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Show County's Delegates to GOP State Convention Announced Utah county delegates to the coming state Republican vention were announced today by County GOP Chairman Phillip V. Christenson, ' The delegates, 109 of them, were selected at the recent county organizing convention, but final compilation of the names by districts dis-tricts was not available until today. to-day. . The list of delegates 'follows: ' Provo (Each delegate is listed In the order of his district, with the first name serving district dis-trict No. 1, on through to the last one for district No. 31) J. V. Bushman, Hugo. Price, Mrs. Mitchell Carter, H. J. Corleis-sen. Corleis-sen. Reed J. Knudsen, Lyle Bell, Rulon Morgan, Daniel M. Keeler, con- Clark PeeGee M-Men and Gleaner Groups Honor Officers PLEASANT GROVE The Timpanogos stake M-Men and Gleaners honored their outgoing officers and introduced the new officers for 1948-49, at a banquet held Friday evening. Outgoing officers are: M-Men, Jim Mcfarlane, president; Steve Warnick, vice president Gleaners: Glean-ers: Hanna Beth Matthews, president; presi-dent; Beverly Monson, vice president; presi-dent; Doris Peay, secretary, f New officers include: Thlel Anderson, president; Jane Brown, vice president; Lois Frampton, secretary for the Gleaners. Glade Walker, president; Johnny Swen-aon, Swen-aon, vice presldet; Max Macfar-Jane, Macfar-Jane, secretary for the M-Men. Under the direction of Lindon, Second and Manila wards and Hanna Beth Monson as mistress of ceremonies, a half hour program pro-gram was presented for the couples who attended. Heber Garden Club Hears 3 Speakers HEBER The Heber Garden club met recently when a good crowd heard Reed Nuttall speak on the care and culture of gladiolus gladio-lus plants. Mrs. Nellie DeGraff discussed the care and planting, types and colors of roses, explaining how to protect them through the long, cold winters. M. B. Wallace, state president of Utah Garden clubs, talked on plant diseases and garden pest control, soil and the cultivation of gladiolus. Mrs. Ina Mangum, president of the local club, conducted con-ducted the meeting. Sherman Christenson, Joseph C. . George E. Collard, Ralph Morgan. Mrs. A. D. Clark. Sher man Wing,' John McAdam, R. B. Masterson, vilate Vincent, wen-dell wen-dell Saxey, Carl Knudsen, Sterling Ster-ling Peay, Wilford Hall, Ashton Fielding, Dean Anderson, Luke Clegg, I. E. Brockbank, Fred Markham, Maurice Harding, tl. J, Butler, Phillip V. Christenson, Clarence Harmon and wiuard 01 sen. Additional delegates from Provo, W. R. Butler, district No 4; R. W. Candland, 5; Dave Rob ertson, 10; Mrs. Ralph Morgan, 12; George Worthen, 25, and Lloyd Whitlock, 30. Lehi, Cedar Valley and Fairfield Fair-field Verda Peterson, Lucille Ingram, In-gram, Susan Jameson, Charlotte Lewis, R. Ward Webb, Orval stone, Carl Webb and jonn Broadbent. all of LehL American Fork, Alpine and Highland Bemell Singleton, Mrs. D. W. Jones, T. J. Turner, Norman Wing, Rintha Christen- sen, Clinton Mikkleson, Jesse M Walker, O. DeVere Wootton, Karl Bennett, Mark Coddington, Dud ley Thomas and Henry Chipman, all of American Fork. Pleasant Grove and Lindon- Don Mack Dalton, Mrs. Sytha Johnson. Lynn I. Johnson and M S. Christlanson, all of Pleasant Grove, and Joseph Wadley, Lin don. Orem, Lake View, Pleasant View and Vineyard R. Kent Fileding, Merle, Jacobs, B. M, Jolley, George Stratton. Mrs. Ethel Pyne, A. H. Christenson, Lloyd Pyne and M. E. Kartchner, all of Orem; August Johnson, Lake View; Taylor Allen. Vine' yard, and Mary B. Davis and Sterling Cluff of Pleasant View. Springville and Mapleton Or val Bird. Margaret Conover. Ster ling Price, Vera Perham, Charles Boyer, A. O. Thorn, Blaine Thorpe, Grant Thorn and L. H. Bjarnson, all of Springville, and Mr. and Mrs. Chris Sorenson, Mapleton. Spanish Fork, Salem, Palmyra and Benjamin Mrs. B. Davis Evans, Gilbert A. Johnson, John E. Booth, David H. Jones, Jack H. awenson, John F. Pinegar, Joseph Jo-seph E. Nelson. LeGrande F Smith, Phyllis Smith, Ray Davis and Thomas M. Herbert, all of Spanish Fork; Thomas' M. And erson, Lake Shore, and Earl Lud low, Benjamin. Payson, Dividend Elberta and Santaquin Joseph Jewett, Gen-ola; Gen-ola; Russel Nelson, Goshen; Henry Hen-ry Jeppson, Frank Thomas, Ralph Chappel, Lewis A. Bates, Floyd Harmer, Melvin Wilson and George A. Cheever, all of Payson, and A. A. Borgeson and Hyrum R. Kay, both of Santaquin. Burgener To Be New Bishop Of Vermont Ward OREM J. Reed Burgener has been sustained as' the new bishop of the Vermont LDS ward of the Orem stake of Zion in a reorganization reorgan-ization effected Sunday night under the direction of President Walter R. Holdaway. Sustained as counselors to Bishop Burgener were Ephraim Twitchell . and Lloyd Louder. Retained, as ward clerk was Edgar Calder with John Duncan, assistant. Honorably released with a vote of thanks for their services were Bishop Archibald Pullam and his counselors Curtis Gordon and William C. Kocherhans. All other ward officers were retained as at present constituted. The reorganization meeting was attended by a capacity audience Present in addition to President Holdaway were his counselors, E. Carlyle Bunker and M. Dover Hunt, the stake clerk; La Var Kocherhans Ko-cherhans and the following mem bers of the stake high council: Stanley B. Harris, Thorval E. Rig- by. Clyde Pullam. William M Vernon, Marvin Stratton, Elden Swenson and Grover Miller. See It Work . . . Compare Its Quality! You'll Want a Sears KENMORE AUTOMATIC WASHER SAVES SUDS AND HOT WATER LOAD IT, SET IT, FORGET IT! SEARS ROEBUCK & CO.-187 W. Center Juab Recorder's Office Gets New Photo Equipment NEPHI Florence C. Cook, Juab county recorder and her assistant, Clarice Kendall, have been trying out the new Dexigraph machine in their office. The Dexigraph has just been installed under the direction di-rection of W. I. Richards of Salt Lake, and Leonard James from Provo. This machine makes photographic photo-graphic copies of deeds, mortgages, mort-gages, and other papers filed in. the office. It saves much time and labor necessary when these records have to be duplicated by typing. Special loose-leaf binders are used to file the photographic copies in. The ladies are very proud of this efficient addition to the office which will help them to do the work with greater speed and accuracy. Lehi Guardian Unit Sets Honor Night LEHI Lehi stake Beehive Guardian groups will hold their annual banquet and honor night program In the Lehi stake taber Inacle tonight under direction of (Mrs. Edith Haws, stake Beekeep er. The Guardian girls and their mothers will be guests at a banquet ban-quet at 7 p.m. to be followed by a program and one act play. Graduating Guardians will be awarded certificates and honor Bees will receive special honors. HOW! ANYONE CAN HAVE HOT WATER QUICK! RACING LEGISLATION SOUGHT IN UTAH SALT LAKE CITY, April 13 CU.R) Trl-State Racing association today pledged its membership of horse enthusiasts and breeders to attain permissive racing legisla tion in Utah, Idaho and Colorado. i The group was formed yester day with S. V. Lund of Salt Lake City as president. Frank Dekay of Blackioot, Ida., was elected as sociation secretary. NEW POCKET-SIZE WATER HEATER COSTS LESS THAN 92.25 Heats Water Fast Merely place a portable FAST-WAY FAST-WAY Water Heater in a receptacle recep-tacle containing water. Plug in tha nearest socket. Lo and behold! Th FAST-WAY goes to work at once, heating water like sixty for 101 purposes a sufficient quantity for bathing, washing, scrubbing, cleaning cream separators, etc. The speed depending on quantity. CAUTION: Directions for using are furnished with each heater. Read and follow. Costs less than $2.25. No fires to build or hot water to carry. No running up and down basement stairs. No heating tanks full when a few gallons or a quart is wanted. Handy! Portable! Inexpensive. Timpanogos Hatchery and Farm Supply 532 South University Avenue Bcrnett Seeks Republican Nomination As State Superintendent of Schools ')?.' OWEN L. BARNETT Central Utah News Briefs Elder and Mrs. Don McCall have left for their home in Mesa, Ariz, where -they are active in the LDS mission. They have been guests in Provo of Mr, and Mrs. Farrell Liljenquist and Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Whatcott. Elder McCall Mc-Call was a missionary companion compan-ion to Max Liljenquist. Mrs. Ray Berry of Provo is re covering at Utah Valley hospital after surgery performed Thurs day. Mrs. Vilate Strong has return ed to her home in Provo after spending the past three months in Portland, Ore. Mrs. Strong went to Oregon to be witn ner son. r rea, wno is connnea to a nos-pital nos-pital there. He was injured in an automobile accident five months ago and expects to remain in the hospital several . weeks longer. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Eichelberger and son, Lonie James, have returned re-turned from a week's vacation in California. Mrs. Joe Bullock and Mrs. Bob Bullock of Provo are expected home this week from California, where they have been visiting relatives and friends in and around San Francisco. Mrs. Alice Bradley has returned return-ed to her home in Salt Lake City after being at the home of a daughter, Mrs. William Berry in Provo for the past three months. Mrs. Bradley has been convalescing convalesc-ing from an operation performed several months ago. The Herald invites items for this column. If you have news of visitors, former residents or trips, please phone 432. Permanent, $4.95 up. Ander-berg Ander-berg Beauty Shop. Phone 689. (adv.) Want to buy or sell a home? Call J. Edwin STEIN Company. 456. (adv.) a Announcements, Invitations and printing of all kinds. Herald Printing Co. Phone 285 for a representative.: rep-resentative.: adv. SPANISH FORK At the request of friends and associates in the field of education, Superintendent Super-intendent Owen L. Barnett of the Nebo school district announces an-nounces that he will seek the nomination for the position of state superintendent of public instruction in-struction on the Republican ticket. Superintendent Barnett Is widely known throughout the state for his interest in education, educa-tion, having been actively en gaged in public school work for more than twenty-five years. He is now completing his 13th year as superintendent of Nebo dis trict schools. Prior to his present position he served for eight years as superintendent of schools of Juab school district. Mr. Barnett is a native of Utah county. He was born at Payson and received his public school education in that community. He received his B. S. and M. S. de grees from the Brigham Young university and has attended Stanford university and the Uni versity of , Southern California, and has completed all academic work required for his doctorate. He has taught in the element ary, Junior and senior high schools in a number of the dis tricts in the state and served as principal of elementary and secondary sec-ondary schools. He has also been a member of the teaching staff afj the BYU. summer session and during the regular school term. He has been a member of a number of state committees working for better school conditions condi-tions both for students and teachers, teach-ers, assisting in the passing of important taxation and revenue legislation for the schools of the state. Mr. Barnett is active in civic and community affairs, being a member of the Kiwanis club and an ardent worker in the L. D. S. church. Phone 613 Provo, Utah For Clean Convenient Comfort Install GAS HEAT now few points of superiority of the Fraser Air Conditioning Furnace are: Goodlooking Built to Last Safe Clean Economic Folly Aato. A FURNACE FOR EVERY NEED Lt oar hasting tBftneer fctlp yon with your heating problem! and tiv yon an itimat with oat obligation to bay. Gat Elietru V Water Heaters All Sizes Down Payment Three Years to Pay Defendant Jailed For Stealing From Former Wife Bertram C. Davis, about 40, Spanish Fork, was in the Utah county jail today serving out a 30-day sentence on charges of stealing from and beating his former wife. Davis pleaded guilty in city court Saturday to a complaint of petty larceny which charged him with stealing $40 from his ex- wife. He received 45 days in jail, with 35 suspended. The action al-, so brought a revocation of a previous pre-vious probation given him on a charge of battery involving his former wife. City Judge W. Dean Loose ordered that he serve the 20 days suspended on the battery charge, plus the 10 for the petty larceny count. Statistics MARRIAGE LICENSES Blaine L. Barker, 20, Springville, Spring-ville, and Mary Lou Doane, 19, Rupert, Ida. Keith Whitely Gordon, 22, Spanish .Fork, and Beth Francis, 20, Spanish Fork. Orval Dallin, 21, Springville, and Peggy Lundell, 19, Springville. Spring-ville. Eldred Bunting, 22, Bountiful, and Ros Lynn Westover, 19, Provo. William C. Hansen, 23, Spanish Span-ish Fork, and Norma Nell Straw, 22, Springville. Don Leon Hopkins, 19, Provo, and La Vern Ivie, 17, Provo. BORN At Utah Valley hospital: Boy, today, to L. Kenneth and Melba Kirkham Laws. Girl, today, to Duane D. and Adelphia Miller Barrett. BUILDING PERMITS Milton G. Johnson, 348 North Eighth East, garage, $800. W. S. Black. 386 North Seventh East, garage, $800. R. L. Bird Co., sign board, $200. Ted Maag. Cartervile, garage, and barn, $900. Willis H. Pueblo, 1184 West First North, dwelling. $2,000. Marvin Harward, RFD No. 1, Box 545, garage. $1,000. Ray Mathews. 230 North 11th East, garage, $700. Cliff Anderson. 429 South Fourth West, addition, $8,000. Cliff Anderson, 851 South Fourth West, addition, $4,000. Richard H. Carter, Box 121-A. addition, $1,000. George W. Tucker, 336 East Sixth North, addition, $5,000. Orvil A. Croft, 331 West Third South, dwelling, $5,000. John Memering, 851 South Fifth West, addition, $3,500. Marion J. Brady. 534 East First South, addition, $650. ' Harold E. Larsen, 790 Timp ,Way, dwelling, $6,000. AFL Political Committee Plans Meetings Organizational meetings, sponsored spon-sored by the AFL political and educational committee of Utah county, will be held in various towns of the county in the near future as part of a plan to estab lish a permanent labor political unit, C. R. Van Winkle, secretary secre-tary of the committee reported today. Mr. Van Winkle said it is planned to set up an organization using the precinct and district system. He said the plan is tied in with a program being carried out by the national and state AFL organizations. "We'll get these meetings roll ing just as soon as we can," he said. The purpose of the organiza tion will be to inform the workers work-ers and the public, in general, of labor s views on political issues. Lehi to Present Drama Wednesday LEHI The three-act comedy, "Don't Take My Penny," will be presented by the Lehi high school dramatic club Wednesday in the high school auditorium under direction di-rection of Dan Peterson, dramatic arts teacher. Leads will be taken by Phyllis Fox and Robert Allred, assisted by Charles Johnson, Nadine Jones, Hal Holmstead, Joyce Singleton, LaDean Prior, Joan Evans, Lee Godfrey, Merle Evans, Richard Evans, Joyce Southwick, Carol Scdarstrom, Shirley Fowler, Fow-ler, Vonnetta Goodwin, Jeanine Hutchings and Elaine Adamson. Student directors will be Ida Gray and Ann Storey. Ned Wilson Wil-son and Wayman Winslow are stage managers. DAILY HERALD Tuesday, April 13, 1948 A. F. Sets Up '48 Recreation K Program, Hawkins New Chief AMERICAN FORK Gordon I Hawkins, student body president of the BYU, was named full-time director of the community recrea-1 tion program Monday night. The appointment was made, and a full- time program was adpoted by the city recreation committee of which City Councilman Melvin E. Dunkley is general chairman. It is estimated that the program will cost in the neighborhood of $12,000. Of this amount $4000 wiU be raised jointly by the city and the Alpine school district. Another An-other $4000 is expected to be raised rais-ed through gate receipts and the balance is to come from sale of family tickets. A special comtrlittee was named to organize a ticket sale campaign consisting of Mayor David L. Greenwood, chairman? George Jones, president of the chamber of commerce and representative of Rotary club: G. Easton Brown, president-elect of the junior chamber of commerce; Mrs. Ora H. Chipman, representing the Alpine Al-pine stake MIA, and A. Grant, Lions club. It la planned that family tickets, a minimum of 400 of which are to be sold, will be issued at $10 each entitling all members of the family to admittance to a wide year-aronnd year-aronnd program of events. The campaign for ticket sales will be organized at a meeting of the committee Wednesday night at the city hall. The program of events will in clude all home games of the Cen tral Utah baseball league, most of them to beaplayed at night; three night high school football games six or more commercial basketball league games; summer aoftbaH games and ' tournament; tennis , tournament; horseshoe tournament; tourna-ment; swimming; dancing; handi crafts; music; skiing; ice skating,. and etc. In addition to the athletic events a aeries of community days have been planned to include Town Birthday, Timpanogos Cave day, Community outing, summer outside dramatics, etc. tee's choice of the seven applicant for the position. He will supervise super-vise the over-all program and will ' be assisted by Leo B. Nelson ol the American Fork high schdbl athletic department and a lady di. rector and a handicraft director. K. J. Bird of the high school mu sic department, will direct th i i .i..jd.. Mr. Hawkins Is a native ef American Fork, a graduate of ' the high school here and thla" spring la to graduate from"" college. The new full-time program. of recreation will set under war with the opening of the Central Utah baseball league in ' May. A contract has been let to the Ub- rigm r.iectnc wo. oi mis cny io increase the lighting of the city hall nark to nermit nisht base ball and football as well as soft- M.. J Jill . I ' baa games, inis aaaiuonai improvement im-provement will cost an estimated $4000. IMMUNIZATION CLINIC PLANNED WEDNESDAY The regular immunization clinic sponsored by the city schools and state health department depart-ment will be held Wednesday at Provo high school, 8:30 10:30 a. m. CANCER DETECTION CLINIC WEDNESDAY The regular cancer detection clinic will be held Wednesday at 9 a. m. at Utah Valley hospital for all persons who registered for the clinic on the last registration day. COLOR MOVIES.... ADVENTfjRE ON THE COLORADO Winner of " the International Percy Maxim Memorial Award for 1947. A movie record of a boat trip down the Colora4o River. See the thrilling boat ride thru the rapids of Cataract t Canyon, a treacherous stretch of the Colorado which ; has claimed 29 lives. See The Land of Standing Rocks, Hole in the Rock, Rainbow Bridge, Ancient Cliff Ruini and the Crossing of the Fathers. ' CALL OF THE CANYONS A prize winning film on the spectacular scenic beauty of the Southern Parks and Grand Canyon. Al Morton, FACL, Producer of Salt Lake City will narrate in person. JOSEPH SMITH AUDITORIUM 7:30 P.M. WEDNESDAY April 14 Sponsored by Audio-Visual Aids Department Brigham Young University General Admission 75c Students 50c tax Included MEN'S SUIT PRICES TO RAISE NEXT FALL NEW YORK, April 13 (U.R Men's suits will cost from $1 to $3 more next fall, clothing manufacturers manu-facturers said today. They said prices of overcoats and boys' clothing would probably remain unchanged due to buyers resistance. resist-ance. The manufacturers met here for the trade openings in fall clothing lines. S) v4 Md by Hiram Walker it Soa Inc., Peons, III 86 proof. Blended whiskey. The straight whiskies in this product are 4 years or more old. 30V straight whiskey. 70 grain neutral spirits. 91.4 tO bQ CXCICt! When purchasers of Imperial were questioned in a nation-wide survey, 91.476 proved to be repeat purchasers. Yes, nine out of ten say Imperial again ! 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