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Show Thursday, Jan. 2, The ,1941 75 B ASKET ALL Women's Co-Worl- Champions d's VS Nephi Cafe JUAB HIGH SCHOOL vs MILLARD High School Friday, January 3 Games at 7:30 8:30 cV Juab High Gym 50c cV 25c Admission: Our Newest Bomber in Flight Nephi, Utah Times-New- s, Local and Social News Remake Jungle, Goal of Brazil Ruth Ord spent Christmas in Burley, Idaho. Mr nrt Mr Wilf.ird Pratt were week end visitors in Hinckley. Wealth of Amazon Valley Viewed as Important Key to Economics. Mr nnd Mrs. Tim Irons visited in Nephi Tuesday with relatives and RIO DE JANEIRO. Sanitation, friends. colonization and increais in producMary Walton of American Fork tion those ars the thres major eleVargas' spent Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. ments intoPresident Getulio scheme remake the Amazon valJ. Lynn Strong. ley. Mr. and Mrs. LaVar Carter anBack from an airplane tour which Dec on son a nounce the birth of took him far into the Jungle counember 26th. try, the little president tees the Mr. and Mrs. Ferl Blackburn of Amazon district as region of "imOrderville are visiting with her mense potential wealth," of tremendous importance if Brazil is to go mother, Mrs. T. H. G. Parkes. ahead economically. Mr. and Mrs. Germit Cook of He has called conference of Salt Lake City were Christmas Amazon nations Venezuela, Colomvisitors at the home of her par- bia. Peru. Ecuador. Bolivia and Bra ents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Irons. zil to consider their common inter- - ! He hat invited the United Lynn Jenkins returned recently ests. to Cedar City after spending the States to attend. holidays with his parents, Mr. and By development of the Amazon Mrs. R. H. Jenkins. of the Amabasin and William Jarrett. a student at the zon countries, he hopes "we will inSnow College, visited during the crease our reserves for defense and holidays with his parents, Mr. and our capacity to resist any attempt at absorption." Mrs. R. R, Jarrett. Vargas does not say what nation Jay Howell returned to his home or nations might make' such an atTuesday from a Provo hospital, tempt, but it is clear he has his eye where he recently underwent an on the European and Far Eastern operation for appendicitis. struggles. Mr. and Mrs. Leland Broadhead The story of the Amazon is a story are the proud parents of twin bab- of rubber. Back In 1910, when the ies, a boy and a girl, born Decem- United States manufactured only ber 20th. 200,000 automobiles, Brazil produced Max Strong left Saturday for practically all the world's rubber Fort Baker, California after visit- 62,000 of the 70,000 tons. But Brazilian rubber was wild ing for the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Lynn Strong. rubber, gathered by natives in ways. The British had Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Scovil of found rubber could be raised ecoMount Pleasant were dinner guests nomically in the Dutch East Indies Saturday at the home of Mr. and the Malay peninsula. and Mrs. J. Lynn Strong. Ford Has Plantation. Miss Janice Warren and Miss 1914, cultivated rubber producBy Mary Lind Irons are visiting with tion exceeded that of wild rubber. Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Irons in Pro By 1920, cultivated rubber producvo this week tion was 320,000 tons, and wild proMr. and Mrs. J. J. Keeler and duction 40,000; the United States condaughters of Provo were guests at sumed 235,000 tons. the home of her mother, Mrs. At In 1937, the picture a gloomy one vin Bowles during the holidays. for Brazil was this: Cultivated rubMax Davis, who is employed by ber, 1,107,062 tons; Brazilian rubber, Standard Stations at Las Vegas, 16,286 tons. Rubber had been worth $3 a pound Nev., spent several days during the But holidays with his parents, Mr. and In 1910 real "black gold." when production could mors than Mrs. T. D. Davis. take care of necessities, prices fell Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Sorenson off. and children Ruth and Richard of way look at President Vargas had Garfield were guests during last near Ford's the Henry plantation or week at the home her parents, Amazon during his trip, and apparMr. and Mrs .Ed. V. Downs. ently was convinced that Brazilian Mrs. Frank Sanford and daught rubber could make a comeback. Aler Barbara and sons Carl and Glen ready, Vargas says, American Inof Springville visited on New Years dustrialists have appeared who are day with Mr. and Mrs. John C Interested in putting capital and Painter. technical experience Into Brazilian Mr. and M"rs. Wilford Pratt had rubber. as their guests Sunday. Mr. and Malaria la Problem. Mrs. A. I. Tippetts and family of Ford has had one setback in his fc.phraim, and Mr. and Mrs. Twain experiments; be had to move his Tippetts of Provo. main plantation when his first locale Mrs. Walter W. Vogt entertain proved unsuitable. So far his output ed on December 30 for her naught has been unimportant, but within a er, LaRay on the occasion of her year or two the Ford people hope to 10th birthday. Refreshments were begin serious production. The Amazon country also exports served to ten guests. nuts. Including the famous Brazil Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bowen had nut; some woods, animal skins and as guests during the holidays, his some fibers. G. L. and Mrs. Bowen, mother, A major task In development of Miss Carol Kone, who is Mrs. Bow-en- 's this district Is the conquest of masisiter, both of Tooele. g laria. The mosquito The annual Statehood ball will breeds In the swamp lands of the be held at the South Ward amusealthough, as President Varment hall Saturday evening, Jan- region, out, much of the terrigas points 4. All to are invited attend tory is free of malaria. The Braziluary this event. ian authorities and the Rockefeller Ballard Hoyt, who Is employed as Foundation bava done a great work Secretary by the Food Stamp plan in eradicating malaria from all the in Helena, Montana spent the holi- Important coastal centers, but their days in Nephi with his mother, Mrs. fight in the interior is not yet comEva Hoyt. pleted. To attract colonists from other Mrs. George R. Howard had as her guests during the holidays, parts of Brazil. Vargas offers free Misses Jean and Alean Simmons, land, agricultural implements and students at the General Hospital in technical assistance, plus free Salt Lake City, and Howard Sim- schools and training for their chilmons of Payson. dren. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Stephenson had as their guests during the Janitor Estimates He's holidays Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Winter Climbed 742 Miles on Job and children of Tooele, and Robert LAWRENCE. KAN. Hallle Harris Stephenson, a student at the Snow Isn't a mountain climber but he has College in Ephralm. a distance N. W. Olsen and family of Black-foo- t, climbed and descended 148 trips up Mount Idaho spent the week end with equivalent to his brother in law and sister, Mr. Everest. Harris, supervisor of janitors at and Mrs. T. D. Davis, and his mother. Mrs. Emma Olson in Ne- the University of Kansas, estimates he climbs 1,400 steps a day. For phi. the last 14 years with the univerDr. T. W. Allred entertained the sity he has worked an average of members of the local battery at a 300 days a year. This brings his MonCafe at the Nephi banquet total number of steps climbed to All of members the day evening. which is approximately 742 battery were present including the 5.880.000. miles. three oiricers. germ-carryin- -- t .I - shown The newest and best of the O. S. mediant bombers 1 off (above), and In the air (below), during a test flight at Baltimore, Md, Product of the Glenn L. Martin factory at Baltimore, this high performance dealer of destruction will soon be rolling off the production lines at mass production rate. B-2- 6, here taking Lesson in Perspective for Prospective Pilots tj -- - - 1 - -- jrjna - .,. s f V ... si it m. s I tLtl2!iia Remember how the railroad tracks seemed to meet in the dislancel Well, nowadajs a ulrin of airplanes has the same effect. The imaginary line of the wing tips is drawing toward a point In the distance. These art some of the training craft at the "West Point of the Air," Randolph Field Texas. The planes will be ased for training the 500 Bring cadets. Mr. and Mrs. William Leavitt and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Olson of Provo were dinner guests at the home of Miss Mabel S perry Tues day. While here they attended the services for Mrs. Emily funeral Sperry. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Bracken and children Non Nell and Alice were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Duckworth during the holidays. Mrs. Alice Miller return ed with them to their home In Lo gan. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Worten and family left Friday for Chicago, They will leave there soon to make their home in Malone, New York. For the pat week they have been visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Hyrum Haynes. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Painter had as guets during the holidays, Mis Ruby Painter, Mrs. Ina Saunders and daughter of Salt Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neaf and family, Mr. and Mm. Ray Painter and son and John Painter of Eureka, and Miss Phyllis Painter, who is attending bnow college at Find 284 DescendanU Survive Union Veteran H1AWASSEE, GA. W. K. Garrett, Union veteran who died recently In Franklin, near here. Is believed to e have set an high In the number of living descendants. Garrett. 96, Is survived by seven sons, five (laughters, 60 grandchildren, 194 and 23 Pioneering Pair May Have 10,000 U. S. Descendants BOSTON. When the In reunion Eddy family to celebrate the 3101b anniversary of the landing at Plymouth of John and Samuel Eddy, they estimated the descendants now living In the United States of these two Pilgrims numbered more than 10,000. John Eddy was a founder of Wa-l- i town. Samuel Eddy was one of the purchasers of Middieboro from the Indians. met here PAGE FIVE Gold Prospectors Get Poor Returns Annual Reward Averages $462 for 'Hopeful' Army. SALT LAKE CITY. They take to g the hills in Utah in the quest for gold, but the chief worry of the prospector who makes more than enough to feed himself and bis mule, or fuel his battered auto. Is not an annual income tax report. His principal problem. Judging from a report of the U. S. bureau of mines, is how to buy enough food to keep alive and sufficient supplies to operate one more year from the he receives annually tor months g of effort Placer mining was the basis of many fabulous fortunes when the West was young, and almost every creek and river yielded gold dust or silver ore. And not even the most discouraging report will stop scores of prospectors amateurs and bearded veterans from hitting the trail, hoping to uncover some hidden bonanza In recent years, "Okies," unemployed bookkeepers, farmers, clerks and laborers have swelled the ranks of those who go into the hills in search of gold. Grizzled prospectors still have their pack mules, but ramshackle automobiles and trucks have become a partner to the mule In beating trails across Utah mountain ranges. Yet a study of the bureau of mines report shows that not one in 100 makes more than the barest living. And the veteran prospector who has spent long years separated from civilization following the lure of gold will admit "there ain't much sense in it, is there?" But the spring thaws In the mountains will find the same veteran leading his mule Into the mountains for "just one more crack at it," because "maybe I'll hit it this time." Flight Training Safe Driving Enjoins Safety Tips Given Design of Instruction in Art Changes as New Factors Appear. never-endin- "Accidents go up when the mer-Jr- y goes down, and It's not fair weattuT when good mot-ris- al-a- ys ts tret tot'i-ther- w r u,m. mond, chairman of the State Road jmmisaion, warned today in the idst of the seasons most rinnror. ous driving conditions. Mr. Hammond mmlo nntiiir. ST. LOUIS. As aircraft design has changed to incorporate new safety factors, so has the design of new set of safety winter driving instruction In the srt of flying les oasea on exhaustive research changed. With several thousand colthe Natinnnl Snfotv r,r.,,r.ii'- lege students and graduates being commlttee on Winter Driving Haz- trained to constitute a reserve of aras. i ne recommendations are pilots tor national emergency, It Is made from actual comprehensive performance necessary that as many as possible tests of automobile under actual snow and Ice condit survive. ions. Hence the "controllad-fligh- t Seven Safety tips follow: course" laid down by the civil 1. Check brake linings for aeronautics board for use of all prigripping. Unequalized vate flying schools which Instruct br akes start skidding.' CAB students. 2. are vitnl winin. Here's what the embryo filer gets ment Tire chains during bad snow or ice In the first eight hours of dual ineather. Good trends struction and two or three hours of but cannot bite In on packed snow solo if he qualifies tor a CAA basio or Ice. Use chains. course: 3. training Make sure thnt ulnH,hinM First comes group school. The wipers and defroster rudiments of the "Theory of Flight" and that your lights are good. Use are taught In two or three two-hoirairic uow beam when passing sessions before the first flight other cars. 4. Travel at reduced Then, with an instructor In the front seat, the student has his first snow or Ice. even when protected r In the air. by chains, and WATCH OUT FOR CHILDREN ON SLEDS. It's Hard to Learn. 5. Leave more rnnm hatwo.in At 1,500 feet the Instructor turns to the student and indicates that be you and the car ahead and don't try Is to take over. And he proceeds to to pass on hills or curves. Aptry to apply the things learned in proach curves slowly. 6. SlOW down in I'OHr nnrl mimn ground school. Within two minutes to keep the he has recalled the line in the man- breaks wheels from locking completely. ual which reads: 7. EXERCISE MORE CAUTION "Flying Is the hardest thing in the world to learn and the easiest to GENERALLY, and open cowl ventilator tO force ntlt do." oxide gas, especially In older model For the first three hours of dual Instruction, the lessons consist of Remember: "An simple turns or "banks," caution may prevent the necessity and a brief Introduction to "power iiicwi puuiius oi cure. stalls" a maneuver which slips the ala of novice's heart and moorings lows it to drift into bis throat. Local-NewThen, ssys the controlled course takeoffs and are outline, landings Knot Records Left by in order. Incas Puzzle Experts At this point In the training, the instructor makes the student don a CHAPEL HILL. N. C The Incas Mr. and Mrs. Alvln must have had some knotty financial pair of headphones, the better to at a family dinner at problems, according to the "qulpu" undermine any belief that he rapid' entertained on exhibition in the University of ly is becoming a finished pilot A their home Friday night swelled head, instructors say. Is the North Carolina library. Mr. and Mrs. T.eFmin nu r The qulpu is a knotted record of forerunner of a crackup. Green spent Christmas here with So the student Is assisted through Mrs. Gee's parents, Mr. and Mrs. the Inca civilization, and, although anthropologists assume it might each lesson with a running fir of Fred Stephensen. criticism. And he can't talk back have pertained to financial prob'Mr. and Mm. M nr.n.. rB.. v. because there is no speaking tuba lems, they admit it might mean alreturned home after spending the and the Instructor has no bead' Christmas most anything. holidays In St George It consists of 31 different types of phones. with relatives. small ropes of a dozen different colDanger in Sloppy Flying. A nA Mr. and Mn flnranA At about the seventh hour In the . ors and no two alike, containing a niiuciauu hundred different kinds of knots. air, the student and the Instructor or Logan came down to spend the Each knot is supposed to mean take off from the home field, fly new i ear wun nis parents, Mr. and mrs. james Anderson. something, but Just what Is a mys- some 10 miles away over open coun Mr. and Mrs. T.oe in.i,m.i, try and the novice Is Introduced to tery. The quipu was donated by John the very sudden and sometimes dis family spent the holidays at Beaver astrous possibilities latent In sloppy wun ivirs. jacKmans Wise of New York, collector of Peru parents, Mr and Mrs. W. J. Robinson. vian art objects, and Is valued at flying. These consist of all types of $500. It resembles nothing so much Mr. and Mrs. Ross Tu rner nf Au as a Boy Scout's collection of knots, "spins," from all types of maneu- rora, Rulon Anderson and Lucille turns from that although on close examination It Is vers. These are spins of Logan spent Christmas with are executed too steeply and with in- Day apparent such knots are unknown their Da rents Mr. nnrl m i.m.. sufficient power, spins from power Anderson. today. Many scientists have studied this stalls and spins from climbing and Mr and Mrs. Lewis Anderson of and similar quipus, but never have gliding turns. The latter type is the most sober Mantl snent Tueorlnv a nA A been able to translate the qulpu or to state accurately what the Inca ing. It Is usually caused by "crossed day In Levan with Mr. Anderson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Ancontrols" and occurs when a pilot derson. civilization was trying to record. applies pressure on opposite ailer ons and rudder. The spin from a Mr. and IMrs. Ernest Sorenson Paintings Found Benefit gliding turn is said to account for and family of Garfield wereuests crashes for a few days at the home of For Hospital Patients most of the Mr. and Mrs. Peter Sorenson during NEWARK. WPA murals In the from low altitude. When the student has eight hours the holidays. room sanof Mountain Essex dining Is no less and of dual Instruction Mr. and Mrs. Darral Childs and atorium, Verona, have had a bene ficial effect upon the mental atti- thoroughly ready for solo, be gets to family and Mr. and Mrs. De Ray Bird of Centerfleld spent the week fly alone. tude of the patients. From then on he files a little eacb end In Levan with Mr. and Mrs. S. This opinion was expressed by Dr. himself. For balf of the pe P. .Chrlstenscn. Byron M. Harman, superintendent. day by riod he gets additional Instruction. Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Although he has no way of measur he goes up alone and prac the Xmas holidaysMalmgren ing the effect. Dr. Harman said, be Then spent In Glen-da- le Is certain that It has been beneficial. tices. California with Mr. and Mrs. And, what If the student doesn't Russell Mooney and with Mr. The murals, covering 1,100 square and practice? WelL the Instructor finds Mrs. Carl Secrest In Fresno, Califfeet of canvas, depict colonial. Revcheck on It out next the flight. ornia. olutionary war and modern phases of New Jersey history. They were Mr. and Mrs. Leon Madsen recompleted late In 1936 by WPA art Storks Bring Boers Dutch turned to their home In McGIll, ists under supervision of Michael Nevada after spending the Messages About Nazis ChristmasMonday Lensor, of Newark. vacation with Mrs. Mad-sen- 's AFRI SOUTH JOHANNESBURG. Studying the effect upon patients. prents, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Dr. Harman said the murals have CA. Boer farmers In this vicinity Franco m. tended to "relieve the Institutional report that some of the storks ar Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Mangelson. appearance of the dining room, mak riving here In their annual 7,000-mil- e Anna Mae Sowny, Mr. and Mrs. are Netherlands The from Ing it more interesting to patients." migration Vern Mangelson, Mr. and Mrs. Patients have Indicated their carrying written messages on the Glenn Mangelson, and Mr. and Mrs. in Nazi Dutch the under of murals. condition the have They James pleasure Chrlstenscn attended the identified each other with different rule. shower In Fountain Green Monday One farmer said that be untied night In honor of Mr. and Mrs. figures and have special names for this scribbled message from the leg Aurtln Mangelson. groups and symbols. of a migrating stork: Funeral services were conducted "We inhabitants of Bergen-op- Sea Otter Cape for Sale Zoom tell you German occupation is In the ward chapel Tuesday afternoon C. Anderson, who If You've Got $75,000 Just hell." Another said, "the Dutch died atforhisHans home Saturday afterSANTA MONICA. CALIF. W. 8. people are dying under Injustice." noon. Brackett may sell his sea otter cape Mr. Anderson was born in Denthe state's attorney general says Father Bids Greek Soldier mark June 22, 1&47, and came to America when 21 years of age. He although state and federal laws Return Only if Victorious married Mary Jensen and has resprohibit the possession of ses otter ided In Levan the majority of his ATHENS. In a package of cigapelts. All be has to do is find someone willing to pay him 175.000 the rettes sent to the Greek soldiers at life time. He has been an ardent Saint. value fixed by a London furrier. letter rem- Latter-da- y the front was found Survivors Include his widow, Mrs. Brackett received the cape as an iniscent of the spirit of old Sparta. Jensen Anderson three dauheirloom from his mother, who ob"Smoke these cigarettes." the Mary five sons: Andrew Antained It In Newton, Mass., 60 years message read, "and If you happen ghters and derson, Woods Cross; James Anbefore enactment of the I remind of prothe derson, I'ayson. Carrie Wankier, to be my son, ago, you hibition laws. blessing I gave you. If you do not Merle Wood, John Anderson, OrIs The cape three feet long with a return victorious, do not return at lando Anderson, and Niels Anderson of Levan; Alvlna Pierce of sweep of 110 inches. all to your father's home." Gunnison; also 27 grandchildren. Mr. Anderson's death Is the first of Vaccine for Measles his entire family. Drawbridge on Dry Land Those taking part In the services But Tender Sticks to Job were: Has Been Discovered Invocation, Edgar Christen-sen- ; Nick CALIF. SACRAMENTO. PHILADELPHIA. musical numbers, Male quartDiscovery SchwaD. receives $50 month as of a vaccine for measles was anette, J. L. Francom, Leo Christen-se- n, bridge-tende- r on a bridge he does Cecil Stephensen and Lee Taynounced at the bicentennial connot operate. lor; violin and viola duet, Ndra ference of "the University of The war department designated Anderson of Woods Cross and Ruth Pennsylvania. the Feather river as navigable McClellan of Salt Lake City; vocal This vaccine is universal, good Earley and Louise tor both children and adults, and stream, despite the fact the stream duet, Henrietta violin and viola duet; vocIn war promises to protect sohat become too shstlow for any- Winter; al solo, Lee Speakers were ldiers from pneumonia that has thing except small power boats Not Bishop E. P. Taylor. Peterson. Alex Peterchannel has the river followed measles outbreaks In that only son, H. R. Frnnnom, Jamen Andershifted until the drawbridge now is son. Benediction was by LeGrand military camps. over dry land. Mangelson and the grave was dedicated by Elgin Gardner. back-breakin- sim-ltaneo- ur half-hou- Levan l" - s |