Interest Centers on November Polls GOP Leaders Intrigue Press With Election Prospects By BAUKIIAGE Newt Analytt and Commentator. WNU Service, 1616 Eye Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. WASHINGTON, D. C. — This weather—In Washington and else where—develops more heat than light. That's a trite phrase, I know, uui u 8 apropos (because heat, rather than light, li always the keyword at this season, politi cally speaking Congress accom plished its fade out rather grace fully, I thought even if they must have prayed for forgiveness for "the things we have left undone" as fervently as for the things they did which didn’t sit too well with their consciences. And now the voice of the vote getter is heard in the land. Radio and newspaper correspond ents are being courted by both political parties. For example, re cently, a crowd of radio folk was given a luncheon-table look at the vote-getting machinery behind the Republican lines. Our hosts were Republican Chairman Carroll B. Reece at one end of the table, and Republican Campaign Manager Clarence Brown at the other. (A similar jaunt into Democratic ter ritory will be reported in a future column.) Reece Quiet, Popular Chief Reece is a slight, greying, quiet voiced man whose Tennessee ac cent reminds one occasionally of Claude Pepper in one of Claude's unoratorical moments if you can catch him in one. (Personal confes sion: I like Pepper and Reece both and so do a lot of people who would be the first to say, “the views of these notables do not NECES SARILY agree with those of the undersigned.’’) It is a little presumptuous of me to refer to Reece as "greying” be cause the year 1880 had to stretch itself from January to December to fill the time-gap between my birth day and his. He has taught In almost as many academic institutions as I have casually attended. He was a battalion commander in World War I whereas I never rose above the exalted station of shavetail, and among his five deoorations are the Distinguished Service Cross, the Distinguished Service Medal and the Purple Heart. He was cited for bravery by a marshal, three gen erals and a colonel. Perhaps the same qualities which won Reece hit decorations qualified him for his present job. He cer tainly doesn’t lack assurance even if he doesn’t rattle sabers in ex pressing it. But we are not talking about Reece. We are talking about his job. He is out on the hustings, al though his trip, which will take him as far west as Seattle and as far south as Georgia, is mildly camou flaged as a vacation. Anyhow Mrs. and Miss Reece are going along, and a part of the time will be spent at a resort in the Rockies. Backstopping Reece here in the capital where nobody votes, but where a lot of writers and talkers remain, will be Clarence Brown, representative from the Seventh dis trict of Ohio, a state which might be called a latter-day mother of presidents and which right now is looking hopefully over the patterns of maternity gowns. I have a fellow feeling for Rep resentative Brown, tinged perhaps with the natural deference a re porter always has for a publisher. Brown publishes several country newspapers (that’s the way he put it himself in the congressional di rectory) whereas I merely write for "several" besides this one. Also he has three more children than I have. He and I once met on the debating platform, and while I would naturally never admit that I didn’t present the best argument, I will concede somewhat grudging ly that Brown’s resounding oratory won him the most applause. We Brown and Reece complement each other very well. Reece is slight, dignified, soft-spoken. Brown is large, loud enough to be heard in the back row without using the PA system, and hail-fellow-well met. As “campaign manager” he is going to sweat It out (that is lit eral ) with the rest of the Washing tonians who don’t vacate in the summer. were debating selective service, and 1 hasten to explain that former Senator (now Supreme court just ice) Burton and I had the unpopu lar side. Anyhow, Brown (may-the best-man-win) won. Reece and Brown didn’t talk on the-record at the luncheon but I bave a good idea of how things looked to the Republicans at that congenial gathering of radio folk. If the elections were held as of that moment, they claimed, the Re publicans would win a majority of seats in the house of representatives and would make very heavy inroads an the Democratic majority in the senate. Since then many of the pri mary battles have been fought and ['ll report the reactions later. % Gallup Poll Heartens GOP In the first place I understand that the Republicans took considerable satisfaction in the Gallup poll which showed that, excluding the one party Democratic states. 40 per cent of the persons interviewed showed a Democratic preference and 54 per cent a Republican pref erence. The GOP leaders believed they had a good, fighting chance to win 15 to 17 senatorial scats from their opponents. In New York, they say Governor Dewey’s good record and the campaign he is planning ought to pull in a Republican senator (they won’t say whom). They be lieve Democratic Senator Mead will have to run for the governorship. They felt they had a chance In Delaware and West Virginia and that If the ballots were cast at that mo ment they would win in Mis Carroll B. Reece and Rep. Brown souri (I'm still talking about the senatorial race). They called Mon tana and Washington probabilities rather than mere possibilities. O'Mahoney knows he has a fight, they say, and they believe the Re publican candidate. John Hender son, has a chance against the popu lar gentleman from Wyoming. I heard a lot of talk, too, about the interesting possibility in Con necticut where Repr. Clare Luce was expected to oppose former OPA Administrator Chester Bowles, which would be a colorful affair with all the technical skill of her publisher husband, and all the skill of an advertising man, Mr. Bowles, pitted against each other. As to the house of representatives. Republican machinery has been grinding in at least 75 districts. OV Kentuck Bloody Battleground Kentucky was catalogued as still a dark and bloody battleground. At the time of the luncheon. Repre sentative May’s followers seemed to feel, according to press reports, that he was a martyr. If something should come out to change their minds on that score, he might go down to defeat. And we are re minded that, as one Republican put it: ’’every 20 years or so Ken tucky changes its mind.” What the Republicans seem to count on most is the natural re action, “throw the rascals out" theory which Americans always have reverted to after so long a pe riod of any party’s incumbency. In addition, say the GOPundits, there are the usual mistakes of the party in power which result in the well known attitude of one of Clar ence Brown’s constituents who told him: "I don’t know who I’m FUR, but I know durned well who I’m AGIN.” NEW UNIFORMS ON PARADE . . . The navy’s new uniforms went on test parade at Treasure Island, Calif., navy base. From left to right, sailors are shown wearing the new dress blues, old garb, new un dressed blues and new work clothes. Major Improvement, sailors agreed, lies In the fact trousers now have four pockets. NEWS REVIEW New Farm Plan Studied; Death of UNRRA Looms UNRRA: U. S. to Quit Following close upon the blast of Senators Butler (Rep., Neb.) and ip 11 « ^ — /r\_ W. S. Clayton La.) against use of United Nations relief and rehabili tation funds abroad, Assistant Secretary of State William L. Clay ton told the fifth UNRRA council meeting in Gen eva, Switzerland, that the U. S. would not contrib uie auaiuonaj runds to the agency. While the senators had charged that UNRRA supplies were being used to bolster foreign govern ments. Clayton stated that the U. S. was withdrawing future assistance to the agency because the pe riod of immediate postwar impov erishment was passing and the U. S. and other countries had sup plied sufficient credit mediums for financing recovery. In all, the U. S. provided no less than 2% billion dollars of aid to UNRRA, sufficient for supplies to fill 2,000 cargo ships. WAR INSPECTION . . . Sepa rated by the war, Mr. and Mrs.. Edgar Manske found inspiration for a unique business venture. Mrs. Manske, the former Jane. Fauntc of swimming fame, sculpted small figurines of their daughter to send to her husband, former football star. Now they are In business selling figurines. FARM PROGRAM: New Proposals A new farm program calling for a combination of sound open mar ket practices and governmental as sistance was proposed by the spe cial house committee on postwar economic policy and planning head ed by Representative Colmer (Dem., Miss.), In recommending changes in present farm legislation, the com mittee urged: Greater flexibility be allowed In farm prices, especially to ward each other. Supply and demand be given greater opportunity to deter mine farm prices rather than artificial controls. Re-examination of the out moded parity price formula de signed to give farmers an in come on a par with industrial workers. Concentration on a long rather than a short range farm program. For establishing a “floor” under farm prices to prevent a disastrous drop, the committee proposed a support program guaranteeing producers “60, 70 or 80 per cent * of parity”; a supplemental pay ment during hard times to assure a certain percentage of pre-depres sion income, and limits on the rate of decline for a specified com modity in a year. CIO: To Fight Prices Remaining militant in its post war program to aid the interests of more than five million mem bers, the CIO announced an all out drive on rising prices to pre vent further depreciation of the workers’ dollar. Revealing that it had given up plans for another big wage drive to win further increases to offset rising living costs, the union stated that demands for more money probably would result in still high er prices. In forecasting additional price rises of 15 to 20 per cent during the next few months, the CIO said that the corresponding reduction in purchasing power of the con sumer’s dollar would represent a wage cut of 17 per cent. A suc cessful consumer strike against higher prices would terminate cur rent inflation within the next 18 months at the worst and three to six months at the best, it said. ‘ENCOURAGED’ DESPITE LAGS Vet Housing May Reach Goal WASHINGTON.-Despite reports indicating building lags throughout the nation. Housing Expediter Wil son Wyatt predicted that his vet erans' housing program will achieve Its goal of getting 1,200.000 temporary and permanent homes started In 1946. Wyatt’s prediction was based on a report which he characterized as “encouraging” although it con tained facts indicating the picture is not too bright. The report showed: A total of 496,000 family units of all types were started in the first half of the year. To achieve the 1,200,000 goal, the number of “starts" will have to average 117, 000 per month in the last half of the year compared with an aver age of 83.000 in (he first half and with 92,500 in June. First Slump Reported. In June, for the first time since the Wyatt program began last January, “starts" of conventional and prefabricated houses and apartments slumped. The June figure was only 62,000, compared with 66,000 in May. To achieve the Wyatt goal. 84,500 of these new homes must be started every month In the last half of the year. They constitute the largest portion of the program. Production of prefabricated houses has been far below Wyatt’s earlier expectations, so that the 1946 goal for ’’starts” of this type has been reduced from 250,000 to 100.000. To achieve the over-all goal of 1,200,000 family units, the na tional housing agency will have to start 738,000 conventional type houses and apartments, instead of 650,000 as originally planned, 212, 000 temporary homes Instead of 200.000, and 100,000 instead of 50,000 “conversions” (adding family units by remodeling older houses and apartments). In the first hall ol 1946, 225,000 units of all types were completed. Of these, 72,000 were ‘•emporary" units, such as relocated barracks and trailers. Only 153,000 perma nent homes and apartment units were completed, and only 40,000 of these were started after the Wyatt program began. The Wyatt report attributed to the bureau of labor statistics an estimate that it takes six to seven months to complete a new family unit today compared with three to four months before the war. Wyatt did not mention in his re j port that the number of applica tions for priorities to build under his program declined sharply in June, a fact that may presage an i other slump in “starts'’ during ! July. Priority applications, which were for 125,102 units during May, dropped to 45,705 units in June. July figures will not be available until ! September. CO FAR 1946 has been an amazing ^ season in two ways—for its bril liancy and its failures. For its Mex ico—and the good that Mexico has done for ball playA Ted Williams ers everywhere. The Red Sox, Joe Louis and Assault have taken full charge of the spot light side. They have been the out standing cham pions. Golf has no entry with Ben Ho gan and Byron Nel son, the two lead i n ft mnnatr u'innorc trailing Lloyd Mangrum in the U. S. Open. We seem to have the best tennis players but a Frenchman is still the Wimbledon winner. What has happened in the first year after the war? Except in the way of record attendances and gen eral enthusiasm, the aftermath of World War II hasn’t even ap proached the aftermath of World War I. Not in the way of competi tive class. Can you name competitors today who have anything like the com bined class of Babe Ruth, Jack Dempsey, Bobby Jones, Bill Til den, Tommy Hitchcock, Rogers Hornsby, Earl Sande, Walter Hagen, Gene Sarazen, Red Grange, Man o’ War? We have Joe Louis. But Joe Louis has been the world’s heavyweight champion for over nine years. We have Ted Williams, but Ted Williams hit over .400 before the last war. He was a great ball play er, or at least a great hitter, before World War II ever developed a slight fever. Sammy Baugh and Sid Luckman go well back before World War II. The brief postwar period has de veloped a wild stampede to the box office. But very little beyond that. In baseball the batting stars today include Ted Williams, Dixie Walk er, Dom DiMaggio, Vernon, Musial, Hank Greenberg and a few more. But these are veterans—most of them. Hal Newhouser of the Tigers and Rocky Graziano have been the two leading stars since 1941. Against this list I haven’t the heart to give you the names of those who have faded, folded up or slipped badly—who, returning from army and navy assignments, fell far behind. The outstanding per formance of 1946—so far—has been the Red Sox, plus Ted Williams. Plus the Dodgers' fine showing against heavy odds, player for play er. The second nomination is Joe Louis—who against Billy Conn had almost no opposition. Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson are the two major money winners in golf—but Lloyd Mangrum is Open champion and Herman Keiser is the Master’s winner. And Sammy Snead is British champion. It is all very much confused, very badly tangled up. Most Class in Football In my opinion the feature part of 1946 won’t belong to baseball, racing, boxing, basketball, track, golf or tennis. It will belcfhg to football. This applies to both the college teams and the pros. This first applies to the quality of com petition. There will be far more class to football than any other postwar sport can even approach. I understand that over 100,000 ap plications had been made for the Army-Michigan game back in June. There will be over 200,000 ticket applications for this contest at Ann Arbor. Applications for the Army Notre Dame game will pass the 300,000 mark before September. Army-Notre Dame and Army-Navy together could leave the 500,000 mark behind — if there was only space enough. The Navy-Georgla Tech game In Atlanta already has two times the seat applications that Atlanta can handle. Notre Dame, Army, Navy and Michigan will be a triple sell out for almost every contest. The same thing will happen to South ern California and UCLA on the west coast. Also to St. Mary’s and others. But I doubt that Notre Dame will have the team Frank Leahy had in 1943 or that Army will have the team Red Blaik had in 1944 or 1945. The talent hasn’t improved, but the crowd interest has. Veter ans coming from army and navy service have proved nothing. Some have been better — others have taken a big dip. This has been true in baseball — and it will be just as true in college and pro football. There will be stars from other years who will shine — and there will be stars from other years who will be flops. There will be a professional foot ball entanglement that will leave you gasping—and more than a few pocketbooks flatter than a thin plank. In looking on ahead you will also see a big revival in ten nis interest — and one of the hot test amateur golf championships any galloping member of the Thun i dering Herd has ever known. Bud Ward — Frank Stranahan — Cary Middlecoff — golfers good enough to beat the Nelsons and the Hogans in major tests, plus young stars moving up. This has been a rather dizzy season so far, up and down HELP WANTED TEACHERS WANTED—We have abund ant calls from chief cities Pacific Coast, Rocky Mt. states and Mo. Val ley. Top salaries. All lines open. With our 29 yrs. experience and acquaint ance. we can serve you well. Write today. DAVIS SCHOOL SERVICE, 529 Stuart Bldg., Lincoln. Nebr. HELP WANTED CAR REN I'ERS WANTED Boys I’owr Project located ten miles west ol Oma ha and Dodge St. Highway, approxi mately 18 months work, scale $1,625 pet hr., working 45 hrs. per week, double time being paid for all overtime. Applv Employment Office. Peter Kiewit Sons'' Co. Bovs Town. Nebraska. BRICKLAYERS WANTED. Boys Town Project located ten miles west ot Oma ha and Dodge St. Highway, approx) mately 18 months work, scale $1,825 pet hr. working 49 hrs. per week, double time being oaid for all overtime Apply Employment Office, Peter Kiewit Sons' Co. Bovs Tow>n, Nebraska. CABINS FOR RENT Clean housekeeping cabins with elec tricity available for August and Septem ber. Lady of the Lake Resort Park Rap ids. Minn. Yet, with the slight altera tions shown here, such a chair may be made to seem at home with either type of furniture. After the rockers have been removed. It may be made to change character to suit the material used for cushion and back covers. • • • This idea is from Home-Making Booklet No. 5 which also contains more than 30 pages of illustrated directions for other things to make from things on hand and Inexpensive new materials. Readers may get a copy of Book 5 postpaid for 15 cents by writing to: MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Bedford Hills, N. Y. Drawer 10 Enclose 15 cents for Book 5. Name_ Address_ ) Older people 1 If you haven't the stamina you should—because | your diet lacks the natural A&D ’ Vitamins and energy-building, natural oils you need—you'll And £ood-taeting Scott’s Emulsion elpa build stamina, energy and reeieta.net to colde. See this wonderful difference—buy Scott’s at your druggist's today I Gas on Stomach Relieved in 5 minutes or double your money back When excess stomach acid causes painful, suffocat ing gas, sour stomach and heartburn, doctors usually prescribe the fastest-acting medicines known for Kraptomatic relief — medicines like those i n Bell-ana iblets. No laxative. Bell-ans brings comfort in a jiffy or double your money back on return of bottle to us. 25c at all druggists. * *6et O'Sullivan SOUS as well as Heels next time you have your shoes repaired. you CAN WALK FARTHER WITHOUT TIRING. Buy U. S. Savings Bonds! Yodora checks perspiration odor tfay Made on a Jace cream base. Yodora is actually soothing to normal skins. | Entirely free from irritating salts. ; Can be used right after under-arm shaving. Stays soft and creamy, indefinitely. Never gets stiff or grainy. No harsh chemicals to spoil clothing. | Tbbes or jars, lOtf, 80^, 60tf. Yes, Yodora is a gentle dcodoranL | Try it—feel the wonderful difference! | McK**s*on ARobbtn*. lac. BriOcnOTt, Conn. RADIO CASE 180,760 492 __ (Reversing the situation, a Sunday night radio listener has John J. An thony, "W hat’s Your Problem Man" on the stand j. Q. Now, Mr. Anthony, what’s your complaint? A. I have no complaint. You’re mixed up. Q. Come, come, Mr. Anthony, there must be times when organ music and poetry let you down a bit. A. Never. Give me a poem, an organ and other people’s troubles and I’m as happy as a lark. Q. Mr. Anthony, there MUST be something bothering you like every-, body else. Are you happy at home? ** A. Certainly. Q. Well, go on in your own way and tell the radio audience why. A. On my program we only tell why people are NOT happy at home. Q. Why stay in a rut? Out with it, when did your happiness begin? In what quarrel did you first notice it? A. I tell you, there was no quar rel. Q. No fights, no quarrels, no dig sentions? A. None. Q. You mean to tell the judges who have kindly come here tonight to get a little free publicity that noth ing has ever happened in your home that the radio audience should know about? A. I do. A Judge: That’s the old familiar pattern by which so many mar riages go on the rocks, my boy. What you need is a good family quarrel. My advice to you is that you go home and try being very un happy for a change. It may make a new man of you. Q. Let's make out you are an- ^ other case, Mr. Anthony. Say, Case 3457289. That’s the case that won’t go out and get a job and help keep the home. Now, why don’t you go to work instead of sitting around all week waiting for Sunday night to come? A. I don’t sit around all week. Q. And, furthermore, when did this woman desert you? A. What woman? Q. Please go on and tell us all about it in your own way from that point. A. What point? Q. The point where you told your father you wanted to play the ba zooka like other kids and he ordered you out of the house with the baby. A. You’re all mixed up. Q. Now, Mr. Anthony, remember what you said at my office. You said you were willing to take the four cross-eyed sisters in to live with you if the soldier would give them a name and wear shoes at the dinner table. Pull yourself to gether and speak distinctly into the mike. A. Could I read a poem to touch the heart now? Q. All the hearts in tonight’s au dience have been already touched. Dr. Spotlight, what do you think of this case? Judge Spotlight (coming out of a trance): I see no problem here at all. This man should live with the three deaf aunts until their grand father finishes his college course. It will be time enough after that to see about formal adoption. Further more, I think the boy who wants to come home from the penitentiary and beat his mother is wrong. There is something to be said for the mother’s stand that she wants no part in the beating unless as sured the fight is broadcast. • • • Just Casting About Fred MacMurray has been chosen to play the male lead in “The Egg and I.” We rather looked for the part to go to “Hennery” Fonda or Walter Pidgen. Tom Drake and Donald Duck would have sounded okay in the egg play, too. • And for the right touch, what screen actress would fit better in the female lead than Evelyn Laye. _•_ Cary Grant plays Cole Porter in "Night and Day” and if he looks or acts Like Porter then Monty Wool ley is the image of Tad Jones and the ideal man to play the late Arthur T. Hadley would be Jimmy Durante. • • • Elmer Tuitchell has one of those neu> house-to-auto telephones. Absent mindedly he took it in the other day for a grease job. • • • THE INCREDIBLE Count that day lost Beyond your wails That sees no headline "Russia Assails.” • • • Twenty-six ball players have just met with big league club own ers on a new deal including better wages, pensions, etc. _ • There was pride in Casey’s manner As he came up to the plate_ There was firmness in his bearing As he asked a higher rate.