To this thought the Charleston, South Carolina, _
News and Courier adds:
"If the Liberty League shall serve as a de- is gg
fense against a government menacing private ' P
property, threatening to seize the savings of  
the provident, intimating that the diligent and
the capable shall under compulsion support _  
the incompetent and unwilling to work, then ' ·
the debt paying and industrious people o-f the ,
villages and countryside in South Carolina ugh. 5,
will be as responsive to its plans as will be  
the millionaires of New York." `
These are two of the outstanding Democratic  
newspapers of the South. In the same connection,
an important Democratic newspaper of the South-
west, the Oklahoma City Oklahoman, asks the fol-
lowing question:
"If this is not a radical Administration and A S h {
if it is strictly Constitutional, why should its p°°° °
most loquacious friends burst into a frenzy }
when certain men proclaim a determined war up IOUETT SHOUSE
in defense of the organic law? If the Admin- . · · L-b
istration is loyal to the Constitution it has ’ P‘°s‘d°“t’ Ameucan 1 any
sworn to protect and if it is altogether free L9¤9\16.B6f¤1’€ the B¤¤d Club
from the taint of lVIarxian philosophy, why T of New York, November 20
should 1t not rejoice when promment men
prepare to defend the Constitution?" · 1934
There will be those among you who will condemn Q
the League because it goes too far. There will be Q
those among you who will condemn the League ·
because it does not go far enough. But with an eye   i
single to the welfare of all the people, without parti-
sanship, without personal bias, without bitterness, .
without fear, the League will go forward along the · x
lines upon which it was originally projected, in the * (
belief that it can make a real and lasting contri- A i
bution to the welfare of America. ./·¤.>q;\_,
,·i
_ .· ‘ National Headquarters
' NATIONAL PRESS BUILDING
[ 12 ] Q' Washington, D. C.