The Perkins Journal (Perkins, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 15, 1948 Page: 2 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Perkins Journal and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS —
GOP Convention Hands Elomination
To Dewey in Display of Unanimity
Warren Second Choice on Ticket
By Bill Schoentgen WNU Staff Writer
(EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions are expressed in these columns they are thou of
Western Newspaper Union's news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper)
1 DEWEY EYED
GOP Con
GOVERNOR DEWEY AND FAMILY
They want a new white house
GOP Convention
Out of the smoke-blurred rooms
during the recess before the third
roll caU came the word: It was
Dewey—first again with the medi-
cine men
From the very beginning of the
GOP convention in the sweltering
confines of Philadelphia's conven-
tion hall it was a simple case of
Dewey against the field The field
was composed of Taft Stassen
Vandenberg Warren and Mac-
Arthur plus a scattering of fa-
vorite sons
Despite some frenetic jockeying
for delegates by Dewey Taft and
Stassen over the week-end pre-
ceding the convention the big three
of the GOP started out on Mon-
day with their pre - convention
alignments unchanged
But by the time Gov Dwight
Green of Illinois had finished with
his keynote address Monday night
It was apparent that a stop-Dewey
movement was struggling to get
under way As it turned out that
movement never did get beyond
the struggling stage and Dewey re-
mained virtually the only one un-
affected by it
In retrospect the convention by
that time already had assumed an
inexorable course toward t h e
Dewey camp Second - guessers
maintained that the whole affair
oozed along as if motivated by
some fundamental and changeless
law although that was not fully
evident until the convention could
be viewed as a finished product
If there was a fundamental law
it was compounded from a series
of heterogeneous factors political
and personal:
First of all there was the superbly
functioning Dewey machine oper-
ating with almost 100 per cent ef-
ficiency to corral votes
Secondly the Dewey opposition
was divided Taft and Stassen
poles apart in their political phil-
osophy within the Republican
party could not get together Stas-
son flatly refused a deal and Taft
kept waiting for a break that never
came California's Gov Earl War-
ren refused to have a hand in a
stop-Dewey drive insisted he was
running for the nomination and not
just against Dewey Vandenberg
added to the confusion by remaining
silent noncommittal and even disinterested
Nomination
Actual climax of the convention
came when Sen Edward Martin of
Pennsylvania renounced his favo-
rite son candidacy and threw his
support backed by about half the
members of Pennsylvania's 73 dele-
dates to -Dewey That started the
blitzkrieg From then on it was
Dewey and downhill all the way
As the crucial balloting began in
humid steaming convention hall it
became more evident that a stop-
Dewey coalition had not Jelled
On the first roll call it was
Dewey 434 Taft 224 Stassen 180
On the second ballot Dewey had
gone up to 515 and Taft to 274
while Stassen dropped to 149
At that point the convention re-
cessed for three hours a move
engineered by Taft Stassen and
other anti-Dewey leaders to give
them time to decide whether or
not to continue the fight
When the convention reconvened
for the third roll call the stop-
Dewey drive had changed to a
nominate-Dewey stampede Sen
John Bricker of Ohio was the first
on the rostrum to withdraw the
NOM INEE
Thomas Edmund Dewey is a suc-
ce ss story in himself featuring the
kind of success that is achieved not
happenstance but through precisely
calculated ambition spearheaded by
precisely directed energy
At 4fl he has been elected gov-
ernor of New York twice and de-
f:7ntccl crxe t)r the same since
lloreover he hns recelvei the Re
sieilVateMWitAnotiblt0011
GOVERNOR WARREN
He accepted
name of his state's candidate Sen-
ator Taft This was swiftly fol-
lowed by similar withdrawals by
Warren Stassen Vandenberg and
MacArthur
On the third ballot the 1094 dele-
gates to the convention nominated
Gov Thomas E Dewey as their
unanimous choice to rgn as the Re-
publican candidate for President in
1948
Warren
Selection of Gov Earl Warren
of California as the Republican
nominee for vice-president came as
a complete shock to almost every-
one despite the fact that the choice
was a logical and reasonable one
Warren was a surprise pick be-
cause prior to the convention he had
maintained stoutly that he could not
afford to take the vice-presidency
and would not accept the second
spot
It was even more a departure
from the norm in that the Dewey-
Warren ticket failed to offer a
grain of consolation to the old
guard and isolationist wing of the
party Warren has strongly inter-
nationalist political views — even
more so than Dewey—and has been
a consistent critic of the GOP iso-
lationists Initial speculation as to the vice-
president spot ran to Rep Charles
Halleck of Indiana or Sen Kenneth
Wherry of Nebraska both of the
"conservative Republican" tradi-
tion But in the night-long pow-wow
that followed the Dewey nomina-
tion it was Warren who was chosen
Dewey himself averred that he had
not influenced the choice that the
party leaders had become convinc-
ed that the California governor was
the best bet
Nevertheless Dewey had had to
make certain promises in order to
get Warren for the job: The vice-
presidency he said no longer
would be the stale flat and un-
profitable post it has been He
planned to make Warren a "full
partner"
Significance
Whether the GOP convention
constructed its policy platform to
fit the candidates or nominated
the candidates to fit the platform
Is of course an impossible ques-
tion Nevertheless the Republicans
managed to do both
Categorically the platform is a
sound forward-looking one in the
light of the issues both foreign
and domestic to be faced
Strongly internationalist and bi-
partisan in tone it rejects the old
line of isolationism for isolation-
ism's sake and upholds the Euro-
pean recovery program
That foreign policy stand har-
monizing as it does with the pre-
viously stated convictions of Devrlf
and Warren may stand as a his-
toric milestone in development of
the Republican party
Dewey Runs on Calculated Ambition
publican presidential nomint Aon
twice in succession
It is the only instance in the his-
tory of the Republican party where
a defeated presidential candidate
was nominated to run again
Born in °WOES Mich Dewey
achieved prominence in New York
City as a raCsct-buting ilstriet
attorney
THE PERKINS JOURNAL
'tt 11 i t010:1:4A I D ricV fox-z1
No Right-Minded Candidate
Will Antagonize Newsmen
By BACKBAGE
News Analyst and Commentator
CONVENTION HALL PHILADELPIIIA—The notes for this
column are inspired by a view from the extreme left wing of
the Democratic platform - I do not mean that figuratively but
literally
-I am sitting in the left-hand corner of the wooden platform
filled with the brass hats of the party and their friends who are gathered
together to nominate a Democratic candidate for President of the United
States
The scene isn't so very different
from other political conventions I
have attended back to—well never
mind how far back I have in my
mind's eye a dif-
r :''‘ 'I ferent picture It
' t : -i i is a platform
''-?!!'''5' I viewed from just
1
- - T 'if'' 1 about this angle
1-::1
a-::' but instead of
1 A'4-e? i this high ros-
' A 1 IV trum protruding
:A ' -
into the ' hall
1-4 4 k from the middle
7
i ii''1 '
-- - ' of the wide plat-
- k P--- x --
form there is
- 4
I just a wooden
bog with boards
A-- atop it — rough-
hewn rails to fence off the speakers
from the shouting delegates The
name of Abraham Lincoln is being
put in nomination This vision let
me hasten to add is purely vision-
ary I did NOT cover that conven-
tion I saw a picture of it in a book
The scene I have been watching
Is no more placid That Demo-
crats love a Donnybrook is an old
saying No smoke-filled rooms no
private fights for them—rather a
free-for-ail in a wide field even if
they know what the final outcome
Is to be in advance
But frankly I have been thinking
about something else as I sit here in
this tropical heat—that is in thè
moments when I have been able to
think between the flashing of the
light which is the silent bell on the
telephone beside the mike I am
sharing with Earl Godwin The flash
of the light on ttie phone means
someone in the ABC booth high
above us wants one or the other
of us to jump in and givea brief
word-picture of what is transpiring
in our immediate neighborhood for
we are in the thick of things here
and believe me sometimes things
are pretty thick
What I have been thinking about
Is the lot of the newsman and the
small thanks he gets for his pain
and suffering in a political yeaiiBe-
sides being hauled and mauled by
the public—his public as the listen-
ers of a commentator are referred
to—besides that he is under slant-
wise attack by the candidates when
they forget themselves
Nobody either the partisan lis-
teners or the politicos ever
thinks the columnist commentator
or reporter is being fair unless he
is boosting his side
Candidates when they are in pos-
session of their full senses don't
go around arousing the wrath et
the newsmen Even Franklin Roose-
velt who was forever needling the
newspapers always carefully ex-
plained that it was the publishers
and editors and headline writers
who twisted the news not the men
who wrote or broadcast it
But sometimes candidates slip And
as we sit perspiring under the
klieg lights and trying our best to
tell the truth without malice and
with as much charity as possible
about what is going on before us
we recall without too much rancor
the statement of the candidate who
Is not being unanimously nominated
On his recent trip he made one off-the-cuff
remark which prompted
him to send that offending piece of
haberdashery to the laundry imme-
diately after he had thought it over
President Truman opined to one
rear-platform audience that it was
almost impossible to get the facts
definitely before the public "be-
cause there are certain people in
thq newspaper business and cer-
tain people in the radio business
who have a distorted view of what
the people ought to know and
what the people ought to think"
It might have been better if he
had worded his plaint in the Ian-
guage of an earlier candidate—much
earlier—John Quincy Adams who
at least narrowed his charges against
the press to a few papers even
though he didn't name them specif-
ically This offered a sop to the rest
However President Truman in a
previous outburst on that same
western trip was specific too He
attacked the Chicago Tribune and
the Spokane Spokesman-Review In
lambasting the Tribune he was fol-
lowing in Franklin Roosevelt's foot-
steps You may recall that on one
occasion when FDR was asked a
particularly sharp question by a
Tribune reporter he replied: "Oh
tell Bertie (Robert McCormick pub
usher) he's seeing things onler the
bed"
Mr Truman's attack on the Trib-
une came about this way: While
travelling through Washington state
a reporter put to him a question
which although it seemed guitelese
might have conceattql a barb Any-
Iluw tile rtc:Inictit lotkniitelA it that
way when Senator Magnuson re
vealed that the reporter asking the
question represented the Spokesman-Review
The President knows that part of
the country and the sentiments ex-
pressed by its publications: It was
then that he said the Spokesman-
Review and the Chicago Tribune
were "theworst newspapers in the
country the Tribune having the
edge" That was about as sharp a
thrust as a President ever has
launched at the press in modern
times It was in that connection that
he also called the present congress
the worst in our history later
amending it to "second worst"
It would have been kinder to
the rest of us if Mr Truman had
stuck to the specific instead of
adopting the sweeping generaliza-
tion quoted earlier—"some people
in the newspaper and radio busi-
ness etc"
Presidents since the time of John
Quincy Adams have not been shy
about airing their views concerning
the Fourth Estate But Adams while
not specific at least narrowed the
field of his complaint to "eight or
10 newspapers of ektensive Circula-
tion published in various parts of
the Iluion acting in close concert
with each other and pouring forth
IF"r77171 '
PRESIDENT TRUMAN
rear platform opinion
continual streams of slander upon
my character and reputation public
and private No falsehood is too
broad and no insinuation too base
for them "
President Cleveland also had his
press troubles and history admits
he got a rough deaL One summer
when he was governor of New York
and was sweating it out at Albany
New York newspapers reported him
as taking his ease at Newport
Sometimes the newsmen do let
their spleen get into their report-
ing but for the most part they
follow Kip ling's advice and go on
the basis that you can't do a good
job unless " you keep your
head when all about you are los-
ing theirs and blaming it on you"
Television may achieve what the
less vivid reports conveyed by prirft
or the spoken word cannot Repub-
lican leaders realizing this sent out
some pretty strict orders on that
subject before their recent conven-
tion in this city The orders were
revealed by that all-seeing all-hearing
monitor of stage screen and
radio "Variety"
Republican delegates were told
not to be seen (by the eye of the
television camera and thereby mil-
lions of other eyes) talking to mem-
bers of delegations from other states
lest the suspicious public smell a
deal in the making If they must
huddle they were told to huddle
unseen
Delegates also were warned not
to assume awkward positions on
the floor lest televiewers deduce
that handsome isn't as handsome
doesn't And most of all they
were warned not to be seen leav-
ing early and coining late Not
overly hopeful that orders would
be followed monitors wete ap-
pointed Since I couldn't see much of the
video product because as a re-
porter I had to keep my eyes on the
televiewers themselves I can't say
how well the Republicans comported
themselves when televised nor can
I assay how well the Democrats cur-
rently in the spotlight profited by
what they saw of Republican video
performances last month
And if either didn't perform with
all the grace' and decorum nobody
can be blamed but themselVes The
cameraman gets off easy The writ-
er and the broadcaster still will have
to duck the slings and arrows of the
outraged unfortunate
A recent survey showed that
ihteners Ulte hymns mnvt
Probaidy a television survey wouid
show that t:106toners rtqfc-r
Great Britain at Play
It is estimated that the number
of British workers who now receive
holiday s with pay is 15 million For
Inost of Otts vast holiday throng
with their families and for the
great majority of the higher in-
come groups the seaside is the
natural playground for the annual
vacation AIM on every national
holiday from Easter to late au
tumn thousands pack excursion
trains and coaches for a weekend
or even a day beside the sea
which is so near as to be within
easy and cheap traveling distance
for all
Fingerprinting Snowstorms
An instrument that "finger-
prints" a snowstorm by recording
geometric shapes sizes and fre-
quency of occurrence of snow crys
tals falling in the storm has been
developed by weather scientists
according to the National Patent
council The new -instrument with
the help of simple mathematics
makes it possible to count the snow
crystals in a storm and thus pro-
vides information about the rela-
tive numbers of fine nuclei in the
atmosphere which are necessary to
keep a storm active
Athlete's Foot Common
Half of the American people are
infected with athlete's foot Most
individuals especially adults have
had athlete's foot infection a num-
ber of times The disease is usnally
more irritating than dangerous
It is produced from the spores or
seeds of a certain fungus and as
such spreads rapidly especially In
damp dark places The fungi caus-
ing the disease are usually found
In three places: locker rooms
shower rooms and dcessing rooms
shoes garters fabric equipment
and towels and on the human body
Monte Cassino Abbey
Monte Cassino abbey first
guardian of culture during the
darker period of the Middle Ages
received its first bombing by the
Allies In December 1943 Founded
by St Benedict in 529 the monas
tery above Lid valley was the cen
ter of one of the toughest ethical
problems of the Italian campaign
But General Eisenhower's order
that "the building must go" sent
It crumbling The reason was the
Nazis had made it a fortress
Hazards to Bees
Honey bees meet with many
hazards They are attacked by
spiders and many insects by birds
mammals toads bacteria proto-
zoans and fungi They are subject
to specific diseases many of which
are destructive They are also sub
ject to poisoning by chemical
sprays through the increased use
of agricultural chemicals in fact
chemical poisoning has become a
greater hazard than bee diseases
X-Ray Telescope
Basic development of an x-ray
telescope that will give physicians
up to 500 times clearer view of
their patients' Internal organs in
living action was described as po-
tentially the greatest advance in
x-ray diagnosis since these rays
first were put to medical use The
invrease in the brightness of the
Image is achieved through a unique
electronic tube
Use of Bias Tape
One of the more important
sewing notions is bias fold 'tape It
is practically indispensable to the
sewing woman Bias tape is used
for binding facing trimming and
piping Bias tape is cut on the bias
that is at an angle to the weave
It should have great elasticity and
Is intended to Le flat along curved
hems and seams
Protein Needs
One quart of milk furnishes
about one-half of the daily protein
need of a normal adult and one-
third or more of the daily need of
a normal growing- child over 12
years of age
Up Pike's Peak
VP riKe's reak
Up from summertime at the base
of Pike's peak passengers ride the
famous cog railway through spring-
time temperatures finally emerg-
tng into winter at the summit
Wrote About His Father
Christopher Columbus' life was
written by his son Ferdinand
Syrup from Tangerines
A high vitamin C syrup is made
from tangerines
RFD Serves Many
More than 29 million people
are served by the U S RFD
service
Cost of Government
It costs the American people niu e
to be governed than they spend on
food
Milk Center
Harvard Ill has been called the
"milk center of the world" It is
situated in a rich dairy section in
northern Mino is close to the Win-
consin line and has three receiving
plants to which milk is brought
from many miles —
roptt
e p I 1 !AV I M PI
111J
m4 WHOLESALI AND LUAU
When you can't find those' hard-to-vt
items at home—write to us
HUNDREDS of HARD-TO-GET Farm
and Town items listed in our DIG FREE
CATALOG Low Prices All Merchan-
dise Guaranteed
my ek" s on n 4A
- -- 2 :ot
1600 tPPPTY ST l'2X KA---4'AS CITY heA
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
pg
FARMS AND RANCHES
Wheat and MX farms cattle ranti
omi
rich grasses Request list of offerings
Bus Oppor G W Mitchell Fresh
So Dalt
BUSINESS & INVEST OPPOL
LOCKER PLANT — Built 1945 tit
lockers A-I condition 5-room dwell-
ing if desired Good truck farming
district Good oil prospect $14000 asi
pets or $5000 less building R B
Souther land Rush Springs Okla
FARM MACHINERY & EQUIPT
NEW OLIVER RC-60 tractor and cul-
tivator lister planter 12 IL drill
walking liters 1 cultivator 8 1-row
planters MANNFORD MOTOR Ca
Mannford Okla
REALESTATE HOUSES
MOON SIX ROOMS bath full base
ment nets WO per year Call or
write Mrs L T Belden 201 South
Vine Cleveland OKLA Phone 203
HELP WANIED—MEN WOMEtt
POSITION OPEN for Thoroughly ex
perienced turret lathe operators
Also one experienced tool grinder
Additional new machinery reQuiNell
more operators
AMERICAN IRON and MACHINR
WORKS COMPANY
518 N Indiang Okinhoma City 0)016
P O Box 1177 L D Phone 518
Teachers NVanted—Giris PE
Home Ec $3500 Science $3500 Kin-
dergarten $3251) Corn RHO Coeds
KOK Need hundred's rtrade teachers
with degrees at $2750-$3700 Free en-
rollm't Teachers Exch'e Boulder
Colo
HEAT'TREAT FURNACE
OPERATOR
Applicant must be experienced In en
erating continuous type gas tired
controlled atmosphere furnace heat
treating alloy steel
Must be 40 or under and prepared tO
take position immediately
AMERICAN IRON & MACHINE
WORKS CO
518 N Indiana Oklahoma City Okla
P O Box 1177 — LD Phone 518
WANTED TO BUY
FARMS WANTED-10 to 321 Acres
Improved and unimproved sNationad
Co-Operative Real Estate Exchange
231 May Bldg Tulsa t 01( la Ph 2-3111
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE cheap or trade On
Chris-Craft 23-foot cabin cruiser and
boat house guaranteed to be in first- '
class shape two bunks ice box sink
stool Jackets: on Grand lake can be
spen at Si Perkins Cabins and Docks
Grove Okla Cash or time payment&
DON ROLLER CHEVHOI El' CO
Southwest City Mo
STORE FIXTURES
Fine quality modern ivory store fix-
tures for sale at less than cost of
materials
5—Show cases
2—Sa1es tables
1—Set ivory store fixtures
8—Drawer section wall cases
5—Hound garment tacks
KNIORTS
106 S Morton Okmulgee Okla
Ph2218
VVNII-T 28-4S
Value of Vegetable and Fruits
Vegetables and fruits should be
-Included in the daily meals of
every family They are protective
foods By using them we can get
many of the necessary minerals
and vitamins which help to main-
tain good health Actually they erre
better for one's health and cost
less than tonics and cathartics
Since many fruits and vegetables
are low in calories they can be
used generously by those who want
to keep their weight under control
Vegetables and fruits make good
eating They are versatile so they
can be used In many ways If they
are varied and served properly
prepared the family will never tire
of them
Life of Samuel Colt
After being expelled from Am
herst Samuel Colt was sent to sea
The ship's paddle wheel gave him
an idea for the revolving pistol
cylinder At the age of 14 he white
tied out a model and it worked
Later he quit his father's dye
plant to seek his fortune as "Dr
Coll It" In 1832 he sent his pIan of
a gun to the U S patent office'
and was awarded a patent in 1811
After the original company failed
Colt invented the submarine
"mine" while still in his twenties
He died wealthy at the age of 48
-
Safer "Pick Up" at Home
Some of the picking up that must
be done around the house is diffi-
cult or even dangerous if done by
hand Because bUrns and tuts are
some of the most frequent home
accidents suffered by women more
care should be taken with hot and
sharp articles Use tongs to pick
up hot articles at thn stove °lit-
door fireplace or sink Use tongs
to life jars from hot water in can-
ning large vegetables from cook-
ing water baked potatoes from the
oven hot grater or lids from the
fire Use tongs to lift silverware
from hot rinse water
Bright Spot In New Mexico
White Sands national monument
covering approximately 14403
acres is just west of Alamogordo
N M Here great deposits of wind-
blown gypsum are found which in
bright light resemble a vast snow-
field near where the army's
rocket-testing program Is in progress
"Gold Mine"
Montana is a veritable trensura
chest because of its great wealth
of gold copper silver and coal Its
cattle sheep and grain
t
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THE PERKINS JOURNAL t
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-- Great Britain at Play 1
1 PI I it ba(64 A &tt) (0) kti S iciltlt tokZ41 It is estimated that the number
E ImF IEENDT )
- ? C WEEKLY NEWS A
GO onvention Hands Hommation of British workers who flOW receive i
D CD EL Ap ASRST
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MI in of Unanimity No Right-Minded Candidate
10 Dewey m Display
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1 1 FARMS AND RANCHES
great majority of the higher iii
a
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Eyler, Glenn L. The Perkins Journal (Perkins, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 15, 1948, newspaper, July 15, 1948; Perkins, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2148875/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.