Speech by Vice-President Henry A. Wallace at New York City, New York
Images (3)
दस्तावेज़
| id |
id
125959933
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 3JOHN L. CHILDS
JOSEPH V. O'LEARY
HARRY UVILLER
ALEX ROSE, Chairman
State Chairman
State Secretary
State Treasurer
Administrative Comm.
news
LIBERAL PARTY
OF NEW YORK STATE
160 WEST 44th STREET
Telephone: LOngacre 5-0500
NEW YORK 18, N. Y.
FOR RELEASE ALL PAPERS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1, 1944
Address by Vice-President Henry A. Wallace,
prepared for delivery at the Liberal Party
Rally, Madison Square Garden, Tuesday evening,
October 31st, 1944
It is good weather here tonight. But ten days ago here in New York the
biggest Republican campaign issue was exploded by a blizzard and a lot of rain.
What a joy it is to have a leader that can rise to any emergency whether a bankrupt
country in 1933, a war in 1941, or a blizzard in Greater New York.
There is one more rain and one more cold in the head. But this time it
will be a rain of ballots November the seventh for Roosevelt, and a dold in the
head for the big money men behind Dewey. It took a rain to show up these mental
whiners and snifflers. But don't forget, rain or shine to vote November seventh
for victory, for permanent peace, and for full employment with Franklin Delano
Roosevelt.
Here tonight we know "the doorway to the future is Roosevelt." Roosevelt
is a vital bridge across what otherwise would be postwar unemployment, deflation,
and Wall Street normalcy. But as we think of Roosevelt tonight in New York City
we can't help thinking of other great New York statesmen. First there is our old
friend Al Smith. Many of us worked hard for Al in 1928. Do you remember what you
said when you turned away despondently from the radio that evening November 6, 1928?
I remember saying, "the cup of iniquity of the Republican Party is not yet full,
Al was beaten and Al is now dead but the New York brand of public service which he
did so much to start has been carried on by Wagner, by Lehman, by Mead, and above
all by Roosevelt. Men and women who really believe what these men stand for will
work and spend their money and use their influence on behalf of any one of these
four men if they need political help.
Tonight the sands in the hour glass are running low. Six days of work
are left. A week hence we shall all be sitting around the radio again. It will
be a big night, more exciting than the seventh game of a world series, as important
to the world as a big naval battle or the Grumbling of the Hitler West Wall.
RUMAN
(more)
Terms
Relations
belongs_to