For a President who loves both traveling and political maneuvering, nothing is more fun than to combine the two. In high good humor, Franklin Delano Roosevelt last week boarded a train at Hyde Park, N.Y., to spend twelve days doing exactly that. Ostensible purpose of the trip was to see his daughter, son-in-law and grandchildren in Seattle, pick up first-hand impressions on how the Northwest felt about things in general and the New Deal in particular. But even if Franklin Roosevelt did not love campaigning so much that he does it from sheer force of habit, his visit to his grandchildren would inevitably have been the week's major U. S. political news.
To Franklin Roosevelt a cross-country jaunt for a family reunion means a special train whose ten cars house a retinue of newspaper correspondents, radio broadcasters, photographers and secret service men. It means a series of rear platform talks, carried to the train's press car by wire and amplified for the cheering thousands behind the train. All this produces a steady crackling of political electricity, which makes Governors, Senators and Representatives stand on end to join the Presidential special as it rolls across their States.
Last week the electrical display, as President Roosevelt set out to see his grandchildren, was unusually effective. For two days the Presidential special rolled across Grandfather Roosevelt's constituencyuntil it came to the home States of three Democratic Senators who last spring helped defeat the Roosevelt plan to enlarge the Supreme Court: Wyoming's Joseph C. O'Mahoney, Nebraska's Edward Raymond Burke and Montana's Burton Kendall Wheeler. Its first scheduled stop was Cheyenne, Wyo.*
When Senator O'Mahoney learned that the President's first pause would be Wyoming's capital, he and Mrs. O'Mahoney were in Chicago where they had just bought a new La Salle for $900 cash and $450 allowance on their old car. Disregarding the caution to go slowly for 1,000 miles, they jumped in, made
Cheyenne in 25 hr. 25 min. hard driving. En route in Omaha, when an interviewer asked Senator O'Mahoney if he were hurrying home to lay the groundwork for the President's visit, Mrs. O'Mahoney answered for her husband: "Perhaps 'allay' is the better word." They arrived a day ahead of the Presidential special. Before the train reached Cheyenne, it stopped long enough for Cheyenne papers to be put aboard. Front-page headlines told about a testimonial banquet which Cheyenne Democrats had "only yesterday" decided to give Senator O'Mahoney. When the train stopped at Cheyenne, New Deal Senator H. Harry Schwartz, Governor Miller and Wyoming's one Representative, Paul R. Greever, who had all been invited aboard, were on hand. So was Senator O'Mahoney, uninvited but a member of a Citizens' Welcoming Committee. The joke appeared to be on Franklin Roosevelt. Said the President with gusto: "Hello, Joe! Glad to see you!"
