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OCR Page 1 of 2IMMEDIATE RELEASE
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
REAR PLATFORM REMARKS OF THE PRESIDENT
"NATIONAL
AT TOLONO, ILLINOIS, October 12, 1948
ARCHIVES
RECORDS
AND
2:10 P.M., C.S.T.
SERVICE"
ROVERN
WENT
Thank you very much. I appreciate that introduction
very much, and I hope that Mrs. Goldman will be the next
Congresswoman from this District, too.
I am always agreeably surprised at the wonderful receptions
along the w y . I have been from one end of the United States
O the other and now I am going across, north and south.
Having been east and west from one end to the other, I am
going north and south from one side to the other. I have
been in the Middle Atlantic States. I have been in the
Middle Western States. I have been on the West Coast.
I
have been down South. And everybody seems to bei
highly interested in the issues in this campsign.
The reception I am getting today in Illinois means
victory for Poul Douglas, your next United States Senator,
and for Olive Remington Goldman, your next Congr sswoman,
and for Addai Stevenson, your next Governor -- and for the
straight Democratic ticket.
I am told it was just 87 years ago that Abraham Lincoln
came through Tolono on his way to Washington. This was his
last stop in Illinois before he went on to become President.
And this is what I am told he said: "I am leaving you on
an errand of national importance attended, as you are well
aware, with considerable difficulties. Let us believe,
8.S some point is expressed, behind the clouds the sun is
still shining. I bid you affectionate farewell. You don't
know how well he spoke when he said he was going to 8 place
of considerable difficulty. I can speak from three years'
experience that he knew exactly what he was talking about.
The American people today want peace and prosperity.
That's why Lincoln was going to Washington -- to try to got
peace and prosperity. I am trying to help them get peace
and the prosperity they deserve. I want to see everybody in
the country get a fair break, and I have been fighting to see
that vital legislation -- such S.S the farm price support
program -- doesn't get thrown out of the window by the
Renublicans.
After World War I the farmers in this country began-
a series of bed years that didn't end until the Democratic
Party's farm program went into effect in the 1930's I know
the difficult times the farmers had because I was living
E Missouri farm then, and I could see the troubles the farmers
were having. I was trying my best to make E 600-acre farm
in Jackson County pay its way, and in those days it WES a
most difficult job, as you all remember.
The Democratic Administrations of the last 16 years
have been building a firm foundation for farm prospority.
We conceived and wrote the farm price support bill into a
program of law. We placed a floor under the farmers' income
so they wouldn't be wiped out in drought years or low-priced
out of existence when a bumper crop hit the market. The
prosperity and well-being of the American farmers showed that
the Democratic programs have worked.
Farmers tell me they want them continued. Even the
Republicans talk out of one side of their mouth about continuing
them. But what do the Republicans do about the farm program
when they are back in Washington? Well, they cut the farm
price support program to pieces. They cut funds from the
Rural Electrification program, the soil conservation program,
and the school lunch program. They refused to provide funds
for rural housing or better schools.
(OVER)
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