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  • on the ' Victory Special' listening to a rear-platform speech b7 Gov. Thomas E. Devey. - 2 - - ECHOES OF DEWEY TRAIN -- "The content ot the speeches is almost identical. Communism is the main 1saue•••• and like Gov. Dewey, Representative Smathers is seeking
  • Converse Backus Carl E. Bai Icy William M. Balch Mrs. Charles Bang Tallulah Bankhead Lewis 0 . Burows Thomas N. Barrows Phillip Barry Wal1er E. Ba11erson Kemp 0. Battle Honorary Chairman June 12, 1941 Chairman, Finan,~ Commitlte FREDERICK C. McKEE Mr
  • a pleasant reception for a Democratic State to the visit of Govenor Warren, asking funds for himself and Dewey. Truly this is a pleasant and courteous State. Mad at nobody but very much more interested. in the fall foot ball schedule than with Dewey
  • me t i n 1.'-nhi l o s o hy i n a c t . i.ty of u Volt a i r e , _. h il oso phy in th h e t "' ~e d. i n ' v o on o to n one e. lmo s t h8 s t bn of the m, ? ,,.._ _; A,.,icr .c . .•.• i s ,1 id , , Dewey(?) o thf•r e i s 021 :..y t
  • .......................................35 Photographed for LIFE by N. R. Farbman and Thomas D. McAvoy Adlai Stevenson .....................................55 ARTICLE Chang-Eng's American Heritage, by Archie Robertson.66 SCIENCE Will the Rat Get the Cheese? ........................45
  • contact man who offered our Chinese fri ends a J500,ooo bribe and who boasts tha t he gambl es with President Truman. know Wong around Senator El mer Thoma s ' office. Cullum g ot to Wong used to supply Thomas with liquor, whi ch Wong could get t hrough
  • Gray and Smith and Gray stopped ' and ."broken off" have Fellx Longoria!. tl!e soldi~r . ijl­ , and Thomas s. SuthQrland execu- the same meanmg. volved, was buried at Arlmgton tive secretary of the body. ' _. "I think we've got no right to Natio~a.l
  • Thomas E. Dewey. This precedent has spurred individual aspirations. Although Democratic Texas is not a doubtful populous state such as both parties traditionally favor for Presidential and ; Vice-Presidential nominees, one Texan, John Nance Garner
  • and their servant 1Co111i1111•d on Page 1, Col 1/ (Co111i1111,d 011 1'«~, 2. Col . 2 ) (Conti,we.d 0 11 Pur,e 2 , Col. f) It seemed clear t.hat. none of Uw !Wel'e klll•d In Suffolk county whe11 - - · - - -·---- - - --- - -- - 1.hree leading candldales - -- Thoma
  • ? Republican Present Order: Stassen, Vandenberg, Dewey Tatt. Democratic Present Order: Eisenhower, Truman. Stassen has achieved acceptance by both the House ot Morgan and the Roman Catholic hierarchy. Dewey, who had the world by the tail six
  • to tell them? Johnson - Tell them it is the first time since George Washington that a President has had a long range draft bill. This Dewey Short is an isolationist. Truman - Dewey Johnson - ? Truman - That Short was too bad about Johnson
  • would ha•• a cted and certainly Dewey would ha•• been tuzz;y. But the plain Bal'1"7 Trwaan haa spoken . ia in Korea or in France. Harry does not care llhether the agression To Harry it is plain agre aion. He can see Joe Stalin's mind and hie own
  • of the Senate and the titular head of the Re­ publican Party, For in his address Mr. Dulles declared that he had cleared his speech with the Senator from Michigan and Governor Dewey. In order to understand clearly how far Mr. Dulles and the Republican Party pro­
  • a to add t \ion& t m&ke veby a pol i ti.cal Y-lat.ory, 1D a dti1ocr 1e state. major.tty ia now eD11plitied bT Thi and vbiapen ~o th ~ am fart. Dewey Cathol.ica and the ?ol ali ena:f,eu nobody, .but loa a eGl.~ while Mlos op -. Rooaevel.t
  • . I do not think the .Me.rshall Plan is tough. I think it is reali stic. I oelieve under Marshall there is lit. better ' ohanae for p~ce than under Wallace or Dewey. I oelieve that under a democratic con­ tinuance l.lnder Marshall l&it.dership, we have
  • voter has ever experienced. The surprise won't be in the outconie of the balloting, as it was when liarry Truman, beat Gov. Dewey in '48. The surprise may be that 2i hours, possibly a week after the Presidential polls have closed, possibly months later
  • in the earl7 ballots to deadlock the Convention, Dewey's chances will naturall7 improve. 'L -2- Jt"s for the Court, what 7011 88¥, of course, is true. It is all the more Unfortunate that it ehould be true at a time when Dou,;las, Black and htledge