OCR Text |
Show PAGET TWO PROVO "(UTAHV DAILY ftERALD. WEDNESDAY, TONE- '4. 1941 British Roll Into Ethiopian Capital After Forced March bull J ' 'KJ-W rr - . .1 - V V l ft - i I .it. rrumi roll and pipes skirl as soldiers of a Transvaal regiment march into Addis Ababa. The British troops atered the SthUplan capital alter advancing 1800 miles in less man two montns. , : : s : 1 : EDGEMONT MRS. EVA GILLESPIE Be$bter FhoM 040-J-2 Mrs. Elmer Meldrum and Mrs. Will Hull and children spent Monday Mon-day at Peoa,awith Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Marchant and family. Mrs. Nellie Hull accompanied them home, after spending several days at Peoa with her daughter, Mrs. Marchant. ,Hr. and Mrs. Wilford Boren and children of Salt Lake spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Marriott!. The group visited the burial parks at Provo, Salt Lake and Wallsburg on Memorial day. Miss Melba Schoney entertained at a? shower honoring Miss Wflma Wiscombe, a bride of the -week, at her home Monday evening. Lovely roses and peonies were used in decoration. A bride's book was made by the group and refreshments refresh-ments served to Mrs. Wilford Btubbs, Mrs. May Wiscombe, Mrs. W. F. Wiscombe, Mrs. Loleta Dixon, Dix-on, Mrs. Myre Reeve, Mrs. Amy Taylor, Mrs. Merne Schoney, Mrs. Lorna Mecham Watkins, Mrs. Olive Gillespie, Miss Eldora Carter, Car-ter, Ruby Davis, Leona Davis, Donna Stubbs, Lois Dixon, Dorothy Dor-othy Taylor, Edythe Trotter, Ruth , Elliott and Mrs. Beth Lar-sen, Lar-sen, the honor guest and hostess. Lovely gifts were showered on Miss Wiscombe. Miss Leona Davis has returned to American Fork, where she Is employed, after spending the past week here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Davis. 'ANY RAGS, ANY BOTTLES ANY BONES TODAY?' IS NOW A CANADIAN WAR SLOGAN VINEYARD MBS. GEORGE F. WELLS Reporter Phon 01-R-4 Mrs. Harry Orvin entertained at a family dinner Sunday at her home. Guests were her mother Mrs. Mary Bunnell, Mr. and Mrs. Payne Holms and children of Provo, Mr. and Mrs. Berne Fau-cett, Fau-cett, Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Olson and daughter Jacqueline of Elko, Nevada, and their immediate family. The Happy Stitchers club met with their club leader, Miss Vt-rna Harding, Tuesday evening at her home. Dorothy Goode was elected president; Uilda Wells, vice president; Donna. Whitely, secretary; Mary Lou Harding, song leader and Elaine Shumway, reporter. The summer's work was outlined and refreshments served. Mrs: S. H. Blake, Mrs. Milton L. Holdaway and Mrs. George F. Wells visited Tuesday with Mrs. Rex Blake and infant son in the American Fork : hosiptal. Junior Carson of Lehi visited here Monday with his sister Mrs. E. Carlyle Bunker. Elder Carson returned last week from the west-states west-states mission. Friends and relatives of Lawrence Law-rence Goode of .Provo, a former Vineyard resident, will be glad to learn that he is slowly improving following a major op- oanaas? , mm If you need $2$ to" $2 50 "or inbre, come to rVnorwrf Co-cinert- ee seldom required here and no one is notified. -Come in or write Tnr FREK . Fr Pmonl Ltan see THB ', FINANCE CO. r- Room--JOT ;V. It Sast Cntr St. rru Pfcon Z1 '.Provo. Utah folia c;tiMrifr., oo By JAMES MONTAGNES MICA Service Correspondent TORONTO, June 4 With a fanfare of posters and advertising of all kinds, Canada has started a national salvage collection campaign cam-paign to gather waste of every sort metals, rags, bones and papers pa-pers for use in the making of the tools of war. Canadians are learning that household bones, whether cooked or chewed on by the dog, can be used to make glue for airplanes, to make glycerine for explosives. It Is pointed out that if every householder gave two ounces of tones weekly, Canada could annually annu-ally salvage 10,000,000 pounds of bones. Last year Canada had to import rags to the value -of $3,800,000. This year it is hoped that the salvage sal-vage campaign will bring enough graded woolen waste, wiping rags and other materials to cut the Imports Im-ports to a minimum. Canadians are advised that there are 20 kinds of rags recognized by salvage sal-vage dealers, that rags should be sorted into three groups, those containing con-taining woolens, containing white eration performed at the Utah Valley hospital recently. Mr. and Mrs. Rex Davis and children of Salt Lake spent Sun day here with relatives. cotton, and a group containing colored cottons, silks and other materials. All Kinds of Refufte Useful One ton of scrap metal contains con-tains sufficient metal to make 150 shell cases for 18-nounder runs. And so Canadians are being urged to ransack their homes, gardens, shops, farms for discarded metal objects of all kinds, rusty or bright. Aluminum, silver paper, tin foil, tooth paste containers, brass ends of light bulbs all these are useful. Paper and cardboard containers, contain-ers, old newspapers, clean magazines, maga-zines, old envelopes, paper of .all Rinds except cellophane, grease proof, tarred or carbon papers are wanted to make containers for food, rifle cases, cases for shells, to provide reading material for the armed services. One old envelope will make a cartridge waa, uanaaians are told. The salvage campaign has been arranged as a national effort un der the electoral districts, with members of the federal parliament m cnarge or uieir own constitu encies. Egyptian Premier Resigns Position CAIRO, June 4 c.E) Premier Hussein Sirry Pasha tonight tendered his resignation to King Farouk. " It was expected the king would ask Sirry to form a new government govern-ment after reshuffle, of cabinet positions. It was reported the Saadist party which up to the present has not supported the government would now join up. The Saadists had disagreed with Sirry's foreign for-eign policy.. 22 MIXERS HURT IS COAL BLAST. BIRMINGHAM, Ala., June 4 C-P At least 22 miners were injured in-jured late today in what was de scribed as "apparently a gas ex plosion;' in . the Docena mine .of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Rail-road company near Adamsville. Army Divisions 'Battle' to Draw HUNTER LIGGETT MILITARY RESERVATION, JOLOPf. Cal., June 4 OLE) Umpires . of war games between the 3d and 41st army divisions met with Maj. Gen. . Kenyon A. Joyce, 9th corps commander today to discuss mis taxes and technique of maneuv ers completed yesterday when the two teams deadlocked in a pitched "battle." - .. - :v. 1 "If this war had been a prizefight, prize-fight, it Would have been called a drawV the umpire said. "The men displayed a firceness and speed In attack that might very well have resulted - In more than Just war games.t Reserves of the 41st and Sd division, di-vision, ' both. - from Fort- Lewis, Wash.," took -part in the battle before the, maneuvers ended. The two divisions resume the games tomorrow. - . . Children -are - able to remember their dreams more vividly . than adults. Art CenteTo Open Term June 11 ..- , . , ? . " , ' SALT , LAKE CITY, June 4 HE- Summer session of the . Art Center School program will open for registration June 11, and will be divided in two terms for the convenience of , those . wishing to take courses which win not interfere inter-fere with, their regular summer vacation period. ' 4 ,The first, term will extend from June 11th and July 26th, the second sec-ond from July 2Sth, to September 6th, according to Art Center authorities auth-orities who further state the summer sum-mer .. school program has . . been greatly expanded this year to include in-clude a greater number of courses for children and a return ,to .the roster of several adult classes, for the first . time since last summer. 4 i Nearly all the fish In Navajo Lake, .Utah,: were killed when the lake froze almost completely several winters ago, FDR Sdys. Nazis Threaten These Atlantic Islands 5 , ZZ&fS - " . ry -. "T i l , ..mmmim.L ..-:..Ex Ik. X v. mm liiir-i-i-i 1 innMimrdn 0fi Tjil uuuuup r 5 r, Pictures show views of The Azores, left, and Cape Verde Islands, right, which FDR' declared) in-historic in-historic "unlimited emergency" talk, are now threatened by the Nazi advance. The Azores are in the North Atlantic 2400 miles from U. S. The Cape Verde group lies athwart Important shipping lines and is only "seven hours distance from Brazil by bomber or troop-carrying planes," in FDR's - - ' " - '' own words. ., t. , . . , ... . k , Legislator Asfe -j Forlnvestigatidn.1 Of Price HiMrig SALT LAKE CITY, June 4 OIR) Sen. Charles S pence, Salt Lake, today demanded a full Utah Legislative investigation of what he called unwarranted Increases in food and rent prices. - He charg- oH ImartmlaHv inflrtivltv In tKA matter at previous sessions was partly responsible '. for ; the increases. in-creases. Spence said rents In 'Utah during dur-ing the current national emergency emer-gency had risen 20 per cent,'-gasoline prices had gone up and food prices were - raising "although dairymen are getting no more now with butter selling at 44 cents a pound than they were when it sold at 26 cents." The archelon was - the largest turtle that ever lived. Twelve" feet long, it did not have a solid armor. IMS "i A TO PROVE THAT i, . . &a JJuleP in i -."!V.- i . OVERHEATED DEATH VALLEY IIS! LIE mm. New Oil a Life-Giver. 5-Quart Fill None Added Lasted 13,398 Miles more than Twice the mileage averaged by 5 other big-name oils in fiendish Destruction Test ...Impartial... Certified THIRST killed gold-feverish Forty-Niners in Death Valley. You can stand there today on our Hemisphere's bottom, 279 feet be- low Bea level. 'rVrid some of the worst heat on U. S. Weather Bureau records will be drying you up. ' . ; . America's hotspctl . . . where G identical' iden-tical' everyday cars scorched along, testing 6 different motor oils, till 6 new engines were junk. Every condition was the same for all. Qualified authorities eyed every move. Speed: 57 miles an hour for all. The Referee had bought 5 of the oils right off the market', millions know their names well. The other oil was decidedly new. And this new oil that authentically delivered more than twice the mileage averaged by the others is named i r' ' ' CONOCO MOTOR OIL Now on Sale here for Your Car How could one fill of tlus popular-priced Conoco Hth oil keep lasting without one added drop for an official total of 13,398.8 miles? How could Conoco NfA oil outlast them all by 5,683 miles or more, even outlasting out-lasting one "rival" by 8,268 miles! . . . And that's all Certified. , r..- ' rr ) 't:.tw - -. - ; '- ; l- - ;v ' "vS -i 1- " 1 M y 0 p , v & r J i v , I- ?y" '-fi ssy . i -'-Y'T in -rY-------'- mmm mmm - v- j-, --mmmmimammmmwmmmammmwmmwmmmmmim,mmm ir-:-'.,.,..':''.."1.'-v.:v'.''p''''""l;'.v.r:.' w " " New Synthetic In Conoco N You know of vitamin synthetics . . . man-made man-made . . . replacing Nature's life-givers sacrificed sac-rificed in some modern food processing. Similarly, the latest refining methods steal life-giving elements from motor oils. But more than making up for that today in popular-priced Conoco N'A oil is Thiol-, Thiol-, kene inhibitor. . . man-made. (Conoco Patent 2,218,132.) It inhibits or checks the effect of foul leftovers created by the normal engine en-gine explosions. Thus Conoco N'A stays niore like its own good self. . . helps the engine keep fit good way to save quarts. A Triumph matching Conoco OIL-PLATING Another wondrous synthetic long in use under the famed Germ Processed oil patent still makes N h oil give your engine oil-plating oil-plating . . . lubricant that can't all quickly drain down from inner parts. Instead, it able to stay plated up ... on guard against wear in advance, while you're using Conoco Nth oil. In addition you get the latest life-giving aid that foiled Death Valley . . . that eclipsed other oils tested . . . that made one 5-quart fill of new Conoco Nth oil last 13,398 miles. Certified. , . That's like a mad extreme beyond the utmost allowed by authorities on the subject. sub-ject. You'd never make your own car stand such proving-ground torture. But you want as wide a margin of engine protection and oil economy as your money will buy this Summer, and Conoco Nth has nailed up plain evidence. Ask today for Conoco Nth at Your Mileage Merchant's Conoco station. sta-tion. Continental Oil Company Pioneers in Bettering America's oil with Synthetics IMPARTIAL The 6 new cAfs were broken-in alike, after engines had been taken apart for the Referee, to check uniformity. All cars tuned alike. Same desert route for all. Handling Han-dling evened up by alternating alter-nating drivers. One 5-qt. fill per car and no more II . , . enginea tmder tack. ( j fill ""T" ii - 'i - s i&&y 1 t H L CERTIFIED I hereby certify that the Death Valley Test and related work were thoroughly and fairly conducted. Engine Destruction occurred oc-curred in each case at the mileage stated. Consulting Enginr, who during Acodamie yar l Profeuor of Aulomotiv Engineering, Purdue University iU4IIM Lull, l y, t ''''''''Z trry rymI 7-"' -'O t J?55 I V- 7 ia?&yus ' I '"dWoe&biLsiivleE sf At iiii: s-t -St.brc."! .. i Corner Center and 1st East Phone 2020 Attend h Thtri |