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Show Wednesday, April 14, democrats NameT Officers for Election Districts of Provo Democratic officers of Provo's 51 political districts were announced an-nounced today by City Democratic Chairman Elmer Terry, following compilation after recent '-district meetings held for reorganization purposes, ; , . ,. , -0,,;-. . '-' I The first four names listed in each ease are the officers, with all Others as members of the district committee, - unless otherwise noted. Officers are listed in ths prder of chairman, vice chairman, secretary and treasurer in each Instance. I District 1 John J. Nusink and Florence Baird. Secretary and treasurer not yet, chosen. Mrs. John J. Nusink, committee mem ber. i 2 Alton B. Giles, '. Minerva Karsen, Norma G. Thomas, Mrs. Joe Loveridge, Alton Groneman, JLyle Waid and Joe Loveridge. TV -"A. Thurman, Vilate Strong, Eva Mildenhall, Mrs. T. At 'Thurman, William Connell, Ofan Groneman and Sarah Cum-Jmings. Cum-Jmings. tl 4 -Frank G. Chambers, Eva Martin, Iva Reynolds, Ruth Rust, .Mrs. Hollis Twelves, Mrs. W. H. Callahan and Mrs. Charles F. Johnson. I ji.3 Not yet organized. lUfri F. E. Breinholt, Mrs. Sarah Passey, F. S. Hedquist, Mrs. Jane Sr'Watkins. Roy Passey. Mrs. Kate Bjerregaard and D. J. An derson. f 1-B. F. Pendleton. Marintha Pendleton. Eloise P. Fillmore, Mary G. Thornton, B. D. Palfrey-man, Palfrey-man, J. W. Thornton and Millie Stewart I a Mark Albert Reynolds, Ca vnilla S. Merrill, Zina P. Dunford, JHazel M. Robertson, Paul J. Mer jlll,. Joseph Sudweeks and Ber nice E. Reynolds. 1 George R. Mayberry,. Mary &TLlston and Mary Startup, the later serving as both secretary and treasurer. f ilO Asael H. Fisher, George S Ballif, Clark S. Knowlton. Dr. J J;-Weight, Mrs. Vasco M. Tanner 0d J. Oscar Garrett. 11 Verner A- Powell, Fannie Zyans, Edith Powell, Myrtle Clay ton Dora wall, Bruce Haws and JEva Wright. ' '12 Emll K. Nielsen, Margaret IT? Aikin, Eva Nielsen, Frank Bennett, Ben-nett, Dwight Billings, Fred Roy- i rr ' TACK AND JUDY IN BIBLELAND MY FRIENP. I WISH TO SPEAK WITH 'WJ&WUwr 'JW r7)J'T DOESN'T LOnr? ' fC"?lAmlJA't1$fcl ' ' rf fit A THOUGH I WAVE j JUST POWN AT THE END OP THIS vy gMi..nnd f r"r" -nu'C--'J? VALC YCXLL FINP A GROUP OF MEN, JlN THAT EVENT, NONE OFxl H Ml PING. TELL THEM THE CARAVAN YOU WILL LEAVE THIS SPOTj If RESTI N6, ANP TO ATTACK AT tAUVI - SUN$ET)7cuppo-E . PF57 you'd better oo n , V(SUPPOSEI REFUSE ; .J1 AS HE SAYS JOSEPH' Y ) TO SAY A WORD TO V? hb satsjceph. jiWL 1 THIEVING , f - MWi feV ! fTOOBADFOR ALL ASSURED HOME OWNERSHIP LOANS! Interest Americas Finest Plan oi Home Financing W of Amount of Loan Allowed toward Closing Costs. ..... $2000 Interest Free, One Year to War Veterans Equitable Life Assurance Society ALBERT KIRKPATRICK (Agent) 125 East 6th North Phone 1257 tm NOW! ANYONE CAN HAVE HOT WATER QUICK! i NEW POCKET-SIZE WATER HEATER COSTS LESS THAN i $2.23 Heats Water Fast " Merely" place a portable FAST-WAY FAST-WAY Water Heater in a recep-, recep-, tacle containing water. Plug in the , 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-I scrubbing-I cleaning cream separators, etc. ' The speed depending on quantity, t CAUTION: Directions for using are. furnished with each hcatei. ! Read and follow. Costs less than $2.23. No fires to build or hot water to carry. No running up Timpanogos Hatchery and Farm Supp'y 532 South University Avenue Phone 61S 1948 DAILY HERALD r 'Districts 13 and 14-Not yet organized. . ' J - 15 Delia Waterlyn, Asael E. Barrett, Afton Crandall, Lavern Barrett, ' Ray Sorensoh, Louis Christenson ; and .. Ole Christiansen.- . ' -'. .. : V 18 . Leonard Leetham, Eva Probert, Pearl Leetham," Elwood Carter, Emma Gay, Kate Mitchell and Beulah Hendrichsen. 17 Nels Hansen, Emma Jensen, Ruth Vincent, no treasurer yet selected, Myrantha Angus, Milton Thomas and Fern Thomas, 18 Claude O. Carter, Ada Giraud, Katherine T. Carter, Vincent Vin-cent Slater. 19 George W. Loveless, Florence Flor-ence Christensen, Almera Hopkins, Hop-kins, Joe P. Gourley, Delia Loy and Myri Dean. 20 George N. Larsen, Mrs Averil Foote, Wilford M. Johnson, Ralph B. Foote, Mrs. Mable Johnson, John-son, Mrs. Anna Mikkelsen and Mrs. Winona Box. 21 Orvil A. Watts, Madeline Thornton, Hazel A. Watts, Wilford E. Thatcher, J. Carl Lewis, Lloyd Thornton and Clarence Huffine. 22 Ray Madsen, Cleo L. Thatcher, Hazel Coleman, Jane B. Evans, Clifton B. Thatcher, Keith T. Coleman and John H. Davies. 23 Not yet organized. '24 Roscoe Kay, Mrs. Hazel Coombs, Mrs. Maud Kay, Mrs. Verna Cloward and Lyda H. Van Leuven. 25 G. E. Sandgren, Nedra Sumner, Cora Booth, Barbara Taylor, G. E. Sandgren, Sylvea ter Clark, Barbara Taylor, Orin Romney and Leland Nielson. 28 John Vloy antes, Ethel Spencer, Clyde J. Fescher, LaReal Mitchell, Emily Tyler, Ray Mur- dock and Rhea Reeves. 27 Rees E. Bench, Ida Knud sen, Casto F. Schultz, Royal Niel son, Milton Nelson, Alfred Swen- son and Louis Bandley. 28 To be organized Monday night at the home of LeRoy Tuckett, 233 North Ninth West, 7:30 p. m. 29 Not yet organized. 30 Bee H. Eggertsen, Herbert Christensen, Harry Blackwell (both secretary arid treasurer). Lillian Christensen, Armanell Larsen and Armand Eggertsen. 31 Reed Brown, Mrs. Reed Buckner, Mrs. Eunice Young, Jay smith' and Henry A. Maag. I HEARD YOU SAY YOU ARE GOING TO FINP YOUR BROTHERS. NOW, IF YOU WANT TO GET THERE SAFELY YOU'LL DO A LITTLE ERRAND POR ME and down basement stairs. No heating tanks full when a few gallons or a quart is wanted. Handy! Portable! Inexpensive. itera 1 rA. " t:tvC Provo, Utah U -.i.iv Wtrf .Blv'-v !? i i i i - l.r T' 'v '.v f l,,"LT " "if-- f Closeup of one corner of Ayers Houghtelling's story-paintinr of "Alice In Wonderland" shows his "book-on-canvas" technique. BY NEA SERVICE NEW YORK (NEA) Ira Levin, 45, gave up a prosperous oil business busi-ness to teach his children to en-Joy en-Joy classics like "Gulliver's Travels" Trav-els" and "Treasure Island." Now he's right back in the oil business again oil paints this time. Levin discovered that his children, chil-dren, David and Gloria, were more interested in today's blood and thunder than in reading. They wanted something excitins and book type was dull to them. Levin decided that if they could visualize the stories of Gulliver Gul-liver and others, they'd find the reading just as exciting. About the same time he remembered the job California artist Ayres Houghtelllng had done in painting paint-ing an oil company's dull annual Missing Nightclub House Maid; Gives HOLLYWOOD, April 14 (U.R) Maria Gatica, $1500 a week Chilean Chil-ean .nightclub singer said today she' had solved her problems while she washed dishes at $50 a month. Miss Gatica, torn by the dilemma dilem-ma of a career and a coming baby, disappeared without warning Friday. Fri-day. Her husband found her last night working as a house maid. The 27-year-old Chilean beauty thereupon gave notice both to the Hollywood housewife who em ployed her and to the swanky Mocambo nightclub where she recently re-cently opened an engagement. During her four days doing housework, she said, she had decided de-cided to give up her career for the child. "I will remain here for the rest of the week until the woman who hired me can get someone else,"' she said. "She was so nice to mo snd turned down two other girls for the job. "Then I will come home, but i won't go bak to the nightclub. I am giving up my career." Miss Gatica's husband, Advertising Adver-tising Executive Curtis E. Fell, was calling everybody who had Kentucky! fflSffilf NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION. NEW YORK. N. Y. KENTUCKY WHISKEY A BLEND S PROOF 65 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPtRITt Children Get I he Dooicm One Picture fin 7J V- report so that even the stock holders enjoyed it. He discovered that Houghtell ing felt the same way about the classics. Houghtelllng already had painted the story of "Alice in Wonderland" for his own children. Levin bought the picture and tried it on his youngsters. It worked so well he decided to get back in business printing picture stories of the classics. So far more than S000 copies of that first picture-story have been sold and Houghtelling is hard at work on "Treasure Island and "The Life of Christ." When he finishes these, Levin has commissioned him to do "Gulliver's Travels" and "Robinson "Robin-son Crusoe." In all he has some 20 children's stories planned. He is even considering the idea Of getting Picasso to try one. Singer Turns Up As Up Career for Baby advertised for a housekeeper when his wife called him. She explained' ex-plained' she had seen newspaper stories of her disappearance and was sorry she caused "so much trouble." "I just wanted to get away from my career'and all its problems for a while," she said. TEACHERS TO LEARN DRIVING NEW PALTZ, N. Y. (U.f) A driver education program for high school teachers opens at New Paltz State Teachers college April 19. The week-long training program pro-gram will be sponsored by thi? college and the Automobile Club of New York to train teachers to conduct driving courses tn their high schools. Under New Management CENTRE BARBER SHOP 274 W. Center Three Experienced Barbers To Serve You .Formerly The Lewis Shop , ,1 . iff jTW., Woman Kills Four Children; Ends Own Life PITTSBURGH, April 14 (U.PJ A 32-year-old mother, who learned learn-ed to shoot a revolver when she was a member of her college pis tol team, 1 fatally shot her four children and then committed suicide, sui-cide, , homicide detectives reported re-ported Tuesday, i Mrs. Gilbert E. Morcroft, wife of a Pittsburgh board of education educa-tion solicitor, killed her four children as they slept In their suburban Bellevue home shortly before midnight. Then, sitting on the edge of her bed, she turned the .38 caliber revolver to her head and fired a fifth shot. She died Instantly. Morcroft, who had been to a business meeting, returned home early today and went into the room where Susan, 8, sleeping. sleep-ing. He said he picked her up and didn't know anything was wrong until he felt blood running down his arm. Then he ran through the house and found the other children, Nancy, 8 months; Douglas, 3, and Gilbert, Jr., 12, also had been shot. Gilbert's body was found on the same bed as his mother. Morcroft told detectives that his wife, was a member of the Carnegie Tech pistol team when she attended the school. He said she had won several trophies for her marksmanship. Morcroft said his wife was "in perfectly fine spirits" when he left the house to go to the busi ness meeting. He said, however, that she had been under a physician's physi-cian's care for melancholia since the birth of their fourth child 8 months ago. - IDAHO MAN KILLED IN HEAD-ON CRASH HAZELTON, Ida., April 14 (U.R) Henry Steinmetz, Eden, was held on an open charge pending an investigation into the automo bile death yesterday of' Arthur Johnson, 70, Hazelton. Johnson was killed instantly and Gordon Newbry, 48, Hazel-ton, Hazel-ton, was seriously injured when cars driven by Newbry and Steinmetz Stein-metz crashed head-on at the Greenwood bridge five miles eat of here, Jerome County Sheriff Galen Hall reported. iid re Rtiss Halt Traffic 4 ' Passengers look out of windows of U. 8. train halted by Russians at Marlenborn. Germany, checkpoint in blockade which cut the German capital off from western allies. American officer in charge of the train refused to allow Soviet troops aboard. FAVORED INITIALS "H.L. BEATRICE (U.R) Mrs. Lydia Ann Divine was, consistent in giving giv-ing initials to her four children. A final decree in her estate pro bated In county court here showed all four heirs have the same initials, H. L. Hazel L. Reiff, Helen L. Moltzen, Hettie L Hostetler and H. L. Devine. In 1828, what is now the bus! ness center of Chicago was fenced in as a pasture. Let Us Replace Your Cracked Or Broken Auto Glass SPECIALIZED GLASS SERVICE AHLANDER'S 490 South University Avenue PHONE 100 PROFITS Takes Jobs don't just grow. Jobs are made. For when you're talking about jobs, you're "talking about the equipment, machinery, ma-chinery, buildings and materials that fit together to make a job. The cost averages aver-ages about $6,400 per job. "And that's where the pinch comes! Like every other dollar, the profit dollar dol-lar has taken a licking. Its purchasing power ... the "real profit" ... has been seriously reduced. AMERICAN IRON AND STEEL INSTITUTE 350 Fifth Avenue, New York 1N.Y. Thtrw rt St MtMMr fmpmmt U InttUut tttfft pkmlt t it American rowmmUliM. flkcy prWiK frcmt IM CMlrjr' ttttL to Berlin n 4,. (NEA Radio.TeUphot0) FACTORY COOPERATION 21.20 CLUB ALUMINUM included with every Monarch purchased during this sale The Best in Gas, Coal or Electric Cooking Exclusively at JJD to prof ec? When a steel company Bets out today to buy a coke oven, this year's profit dollar buys only 40 cents worth of oven compared with 1938. Steel profits on sales averaged 6.3 cents on the dollar last year. Steel profits on investment averaged 9.4 cents on the dollar last year. ' Steel profits are dangerously low meas-ured meas-ured against the cost of the things that create new. jobs and support old ones. Weight to Hedcf Chicago U Drive Dr. Jesse J. Weiaht of Provo, im 1 1 eartrp ns ini'B i rnai rmH t vs. the University of CMcago Aiurom Foundation campaign for fund J this year, a recent report from toe university aid. . ' , ; 'l i',-.',. A medical doctor graduate t the class of 1932, Dr. Weight : i sity to lead the national drive which is expected to reach a gift of $350,000 this year. , , , , UTAH CHERISHES ITS ART PROVO (U.R) The largest col lection of Utah art known , has been assembled by Brigham Young university in Provo. Prof. B. F. Larsen, chairman of the art department, reported that the collection now Includes more than 800 originals and- 300 full size prints of paintings on Utah subjects sub-jects or by Utah artists. LISTEN Every Wed. Nit Te - "Yours For the Asking" Over KOVO 7:30 to Sponsored By Intermduntain Heataif and Appliance Range Sale jobs i i i i |