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Show WALTER WINCHELL Notes of a Bystander The candidate profiting most from all the Eisenhower talk is Stassen. y The more talk for Eisenhower, the harder it becomes for Dewey and Taft to crash through. After Stas-sen's Stas-sen's Washington press conference (in which he suavely posey'd the Taft-Hartley bill and said that further fur-ther aid to Britain should be stopped if the English socialize the steel industry), in-dustry), one gal reporter wistfully said: "And he used to be such a nice liberal, too." All that Stassen is trying to do is show the GOP biggies big-gies that he really belongs to the club and wouldn't be such a bad guy to nominate. Remember when Bilbo cried poverty and was allowed to stay on the senate payroll at $50,000 per annum (including staffers' expenses) to pay for his operations? opera-tions? Now he bequeaths $100,-000. $100,-000. Of your money! Topio "A" in South America wasn't President Truman's visit but what Evita did when she returned from her 78-day Yurropean trip and found that Peron had installed a beauty contest winner in the Presidential Presi-dential Palace of Olivos. ... In Alfred Al-fred Dunhill's store (Radio City) all the male and female solicitors are compelled to wear gloves. |