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Show y - i i i - i - . PROVO (UTAH) ' ? DAILY HER ALP ItlESDAY, APRIL" 20, 1943 "Are We Glad to See You!' iTv n '5F?r v4 A A X $v3S?larj 4- -4.,. Our Boys In the War Lt. Max M. Nicholes of the army medical corps, is stationed at Oakland, Oak-land, Calif., according to word received re-ceived by his wife, Mary Kane Nicholes, and his parents. Prof, and Mrs. Joseph K. Nicholes. Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Williams received re-ceived a telephone call Sunday from their son, Nevin Williams, who is stationed in Hawai. He reports he is well and happy and sends greetings to his friends here. CORPORAL. RATING Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Howe of 857 West Fifth North, were happy to receive word for their son. Wood-row Wood-row Howe, of the Med. Tng. Bn. at Camp Barkeley, Texas, that he has received his corporal rating. He entered the armed service November No-vember 19, 1942, and reports that he is enjoying his work. Another son, Private Francis E. Howe, is serving as mechanic in the army corp. entering the service Sept. 22, 1942. He is stationed at Fort Dix, New Jersey. : He too is enjoying en-joying his work. 4 "Victory Was Never Won at Bargain Rates!" .V V.V.'.WA .V.V.. V.-.' gehtine Consul lhaihedi of Role By Nation fyPlayed BAN ON PRESS DRAWS PROTEST Lieut. Edwin Ricks of Provo has been assigned to the infantry re-! placement training center at Camp Roberts, Cal. REPAIR ENGINES Two Provo men are learning how to operate and repair a ship's engines at the navy's trade school for machinist's mates on the campus cam-pus of the North Dakota State school of science at Wahpeton, N. D. They are John R. Weight, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Weight, and Paule E. Foote, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. Earle Foote. Offensives Abroad Must Start At Home- - With More Money Materials, Says Supply Chief Wilford George Adams, son of Mr., and Mrs. Eldon H." Adams of Provo Route 2, has begun recruit! training at the naval training! station at Farragut, Idaho. I Two recruits from Provo havet taken their first step toward be-, coming seasoned navy men by en-, tering training at the naval train-! ing station on Lake Pend Oreille, I Farragut's "inland ocean." They( are James Leroy Jeffs, son ofMr. 1 and Mrs. Ephraim L. Jeffs of RFD 2, Box 206A, and Richard; Henry Levin, son of Mr. and Mrs.; S1. I. Levin of 210 South First! East. S LECTURES AT FORUM Thorough treatment of the sub- Iect of Technocracy, was given by J. Weaver, at tj?e forum study tlass Sunday at the Provo city Kbrary. Open discussion followed for over an hour. The forum meets every other j BUnday at 3 p. m. "Shall we foster ; private enterprise as a method to ; insure post-war peace and secur- j ity" will be the subject. The speaker will be announced. Everyone Every-one is invited. By LIEUT. GEN. BREIION SOMERVELL Chief of Army Service Forces (Written for NEA Service) The offensives launched at the front originate in the factories and foundries and on the assembly assem-bly lines. The planes and tanks that tatter the Axis today, the bombs that blast Berlin and send Jap ships to the bottom, come from the home front. It's something to remember. Remembering it, we look at the current Second War Loan as an offensive, an intensifying of our attack on the Nazis and Japs. Success on the financing and pro duction fronts are vital elements! of success on the battlefield. Noi war was ever won at a bargain. The kind of victory we have de termined to win bears no price I 1. a a v.-J tag. mere is no cut rate ior unconditional un-conditional surrender. This is truer today than ever, before. We are fighting the most highly mechanized war in history. The task of arming and equipping our forces is without parallel. It requires twice as much pro- rYwirv.ii ductive effort to equip a motorized motor-ized division as to equip a foot division, and five times aa.mujch to equip an arm ored division. , - thattfc -United Nations today are on tne-dffenr 1 HoKoviraHrm norts and overseas depots all must be well stocked, and behind these lines of trans-Dortation trans-Dortation four to six weeks of supplies must be maintained to insure a steady flow; We call the process "Keeping the pipe line full." It is a gigantic operation. The Army deals in ' more than a half a million items. In 1942 it accepted accept-ed more than 56,000 combat vehicles, 600,000 machine ma-chine guns and 30,000 guns of larger caliber. Plane output last year increased 186 over 1941. Small-caliber Small-caliber ammunition is now produced at a rate of roughly a billion rounds a month. Yet matching weapons with the Axis is not easy. We must produce a tremendous volume of shipping, a Navy to protect this shipping, and additional ad-ditional equipment to replace losses. Because of re-quirements-of our maritime program, we can put perhaps one-third of our steel into ground weapons while the Axis can probably devote two-thirds of theirs to this purpose. OFFENSIVES COST MONEY Nevertheless the superiority in equipment which has rested with the Axis is passing into our hands. We have attained volume and we have attained at-tained it without sacrificing quality. The American soldier has never been better equipped. The United Nations are turning out more and better weapons and munitions today than the Axis nations. And our production is still rising. That has naturally influenced the shape of our strategy' 'C-eyond calculation. It is behind the fact NEW:YORK, April.' 20 : (HE) 3ftaynion' Munlz Lavelle,' Argen-'tine Argen-'tine vice consul to Tokyo, announced an-nounced his resignation last night in Vw protest against Argentina's service as "the eyes and ears of the Japanese jrovernment in the western .hemisphere." I Me' said more than 60 cables containing information, almost exchisively about war production arid, morale, are sent from Argen-tina$to Argen-tina$to Japan daily. .'I'Believe me' Lavalle said in a broadcast over station WABC, "I anl. ashamed of -Argentine neutrality neutral-ity for this war is Argentina's .war as well as any other coun- "ry's." Spraying Urged For Leaf Roller Fruit growers have been advised ad-vised by Clarence D. Ashton, assistant as-sistant county agent, to spray for the strawberry leaf roller, a moth Jhat attacks strawberry plants. The moth is more numerous in Utah county this' year than in past years, and much damage will be caused to the strawberry crop unless immediate action is taken, Mr. Ashton advised. The moth can be controlled by spraying with lead arsenate in the proportion of three pounds to 100 gallons of water. The spraying must be done before the plants blossom. TRAINS AS SmPFITTER Eugene Molyneux, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Molyneux of 801 North Fifth West, seaman second class inthe U. S. navy, has graduated gradu-ated as a metalSmith at San Diego, where he, has been training as a shrpfitter. He entered the navy in October, 1942. NEW YORK, April 19 (UE President Roosevelt's refusal to permit full news- coverage of the forthcoming United Nations food conference establishes a pattern "which if continued will stifle the right of free inquiry and prevent continuous flow of full informa tion to the public," 11 members of the American Society 'of Newspaper News-paper Editors said in a statement last night. The editors, all members of tho board of directors of the society, v emphasized that .their- statement 'was not a formal pronouncement because the full board membership member-ship was not present at the meet-, ing in which it was drawn up. The statement was signed by Roy A. Roberts of the Kansas City Star, president of the society; socie-ty; William Allen White of th Emporia, Kan., Gazette; Tom Wallace, Louisville Times; Dwight Marvin, Troy, N. Y. Record; W. S. Gilmore, Detroit News; Wilbur Forrest, New York Herald-Tribune; Ben McKelway, Washing ton Star; James M. North, Fort Worth Star-Telegram; 'Erwin D. Canham, Christian Science Monl- i tor; Basil L. Walters, Minneapolis Minneapo-lis Star-Journal; and Dwight xoung, .uayton Herald and Journal. With Joy written all over their faces, two survivors of a torpedoed Allied vessel are pulled aboard a U. S. Coast Guard cutter that rescued them from a watery life raft in mid-Atlantic. Official Coast Guard Dhoto Pioneer Freighter Dies in Salt Lake SALT LAKE CITY, April 19 (U.R) Samuel Heber Kimball, 91. pioneer freighter, rancher and L D S church member, died here yesterday of causes incident to age. Kimball, son of the late Heber C. Kimball, first counselor to Brigham Young, engaged in, freighting between SaRi Lake City and North Platte, Neb. for several years and was a pioneer rancher in Grouse Creek, Northern Utah. He was a former bishop of the Grouse Creek L D S ward. Kimball was born here Dec. 9, 1851. ONE OF THE GREATEST Tou girls who suffer from simple anemi or who lose so much during monthly periods you feel tired, weak, "dragged out" due to low blood Iron try Lydla Pinkham's tablets one of the best and Quickest home ways to help build up red blood to Ret more strength In ! such cases. Oet Pinkham's Tablets to-i to-i day! Follow label directions. Immunization Set For Typhoid Fever Miss Loucille Thorpe, Brigham Young University nurse, announces an-nounces that there will be a typhoid, ty-phoid, fever immunization clinic at - the medical department, Education Educa-tion Bldg., April 21, 28 and. May '5, for all college, high school, and training school students and their families. Those who have completed the To thr fixed items of equipment, "spot items' must be addedspecial Equipment for special operations. oper-ations. The port, and dock facilities and railway equipment required in North Africa are examples. On top of this, there must be a steady stream of replacements to take care of day-to-day wear and tear, transportation and battle losses. When armored forces clash, the wastage is tremendous. A week of heavy fighting may mean losses of more than one-half theeombat ve'hicles. To make certain that replacements will fce at the front when needed, tremendous quantities of material must keep moving endlessly from factory to battlefield. Shipping depots, trains, embarkation sive. Offensives cost money. A single 155 mm. field gun. costs $50,000. A heavy bomber costs $450,000. A fleet of 10,000 of these bombers would cost every man, woman and child in America $33 as his personal per-sonal share in these planes alone. Multiply this single unit by the needs of the great striking forces we must have on land, at sea and in the air and you can see what it will cost to deliver the knockout knock-out blow. You can see why the Second War Loan is a major offensive. You can see why every penny of every dollar every American can possibly sgare must go to war. . tS. series of three inoculations in pre-, vious years are advised to take a' "booster" dose now, and one each year following for good measure, j Twenty-five cents will be charg-1 ed for those who receive the entire series of three doses, and a fifteen -(Sh cent charge will be made for the "booster" dose. j Dr. L. L. Cullimore, medical.di-j rector will be in charge, and Miss Thorpe will assist. Salem News Automobile msuiaton should tej cleaned of all grease and oil at regular intervals. WAIT WE CAN'T ALL FIGHT BUT WE CAN ALL HELP THIS WAR TO WIN Mr MY 111 M0IE WIS An old-fashioned surprise party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ivin E. Gardner in honor of the birthday anniversary of Mr. Gardner. After a delicious hot dinner had been served, the guests enjoyed a pleasant evening with active participation in games, community singing, and special musical numbers. The following guests were in attendance: Mr. and Mrs. Leon Hiatt, Miss Joan Hiatt, Mr. Frank Hiatt, Mr. arid Mrs. Vernee, H. Iverson, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Jex, Mrs. J. B. Jex, Mr. ?-and Mrs. Myrl Jex. Mrs. Joseph Jenkins and the. host and hostess. Leland Davis and Ronald Davis who were inducted into military service recently, spent the week nd here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Davis, and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Davis. Mrs. Joseph Jeikins of Salt Lake City was a week end visitor at the home of her father, Andrew Iverson, and of other Salem relatives. Mrs. Roscoe C. Hanks ia visiting in LaGrande, Oregon, with her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Garth-Sir-rine and their new baby daughter, born March 31st. v Mrs. Sirrine was formerly Miss Emma Jean Hanks, of Salem, Mrs. Ray Hiatt is in San Francisco, Fran-cisco, California, where she went to join her husband, who- is sta tioned at Treasure Island: Mr, and Mrs. Jolm Hanks . and and Mn. Herbert Hanks of Salt Lake City were Sunday visitors visi-tors at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Hanks. MrsV Leo Davis and Mrs. Angus D, Taylor entertained at. a bridal shower at the Salem ward amusement amuse-ment hall on f, Saturday ;evening, honoring Mrs. Davis' daughter Miss Vera Anderson, who is , leaving leav-ing "soon for Tennessee where she will be. married to Martin Taylor, who is in U. Sv Navy service there. An . interesting program was carried car-ried out and . delicious refreshments, refresh-ments, served to a v large. 1 crowd which attended... Many beautiful and useful gifts were received by the bride. 1 I INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION Spiders v are., able to spin threads that are- only- one 4 five-. thousands' of . an inch thick.- '' Hslp wiiru frbe war oiF (Food! I 4' As a convenience to the public, a full line of quality ! garden seeds is being handled at many Standard retail outlets. This service will enable you to purchase seeds eas0y onr weekends; and will permit you to buy them in L y yoxir own neighborhood, saving unnecessary car mileage. -- -r.' : .. - :, t --r-J ,-- . , " -, - ' f ; ' ' -- :' ' . " STANDARD OIL' COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA Quality tSewtce STAIIDARD. i - .. . i' |