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Show -- SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1939 .Provo, Utah County. Utah . 4 SUNDAY HERALD Two Connecticut Ad Men Face Tough Selling Job In This Campaign to Keep Their Postsi as Governor and Senator Br NEA SERVICE HARTFORD, Conn. (NEA) Benton and Bowles, a couple of y c5?rT ,: one-minu- nd '- -- Aith. kCV high-pressu- re l tire , i.Wa,-tWIty.- There are 46,151,170 dwelling units in the United States. r " ) ex-act- PABLO PAINTS AND "POTTERS" Pablo Picasso, high priest of surrealistic art, modestly averts his eyes as the camera catches him with a few of his new creations showing. At his home in Vallauris, France, the artist has been polishing several new ceramic and pottery styles, as well as finishing new creations titled, "The Man With the Lamb." "The Bull," and "The White Flower." These "objets d'art" are reportedly made of such materials at bicycle handles, shovels and similar items of hardware. or , Six Labor Unions Sign Contract With Kennecott re-soli- Benton is battling a Wall Street broker who has just as many man and just in tricks as an ex-big industrial cities like New as much money. Prescott Bush, Haven and Bridgeport, where the GOP candidate for the remaining populations two years of the U. S. senate term large swing an election. And his vacated by Raymond E. Baldwin, can former Francesca Brag- is making more than 100 tele- wife, the double-featur- e. is She the giotti, vision appearances over Connecti- often four alone, stumps speaking TV cut's only station. five languages; and sometimes, Bush also campaigns in a rack-bod- y or she appears with her hustruck equipped with loud when band at rallies; she puts on a he at and rallies speakers, sings costume and goes into one of the second bass in a barbershop-typ- e she performed in her naquartet. The music is often the dances tive Italy. "Whiffenpoof Song," from Bush's alma mater, Yale; it is also the The prize national post at stake alma mater of Benton and Bowles. Pitted against ex - ad man in Connecticut is the John Davis senate term to which Brien Bowles is Yale- Lodge, currently a representaseeks tive, whose campaign is some- man McMahon's opponent is Yale- prothing of a double-featugram. Democrats like to keep tell- man Joseph E. Talbot, a former ing the voter that Lodge was congressman. "Shirley Temple's leading man," McMahon, top vote - getter but Lodge's acting ability is no among the Democrats, has wrap mean help on the platform. ped himself in the prestige of his He can speak Italian, and does job as chairman of the Joint ad Italo-Americ- '.I II te an six-ye- ar ex-act- SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 4 (U.PJ The Utah Public Service Commission will hear application of the Utah Natural Gas Co., to build a $25,000,000 pipe line from Sam Juan county to Salt Lake City, at a hearing here Dec. 11. The PSC will determine whether pr not to issue a certificate of convenience and necessity authorizing construction of the line'. Attorneys for the company pointed out thatr it will be strictly an intrastate project and no federal approval will be required. , Pr j?t.Cik ng Natural Gas Line Set for Dec. 11 SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 4 fll PI An attractive young woman, clad in a black strapless evening ..... .. ww.-.ipt..- .. .... gown 'Jumped or slipped to her " iliiii.ili.ii J death Friday from a painter's scaffold on the San Francisco-OaklaI..-- . . bav bridcre as four mo torists tried to persuade her to return to the railing. The victim was identified as Patric Byus, 22, Oakland, wife of a sailor and mother of a l v year-ol- d girl. Relatives sne naa been despondent reported for sev eral months. Police out out an alarm uhn a cousin, Julie Jarrett, of Rich mond reported that Me. Bvm xo say sne was naa cauea to commit suicide, sne wasgoing re ported heading toward the bridge euner to crasn ner car or iumn 1 I . ft A v .I . i into the bay," Don Lincoln, 27. of Oakland, who witnessed the leap, said Mrs. Byus parked her car and ran back aoout zuu yaros wnere she climb ed over tne railing to the scaffold. Lincoln said when he rlimhori after her she screamed, "Don't touch me or I'll iumn." A h reached for her. Lincoln saiH ch yened, "Oh my God, I've lost my grip." Then she plunged 60 feet into the bay. HIHII I IIMMIMm .tr--irJ,ffShe was still alive when coast guardsmen pulled her from the BIG SMILES AND HEARTY HANDSHAKES by the four most vigorous Connecticut campaigners. Day, Dut she died a short time William Benton and restaurant visiting Prescott Senate candidates (above) are helicopter-jauntin- g later at Harbor Emergency John Davis Lodge with his political asset Bush. Fighting for the governorship (below) are Francesca Bragiotti, and Chest ter Bowles, visiting a textile mill in Rockville, wife, Italian-bor- n men from the firm of the same name, are back in business again for one of the biggest sales campaigns of their careers. They want to keep their jobs William Benton the one he's had in the U. S. senate for 10 months, Chester Bowles the one he's had as governor for two years. To do it, they are bucking a that has pendulum political election to swung every the Republicans in Connecticut since 1934. At stake is political control of the state for at least the next four years, since the governor's term of office has been doubled. At stake also are Bowles' ambitions for 1952; the New Deal governor has wishful eyes on the next Democratic national convention. In their new political-advertisipartnership, Benton is the huckster. He has been using not one, but two helicopters to stump the state, the first going ahead in the manner of an advance ballyhoo man for a circus. He employs spot radio ads and corner blurbs, comic-stri- p booths in which. pretty girls show Conn. Benton movies. Bowles, by contrast, is a quiet salesman. An unpretentious millionaire who is apt to go around in shoes that need he has just begun to campaign in earnest, invading the small, diehard GOP towns that have helped keep the Republicans in control of the State House of Representa tives since the Civil War. He is a auiet, unemotional speaker, but he has kept his name on the front Daees with controversy since he squeezed into office by 2200 votes while Truman was losing the state by 14,000. Either way It goes Nov. 7, It is sure to be a tight squeeze again. off-ye- ar Application For IWoman Dies After Leap From Bridge Mc-Mah- on or on. re Committee on Atomic Energy. One way he campaigns is through a radio program called "Ask Your Senator," in which he answers telephone questions. Most of them, he says, "center around proDiems or nauonai sur- - j Victor Howell, 55, 1124 E. 8th vivai. was released by Third district .ven if Benton and Bowles go jN., rnnrt inHav whpn a iinvpnile down and it s so close tne ex- charge of contributing to the de perts aren't predicting -- it seems linquency of a minor was dis-pretty sure that McMahon will missd for lack of evidence. Mo survive. tion for dismissal came from County Attorney Arnold Roy lance. Howell was charged with pur SLIGHTLY CRYPTIC chasing a stolen battery from a The juvenile. The complaint charged LAWRENCE, Mass. (UR) cotton division of Pacific Mills that the battery was stolen from bought a print design featuring T. J. Smith, and that the defen two Egyptian vases decorated dant was aware that the battery witn nierogiypnics. ine design .was stolen, was abandoned when the foreman discovered that UDside down, the' "hieroglyphics" were plain Eng- - Ninety per cent of the world's lish. On one vase it said "His", nickel supply is produced by .Canada on the other 'Hers." Juvenile Court Dismisses Charge Ex-Ut- a mm SALT LAKE rtTV W Six labor unions Friday signed " "cw contract witn the Kennecott Copper . Corp., Utah division, according to Rov Hath assistant to the general manager! me new agreements provide a wage increase of 10 cents per hour, three week vantlnn ,n employes with 20 years service and sick leave with oav after on year's service. The unions involved included, Arthur-Macn- a Millmor, i 392 and Open-P- it Miners' Union, uof Doth members of the International Union of Mine, Mill) and Smelter Workers; Local Union No. 3, Operating Engineers ah NimiwJ,.C....- EDWARDS LOAM at Sgt. Chapman graduated from AFB, Muroc. Calif. J. Chapman, son high school in Lehi, Utah, in 1940 Chapman, Weston, has been assigned to Edwards air force base, as a sheet metal worker In the manufacture and repair branch of the base. Ida., International Union of Bingham Operating Engineers; Local 1081 and Magna Local 1438. of Brotherhood International Electrical Workers; and Lodge 568, District 114, International Association of Machinists. The wage increase was retroactive to Oct. 16, and six days of sick leave will be allowed a year. of the M TAYLOR and attended college at Provo, from October, 1946, through December, 1947. He was employed as a general store clerk by John D. Chapman at Weston when he was recalled to active duty, Oct. 12. He arrived here Oct. 18. His wife, Jenevieve Buchanan, is a native of Venice, Utah. They have two sons, Allan D., 2, and Kirk L., 3 months. Sgt. Chapman is a veteran of World War II, having served 10 months in the ETO and 14 months in the CBI. He holds three theater Scovll, mBr. or-rang- es for leans up to Quickly Quietly Courteous! Alpine Finance Co. 722 (Star North State St Orem Power A Liht) ribbons for his war service. 17 k 0537-R- 1 Edith DT'S AIPPUAMCE, p n ,.,,,,,1 call me( for a QUICK CASH County Man Assigned to Air Base TSgt. Harold of John D. - I Dr. Peter Andrews ...class of 1901 "It was the spring of 1901 and I can '.remember the elms of Faculty Row as af sc were yesterday. I remember, too, the sea of upturned faces and the firm hand clasp of kindly, old Dean Hol-listas I stepped out on that sundrenched platform to claim the sheeo- kin that said I, Peter Andrews, was an M.D. . . . entitled to practice medicine. I guess everyone has a right to get a lump in his throat at some time or another:. Mine felt as big as a goose egg. "There's been a lot of water under the bridge since then. I went West, almost two thousand miles from that drowsy, old New England campus that was my Alma Mater. Stepped right into a raw country town at the turn of a century. Met a girl and settled down to raise a family. And I wouldn't change a day or a year of k . . . good times or bad. "But every spring since then I've had a hankering to visit my old school along about commencement time. Never was able to make it though until last year. Seems there was always something happening. One year we even had the train tickets bought. But Ed Heal-fteam ran away with the mower and cut him up badly. By the time Ed was patched up and back on his feet, another class had graduated and Mother and I were planning on another year maybe. Then along came a scarlet fever epidemic. But last year we made it, like I said; Mother never had been East before and I got a great kick out of out places and things. Changed a lot, but notpointing to prepare me for the surprise at seeing myenough Alma -- er a Think Right . . . Mater. The elm trees are gone. Got too old like a lot of us, I guess. And a twelve story steel and concrete building has replaced the little, old medical science building that looked pretty imposing to me as a freshman. "Things were changed inside, too. Laboratories and class rooms stretched a mile. My feet got plenty tired just wandering and looking. Pretty fine equipment, too, enough to make a man wish be were the greenest freshman on the campus again. And I got to thinking that free enterprise had built this great center of learning and lot more like k from one end of the country to the other . . . and trained the thousands of doctors that go out each year, just like free enterprise sent me West in 1901. I didn't need a government directive to tell me where I was needed. I went where I thought there were people who could use a doctor. And I like to think of that old school of mine . . . growing, progressing, making great discoveries in medicine . . . turning out better doctors all the time. I like to think of the great strides that American medicine has made in my lifetime, ' and without any Federal 'help.' I like to think of men working together as brothers in a common cause, yet each man working every day to do a better job than the other fellow. I like even in medicine, and competition, lj that'5 wnF P against socialized v1vfcM medicine. I think that freedom RLH I brings out the best in any institu- tion lke " does in any man." ( so-call-ed ft I 2n CKOSILEY VVe y,r'. fJ I V " o, Or. r RANGES REFRIGERATORS FREEZERS - , frc ALWAYS PLENTY t$ of Kep 'I APPLIANCES ARE HERE Come in and Select Yours Today! Only Crosley Has. the Shelvador! hsv J.m AI f'UrP''onc?'' The Beautiful, New 1951 Socialized Medicine Out of America mm mm mmm immmss IPorEdirug APPLIANCE DEPARTMENT In Our Lot! it |