
September 18, 1944
After spending Labor Day in Pawling, Republican nominee Thomas E. Dewey drove to New York for conferences with John Foster Dulles, his adviser on foreign affairs, and Herbert Brownell, Republican National Committee chairman. The next day, on an 11-car special train, accompanied by 65 reporters, he started on his 6,700-mile campaign trip to the Pacific coast. In Philadelphia, he delivered his opening campaign speech.
Ever wonder what would happen of Salvador Dali was a commercial artist?
Life features Ed Wynn’s whimsical “inventions.”
And after the war, get ready for television.


