United States Senate Washington, D.C. June 3, 1935. My Dear Mother: We have appreciated your loving letters.  I have wanted to write you before but have been through such a period of storm and stress that I have not written. The Supreme Court has risen to heights reached only when our government has been in great danger.  I feel safer and more 2 hopeful than I have before in two years.  I enclose a copy of an article I have written for a Greek society called Ahepa whose object is the education of Greeks in the Constitution and other fundamental things to qualify them for good citizenship here.  This article will be published in their monthly paper so do not release it to anyone else. 3 Senator Borah's speech is opportune and should be of more effect because of his record for independence of party- save Borah's Party. The Presidents mood is unfortunate for him and may crystallize the defensive elements of both major parties to pressure a free government.  His confession of intent to permanently centralize power in the Federal Government over local affairs 4 will shock many who have heretofore followed him blindly supposing that he was dealing only with emergency agencies. Your account of your fun in the garden and your picture of your blossoms excite Mildred and me to go home.  However, the attitude of the President suggests that we will be here perhaps until August. Best love from us both Warren.  THE CONSTITUTION SAVED by Brother Warren R. Austin, U.S.S. Ahepans have a special interest in the recent decisions of the Supreme Court regarding New Deal Acts, because these deci- sions express the vigor of the Constitution as a protector of human rights. These rights which the New Deal Acts violated included - LIBERTY for which the fathers gave their blood, and secured for us by means of separating the powers of Government. They forbade the President, for example, to control the purse and the sword. They denied him the authority to be executive, legis- lator and judge; INDEPENDENCE, preserved by limiting the powers of the Federal Government to National affairs, and retaining all other powers in the several States; FREEDOM to contract and to conduct business within a State without interference by the Federal Government. For example, the right to operate a store or restaurant without code restrictions, regulations and assessments made at Washington; SECURITY in the ownership and use of property, ensured by the command that property cannot be taken without just compensation, and without due process of law. -2- These rights are common to all who live in the United States. They were threatened by New Deal Acts. But now, since the Supreme Court has declared those Acts unconstitutional, we again live in the protection of the Constitution - safe, as in the shadow of a great rock. These decisions, which are of so great value to every person, and which should increase our faith and courage, are briefly referred to as follows: 1. The Economy Act repealed all laws granting or per- taining to veterans' yearly renewable term insur- ance. June 4, 1934, the Court held that these contracts were property and that so much of the Act as deprived the veterans of their contractual rights was void. 2. February 18, 1935, The Gold Clause Cases reaffirmed the citizen's inviolable right to have his Govern- ment deal honestly with him, and denied to Congress the power to override the obligations to citizens created by Government promises. 3. March 4, 1935, The Hot Oil Cases, decided that the Executive Orders and Regulations under Section 9 (c) of the Petroleum Code under N. R. A. were void be- -3- cause Congress exceeded its Constitutional limits of delegation of legislative duties to the President. Thus the separation of Governmental authority was maintained. 4. May 6, 1935, the Railroad Retirement Act was de- clared void because it altered contractual rights, took private property from one and gave it to another without compensation, and without due process of law. This case saved another human right, viz.: the inde- pendence of the several States. The Court held that the Act overreached Federal limits by attempting to impose by sheer fiat non-contractual incidents upon the relation of employer and employee. This power belongs to the State and its people, not to Washing- ton and the Nation. 5. May 27, 1935, The Frazier-Lemke Act was held void because it tended to place the commercial and finan- cial life of each state in a large measure subject to Federal Regulation, and to break down the freedom to do business within a State according to its laws and to keep ones property. 6. May 27, 1935, The N. R. A. cases on the "Live Poultry Code" gave this Nation a rebirth of liberty. They -4- demonstrated that the code making authority granted was an unconstitutional delegation of law-making power. Equally important to our liberty, independence, freedom and security, was that part of the decision which clarified the distinction between domestic business and interstate or national business. From the opinion of the Court it is clear that the operation of a store or a restaurant, a factory, or a bakery or any like under- taking confined to State limits cannot be regulated by codes made by Washington. 7. May 27, 1935, The Humphrey Case saved the independence and impartiality of the Federal Trade Commission, and freed it from domination by the President. It made plain that Members of such agencies cannot be removed by the President at will. These rights which Ahepans associate with citizenship in the United States have been preserved because of the separation of the judicial power from the executive and legislative powers. Government is still free because the Supreme Court is not under the domination of the same influences that rule the President and Congress. The Supreme Court has proved to be the sanctuary of the citizen in the storm of emotion and reform frenzy which has visited this Country. -5- Thus, the vitality and efficacy of the Constitution have prevailed. Now, let us, without political prejudice, make the Constitution a more intimate element of our charac- ters individually, giving it the flesh and blood of our own beings, making it guide and temper our daily thoughts and conduct.