AY, JULY 31, 1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY NEWS Of The DAY Complete Text Of Col.Knox's Chicago Acceptance Speech CHICAGO, July 30O-.(P)-The text tion to keep. That obligation was to of the address of Col. Frank Knox, fulfill the solemn promises of econ- Chicago publisher, accepting tonight omy and moderation with which it the Republican nomination for Vice- lured people in the campaign of '32. President of the United States fol- How did it meet that responsibility? lows: How did it do that job? How did it, (From The Associated Press) Three Northern Fires Under Control SAULT STE. MARIE, July 30. (M)-Three upper peninsula for- est fires were brought under con- trol tonight after 1,000 workers had battled the flames for 24 hours. A determined crew threw a hand constructed fire line about the blaze in the Robert Hunter cuting near Newberry and brought it under control after it ate over 175 acres. All WPA work was suspended and the men were sent to fight the blaze. Newberry hardware stores were sold out of tools as the fighters were equipped for the field. The workers attempted to halt the blaze at the Newberry Lum- ber and Chemical Company grade. The flames roared through spruce, pine and hemlock above their heads and jumped the gap. Fire destroyed two barns and a home on three farms in Chippewa County, but was believed under control six miles southeast of Pickford. A hundred men from Pickford, Trout Lake and Dunbar Forestry School stood guard over a fire in a four-mile square track that threatened the Sand Ridge set- tlement. At Calspar, south of Blaney, a fire advanced to the Lake Michigan shore on a mile front. The Manistique fire department made a 30-mile run to save a school building. Leonard Celluia Charged With Murder DETROIT, July 30.-(GP)-Po- lice said today that Leonard "Black Leo" Cellura, the prohibi- tion era racketeer who ended a six-year search for him by sur- rendering Tuesday night, would be arraigned tomorrow on a murder indictment. The indictment accuses him of slaying George Collins and Wil- liam Cannon, minor Chicago hoodlums. Angelo Livecchi, Cellura's former room mate, and Ted Piz- zino, his partner in a night club, are serving life prison sentences for the slayings. Cellura denied any complicity in the slaying of Gerald E. Buck- ley. Deputies Suspended After Killers Escape CHICAGO, July 30.-(P)- Three deputy sheriffs were sus- pended tonight after three ac- cused killers escaped from their custody in a criminal courts building elevator on the way to a murder trial. The prisoners pulled crude daggers from their shoes, stabbed one of their guards, and trans- ferred their handcuffs to the deputies' wrists before spreading terror over five floors of the building with blackjacks and fists. The deputies-Edward Tierney, Louis Green, and Edward Wing -were ordered removed. The recaptured prisoners- Frank (Bones) Korcykowski, 27; Andrew Bogaci, 28, and Paul Jenkot, 24-were placed in sol- itary confinement in the jail. Maor Leagues AMERICAN LEAGUE Senator Steiwer, fellow citizens: You have heard the eloquent words of that stalwart statesman from our sister state of Oregon, Senator Stei- wer. You have heard him convey to me the official notification of my nomination by the Republican party for the high office of Vice-President of the United States. You have heard his clear call to all citizens to join in a crusade for so.und government in America. You have heard his friendly and flattering references to me. .It becomes my privilege and my duty to accept this call to service. I am deeply conscious of the personal honor that has been conferred on me by the Republican Party. I am deep- ly conscious also of the responsibility that rests on me to bear this honor worthily. But I am, above all, con- sciois of the opportunity for service. Even above and beyond my profound appreciation of the honor and the re- sponsibility that have been given me is my appreciation of the opportunity to serve not only my party but my country. Refers To Career It is customary in acknowledge- ments of this kind to avoid personal reference. Tonight, I am going to de- part briefly from that custom. I am a working man. I have always worked. I began to work as a small boy in a small town in Michigan. Throughout my life, I have followed one guiding principle. That prin- ciple was to do as best I could the job that. lay before me. That principle carried me into life and work in a fine New England town. It took me into difficult and responsible work in the great city of New York. It carried me into the service of my country in two wars. It brought me to my work and my home in the great city of Chicago, the metropolis of a great state in a great Middle West empire. And I am moved tonight by a real- ization that in this crusade for the restoration of sound government in our land there is before me the great- est opportunity for service that has ever come to me. Long years ago, I learned as a buck private the lessons of duty and of loyalty. In the years that have passed I have learned the equally important lesson that the greatest achievement of any man is service to his fellow citizens. In this spirit of s'ervice I accept the call of my party. I pledge my loyalty to the principles of the Republican party. I pledge my loyalty to the policies laid down at the Cleveland conven- tion. I pledge myself to the principles of sound and honest government. I pledge my personal loyalty to that great governor of a prairie state, the next President of the United States, the Honorable Alf Landon. Examine Roosevelt Record It is no ordinary campaign that confronts us. It is no ordinary po- litical choice that the country must make next November. In this pres- idential campaign, as in every other, it is for the nation to decide whether the administration in office has per- formed its duty. There is always the question whether the administration in office has met its responsibilities honestly and fairly and wisely. There is always the question whether it has fulfilled the stewardship entrusted to it arfd earned thereby a renewal of its direction of government for four more years. In every election the people must decide whether they shall say: "Well done, thou good and faithful servant." In this first and ordinary issue the present administration is found want- ing. It has failed to meet its respon- sibility for ! the orderly, economical, and impartial administration of the affairs of the nation. More than three years ago the present adminis- tration tooli command of the Amer- ican government. No administration in the history of the nation has had so glorious an opportunity. The country had already begun to emerge from the bottom pit of a grievous world depression, caused by a calami- tous World War. A sore and wounded nation needed pathetically a wise and far-seeing government. The millions of stagnant enterprises needed only the encouragement of sensible gov- ernment policies to take on renewed life. Recovery Needed Little Aid A stricken agriculture needed only the encouragement of sound agri- cultural policies and wise legislative assistance. The timid beginnings of renewed investment needed only the encouragement of sound laws of banking and credit. The spirit of American enterprise, discouraged by vanished markets and reduced con- sumption, needed only the encourage- ment of economy and moderation and helpfulness in government. No ad- ministration in our history since Lin- coln's time has had so grand an op- portunity to lend aid to a distressed people. The present administration in the winter of 1933 had just one immediate responsibility to meet. That respon-I sibility was to promote the little flame of recovery that had begun to -. i, n h e , ,. rf 1'9 hc ..f r keep that moral obligation? From the day that it took office it embarked on a series of hysterical experiments on the economic life of a burdened people. At a time when universal cooperation was a necessity it in- itiated a campaign of abuse and vilifi- cation of business men. At a 'time when the credit of the country should have been strengthened it inaugurat- ed a policy of credit adulteration and currency experiment that demoral- ized foreign trade and frightened do- mestic finance. It set up a system of regimentation of industry that re- duced production and prevented re- employment. By coercion of Con- gress it forced the passage of reform measures so recklessly drawn that they hamstrung the revival of enter- prise and paralyzed the renewal of investment. It installed a regimen- tation of agriculture that destroyed food and reduced foreign markets and increased the cost of living and multiplied the expense of relief. Administration Hindered Industry At a time when private industry was struggling desperately for a new start it set up governmental enterprise to compete with private business. At a time when the burden of taxa- tion was already hard to bear it em- barked on a policy of squandering public funds and increasing the weight of taxes. At a time when unit- ed effort and mutual good-will would have completed recovery it promoted sectional hatred and class strife. At a time when returning business confi- dence was ending depression it began a campaign to terrorize business and subjugate the banks. At a time when confidence in the character of gov- ernment was vital, it established a spoils system. At a time when the economic system was worn and ema- ciated it performed major surgical operations upon the industrial body to see what was inside. It adopted an economic philosophy of scarcity and forced it upon a hungry and dis- tressed people. New Deal Ignored Duty I The present administration ignored its responsibility, failed in its job, defaulted in its obligation. I do not need to tell you the results. The in- evitable recovery could not be perma- nently blocked by governmental error. It is still on its way. But it was re- tarded and discouraged. And we slowly emerge from its thralls with the menaces of governmental insol- vency and nondescript currency and business disturbance shadowing the future. You see the results in the fourth year of mounting deficits, in the chaotic condition of our currency, in the bloated reserves of our banks, in the swollen expenditures for relief. Above all, you see the results in the millions still unemployed. I charge the present administration with de- laying recovery, in the United States and in the world. I charge the pres- ent administration with responsibility for the ten million still unemployed. It would not be truthful to say that all the measures of the present administration have been failures. In the mad whirl of economic experi- ments there have been a few sound and desirable measures of regulation. That must be freely conceded. But in the major measures of recovery and in the task of administration it has failed completely. It has not kept faith with the nation. It has not ful- filled the duties of its stewardship. Of this one issue, that it has not con- ducted the affairs of government ef- ficiently and economically, it should be condemned and rejected by the people. 'Government By Guess' This endless succession of inter- ferences and experiments were inaug- urated under the deceptive slogan of a New Deal. This policy of govern- ment by guess, officially explained by President Roosevelt as founded on a philosophy of try-anything-once, was initiated under the title of economic planning. No one of its proponents has even been able to define the New Deal or to explain what it is aimed at or where it is going. No one of them has been able to make clear what the economic plan is. It began with a proposal for a belt of trees in a territory that nature had de-. cided should not have trees. It is end- ing with the use of public funds to conduct classes in tap-dancing. No one can explain the New Deal, or{ economic planning, but everyone knows what came from it. The ma- jor measures were the NRA, the AAA, the PWA, the CWA, the WPA, and devaluation of the dollar. Such measures are not new. They were old in history before America; was discovered. They failed in Baby- lon and Rome and England centuries ago. Not one of these New Deal measures is mentioned in the 1936 platform of the Democratic Party. There is no reference to the fate of of these strange experiments. There is no reference in all that platform to the New Deal or to economic plan- ning. But in this omission they are entirely consistent. There was no mention of them in the 1932 platform either. They are a strange interlude Republican Party has always stood for a strong Federal government. The assertion is correct. It still stands for a vigorous Federal authority. But it advocates this authority within the limits set by the Constitution. It has always exercised that authority by legislation constitutionally passed and constitutionally executed. It always will. It has always exerted that authority without passing the boundaries of states rights and local self-government. Need More Federal Activity The Republican party recognizes that changing social and economic conditions call for increased Federal activities. But it always insists that such new activities shall be legalized by proper constitutional amendment. It always will. It approves the horse- and-buggy method of changing the constitution, and it disapproves of a philosophy that laughs at the horse- and-buggy method and wants to use only the buggy whip. It condemns the abuse of Federal power to invade local rights. It does not believe in putting a New Jersey pants-presser in jail for charging less than the amount dictated by a board in Wash- ington. It disapproves a government of men instead of a government of law. It prefers a government guided by constitutions to a government guided only by caprice. The Republican platform of 1936 lays down in simple language the program of Federal regulation and legislation to which it commits itself on many issues. Where the specific program is not definitely outlined the details will be presented in the com- ing campaign. On certain matters Governor Landon made the issues clear in his telegram to the Cleveland convention. In his acceptance speech one week ago he presented specific policies in reference to other import- ant issues. Whatever concrete measures the Republican party has in mind will be presented to the vot- ers before election, not after. And whatever measures the Republican administration may urge upon Con- gress, not one will flout the consti- tution of the United States. Not one will violate the obligation of con- tracts. Not one will break a promise. New Deal 'Failure' I have already said that this s no ordinary campaign. On the mere is- sue of efficiency in administration the present government stands con- victed of failure. But there is a larger issue, an issue that goes to the heart of American life. It is the is- sue of the kind of economic system the American people will live by. For more than three years the economic life of the country has been at the mercy of a crew of amateur experi- menters, hacking at the vitals of American industry, agriculture, com- merce and finance. Driven by a fanatic impulse to shape our econom- ic structure to their fantastic designs, they have usurped the powers of Congress, insulted the authority of the courts, invaded the powers of the states, and undermined the institu- tions of local self-government. As one experiment after another has ended in ignominious failure or repudiation by the courts, new exper- iments have been attempted, from laws to put producers of potatoes in jail, to proposals to cut Florida in two. Driven to desperation by failure, the present administration undertook to gamble with fate. Realizing that re- covery was inevitable, in time, it un- dertook to overcome the depressing effects of its experiments by an arti- ficial prosperity to be created by the squandering of public funds. It is now a race between the exhaustion of Federal credit and the coming of natural recovery. It is a race be- tween inflation and the revival of normal business activity. The race is not yet decided. The fundamental issue is now clear. No one can define the New Deal or even describe it. But we know what it means. It means Federal control over local business, over local bank credit, over local wages, over local conditions of work. It leads to Fed- eral regimentation of the labor, the business, and the home of every American citizen. It leads to price- fixing and production control by Fed- eral authority. It leads inevitably to the extinction of the small business man, to the end of free enterprise in America.. There is no half-way house in which American enterprise can take shelter. The coercive control of bank credit leads unavoidably to control of investment and that leads to the end of competitive industry and free en- terprise. The country must choose between the regimentation of the ec- onomic life of a hundred and thirty million people by politically appoint- ed Federal bureaucrats and the con- tinuance of the American system of free enterprise under a government of constitutional powers. 'Verdict of History' It is not a question whether Fed- eral regimentation of the economic life of a great nation can be success- ful or not. It is the verdict of history, from Diocletian in Rome to Mr. Roosevelt in Washington, that no one man can successfully guide the course of industry for a great nation. All the major New Deal experiments have ended in failure and economic loss. There are known and true principles of economic life. There are, for that matter, competent economists, if you will look for them outside of Wash- ington. There are limits to the abil- ity of government to regiment the economic life of a people. When it blindly passes these limits, it does not encourage industrial production; it destroys it. Such interference al- ways encounters a drought or some other force beyond the control even of a New Dealer. There are limits be- yond which Federal regimentation should not ,go, even if it could be efficient. When it passes these limits it destroys personal initiative and in- dividual liberty. The American peo- ple do not want Federal regimenta- tion of their economic activities even if it could be efficient and fair. As Al Smith has expressed it, the American people do not want a dictator, not even if they could get a good one. Here we have the issue that must be decided next November. It is whether the American people shall have an orderly and economical gov- ernment recognizing the limitations of Federal power or a government de- termined to reorganize the American economic system by experiment. We know what the decision will be. The people want recovery, not rhetoric. They want economy, not waste. They want work, not relief. They want co- operation among the partners in production, not industrial strife. They want order in economic life, not an occasional breathing spell. They want dignity in government, not a merry-go-round. They do not believe that all bankers are scoundrels, that all employers are exploiters, that all business men are motivated by greed, that all working people are victims of oppression. They do not believe that the American system was a failure until the New Deal came along to save it from its sins. They do not. believe that American industry is a jungle of cut-throat competition dominated by intrenched greed. The people know that with the election of a new administration next Novem- ber the dammed-up forces -of recovery will burst forth in a magnificent pros- perity. U.S. Can Face Adversity The American people know that in man's long and troubled journey through the ages he has faced flood and famine, pestilence and drought, conquest and slavery, tyranny and in- justice, poverty and depression. They know that he has overcome these savage enemies through his unrelent- ing determination to work out his own economic salvation. Poverty and in- security are not yet exterminated in our land. Economic hardship and ec- onomic injustice are not yet elimin- ated. But in the United States, in the last hundred years, the American people have come nearer to these goals than any other people anywhere in history. Brave pioneering and hard work and patient saving have made this the richest and fairest civ- ilization in history. It has not been made by sleight-of-hand tricks. With the American system preserved, we shall in due time have a free people, living in plenty and security, without exploitation or destitution. The American people are not going to surrender this prospect to the regi- mentation of visionaries and amateur economic planners. They are not go- ing to exchange our economic system for the rainbow millenium of politi- cal magicians. 'Rendezvous With Destiny' The President has recently told the American people that they have a rendezvous with destiny. As I un- derstand the term, a rendezvous is a date. What is this rendezvous? Un- der present conditions, the most like- ly rendezvous is with a receiver for the treasury. After the acceptance by the people of the promises of the 1932 platform, what unexpected ren- dezvous did the people have? They had a rendezvous with the NRA. They had a rendezvous with Farley- ism. They had a rendezvous with the tax-collectors. The American people want no rendezvous with a destiny plotted on blue prints in a Washing- ton office. When they have a date with destiny they want to know what the lady looks like. They want to have a word to say about it. The issue before the country is the preservation of free enterprise. On this issue the Republican party ap- peals to the whole people. It appeals r i 11 LIIIIIIAE P ROLIIS4 h /e ALiESV f'se C1f NEW EDC LEIONARY ALRGUS CANDID CAMERA C P, 11 DESI DERI'k ERA~r5 i/s ,443 ~ _ 11 $12.50 New York .......... Cleveland ........... Boston .............. Chicago ............. Detroit .............. Washington.,... . St. Louis ....,...... Philadelphia....... W .64 .57 .53 .51 .51 .49 .33 .32 . L. 34 42 46 45 46 49 63 65 Pct. .653 .576 .535 .531 .526 .500 .344 .330 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 5, New York 4 (10 innings). Movie technique applied to a "still" camera. Takes 8 pic- tures per foot of 35 mm mo- tion picture film. Capacity, 1 to 36 exposures. 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