Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1938 — Page 10

oT ext of Willis Speech Outlining Seven Point Republican Program ®

The text of the address by Raymond E. Willis, -Republican senatorial candidate, at Washington, Ind., last night, follows: This meeting here tonight is the

first of state-wide significance that I have addressed since I became the Republican nominee for the United States Senate in June. Whether we realize it or not, we are assemblying under unusual circumstances, unusual for three reasons:

First, this is one of the few nations of the world in which freedom of political activity and expression still is permitted.

Second, although this freedom of Speech and political activity always has been a cardinal principle in so far as this nation is concerned, movements to curtail these liberties are under way. Only recently, (a few weeks ago) we were treated to the spectacle of a President of the United States moving across the nation in an imperial manner advocating the defeat of certain men aspiring to political offices only because they are opposed to his will. In the beginning, only a few years ago, his efforts to defeat persons who opposed him were persuasive. By specious argument and golden promises, he sought to persuade the people to support his declarations even when those declarations were in direct opposition to the government principles advocated by his party.

. With the passing of the years, his attitude has changed. No longer does he resort to such seductive reasoning. Today—as he moves across the face of this land—his attitude is entirely different. He demands the defeat of those who oppose his will. He no longer makes . his demand by appealing to the people to benefit themselves by supporting his opinions. He does not ask—he orders.

Thus easily do men change from advocates of Democracy to advocacy of imperialism. The theory of the divine right of kings was once believed to be dead. Today we are witnessing a revival of that spirit all over the world—and the United States is a part of the world in that respect. This change has come about very gradually—so gradually, in fact, that one scarcely realizes that it has tak-

down to analyze and fo compare political attitudes of a few years ago with those of today that one comes to understand the change. The American Government always has been based upon the theory that the will of the people should be through. Congressional enactments carried out by the executive branch of government, and that the rights of the people should be protected by a free judiciary. Yet within the last six years, without precedent in the history of the nation, we have seen Congress, with its 96 senators and hundreds of representatives, turned into an echo by the will of one man—and we have seen the judiciary attacked because it did not alter its precedents to suit the will of that same man. Strangest of all, for the first time in American history, we have seen tire United States Treasury turned into a campaign fund, from which its money is drained at certain seasons, not necessarily to meet the needs of the impoverished but to influence the electorate.

SCORES SENATOR MINTON

That development also has been a gradual one. In the beginning, the tremendous program of spending was inaugurated because the people needed aid—needed aid desperately. An expenditure for such a purpose is sometimes necessary. Then those in control of the spending discovered that the people were so fearful of a return of their former condition of destitution that a mere threat to reduce governmental expenditures was sufficient to frighten them into a panic. Those in control discovered also that it was an easy matter to influence votes by increasing expenditures as election time approached. This effort has grown to such huge proportions that, in our sister state, Kentucky, recently, we are told that an average of $1200 per vote was spent.

So, under the guise of charitable assistance, a movement was begun, if pursued to vs conclusion, will ultimately lead to the surrender of public liberty. Tyranny all over the world is being resumed—and always the argument is that the people will benefit. And the people, harassed ‘by serious troubles, have

en place. It is only when one sits

been all too willing to surrender the

right to govern themselves. So gradually have we, in this country, surrendered the right to govern ourselves into the hands of one man that we have failed to realize the growth of the menace.

This condition has become so serious that when your junior Indiana Senator, Sherman Minton, recently attempted to abridge the freedom of the press, it- caused no great public excitement—although freedom of speech and freedom of the press were two of the things for which our forefathers fought on a hundred battlefields only a little more than 150 years ago. Tonight we face a choice. There are two paths before us. You know what they are as well as I do. First, we can ‘continue as we are - going—surrendering our freedom and our right to govern ourselves— until, along the path that other nations have followed, recenfly, we approach what has come to be called “totalitarianism.” That certainly is a mouthful of a word for a country editor. Tosme it means oldfashioned autocracy. - Second, we can retain our government as our forefathers gave it to us—the most advanced and enlightened government that the world has ever seen. I do not mean, in that second statement, that we must be reactionary. I do not mean that we must not advance scientifically, industrially and socially. For instance, I favor, with the utmost sincerity: A program that will give security to the aged. I favor relief for those who need it—not as a permanent measure but as an emergency program; not manipulated to control the nation politically but to place bread in the mouths of the hungry and- shelter over the homeless. I favor the enactment of laws that will protect the American laboring man, whether he works in a field or a factory, from the destruction of his security by foreign imports under an obnoxious reciprocal trade treaty program, which is literally nothing but the aged lowtariff or free-trade policy over which this nation has fought for a century.

OUTLINES FARM POLICY

I favor a sound governmental finance policy. No business, whether it is government or a corner

grocery store, can operate indefi-

nitely and maintain its creditgif it perpetually spends more than it collects. I favor a farm policy that will leave the farmer free to manage his own affairs, plant his own crops and control his own business without dictation from men who never cleaned a fence-row or pitched hay out of a hay-mow into a manger, I favor the elimination of unnecessary and hampering restrictions upon business but which will protect the people against the aggression of a selfish monopoly. I favor tax reduction—fully realizing that this goal can be and must be attained only as private industry can re-employ those. who now are working for the WPA and various other alphabetical agencies. You. know, ref to that last statement, a man told me a WPA story the other day. If I had heard the same story a few years ago, I might have laughed. But I. have learned a lot in the last few years —s0 I didn’t laugh. Somehow, I can’t see funny in WPA stories. Analyze the situation a little and perhaps you will feel the same way. Just what is a WPA worker, anyhow? Is he any different from you or me? Does he have any more arms and legs? Does his heart beat any differently? Does he not have the same human impulse to provide protection for his family? As I see it, a WPA worker is a man just like you and: me—only not quite so lucky. For some reason, perhaps, you and I have retained our werk. The WPA worker has‘lost his place in the commercial and industrial life of the country—through no real fault of his own. What would you and I do if we were to lose our jobs or our businesses? Would we permit our families to starve? Or would we accept the only employment open to us that would keep bread on the table and roofs over the heads of our families? But, our national administration has made an error. Because people accepted the WPA as an emergency relief from joblessness, the administration has assumed that they actually like to work for $40 to $50 per month. That isn’t true. The WPA worker accepted his job as an emergency measure—and I know that because I have talked to them. The feeling of relief that

they experienced when they ob-

Text of

Chairman Hamilton's

Address

Following is the text of National Republican Chairman John D. M. Hamilton’s address at Capehart Farms this afternoon:

Your presence here in this great gathering, the events of the last two days in your State, and the energetic efforts which Arch Bobbitt and your State Central Cowimittee are making on behalf of the Republican Senatorial and Congressional candidates in this State are all evidence to me that the people of Indiana are fully” aware that this year’s election. campaign is no ordinary one.

It is evidence that the people of this Middle Western State realize that the Republican campaign this year is the beginning of a mighty fight to save the United States as we have known it for 150 years. One battle of that fight is being fought this year. We must win that battle by turning back in their course those seeking to destroy the Amerjcan way and Constitutional representative government. We shall win that battle this year and thus solidify our ranks to recapture two years hence the American Government from those who have profaned it. We shall win that battle because Americans will not submit to defeat at the hands of those who, more arrogant than any King George III, play politics with human misery and regard the national Treasury as theirs to be used in perpetuating themselves in office. The Chief Executive of this nation is now engaged in what generally has been termed a “purge” of those members of his party who refuse to be rubber stamps and Charlie McCarthys for him. This word “purge” as a politcal term is a new one in our vocabulary. We first heard it used a few years ago when the Russian "dictator Stalin staged the great theatrical public trial of some of his party members. Coincident with that first Soviet purge was a great famine in Rus.gia. Coincident with subsequent Soviet purges were disastrous breakdowns in the Russian Five-Year Plan for the -industrialization of that country. More recently, Hitler staged a purge and coincident with that purge were rising murmurs of discontent among the German people over their economic plight. - So, we have come to realize that the real purpose and object of the Russian and German purges was to divert the attention of the people of those countries from the failures of their governments. Now we witness the President of the United States adopting the Russian technique of the purge to divert our attention from the failures of the New Deal. But the American people are not being misled by the theatricals of the New Deal purge. They want the real issues of this campaign discussed in the open and they want Mr. Roosevelt to justify, if he can, the plight in which this country finds itself after more than five years of his rule. Instead of hurling meaningless epithets at ‘those who have dared disagree with him, let Mr. Roosevelt explain to us why we have at this time 13 million unemployed —a number no less than in the very depths of the world-wide deprespr of 1929-32. Let Mr. Roosevelt explain why tens of thousands of persons are reported to be in misery and distress after more than 21 billion dollars has been spent in the name of

of default.

works programs and emergency public works. Let me read to you from an article in last week’s issue of The Nation i “The Breakdown of Reef”: “Relief in a good part of the

| United State,” says this article, “is

crumbling under the impact of the recession like a town rocked by a series of earthquakes. In some cities relief agencies have already slammed their doors against thou-

‘sands in dire need. Akron’s relief-

ers must keep body and soul together on 12 cents a person for a day’s food. Cleveland’s poor are still begging from door t6 door and foraging in garbage cans. Detroit’s jobless sick must trust to God or nature if their illnesses require any but the cheapest drugs. Evictions have become a daily routine in Chicago. Distress and suffering are spreading like the plague. “For five weeks,” continued the two authors of this article, “we have been touring industrial cities in western Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois— places where the recession hit the hardest. Everywhere unemployment is almost as great as during the blackest days of the depression, and relief loads are even heavier.

‘One out of every six families in

Pittsburgh either is receiving direct relief or is on the WPA; one out of five in Chicago; one out of four in Akron; more than one out of four in’ Detroit; one out of three in Cleveland; one out of two in Flint. Most of the cities and some of the states have plunged neck-deep into debt to provide even miserable handouts. Many communities are on the brink Virtually none have funds to last longer than the next few months.”

ASKS EXPLANATION

If the conditions portrayed in this article exist—and 1 have no reason to suspect their truth since this article was published in The Nation, an ardent and sympathetic supporter of the President and the New Deal—if such conditions exist in this country, then I say they constitute the most damning indictment of the New Deal ever written. Instead of spending his time in theatrical purges, let: Mr. Roosevelt explain to us why, as this article shows, people in this country are foraging food from garbage cans. Congress has not been miserly : eppropriating funds for the relief of distress among the unemployed. It has given Mr. Roosevelt all he has asked for that purpose. # has given to him and to Harry Hopkins $1,425,000,000 for the relief of distress between July 1, last, and Feb. 1, next year. In less than four years Congress has appropriated for WPA use alone the gigantic sum of $6,000,000,000. Well, if this money has not been spent to relieve genuine distress, how has it been spent? Has it been spent to advance the fortunes of Mr. Roosevelt's political machine in Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and other states? Evidence before the Senate committee investigating this year’s campaign

evidence indicates it to such an extent that this committee, controlled by Democrats, has on several occasions expressed shock over the revelations made before it. What has Mr. Roosevelt, who likes to talk so much about morality in Government and politics, to say to this picture of jobless, hungry people eating out of garbage cans while his henchmen, in his name, use relief funds to buy

relief, public assistance, Federal

their way back into office?

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would so indicate—indeed, that |

What has Harry Hopkins, who now seems to be spending his time as the stage manager for these entertaining purges, to say to this condition of affairs? He will probably explain again the necessity of spending - relief money for the teaching .of eurythmic dancing and theater projects presenting plays with Communistic themes, or perhaps he will lay the blame on the States. Whenever anything goes wrong Mr. Hopkins always passes the buck to someone else. But this time he will be shifting the responsibility to his fellow Democrats for every state mentioned in this article has now a Democratic Administration. But neither Mr. Roosevelt nor Mr. Hopkins can escape responsibility for the present playing of politics with relief funds this year. Let Mr. Roosevelt explain if he can why he remained silent last Spring when his leaders in Senate and House fought unceasingly and successfully every effort made by Republicans, and even by Democrats, to provide punishment ior those who wuold prostitute relief to political purposes.

FARM INCOME

Let Mr. Roosevelt explain to the farmers of this country why their income this year, according to estimates of the Federal Bureau of Agricultural Economics, will be $1,100,000,000 less than it was last year. Let Mr. Roosevelt explain why after five years of reckless experi-

farm pricese are back where they were in 1933—back to levels which in the terms of the old gold dollar are the lowest ever recorded in this country. Since Mr. Roosevelt personally claimed credit for the recovery achieved in 1934, 1935 and 1936, boasting that “we planned it that way,” let Mr. Roosevelt now explain why business failures this year rapidly are increasing. Let Mr. Roosevelt explain why the railroads face the severest crisis in th history. And why, despite repeated promises by him, he has done nothing to assist them and the hundreds of thousands who work for the railroads toward economic stability. Let Mr. Roosevelt explain to us and justify, if he can, the stagnation of private industry, brought about by the policies" which he has 1 | pursued during the last five years. According to Federal Reserve Board statistics, industrial production in this country so far this year has been less than 80 per cent of the 1923-25 average. Think of it! Our industrial production, despite a sub-

today but four-fifths of what it was 15 years ago. National income, the sum total of all the income that you and I and everyone else receives in wages, dividends and from the sale of our farm products, this year will be approximately eight or nine billions of dollars less than last year. Indeed, the national income of this

—LOOKING _

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mentation with agriculture, major | 280

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country at the very peak of the New Deal was approximately 10 billion dollars less than it was in 1929— and now it is getting smaller. Let Mr. Roosevelt tell us now, in view of the conditions which I have just recited, the standard of living in this country can be raised, how the man who toils in factory and the farmer in his field, can enjoy a more abundant life when the strangling hand of the Federal Government is choking off the production essential to sustain for them a more abundant life.

SOCIAL SECURITY

Let Mr. Roosevelt tell us now what, if anything, he proposes to do about the Social Security program which has been criticized by every competent authority in the country on that subject, liberal or conservative. His vague words of two weeks ago, on the third anniversary of that law, are not enough.

Surely the employees and employers of this country who are witnessing the millions of dollars they are paying for Social Security dissipated by a spendthrift government have a right to know. Nor will they be diverted by Mr. Roosevelt's belated proposal for expanding the benefits of the Sociay Security system to agricultural workers.

Republicans in House and Senate made that proposal more than a year ago and had we had a majority in Congress it would have been enacted into law many months

Let Mr. Roosevelt discuss these failures of his Administration and join the issue with us. The hurling of epithets, brow-beating the press, the flogging of whipping boys and the staging of theatrical purges may be very diverting and entertaining, but they do not feed the hungry, nor do they save the little businessman from ruin This country wants and needs a return to sanity and statesmanship —a statesmanship which will encourage business and industry so

unemployed men and women to jobs in private industry, a statesmanship that will undertake to get for the farmer a fair price for a fair crop, a siatesmanship that will protect the rights of the laboring man and not dissipate his small income through numerous unseen and. hidden taxes. This country can get that type of statesmanship by electing Republicans to Congress and to State and local offices this fall as a preparatory step to electing a Republican President in 1940.

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that we can restore out 13 million.

tained such employment has been succeeded by a feeling of resentment because the opportunity to obtain real jobs at real wages has been denied to them, and their hope for opportunity for their children is

I have attempted to outline to you, as buietly as possible, because my time short, my beliefs and

‘| opinions RO the present con-

dition.of this country. It would be impossible for me to attempt, in 20 ‘minutes, to discuss them in detail.

CITES PAYROLL DROP

I know and you know that criticism must be constructive or it fails of its purpose. It is: not enough for me to oppose the New Deal and that strange little group of White House handymen — that super-

council of your Government—who

have fathered most of its activities. It is not enough to attack. We can not win by standing still.

I do wish to point out to you that, despite the representations and claims of the present Administration, its program has failed utterly to accomplish these things which we were promised would be accomplished in a series of fire-side chats and in the speeches of three campaigns. ; . There has been much critic of the last Republican administfation —but I can tell you now that economic conditions during that administration did not even approach the dangers that we face today. For instance, from August, 1929, until February, 1930, payrolls in this country fell 14 per cent. But from August 1937, to February, 1938, payrolls fell 33 per cent. During those same periods, hog prices fell 14 per cent under Hpover and 42 per cent under Roosevelt. During the period from March, 1933, when the New Deal began dealing, until today, the national debt has been doubled in an alleged attempt to correct this condition—and there are more people out of work, more businesses in the red, more people on relief than ever before. During that same period, we have seen crops curtailed, cattle slaughtered, hogs killed—and, through a series of reciprocal trade treaties, we have seen the imports of hogs alone increase 24,800 per cent. I know that the figure sounds unbelievable—but it is true. Remember, please, that this disaster resulted from violated promes For instance, on March 4, 1933, when he was inaugurated, Mr. Roosevelt said: “Through this program of action we address ourselves to putting our wn national income in order, and making the income balance out-go.” And the out-go exceeded the income by 15 billions during the years from ‘1934 to 1937,

inclusive.

On July 2, 1932, Mr. Roosevelt said: “I propose to you, my friends, that the Government be made solyent and that the example be set by the President of the United States.” Solvent was the word he used—and then he proceeded to increase the national debt from 21 billions to 38 billions. These are but a few of the broken promises. It would consume too much time to list all of them. It is ‘sufficient to say that every program initiated by the national Government during the last five and a half years has failed. There is only one reason why this condi-

that is because, through the expenditure of tax money, Mr. Roosevelt has produced a counterfeit prosperity at times and a counterfeit employment of idle’ labor— movements that can not but collapse if they are continued until the credit structure of the nation is weakened.

ATTACKS VAN NUYS

At the opening of this address, I said that we were assembled here under unusual circumstances—for three reasons. I enumerated two of those reasons, and I have discussed them. I now refer to the third reason. Assembled only a few miles from here is one of the strangest po-

tion has been tolerated at all—and

litical gatherings in the history of this state. A on ak te Ee a members, i Hie Townsend, at the command of the chief executive of this nation, read my opponent, U. S. Senator Fredpt VanNuys out of the party. Tomorrow night he will read him back into the party again. . In the period of one year, however, much has happened. There has been charge and countercharge, attack and counter-attack. We have heard the Governor of the state of Indiana attack the senior Senator—and we have heard the senior Senator attack the Governor and all of his associates. Then early in July, we witnessed a strange reunion. Governor Townsend invited Senator VanNuys back into the party. Senator VanNuys accepted. We only can guess at the cause of this strange reunion. But one thing is certain. Senator

VanNuysy with his attacks on the

Administration, nas said elther too much or too little.

Nuys said: “I can ‘name one city |.

in Indiana where the mayor, ‘chief of police, prosecutor, sheriff, city attorney, criminal judge and other officials were given stock, free, in a corporation created at the State House to hold a port of entry beer permit; wherein the stockholders, who did not pay one cent for that stock, have collected dividends thereon, all this being done in consideration for the promise that they would deliver intact a complete delegation to any one that Cliff Townsend might designate for Senator.” On March 24, 1938, only three months before he made peace with Governor Townsend, Senator VanNuys again attacked the beer and liquor law administration of the state, charging that one Indiana Administration leader had reported earnings of $140,000 in the year

Arch Bobbitt’s Text

Following is the text of Republican State Chairman Archie M. Bobbitt’s address

at Capehart Farms today: This meeting today is a symbol of Republican victory in the November elections. As we gather here, I am reminded of the many times in history that groups of people have assembled in tents in times of great stress for the purpose of dedicating themselves to a great cause. -As far back as the

Crusades, men, willing to enlist not %

only . their ‘fortunes, but their lives, assembled in tents and started a crusade for liberty, justice and righteousness. The course of history has been changed as a result of such meetings. “We are now entering upon a cru-

‘sade to preserve our American form

of government and our liberties. You people asembled here today, particularly the precinct committeemen and women, form the army which must carry this fight to a successful conclusion. The burden is upon your shoulders. The most important position in a political organization is that of precinct committeeman. The committeemen and women are the cor-: porals in the organization army, and the battle line is just as strong as its weakest point. The failure of any precinct committeeman to do his full duty and thoroughly organize his precinet and get every Republican voter to the polls may mean the defeat of the entire army. Unless we leave this meeting and return to our respective counties with a determination to see that every Republican voter in Indiana is properly registered, his vote gotten into the ballot box on election day, and properly counted, all of the efforts expended to arrange for this great gathering and our meeting here today, will have been in vain. Now is the time when all Republicans in the State of Indiana must stand united with one come mon purpose—and that is the election of Ray Willis and the entire Republican ticket. Our present task is to win the 1938 election, and if we are to accomplish this, we all must put aside personal feelings and ambitions and permit nothing to interfere with our wholehearted support and effort in behalf of Ray Willis and the entire Republican ticket. We can and we must win this election in 1938. Many years ago Gen. Smuts said:

“Civilization has struck its tents; the caravan of humanity is on the march.” This encampment here today was erected for an army created for the defense of the Republic. Tonight, when Homer Capehart strikes his tents, the caravan of the Republican Party will be on the march.

PARADE CLIMAXES -2DC. M. T. C. CAMP.

The second C. M. T. C. encampment reached the climax of its training today when it passed in review on the main parade ground at Ft. Harrison. Fourth-year candidates were in charge of the review, which was intended to demonstrate what the trainees have learned about mili-

tary tactics during the last month of training. Brig. Gen. William K. Naylor, Ft. Harrison commander, received the review.

DOLLAR HEIR IMPROVED CHICAGO, Aug. 27 (U.P.)—H. Stuart Dollar, 26, grandson of Capt. Robert Dollar, founder of the Dollar Steamship Lines, was reported improved today from a mysterious illness his physician believed had been caused by an overdose of a sedative. Mr. Dollar was taken to Grant Hospital Thursday night after his wife had found him in a coma.

1937 to the United States internal

for the publication of this income 3

tax report. ... I've got facts and

figures and will talk in dollars and * cents. I'm going to tell Governors

Townsend what's going on in Ine diana. Let the chips fall where they may.” - On March 31, 1938, Senator Vane Nuys said: “Even under other circumstances, I could not have ace cepted aid from the Two-Per Cent Club organization for the simple reason that I regard that organiza

tion as violative of both the Fed-

eral and State Corrupt Practices Acts. ”» On April 20, 1938, Senator Vane Nuys said: “We are going to fight the State House organization to a standstill. On June 14, Senator VanNuys said: “In September I will tell the people of Indiana how some of their public servants have profited to the tune of thousands of dollars through political manipulation.” : Tomorrow night at French Lick, Senator VanNuys will talk to this same group that he has attacked so bitterly — Governor Townsend, Dick Heller, Frank McHale, Bowman Elder.

What an excellent opportunity for

him to reveal this information that he has concerning alleged crookedness in Indiana politics! He has said that he would reveal

this information in September.

Well, he is opening has campaign tomorrow night. And September is only a few days away.

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