OCR Text |
Show r1' 8 '9" ' '" . fltt BtflilttN, UHam UTAH , - .. 'm H.i . ' ' served. Mr. and Mm. Roy Harnett and family, former residents of Salt Lake, are making their home in Copperfield. afternoon was Spent in sewing. Miss Anne Georgles spent the week end at home with her parents at Carbon County. Mrs. Sarah Eastman and daugh-ter Jessie of Herriman have been guests this week at the home of Mrs. Thomas Anderson in Copper-field- . Mr. W. E. Scott and son Richard are leaving for Los Angeles Tues-day morning. Mrs. Isabel Rose and daughter returned home Friday night from Butte, Montana, with the glad new that her father was feeling much better. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cunlife were week end guests at Mrs. R. L. Cuiv liffe. Mr. Byron Thurmond who has been in the hospital for eight months arrived home Saturday. Miss Katherine Pazell entertain-ed the C. T. club where they pla ed cards. Late refreshments were j Copperfield By Mrs, . A(net Steel. Ladles Aid met at the home of Mrs. Myles McDonald Thursday, April 1, when plans were made fo the bazaar to be given by the la-dies the latter part of this month. Refreshments were served to lfl( members and the remainder of the. v FOR SALE Apartment house, 12 rooms; Ideal location. Lot front 93 feet long on ' Main street. Modern, centrally lo-cated. Inquire at Bulletin office Call 81. 3t We have just received anew shipment of Wallpaper in the latest shades, styles and de-signs. Come in today and make your selection. West's Furniture Co. ' 480 MAIN 'PHONE 67 . , , """"'' Wav JUDGMENT During time of bereavement, It becomes necessary that some one person or group of persons be depended upon for th. complete arrangement of the last rites. By depending on our judgment, you, too, will find almost complete removal of your burden. BINGHAM MORTUARY John Stampfel Licensed Embalmer Telephone 17 BINGHAM & GARFIELD RAILWAY COMPANY Ship your freight via. Bingham eat OarfUld Railway. Past daily vmbindii can from Salt Lake City ia connection with tb Uaioa Pacific System. Use Copper Bran piping for 14,500 cottages only coat 141.17 more (hso galfa-u- wd itaa piping and trill Last Forever T. H. PERLEYWITS. J. H. CULLETON, Atet. Gea. Freight V Pass. Act. ' Aftat Salt Lake City, Utah Bingham. Utah - y v MATTRESS RECOVE&INO Old Mattresses renovates and re-built at eity prices. All work guaran-teed. Easy payment plan. Free de-livery service each Tuesday. Phone 91 to leave calls. OVERMAN MATTRESS CO. Hyland 1067 642 South 10th East j RSnJ Value $9.85. . J f TOASTED SANDWICHES 'A PANCAKES AND " V N"-- fJ SAUSAGE 'fX&n&fi'' BACON AND EGGS HAM AND WAFFLES V ... -i- iii'iiTa iriaiiia.v un mi iii mi mm "ir itnin-J-- -n rmm AH three pieces exactly match in design and all are beautifully chromium finished with solid walnut trim-mings. The tray is 11 inches in diameter. The remov-able aluminum cooking grids are 93pc534 inches. By ''.-..- means of the interchangeable waffle grids, four gener- - : ous waffles may be baked at one time. - - iftmnfmr- - --T rTint Jf n tfMiitniW(fif ifmmw rniii hm t iriiTr"-- v j " iMa....w.wm v. . ,. .f ml m r f 1V- 3 xsxTxnia ? Princess Theatre l SEMI-MONTHL- Y PROGRAM : Matinee daily at 1 :30 p. m. Evening, 7:15 and SATURDAY ONLY APRIL 10 i DOUBLE BILL The Accusing Finger With Paul Kelly and Marsha Hunt . General Spanky I , With Spanky McFarlund and Phllltps Holmes Also Final Chapter of Serial SUNDAY ONLY APRIL 11 PENROD AND SAM f I; With Billy Mauch j MON., TUES., AND WED. APRIL 1M314 After The Thin Man H With William Powell and Myrna Loy f t Admission e ' f'l f THURSDAY ONLY APRIL 15 ' I) Jack Pot Night. Now Amounting to ? P Murder Goes to College ' With Roscoe Karns and Marsha Hunt ' 1 i j All Seats 25e ' ii . i FRIDAY AND SATURDAY APRIL 16-1- 1 li DOUBLE BILL f 1 SINNER TAKES ALL i J With Bruce Cabot and Margaret Lindsay J j f MIDNIGHT COURT i - With Ann Dvorak and John LItel ' 'I i Also First Chapter of New Serial . j j! THE PHANTOM RIDER, With Buck Jones 1 SUNDAY AND MONDAY APRIL 18-1- 0 I TARZAN ESCAPES j yyiti, johnny Wcissmuller and Maureen O'Sulllvan !. . j " TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY APRIL 20-i-l ; History is Made at Night j With Charles Boyer and Jean Arthur THURSDAY ONLY APRIL 22 to T Feature Picture Jack Pot Night. Now Amounting- - MAID OF SALEM j wuh Ciaudette Colbert and Fred MaeMurray All Seats 25c FRIDAY AND SATURDAY APRIL 23-2- 4 DOUBLE BILL Trouble in Texas With Tex Rltter I Stand Condemned With An Ail-St- Cast Also Chapter No. 2 of Serial ;' ' - Afi Hi Vj : ill?! Hi " ; : 1 jllilS j ' BLENDED WHISKER i 1 "n ' , v ft . I 9$mm II '"W l r " "" "r" ' " 'T"""nMlf.i-.ii.i- J rs . 1 Phone I'd Your Newt Items. Call 91. Utah Copper Co Produces Rare Ore Molybdenum, an important metal used in industries, Is being recover-ed from ores at the Utah Copper company's mines here in Bingham. Experiments begun several years ago to determine feasibility of moly-bdenum extraction have passed first experimental stages D. D. Moffat, vice president and! general manag-er of the company,, revealed last week. Production on a small scale has already begun. ; Ores of the Utah Copper contain only a fraction of a pound per ton with only a small part recovered. Value of the recovered mineral amounts to a few Cents per ton. "While satisfactory metallurgical recoveries have not yet been reach-ed," said Mr. Moffat, "constant im-provement is being made which pro-mises production before long of quantities of molybdenits concentrates. Eventually production should reach such substantial pro-portions that when and it our ex-pectations are fully realized, the state of Utah will appear as a size-able factor In the' molybdenum pro-duction of our country." Distinguishing characteristics of the metal is its ductibility. Current price is around 40 cents a pound. United States is the world's leading producer. O day. From the viewpoint of the striker they are good because at least effective so far. From the standpoint of the non-strik- they do not appear to be clothed in the best of raiment. Although many con-cep- ts and maxims of the past have been sent to the Junk heap, there abides" the notion that a man's house is his castle, a rule which the sit down strikers would not care to have construed against them per-sonally; When all is said and done,! a person's place of business, as welt as his house, is his castle. The dif-ficult question is what is to be done about sit down strikes, rather than f what sit down strikes do or do not accomplish. Away back in history J men 'used to erect pillars and spend their lives on the top of them, with a view to emphasizing purposes which they had in mind. That prac-- ' tice went out of vogue centuries ago. By the same token, sit down strikes may be not more than a product of the times and destinea to pass as the times change. Lawrence Tibbett, scheduled to sing in Washington, contracted a ore throat, was confined to his ho-tel, and four thousand persons who had assembled to hear him put on their hats and trouped back home. The sore throat was painful to the singer but it is likely that he was more distressed by the fact that so many had been called out on a wild goose chase. Prominent folk are not always hard hearted or selfish and one of the unpleasant things about being a big man must be the thought that a tire blow out, an aching tooth or losing a pair of spectacles may disturb the comfort of a whole army of friends and well wishers, or even lead some of them into danger or disaster. lent ' merit tiTweWin. or a tl i . a broken water pipe in,ment into the home, ;. most part, liM there con-ashin- g the dishes. bringing PWSpapcr and putting out i,t should not be. ; supposed ,ress is without a routine ,r sort The Congressional resents nothing startling resent time. To be sure, .he 'Supreme Court matter, nsbeen aired so thorough-withstandin- g its import-publi-c is willing to dis-rea- d about something else. Constitution can wear out guest on the front ne as a !y stated, Congress is jog-- ; , its every day dishwash-- h comprises appropriations ,s the most important item, million dollars being ask-- , connection with affairs so that they will have to be under the general heading nd that. The Navy comes , well, with more than a ,n allotted to it by the ubject to the usual con-jtwe-the Senate and the alk about appropriations nds a chill up and down of the taxpayer, this time vithout good cause, since dent is of the opinion that tion is not needed, even ie income tax harvest was reasons that the Treasury gure out. ianish War goes on a pace, connection with it, Euro- - itions continue to accuse ther of sticking in their m a job that does not con-n- . Being neutral is a tough n under any circumstanc-- , any place .It is especially . fight now in point of time lurope so far as locality is A newspaper heading ' ;!gian Monarch Takes Neu-- roblem to Eden. It is to be lat the scriptural garden ! the only place where genu-ralit- y .will flourish, unless is made over somehow in hat has not as yet been dis- - xn strikes are the order, or ne say the disorder, of the Tony Montoya, a ninth grade boy, aspires to be a pitcher. I hope he may some day become the left-hander we have been looking for. Some 23 football suits have been issued for spring football. As soon as weather permits our workout Joe Frisch is working hard to get his arm in shape to pitch a few baseball games. Joe pitched for the Elva-Rut- h Shoppe last summer and kept his club in the running right up to the last day. Enjoyed a very pleasant visit from Leland "Sonny" Walker and Bill Pearce, two of our former athletes who are now attending Westminster college. Both played' football on the main squad last year. "Sonny" has made just about every team he has gone out for, which speaks well for a boy who has had to fight from the bottom with size against him. Just a fine boy, with lots of guts and determination which has earn ed him letters In football, basket-ball, track, wrestling and tennis. A little fellow many a big boy could emulate. Joe Norden Jr. of Placerville, Call-forni-was also a caller. Joe is at present attending a Junior college in California and played football on his high school team there. Joe moved out on us just about the time he entered high school here. He says he will redeem himself by sending his younger brother to school here next year. Thanks, Joe, we need him. Another boy who Is very much Interested in our athletic welfare Is Howard (Micky) Buchman who is attending New Mexico Military Institute at Roswell, New Mexico. Mickey Is enjoying cadet life and his school work very much. We drew perhaps the toughest baseball team in the league for our opening game, as Davis high school has the same ball club to the man they had last year. They really should have a lot of power at the bat and plenty of good pitching. Our 1937 Baseball Schedule April 15 Bingham at Davis. April 22 Tooele at Bingham; April 27 Cyprus at Bingham. April 29 Davis at Bingham. May 4 Bingham at Tooele. May 6 Bingham at Cyprus, .. . Spring Sports by Bailey Santistevan Ensign Jensen will captain oar baseball team this spring. Though small, he has what it takes to be a leader, popular with his fellow players plus a playing heart and an Infectious smile. Naturally quick at nsing-hl- s head, Ensign Is an ideal leader. i The weather" so far nas been far better for duck hunting than base-ball conditioning. Joe Churich, fullback on our 1936 football team reported for baseball this week.1 Joe nas a lot of ability, and should develop into a good baseball player. |