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Show k3K pvj, y , APRn24, PROVO, UTAH COUNTY. UTAH, MONDAY, aitorial. W "I indent 1944 ereis & haps Vice Pre The Washing! WASHINGTON Friend of Governor Dewey are quietly passing1 out word that their candidate has part of his cabinet already picked ' pending hit election and they don't seem 'to think there will be much question about that. f - j First on the list is Herbert Hoover as secretary secre-tary of state. This is the! only post which Interests the ex-president and would be the pay-off for the job .of master-minding; which Hoover has done behind be-hind the scenes to put Dewey across. . -f. r Secpnd is winthrop Aldrlch, head of the Chase National Bank and a member of the Rockefeller family, as secretary of the treasury. Aldrlch also has been one of the potent backstage wire-pullers If or Dewey and is credited with raising, a good share of the money which flooded. Wisconsin during the last days of the primary campaign. Third would be Governor Harold Stassen. nowJ a. lieutenant-commander In the Navv aji nerrsEnrv of the navy. 1 The Hoover and Aldrlch appointments are con sidered definite. The Stassen appointment I understood under-stood to depend pretty much on Stassen himself, since he is now in the Pacific and is sun a cchdi- date for president. However, Dewey cohorts Con sider him a natural if he would take the job: Another potential cabinet member, though, still In the nebulous stage, is General Mac Arthur as secretary of war. Obviously, since Mac Aether; also is a canaiaaia. zor president n is arincuit to approach ap-proach 'him now regarding a lesser post.; Furthermore, Further-more, Mac Arthur and Hoover are not' on good terms., due to Mac Arthur's attempt to saddle Hoover with the Bonus Army fiasco. - However, if all goes as the Dewey cohorts ex pect at Chicago, they hope that, sometime during the subsequent campaign, Mac Arthur may be -approached to fill the post of secretary of war. NOTE Dewey has recently adopted the same technique which was tried by Roosevelt so un- Men soonill be finding out that nothing " can feel ; better and look worse than last ! year's straw hat Nb new passenger .cars until; the collapse of either Germany or Japan, says the gov- Arrlttient' - Frit th nresent we mast he satis- ftied to ride the enemy. , The will power of men would get a lot 'I M t li. A. M 4.1 i . M lurmer u it wercu i, xur me wua b puwer ox women. v.. ..- - . - ' '. It would help a lot if there were as much working for the best as there is hoping fv) fon- Britain is keenincr dinlomata within the boundaries, of the country. Shutting them "fTIflltt TITV ;; It won't be surprising this summer if the .old buggy is hauled out for sparking instead' VAif the auto for parking. U? The best picture of health is not the h ', painted ' variety '47 ir . ana- 7 .. . . on k A i-Y'iwi' I y -Go-Rourfd A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs By Duff 5l. s. Alias ' 'f Mr. Wallace ;i . ng suspicion that per- Wallace8 projected trip to China should be taken at-face value . This is. naive, of course. It violates the tradition ' ,pt Interpreting imy announcement which , carries i political overtones.' But all the speculation upon thi4 junket's possible effect 'on Mr Wallace's chances for rehomination ,have been inconclusive. We shall just have to wait and see. Meanwhile, there is a job ffto be' done in China. ;, f What Is to(be4one, and how, is not clear. But there are various points of friction be- tW6Bti China and the other members of the Big Four war alliance that need repair. vChina's relations with Britain, for instance, have not been of duck-pond smoothness. The 4,iueson of Hong KoAg remains unsettled, v The Chungking government has not been eh-Itltfclf eh-Itltfclf sympathetic . toward England's hand-ing hand-ing of Indian problems. And lately there C)was the rebuff of China inEngland's dras-f'M4 dras-f'M4 clamp-down on diplomatic immunity. 7; There has also been a recent border dis-. dis-. pate between Russia and China. What hap-opened hap-opened inthe remote western province of Sin-giang Sin-giang may not -have seemed very important 1 over here, but it was symptomatic of inter- Anal trouble in China that might have far .reaching effect. Evidently there is f a lot more trouble in China than most of us know. The country ' Is tightly governed and tightly censored. The only opposition political party, the so- Called Communists, are Walled Off by nllllJ successfully and which FDR has since abandoned tary segregation, btones that come through from Chungking hint at hunger and great weariness, at an ill-eoruiDDed armv. at infla ?--,tion. ..; ' : China must be near exhaustion after 10 ( war 'years. She needs' assurance and encouragement-While she waits for help so long .needed and so. long promised. She -undoubtedly. needs some practical and immediate ad- vice, and a frank discussion of mutual points of dissatisfaction among the Allies. I .- This job calls for an: American, on the basis of the long, friendly. association and ' mutual respect between the two countries , It also calls for an American who can speak , . with wisdom and authority. In tackling it, Mr. Wallace has an important and challenging challeng-ing opportunity for diplomatic service n6 matter what effect his journey to Chungs , king may have upon his ambitions at home. If 8 Not the Principle Nine hundred flying instructors have al- ready been cut loose by the Civil Aeronau-tics Aeronau-tics Adxiiinistratien, , another 4000 ' are expected ex-pected to be out -by June' 30. A similar number now studying to be instructors may wind tip with nobody to teach. t Ail this is reason enough for the Hoyse committee investigating Civil Service to take a close look at the Women's Air Force Service Serv-ice Patrol training program: 500 receiving Instruction, 500 signed up and ready. .The sgins, xerry pianes, low wgeis, etc. it seems a .foolish to pay, for their-training when ex-' ex-' perienced men pilots, unfit for combat serv ice, are being turned off. It isn't th tfrinciple of the thing.. It's matter of $6,600000 for WASP training. r- 1 -- Japs, Scotch, and Soda Pop '.v The convenient fact that Mai. Richard I :' Bong is a teetotaler savedia lather embarras- sing situation after the Pacific ace broke V.Capt: Eddie Rwkenbacktr'sKorld War I ' record. When Captain Rickentfefcker started" ta send, the record-breaker a casef Scotch, .General Mac Arthur faised an objection. He did--net think spirits an "appropriate recognition, recog-nition, suggested that promotion to major was enough. - General MacArthur may have been within with-in the bounds of authority; but he conceivably conceiv-ably exceeded those of good taste when he passed judgement upon the appropriateness of some other person's gift. General Arnold's message with a gift of soft, drinks' was more gracious: "Under. V stand you prefer this Aype. of refreshment to 9inera. jlou inorougniy ueserve w nave me kind you want. purging party enemies. .Dewey has mobilized New York State Republican forces to oust Holland Marvin, Mar-vin, former mayor of Syracuse, as a member of the Republican state executive committee. Marvin, 1os been a strong- Willkie booster and, so is getting the Dewey axe. In contrast, FDR came to the rescue of Jim Farley when New York Democratic-leaders wanted to oust him as state chairman. SICILIAN OCCUPATION Some of the inside .facts about the occupation of Sicily are beginning to leak out. AXday before the embarkation from Africa, some one remembered that no proclamations had been' printed for American troops W- post In occupied. occu-pied. Sicilian villages, announcing liberation '"from Fascism. .Taking extreme caution to give tne assignment as-signment only to printers who could be relied upon not to rev.eal our plans, the army finally had the job rushed through just in the hick of time. The proclamations wererf posted in; various Sicilian towns as we went through, and U. S. troops were puzzled by the7 solemn response. They had expected joyous welcome, but somehow the proclamations -of liberation did not cheer; the local peasants. It took nearly three daya for! someone to explain to American officials that the Italian- language proclamation declared a curfew in SicUy "from sunrise to sunset.1 JEWS AND AR Roosevelt recently advised a close friend that he had had a lenethy discussion with Winston Churchill (presumably by trans-Atlantic phone) during which the whole Palestine question was threshed out with "very beneficial results.' Bicreest stumbline block to the immediate ooenine of Palestine to Jewish refugees, the presl dent disclosed, was Nazi and Jap propaganda among the Arabs. This, FDR said, had been ef fective. Japagents, he said, have been almost as active as tne JNazia in spreading stones ojnung uw ai that the Allied -powers are planning to turn Palestine Pales-tine ompletely over to the Jews after-the war and drive out Arab landowners. At least "three prominent prom-inent Arab leaders" have been taken, in by this fantastic talk, the president revealed. Roosevelt further disclosed that, in his talk with Churchill, he had expressed strong opposition to the British ?'Whlte Paper." Which has stopped Jewish immigration quotas in Palestine thia year. He said that the British prime minister gave him no argument but on the contrary, was whoUy in accord with his views. However, both Roosevelt and Churchill are opposed to. making ; Palestine a Jewish common wealth after the war namely, an independent state run by a Jewish government. T This, the president presi-dent feels, is unnecessary. . - Many prominent Jewish leaders in me unitea States feel the same way. At a hearing several months ago before the house foreign affairs committee, com-mittee, Rabbi Lon Wolsey of Philadelphia, Les-sln Les-sln Rosenwald of Chicago, and others, came, out against the "commonwealth" idea. "H1TLEB S OAINU" , The treasury department is overioojung a swu bet to boost waf . bonds, all on account of prilcjai squeamishness. A - ;t . . ' . Paramount ctures recenuy couieicu a movie entlUed "HiUer's Gang," a factual study of the origin and rise, of Nazism. But when Paramount Para-mount offered to release the picture for a public premiere June 12, to coincide with the opening ox the Fifth War Bend Drive; the proposition was re jected by certain of Henry Morgentnau s spinsxer-ish spinsxer-ish aides. v Thev artnied that it mignt appear tnat uw treasury department was 7endorsing" the violent anti-Semitic and anu-uainpiic mournings .pi nmci, Goebbels and other Nazi leaders, which figure prominently in the early art of the picture. (Copyright, 194; by ICJnited Feature Syindicate, Inc.) if Comos Now His A nual Foat of Streng th . V j . ' ' ' ' V TAKE AWAY TW LADY Copyritiit. itU. EA 8enrlc. Ine. TRB STOAT Unt. Ltak Belt Army Air Carps nlom. la la . erac ! NIJI rrtara, Yjoktfkaaaa. His w krvnirht Iowa Whil iMBklM Tokr. He la alk. it t P1I Ofllee Bala win a the HABVa fcllear rleeaet, waea tae i cell deav eaea aa a Jay fleer ' ateaa laalSe.. . v CAPTAIN AZARASKI The supreme values In this word are- human personalities, not material resources. Human rights must come first in any rational or reausac scale. Francis &. Sayre, UNRRA diplomatic adviser, (jiernans L- The Germans always seem to fly in twos or fours, strung but in a line, and they keep right be hind theiij leader, no matter what happens as If they are afraid to branch off .Capt. Don S. Gentile, Gen-tile, a leading American air ace. The community of action among the American nations will be indispensable in the advancement of our economic well-being and In the establishment of international organization to prevent tne recur rence of world wars. Secretary of state coraeu Hull.. m stood ss they always seemed to stand, one hand on a hol-itered hol-itered revolver, as " his eyes searched the prisoners. "Your badges," said the officer loudly. "All your badges, let me see." The badges were made of white doth, all prisoners being forced to wear them. Printed on them was the wearer's name, nationality, national-ity, and a number. They must be worn at all times. "They're after somebody," Baldwin Bald-win whispered. Link nodded and said, "Poor devil, whichever one of us it is." He did not say ityery loud. He said it, probably, because that was what they usually said when, the Japs took away a prisoner. Actually, Link had the queerest feeling that he was the one they were after this time. All of a sudden, sud-den, he felt the way you feel after lightning has struck close to you. So he somehow was not surprised at What happened, . The officer pointed at Link. . You," the officer said. "You come with me." Baldwin, in a stricken voice, gasped, "What's wrong? What's happened?" "My name must have come out of a hat," Link said. Or had they found out that he had been in a bomber which had dropped a few on Tokyo, he wondered. won-dered. ' i They took him upstairs. So he knew he was going to the elaborate elab-orate private office of Captain Azaraski, commandant of Niji Prison. r There were many flights of stairs. There was an elevator too, but they did not let Link use it They climbed stairs and stairs and stairs and stairs. p ATTAIN AZARASKI sat be-hind be-hind a desk. Looking, reflected reflect-ed Link, like an organ monkey that had popped about half way out of a walnut box. - "Give- me your name," said Captain Azaraski curtly. "Lieut Lincoln Belt" "Your middle name, .'also." : i Link had had trouble about that before. They, seemed to think all Americans should have a middle name. "I have no middle name," he said. Captain Azaraski was looking at a document but not writing down anything. "Your age?" "Twenty-eight" "Birthplace?" , "Not military Information," said Link. Azaraski did not change expression ex-pression the slightest "Millard, Missouri"," he said. "And believe me, I had to get a good map to find it" Link felt that he jumped a foot. How had they found that out? He was dumbfounded. "Eyes blue, hair red, height six feet one inch, weight 180." Azaraski Aza-raski lifted his eyes and examined Link. "You have lost about .20 pounds, I should say." He made a 'notation, evidently changing Link's weight "Now;" Azaraski said, "from what field did you leave on the flight which ended in your capture?" cap-ture?" This is it, Link thought This is the beginning of the party. "Not military information a prisoner is required to disclose," Link said. Captain Azaraski leaned back and stared at Link. . "Tokyo," he said, "must be an interesting sight from the air at night self." I have never seen it my- O they had the dop on him. Of wM-a thoV 4natflch!nsf Azaraski began grin.; . lfNow," said Azaraski unexpect "let me tell you the, one about the lawyer who told the judgeXhe didn't want to parade his vlrtuesX ' Whereupon the Judge sa for hint not to worry, it takes number to make a j parade. . Ha, ha, ha,' Link's mouth fell, open. Azaraski laughed.: Then Azaraski came desk and reached up and iMK on tne snpuiaer. "What did you lnmfcwe were going to do to you?" asked Aza raski. "Cut off your ears and hold matches to your feet? . Forget it. pal. Forget it" Link was speed Captain Azaraski tubbed Lmk't back like a lodge; brother and asked, "How would! you like to be sitting on the front porch of the Its Club right now?" "The Its Club!" Link said, still more astonished. "How on earth would you know about the Its Club?" j 'f: Azaraski went back and stood behind his desk, still grinning. We have osteopathic doctors in Japan,, too, you know," he saidi Until now there had been; as far aS Link was concerned, three categories cate-gories of Japs. There were thin ones, fat ones, hard ones. He had typed Azaraski as- one of the lastj, and let it go. . . i Now Link was jarred. For tha first time, he was really inter ested in one Individual Jap.' He looked closely at the man: Captain Azaraski was about 40L His ' glasses made his eyes look slightly smaller, indicating- my opia. He had cicatrix tissue eh his left cheek, the result of a con siderable cut at some time or other. He was bright alert" and in good health, apparently. His black hair was cut short andstood up like a brush. It had a little gray." "I haven't told anybody,", said Link, "that I was an osteopath." To Be Continued) Opce News, Now History Thirty Years Ago From the Files of The Provd Herald April 24, 1914 A! big, black banner line across the top of the front page screamed scream-ed out that "The U. S. Must Fight United Mexico." Yttla and Car-ranza Car-ranza were marching towards the border to join with Huerta in fighting the United States. There seemed to be little doubt that the United States would have to fight Mexico. . Carranza, who aspired to the presidency of Mexico, declared Huerta was a usurper and said the United States would nave to submit their demands to him. The American troops seized control con-trol of Vera Cruz. Twelve men had been killed So far in sporadic fighting. President Woodrow Wll son's foreign policy " towards Mexico Mex-ico was tinder heavy fire from the Republicans in Congress. A program given by the Provo Commercial club was highly praised, prais-ed, (specially a talk by Will G. Farrell' of the Salt Lake commercial com-mercial club. Others who spoke were R. K. Irvine, Jr., Will D. Roberts, Preston G.. Peterson, president, and Jacob Coleman, program chairman. A big athletic .carnival, the forerunner of the mammoth BYU invitation relay -meetaheld until the war made cancellation imperative, im-perative, was announced for the university field, with 190 athletes registered. . It was cap and goWn day t the university, featuring the members of the graduaitng class in a College Col-lege Hall program, followed by tennis matches, the senior march, and the senior hall in the evening. . Spanish Fork was getting ready for a horse show, with 33 horsesJ of the best strain already promised promis-ed for entries. ; . ' Among the advertisers who have sifice passed out of the picture pic-ture were Baker Lumber Co., La mar Hotel, Spencer's Cafe, Albert trio Supply. E. J. Ward & Sons, Fairer Brothers Co., EUen Thea- j ter, Provio Commercial and Savings Sav-ings bank; Smoot & Spaff ord, Irvine's, Princess, Beebe Lumber Co. Advertisers then who are still carrying on were Taylor Borthers Co., State Bank of Provo, Beesley Marble and Granite, Works, Farmers Farm-ers A Merchants Bank, Provo Drug Co. s Q's and A: We must not inadvertently slip into the same condition internally as the one we fight externally. rtn. Douglas MacArthur. The chief factor holding down (steel) .produc tion is a growing aenciency or manpower wnicn is being made up by the employment of 50,000 women and by the lengthening of working time of remaining remain-ing employes. American Iron and Steel Institute bulletin. Judging f rbin the advance showing of this j You can get a lot more health in theopen yearns bathing suits, the poor moths . .than you can in a Dotue. going to starve fiext wiater. Q Howv many Purple Heart decorations , have been issued in World War n? . - I A Up to Nov. 80, 1W3: 50,383. ' 4 Q Has , Australia had any money-raising campaigns similar to our. War Loan ' drives ? A Yes, a Victory Loan drive for $?50v000,000f slogan: "Fight and Feed." . Q Which Withstand air bomb ings better, cats or dogs? National Canine sague . declares that behave better than blitzes, Q What Suropean nation is at 'peace at home and at war in its island possessions ? , A-APortugal;- she allpws the Allies to' occupy the Azores and she exports wolfram to Germany, m. m. tX.TJmm t.1 are the British Isles. V A The River Shannon In A Britai: De,fense London's dogs dt 250 miles long. Q Where is the Had of Fame for Great Americans? 1 A-On the campus of New Work University, New York City. i ' ; 13 When was the ifirst trans? Atlantic I radio photograph trans mitted? i A 1924, ; I Q Who i "George" to British fleers? V ! - , .., : A Q Who is the V. S. Bureau of I the Budget Director? D. smith. , ; 2- the largest river in n lack of blood-iron makes you pale, weak! "drikggedcUt'V Xdla Pins)-ham Pins)-ham iTABlfiXS me ef the best ttfhelp build up red blood strength and energy -ia Follow label directions. noma i to ret more ! such cases: II w3rw sar . L ----- Hank ENOZ PARA PACK rt ff8&ti&H& kfs jfitoQ htt mm am. - IsW afesksMtssssM COaiPLETE and '. Ready To Use ... REFILLS, Each ....$9e hi i Bm mtMLmmm- SBBfJfJIIVSJfiy fSfSPBPSP' tan trt y 65 c onism In.New Clothes By PETER EDSON Daily Herald Washington CorresDondent As the Navy keeps knockihe off mmiay raciuc .latanoT oases onei after another or by the half-dozen, me qesuon or what's going to be done with all these, Jan-mandated possessions gets hotter and hotter and that ain't all. At stake is the shaping ut of some sort of an American! postwar post-war policyvon territorial gbvern- roencr eometning tnat will make sense. Never having been much of a colonial power in toe sense thatthe British, Dutch, Frencn and; Italians have gone out for subjugation and commercial exploitation ex-ploitation the United States has been either one of the best or nn of the worst territorial adminis trators in the world, depending on now you jenoose to view results. j.ui ui start a arawiag room brawl over this any timeyou can find a gfoup sober enough to con siaer t seriously, but a: fair con bcnauB wouia oe that Hawaii is wonaerxui, , the Job done fn the Philippines was notso bad, the uanes aia a nice lob far ti in th Virgin islandsrtMeCanal Zone is a piace 19 go through but not to. uuanv and American Samoa are wavy qumps, Alaska la cold in wuiier, Aiatamufka was a dismal flop, Puerto Rio positively stinks, and what in heaven's name is the government trying to do by sharing shar-ing "sovereignty'? with the British on uanton and Enderbury! wei it this great American nation is ioing to take over a lot of additional islarid Wnd. t tories after the War ia nv.r f better Inake up its mind on how ucn piaces are going to be fun. Successor to IsoUtlohism It Isn't . .USt the OX..Tan.man. "F" lanaa or tne exisung u. S. jwHBeasiona tnat need tO be WOrrlfwf lhnn Vyu. anouia nave heard Congressman Wpm Fish of New York? thtf old DUbliC unlatlnnlat . mmtk.. .m. . VIIC. spouUng the other day fcbbuf how he was in favor qf acquiring every one of the islands 09 which there were ss air bases under 09-year 09-year lease, from Bermuda to South America. And vou ahmiid have heard Concrresswoman icdith jNourse Rogers of Lowell, Mass, coming in win a cold -sopranoi proposal mat uus countrv should have Greenland, too. It all such talk sounds to you much like the old line of America sirst isolationism, it isn't This rnenas, is tne successor to isolationismthe isola-tionismthe first still small' voice or, tne new American imperialism, and how. do you like it? ' As mentioned aunra. the hmrir- trouble with our croverniner of ter ritories, and Dossessiona has ben that tne country had no . colonial policy, on pp of that, such governing gov-erning as was done was scattera! aoout tne government, in Interior, war ana wavy departments. A Cole is Put on the Flria . i in the works, howeveri Is one proposal to end all this y arbitrar- ilV putting the Whola tArrlfnrial management business slap dab in we avy. is a bUl being prepared pre-pared by the Navy at the reauest of smart yoiing Congressman W. Sterling Cole of Bath, N. Yn who win sponsor the legislation. Cole Is in a good spot for initiating initia-ting this idea As a member of tne .committee on Insular Affairs, he has been in on all the Puerto Rican investigations and has had a chance to see what's jnmmo tnere. He is also a.memiutr nt tva House Naval Affairs Committee and the new 21-man Committee on Post-War Military Policy. His proposal to vest all .territorial .terri-torial government in the Navy will probably be shot at, from many quarters. Cole Justifies it in that tne problem ts primarily one of sea-power, defense and the protect tioh ,.of maritime commerce with these, territories. But the Navy's record of government In Guam and Samoa Is nothing: to shoiit cswuf jnuu uic (TCVr'lO WUU UVCIH There was Governor Herbert & Maw.i himself, occupying the spotlight spot-light as a governor should, in the rote of the convention keynoter. Since he had made his formal announcement an-nouncement joij. his candidacy for re-nomlnatlon-only the dav before. his address, the first public utter ance since that time, could be construed as the opening gun in his campaign. Non-partisan observers ob-servers would be comDellell to ad- mit, that the governor handled his xeynoung job in a fairly effecuve style. , . . 0O0 ; The. Provo convention was unique from a political standpoint stand-point in that the governor's only announced opponent for the guber natorial nomination to date, State Senator Stanley N. Child, spoke from, the same' platform as the governor, later in Jthe evening. Senator Child made a decidedly favorable impression, and although ne spoxe less tnan a minute received re-ceived quite an enthusiastic ova tion from the floor of the con-' yention. PEDESTRIAN KILLED SPOKANE, Wash., April 24 dm Edward Nelson, 67, was killed almost instantly early yesterday morning when struck by a ' car at a residential district intersection. intersec-tion. ; The nrosecutor's office listed the driver mm Dan Dashieil.: . who said S. Jones. Garden, Seed, proyo Elec-f gon waiked into the (side of his car and he7 was unable to avoid hitting him. Japan plans to substitute a tin alloy for aluminum -in some coins. according to a Dome! wireless dispatch dis-patch reported' to the Office of War Information. . DesfcChai dire ipped auoi- Anyone who might have 1 in at the ' Provo .high school torium Saturday night while the Democratic county convention wa in progress, might easOv hava: got the impression that the state government had been transferred to Provo. Before the program had gone very, far, the visitor had concluded that very few Statai of ficials at the state capital had! remained re-mained in Salt, Lake City. Yott might say it was a virtual Demo cratic invasion -of the Garden City. . . Coming back to the rollcall of the official state family': there were seated on the stage among the guests of the convention and introduced to the audience the fol lowing , in addition to Governor Maw and Senator Child; Dr. E. E. Monson, secretary of state who has been mentioned as a candidate for nomination as governor, but lately believed to have reconsidr ered, and may have decided to run for renominatlon as secretary of state.- Reese M. Reese, state auditor. how a candidate; 'for renominatlon to. his former job of state treasurer treas-urer Oliver M. Ellis, state treasurer, a (candidate for the state auditor nomination. J. Ed Holmes, chief deputy state treasurer, also a candidate for state treasurer nomination. ' Graver IGiles, attorney general and one of his deputies, Herbert F. Smart, of Provo. " "', David Gdurley, assistant super-tendent super-tendent of public Instruction, former for-mer Alpine district superintendent, superintend-ent, who has probably got his eyes on the Democratic" nomination nomina-tion for the1 state superintendent's position hi case Chares J. Skid-more, Skid-more, the incumbent, decides to accept retirement ' . , oOo " .' ' In addition to -these state ejf-fioials ejf-fioials whose names will appear on the primary Abllots, there were a host, of county officials and state party dignitarteSj, led .by Stuart P. Dobbs of Ogden, national committeeman com-mitteeman who were introduced 10 aay neiio 10 uio crowd. bOfa The affair turned out to be somewhat of an endurance contest,; starting at 7 o'clock,; It was about midnight, before the official busi ness had be en disposed of and J. w. Tnornton, tne chairman de clared the convention adjourned. The coveted ; prize of the eve ning, the county chairmanship went to Emil K. Nielsen. Provo? school principal and state sena-i (tor who defeated Francis . LundelT mujaioui, vy a eiuiUMiig, mi most three to one vote, 301 to 106. Melba Miller of SpringvUle won out for vice chairman, but it required twoj5allots for her to get the larger territories resent any ( IUCH Mi J UUU UULCi ,L V ill an self-government . Mr. Ickes will probably be heard on this subject too. of Provo. 244 to 132. By the time these ballots had been taken, the convention was in no mood for any more balloting or tiresome nomination speeches , with the result that Dean Terry ' was re-elected secretary by accla mation ana Mime Greenwood named treasurer in the same man ner. . . ' .'?': Five-minute nominating Speech. es seem to be the accepted no . litical practice, but it Would be interesting If a survey could be made to determine If any delegate's dele-gate's mind has 'ever been chang ed by listening to someboays nomination .speech. The iama holds ( for seconding speeches, which ' seem to come under the head of "returning a compliment to a good friend. . At . jg 1 . 1 Si More than Ieeti9 the Eye is just as true in funeral service as in . the development of a beautiful orchid. Years of care are required. Likewise, years of experience were heeded to . develop our funeral serviceJ ' r : BERG MORTUARY t -1 PHONE 378 aMl- ' 7. n t wo 4t H V |