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OCR Page 1 of 2Editors:-- For release to norning pupers of October 3 and after.
TRUMAN-FOR-SENATOR STATE HEADQUARTERS
Madison Hotel
William P. Harvey
ARCHINES AND
Jefferson City, Missouri.
Publicity Director.
KENNETT, 101., Oct. 2:--In combination with the processing taxes
and other laws directly benefitting agriculture, a rightful use of
profits accruing to monufacturers in the tariff schedules enjoyed by
industry would pave the way for a rapid return to prosperity, it whs
declared here tonight by Judge Harry S. Truman, Democratic nominee for
United States Senator.
Truman visited five touns on his way to Kennett from Flat River.
He spoke in Fredericktown and Poplar Bluff, mainly discussing farm
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issues, and visited business men and residents of the smaller towns
en route. In his speech here tonight, Truman went into detail in
that he termed the "manufacturers' processing taxes, " referring to the
tariff.
"Industry was given high tariff schedules for two stated reasons,
among others, 11 he said. "One vas to protect Amerionn industry agninst
cheap labor abroad. The other was designed to raise the standards of
living of factory workers through high wages. Industry got its high
tariffs. But labor did not get its high wages.
"In this fact lies a great part of our troubles. The toriff, owing
to close and allied ownerships of many industries, largely benefits a
few persons by adding to their wealth. Had wages been raised
continuously in any relative proportion to the increases given in
tariff duties from time to time, much of the underconsumption now
prevalent would not have ensued. If industrial wages were increased
at this time, the spending power of the people, in connection with
improved farm conditions, soon would bring us back to prosperity and
widespread employment of the idle.
"The effect of the ,Roosevelt farm policies are not to be mininized.
All of the great centers in the Middle West have felt the business
stir occasioned by the money being distributed by farmers in paying
bills and buying goods. Retail business, bank clearings, railrond
loadings, wholesale business and other mercantile factors responsive
to buying power have been greatly stinulated.
"The tariff taxes are merely manufacturing processing taxes. They
vary in no way, either in effect or results, from the farm processing
taxes. The manufacturer takes his processing taxes up to the
Preservation Copy
maximum allowed him by the tariff schedule affecting his particular
output. And what a healthy tax that has been since the passage of
the Hawley-Smoot tariff bill!"
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