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Show 1 ..... , .' I - - gingham Canyon J A. ? 5 J Knfham Canyoa XvA nj , (CDaJ'S OmiTTrfr niT itiw JaM4A initmi AMRICA VOL. 46. NO-- 6- - An independent Newspaper BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1936 oldest Weekly in gait Lake county 'Phona 91 Gemmell, Pinney, U.S. I Mines Meet Saturday And Sunday For Title titiE PLAYOFF BETWEEN MAGNA-CARFIEL- D AND! SECOND HALF WINNER WILL BEGIN WEDNES-DAY, A FIVE GAME SERIES Gcmmell meets Pinney 4 p. m. Sriurday at Copper ton Park to determine which team will meet U. S. Mjes Sundav to declde the winner of the last half schedule. 0. s. lost their lead last Sunday it Provo, when the Timps beat them 4 3. The loss tied them with pinney and Put tnem one game I ,head of Gemmell until that club won their postponed game from Magna Wednesday. Wednesday night Wally Walbeck, Leland Walker of U. S. Mines; Otto Birk, Industrial League vice presid-ent and manager of the Provo Timps; Lee Self, manager of the Magna Garfield team; Claude Eng-ber-manager of Pinney Bevera-ge; Ceorge Knudsen and Al Ab-le- ft of Gemmell met in Bingham to plan the games which will disc-lose the last half winner, who will meet Magna-Garfiel- for the title play, a five game series that will begin next Wednesday. As a result of the drawing Wedn-esday night the winner of the Saturday Pinney-Gemme- game will play U. S. Mines Sunday. Both the Gemmell Pinney and U. S. game will be at the Copperton part, admission will be 25c ' for adults and (or children up to 18 a 10c charge will be made. Al Abktt says he will start Don Harrison in the Pinney game, and he figures Engberg is almost cert-ain to start McDuffie on the mound, as he held Gemmell well iii check last Sunday. More than lely Mclvor will get the 'pitching assignment for U. S. Sunday. n Business Men To Seek WMA Funds As Aid To Building, Repairing BUSINESS GROUP WILL COOPERATE WITH CLUBS TO SECURE RESIDENT MUSIC TEACHER FOR YEAR-ROUN- D COMMUNITY BAND Seeking governmental assistance for builders and property owners who would like to make improve-ments on their homes, a committee from the membership of the Bing-ham District Business association will contact the regional director of the Federal Housing Administra-tion in Salt Lake City to ask him to bring FHA Into Bingham. Hous-ing problems locally are becoming acute, and the business group feel that there are many who would be anxious to take advantage of the FHA plan if it were in operation in Bingham. C. E., Adderley, Elliott Evans and Bud Aven, appointed by BDBA at the monthly meeting Mon-day evening at the Italian-Frenc- h cafe, will report on the results of 1 their conference with the regional director at the next meeting, sched-uled Oct 6. Community Band Discussion of a high school band which would be available for com-munity programs the year round brought up a resolution of the busi-ness men to cooperate with other civic groups in requesting the board of education to send a resi-dent music teacher to the Bingham schools. Dissatisfaction with previ-ous instructors who have left at the beginning of vacation was express-ed. Mrs. J. E. Greene, George Ev ans, and Ed Johnson will work on a committee to communicate with f ' the board of education. President William Grant named as committee members to develop a fall promotional Idea Grant Mer-rt- t, Jim West and Bud Aven. Holiday Plans Part of this winter's program for the business organization will be the sponsorship of a community celebration during Christmas holl- - days. A committee was appointed to work out details. Prizes of $15, $10, $5 will be awarded to homes that are Judged most attractively decorated for the season. Utah Power and Light Company have volunteered power for city decora-tions and help In stringing holiday lights across the streets, Horace Aven, chairman; Earl James, Joe Scussel, and Ed Johnson and Le- - land Burress are committee mem- - bers.. . Regnlar Meeting j It was voted that the association meet the first Tuesday in each ( month, and dues be collected quar- - ' terly. A bill for expenses Incident to transporting the Bingham float to Salt Lake for pioneer day' parade was passed. s L ; Home Fields ARE Greenest .... And home folks treat you best Watch the Bul-letin for ' a community offer Bingham 1 Canyon merchants will make soon. Something for nothing, bona fide values! COMING SOON POLICE COURT NEWS j Traffic cases in the city court since September third show a num-ber of transient motorists arrested and taken into court on traffic vio-lation charges. John Park. William Wood, K. A. Thomas, B. J. Ander-son were fined $2.00. William Wallard received a sus-pended sentence of ten days or $10 on n disturbing the peace charge. Frank Clark forfeited a $10 bond, and Philip Garcia was fined $5 on a disturbing the peace charge. , F. O. E. DIRECTS RITES FOR NICK PADGEN Fraternal Order of Eagles, Lodge No. 659 directed last funeral rites for Nick Padgen resident of Bing-ham Canyon for the last 35 years,: who died in a local hospital Satur-day afternoon of lobar pneumonia. Mr. Padgen was born in Gospic, Jugoslavia in 1880. He had been employed here as a miner. Services were in the Bingham mortuary chapel. Surviving Mr. Padgen are four nieces and . one nephew. ; MEXICANS JAILED AFTER HIGH BOY HIE FIGHT THREE CHARGED WITH ASSAULT. ALL OUT ON BOND Two men were taken to the city Jail and one was taken to the hospi-tal, aftermath of a Highland Boy home party in which the host and hostess were bested in an argument about the merits of a radio program and in the free for all battle which followed. Amelio Travizo and Ja-cinto Medina were at the Juan Ro-ch- a home listening to a radio pro-gram. Medina disagreed with the broadcast and rose to change th dial. The others objected to the change, and Medina drove his fist through the loud speaker and then began to wreck any furniture at hand. Rocha ran for a .22 caliber rifle which Medina snatched and broke over his head. The metal part of the rifle was bent and the wooden part splintered. Medint pushed Rocha from the front porch of his home down a 10-fo-embankment. Mrs. Rocha re-ceived head lacerations when Me-dina broke a flower pot over her head. Officers arrested Medina, and Travizo at the Apex boarding house. Rocha was found in a dazed condition, with what was thought to be a possible skull and hand fractures. His injuries were found to be less serious than it was sup-posed, and both Mr. and Mrs. Rocha were at the Highland Boy danco Tuesday evening. Medina, Rocha and Travizo are out on bond on an assault and bat-tery charge. - MANY 6R1DDERS CIPEIE (Oil SP POSTS TWO HOME GAMES ARE SCHEDULED THIS YEAR AT HIGH SCHOOL Only two home games are set for Bingham high school In Jor-dan district schedule: October 23 with Grantsville and November 13 with Cyprus. Twelve lettermen hav,e returned to form the nucleus of the team Coach Santistevan will build this year: Ensign Jensen, Blaine Wells, and Allen Cleason. Out of these Buddy Macke, Joe Watts, Allen Gleason and JackLar-so- n filled regular berths last sea-son Large numbers of prospective gridders reported for tryouts. Joe Church, Syd Tregaskis, Emil Pol-lic- John Yenyich, John Osoro, Nacho Ortego, Gam Carpenter, Pete Gerbich, George Austin, Eu-gen- a Peterson, Joe Fresh and Har-old Bianchi are making strong bids for positions. Of these new recruits Fresh, Tregaskis, Ortego, Pollick, Jensen, Church and Peterson are trying to land in the backfield and Osoro, Carpenter, Yengich, Austin, Tripp and Gerbich are out to hu tle for line positions. Cbach Santistevan feels that the biggest team weakness lies in the kicking departments, where the graduation of Verl Peterson has left a good sized hole. So far most of the drill time has been consumed in blocking, tackling, and . pass catching. Transportation problems have been largely solved by the trans-portation superintendent, J. M. Wood house. A bus is provided to return football players to Copper-fiel- d and Highland Boy after prac-tice. Eugene Peterson' and Allen Gleason of Lark walk to their homes every evening, showing the kind of determination that usually lands a player on a squad. Practice has been hampered by the Industrial League playoff. There will still be many evenings when practice will not be held due to the demand of U. S. Mines and Gemmell club for the field. Play-ers are looking forward to next year, when a fine schedule on the new stadium is anticipated. Legion Officers Plan Activities For Next Year At the election of officers for Post No. 30 of the American Legion Rex Tripp was flamed commander for the coming year. Mr. Tripp has previously held nearly every office in the local organization and was a charter member of the post when it was organized in 19 1. During the war he was a member of the ninety-firs- t division of the Ameri-can Expeditionary Force. Program activities outlined by the post for this year include comple-tion of the Legion hall for a Civic centerr organization of a gun club and epuipment of the room which was originally the swimming pool in the civic center as a small arms range; construction of an outside rifle range. 1, Installation of the following of-ficers will take place Oct 2: Rex Tripp, commamidfr-Fer- a Pett, first vice commander; Lee Tuft, second vice commander; Dave Lyon, chap-lain, Sam Feraco, sergeant-at-arms- ; Stan Jaques, adjutant; Lee Jones, George Bolman, Frances Quinn, ex-ecutive committee; Wayne Shelley, finance officer. Armistice Dance Committee for the Armistice dance sponsored by the Legion, will be named next meeting. A good orchestra will be chosen by the organization. - Another Legion event to take place soon is, the dinner for the American Legion ball team. George Bihler has been in charge of the team this summer, and by his hard work has kept the Legion team in the tournament play the last two years. O FIRE PREVENTION WEEK OBSERVANCE PUUUEDJBV UNITS Essay Contest, Programs, Window Displays, Dance Planned Oct 4-1- 0 National fire prevention week, Oct 4 to 10, will be well observed by Bingham Firemen's units. Suit-able prizes for essays on "Fire i Prevention" entered In a contest by senior and Junior high school j students will be awarded and thej essays published in the Bulletin, firemen announced this week. Window displays are to be ar-ranged in Main street buildings.' Programs are being planned for presentation to school children and in the Princess theater. Firemen are planning a weekly Inspection of buildings for fire hazards throughout the winter. Plans' are underway for the Fire-men' nnual Halloween danc which will be held October 31. The' committee in charge of this annual affair includes the follow-ing: Earl James, Joe Scussel and D. M. Larson No. 1 Unit and Cliff Butterfield, Jay Farnsworth and j Ross Marriott No. 2 Unit. PIPELINE PROJECT DETAILS HALTING BOND BALLOTING Taxpayers at Meeting Urge Pipeline Bond Election And Okey Project Taxpayers at the mass meeting In the city hall last Friday okehed the bond election for the PWA pipeline project from Dry Fork to Bingham and urged city officials to submit it to Bingham voters in a bond election. In the council meeting .Wednesday evening it was found that there are details which will delay the bond election for several weeks. Estimates of the amount of pipe needed, decision on the kind of pipe' city officials will select as most suitable, and the question of right of way in laying the line will need settlement before the city can ad-vance with their plans. C. A. Morley reported that the Dry Fork tunnel has advanced 65 feet since the work was resumed August 1. The city council are advocating removal of several delapidated, empty,, unsightly buildings around town bn the ground that are fire traps and eye sores. - O Old Resident Visits. Henry H. Keysaw of Eureka Springs, Arkansas, visited here the fore part of the week with Judge S. J. Kenner and family and other relatives. Mr. Keysaw was car foreman for the D. & R. G. W. In Bingham 25 years ago. Leaves On Trip. Lee Tuft left Salt Lake Thursd-ay morning by plane to Join his , wife who motored to Spokane last week where she is visiting her mother, Mrs. Mary Godbe. Mr. nd Mrs. Tuft will return home in about ten days by a coast route fter a trip to British Columbia. ELK PERMITS TO BE GIVEN HUNTERS Ten permits to kill elk on the Heaston game reserve of the Wa-satch Forest will be sold by order of the state big game control board. No permits to kill deer will be issued. George Earl and Dr. R. G. Fraz-ie- r of Bingham Canyon were pres-ent at the meeting of the board of big game control last Friday at the state capitol and protested any deer hunting on this side of the re-serve, as the country is open and there is no shelter to prevent whole-sale slaughter of animals. ' The Bingham representatives-proteste- d the number of elk permits apportioned. They are of the opin-ion that there are only fifteen bull elk on the reserve. O CHIEF OF POLICE ON VACATION Chief of Police Al Paustch and Mrs. Paustch left Thursday to visit their son and daughter-in-law- . Mr. j and Mrs. A. P. Paustch at Rock ! Springs. Chief Paustch is taking his ten day vacation, most of which will be spent in Pinedale, Wyom-ing, fishing the streams there. Stanley Davies will act as chief the absence of Al of police during vacation, and Ross Paustch on his Marriott will take Mr. Davies place as night patrolman. I SWEEPS HOI OF DESTJTUTE FAMILY Fire of unknown origin consumed e frame house occupied by the Henry Magee family in Freeman ; Gulch Thursday morning, leaving e family 0f nine children jrang- - tag from 14 months to 12 years in a?e and the father and mother shelterless. No one was in the house when the fire broke out and hefore Mrs. Magee and the nelgh-bor- s at whose home she was vlsit-m- g were aware, the house' was in flmes. Though both . units of the Bingham fire department respond-ed immediately to the alarm, the home and furnishings valued at $1500 were burned to ashes. The residence was located half-mil- e from Main street, the last house in Freeman gulch, and was th property of Mrs. Annie Teet: er of Marble, Colorado. He"t7 Magee is numbered among jhe unemployed of Bingham and no permanent work. He has been employed on local relief pro-)ec- s. All the family possession, with the exception of the clothes hich they were dressed, were destroyed. - U. of U. Opens September 29 SALT LAKE CITY-W- ith the prospects of having one of the greatest school years in the history of the University very bright be-fore them, the University of Utah will officially open its doors to students Wednesday morning Sep-tember 23 at 9 a. m., when Fresh-men students will report to Kings-bury Hall to take the required Placement examinations. All Freshmen students are re-quired to take the Placement ex-amination on September 23 unless the examination has been taken at an earlier date. Actual registration for first year students will begin Thursday, September 24, following a meeting at 9:30 a. m. in Kings-bury Hall which all Freshmen are required to attend. Registration will continue September 25. Sophomore students will register on Saturday September 26. This registration will include only Sopho-mores in the Lower division, the second year students in the School of Mines and Engineering register-ing on September 28. Upper division and graduate stu-dents will register September 28, following the same arrangement Actual instruction will begin Sep-tember 29. Students who are interested In acquiring aid under the NYA are urged to send in their applications immediately. First actual allotments will be made September 21 and will include all applications made prior to September 19. For NYA information write to the Dean of Men or Dean of Women. the age of 14 good health and good parents; from 14 to 40 good looks; from 40 to 60 personality; and from 60 on cash! Ladies Home Journal. Yeh, and what do men need? It goes like this: Up to 14 health and freedom; from 14 to 40 financial backing; from 40 to 60 business ability and 60 on more money. "What This Country Needs-G- ood Headlines" Frank Kent in an American Ma-gazine article discusses the friends of Republican nominee Alf Landon on the premise that when a presi-dent goes into office he sweeps his friends into high positions. What can happen when his friends are not capable and perfectly trust-worthy was illustrated during the Harding administration. Strangely enough Landon's four firm friends, the original group that set up the first "Landon for President" headquarters, . are all newspaper editors. Each one has been highly successful, and who knows, maybe a bunch of veteran newsmen would be very effective in handling administration prob-lems, especially publicity. News and news values are Important in a country where everyone, night and morning, drink in "the strong black headlines." PRECIPITATES How Many In Bingham? An interesting question was rais-ed at the business men's meeting Monday night. One merchant who has his fingers on the public pulse seriously estimated the present population in Bingham Canyon at 10,000. Others say 7,000. Postmaster M. L. James figures the population between 7,000 and 8,000, using mail delivery as a basis of computation. Deer Killers. Deputy Sheriffs E. J. and J. L. Householder and Chief - of Police Paustch have found no evidence that could lead to the arrest of the person who killed the three deer at the head of Freeman Gulch1 last Thursday. The officers are still working on the case. ' Signs of the Season. .' Early morning haze thick ori the reddening hills. .. .First winter coats seen this year appearing on Main street Welcome heat in the radiators Bonfires built around the edges of the diamond by chill-ed spectators of the ten inning baseball game between Gemmell and Magna Tuesday evening.... Football talk everywhere, at ban-quets and on street corners. Linguist Dr. B. D. Bennion may not be a student of languages, but he knows a lot of tongues. Eight! - ' What a woman needs is: Up to FALL FLOWERS It's late In the season fer bou-quets, bat the Bulletin received three of them this week. The Salt Lake Tribune seat a clipping of an ad the Bulletin ran i f for the Bingham Mere. One of advertising clienU had brought It Into the Tribune ad- - ! Torturing department asking for ! a similar ad. The Tribane aaked to borrow the Bulletin cut, and complimented us on our paper. J. R. Jarvts wrote this week and asked that Us paper be sent to his new address, as it "Keeps him informed on activities In . Bingham Canyon." Two of our' own advertisers told us of direct result from their advertisements In last week's paper. We are always sincerely appreciative when a reader takes time to tell merchants that they are,, asking for merchandise seen ! "advertised In the Bulletin." (opperficld Firemen Will Present Plays Announcement of three competi-tive one act plays to be given in the near future by the Copperfield Firemen was made this week by The plays are Chief L E. Dolman. to be sponsored for the purpose be used for of raising funds to Xmas for the kiddies. The three plays chosen, "Mother "In Doubt Abou PullS The Strings," Family." will Daisy" and "Ted's of George under the supervision Pft2ell with the following actmg as Mrs. Ar assistant directors, Steele, and Mrs. Fike Mrs. R. G. Casts for the plays have Bud Av- e-not been chosen. County Convention Draws Republicans . Delegates to the last of the Salt Lake County conventions will gath-er at the' Rainbow 'ballroom next Saturday to select Republican can-didates to county, legislative and judicial posts at stake in No-vember. Following are delegates named at the primaries Monday "evening. Dist. 333, Copperton George EarL J. H. Colyer. , ' Dist 334, Lower Bingham Art Sorenson, A. C. Cole, Ross Mar-riott, Rulon Madsen. Dist. 335, Upper Bingham Dr. F. E. Straup, Jesse Southwick, Mrs. Ruth Grandquist. Dist 336, Copperfield Earl Nep-pie- , Steve Butler. Dist. 337, Highland Boy L. E. Snow. - Dist 338, Lark-Cl- yde Crump. Attnd Meeting. John Creedon, George Knudsen, "1 James, Ray Tatton, and James an-iga- went to Salt Lake Thurs- - y evening to attend a committee feting to outline plans for the states First Aid tourna-an-the Utah Nevada Safety which convenes Jointly al vcy's Coconut Grove ballroom 5ePtember 24. - 5: I Leaving For Visit Mrs. T. A. Masters is leaving Sept 22 for Boston for a visit with her son-in-la- and daughter, Dr. and Mrs. Andrew Contratto. Mrs. Masters expects to be away a month. , DOG TAX COLLECTIONS $162.50 has poured into the city coffers from dog tax collections made by John Bird, county dog tax collector, as compared with $3 paid last year. Jm 12 day trip " C. f' ; SSI d B"MvJ" Missouri. .. v ' Mr. B. T. Lynch, chief deputy of the county treasury, vlstted in Bingham Wednesday night |