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Show Page Of187Years Five University of Utah educators, whose combined service to their profession totals 187 years, will be honored at a public Ibanquet Fri4ay at 6:30 p.m. in, the Union Building." 1 0, The five, whose retirement was recently announced jto take effect June jW are: vice Bennion, Dean Milton president of the U. of U. and head of the School of EducDean J. L. Gibson of the ation; -School - of -- Arts - and Sceinces; Dean Thomas A. Beal of the School of Business; Esther Nelson, librarian; Elias H. mechanical professor-o- f engineering. They have an average of 37 years service. . . Heading the committee for the banquet are Dr, H. L. Marshall, general chairman; Dr. Orin Tug-madinner; Dr. I. publicity, Lila Eccles and Dean John L. Student Ballif Jr., reception. member are Mona committee Snelgrove and Jack Shilling. Assistants oh the general include Dean A. LeRoy Taylor, Dean LeRoy E. Cowles, Dean Myrtle Austin, Prof. J. R. Mahoney. William F. McCrea and Douglas 0. Woodruff. The affair will be and reservations, which are open public, may be to the general made with the Extension Diyl-sio- tal for that state to Visit Buildings Plans for a joint Installation children -Fifty-twPrimary banquet of the Salt Lake and Ogden Optimists Clubs set for 7 of the Tremonton First Ward visited Church office p m, Saturday In the New house today had listened to the Taber Hotel were discussed at the week- "buddings, ly Salt Lake dub meeting in nade organ recital and paid a the hotel yesterday. cheery Visit to the Primary Chii Ora H. Barlow wiU be Installed ldrens Hospital. as president of the local group They were accompanied by Lo--Js Wathins, wardluperlntendsucceeding J, IX Hurd and Wallace B. Kngtand will head the entr Phoebe Haight, Valera Gets,--ldell- a VtUiam Alien. Hand Koford and ' Ogden dub succeeding F. Smiley, H. A. Bement is gen- Leeh Deacon, Primary officer eral chairman of arrangement. and teachers. o $3,732,000, compared with $2,695,000 a year Cuba exported $.751433 pounds of fresh beef to the United "Sttte lathe first -t- hree months this year, compared with 6.309.1 9 pounds - in the last quarter of .last year. . Beck-'stran- d, n, HEW OIL A Owen-Hors--fa- ll, LIFE-GIVE-R. 5-Q- FILt-llO- T. lBDEDr LASTED 13,398 MILES llE com-mitte- es -- more than Twice the mileage averaged i Nx x xv other by 5 -- X 44 sXxXvxVx XVX'-X- . s : . - I;- - t" Marsden Barham re- ceives award at Harvard. - I IWins Honor f At Harvard i Named Winner Of Essay1 Contest I Marsden Durham, gradand uate student at Harvard, son of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Durham of 1123 Lake Street, has been awarded first prize by the - Harvard Dante Society for his essay "Dante, 1941," It was announced today. Mr. Durhams subject was a study of Dantes Influence upon the poetry of T. S. Eliot. The ' award, carries a $50 cash prize. The prize is awarded for the best essay by a student in any department of Harvard University, or by a graduate o not more than three years standing, on a subject drawn from the life or "works of Dante. The competition is open to students and graduates of similar standing In any college qr university in the United States. to Essayists are at liberty write on any one of the subjects which have been proposed In the years during which this prize has been offered, or to .propose new subjects for the ap- proval of the Dante Society. Mr. Durham Is doing graduate study In English at Harvard and will complete this years work on June 7, returning to Salt Lake City for the summer. He is a graduate of the University of Utah having received his A. B. degre from that institution last year. He was an English major at the Utah school. Army Requests Land By Airport office. The land, upon which approximately $300,000 in improvements would be constructed, was requested by Maj. Raymond T. Elsmore and Capt Winston R. 'Maxwell of the Twentieth Wing. Attending the meeting were: Finance CommissionerOscar W. McConkie, Park Commissioner ;P. H. Goggin, Streets Commissioner John B. Matheson and Water Commissioner George D. Keyser, Chamber of Commerce Secretary Gus P. Backman, and ' Max Schick, office engineer, and A. B. Larson, assistant city engineer. X THIRST killed gold-feveri- Forty-Nine- sh LIVER moot Ciiand-A- BIL- E- Twill mp Odl ( Bed in fce Morning Ruin U Go ' Tlie Umr ihooM poor 2 pinto at Hit frieo Into poor bowel, every day. It tfaie bile to not Sowing freely, your food mey not et It mey juet decay in the bowek Then bloete np your stomach. You ret con. titrated. Von fed tour, sunk and the world looks punk. tood, old Carter! Little Liver Pills to get these 2 pints of bile flow ing freely to make yon fed "up and no Cet a package today. Taka aa directed. Amaetag Jn making bile flow freely. Art foe GartaPt Little Urer Puk. 1M and ted. nd X'X n sVX V"VX xn X 'XXXxXx nv'IxAS stand today on our hemispheres bottom, 279 feet below sea level. And some of the d worst heat on U. S. Weather Bureau rec-or- (D-C- will be drying you up. . . . Americas Hotspot! . . . where 6 identical everyday cars were kept scorching along, testing 6 different motor oils, till 6 new engines were junk. Every test condition was the same for all. Qualified authorities eyed every move every mile. Speed: 57 miles an hour for all. The Official Referee had bought. 5 of the oils right off the market; millions know Draft Inducts Another.65 Men With an additional 65 men Inducted today, the tenth selective service call for Utah, Nevada and southern Idaho, which is scheduled to continue today and Thursday, had added 123 new army recruits, it was reported from induction headquarters at the Ness Building. Seven men were rejected over the two days, of examinations for failure to meet physical requirements, it was reported. Two additional draft callsthe eleventh and twelfth, have been ordered for June. .Aj 'CONOCO processing. Similarly, the latest refining methods steal some of Natures best elements from motor offs. But more than making up for that today in life-givi- ng popular-p- " Graduate Five Diplomas will be awarded to five students of St John's Lutheran School at 1030 Fifth East Street, at graduation exercises to be held this evening at 8 oclock according to the Rev. F. E. Schumann, pastor of the St Johns Lutheran Church. The five graduates are Lucille Boulton, William Franken, Keith Hoesch, Raymond Maurer and Neal Scheid. Mr.,- - Scheld will be valedictorian and David Schumann will reply. Mr. Maurer will give the salutatory. The exercises will be under the direction of Raymond J. Mueller, superintendent of the school, who will also distribute the diplomas. N6 - , Conoco NA oil is a new synthetic called Thialkcne inhibitor ...mw-mad- e by Conoco. U. S. Patent 2,218,132 tells what it is. And Death Valley showed riced , what it does. It in A ibits or checks the effect of foul leftovers always created by the normal explosions in every car engine. Thats what makes Conoco NA stay more like its own good self . . . helps the engine stay in OIL MOTOR Sals hers for Youf Car Now on How could exactly one fill of this popular-price- d Conoco NA oil keep lasting with- out one added drop for ah official total of 13,398.8 miies? How could Conoco - . A shape N Life-Givi- oil is preserved by You know of vitamin synthetics . . . man- Safe- - made . . . replacing Police were today investigating theft of $90 in cash and two small, unset diamonds from a safe in the office of Samuel A. Cottereil. 303 Utah Savings and Trust Building.' Officers said the safe, apparently had been left unlocked, as there were no marks Indicating a forced entrance. Natures - life-givi- ng G. CERTIFIED 7 nX- - ' 4 ' XV oil-plati- ng life-givi- Thats like a mad extreme; X .2X0 xlx . r iv Th Engin De- struction Test in brands, was closely observed by me ' A to , game mSeago stated. XT' esert . y A i i vr f XX CwnwSk I AtaSaaic tnee. vAo Uwrkie over-stretchi- ng Company Pionccrs in Bettering teas oil with Synthetics and my during the preparation of the test fleet and during the entire period of the test. The five competitive brands were bought by us at retail and handled only under our observation. Closest possible uniformity was attained in the cam and driving conditions. . I hereby certify that the work and tests were thoroughly and fairly conducted. Engine Destruction occurred in each case at ths C s the limit far beyond the utmost distance allowed for one fill of oil by authorities on the subject. Youd never make your own car stand any such proving-groun- d torture. Certainly not. But you want as wide a margin of engine protection and oil economy as your money will buy this Summer. On both counts Conoco NA oil has nailed up plain evidence. Ask today for Conoco NA at Your hlfieage Mer-.chants Conoco station. Continental Oil well-know- I ng 13,398 miles. Certified. ViDy, tMti&g Continental Oil Company's new motor oil and flra n advertised competi-tiv- a other . The city must act either to replace the old markers or install the new type "Lyman guide-post- s before very long, said Mr. Matheson,' suggesting that in the latter event the project might be accomplished in "sections." He reminded the commissioners that he had asked 'for a $20,. 000 appropriation for the renumbering in this years budget but it had been eliminated. Experimental Lyman markers are now in use on Ninth East Street. The matter was referred without comment to the committee of the whole. and run raw till oil gets pumped up, this faithful stays plated up . .. on guard against wear in advance, while youre using Conoco N ofl. And in addition you get the latest aid that' foiled fearful Death Valley. . . that eclipsed other oils tested . . . that made one fill of new Conoco NA motor oil last all of DsnUk V'V eral complaints from tourists to the effect that the citys ancient street designations are almost Illegible and are placed too high for auto headlamps to Illuminate at night OIL-PLATI- This lasting lubricant cant all drain down from inner parts though the csi speeds or stands all day. Instead of allowing the engine to start dry engine New Synthetic! ng matching Conoco Another wondrous synthetic, remember and long used under the famed Germ Processed oil patent still gives your even outlasting one rival by 8,268 miles! . . . Certified. Conoco good way to save quarts. ' A triumph oil outlast them all by 5,683 miles or more, ' Cask Goes From elements sacrificed in some modem food their names well. The other oil was decid- - .. edly new with a name you are sure to know better and better. This new oil that authentically delivered more than twice the mileage averaged by the others is named School Will -- lAdrJ X rs street markers. WAKE UP YOUR XXX -- Streets Commissioner John B. Matheson today asked the City Commission to do something one way or another about sev- - CNXS oXN x in Death Valley. Down at Bad Water, undrinkable Death Valley puddle, you can A bill to double the salary of the adjutant general to $4,000 a year was introduced into the House late yesterday by Rep. S. W. Elswood The bill also requires the' ada $10,000 bond. jutant to post was introduced by Another bill Rep. Edward Scherer a bon) which would allow majority of employes of an employer of three or more persons and to the Industrial Commission enter into a mutual agreement with the employer waiving their seright to have their wages cured as required by previous acts of the Legislature. .Formally the employer was double required to guarantee amount of his largest monthly payroll either by Insurance or acceptable by depositing City Street Designation " Cause Of Protest Signs The commissioner told of v amimfiniwiindinHiini - ' Application for 80 aores of land adjacent to the U. S. Army airdrome lease was made to city commissioners, representatives of the City Engineers Office and the Salt Lake Chamber of Com- merce today by army officers at a meeting in the city engineers X ' i Bill Would Double Salary To $4,000 I. Marsden Durham xXxx v Destruction Test . . . Impartial . . . Certified AdjutantPay Boost Sought I Salt Laker XX X ''V'fXx XXXs X 4 XX X XxvXXXvx- Vvx semi-form- Si Honored -- . v XX . x X ltm ' s X .v X'XvXX' Xx xvT XX XXX. oils in fiendish big-na- X IJI"" ftm k Ntww aI a . Primary Children Optimist Club Lays Installation Plans come totaled $109,373,000, compared with $90,501,000 during March last year. The Increase In payments to Idaho stockmen brought the to- last year than were the growers of grains and other traps. The value of crops sold In the 11 states gained, however, to a total of $42,543,000 from $37.227.. 00 in March. 1940. All told, the western farmers got $93,090,000 from sales of products In the month, the department report--' d, and with, an additional $14,- - March of 1940. , In total Income, the climb in stock other lamb and' cattle, prices gave stockmen of the 11 western states some $52,547,000, compared with $41.985,000 in r1940r The figures showed the stock-me- n doing considerably.- better in pushing current income above Those higher prices Mrs. R. House-wif- e (Rocky . Mountain) has been paying for meat meant an adidtional $1,055 000 to Utah stockmen in March, fig- ures.lreleaseL today ..by the of United- - States Department Agriculture, showed. Utah stockmen took in $2,870,-00compared with $1,815,000 in M. University Officials, Have - Combined-Servic- e the form of government payments, their Match In- 2S3.000 In Income Of Utah Stockmen Shows Jump Of Million Over Same Month In: 1940 Banquet To Honor Veteran Utah Deans .JFive JTcdnesday, June 4,19it NEWS THE DESERET Lake City , Utah 10-- Suit f X |