Show - fr Im A6 - — - t : 1 owal - - THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Friday February 27 1948 10 - 4 es EDITORIALS ‘ latableaned April 1 13 11171 Issued every morning by The belt Lake Tribune Publiabing Co Sale Lake OM Utah I - i I t 1 before which tiny town of Lidice was burned to the ground while its inhabitants were massacred is again upon the sacrificial altar This time it is the minions of Moscow Before it was the brigands from Berlin Always it is tragedy the tragedy of a people who have tried to remain free to develop an industrial and agricultural unit and to live as good neighbors to the rest of Europe Proclaimed as an independent republic on October 28 1918 and assured of its existence by negotiators of peace Czechoslovakia has had the misfortune of occupying a strategic area in central Europe No matter how hard the Czechs tried to mind their own affairs there were always greedy eyes peering across the borders Hitler wanted Czechoslovakia and he took it while Chamberlain and Daladier bowed before the fuehrer at Munich Today Czechoslovakia is being taken over again This time more subtly than in 1938 but apparently just as conclusively There are many independent persons left in that land many who will fight for freedom but the situation is changed Today it is not the tramp of German boots and rumble of nazi tanks that sound the doom of Czech freedom but the strike-stoppe- d silence of factories and the Stilled i voices of free speech and a free press I minorities" Keep Home Fire Burning But Not Too Hot fi I The Lyons Den a r y Anita HOLLYWOOD-- 4i Loos tells the story of the prawn xi:ho fell in love with the crab Her family objected: "Ugh How could you love one of those awful creatures which walks sideways Sideways How could prawn nevertheless your" The her family to invite persuaded the crab to their home The crab arrived walking perfectly Burrows champagne" "but also I suspect it's plained from this very neighborhood In fact I'll bet that if we remove our host's shoes well find grape stains on his feet" Fame Dept Gregory Peck tells of his first visit to the Stork club after he had appeared in a few movies He wanted to sit in the Cub room but the tables were occupied and he was told that he'd have to wait "Tell him who you are Greg" Peck's companion whispered "If I have to tell 'em who I am" replied Peck "then I ain't" Bob Vacation department in- Woodruff bead of Coca-Col- a vited Edgar Bergen to his plantation at Albany Ga for some shooting Bergen shared a blind with one of Woodruff's friends They spotted a turkey and both men fired at the same time The straight "What happened to you you're walking straight" whispered the prawn was nervous" said the crab 'took two drinks and Im Wine Dept—Califotmlans are proud of the wtne produced in this state and are ready to compare it ith any French import Abe Burrows the radio star drank some of this wine at a by a native Califorparty given nian -- Not only is this domestic — AMERICANS ALL t By DAZCIEL POLING Gene Tunney has written an article on prayer that every athlete should read It will improve his game! Also it will do something more—it will give him a new outlook upon life generally I read this piece in Guide posts — a remarkable monthly publication that specializes in success stories of another kind Men and women of all faiths and activities open up and let you see what makes them "tick" or so it appears to me AZ month after month I read these little columns In Gene's piece he is brutally You will frank with himself hardly believe it but taking him at his own word he was about the No 1 coward of just the American prize ring Referring to his bout with 'Whitney Allen (one of his first fights after returning from World War I) he says: "I was one scared young man My fear was based on a fear that I had all my life of professionals I took it for granted that rd be knocked out and I was terribly afraid of being hurt for life" Even more dramatic is what he writes about his fear of Jack Dempsey: "One night at the beginning of my long training period I awakened suddenly and felt my bed shaking It was I who was shaking trembling so hard that I made the bed tremble—I was that much afraid —afraid of what Dempsey would do to me Right there I had already lost that match which means everything to me— the championship I had lost it unless I could regain it" Well of course Gene did regain it but how? How could so a complete and coward rally to twice defeat the Manassa Mauler' The answer to the question is one small word —"prayer!" Gene Tunnity prayed and the way he tells it He didn't ask is something! God to plant a knockout blow on Dempsey's chin He did ask God to help him conquer fear Tiumey was too good a sportsman to pray for victory—that would have been a coward's But he did pray as prayer every man has the right to pray he did pray for strength and Such a prayer earncourage estly offered God never fails to answer provided of course you do your own dead level best Copyright 1948 New York Post Corporation - t 1 I 1 1 1 I : il ' 1 - self-confess- ed I I I I i I l Business department—Chappell & Co published before the show opened the score of the new musical "Look Ma I'm Dancin'"—all except the Texas song because its censorable lyrics assured its being banned by the networks But the demand for it by sheet-musi- c buyers topped all others Chappell therefore decided to publish it And because there is only one copy of the lyrics the publisher had to send someone to the theater to jot down the lyrics while they were being sung on- I 1 I I Finance department—A visitor at the office of Dr Harley N Davis head of Stevens Inst of Tech noticed an old grand-father- 's clock in the office Its ticking was loud unusually loud "Can't you with the engineering skill available here make the ticking softer?" "of course" said Dr Davis and then showed the visitor a label inside It stated that the clock was a gift from a man who also had left a $12000 bequest to the institute And if the clock ever Is allowed to run down the money is to go to Columbia That's why Dr Davis keeps the clock in his office—and ticking loudly t I Truman has ! I But for a genuine dessert I share with The laughter and every age excitement of The good old comic page ' 4' - - 1 J- 1 tv i r : - r: I? - 4 t - — 11 - et 4 - 4 '4: - ' '' 2 :i t à ' x ' i'' 11 t -- 7 ) - 1: ' fg- ' f-4- -' t 1- - - - :'- A1 - - ': t4 -- -- 442- -- -- - - z' - ' : : "' i ' - - - 2 ' o ' 7 w- “'i-- ' 77- - -'' 141 a - ' fI f uwsaawzzd - sr- - -- - 77'''"-' --- 7 4 "1 - Of t44 r- -4' - "-- er ei' —4 -- 0-- - - - " - i l' - -- ' - ' ': - -"'- ' :7 -: - - ' ' - - -ii:f ' :'':- :': S'' k t 1 I '' - 1 1 - 1 4 I 41 fl'' t- tce'' t'''7N1 it t 1 - v - - - :1- : - ii f : i - Itr 4 ' a1--"ft-lilk ' A ?Z — '- - - - - -- - - - -- (1) Exceed 200 words (2) discuss religious or racial matters in a sectarian way: (3) carry partisan political comment or advertising (4) make personal aspersions or (5) con-tan libelous matter obvious misstatements of fact or statements not in accord with fair play and good taste talking about for 20 years or so Since Mayor Glade called a matter meeting to discuss the I have heard nothing more about it Why not call another meeting to discuss a possible site and when this has been decided upon let's make a start with the money saved on the D U P buildOr are we going to keep ing on talking about it for another 20 years? m their toes send presents to rich people who are strangers to them want antique furniture or rugs Why people drive an auto right in front of a bicycle then say the bicycle ran into the auto Why church people advocate equal rights then advertise for help and say must be of a particular faith Why city garbage trucks drive on the wrong side of the street Why some people kick about labor unions and not about businessmen's organizations Why anybody wants to get drunk Why people don't like to have cigaret smoke blowed in their face J W Need for Water R Editor Tribune: As I listen and read of extended drduth conditions In our sister states to the west: and survey our prospects for a growing need of water in our valleys! I wonder can we in any way make further preparation for a drouth emergency should it extend within our borders to threaten our water supply? I hereby hazard a guess that there is much danger in the offing I am only judging the future by the past Earnestly I urge that we farmers prepare for such drouth eventually by the early preparation of seed and soil so that there vvill be no delay in early planting of crops: and thereby gain advantage of spring rain and ideal growing weather The present world shortage of food makes it imperative that we heed this time worn adage: "Procrastination is the thief of D Y Goddard Johnson If This Be Treason etc Back in the effete east behind a big shiny desk in a swanky office sits a tycoon A manufacturer of clothes for little boys A fashion dictator On the wall hangs a huge map of the United States with the firm's sales territories marked Sales records are inclearly dicated by tiny flags Like a commanding general the tycoon grimly surveys the map Massed flags in the Atlantic coast theater and the satellite midwest show the complete success of his plan there Infiltration in the southwest and the Pacific coast Is on an upward trend Only one section remains blank — the - Matter of Taste Editor Tribune: I notice much space and talent is again being wasted on smoking and smokers According to my belief people who smoke have as much right to do so as those who do not have to abstain from it but of course no gentleman or lady either for that matter will offend those to whom the smell of tobacco smoke may be offensive signs or no signs As for myself it is a habit I have never indulged in yet I am but 80 years old and we can never tell when we may be overcome by temptation! But I shall continue to fight against it for I do regard it as a useless and intermountain states The tycoon flicks a key to the interoffice communication system "Operation Little Lord Faunt- leroy is being sabotaged! ' Remove the man in charge of the Utah - Idaho - Nevada - Wyo (11411440 Editor as or it army wudy I II a --11 IA w c"A"--rc- 0 tc rft - -- 0MP M-- -- 4 H iS FORTLIN I "4011t 1 I I 1 1'14 A214 rittt 1:-- '' V' a z? I Ale' - 21- lik NV '' 4 q how do they get that up all way? People that stay night to see the king and queen of England go by People that want autographs of movie stars have bathing beauties stand on Z AitC AUP -- - get the I - ‘1k‘i tki4 ii - V 44 - S'e 0 i 344 If 8 ebt Pv ner TO na Nowa SvIONrat e- - - I I " entrance and welcome them seven days a week The spittoons are gone and women are all over the place They still can't get into the men's grill but it sure lodks right cheerful down in the lobby a big improvement Doggone it they are decorative Distributed by McNaught - he commands harshly The land of big and little The is in open rebellion Fifth column those oily advocates of a "new" look for little boys is a complete flop Merchants many of whom recall with dismay their own agnonizing experience in the days of long ago when their mothers made them "pretty" with long curls velvet suits with lace collars and knee pants and hats with floppy brims and ribbons remain adamant Bring back that sissified catastrophe on the kids of today ? Not in a million light years! Let the women and girls cringe servilely before the style designers if they will but not the men and boys Long pants forever! levis and Brotherhood Brotherhood! 0 God if we Could reach this word's sublimity Could gain the vision of its plan: How differently our eyes would scan Our fellow men How swiftly theil Would come hate's final overhe-m- tI : 1 en Syndicate -J 4 ' :: i t - I I '':-- i i i t:''-:- - c t 1 '' ( 1 - I : — I Years ago the athletic club to which I belong used to be a bit stiff about allowing women on the premises They could only come in to dine on certain nights and then were whisked in the side door and up a special elevator Jeepers creepers but it was dull Now they've opened up built them a cocktail lounge off the main territory" t 1 ens up veral democratic policy of "live and let live"—let both the landlord and tenant be sensible Each considering that "without each other neither can survive" By so doing both will benefit—and help each other! Jack A McQueen ming-Monta- d men's fishhave a real old-tiDo know how you party ing long they can stand it and really enjoy it? About three days The first day it's a wonderful By the second they have party no more stories to tell they have exchanged their political views caught some fish and made a holy mess of their cooking if they are camping By the third day they are restless moody silent and morose Finally one guy says "Say ya know rn bet the girls would get a big kick out of coming to a place like this and fishing Why don't we take 'em along next year?" Everybody then bright- :'' dtZt —' 1 k i Inc ' OFF THE RECORD By 11 V WADE 1 ' A sigh in passing for those who do their marketing only once weekly and entirely missed the recent healthy recession Each day now one hears of new triplets and quadruplets and little of single births What's the present system of scoring— three or no count? An old controversy over ownership of the lonely Falkland islands is stepped up by the finding thereon of the popular metal uranium which never depreciated a realty value as far as we know The green stuff on the planet mars continues to mystify we too though it shouldn't -aseras of have our mildewed which this seems to be one And we at long last come to know In brotherhood lies war's cur- cease The kingdom of His lasting peace Angleman Salt Lake Notes on the Cuff Department Cliff (Hardware) Evans who has been back home on a visit for several weeks will return to his Pacific coast territory Sun- day Members of the "club" will meet Saturday to speed the ' t - PA Boston cat jumps up into the kitchen sink and drinks water dripping from the tap" The cat's okeh It's a new washer that's needed A thought here for the British cousin tangling with a first fact of life as he swaps nonedible railroads in Argentina for nutritious wheat and beef In St Louis unsanitary conditions are- uncovered on the premises of the Owl 'Baking Co to be kept in mind by Missouri consumer) of baked rent I I It nt Editor Tribune: Sometimes I wonder if the present "rent race" between landlord and tenant will eu!minate In the "sky as the limit" as a settlement of the I believe that the problem landlord is entitled to a reasonable return on his Investment— but I do not believe in an Irresistible incentive for trying to get rid of present tenants who refuse to pay exorbitant rents! A great deal of the present increases "blackjacking" of rent some tenis due to the fact that ants are "undesirable"—in that they ignore all rules of peace and the protection of property— also the fundamental rule of "live and let live" I do not beliseve in lacking up rents—if the tenant it satisfactory and abides by the present provisions of the rent control law Prolandlordism is as dangerous as fascism—wherein the few dictate to the many The only reason we have rent control is because there is a shortage of housing So in order to follow the uni- throw (ROW MAN'S OWN -- I - He Doesn't Get 'V Era- - PA ANNIINA By HAM PARK For we that live to please must please to live — Samuel r i Dean dear I love you for those words Remember when you and I were on the same radio program for a while ? I thought you were sweet and cute then but now I know it Aye lost and frustrated we are and at all times prepared to be the objects of deepest pity To be a man is not easy parwith all ticularly as you saySometimes those dames around I just wonder how I manage As you say there is nowhere a gent can go to escape from them to reinflate his afflatus and bolster up his skittering ego But it's even much worse than that dear dean Not alone is there no sacred reservation left where a fellow can go to get away from women but if there were he wouldn't go there any more Darn it all he's grown to like thecreatures Lemme tell you about guys off on a fishing trip Two or three good Joes get together and fix up to go away up state or downshore or to an island somewhere leaving their wives and sweethearts behind while they SENATOR FROM SANDPIT Archie Bennion harmful habit Tobacco manufacturers are wise and crafty individuals At first it was only the men who smoked or used the weed in any form but due to alluring advertisements showing ladies with cigarets neatly balanced between the fore and middle fingers the desire to personally imitate became so overpowering that they soon yielded just as the tobaccocompanies knew they would But I would never attempt to deprive anyone of its use or make it more difficult for them to obtain it through the enactment of law for after all it is strictly their own affair J M Parker 4 'Rent Race' Peril Letters express opinions of contributors with which The Tribune may or may not agree Writers must sign true names and addresses in ink but letters will be carried over assumed names If requested 'Poetry will not be used- - Letters may be rejected if they:' used to start that much discussed auditorium we have been - By Our Readers FORUM RULES' 4 - lost" "1"11 ------ I taxpayers several hundred thousand dollars is the best suggestion I have seen on this very controversial question The money thus saved could be time" 4 2 1 ' : ': 1 4 i - - -- Editor Tribune: The artic1e In the Forum by L E S in which he suggests that the governor's mansion be turned over to the D U P for a museum to house their relics and a new home be built for the governor at a cost of about $50000 thus saving the I --- 2 i Iro - Auditorium Talk I - - The Public Fortml I -: : i- - - t I I t i c : 4 414-: --- I I - - l z - - 1"e'-'-- '- i i--- a ii 41: P41 '' - e A 4 J ! 44 ' i x et '': -- - C J4 - t: ' I e- ''' 4- -: ) r ''' - i "4 d P 1° - 1 : i I 1 - 1' t 1 I1 I i 4 4 I :e r( r ' i i: - '' '' '' f” '" 3'-- -- - -' : — --- " ' -' :' ' '''''' ' Ioom - -- : ! 0 'I itt:f er - 4 ? - i ic - 1 4 '' 7'0 1 1 t! t ( ' - I - r -: -- - - :' ' :: - -- - - '' c - ' - og a '- r-- tr J''- ' -': )k 4 : I' 0 ' :''10:-lk' - der' '' 4 - -: ' ' - :"- — ' 4 f2' - 7:- ad: 2 S' - : 4' 4 : - 1 -- !' ' 7' ' - - A' 411 : '' 41' ''' - N - 4 - 7 : ss'' I - - g? :N A' - ' - :- ts 14't 0- ft- - ' 4 By PAUL GALLIC° NEW YORK — A kind ar d sympathetic word for the dope known as man has finally bees spoken and of all things by a woman C Mildred Thompson dean of Vassar college who last week told the National confer ence of Womers Organizations in Washington that modern men are a lost sex sick with frustration Just because the sound of her words falls so soothingly upon mine ears I am going to quote them Dean Thompson told the assorted club women that after centuries of boasting about his dominance over women man had now lost all his cherished marks of superiority Says she "He used to have safe refuge when things at home were not to his liking in the corner saloon where the 'swinging door gave him security from troublesome women But now when he seeks comfore at his favorite saloon whom does he find with feet on the brass rail beside him ? For long years the barber shop was his last resort and hie alone That too he has s tI i i t : ? ll ! r ' t? p 4 1 0 t! - 4'4 41 — E! - t-- - departing guest Annie Pike Greenwood writes that she remembers well the Youth's Companion and the Chatterbox of the more or less gay '90s She also recalls thea time years ago when she did I column for The Tribune salute my predecessor owls American - college girls send their short skirts to France And here in another column it says tourist reservations to Pails are the largest since 1939 1' ' ' - - -- ti - : 4 'r ' ' - -: ' - IP - '' 1!4 - ' - '- -- '' t k — - tear or smile :' - By JAMES J METCALFE i — s:±-- --- EA ' -- i s - —:- -- : ol I read the paper every day To keep in touch with things And get myself acquainted with Important happenings I scan the headlines and I At captions here and glance For something new in there life and if The weather will be fair I turn to sports and social tvhirls And then I look at ads In search of special bargains or To see the latest fads The daily editorials Intrigue me for a while And columnists and readers' views Provoke a - ":: ' ' : - t ? 4 - 4- : 71'- - - - - - 4 4 MY DAILY PAPER I I i !:: - : -'' ' : - ? - 2- - tax-reducti- on stage I - Tr tion Gen Wedemeyer carried to China a scheme worked out by American and Chinese bankers by which the United States would loan 400 million ounces of its buried hoard of silver worth about $300 millions to provide the basis for a new Chinese currency Under this plan existing Chinese money would be wiped out by exchange at some very small value for the new currency The reason this plan failed it is said was Chiang's refusal of a stipulation that the new currency be controlled and managed by a nonpolitical board made up of Chinese and American balikers until such time as the American silver or its equivalent in other commodities was paid back k ew informed people would deny the importance to the United States of keeping China from falling into the hands of Communist Russia Gen Marshall no less than his Republican critics is anxious to do anything practicable to avert that calamneither Marshall nor ity But else so far has been able anybody to show how the pouring of money or even guns and tanks and airplanes into China under present conditions would effectively check Russia But Mr Truman by his $570 million proposal has very effectively taken heat off himself and transferred it to the Republicans Especially Senator Bridges as chairman of the senate committee on appropriations is on a hot spot Bridge's big job is to whittle down expenditures to the point that will permit tax reduction But if he sticks to his loud demand for aid to China by apmillion for that propriating $570 purpose in excess of Pres Truman's original budget he certainly will put large crimp in the Republican hope Bergen" Art —Modern Art museum once held an industrial exhibit featuring such items as an aluminum bathroom Al Hirschfeld the caricaturist was trigued by these industrial items exhibited at a famed museum The day after t h e exhibit opened a metal ash tray in the shape of a cowboy hat suddenly and mystviously appeared on a table of the exhibit Beside it Wail a card: "Functional Ash Tray by Albert Hirschfeld" It stayed there throughout the entire run of the exhibit Hirschfeld had bought it at - -- : p" - - :: ':--!-- ::: - Senator Styles Bridges for exemple—and the efforts of isolationists to weaken support for the Marshall plan by injecting China into it President Truman met the Republican outcry by asking a separate appropriation of 4570 million for aid to China but with the stipulation that this expenditure be conditioned with the same stiff "self-helrequirements as the Marshall plan bill applies to European nations It was the complete failure of the Chiang government to check the wholesale graft that was absorbing most of its tax substance that turned Gen Marshall against it Whether from his own inclination or because the grafting elements were too strong for him Chiang has persistently refused to make any effective move to check infla- said Bergen Then the ventrilo-quist stepped up to the dead turkey lifted its head and asked: "Who shot you turkey?" And the turkey answered: "You did 6: : There has been no indication that Vandenberg has changed his mind on the subject certainly he still is dead against the U S attempt to force Chiang to dicker with his Communist enemies But Vandenberg may be embarrassed by the extent and vehemence- of demands for aid to China by some Republicans— Governor Thomas E Dewey and turkey fell and each man insisted that his shot had brought it down They were still ing about it when they got back to Woodruff's home "There's only one way to settle this" corn- - it i'V - i - Kai-she- munimtm- By Leonprd Lyons :' : - I 11 -:':-- - pean Relief plan was first broached Republicans including a lot of isolationists have been whooping it up on the theme that a cash contribution to save China from Communism is equally important Obvious factors prompting thic advocacy were: first the appearance of a split between Secretary of State George C Marshall and Senator Arthur H Vandenberg on the Chinese issue and second failure of President Truman to reveal the report of his own most recent investigator of conditions in China Lt Gen Albert C Wedemeyer In January 1947 just after Gen Marshall concluded his year-lon- g stay in China with a "plague on both your houses" criticism of the Nationalist and Communist factions in that country Vandenberg came out on the side of Generalissimo k Chiang United States policy Vandenberg said "might well now shift its emphasis" to definite support of Chiang's government rather than continue the Marshall policy of "impartially urging that it produce unity with & rival armed party—the Chinese Corn- dyed-in-the-wo- cans During the ceremonies a special award of the king's medal will be made to John James long a resident of this community and as enthusiastic a Welshman as one will meet in a square mile of Morganwg or Drefaldwyn A feature of the local "Eisteddfod" will be an address bydl S Merchant British cons sul at Denver who will make the medal award to Mr James Mr Merchant will have for his topic "What's Happened to Great Britain Since the War?" It is a notable characteristic of the Welsh that while they are loyal subjects of the British crown they have never quite forgotten that there is a distinction between Englishmen and the natives of ancient Cambria and that after they become admiring and patriotic citizens of America they always remember the green valleys of the homeland and the songs of their forefathers The Salt Lake Tribune congratulates Mr James on being selected for the honor of receiving "His Majesty's Medal for Service in the Cause of Freedom" htivities S : : - --- territory From the time when the Euro- Utahns of Welsh nativity or ancestry will gather here in Salt Lake Monday for their annual banquet and program as well as to brush up on some of their famous songs and perhaps practice a few phrases of the language which they boast has never been modified by Angles Saxons Normans or Ameri- summer Thus it behooves all householders to be more on the alert during cold weather spells Especially must parents be on the lookout for re hazards and keep matches out of reach children who are forced to play inside and range all parts of homes and apartments From the frigid reaches of Canada and Newfoundland to the more temperate regions of this country the temptation to build up big fires to keep out the winter cold is pressing Each winter brings reports from the northern areas of costly blazes attributable to this cause Here in Salt Lake sand surrounding sections there has been an epidemic of home fires most of which could have been avoided if due care had been exercised A blaze which destroys a home or damages an apartment is not only expensive but most inconvenient when it is not downright tragic Families forced to flee from burning homes run health risks and dangers of exposure as well Si the loss of housing facilities which are not easy to find in these days of shortages r deep in Republican possession Cambrians Gather Monday For Songs Speeches I Winter is traditionally the season for residential and apartment house fires when overheated stoves overburdened furnaces and unusual current loads on electric wiring installations provide starting places for destructive and sometimes tragic conflagrations Industrial blazes while a number of them are reported during the cold months are not more numerous in the winter than in the J( President Harry - - By JAY G HAYDEN WASHINGTON — Relief for China has become mainly a political football and at the moment Vassar's Dean Rightly Tags Male Pitiable' By Reg Manning - On China Aid Czechoslovakia Is Again the Victim Of Greedy Grasphlg Aggression No nation In Europe has suffered more severely the pangs of partition or the heavy hand of the aggressor than Czechoslovakia the little republic that was founded by the victorious allies at the close of the first World war invaded and trampled down by the Hitler gangsters and now taken over by the communists in a bloodless battle While the citizens of western democracies sympathize with the harassed people of this little Balkan country they can see clearly the manner in which communism plans to take over the rest of Europe and perhaps the world While the rest of the nations stand by impotent to interfere the communist party using its power over the police and labor unions has moved into complete control of the government President Benes who has fought for freedom and democracy in his beloved native land against Hitier's savage bands of robbers and later struggled to retrieve a national life from the ruins of a second World war is powerless to stop the red tide Czechoslovakia the bone that was thrown to the nazi dogs by British "statesmen" so that they might preserve "peace in our time" the country that was carved to death piece by piece with German sabers under the cloak that background of Curtain Truman Wins 2nd Round Friday Feb 27 1948 4 - i galit pibune gljt : " - - --- - I 1 : - - : - r ii - |