America at war! (1941–) – Part 3

Philadelphia strikers still defy government Army troops moved in

Transportation crisis grows more critical

Worst since D-Day –
Strikes in U.S. threaten to surpass record peak

New walkouts now occurring at dangerous pace of seven to 10 a day

Wounded heroes uninjured –
47 die, 32 hurt in train wreck

Cars jump track in South Georgia

Actor Jon Hall slashed in neck

Hollywood, California (UP) –
Virile screen hero Jon Hall was treated at Emergency Hospital early today for five slashes in the neck he said he received at the hands of two unknown men who jumped him after he had had an argument with band leader Tommy Dorsey.

I DARE SAY —
Young man with a future

By Florence Fisher Parry

americavotes1944

Hopes of GOP soar high after parley

Dewey heads home, visits Indiana
By Lyle C. Wilson, United Press staff writer

En route with Governor Dewey –
Republican hopes for a long-delayed political victory next November soared high today as Governor Thomas E. Dewey, GOP presidential candidate, sped homeward from a three-state campaign swing that apparently put some solid foundations under the party’s 1944 effort.

Win, lose or draw, the Dewey campaign promises to be better organized than those with which the Republicans have three times challenged President Roosevelt – in 1932, 1936 and 1940. He does not suffer from the blight of unpopularity which fell upon Herbert C. Hoover’s lost-cause candidacy for reelection in 1932.

Governor Dewey is better known and has tremendous geographical advantages over Alf M. Landon of Kansas, another governor chosen to joust with the New Deal champion in 1936. And Governor Dewey is not regarded as an interloper who crashed the party gate, as many Republicans looked upon Wendell L. Willkie, a one-time Democrat, who led the GOP in 1940 and polled more votes than any man – other than Mr. Roosevelt – ever got for the Presidency.

Governors confer

Governor Dewey tied his campaign kite to the fortunes and aspirations of the other Republican governors of this country in a three-day stopover in St. Louis.

Two days he devoted to a Governors’ Conference in which he and Governor John W. Bricker, his running mate, sat down with 24 other Republican governors, and drew up a 14-point bill of indictment against the Roosevelt administration for its conduct of domestic affairs.

Dewey managers are determined that local Republican leaders shall feel that they have an active part in the campaign.

Dewey confident

The New York Governor was satisfied completely with results of the St. Louis conference and said he believed the state governors rendered a service to the people that will not be forgotten in November.

He told newspaperman:

I am convinced that the Republican Party will win in November regardless of the war news.

The net result of tremendously hard work is that one of the most vexatious problems that has faced the country has been settled as a matter of national policy by our party and to the complete satisfaction of the governors representing three-quarters of the people.

He added another state to his 2,350-mile campaign swing when late last night he stopped at Indianapolis, Indiana, to confer with Ralph Gates, candidate for governor, and Homer Capehart, Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate.

Some sour notes

There were some sour notes in the seven-day journey – no political junket escapes them. Among the big crows watching the Dewey parade in Pittsburgh, there were a few persons who shouted “We want Roosevelt.”

In St. Louis, the Dewey train arrived before officials had reached the downtown section and the streets were almost deserted as he rode through the city. But a midmorning arrival in Springfield, Illinois, brought out crowds that almost overcame police efforts to maintain order.

In Pittsburgh, Springfield and St. Louis, Dewey conferred with political leaders and spokesmen of racial groups, industry, labor, agriculture and other segments of the national life. It was notable that his meetings with labor were largely American Federation of Labor affairs. The Congress of Industrial Organizations evidently prefers to talk politics with the Democrats.

CIO’s strength shown

Arriving in St. Louis the day after the state primaries, Governor Dewey could read in the papers of the power of the CIO-PAC whose opposition was judged to be a major factor in the defeat of Democratic Senator Bennett Champ Clark.

Mr. Clark has been an anti-Roosevelt Democrat and was on the President’s so-called purge list in 1938. But White House scouts looked the situation over then and decided Mr. Clark was too strong to be licked. This time he was bowled over, shouting that the “Communist-controlled CIO” had done him in.

Although the CIO was a factor, political observers said Mr. Clarks’ opposition to the Roosevelt administration and war policies had worked heavily against him. In any event, the CIO-PAC is something with which the Republicans will have to cope and Governor Dewey could see concrete evidence of that in Missouri.

Pulse feeling

RNC Chairman Robert Brownell Jr. found the Governors’ Conference an opportunity to do some pulse feeling.

He was too practical a politician to claim that he had been promised that every one of the 26 states represented in St. Louis would go Republican next November, but he insisted that the governors agreed that the Dewey-Bricker ticket was in.

If all 26 states were won by the GOP, Governor Dewey would have a margin of 75 or so votes in the electoral college, in which 266 is a bare majority.

Campaign plans are still “secret.” It was plain enough, however, that Mr. Brownell wants the people to see and hear his man and is planning at least one coast-to-coast campaign swing, probably in October.

In Washington –
WMC is made final arbiter in reconversion

Byrnes’ order limits authority of WPB

Jackie’s finance retains faith

Delinquency charge termed ‘frameup’

Japs on Guam facing final drive by Yanks

Enemy trapped on third of island
By Frank Tremaine, United Press staff writer

Safe at last from Nazis, 1,000 reach haven in U.S.

Refugees from war-plagued Europe dance and sing while on way to freedom

Editorial: Say ‘yes’ or ‘no’

Editorial: ‘Semper Paratus’

americavotes1944

Editorial: Senator Truman resigns

One of the outstanding jobs that has been done on the home front in this war is the one accomplished by the Special Committee of the U.S. Senate to Investigating the National Defense Program.

This group, which became known as the Truman Committee, after its chairman, Senator Harry S. Truman (D-MO), has done a necessary job, a constructive job, a earnest job. Instead of waiting until the war’s end to investigate production and the general conduct of the war, this committee has been at work since early in the game.

It has nailed down fraud before it got well started. It has uncovered and aired flagrant deficiencies in production. It has been critical alike of the government, industry and labor. It has operated on the one principle that the purpose of the whole war effort was to get the job done, speedily, honestly, at reasonable coat, with efficiency and to the best interests of the fighting men overseas.

Perhaps the committee has made mistakes. In such a gigantic job, mistakes would be inevitable. But it has more than earned its salt by throwing the light of publicity on holes in the war program.

Of course, the bulk of the real work was done by the investigating staff of the committee. It was they who dug up the information and prepared the numerous reports.

But the staff could not have done a sound job unless the 10 Senators on the committee wanted a sound and impartial job done.

Those 10 Senators have worked together – six Democrats and four Republicans.

It is essential that a committee of this type keep up this job, and that the work be continued on the same impartial basis on which it has been begun.

However much he might desire to avoid political implications, it would have been inevitable that some would have crept into the picture if Senator Truman, as the Democratic candidate for Vice President, had remained as chairman.

As the Senator said in his letter of resignation:

I am of the opinion that any statement, hearing or report for which I would be responsible would be considered by many to have been motivated by political considerations.

As a candidate, Mr. Truman might find it difficult on his own part to refrain from such considerations.

The Senator said:

I do not want even the shadow of suspicion that the committee’s activities in any way are determined or influenced by political considerations.

Such suspicions immediately would destroy the usefulness of the committee. Senator Truman used good judgment in quitting.

Socialite accused of slaying youth

Farm boy’s sister tells of quarrel

Robot bombs protested

Church leaders issue manifesto


Poll: U.S. citizens skeptical of robot raids

Only 2 of 10 think it could happen
By George Gallup, Director, American Institute of Public Opinion

Wheeler: Marines ask no quarter, give none in Guam battle

Devil Dogs and Japs hit gap at same time – and enemy is ‘killed by potful’
By Keith Wheeler, North American Newspaper Alliance

Johnson: Love was her crime, it sez, but Deanna hasn’t changed

Varying reactions from fans who send notes to her about new film
By Erskine Johnson

Millett: But ‘Mom’ keeps on working

Service at home can’t be ‘cut’
By Ruth Millett

Fans new ‘crybabies’ at Cleveland as Tribe pulls familiar foldup

By Carl Lundquist, United Press staff writer

Attack by ‘flying infantry’ thrilling sight in Normandy

Doughboys watch as planes go in to strafe tough SS troops holding out in France
By Gault MacGowan, North American Newspaper Alliance