OCR Text |
Show PAGE TWO PROVO (UTAH), DAILY HERALDWEDNESDAY, - JUNE 24r-1942 uroup . A list of young men comprising the second June draft quota from selective service district No. 22, which includes the north half of Utah county, was released today by the board. The group, which left for in duction at Port Douglas, is the largest inducted at any one time from the local board. The list: Harry Walter Startup, John M. Freckleton, Gennesse Morris : Newberry, Lee V. Kleinman. James Brigham Clark, James Peter Daniels, Kenneth Henry Maynard, Wallace Robert Anderson, Ander-son, Kenneth Pyne Chipman, Mark Anderson, Jr., -Lewis Del- bert Wilklns, John Weston Gulick, Alma Daniel Ross, Mark Way-man Way-man Wllkerson. Owen Clifford Nielson, ; Raymond Ray-mond Duane Pulsipher, Hayden Boyden Boshard, Reed Pierce, Tell Grant Muhlestein, Vernon Winford Nelson, Hal Taylor Dahl-quist, Dahl-quist, Ralph Mads Sorenson, Ted J. Parkinson,- Harold Theodore N Sorenson Vearl S. Johnson. George Earnest Pringle, Jr., Jack K. Groneman, Clark Harold Boul-ton, Boul-ton, George Russell Bonnett, Charles "McGlure Elliott, , Clifford Clyde, Bertram Joseph I Muhlestein, Muhles-tein, Harold Raymond Smith, Floyd Ferguson, Wendell Raymond Ray-mond Ivie Reed Romero Chris-tensen. Chris-tensen. , 1 William Stanley Dunford, Jr. Jay Ha le Neilson, Kenneth Lyman Ly-man Glen, Harrs Leone Brinker-hoff, Brinker-hoff, Willis Verl Taylor, Frank B. Taylor, Sherman Bukofzer, . William Robert Jensen, Paul Barrett Stewart, Leland Glen Snarr, Alfred Rudolph Byrd, Milton Mil-ton Pounds, Verl M. Olsen, Harry Alexander BaLL Ernest Bartell, Burrows Mel-don Mel-don Hill, Jacob J. Berger, Horace Hor-ace Christopher Larsen. These are all from Provo. Daryl Warren Greening, Char- lie Hardman, Theodore Earl Kelly, Kel-ly, Richard Elmo Hunter, Bert William Wagstaff, Patrick Phillip Phil-lip Pacheco, Sheldon Edward Wilde, Henry C. Adamson, Francis Fran-cis Ralph Morris, Thomas Shepherd, Shep-herd, all from American Fork. Paul Warren Kirk, Julian C. Lowe, Clarence Orlando Gravatt, Kenneth Nielson, Joseph Thornc Smith, Howard El Paxman, Sherman Sher-man Ellsworth Jacob, Harold K. Hooley, Keith Adair Payne, Ronald Ron-ald Wilford Anderson, William Mark Jorgensen, Milton Loren West, Dale Francis Atwood, all from Pleasant Grove. Noiis Glen Peterson, - Dave John Jones, Lane Pierce Hall, Elisha Glen Evans, from Lehi. Inducted from Alpine was Joseph Jo-seph William Watkins. One hundred and fifty different Strains of black stem rust have been identified in wheat. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE- Without Calomel And You'U Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin' to Co The liver ahoutd poor 3 pinta of bflo julc Into your bowel every day. ff thia bile ia not flowing: freely, your food may not digest. di-gest. It may jut decay in the bowels. Then raa bloata op your atomach. You Bet eon-atipated. eon-atipated. You feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. It takea thoee good, old Carter" Little Liver Pill to get these 2 pinta of bile flowing flow-ing freely to make you feci "up and up." Get paokage today. Take as directed. Effective in making bile flow freely. Ask for Carter' Little Liver Till. 10c and 25. Adv. PROUO TABERNACLE GROUNDS Here Are a Few Suggestions Tires, inner tubes, seat and chair pads, baby's rubber pants, rubber handles, girdles, rubber plurnbing parts, lawn hose, rubber rub-ber aprons and gloves, rubber heels and sole, in fact anything that contains rubber. DO YOUR "GOOD 'TURN" FOR AMERICA flUBBER - nUBBEll - RUBBER Phone Any Boy Scout, Scout L eader--or Scout Office, No. 361 FOR RUBBER PICKUP! Coast Shellings ;acific oceak'J -(3 siasioi -' - - ) ir .RTUN0! ml -...- M OREGON Mfl DISTANCE I 550. CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO WILES too Trie facilic coastline ot the mam-land mam-land United States and Canada was again the object of attack, apparently apparent-ly by a Japanese submarine, when shells, from unidentified sea craft fell at Estevan Point, British Columbia, Colum-bia, and Columbia Beach, Ore., Indicated Indi-cated by arrows. No damage was reported re-ported in the attacKs, ttie Urst since Feb. 23. near Santa Barbara, Calif. AXIS (Continued from Page One) ton Churchill faced a bitter debate on the Libyan defeat to be followed fol-lowed by a vote on a motion of centsure against conluct of the war, designed primarily to force the prime minister to give up the post of defense minister. Chungking Chinese report counterattack, reeapture important import-ant city of Kwciki on the Chekl-ang-Kiangsl railroad, as Japanese drive is stalled. Melbourne Allied airpanes fight off Japanese on scouting operations opera-tions north of Australia, shooting down one enemy plane over Timor. The sinking of 15 more ships 13 in the Caribbean and two off the United States Atlantic seaboard sea-board was revealed, raising to 319 the toll of vessels sunk by oy wkil BUILD A RUBBER MOUNTAIN . . for . . UNCLE SAM ON THE Pipe Plant Head, Union r.leii ForWLLVKearlng Harvey King; general manager of the Pacific States , Cast Iron Pipe ' plant at Ironton, together with Dean P. Brayton of Salt Lake City, attorney for the company," com-pany," left Tuesday for Washington Washing-ton to attend a hearing called by the national war, labor, board to effect a working contract between the company and the SWOC, local 1630. r Ralph Farrer of Provo, vice president of the local union, and Varro C. Jones of Salt Lake City, state SWOC director, had left earlier to attend the meet. , The. labor board recently ordered the company to increase wages of all non-bonus and minimum bonus workers at the plant two cents per hour, retroactive to September Septem-ber 15, 1941. The pipe company requested a hearing on the case. Plans Ready For Youths' Sign-Up . i. . . ..... North Utah county district reg-. titration places for , the June 30 selective service sign-up for boys 18, 19 and 20 years of , age have been announced by Mrs. Zenith Johnson, clerk of the selective service board. ' They are as follow: Fairfield church, Cedar .Fort . post Office, Lehi Memorial building, American Fork Legion hall, Alpine town hall Pleasant Grove city hall, Orem city hall, city and county building in Provo, and the residence of Rosetta Johnson, RFD 1, Box 134 in Lake View. . Volunteer registrars will conduct con-duct the sign up from 7 a. m. to 9 p. m. on .the registration day. No lottery for the new registrants regist-rants is planned, it is understood. The boys will become subject to draft as they reach their 20th birthday. Stocks irregular and quiet. Bonds irregular; U. S. governments govern-ments mixed. Curb stocks mixed. Silver unchanged. Cotton futures off as much as 60 cents a bale. Wheat closed ',i to 5-8 cent higher; corn was unchanged to up v cent. Axis submarines and mines in west hemisphere waters. The German radio claimed that Nazi JU-boats had surd ,20 more ships totalling 102,000 tons, and one escort vessel off the north and central American coasts. Argentina, which has refused to join the Pan-American front against the Axis, was angered by the torpedoing; of the steamer Rio Tercero by the German submarine Innsbruck without warning. It was the third Argentine ship attacked at-tacked by Axis submarines and the second sunk. Anger against the Axis also was rising in Chile, which joined Argentina in refusing to break off relations with the Axis. President Juan Antonio Rios was ready to sign emergency bills enlarging r-hiip'a armed forces and prepar ing' the nation for the increasing danzer of war. MARKETS at a Glanco HELP THE Scouts Tftgedy;Si , , . -Z-vf S ;'S,r Af7 , i- : I J' tli - r s iSHv - -f"::o -d r . , ;f:-Jt v . .i,- rl In the sparkUng reflecUon of the sun's rays on Atlantic waters, a small lifeboat pulls away from a torpedoed United Nations ship sinking with much valuable aid to our allies. At right is the wing tip of a U. S. Army bomber, which arrived on the scene too late. Army Air Force photo. Now .Seaside to Wamt - rOHT op Ff "' r i (NEA Telephoto) When resident of the resort town of Seaside, Ore., erected this signpost two years ago, war seemed far away. But war came to Seaside's door-tep door-tep with surprising suddenness when shells from an unidentified sea vessel, presumably a Jap sub. were blasted at the town but plunked harm-. harm-. lessly onto the adjacent beach. HOUSE (Continued from Page One) try to peacetime production must also come out of the taxpayer s pocket, most economists believe, so the treasury developed a scheme to prepare the way now for meeting meet-ing it. The ways and means commit tee's decision, .following the pat tern of the treasury proposal, pro vides that 14 per cent of corporation corpora-tion earnings which for war tax purposes are considered to be "excess "ex-cess profits," will be returned to he corporation after the war. The committee has voted to tax "ex cess profits" at the rate of 94 per cent, but the refund reduces the eventual rate to a net of 80 per cent. The Union Pacific has changed the name of its "Mikado type" of locomotives to "MacArthurs." The Mormon tabernacle in Salt Lake City required 40 years to construct. At The Paramount I i I I jTV. ... -MMnaA. The-screen's master, of action suspense, Alfred Hltchock, unveils his latest hit "Saboteur", at the Paramount Theatre Tnursday. Robert Cummlnes and Prlscilla Lane head the cast which includes Norman Lloyd, Otto Kruger, Alan Baxter I mount management has surrounded ray -of shorts which includes Pete Smith's 'Victory Quiz," "Land of the Quint" ---Fitzpatrick short, and a "Puss 'n Toots" Tom & Jerry Color Cartoon. to Has Everything n . x 1 t a.., W , 4993 y v ill r V aft fit , - ST..--.-- - 64711 ' - -AI j IkavO. : Edgemont A welcome home party honoring honor-ing Elder Reed G. Gillespie, who returned last week from the Hawaiian Ha-waiian Islands where he has spent the past thirty months in the L. D. S. mission, will be ffiven Friday evening in the ward chapel. A fine program has been arranged, arrang-ed, beginning at 8:30 o'clock. All members of the ward and friends of the young man are invited to attend. Mrs. Edith Y. Booth will read an original three act play at the Literary club meeting Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Joanna Boyce. The play is based on true historical facts and will be very interesting. All members are invited to attend. The following Edgemont ladies did mending today at the Utah Valley hospital: Mrs. Ray Hawkins, Haw-kins, Mrs. Sharp Gillespie, Mrs. Ralph Meldrum, Mrs. W. B. Davis, Da-vis, Mrs. H. V. Smith, Mrs. Leo HanSen, Mrs. Verl Stubbs, Mrs. Ike Boyce, Mrs. George Boyce, Sr. and Miss LaNeil Taylor. and Dorothy Peterson. The Partf- "Saboteur" with an "all out" ar SHORTAGE OF PICKERS FARMINGTON, Utah, June 24 (OR) Davis county cherry crops are seriously endangered because of a shortage of pickers, David Merrill, vocational coordinator of Davis schools, said today after the Davis County Fruit Growers' association met here to help solve the problem. Officials from the fruit association, associa-tion, and employment service workers also attended the fruit meeting. SEMTEMCEO T0 JUOGEi Will the witness please take the stand? You swear to tell the truth? WlTNESSt I do, Your Honor. judge i Where were you about a year ago? wiTNESSt In Death Valley. judges What were you doing in Death Valley? witness: I was observing a test of six high grade motor oils, including in-cluding Conoco N oil. judges How was the test conducted? con-ducted? witness: A five-quart fill of some one brand was sealed in the crank-case crank-case of each identical car and no more oil was added. judoei Then what? witnissj The cars were driven until un-til the engines were wrecked. judges What happened? wiTNESSt Conoco N" oil carried its motor for 13,398 miles. " ... innsoasnfcatidhurrribt D0TLacve if tiZit 1 wul check and PPf foTand report anything call for it j urv I wul Iook iw .r. -q a care-radUtor care-radUtor and battery, i attend I V-U Wrviceareeedea. , Ift&oAt 1.1. tr VflU. LET US CALL FOR YOUR CAR Service It, and Deliver It To You the Bottom v SEA Teleohoto) Coming Events KlwanU club, Thursday, 12:15, Hotel Roberts. Speaker, Lieutenant Lieuten-ant Governor John E. Booth of Spanish Fork. SECOND WARD CHOIR All members of the Second ward choir, are asked to attend a rehearsal re-hearsal Thursday at 8 p. m. at the ward chapel. (Valley) judge How far did tho other oils go? witnesSs They didn't average half the mileage of Conoco N. judges Why would Conoco N'A oil perform in this fashion? witness: Because of two synthetics. synthet-ics. One gives it the oil-plating effect. The other helps keep oil and motor clean. judges Would you recommend my driving this far on a crankcase of oil? witnesss No, your honor! That mileage was for test purposes. You want to preserve your car and should drain at recommended periods and oil-plate with Conoco N'. judges Thank you! Witness dismissed! dis-missed! " See Tout Conoco Mileage Merchant Mer-chant todaf. Get Conoco Nh motor oil and you, too, will bear witness to the truth of this testimony. testi-mony. Continental Oil Company Don't depend on Pi .. k.vA vour tires c. aa:rsn one vour tires and l car - - "TED" EUAIIS C0;iGGO STATO Cor. . 5th West A-Center Phone 1515 PROVO ZONING CHANGE OKEHED Providing for the creation of two new districts, a new zoning ordinance and map was approved Tuesday night by the Provo city zoning commission, to be presented present-ed to the Provo city commission with recommendations for adoption. adop-tion. .-'.. The ordinance provides for a residential district which provides pro-vides areas for trailer camps and tourist cabins. It, also sets - protection for agricultural areas, which were formerly unclassified. Extension of the industrial district, dis-trict, from Center street north to the city limits on Twelfth West street and enlargement of "the class B residential area to include Center Cen-ter street west to Utah lake tf protect the frontage of the lake recreational area, was also approved. !T'C7 I. f. MOTOR OIL Specialized Greasing Greas-ing by Experienced Men |