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Show SECTION TWO PROVO (UTAH) DAILY HERAUX THURSDAY. DECEMBER ' 24, 1942 PAGE THREE- Largest Provo Draft Board Group of Men for Selective Service : Largest single quota of men from selective service district No. 22 representing Provo and north Utah county was inducted Wednesday. Wed-nesday. The list took in men ranging in age, from 18 to 38, a few 18 and 19 years olds being included. There was a large number of married men, some of them with children. Some of the men were mafried prior to the selective service law who had no children born before September 8, 1942. Largest Quota Yet While Wednesday's group constituted con-stituted the largest single quota from the local district, as many men were inducted in November when there were two inductions. The list follows: Provo and Provo R. F. D. Glen Charles Wilkinson, Francis Steiger Boss, Lyman Alfred Mad-sen, Mad-sen, Anthon Gold Armstrong, Scott Eugene Wilkins, John Willis Wil-lis Funk, Oral Crook Butler, Loren Kenneth Laws, Oren Fay Larsen, Layern Junius Cook, Jack Naylor Jensen, Dean Witney Johnson, John William Lamb, , La Von E. Payne, Alan B. Olson, Leonard Martin Wall. Harry Albert Dixon, Ellwood Cluff, George Kenneth Schoney, Clarence Johnson, Fay Valo Black-ett. Black-ett. Glen E. Johnson, Clayton William Wil-liam Smith, Ferris Jessie Park, George Robert Ruff, Garth Chamberlain, Cham-berlain, Carlos Christensen Davis, Martin Jackson. Wilford James Teasdale, Don G. Gillman, - Walter Van Skinnef, William Lewis Brandon, Shirley Hunter, Roy Carter, William Andrew An-drew Wright, Milton Mathis, ICamis LeRoy Nelson, Grant Thomas Baker, Lewis Rawle Rich, Carl Armstrong Watkins. James Earl Snow, Howard Walter Holdaway, H. Neil Mc-Knight, Mc-Knight, Cornell B. Cameron, Earl Dell Buckner, Raymond Adam Brittain, Harold Jinnlng Olsen, Hal Milton Thomas, Merlin De St. Jeor, Lloyd Gee Carter, Patric Walter Gaines, LaMar M. Soren-sen, Soren-sen, George La Von Gee, Oliver Phoenix, Ted Sellers, Ocie Paul Russell, Raymond W. Wagers, Leslie Elison Jewett, Malcolm Allen Brittain, Melvin LeRoy Edwards, Ed-wards, Don H. Stubbs Jr. Clyde H. Kallas, Robert Ed- illl s 8 8 m m 18 JB i SB m m m m m m I e'My ifiisimas One of the Greatest Pleasures of the Christmas Season is the opportunity to acknowledge ac-knowledge our friends and it is with this in mind that we send you Season's Greetings. The business you have entrusted to us is indeed appreciated, and we hope that with the turn of each year, the plecsant relations existing between us wi'.l be increased and strengthened. We wish you a Merry Christmas and Happy New Yeor. IS IV. E. MITCHELL JEWELER 31 WEST CENTER PHONE 52 i SI i 9k 1 wt 9k 9k i 9k I B 9k I 9k I 9k i I 9k ward Hawkins, Reed M. . Peck, Dean IL Draper, Stanley Virgil Hadlock. ? LaVar Oliver, Lester Oliver? Peehrson, " Juel Farron Powell, William M. Alvey, Elwin LeRoy Mitchell, Glade Lloyd Ivie, Robert Beatson Wallace. Alpine Fredrick Hammett Forbes. Cedar alley Raymond Vince Ault, leucine unamDeriain, ui-ford ui-ford Carl Miller. American Fork Cecil Angus Cunningham, Ernest LeRoy Makin, Glenn Boley Greenwood, Von L. Tidwell, Earl " Kenneth Laycock, Vern R. Humphries, Harold Orson Pratt, James Lorenzo Gaisford, FJdon Roberts, Garth Thurman Read, Paul Hugh Wilson. Pleasant Grove Alfred William Morton, Lionel Leroy Matthews, Joseph R. Adams, Grant Sigfrid Omer, Leo Bezeant, Oral Fred Richins, Lynn Keetch Cullimore, Dean D. Smith, Vern B. Adams, Keith Emett Nelson, Blaine Walker Walk-er Swensen, Raymond Amasa Ja-cobson. Ja-cobson. Marvin Leo Radmall, Darwen H. Nerdin, Royal Covington, Jay C. Rose, Robert Brown, Rex Basil Walker, Ernest LeRoy Sadleir, Lemuel E. Anderson, Grant L. Fowles, Charles Lyle Rodeback, Archie Loren Brady, Rancel Vern Sorensen, Arden Adelbcrt Hul-linger, Hul-linger, Dale Mark Devereau, Edward Ed-ward C. Durant, Horace Aston, Max Harold Jorgensen. Lehl Edward LaGrand Ches-nut, Ches-nut, Robert Samuel Curtis, Leland LaMar Rockwell, John James Gray. Inducted for other boards John Vincent Harper, Dale Clyne Wall, Harold B. Wilkinson, James Jackson Jack-son Hill, John Leslie Henrichson, Marion George Cox, Paul Warren Frisby, and Thomas Allen Searles, all of Provo, Marcus Andog Este-ban Este-ban of American Fork, Albert Grace of Springville, and Royal Jensen of Lehi. AUNT HET By ROBERT QUILLEN "1 don't care how impor tant he Is. Ill slap his face If I hear Mm say the people ' won't stand for this or that hardship that's necessary to win." r- - - -i r r - - 1 ' " CZZZZZ3 3 er! 1: M i m ir at GlisuAttnxz&titne,! Did you ever go to Grandmother' for an old fashioned Christmas? A little old farm house, nestled back in the hills, surrounded by giant oaks with a white, mantle of fresH snow ... the old fashioned kitchen with its savory fumes of roast turkey, dressing and plum pudding . . . the old pine Christ mas tree with its tinsel tresses . . . the heaps of gayly wrapped Christmas Christ-mas gifts ... the logs blazing merrily mer-rily in the open fireplace ... the stockings of the youngsters presenting pre-senting an unforgettable silhouette . the spirit of warmth and con tentment . . . the glorious reunion of loved ones and friends brought together once again by Christmas . . . underneath it all, the real significant spirit of the occasion. It is a cheerful picture, is it not? Perhaps it will not be your good fortune to enjoy such a Christmas this year, but it is a kind of Christmas Christ-mas we think of when we say "We hope you enjoy an old fashioned American Christmas." TAYLOR BRO S. CO. The Department Store of Provo v r . r. - v i v ONE DOWN one to go. With a Jap plane already having nose-dived into the. ocean, a second Nipponese Nip-ponese victim of U. S. anti-aircraft fire plunges seaward near an American cruiser. Picture was takea during battle off Santa Cruz Islands. (Official U. S. Navy photo.) , Vineyard LaVar Ash has arrived for a short furlough from Camp Lewis, Wash. He will visit his parents. My. and Mrs. Ezra Ash in Salt Lake and his grandmother Mrs. Harriet Varley and other relatives here. He leaves the last, of the week for Fort Sill, Oklahoma where he will enter an army officers offi-cers school. LaVar is only 20 years old and left with the 145th F. A. nearly two years ago. Mrs. Clara Chase accompanied her nephew and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Holdaway to Salt Lake Tuesday Tues-day where she left by train for her home in Berkeley, Cal., having hav-ing been called here due to the death of her mother Mrs. Prudence Holdaway. Members of the Harriet Varley family honored Mrs. Sarah Hooley at her home in Windsor Friday evening, the occasion being her birthday anniversary. A pot luck supper was enjoyed. J. Wallace Clegg of Springville was a Vineyard visitor Monday. Twenty-six Relief society women wo-men enjoyed a Christmas social at the home of Mrs. Nora Anderson Ander-son Tuesday afternoon. Useful gifts were exchanged and a Christmas Christ-mas program given. Delicious refreshments re-freshments were served. There will be no meeting held next Tuesday. The next meeting will be at the home of President Mabel Bunker Tuesday, Jan. 5. Major T. C. Hebertson extends the season's greetings to his many friends and relatives here. , He is confined in the Hammond hospital hos-pital at Modesto, Calif., and has recently underwent two more minor operations. He is improving improv-ing and is hopeful that a major operation will not be necessary. Nyron Sorensen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Sorensen, has enlisted in the navy and is taking training at the B. Y. U. He expects to be called into service in February. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cotton will spend Christmas in Salt Lake with relatives. Mrs. Armanel Larsen and O ANSWERS TO WAR QUIZ Questions on Page Four, Sec Taw 1. Silver bars are worn ty Army Ar-my first lieutenants. 2. Some 50.000,000 Americans have purchased war bonds, many ihrough payroll savings plans. 3. British armies elected to make their stand against Rommel at El Alamein, Egypt, in the summer sum-mer of 1942 because a vast waste-Jand waste-Jand (the Qattara Depressipn) narrowed the passage along the Mediterranean coast here and made it easier to defend than other points. Similar salt marshes marsh-es narrow the coastal passage at El Agheila, Libya, giving Rommel a place to make a stand against the British in December. Richard have moved to Provo where she has purchased a new son home. Blaze Damages Ward Chapel Roof BENJAMIN Fire caused by sparks from a chimney damaged the roof of the Benjamin L. D. S. ward chapel Monday afternoon. The Spanish Fork fire department made the seven-mile run in record time to assist in putting out the blaze. The damage was estimated at $150. The fire department also an swered an alarm- Tuesday morning morn-ing from the home of Henry" John"- son, when some clothes drying "in the basement caught on fire. U. MEXICO SIGN TRADE AGREEMENT WASHINGTON, Dec. 24 UJ The United States and Mexico have signed a reciprocal trade agreement involving a long list of tariff concessions including, a 50 per cent cut in duties on imports im-ports into this country of crude and fuel oil. AMERICA WELCOMES Am"het ear h" passed . ,. . Whether CHRISTMAS u has brousht u happiness and prosperity, pros-perity, or disappointment'and loss, your life should be the richer because of the experience you have gained ... A New Year is Ahead . . . It offers every kind of opportunity. During the coming year you can increase those treasure treas-ure of life friervls. happiness, and success. You have ahvas had our very best wishes, aid now at th Chi islmas Season we want to give expression to those wishes. May you be vrry happy on this occasion. 4 V 4tk STANDARD SUPPLY 83 No. University Ave. - Phone 14 5& m I - -zr"- til Li te'd m 4 : . 'M H eres I SPIFFY SPAR. Marian Lynn, Chicago, looks trim in the new uniform for officers of the &PARS, women's reserve of the ' US. Coast Guard. 1 Men, Women ! Old at 40, 50, 60 ! Get Pep FeelYearsYounger,FullofVim Tiont Wme eh'i"t1, worn-out, run-down fwJln on your ago. Thouaandu aniasad at what a llttla npplnc up with Outre will do. Contains Keneral tonlca often nmled aftor 40 by boAIn la-kln Iron, calcium pbiMphate, Vitamin Hi. lntrodurttiry 85e Oatrei Tonic TalilPU now oni Wo. Why feel did? Start feeling peppier aud younger, today. For shIu at till good drug storea. (Adv.l : ifn Qhristmas Plllll - ssa. am rs a ss ' I Bill mw mww m I TO THOS WHOM W SR As, the shadows of the old year lengthen toward the twilight and as we prepare ourselves for the problems of the new year, it gives us reason to pause for a moment or two to consider the pleasures that have been ours. Ve are indeed grateful for the opportunities that have been presented to us, and we are conscious of our responsibility responsi-bility to you. We do not hesitate to renew our pledge of service and cooperation in whatever capacity we may be called upon. A joyous American Christmas is extended to the citizens of this area. Hear til m at Si Presented as a jg Dickens' Immortal "Christmas Carol" DOROTHY JONES MELBA CLARK BESS TALMADGE LETT IE R. DIXON HELEN I. WILLIAMS JEAN TIDWELL ELSIE McKAY GLEN HILL WILL GILDNER JIM OLDROYD ORVIN E. WILDE -Officers and Staff- ALEX HEDQUIST President FRANKLIN S. HARRIS Vice President VICTOR J. BIRD Vice President J. HAMILTON CALDER Cashier ALMA DANGERFIELD Assistant Cashier Board of Directors ALEX HEDQUIST JOHN T. TAYLOR J. ELMER JACOBSENW JOHN O. BEESLEY VICTOR J. BIRD J. HAMILTON CALDER 0. m Public Seirvice Feature CHRISTMAS DAY at 2 p. m. Over By The Provo City Power ?J FnniMEns nrjD r.raicnnrjTS nnrixc PROVO. UTAH MEMBOI FIDMAL DCTOSIT mSUIXNCZ CObTOBATIOM PROVO, UTAH That Friendly Home-Owned Bank ,. .j . . i. - " ' - -- 'j"fc t - " , ' ..-,-.-.;-.--; : "1 -M. -r . MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM i 9k' i m I 9k s 1 1 1 i 9k i 9k B I 9k H 9k 6 n 9k 9k B- 1 i sat 9k 1- n 9k |