| Show - -- 4 44 - -- ' - - - - - t i BY TH011AS L STOKES Variety Spices PCA Confab As 3rd Party Spurs Drive ment of folks arid motives you never did see as the several tnndred - perN- gathered hers from all parts ofIn the the country esiv e ' t e 1 of Citizens America na- tional convention to organize a third- moveparty ment behind Henry A Wallace for presi- 1 of t N 1 o : Altio Kenny dert There are the iinexperienced in polticas prominent in the arts and professions who yiv may asoumes are actuated by idealism They include college proIntinsors novelists dramatists musicians and one noted scientist Dr Herlaw Shapley of Then there are rettrusts and fellow travelers who know their way around In the politics of confusion and have infiltrated iinto this movement for their purpose This Is Interpreted to be defeat of the 1 rinnan administration Immediately to checkmtate its foreign policy—particularly as it relates to Ruarta—and ultimately according to some analysts to create a situation through election of a staunch conservative ad- that would redound to their benellt This on the theory that such an adrninistrarrizritstratAon tion would run Into difficulties perhaps a major depression as did the Hoover administration and produce a popular revulsion that they could CXpiOlt Then fizuilly there is Robert W Kenny of California a practical Democratic politician Ho is important because he is currently bead man of P C A However he still has the title of cochairman since the abrupt resigmaticpa of Frank Kingdon of New Jersey the other cochairman who refused to go along with the movement Mx Kenny also Is chairman of the California Wallace-for-preside- Democrats-for-Walla- nt commit- ce tee 4 I 4 - To TAgE k A ators ' ‘o it - - 21 1 : 1 I 4" t 1 1C-- : t - UV - s -- - m" TWE 1 coo CRZE a- h ts -- I '1't'70" NI- c0001°!11 - i 1 TI4e A tiost- 'N i NOIANS - (0 eqt4lic'' "wit' 7- 11:: 4t 7t pr3 :'''' " —7I ' 'e R —Lc — t De we natra year when he gets into the rrd presidential ' ' potato race If V– i ''' the Dewey you 1:4 - "-! zieotkIlt remember i a – the T E D of cll the last pres- - f'N‘Z7 - ( I suspect his New York neighbor farmer Lowell Thomas had a hand in It Dewey today sounds like a cross between Thomas and Arthur Godfrey He has picked up some lower register rumbles delivered In a There is suppressed giggle humor In it and enormous assurance There is a lazy drawl too A sort of pleasant offhandedness like that of another successful barytone a Mr Crosby The Hon Thomas' critics have him with the always endowed frozen stiffness Coolidge-typ- e which made him seem while performing the routine political gymnastics we seem to demand of our candidates Well I think the new Dewey will kiss a baby or milk a cow or play a piano or even skin a cat if nec- t r - I - - - '- idential you '' ' f 1- - chooae-u- p got a surprise Dewey coming The little man with the mustache has bounced right along The with his personality change has been gradual but the folk who remember him only four years back won't recognize the lion Thomas E of today I was sitting real dole to him at a dinner the other night It strikes me Thomas has been toiling mightily on his new look Over the last four years some miraculous things have hap always buying it Copyright 1948 New York Post Corp - a 1 - ' '1 4' Al i Loekb U olo - - Iii NToy: t i': rit 4 1 i ! II t- -4 s " i : ' - - "- 0 ' aii 411700i - re--40:-- -- ) 7--It I u re ' 1 ---) ! r-- -- 4 ' ) t 'e- Li 17 ! r U l- - -0 1 (" If i I 1 r A it ' 1 2- - 1 an 'rtfII Give w w lhafclzic ' 41 Ac 4? 1 4 ileiri 4'1'111 II 1 - 3 z A Lii '64-"'llig'- It"-N - 11 " ' i i on your old MOUNTING in your - 1 127 L - - 4-- '- - - El i '14 t 1 ''- - Ivr 7 r rl E '17:77:' -- ”' f iLo ' — j (k:' ' ilL if you wish i A- a t 41 - 1-- 13 --- ---- I - l' A YOUR DIAMOND will find its FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH in one of thesekeautiful new settings for ladies or t'1 men and your cost will be very reasonable ILLtl from HUNDREDS OF SETTINGS FROM WHICH - "That Buyer 4 I t CON7:7724 Gaiho Deals vl" IIENT CRE::11" - ' L ' 0 -- SIa It sob- ' i 2 -I I e - tioiLDIA LidEditailiiiiktiMMONWIMAglosagONESEM I el ' I ! i 1 114i j IF 0 i NEW YORK—A man whose important Washington job had just ended went to Senator Millard Tydings for advice about his future activities "If were you I'd leave Washington and go back home to work" the senator replied "My personal feeling about this place is that a man shouldn't choose Washington as the place for him to live unless he's one of three thing a: (1) conspicuously wealthy (2) a senator or the holder of a government post of equal or higher importance or (3) assumed to be the possessor of unusual political influence" Complaint—Lester Cole who was fired by M G M for being one of the ten men cited by the house activities committee was in Sardi's In J Parnell discussing Rep Thomas head of the committee which cited him Cole said: "Parnell Thomas seems to be 51etermined to make the American eagle fly without a left wing" Resentment—The editors of an eastern college newspaper expressed annoyance at what deemed undue publicity they to a New York debutante given The editors therefore have re- taiped a private investigator to check into the history of the At anyoung lady's family other major college in the east 400 of the students who also are puzzled by the young alga rderes publicity signed a solemn Landis Stokes says the message laid Truman's critics say the message is lust "politics" and so it is says Stokes if the president does not reform his actions in accordance with his words Lawrence says the first principle of radicalism is to abolish the free enterprise system by wrecking initiative and Mr Truman has now embraced that principle by advocating that everybody should have a $40 tax cut This simply penalizes those who have thrift success skill and higher incomes In advocating that the loss in tax money be made up by raising corporation taxes Mr Truman is beating the corporations over the head with a plank he stole from the Communist party Lawrence claims He predicts that the Republicans will have no trouble forces in mobilizing the country against such a pro- wimetnht htherat T "':41 7471k none ever will dance 4s t-' I il e ! 1'51 1 ' --- - ' a : - - WI'i- - —1 - 14757e0 ' i r tro i 11 I 1 1 it 7111t i -- 111 e starve shrugged00rdered another drink and took more peanuts Distributed by McNaught Syndicate Inc - ' : r r ( t i i t 1' i for telio'peeon:117c' dance t 1 r gram asks Miss Thompson? Ile" wants to organize for peace the I way we organize for war But we d organize for war in a highly au- - s thoritarian manner Miss Thompson points out with con- - ( t - E if olfconaringtroeetadiseaniudflorotamaLtiereithisalsevi‘: what Wallace wants? Samuel Grafton says Wallace Li against war pretty much as the late Calvin Coolidge WAAL' against sin He wants to kill off t the European Recovery Program-odeprive it of political effect- but he doesn't say what he would do about Russia if she wouldn't behave as he lectures her He ' could of course burst into-teare but says Grafton that not good enough The majority of the American people fear Russia Grafton claims and if France and Italy went Com- -munist we would be terror stricken and would begin to pre- pare for war We should be in the same state of mind as we were the night the Hitlerian t troops entered Norway- Eleanor Roosevelt says that if t Wallace had to deal with the as she and others Russians have had to he would abandon his aproach to them so reminiscent of the Chamber- lain approach to Hitler and would go in for something vety- much like the E R P There is general agreement that the E R P ist in for a lot of trouble with the present con gress Elmo Roper traces thoi growth during 1947 of sentiment- in favor of aid to Europe Old r r - hat-in-ha- nd fashioned isolationism is finished among the people if not among their representatives he says--'- ' and his polls show that Americans believe five to one that the Soviet Union is warlike Walter Lippmann believe the E It P unquestionably the wisest and most enlightened way to use our limited resources on 7 behalf of peace Joseph and Stewart Alsop sayts that if the E It P pasites in con-grea- substantially unimpaired oat wtwillobveerydue grttht eroaeribleviehfofosart: t above partisan - politics-7-Secre- -tary of State George C Marshall and Senator Arthur H Vanden- - -t berg Grafton thinks that it people will stick to the motive of aiding humanity and forget right- - i lit and leftist dictrines the E R P will go through To be isolationists or to be Communist and- so to reject the E R P is in- ! humane to hungry distraught - i I r - fll - Europeans our help to tnoth7rnesnetwvehs°gnoeinegd again Readers Features Inc i t 1 41 t ' - f f r4 tt i) - k t ' - c' kt THE DALE CARNEGIE al ( COURSE ' f - i- CONFIDENCE t - t - Increase Your Income! i 1' : t 1 WILL HELP YOU DO I- SPEAK EFFECTIVELY befors 0124 seDEVELOP 3 faziiirsLiienacipeOfol 4 INCREASE INCOME through ability to handle people YOURSELF your service"8 IM g ki s conferences I THINGS THIS TRAINING 10 and COURAGE polish reSEe your product t - - ritzEmos by lug your knowledge WIN clubs themes-U- of au s ifnosren raea:talonfsaccat n Us TOR LEWmPREPARE SHIP by developing your latent powers BROADEN YOUR LNTER1ESTS GET OUT OP YOUR RUT n14 a - MEMORY ml la 2 facts 10 a - k - OVERCOME FEAR—DEVELOP - - WILL HELP YOU BECOME AN EFFECTIVE SPEAKER! la017 i - iTcti 11N j i 1 4i ii I A second dience laughed comedian arose and said: "The tailor said—No 146" and again the audience laughed The puzzled financier asked his companion why they had laughed at the mere mention of these numbers and was told: "The guests know every joke so we merely Joke No number the jokes 14 was about a doctor and No You're a 146 about a tailor financier—so tell joke No 62" Nobody laughed The financier 1 1 create new Interests i I I - - - Learn to Win Friends and Influence People! In this Dale Carnegie Course you will be working in a lab- to Win oratory of dealing with people The book 4 "How Friends and Influence People" grew out of this course and was written solely as a textbook for this course This trainmethods ever ing in effective speaking is also one of the bestand poise yet devised for develaping coge now—you'll be glad Investigate this famous F self-confiden- co you did! - - t - t - t z Classes Aro Forming! oeltasLostiniectsusr4clonizorrorcaltuurtmhrer tell seenewurei Prroeumaptviazectiatrinalthim: 1 1 DtreeonalidniGormLaytimoannp1s3onion VETERANS! 111enager Scheel Schnbach Optical 1 I 165 So Main - Salt Lake City !Itch 1 1 - ! Please send me without obligation your "Hearing Test Chart' ! I Name Address LC - I tv 1 Bill I DALE CARNEGIE COURSE 11 II tor ' 1 Trhjlir:guru"ndearPPG1-714- - I i 1I a OF sponsored by HENAGER SCHOOL ' ' 45 L Broadway Phone g- BUSINESS s 91 WRITE FOR FREE INFORMATIONwows Carnegie Course 45 E Broadway Salt Lake City Please send me without obli- Name gation complete information Address on the Dale Carnegie Course City wokAow Dale I A f - t- days Rothstein operated a gambling casino in Long Beach near the club where' Irene and VerCli:ves non Castle danced Cavalier° Yea was there the night Laddie Sanford who then was 17 lost ComfortConvenience $5000 at the gaming table and Rothstein refused to accept his BETTER IlEARIIIG r i money and warned: "Let this Ii be a lesson to you you're too Here is a singleunit : young to gamble" A few hours hearing aid that later Rothstein would sneak out affords luxurious of the Colony to avoid tipping mental and physical I -the waiter comfort You'll be Routine-the luncheon in delighted when you honor of Ed Wynn Harry Hershfield discussing the difficulty of again bear sounds CLEARLY— or distortion A telling a joke before an audience without strain aid et a price you told quality bearing of professional joke-telleof a financier who came to a can afford Lambs club dinner and heard a comedian say: "Then the docSand for FREE 'haring Test Chart tor came—No 14" The au- 74 f U - ) f aitienmespuotrnroiogrunntoyoem”l ' -- I: wer So Ugh! Y‘ou Forrt You're Wearing ft -- Morning the pigeons come to my windows They know I have peanuts for them always even tap at my window ifThey the peanuts aren't there lf it were not for me the pigeons would So" Howard I- z- : No columnist has yet had a word for the Wallace third good - i'lt 7iti !' itnheprzhcciipioeu tbuott their sails PIs-T- -Al El - In the background of the Truman message both Stokes and Lawrence see Henry A Wallace and his third party nheacpasimviecdtorwioluthe nynao aa i Ma - -----' tfP gram - - st n :tt inescogrniapeputmanioendr It on the liberal line right across the boards Mr Truman sounds good He is for improving the public health helping public education reviewing public housing raising wages expanding old-ag- e benefits and fair employment practices And yet says Stokes Mr Truman is the fellow who fired his able housing administrator Dillon S Myer with a bow to the real estate interests and who fired James M Landis civil aeronautics board chairman with another bow to the big airline interests Mr asked his companion why they hadn't laughed and was told: "Because you told it poorly" Chatter—G B Shaw has finished writing a new play Arthur Murray sold his Wilshire studio in L A to Lilian Mc- Grath one of his teachers for $350000 Monty Woolley is in a hospital in Albany where he was operated on again Norman Katkov's "Eagle at My Eyes" has sold 25000 copies In its first two weeks Jane Pickens whose looks and voice help make the Ed Wynn show at the Carnival one of the top bargains in N Y night life is deciding between two musical Sir Laurence comedy offers— Olivier was warned that a scene In his movie version of "Ham- let" would be censored "I know but we'll shoot it" Olivier in- sisted "I suspect it will be cut by them but it will be good for the censors to see it" Drink: Willie Howard was at Toots Shoes bar ordered a drink took a handful of peanuts from the plate on the bar put the peanuts in his pocket and then swallowed the drink He ordered another drink again put a handful of peanuts in his pocket etc etc "Why do you drink so much?" Howard was "'Because I like piasked geons" he explained "Every miloeer 46- -1 —the day Mr Truman revealed himself for what he is a new deal radicaL this figure t I 1 - - — message marked a historic event ' it - 1 - - t rs ' I 4 S RJ - - "- is la - 1 - )1 -- 1 said that a third party would simply play into the hands of what he called "the Republican reactionaries" Marquis Child4C: bellevea the 0 0 P old guard" in thank' to the Wallace split the Democratic party can win In 1948 without making concessions to the independent voter Dorothy Thompson plainly thinks Wallace is a demagogue At TO CHOOSE NIII it T0 lorl ' -- L Stokes agree that this the issue all right but that about all they agree on Stokes halls the speech as an eloquent Franklin D'Itoosevelt Job but ha is a little dubious Thomas --"----- c f: - ainteillottlitaocnPtrioteonsidoLaeenrrytivTrerthunemeeafthnin'sienkrwesaoltrihdne- Republican agreement on method of administering European relief But Vandenberg once his foreign relations committee has fixed the minimum amount it considers essential to success of the program will fight to the bitter end against any hamstringing reduction of : I1 either a plain solitaire or with a finely cut diamond or two on each side 10:1 1- i Other senators at Monday's that meeting who supported Wilamendment were Hawke& liams Wherry Brooks Dworshak Malone Ecton Kern Bricker Revercomb and Jenner Of the 20 senators attending Monday's meeting the only ones besides Knowland and Reed who voted against any cut in the emergency relief authorization were Cain Capehart and Young Senator Vandenberg certainly will do his best to achieve a 880 tu0e0i i '''' t -- Laand David 000 the gam- in one of our exquisite new rings artistically made in PLATINUM t - YELLOW GOLD or WHITE GOLD with wedding band to match ----- ---- - n to $400000- - from $597000000 ble because he felt that Cavalier° would make the restaurant In those f' a successful one I 1 ( — ' r-- :2113w:ea: II ptso senators voting for an amendment to reduce the authorization ' re-setti- ng t- halI w Gambling — Gene Cavallero proprietor of the Colony Restaurant revealed that when he the' restaurant for $25- bought e by yi money notes which itaooithe:dst sethot st ingh ri rri Arnold Roth i 1 'er' - - ( 4 wrence lieve that American money must be supplemented by men with if the proAmerican know-hogram is to succeed Third want to avoid a serious split of the Republican party on this issue" Senators Reed and Knowland Senator consistently backed upconsideraVandenberg during tion of the earlier emergency foreign relief bill but Buck and Ball were among 20 Republican '''l t " for the affirm- ative on the is- - isneomonidtteis hoef foofrethigon prerelesitdioennit 1 t A I E r ' a congress &truck a blow :o:1 non-radic- al - r-oli- heghm'Tg111 to message By LEONARD LYONS used to be cr) '''' his THE LYONS DEN L ' :e Tr::arne e- IP 444MOVEMENNIEMMEIMINIMM ' pointsout the Holl3rwood's feat of making Charles II of England seem a right guy is its biggest in the history line since Jesse James turned out to be Tyrone Power I and misunderstood this way: "The 'United States definitely has a responsibility looking to world recovery that we must discharge To this end I am working to three purposes First to see that an expert business machinery is set up to ad- minister the relief program but this without infringing upon the constitutional prerogatives essary Physically he Is leas reminiscent of the chorister than he ' in- - of Wisconsin The chief instigators of the meeting appear to have been senators Reed Ball Knowland and Buck all of whom profess to have been moved by a desire to obtain adjustments of the European relief bill in the interest of Republican harmony Senator Reed who was host to the gathering declared himself pened to his voice It always was rich and resonant but it never sent you very far That's to say he was no podium Si- e this y oto itah - Dewey Swaps Austere Mien For New Look—and Voice NEW YORK — The voters of as the politicians say these broad lands are not going to nwoi the result thief ERneropupbelenicanrsenseof divide on issue as to precipitate it into their presidential nominating convention The hottest attacks on the Marshall plan in this Repub7 heart meeting came from fresh men senators—notably Malone of Nevada Williams of Delaware Ecton of Montana and Kern of Missouri These senators do not face another bout at the polls until 1953 The others present were Bricker of Ohio Capehart and Jenner of Indiana Cain of :Washington Knowland of Cali fornia Reed of Kansas Young of North Dakota and McCarthy' A(2? 1 Vandenberg became more and more a plea by senators up for reelection to their less closely beleagured colleagues to think what may be ROBERT RUARK REPORTS recognize Thomas E tholationisembleddist-mcu- ss ohRbeei - me LV4ZNE0 Mil 4nr--E Z 1:2t)138ERCO PANIt46 5 EVERA1- - TIMES THATM0CI4 ': '''''' -u- thought is to introduce its t Truman New Deal Message 7 Paces Great Debate of '48 ' visible rays to the gala Hollywood film premiere which has tended at times to the overconspicious With rockets it May soon be possible to take pictures 600 miles up thus bringing what used to be the 65c lunch back Into focus The wild of dered by the ebneenthusiams emo eannygg tr3rless older cry:- indi' done about category Brooks of Delaware Dworshak of Idaho Hawkes of New Jersey of West or Virginia RA rvrtrye oonfm of WyoNebraska ming and As the discussion proceeded it DOWNI4E CAN FALL 15ACK ON 4 tbs ' --s oszsP4APY LANGUAGE OF MEDIATION BOGS Yr-AJ- PiaCAING czurr A JOG WITI4 u st:---- ' i 1 :'''''' t' The army finds' radar much more effective than batteries of powerful searchlights and a the Marshall plan Monday evening was that members of this group up for reelection this year are acutely anxious to avoid a obreak r'4- 7 - ott Pt pRzscNrr JOG AT 1 rz ::: THAE - -- " lel a ifi gSR6 I oczers t 'ti1111" - ‘ gt -- -- 1- - 61V465 Itre i the great Samuel Johnson once remarked ”Experience Is what a man has left when every thing else is gone" Which reminds me that experience Is a perpetual best seller—everybody Li ---- '1 4""r4 I4 Aa possibly be reelected and that bolds with Or without the Wallace third-part- y candidacy The - ' ?it HI 1m Ez: "- I Ay A o S to : t ITHE COLUMNISTS SAY By IL V WADE HAYDEN By J WASHENGTON — The most Bignificant disclosure in the meeting of 20 Republican sena- - Se n a - 17 GOT OFF THE RECORD I G : i1 By FRANK revitalize the Democrat party so that it cart win elections He says President Truman cannot ‘'' Si S 1 4 1 LAit:& : 1 141 WHAT AM I SAYING Bob Kenny Ls first of all a Democrats and a maneuverable ones clever in his footwork His kno is that the object of this movement as he sees it Is to :i"7 ii frighten the Democrats to the point where they would ditch their president any more than two SWILIIONVI make a summer or Maine and Vermont make an election—a truth that a man from Kansas learned a dozen yeitrs ago But being a practical politician and also ambitious could It be that Mr Kenny ls thinking and dreaming a little about Mr Kenny and through his tactics coming back into power in the Democratic party in California? And possibly is he imagining things about getting an influence In his part3r's convention as a minor warw-ickHe hits been a champion for a long time of Associate Justice William O 'Douglas of the supreme court as a presidential candidate though that project seems the wildest sort of fancy in this year of grace Anyhow listening to Bob' Kenny you get the impression that what the Wallace movement is to him is something entirely different from what the idealists see in it not to speak of the Communists Who is the rider and who Ls the horse In all of this? Copyright 1948 United Feature Syndicate — some Corn- Ilarvard ') :t 1 ACIIT"44114491deltD:ZECT No t i He expresses great confidence that Mr Wallace rurming in the Democratic primary in California and Oregon—which is his plan and not difficult to sir ? range—can carry both states against the president The presence of Wallace delegations in the Philadelphia Democratic convention he says would sCk alarm the leaders andodrelegates that they would take another look and nominate someone other than Mr Truman Just-whohe does - not say but 01i1y conceivably- Henry Wallace Well now despite all such talk Kenny seems too astute a politician to believe that delegations from two states would I 5 -- 11'1 Hopefuls Fear Vandenberg Ire Over ERP ' By Paul Ford — I party AOMI Frog:re 0assemdo"r811410s-A"41- Democratic party can't win hi claims because it has become a carbon copy" of the Republican assort- 1121 0 Private Lives I :- Al? THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Sunday January 18 1943 1 - t - |