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Show PTVrTAM ITTAH THE BULLET!" jgLgTotE,,. P.t. Six lm Must k Registered to VOTE! j Register Tuesday, October 2to j Bingham Junior Chamber .fCn, refreshments. Lois Booth and Boyd Stock won prlzeB. Jim Jackson Is expected to return Monday from a few days hunting trip in Southern Utah. w. of Copperton is making arrange-ments for it's annual card party, to be held at the home of Mrs. Pete Smith Monday evening, October 26th. Mrs. Charley Sax, Mrs. William Brown and Mrs. Smith comprise the committee In charge. Mrs. Eugene Hallowell was hostess at a bridge luncheon last Saturday afternoon. Three tables were in session, prizes going to Mrs. Richard Smith and Miss Mabel Neprud. Mrs. J. White, Mrs. Robert Anderson and Mrs. White of Salt Lake were out-of-to-guests. Miss Iretta Roylance and Miss Freda Nelson of Salt Lake City were house guests at the A. W. Bowlby home Sunday. Mrs. Earl Robinson was a Salt Lake visitor last Wednesday. A one o'clock luncheon and bridge party was given by Mrs. W. T. Rogers Thursday after-noon at her home. Guests were bidden for four tables of cards. Mr. Richard Nichols of Salt Lake was a Copperton visitor Monday. Master Eugene Olsen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Olsen, was the recipient of a birthday party Sunday afternoon. Fourteen lit-tle guests enjoyed games and j Copperton j By Mary Brown Mr. and Mrs. Ooorge W. Wat-kin- s, Mrs. C A. Bartlett and children of Salt Lake were Sun-day guests of MT. and Mrs. L. Fern Pett. Members of the Public Safety Commission gave a very Instruc-tive program at the regular L. D. S. church session last Sun-day evening. Miss Jean Frazler returned to Wasatch Academy, Mt. Pleasant, where she is attending school this season, after a brief visit with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. R. 0. Frazler. William Brown was taken to St. Mark's hospital Wednesday, where he will receive treatment for sciatic rheumatism. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hansen, Mr. and Mrs. Bernell Hansen of Spanish Fork were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Oammell Sun-day. Mrs. Martin Jensen entertain-ed her bridge club at her home in Copperton, Thursday after-noon. Luncheon was also served. Miss Helen Loveless of the Brigham Young University at Provo, is spending the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. 0. Loveless. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Thomas of Salt Lake were Sunday- - dinner guests at the Fred Schick home. The Democratic Study Group Europe. Those who have not forgotten the Thirty Years War will recall that, In substance, it was started by throwing some envoys out of the window upon a manure pile. Only a similar "incident" seems necessary to start the cannons booming thru-o- ut a world alleged to be civiliz-ed and abhorrent of war. CURRENT COMMENT It is now settled definitely that the country soon will have that apparently necessary thing known as a working Congress. Indeed, Washington without a Congress seems as dismal as an old time fair ground without a fair. The President's latest fireside chat makes it evident that by the fifteenth of next montli, the legislative body of the land will bo back in its- - chairs. There is a feeling that Congress ought to be on the Job and doing some-thing, even though what is done may not always meet with the approval of the whe-ther or not they Are vitally con-cerned. ' In any event, before long we shall have Congress gain with us, either as a tar-get for condemnation or an ob-ject of applause. The constitu-ents, too, will feel better when they know that their Federal representatives are earning thel? pay. Congress has plenty of work cut out for It, if it disposes of all the Important measures to which the President has invited its attention, and especially so since details will have to be worked out in the legislative halls. The list of matters requir-ing atentlon Is appalling, even If the major headings alone are considered. Crop surplus is to be made the subject of law enact-ment and the wise men must decide how land best can be used. Trusts and monopolies must ba put in their place. More must be done about wages and hours and the employment of children. Irrigation and flood control mus; be looked after. The Fede Government, in general, is said to need an overhauling. Add to these the routine work and the emergency action that is an inoident of a congressional session, and it will be seen that the extra convocation is not due to be carried to the skies of adjournment on what the hymn writer calls flowery beds of ease. A review of the doings of 1838 mentions only the fact that there was a bad fire in Charles-ton, S. C, and that people were interested in the performance of the Great Western, one of the largest ships then afloat, from which it appears that the year 1838 was made up of peaceful and uneventful days. No such quiet can be hoped for In 1938, and one is inclined to sing about the happy days that are to come again, or to wish for the "good old times" when all that there was to break the serenity was a fire or a new boat. As a mat-ter of fact, the folks who lived a hundred years ago had quite as much to trouble then as we have now. Their troubles simply were not so bad aa they thought them to be, and have been for-gotten, Just as a man forgets the half hour that he sat out in the dentist's waiting room, his hand clapped on the cheek that cov-ered an ulcerated tooth. A cen-tury hence, the coming year of 1938 probably will be covered by a few lines. The optimists and the pessimists are left to battle the situation out, the one Insisting that there are no good days but those of the present, the others maintaining that there are no good days at all, and that the past neither worse or better than, or materially different from the present. It seems ispossiblt to touch on current events without referring repeatedly to Japan and China, and to the war in Spain. In the Orient, the Japs blow up a train of English motor trucks, which if it does nothing else, brings into print the new and useful word "motorcade". France threat-ent- s to call out her reserves If tension along the Spanish bor-der does "not lessen. It will be recalled that a mine exploded under the battleship Maine brought on the trouble of 1898. itBeems as though a "motor-cade" or any other equally simp-le object might be the cause of Betting on foot a conflict that would Involve boih Asia and Mrs. Steve Luvich and Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Steel and daughter Betty spent Sunday at Salt Lake visiting Miss Steffie Valasic and friends. Mrs. Francis Stellnovich and son Tony and Mr. Bob Austin were visitors of Mrs. Mary Zdu-nic- h Monday. Miss Florence Foger of San Francisco, who for the past three weeks has been staying with her grandmother, Mrs. George Steph- - where she m I wlth h aunt anl "d Mr8. Bill Um Mr. Sam Vanorlefc ,, Pete Chanac i(t for B Utah, Tuesday tm will bunt deer. Sunday evening Mr. B j Pete Kosovich Were f Mr. and Mrs. JM Padgei" J vale. j Mrs. John Polllck let day for a few days in I Highland Boy l Rose Marie Yengich Mike Error, who for thte past lour years has been serving in the Navy has returned to High-land Boy. Miss Sophie Loverlch spent the week end at Midvale with Miss Sophie Lemich. Florence Austin, who Is a stu-dent at the University of Utah, spent the week end visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Austin. George Addy, James Nordberg and Sid Tregaskls attended the Boy Scout University held Mon-day evening at Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrsfl Nick Lujen of Las Vegas, Nevada, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Frkovlch Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thomas of Tooele were the guests of Mr. and M'rs. Qeorge Zdunlch Fri-day. t y qua M 60 VRf j " . , .j , . f 5 .,""- - - saai' ' . -- l K Light Is Cheaper Than Ever Recent tduction In th domestic lighting rate, .T'" :'t plus Extra Electricity at r&fTi td't'TtS,. HaH-Prie- make. .ra light available at lower Wff'ifS1ShlflM cost than ever b.iore. X&M&J Ma. .. ..trr.-.r-- "M'M-tWA- " 'iiim Viinnji, SEE YDUR DEALER OR , UTAH POWER & LIGHT CD. i l n U u 3 u leiQ JWuLJ3L--J U LiUVJl jik IUJ New HUDSON Tenaplane New HUDSON Six New HUDSON Eight W-I- W. B.. M AND 101 H. P. 1M-I- W. B.. 101 AND 107 H. P. WITH SIX tTAMOTO 1M AND 1WN. W. 9.. 1M H. P. '3 BRILLIANT' WEW CARS Built to Excel in Style, Performance, Long Life Here are three greater new Hudsons . . . Hudson Terraplane, Hudson Six and Hudson Eight . . . magnificently styled for 1938. They ride p and drive with the smooth brilliance found only in recognized per-- Cc formance champions. They stand up amazingly well as shown by OOuh official figures on resale value, the accepted measure of the long life Qln tf built into a car, which any Hudson dealer can show you. They cost I Tfig O If little to run . . . and come to you for 1938 at prices starting down I wlfh Oty$f jl close to the lowest. They are cars that cost you less for what you get j ,' o fj than any others in the world. Meet Hudson . . . then drive a Hudson. Ptonli n, Discover America's No. 1 value cars. w" 'neon, Don't mist Hudson's "HOBBY LOBBY", over Columbia network every Wednesday evening: 7:15 E.S.T, 930 GS.T, 8:30 M.S.T, 7:30 P.S.T. AMeTley Mfictoiols (Ssrage Bingham Canyon Utah - Phone 88 BINGHAM & GARFIELD RAILWAY COMPANY Ship your freight vi. Bingham and Qttdtld Rail1"- - atrcbanditc can from Salt Lak City in conwctioa ' Pacific System. Use Copper Braaa piping for $4,500 coctagw only " ' mon than galvaniwd iron piping toA Last Forever T. H. PERLEYW1TS. ' J H . i Aiat. Gn. Freight Patt. Agt , 8alt Lake City, Utah |