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Show FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1952 : THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH ' PAGE FIVE that great magazine distributed with next Sunday's Los Angeles Examiner. THOSE DARN Chinese Reds have associating with Ameri-cans too much for the good of their philosophy and ours, even if the relationship has been only on a hostile basis. Chinese are expected to believe that this sojourn is only a camp on the trek to Join the great in-finite. Enterprise in this life is futile, they say, because our days here are fleeting and earthly hopes are as dry as the bamboo walls in Chinese houses. Americans are just the opposite. But now the Chinese at the Pan-munjo-truce site in Korea are digging in for a long stay and are replacing the battered conference tent, that could have been folded silently any night and whisked away, with a solid wooden house a structure that can stand in. definitely. The building is of more solid structure than is usual in Korea. It is made of wood, but has a con-crete foundation. The walls are of white pine. We've been fearing that those deadlocked truce talks would last forever. Now with the Chinese those fellows who go In generally for paper furniture and straw houses building upon concrete, it begins to look as if they consider Panmunjon as the great infinite. It's association with Americans that did it. We're surprised that the United States forces didn't build a apartment house on the site, survey the streets and erect a shopping center. Our patriotic pride is hurt that we let the Chinese first instill a theme of permanence into something the very nature of which is ephemeral a conference to end a war. They outdid us at our own game and built their permanent confer-ence headquarters before we could put up even a gasoline station or motel. We were caught idling away our time and contemplating our navels by a bunch of paper dragons toting concrete blocks. That's no way to win a war. hostess and Mrs. Norma Nichols ss for the evening. All members are invited. Mr. and Mrs. Monty Jones and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cowdell of Riverton were dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Cowdell Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Gard Draper of Richmond, Calif., visited Thurs-day and Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Cowdell. Mrs. Ray Cowdell and Mrs. Albert Ray visited in Riverton Wednesday with Mrs. Monty Jones. A lovely birthday party was given in honor of Mrs. Elvin Armitstead last Saturday even-- 1 ing by her sister, Mrs. Martin Hansen of tJult Lake City. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Arm-itstead, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Con-de- r, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Lewis, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bert, all of Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. James Peterson recently moved to Oretn where they will make their home while James is attending Brigham Young University at Provo. A candy pull was held at the home of Ann Diederich on Mon-day, September 15. Those pres- -' ent were MarJean Lofgran, San-dra Alexander, Ann Christie of Lark, Audrey Ann Sumnicht,. Louise Stoker and Joyce Farley. A good time was had by all. MarJean Lofgran of Lark spent Wednesday night at Copperton as guest of Ann Diederich. "On Trial For Love" An Am-erican girl who fell in love with a German prisoner of war help-ed him escape, tells, in her own words, of their fight for happi-ness. It's the unusual story be-hind one of St. Louis' most grip-ping courtroom dramas. Read it in the new American Weekly, JUMBO GETS NOSEY . , . Candy, Asiatic elephant at Bronx, N.Y., too, pokes a nosey trunk Into eye of cameraman who tries to get a closeup of the one-year-- elephant. . , LARK NEWS Joy Seal 901J1 LARK SCHOOL P-T- A The Lark elementary school A held a matinee and night picture show at the school on Monday, September 15th. Pro-ceeds from the shows went tow-ard paying for stage curtains in the schoolhouse. A short business meeting was conducted by Mrs. Alta Boyd, president, before the evening show. Mr- - and Mrs. Earl Bigler vis-ited Sunday, September 14 with Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Roberts of Lay ton. ' ' t A birthday dinner was given in honor of Mrs. Horace M. Seal at her home on Sunday, Septem-ber 14th. Those in attendance were Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Draper, Mrs. Jessie Nielsen and family, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Walker and Marsha, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Carson of Salt Lake City and Joy Seal. Afternoon visitors at the Seal home were Mrs. Seal's sis-ters, Mrs. J. Thomas Ostler of Sandy, Mrs. Mildred Christensen of Salt Lake City, Mrs. Erma Crump and Mrs. Ferrell Good-rich of Midvale. R. P. Nell is convalescing , in St. Mark's hospital after a minor operation. Mrs. Horace M. Seal and dau-ghters, Joy, Mrs. Harry Carson, Mrs. Dallas Draper, Mrs. Thomas P. Walker and Mrs. Jessie Niel-sen enjoyed dinner at the Hotel Utah Coffee Shop and went to see the square dance jamboree with Bob and Dotty Brown and saw the we the people broadcast and presentation of Miss Utah contestants Wednesday evening. Howard Gressman left Tuesday September 16 to return to his home in Huntington Beach, Calif, after visiting two weeks with his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gress-man and family. SPAGHETTI DINNER AND APRON SALE A spaghetti dinner and apron sale will be held at the new Lark divorced him when he hit the political jackpot., This and many other fascinating features will appear - in the: new American Weekly, that great magazine dis-tributed with next Sunday's Los Angeles Examiner. elementary school on Friday, September 26th, under the spon-sorship of the Lark Ward Relief Society. Dinner will be served from 4 to 6 p.m., price of which is: adults $1.50 per person, high school students $1.00, and all children under 12 75 cents. A program will follow the dinner, and a quilt and luncheon cloth will be auctioned off. Proceeds will go to the new church build-ing fund. The Junior Gleaner class of Lark Ward MIA put on a fashion show at mutual Tuesday, Sep-tember 16th. It introduced the proper clothes for LDS mutual girls to wear to church and pub-lic functions. Miss Melva Peter-son acted as narrator. Those par-ticipating in the modeling were MarJean Lofgran, Ann Christie, Joy Seal, Rex Wittke, Don Fer-guson, Albert Lisbon and Royal Michaelsen. "The Truth About Mrs. Adlai Stevenson" Read an intimate portrait of this beautiful and tal-ented heiress who fell in love with a smart young lawyer and wiiuiinw ii m iuwm'iwMiHuii''iLM' mm nmwiM.niuiuu m .......... ( R2GDS). v -- : ; Prprf fcjr tint 5l$T$R KENNTf FOUNDATION a apvblfc tervk ' I p? j T; j W ,y ft er$Ectn ( thin6 taken into the EXERCIse NORMAL PRC- - - "Sl MOUTH MOST B CARE" CAUTIONS AGAINST EX- - CONTACTS WITH NEW J FULLY GUARDED, AVOID POSOBBTOACDMMyN GROUPS SHOULD 66 I 03NTACT WTTM PLIES OR (CABLE OrSEASB. i AVOIDED. ANVTWNS EWbSEOKSRJES -a- -. r J -- -. 3fe SAYOl0a'ERJW "X ijT AVOID FATIOOe ?) L Vllk, SWIMMING SUITING PflOM l&M Lm - $11 T1T WATER j WORRVOe lR- - fT yyT) j RE3ULAR uv,Nfi EN u0 gKES ftVl CAU KXJR COCJOC! EAR.LV APPLICATION r VaIY I ff OP KENWY TREATMENT IS IMPORTANT IM M lfcL r1 PREVENTING CRIPPLING. ADMISSION TO ZA JbsX A ENNV TREATMENT CENTER 6 ARRAN6- - mTxY ED THROUGH KUR CCCTOB. Te PULL v3S"j$r NNV TREATMENT IS ADMINISTERED -- rV BV FUUV TRAILED KENNV THERAPISTS. : LOCAL NOTES : No. 2 Fire Ladies met last Mon-day night as guests of Mrs. Earl Rager. Prizes at bridge were to Mrs. Marlin Schultz, Mrs. Jack Householder Sr. and Mrs. Leonard L. Miller. Dainty refreshments were served to thirteen. Linger Longer club members met at the home of Mrs. H. R. Gust of Copperton on Monday night. Mrs. Louise Prescott was welcomed into the club as a new member. Mrs. Pete Smith was an invited guest. The occasion also celebrated the birthday an-niversary of Mrs. J. T. Davis and she received many lovely gifts. A dainty dessert luncheon and birthday cake were served after which contract bridge was play-ed. Prizes were won by Mrs. Smith, first; Mrs. G. T. Buckle, second and bingo, and Mrs. A. A. Berg, consolation. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Prigmore are visiting with relatives and friends in Washington, D. C. En-rou- te east they stopped to visit in Kansas City, Mo. A. L. Nelson and Mr. and Mrl. H.-V- . Nelson just returned from a vacation trip to Florida and the midwest. , Mrs. J. Lynn Booth was hos-tess to the No. 2 Fire Ladies on Monday evening. Prizes at bridge were awarded to Mrs. Lawrence West, Mrs. Martin Prigmore and Mrs. Sam Lovat. Lovely refresh-ments were served. Next week the No. 2 Fire Ladies will be guests of the No. 1 Fire Ladies. Mrs. John R. West will entertain the No. 2 Ladies on Monday, September 29th. Model Cars at $4,000 Each - Two model ears, each winning a $4,000 scholarship, shown with their builders and "Boss" Kettering, General Motors Director and famed re-searcher. The boys are, William Morgan, New Albany, Ind., whose model car won top honors of $4,000 in the Senior Division of the Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild, and, right, Gerald Grabcheski, Elizabeth, N. J., whose car won an equal award of $4,000 in the Junior Division of the compcli tion. Eight "national winners were selected from forty-tw- regional winner Jn this annual competition which oilers $65,000 in awards and university scholarships to boys from 12 to 20 years of age for designing and buildin their own model cars. 'GREATEST FIGHTER' . . . Sam Langford, called by veteran Boston fans "the greatest fighter who ever lived," lives in Boston on a 1.65-a-da- y charity check. He is blind. At left Is Al Delmont, former New England feather champ. f ' m m m m m : copperton : Joyce Olsen, phone 530-- Ann Diederich, Phone 521-- W . COPPERTON SCHOOL MEETING SLATED SEPT. 24 First meeting of the Copperton Grade School P-T- A for the 1952-5- 3 school year will be held at the school n Wednesday, Sep-tember 24th at 7:30 p.m. accord-ing to Mrs. Betty Winn publicity chairman. The program will consist of a panel discussion entitled "Know Your District" with Arthur E. Peterson, superintendent of Jor-dan school district, acting as moderator. All parents are invited to at-tend. Sunday dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Fike were Mrs. Gladys O'Connor of Salt Lake City and Mrs. Ross Rigby of Clovis, N. Mex. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jensen of Midvale and Mr. and Mrs. Stan-ley DeLeshe of Sandy visited Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ray and family. Tuesday evening guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Keith and family were Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jacobson and fam-ily of Union. Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Jarrells and daughter Ella Jean of West Virginia are staying with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Olsen and family. They will later make their home in Bingham. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Nelson and Mrs. Wilford Harris and son of Provo visited with Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Olsen and family Sunday evening. A candy pull was enjoyed Fri-day evening at the home of Bar-bara Nix. Those attending were Sandra Laycock, Patty Redmond, Mary DeCol, Merry Simkins, Sandra Archibald, Sherry Lan-caster, Marilyn Stocks, JoAnn Rasmussen and Joyce Olsen. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Pingree and daughters, Karen and Debra of Roy were Monday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Wing and family. STUDY GUILD PLANS TRIP TO MAGNA MONDAY A trip to the Magna Mills will feature the second meeting of the Copperton Study Guild to be held next Monday, September 22. Members will meet at the home of Mrs. Lucille Brisk about 5:15 p.m. and leave from there for Magna at 5:30 p.m. Mrs. Brisk is All in the Game: FESLER Insists that his WES Gophers are not a good Big Ten squad . . . Sugar Ray Robinson and Jackie Robinson plan to team up on a winter stage tour Sugar even has had some plastic surgery done on his nose to make him look pretty . . , The Cards have extended the contract of Manager Eddie Stanky for another - year seems they like the stinky 7,uy ... . Race track operators at Butler county (Ohio) fairgrounds have been sued by a horse owner wlia charges the owners with hav-ing his horse's tall tied to the starting gate at the beginning of a race . . . The New York Giants figured to play before a ' million and a half persons at home this season, but they'll do well to come within 300,000 of that figure . . . Into the hottest new coaching spots this year go Forrest Evashevskl at Iowa, Bernie Crlmmlns at Indiana, and Red Dawson at Pittsburgh . . . Sanity codes, and new restrictions are springing up In football everywhere, but they will not lessen the win-or-el- mania. l? TIME I'l i I travtl overnight I EI4IG4IW MS 5m jOIMOltXjj annnDncnnannnnnnnooannnnnnnona FOR BETTER MEATS GIVE US A TRY I POULTRY CHEESE QUALITY MEATS y j; BUTTER EGGS BINGHAM MEAT CO Clarence Robison W. H. Harris Clinton Robison Phone 5 We Deliver lannnnnnnnnnnnnonnannnBnniinnDnD foE6years old I'Ys it WRA YEARS 3f ancetfie great Bourbon Taste of WE'LL SEE YOU AT THE OLD Jf BINGHAM CLUB BEER ON TAP LOCAL AND EASTERN BOTTLED BEER Sam Feraco, Prop. tJdAli MT & :f $ ; s2j CARD ROOKIE . . . One of the rookies that have enabled the St. Louis Cards to keep in the National League race and com-pile a seven-gam- e winning streak recently Is Stuart Miller, right-hander. He let the Giants down recently with a three-h- it ball game. By LYN CONNELLY pHARLES FARRELL and "Sev-V- j enth Heaven" are synonymous, at least in the minds of avid movie-goers of the late 20's ... He played Chico opposite Janet Gaynor in the stirring drama of World War I . . . Now he's playing the part of a middle-age- d father in the CBS-T-series, "My Little Margie" . . . His daughter, Margie, is played by Gale Storm, who has three chil-dren of her own ... It was at the behest of Hal Roach, Sr., a long-time friend of Charlie's, that the star returned to public "life, and it is Hal Roach, Jr. who Is pro-ducing the series of T.V, domestic comedies. Farrell's screen career, after some years of extra work, was launched in Paramount's "Old Iron-sides," directed by the late James Cruze . . . "Seventh Heaven" fol-lowed (1927) . . , Then came a se-ries of other Fox pictures, including "Street Angel," "The Man Who Came Back." "Sunny Side Up," and others, most f them with Janet Gaynor ... In 1932 he mar-ried Virginia Valli in New York City . . . She had been a screen star in her own right, but retired upon marriage. When the picture industry ap-parently was falling for him, he hied himself to Palm Springs, picked up a piece of sand which later became the lucrative Racquet Club ... It was on Christmas Day o.f..1934 that he opened the project The following day, Hal Roach Sr. went down to the California desert spa, ran into Charlie and asked him how he was doing . . . Farrell, In all honesty, replied, "Well, we took In $18 yesterday" and Roach, in all honesty, said, "Well, we opened the Santa Anita race track and took in a million and a half" . . . The chickens came home to roost for Charlie ... In the years that followed he has made close to three quarters of a million a year with his original pile of sand. He and Virginia operate the club together and during the summer re-side in Beverly Hills. P P P P P I P P P P Fl iT I i2 3 j Kmr p sr-rT- 53 71 s-r- - ir 7 5T7lWilm5m,"T . FFT'TI JLJ. IL 38 7?7Z 39 40 . 41 m , 4 ' ' llLiJL-l7Wr,J- L - Jm-j- -i ii t Crossworo Puzzla HORIZONTAL 1 Mad I Kind of tapestry It Dfaprova 13 To Jlggl 14 Aloft 15 Argued IT Negative 11 Hard-shell-fault 50 Diiitanc meas-ure (pi.) 11 Spider 28 Roman road 14 It la (contr.) U Tropical plant M Trees 18 Jab 30 Hazard 11 Away 31 Ridges 35 To oppose 38 At this place 39 Hawaiian wreath 41 To carry 43 Indian mul- - berry (pi.) 43 Precedes is NegaUv pre-fix 4S Roman number 47 Recompense 4 Slang: to defeat N To soften la temper 51 Robber 64 Cupolas U Concluded VXRTICAL 1 XstlmaUoa I Continent (abbr.) I To sprout 4f Entry Entries on left side of an account f To certify T Female ruff (pi.) 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