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Show t FRIDAY, MARCH , i P Four THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON', UTAH 4: Making"A Desert Bloom? k - i r mii;; AV J f If & i h ,.vniimm'i&iif ir.,. , t J " Community iriil; follow civillza-- , lion everywhere, 'i Emphatic testlmouy of this Is slven in the accompanying picture i which shows the family ot a mine worker at a cottage in the Mercur ' district, Tooele county, Utah, where 'I housing is something of a problem owing to the rapid revival of the once thriving mining community. The camp, which was virtually ' deserted 10 years ago now has a population of approximately 1,000 persons, with nearly L'jO finding steady employment. The higher price now paid for gold and 1m- - proved gold metallurgy are helping to bring the old camp back to life. While numerous cottages have been built In this community since the revival, many are still living In tents and trailers, and a desert Is beginning; to bloom asv-lln- . A scant supply of water seems to kit 4 no handicap to the industrial miner and their fumilles, mam"1 whom carry water a considerailfe-- ' distance In order that their tlb roundings might be improved ftf" little cottage above with its lamW flowers and shrubs, has a bactfdc ground of sage brush and barmlr. hills. Nearby can be seen t 9Lrv where another worker hopes have a cottage soon. st( Is the manner In tilti(j much of the west was built. Frailys such a small and seemingly tbl'S beginning, great Industries aj r communities have been built wfcfcy have returned rich rewards to iai a people. "Mercur was a grpat cajl. once and. with present ImprorKj I geology and metallurgy together! with a higher gold price, the fol trlct will reach even . greattj j heights," declared one i who returned to view the coniebaci' ien QHje Singljam SluUeim I.iued Every Friday at Bingham Canyon, Salt Lake County, Utah. Entered as Second Class Matter, at the Post Office at Bingham Canyon, Utah, Under the Act of March 3, 1879. uimfoufttS ASSOCIATION LELAND G. JJURRESS, Editor and Publisher Subscription Rate, per year in advance $2.00 Advertising Rates furnished on application. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Colyar and daughter, Patricia, went to Sanpete Thursday to visit w ith Mrs. Colyar's mother, Mrs. J. L. Peterson. Mrs. A. A. Maeke was Hostess at a one o'clock bridge luncheon Friday afternoon. Guests were Mrs. E. V. Knudsen, Mrs. Rich-ard Smith, Mrs. W. T. Rogers, Mrs. J. D. Knudsen and Mrs. A. C. Larick. Mrs. Rogers played high. L. S. Breckon made a business trip to Nevada Saturday. Robert Colyar returned homej from Detroit, Michigan, the lat-- : ter part of last week where he purchased a new Chrysler Royal. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Cox of Salt Lake City were dinner guests of Mr, and Mrs. Fred Cux Sun-day. Copperton Uy Mary Ilrown Mrs. George Jensen honored her daughter, Marilyn, on her eighth birthday, Wednesday, with a party. Games and refreshments featured the afternoon's enter-- ! tainment. Pink and white color scheme was carried out in table decorations. Alma Iverson was taken to St. Mark's hospital Sunday to re-ceive treatment for influenza. He is reported as greatly improved and expects to return home the latter part of the week. Laveder, Alden Bray uvj Jimmie Rasmussen. The afternoon was spent playing games and each guest received favors. Dainty re-freshments were served. Mr. and Mrs. John Laveder are visiting at Granger and Lehi for a week. Mr. and Mrs. Liston Bray and daughter Barbara of Murray have been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Swain. Among the persons visiting at Salt Lake this week were Mr. and Mrs. Pete Arnta and sons Eddie and Pino, Wednesday; Mrs. Grace Williams and Mrs.! Margaret Anderson, Monday; Mr.! and Mrs. Gail Rose, Wednesday;: Mr. and Mrs. Myles McDonald, Thursday; Mr. and Mrs. Nick Golish and Mrs. Eli Gohsh, Wed-nesday. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Beck- - stead were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Leatherwood Wednesday when Harold Loath-- , erwood's birthday was celebrat-- : ! Mr. and Mrs. Ray Call and family moved Saturday to make their home at Bingham. Mrs. Nick Malkas left Tues-day for Carbon county win-r- she will visit for a week. Fred Wing left Thursday for Springville where he will visit his father, who is ill. Mrs. Myles Anderson is visit-ing at Bluffdale at the home, of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. Ferry. P.-T- . A. Entertainment The Amateur Hour was held at the Copperfield school audi-torium Saturday evening. Twen- - ty-sj- x parts made up the pro- - gram. Contestants came from! Copperfield, Bingham, Copper-- ton and Salt Lake City. The program included songs, dune-- , ing, readings, instrumental num- - bers, novelty roller skating, poems, characterizations and was concluded by a volley ball game between the Dinkeyville Red Skins and Copperfield Tigers, The Tigers won two straight innings. The program was spon-sored by the Parent Teachers association, the funds being used for new curtains for the stage in the auditorium. Mrs. George Johnson of Tay-lorsvil-has been visiting at the home of Mrs. F. E. Burke Thurs-day. O Copperfield Agnei McDon&ld Mr. and Mrs. Budd L. Aven and son Buddy have left Copper-field- . Mrs. Aven is in Pomona, California, with her mother, who is ill, and Mr. Aven and Buddy are visiting in Lancaster, Calif-ornia, with Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Aven. The family will not return to Copperfield but are as yet un-decided where they will make their home. The Ladies Aid met at the home of Mrs. Myles McDonald Tuesday. The evening was spent quilting and light refreshments were servd. The Ladies Auxiliary met Mon-day evening at the Office Build-ing. Five Hundred was played and prizes were awarded Mrs. Thelma Barratt, Mrs. Laura Mc- Donald, Mrs. Agnes Steele and houseprize, Mrs. Dorothy Shep-herd. The hostesses for the even-ing were Mrs. Katherine Peter-son, Ellen Carl and Maxine Mar-co- n. A delicious lunch was serv-ed to sixteen members. John Pantalone Jr. is reported to be recovering nicely at his ihome from an appendectomy. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Wetsel and Genevieve Wetsel spent the week end in Idaho visiting with relatives. Mrs. W. Booth honored her son Buddy with a party on his day, Sunday. Sixteen guests at-tended including Coleen Man-nio- n, Darlene Anderson, Beth Merrill, Bonny Lee and Ruth Barton, Norma Nevvers, LaVon Anderson, Junior Petraca, Ethel and Warren Palmer, Junior and! ' Donny Tyson, Jackie Kinsey, Ken Joe Eadovinatz and Rollo hi visited friends in Salt Lake City Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kopesic and son Raymond have moved into the Tony Teasik home. There is ' quite a number of Highland Boy residents ill with the "flu". Little Matt Pazell has had pneumonia and Mrs. Galvon is in the hospital. We wish all a speedy recovery. A group of out of town visitors were guests Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Har-old Sorenson, Mrs. K. A. Miller and son land spent Saturday in Salt Lake City. "The Path Across the Hill", a three-ac- t comedy drama present-ed by the Queen Esther and Ques-te- r clubs, Monday evening had a largo and interested audience'. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Clark and! four children, formerly of Mur-- j ray, Utah, are now making their! home here. , Scout Troop 113 of Highland .Boy were hosts at a roller skat-ing party Tuesday evening at the Community House. Guests were Scout Troop 111 of the Commu-nity church at Bingham. Rever-end Meredith Smith accompanied the boys. 28 Scouts enjoyed the evening. Danny Montoya returned Tues-day from a month's trip to New Mexico and Colorado. All women interested are invit-ed to attend the gymnasium clas-ses given each Wednesday and Friday afternoon at the Com-munity House. O Miss Ada Duhigg gave the for-eign missionary address at the First Methodist church in Salt Lake City Sunday morning. Her topic was "The Lapidary and His Gems". Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Montoya and children were visitors in Salt Lake City Saturday. Miss Helen Hertzog, public school teacher, and Miss Lilly Stokes, Red Cross nurse station-ed at Burley, Idaho, visited re-cently with Miss Vera Duhigg. Highland Boy L .,.TT3. ! Mr. and Mrs. James Covert have moved into the Sam Gavich apartment. Sunday evening when Joe Ra-kic- h was chopping wood the axe caught in some wires, slipped from his hands and cut him on the left side of his head. Two stitches were taken in the wound. Special Palm Sunday services will be given Sunday evening at the Community House at 7 o'- clock. A play, "The Sign", will be given by high school young people. Special music will be presented. Pete Uzelac is back at work after being at home for some time with a severely cut head. Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Bolinder and family have moved to Salt Lake City. Mr. Bolinder is em-ployed by a freight line there. Mrs. Nick Melich and son mo-tored to Salt Lake Saturday. The George Badovinatz family have moved into Jeffcott apart-ments while their home is being moved to a new location. Mark Muhar and sister Mildred motored to Salt Lake on Friday. They visited their mother at St. Mark's hospital. Mrs. Muhar is improving very nicely. SPRING TIME IS CLEAN-U- P TIME April showers and May flowers aren't far away. That means spring cleaning time is near. And spring cleaning shouldn't mean just shaking out the rugs, washing the curtains, and dusting that little-use- d spare bedroom. It should mean a definite, planned program for putting property in apple-pi- e order, not only to improve its value and appearance, but to help prevent that dread destroy-er that strikes when we least expect it fire. Trash-fille- d outbuildings are perfect incubators for fire from a carelessly dropped match or cigarette. Check over fireplaces and chimneys. Above all, go through the house from cellar to attic on an inclusive "junk-disposing- " program. Those old newspapers and magazines you've put carefully away and will never look at again that broken furniture that belongs to the worst period of design those odds and ends of "gay nineties" clothing that jumble of worthless, inflammable knicknacks in the hall closets. Get rid of them all. Give them to a charit-able organization or the junkman. And you'll materially re-duce the chance of a fire hitting your home. O-- ANOTHER SUNDAY DRIVING DANGEF Driving toward Bingham " their ear Sunday at 3:;S0 p. in and as they noared the Mana Lark cross-roa- Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Madsen and children ol Copperfield claim they were shot at from a car traveling in the opposite direction. Mr. Madsen turned his machine around to give chase, hut lost siyht of the car, which he now thinks turned off on the Lark road. E. J. Householder, deputy sher-iff, Ross Marriott, city officer, and John Knudsen investigated the report with no result. WHY. PURCHASE HUNTING OH FISHING LICENSES Sportsmen in general believe that they are getting a mighty rotten deal by almost everyone in Utah, and the odd thing is that many "sportsmen" are taking a crack at each other and have not woke up to the fact. When they do there might be Rome kind of a settlement. The first upset was when the Strawberry Water Users association assessed an additional penalty on all fishermen on the Strawberry reservoir. This left a quinine taste with everyone, sportsmen or otherwise, for the reason that it liter- - ally neoned the fact that lovers of the outdoors were being chisled upon. However, it can be stated that this trouble has been overcome through the efforts of State Game Commis-sioner Newell B. Cook, who has arranged with the Straw-berry Water commission to pay a certain sum each year for" the privilege of license purchasers to fish on those waters. So as long as this stipulation is complied with by the state game commission there will be no additional charges on the Straw-berry. . Now the farmers in most sections of the state, by law enacted by the state legislature, are going to demand 50 cents a piece for each pheasant that is killed on their land; this fee being in addition to the regular hunting. During the season the rancher "soaks" the hunter in every way possible 50c to get through his gate, so much to park on his land near a water supply, up to $3 a day for a horse not worth that nuch on the market, etc. The valley farmer hunts deer and fishes, the fisherman hunts deer and pheasants, and the rancher fishes and hunts pheasants, so each is taking a crack at the other. However, the principal motive back of it is to chisel additional money out of those lovers of the outdoors who are not included in the above three groups. It makes one wonder whether or not it is worth while to even purchase a hunting or fishing license. Eureka Reporter Man Is a Failure Man is a failure when he becomes so absorbed in his work that he cannot say that life is greater than work. Wrhen he is so busy doing work that he has no time for smiles and cheering words. When he lives his own plans and interests more than humanity. Have we really decided what we are going to do with 1939 or are we just waiting to see what 1939 will do to us? Good will and the trade that it brings are the only as-sets of a business. Good will is created by good methods but the public can always take it back. Some women have a fine sense of humor, but most all of them have a fine sense of rumor. - -- - 4tc THEY WOULD READ YOUR AD I c TOO, IF IT APPEARED HERE s: i i ten; , tc sly-Ma-ke M I Mine Cream lsjf; 111 and eniy Kentucky's fjiSfpzi "Double-Rich- " straight IJu Bourbon! ff'lf' Kentucky Straight Bour- - UhZ&!l bon Whiskey. 90 proof. fc PINT No. 61 tCNt X'&Vfl J QUART No. 60 f( Xtif El h PINT No. 62 (l"--- CD 17171 If ExceM Acul causes iJALlLl youpein of Stomach Ulcers, Indigestion Bloating, Gas, Heartburn, Belching, Nausea, get a free sample of UDGA and a free interesting bookie t BINGHAM DRUG CO , IZ F - hat make Hudson, the world', car, "onhf0Ugh ndJ,hjrouh! A car you Drive the new Pacemaker today. Learn, V ; 1 IZtZ" VZZTJ drive at 8 savi- "- Tfrth new ,owest Priccd Hudso- n-e j Traveler Coupe! Remember, in ' W,S!K K u Car at its price (1 h evefv ropular price class, even the lowest, 0 hor epoter InT i'"0,'th saf " xm, more power, moother : i perform. I, s t"!"" Performance; than any other car, or near U, . v MATTRESSES REMADE $1 Spring Mattresses, $8.00 See us for Furniture Uphols-tering and Cleaning. Call For and Delivered Each Wednesday Local Phone Bingham 91 OVERMAN MATTRESS CO. 2763 So. State, Salt Lake City ;.-- ," 15 mei1, Pnces. Compare and see! 3-- . ' t r ihoun " "rw Hudson - J) 1, I- -'' i l""" W"L , J- - .r HxJ'on'sWher-MarPrrbAirndlUa- l ' ' I'" - i u Trm 'vS.x -- trol uva.Ubl, in altmoJth at sls,M . '!.". AaSderley & Mthots Garage ! 87 Main St. Phonej- - mf) became U's Sed better M Y CODE No. 152 I 9art-Co- d No. 150 ) f u CiiDMo", tooo uauoRS M knight 1 WN ' irIS WHISKEY-JS- YEARS OLD f K C - w stL Mli Kurt i1- - C A ' " n unmiht i.m, I N.non.1 tnme prc eon3uf,tti N .t r ,0 noof. TOOELE HOMES FOR SALE j 4 & 5 Room Brick Houses, j Bargain prices NOW For Cash. j Apply: O. E. Isgitt, Agent. Apt. No. 1 Tooele Apartments. TOOELE, UTAH. 1 . Expert Shoe Repairing, Red Wing Work Shoes A Better Shoe for Less Money. BINGHAM BOOTERY J RUNS INTO CAR Bud Patrick, four-year-ol- d son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Patfick of 53 Main street, ran into the side of an automobile operated by Howard Smith of Midvale at 7:15 p. m. Sunday on Main street in the lower end of town. Mr. Smith reported he was going ten miles an hour. The child received bruises on the forehead and scratches. He was taken to the Bingham hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Alger Baum and Mr. and Mrs. Brigham Vander-sco- tt are attending a dinner dance at the Hotel Utah tonight for Metropolitan Life Insurance sales-men of Salt Lake county. |