘our national forests for] = the mature of the husiness in hand | finguished from appropriations tell 4% the 104 ter % O BOEY T o, | cruisers of over ten thousand tons.|try. The people themselves should | The fariff is ineffective on com-|and misery. An ounce of prevention | ecreation should he gréatly extend-| ta and | appreciated that - the state-s |the same story. Aside from interest | CCrUs 12T ESATIOn ©IL RS RONC 1y approved without party dis- after this cight years of trial, be Per- | modities of which there is exportable | is worth a pound of first aid and | ed. 1 also pledge myselt.to give th 1 business is his husiness. [on the public debt which has been | Sk I I DI Mo s o [ Dite as a start of the process of re-|mitted to say whether *XISing cOn- | surplus without controlled sale of |relicf. In the last congress the A % Reviving National Ideals reduced by retirement of bonds or |, naijon % moving from the backs of the toil- gitjons should be rectified. T per-|the surplus. Our platform points the | Reid-Jones bill-laid down sound |to a national park, reforestation and| - That direct contact with the peo- | by refinancing at lower interest rate, | Forelgn Pol ing masses of the world the stagger- sonally believe in an ;nnqnhm‘ul N way to make the tariff effective for lines for the solution of this great | recreation pragrfln‘l as hive brough! » Ple T propose to continue in this | (he actual expenditiires for EOVErn- | .y, consitution provides that i€ burden of the hundreds of mil-|the 1sth amendment which would | crops of which we may produce e problem. The policy thus initiated | about the establishment of & gr n campaign and. if 1 am elected, in |mental activities during the fiscal | o iioe ith foreign powers must be lions of dollars that are wWrung from give to each individual state itself | surplus. There has been government | for the Mississippi irinist Be oaried | conssraalisn AriLatats pabK ayfteE] [ The Bomdmet of the nation's affairs. 1| sear ending in 1528 were just 8346.- | hoamn s i 1 O hirds of |them every year for wasteful trans- only after appraval by a referendum | interference with laws of supply and | through. The money actually ap- |in the state of New York. whall therehy strive 10 make the ma- 160000 more than in Dresident | Faifed BY 2 b0l O fagal recogni- | formation info engines of destruc- | popuiar votw of Xts people the right |@emand to benefit industry, com- | propriated for flood relief is too | It was Grover Cleveland who firs - tion's policy the true refiection of Coolidge's first year. I tion of the truth that in our forcign |tion. Ior seven yea the republi-|\holly within its borders to import. i merce and finance. It has been one- |small to make even a start. Too |made our national forest and con-| a the nation's ideals. Because 1 believe | Jricreaied Fedoral Taxes, o e e iy | can_administration has followed i imanufacturc. or cause (0 be manu-|sided because business, INGUSTY and e time Kas born spent In squabe |servation policy into a great publi b in the fdealism of the party of Jeffer- | If the defenders of the adminis- | olitics and act as a united nation, | With nothing cifective. No limitation | fyctured and sell alcoholic bever- | finance would have been helped more | hling over who shall pay fhe bill. question. Theodore Roosevelt follow-| 4 son. Cleveland, and Wilson, my ad- | tration answers that faxes have been | R0 0 800 “olicy must have its | has Leen placed upon land armi-|ages, the sale to be made only LY |if proper attention had heen given | Mississippl Development ed in his footsteps. What these two e ministration will be rooted in liberty reduced, they find themselves in a | rooc j0CS iha anoroval of a very |ments, submarines, vessels of war of iihe state itself and not for consump- to the condition of agriculture.| que wig '”‘N‘i river and its tri. | men began must be continued and| © Under the Tax: Iherty that meane Smilar dilemma. The fotal taxes | |ooe majority of ont people. There. |under ten thousand tons displace- |tin in any public place. We may | Nothing of substance has heen done | hutaries constitute a great network | carried forward. ; pl freedom to the individual to follow collected arc $24,000,000 more than | o 2% (B 0 (ivice was ever |ment, poisonous gases or any of the |well learn from the experience of Jto bring this haslc part of our ma-|of S orviia flowi: ”“ b & Labor Polic t his own will 80 long 45 he docs not in the nrst year f the Cooidge Rd- | ipderd by any president than by other machinery devised bv man for other nations. Our Canadian neigh-|tional lit. into conformity with the |, ;gq mm»he: of .mm‘ '\lu::u:\ort The American people constitute - harm his neighbor: the same high ministration. While tax rates have \woodrow Wilson when he struck at the destruction of human life. Tninors have gone far in this manner|economic system that has heen set|¢nan fiood control is involved. Full. |structure of many component parts. 5 moral purpose in our conduct a ) reduced and some war-time |1y o omeihods of sccret diplomacy, To- | this respect our diplomacy has been fo solve this problem by the method | up by law. Government should inter- | ot govelopment of the Mississippi | One of its foundations is labor. Thel 1 nation that acts the conduct of taxes abandoned. the government | p,c . have close relations, vital to futil: of sale made by the state itself and | fore as little as possible with busi- | 1o (TN ORACEL o Lhe IS EREP | regsonable contentment of those w . the God-fearing man and woman: actually took from the people in in- | yur commereiuzl and world standing, | T believe the American people de- not by private individuals. | ness. But if it does interfere with one | o¢'co S10 1% (ENEATES WY SUETICS | (o) with the conditions under which! 1 that equality of opportunity which (ome Lixcs $383.000.000 more AUr- ity every other nation. 1 regard it. | sire fo assume their fair share of | No Return to the Saloon phase of economic life, be it by taritr, | © (FRTETC SN PO Ml-f"d» they live and work is an essential Io wvs the foundatipn for wholesome ing the last fiscal year than during pererore, as a paramount duty to | responsibility for the administration| There is no question here of the by assistance to merchant marine, | l:u»pt} . es for public good | . L ¢ e nation's well-being. Th 1 amily life and opens up the outlook the first year of the Coolidge admin- | o orast of our people |of a world of which they are a part. return of the saloon. When I stat- | by control of the flow of money and pre S0 T what remains of our| Lo o of our country therefore de-) w e et o the tives of istration. And even these Teductions | 1 fness auestions, and {0 advise the |without political alliance with any|ed that the saloon “is and ousht to |capital through the banking sys- | !5 oSotroct T pledge mysell | governmental concern for thel P otr: children, in s rates have been | Drousht | leeterate ae to facts and policics. | forcign nation. 1 pledge myself 10| a defunct institution in this coun- | tem, it is bad logic. bad economics | & PORICREINe liberal conservation | | ieimate interest of labor. tt e mption of a real endeavor 10 try- I meant it. 1 mean it today. and an abandonment of government POICY based upon the same princl-| Tpg“gemocratic party has alway In the tugged honesty of Grover tration has committed the govern- | guighed secrctaries of state, repub- |make the outlawry of war effective || will never advocate nor approve |responsibility to say that as to agri- | ples to which T have given mv 8UD-| ooognized this fact and under the Cleveland there originated one of ment to appropriations authorized |pcan and democratic alike, this | by removing its causes and to sub-|any law which directly or indirectly | culture alone, the government shoulg | POrt in the state of New York. and | qminigtration of Woodrow Wilson our party's groatst principles: but not mide, amounting approxi- | country had assumed a position of stitute the methods of conciliation. permits the return of the saloon. |not aid. to fight against selfish aggression n | 3 E e O 08 S e legisla. “Publie office is # public (rnst.” That mately fo one billion doliars, which | \corld leadership in the endeavor to | conference, arbitration and indicial | Such a change ould preserve for| Twice a republicun congress has this field wherever it appears and | jon for the protection of those la. Party Responsibility thout primarily because the adminis- | phrough a long line of disti principle now takes on new meaning. i an obligution that is being passed | gutlaw war and substitute reason for | determination. |the dry states the benefit of a na- | passed legislation only fo have it | \Tespective of whom it may involve. | poring in industry, was enscted Politieal partics are the sehicle for on to succeding administrations. 1 forc.. At the end of President Wil The | centh Amendment tional law that would continue 1o vetoed by a president of their own [No nation in history has been more | gyr plattorm continues that traditio & carrying out the popular will. We wish to focus th it attention on gon's wdmwinisiration we enjoyved not The president of the United States make interstate shipment of intox | party, und whether the veto of thuu"“"“‘""' about the conservation of | o¢ the party, We declare for the m place responsibility upon the party. | thcse fundamental fucts and figures |only the fricndship but the respect- | has two constituttonal dntles with |cating beverages a crime. It would |specific measure was right or wrong, natural resources than has ours. We | principle of collective bargaining] The republican party today stands when it is fed with picturcsans |yl admiration of the peoples of the [rexpect to prohibition. The first Is | preserve for the dry states federal |t is undisputed that no adequate |have denuded our forests. We have | hich alone can put the laborer up. responsible for the widrspread dis- trifles about pefty cconomies, such world. Today we see unmistakable |cmbodied in his oath of office. 1If. enforcement of prohibition ~within | substitute was ever recommended to been slow to reclaim lands for de-|on g basis of fair equality with th honesty that has honeycombed its as eliminating stripes from mail wyidinees of a widespread distrust of [with one hand on the Bible and the | their own borders. It would permit the congress by the president and!“lof‘m""' and have allowed to run | .mployer; for the human principle administration sags and extinguishing eloctiric e and unfriendlinses to us, parfic- other hand reaching up to Heaven. to citizens of other states a care- that no constructive plan of relief |{0 Waste or have given to private | that labor is not a commodity; fo le During the last presidential cam- | lights in the offices at night ularly amonz onr Latin American |T promise the people of this coun-|fully limited and controlled methndlwus ever formulated by any leader | ®XPloitation our public waters with |(he fair treatment to governmeny at paign the republican managers were 1 Vs Pale Eeomomy neizhbors try that “1 will faithfully execufe of effectuating the popular will of the republican party in place of |their great potential power for the |and federal employes: and for spe. pi partially successful in leading the | With tlns has gone a government Latin American Policy the office of president of the United |wholly within the borders of those | the plan which its congress passed |development of electrical cnergy. |cific ard jmmediate attention to th vi American people to believe: that th al policy of refusal fo make neces T cspecially stress the <sity for States and to the best of my ability states withont the old evil of the sa- |and its president vetoed. Only caustic | The value of this heritage can | serious problems of unemployment. P! sins should he charged against the | sury expenditures for prrposes which the restoration of cordial relations preserve. protect and defend the loon. criticism and bitter denunciation | best be measured when we consider Abuse of Injunctions Te individual rather than against the would have effccted a real economy. with Latin Ameriea and 1 take my constitutian of fhe United S'ates"| Democratic Principles !were provoked in the minds of the |the recent disclosures of the meth-| From these premises it was inevit. kr party. The question of personal guilt The postmaster-general states (hat foxt from a zrest repnblican secre- vou mey he sure that T shall live nn Such a method would re-establish | republican leaders in answer to the | ods employed by private monopolies | able that our platform should fur H has now been thoroughly disposed of her: was a lzrze annnal waste 0 fary of state, Elihn Roof. who said: ta that nath to the last degree. 1 respect for law and terminate the |nation-wide appeal for a sane en- |to wrest our remaining water pow- | ther recognize grave abuses in the pE and in its place, challenging the wis. | the handling of mail. rosnlting from “We consider that the independence <hall o the very limit execute the agzitation which has injected discord | deavor to meet this crisis. ers from public control. issuance of injunctions in labor dis. L dom and good judzment of the lack of modern furilit'es and equip- and equal rizhts of the smallest and nlodze of onr nl tform “to make an |into the ranks of the great political Markcting Control No more dishonest or unpatriotie - P ; American people, is the unquestioned ment. Scarcely large city in the weakest member of the family of na- honest endcavor to enforce the 18th partics which should be standing for Cooperative, coordinated market- 'propaganda has ever been seen in (Continued on Page 1T fr

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