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Editors: For release to morning papers of Oct. 2 and after. 4000 words in all 3400 inspect TRUMAN-FOR-SENATOR-STATE-HEADQUARTERS Madison Hotel William P. Harvey 35 minutes Jefferson City, Missouri **NATIONAL Publicity Director ARCHIVES AND on radio RECORDS SERVICE" WPH FLATRIVER, CAPE GIRARDEAU, MO. Oct. 1:--The Democratic party will whip the depres- sion and do it constitutionally while retaining the present industrial system in every respect, Judge Harry S. Truman of Independence, Democrat- ic candidate for United States Senator, declared here tonight in opening his election campaign. Truman assailed vigorously foes of the national Democratic administra- tion. He charged that the only enmity to the constitution evident at this time were the attacks leveled at the Roosevelt regime by those who alleged the New Deal is unconstitutional. In all American history,he said,there had never been a political spec- tacle such as that in this campaign,' when men of high social position and of great wealth,acting like cowardly Communists,are undermining the very foundations of government by inciting hatreds and appealing for sectional and class discord." The proper place to learn whether or not the New Deal is unconstitu- tional,h declared, was in the courts and not before the people. The fact that the protestors did not resort to the courts gave sufficient reason to believe, he said, that their entire campaign was based on pol- itical "clap-trap." not "If these men has a case, Truman charged;" they would waste a moment in trying to stop the New Deal by the one effective means, recourse to law. In conferring power on the President to initiate the New Deal, Con- gress could not and did not exceed its constitutional powers. " The only legal question there could be is not as to the constitut- ional power of Congress to transfer these powers, but as to whether or not any single one of the new agencies of the New Deal exceeded the authority given it. That would affect only minor matters and would not in any way invalidate the scope or the purpose of the New Deal." Congress has in many administrations conferred unusual powers on var- ious bodies, Truman said. He cited the Transportation Act, the Seamens' Act, the Federal Reserve Board, the Federal Trade Commission and other creations of Congress. These bodies, he said,ha been clothed with extraordinary powers, some exercising both executive and juridical powers, while others also had administrative powers. " The Fedeeral Reserve Board was created in the regime of former Pres-