OCR Text |
Show FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1952 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH PAGE THREE LAFF OF THE WEEK "Do you have ro srart being domestic so soon?" ; LOCAL NOTES ; 'Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Reid visited Tuesday evening with their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Davis and son of Midvale. t. Mr. and Mrs. John Adamek enjoyed a short visit in Salt Lake City Tuesday evening with Mrs. Adamek's brother and wife and sister, Mr. and (Mrs. William J. Sejnost and Mrs. Lillian Gold-smith, who are enroute to their home in Kansas City, Mo., from a vacation trip to the Pacific northwest. Lady Eagles met Thursday night of last week as guests of Mrs. Irvin Stillman. It was so-cial night and honored Mrs. J. J. Doyle and Mrs. Lester Harris on their birthday anniversaries. Mrs. Hosmer Peterson was an invited guest. Bridge was played with prizes going to Mrs. Doyle, first; Mrs. L. E. Milner, second; Mrs. Harris, consolation; Mrs. Gene Goff, bingo and Mrs. Pe-terson, draw. Dainty refresh-ments were served to fourteen. Dr. Philip G. Fulstow of Kan-a-b was a Bingham Canyon vis-itor Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Ross M. Cushing joined Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Ol-son of Santaquin for dinner and entertainment in Salt Lake City Sunday. The occasion was a joint birthday celebration. Mrs. Homer P. Edwards of Roosevelt arrived last Saturday'i to visit a few days with her dau-ghter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Elmo A. Nelson and children. Paul Nelson who has been visit-ing in Roosevelt for the past sev-eral weeks came home with her. Mrs. Verio Kendrick was hos-tess to twelve members of No. 1 Firemen's auxiliary on Monday evening. Prizes at bridge were won by Mrs. ' Lottie Rawlings, Mrs. Harold Chesler and Mrs. Hosmer Peterson. Dainty refresh-ments were served. r "Journey Into Danger" Low-ell Thomas describes the real-lif- e adventure of Uncle Sam's diplomatic couriers, most of whom quit after two years be-cause the strain is too great. Routine missions may include! hair-raisin- g scrapes with com-munists, flights thru war-zon- es but whether by plane, ox-car- t, canoe or foot America's top-secr- et messages must go thru For this dramatic account read the New American Weekly, that great magazine, distributed .with next Sunday's Los Angeles Ex-aminer. Mr, and Mrs. Clarence Gray and daughters, Kathina and Lin-da of Lincoln, Neb., visited Thursday of last week with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Prigmore and son Mr. and Mrs. Verio Kendrick and Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Ander-son enjoyed a swimming party at the Civic Center pool last Fri-day night. T - : ? i V v s J x v 1 .55. J i. f- 41 $ COOL OFF, BUB! . . . Ump Paparella grabs Ferris Fain a Vi 1st baseman goes for Yank burler Tom Morgan dSom Fain accused of tossing a bean ball In Yankee Stadium game. BATTLE JOINED GOP, Democrats Are Setting Stage For Free-Swingi-ng Campaigns As the Democrats this week paraded their big-na- leaders before their lusty national convention in Chicago in a full-blo-attempt to match or better the resounding antics of the GOP con-clave two weeks ago, the stage was being set for a vigorous, free-swingi- ng election campaign in the interval between now and No-vember 4. The party of Roosevelt and Truman, which had clouded ud gloomily at the mere mention last month of the nami Eisenhower, took new heart and hope for an elec-tion victory after the Internal war-fare that struck the Republicans in their convention. For a good deal of Elsenhower's gilt edge had been chipped aw?y in the course of the waek-lon- g Imttle that resulted in hi? receiving the convention floor. They told the en-tire story, and It ta the more because there were only four ballots cast from Monday, July 7, to Friday. It was shortly after the opening session had begun that the Eisen-hower camp defeated the Taftites on the "Fair Play" amendment by a roll call vote of 858 io 548. The action barred all contested dele-gates In the convention from voting on anything until they were finally and officially seated, but it also permitted the seating of those who had been placed on the temporary rollc by a two-thir- vote of the na-tional committee. That automatically narrowed the much-herhlde- d contests down to Texas. Georgia, and part of Louisi-ana, and sent the convention's cre-dentials committee into a rugged session which hold up the general proceedings a full day. Ike Floor Victory ;The pattern was set, and the fol-lowing day the convention voted 607 to 531 to repudiate the creden-tials committee which had recom-mended seating the solidly pro-Ta-ft Georcla deleeation f,' i"'4.. v ,t.f ' "'A'f After that the Taft forces moved to seat the er delega-tion from Texas In order to avoid another roll call defeat. By that time, Elsenhower and his conhorts Sen. John Cabot Lodge, Governor Dewey of New York, Paul Hoffman, and Herbert Brownell were convinced they had the nomination in the big. That they were right became su-premely apparent at the end of the first ballot to nominate a presi-dential candidate Friday after-noon. Minnesota will be remem-bered for a long time as having administered the coup de grace to Taft's hopes with Warren Burger's climactic announcement from the floor that the state wanted to change its 19 Stassen votes In favor of Elsenhower. That gave the general 614 votes and put him in. Only 604 votes a simple majority of the 1,208 del-egateswere required for nomina-tion. After that the states rushed hys-terically to get on the bandwagon, screaming for the attention of Chairman Joe Martin so that they could get their votes officially changed to Eisenhower. Final tabulation when the roll call closed was Eisenhower 845, Taft 280, Warren 77, MacArthur 4. Move for Unanimity The move for the selection of Eisenhower by acclamation, made by Sen. John Bricker of Ohio, and .its approval by the delegates was a rather week-knee- d aftermath to the bone-shakin- g drama 'of the ballot Itself. DWIGHT EISENHOWER GOP presidential nomination in-stead of Sen. Robert A. Taft. The general of the army who led the World War II allies to victory in Germany and who did a magnificent job of organizing Western Korope's military and economic forces to implement the--Nor- Atlantic Treaty Organization has been sub-merged by the fact that citizen Owight D. Eisenhower is now a man running for American politi-cal office. Not a Disadvantage Yet, Eisenhower 3 descent from the white charger upon which he from Europe last June 1 is not necessarily disadvantage to the Republicans He, with his running mate, Sen. Richard M. Nixon of California, tow is a determined, hard-fightin- g political reality, and the Demo-crats who convened in Chicago's International Amphitheatre this week were aware that they had plenty of work cut out for them. ' ( Despite the deep-roote- d schism between the Taft and Eisenhower factions that had developed during the spectacular course of the GOP , convention, the two sides lost no time in starting to bridge the gap once the show was over and the de-cision was made. Senator Taft, still the Mr. Repub-lican of the U.S. senate, pledged his complete support to Eisenhower's campaign and promised also to back him in the senate. Eisenhower himself, in his ac- - There were other great moments in the convention MacArthur's stirring keynote address, the over-whelming demonstration accorded to Herbert Hoover, Sen. Everett Dirksen's ' blistering and vitriolic attack on Dewey but by that h'storic Friday after-noon, July 11, they all seemed pale in comparison to the flrst-and-la- st ballot for the presidential nomina-tion. ' ; - The Democrats this week have had all that to think over, and it is almost certain that the wondrous events at the GOP meeting will have a strong effect on the ultimate decision the Democratic party makes as to Its candidates to op-pose the Eisenhower-Nixo- n ticket. ceptance speech, stressed the unity theme. . . "This is not a job for any one of v us or for just a few of us. It will take the best in all of us," he said. Nixon Selected The selection as nominee of Senator N'ixon, although not a compromise move, can be regarded as another tep toward unification of the Re-publican party. He is from Califor-nia, which gives a al flavor to the ticket. He has had f relations with Senator Taft and other members of the Old Guard section of the party. And, as one of the original investigators of Alger Hiss while a member of the house affairs com-mittee, he can play a leading role in the gambit of , the Republican campaign strategy. Nevertheless, the convention strife had cut deeply into party harmony. For the Republicans real-ly whooped it up in a series of bit-ter floor battles and behind-the-scen-maneuvers. It was no "smoke-fille- d room" convention. To be sure, there were promises and counter-promise- s and deals within deals; but the Eisen-hower forces chose the battle-ground most favorable to them the teeming, destiny-struc- k conven-tion floor. First Session Drama Taft's convention machinery was well-oile- d when Guy Gabrielson's gavel pounded down on the opening session, but from that point on it seemed to get more and more gum-med up as the convention moved ahead. Tlit sand got Into the Taft gears s a result of three ballots on the LAM RICHARD NIXON 1 THE BAFFLES ByMohoney I BILLY-- 1 WANT YOU TO BE ( I NOBUTS." j I YES-SI- ! I WANT TO TRAIN AMBITIOUS THIS SUMMER JUST SHOW frfY SON,AN0 NOW FOR A AMO EARN YOUR SPENDING YOUR OAD COOL BATH MONEY.ro like rr if you a little, wi nothing like WOULD FIND A UTTLE JOB INITIATIVE.' 'Mj ! IT TO PEP YOU AND SEE HOW k . fe t UP OH A HOT f ' T) NICE IT IS TO r HUMiD PAY. . JbYTy A I Y THOUGHTFUL PER- - fhC. --.Si L WriLLEO THE , jlUR , , THAT'S WHAT I WANTED TO J , , , ' T TELL YOU, POP. JIMMY Ss. A K X j JONES AND I ARE IN w.f v V-- 4f THE FISHING BAIT 5iS IViXX "7,",''r"--- - business and we're m i RAISING MINNOWS iVr?) A I J s ll.V AND CRAWOADS IN Jir sffi THE 0 Jp) ' IMMOHRfc-j v S , w Former Governor Maw Announces Candidacy for Senator In making his announcement Governor Maw, who has lonjr been regarded aa one of the top lead-er- a of the party in Utah, urged the Democratic party to take the lead in reducing government ex-penditures, warning that exces-sive taxation can destroy the gov- - ernment "This reduction in expenditures can be done in the nation as it was done in Utah during my ad-ministration," said the former chief executive. "If elected to the United States senate, I shall do my best to accomplish similar re-sults on the federal level." While he declared strong op-position to both "socialized medi-cine and federal control on re-strictions on education," he said "the people of Utah are entitled to their full share of federal aid for state projects. Therefor I de-clare myself as favoring federal aid - to education, highways, we-lfare, public building, reclamatiop and other beneficial programs." His statement also emphasized the "prosperity which the Demo-cratic party has brought to the people of Utah and to the nation;", cited the need for further reclama-tion and power development on the Colorado river and smaller streams of the state; called for curbs on government interference with the private affairs of citizens and businesses; asserted the need for elimination of "graft and from federal agencies," and urged programs to eliminate the "destructive and menacing in- - fluence" of the communism in this country and the world. Other points of his . platform will be brought out during the campaign, he added. Mr. Maw was born in Ogden Marrh 11. 1893. attended elemen- - tary schools in Ogden and Salt Lake City and was graduated from the University of Utah. He later received a doctor of jurisprudence degree from the Northwestern University. A member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints he served as an Army chaplain during the first world war. He taught speech at the University of Utah and for a while was dean of men there. " In 1928 he was elected to the state senate, in 1932 and 1934 and became president of that body in 1935. After serving two terms as governor, he won his party's nomination for a third term in 1948 but was defeated in the final election by Gov. J. Bracken Lee. 4?feTHE PRO-DRIV- KNOWsTV fiPJ SPEED KILLS 1'Civl (Um Your Htod No Your Fooll fVJ "Safety Is No Accident" t DID YOU KNOW? Highway acd- - Jlf 'iw dnt have rachd tuch alarming k tV'tSp- - proportion! that Gov. loo hat callod fS2!$c!S. C-- "1 V7V on "f9"cy So'oly Conforonco for WjfivVVX wsfo.'vTAN jui' j8 you shquld " THEM(aIC'l)I COPPER GATE BEER PARLOR 54 Main Street Telephone 290 BEST BEER ON TAP ALL POPULAR BRANDS OF BEER IN BOTTLES AND CANS Jack Nicholls, Prop. 'fMEBS IF! "Mining it my business. Ifs mine w ' because I have such a big stake in it. As long as our industry operates successfully, my family lives well. So if important for me to do what I can to help the industry. And I can do that by keeping production up and costs down. Thafs the way I help to earn the profits that keep my paycheck coming." l ' ,.. M,. ' j jkCfjj "Sure I'm a fast runner, j LXFT but I wish I could get as many V v fif sold medals for fast running l J'",!Tu aS Dairy has receiv- - '4t. 'Sy ed for high Quality milk." FOR TV. AND RADIO SERVICE IT'S EAST MIDVALE ELECTRONICS PROMPT. COURTEOUS, GUARANTEED SERVICE, WITH QUALITY GENERAL ELECTRIC AND HICKOK LABOR-ATORY TYPE TESTING DEVICES THE BEST IN SERVICE CAN BE RENDERED, REASONABLY. Bring the family and visit our comfortable display room, featuring famous Hallicrafters T.V. EAST MIDVALE ELECTRONICS - T.V. - RADIO SALES AND SERVICE 38 W. 7500 So. St. Midvale, Utah Mid. 144 IISIIJK WE'LL SEE YOU AT THE BINGHAM CLUB BEER ON TAP LOCAL AND EASTERN BOTTLED BEER Sam Feraco, Prop. mmmsm m SEE THE BULLETIN FOR FINE PRINTING! |