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Show 1 PAGE EIGHT THE FRIDAY, BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH NOVEjfBER effects. High score prizes at bridge went to Mrs- Max DuBois, Mrs- Bert Thomas and Mrs- Louis Watson. f Mrs. Elliott W. Evans was hos-tess at a one o'clock luncheon for members of the Martha Circle Wednesday. Covers were placed for tsventy-fou- r and chrysanthe- - mums were used for decorative Ariadni Club SlaUi Social The Ariadnie club will meet this evening at eight o'clock at the M. E. Community church, it js announced by Mrs. Anast J. Chipian, president. Main business "topic will be the dance to be giv-4-- n Sunday, November 10, at the "Civic Center for benefit of the Hellenic school- Tickets are twenty-fiv- e cents each. ; or. Her corsage was of pink rose-buds. Miss Bessie Evankovich of Salt Lake City attended Miss Loverich and Nick Pieidmont of Nevada City was best man for his brother-Mrs- . Peter Loverich and Miss Mary Loverich were cohostesses at a shower honoring the bride at Highland Boy Saturday even-ing. A number of very lovely gifts were opened and displayed by the honoree. t Miss Sophia Loverich Is Monday Bride Miss Sophia Loverich, daugh-ter of Mr. Peter Loverich of Highland Boy, and George Pied-mont of Nevada City, Cal., were married Monday in Salt Lake City, and will be leaving some-time this week to make their home in Nevada City. Mr. Pied-mont is the son of Joe Piedmont of Lava Hot Springs, Idaho. The evening of the wedding a family dinner party was held at Highland Boy. A centerpiece of lovely white flowers and a beautifull-y- decorated wedding cake adorned the dining table. The bride wore a smart dark brown woolen frock with gloves, hat and slippers in a contrasting col- - The senior Sunday school class of the M. E. Community church were guests Monday evening of their instructor, Mrs. M. Smith at a Halloween party at the par-sonage. Irene Anderson, Helen Stillman, Frances West, Elaine Harris, Genevieve Wells, Vivian Wells, Clay Watson, Lela Leyba Kenneth Hedman and Lyman Yarnell were those attending-Prize-at games were won by Irene and Elaine. Refreshments were served- Emanon Club With Miss Verona Graham as hostess, the Emanon club met the evening of October 24 at the Charles Sullenger home in Cop-perton. A seven o'clock dinner was served to twelve, including Mrs. George W. Bohnan and Mrs-Eugen- Morris, invited guests. Miss Vernon and Mrs. Morris played high at bridge. CARD OF THANKS Mrs. Anna Scoff and family of Pueblo, Colo., wish to express their appreciation to the friends of John R. Rudman for the many kindnesses following his recent Anna Scoff Dr and Mrs. Kenneth Culver of Berkeley, Cal., visited a num-ber of friends in Bingham Tues-day evening, when they were al-so dinner guests of Mr- and Mrs. T. H. McMullin of Copperton. Mrs- Culver is the former Lillian Hogan Jensen and has many friends here and in Salt Lake City, where the Culvers visited a week. w One or the delightful parties of the week was the bridge lunch-eon given Monc'ay'by Mrs- R- T. Smith of Copperton. The sixteen guests enjoyed luncheon at the Charles Sullenger home followed by cards at the Smith residence-Favor-were of Halloween inspir-ation and fall flowers were used in decoration. Prizes went to Mrs. J. Dewey Knudsen, Mrs. W. and Mrs. R- - G- Frazier. t ON YOUR rj 1933 to 1940 modal j trucks-contr- acts reinaJ cash advanced. T Free Parking Cullen J 37 Vi W. 2nd. So. I CONSUMERS CR COMPANY J OWNED m l PACIFIC FINAi; 600 Continental Bankfc Sail Lake City FOR SALE Home, gar-age, electric range, eleclric wa-ter heater. Inquire Mrs. Cliff Bulterfield, 278 Main street Bingham. Upd MR. AND MRS. HINGHAM VOTER You're tine Boss '. IF YOU SEND JESSE B SHARP WW Republican Candidate ;H. TO THE STATE SENATE ;T!-'- pi Mr. Sharp is an experienced legls- - iA ffi-:it.- .'' lator, having served in the 1925 .t.,'' V legislature. ..A' Mr. Sharp is a proven friend of Ut: "jSy labor. In 1926 during the Republi- - J A f can nominating convention he l&J ft withdrew his name from the con- - flY vention in .support of a labor re-presentative in the State Legislature. With the support of Jesse, this man was successful in being elected. . Mr. Sharp received the highest number of votes in the Tenth precinct in the Run-of- f primary for State Senator. Jesse is a friend of the ISingham people and will, if elected support legislation that will be for the best interest of Ringham Canyon. VOTE FOR SHARP A True Friend of Labor, Agriculture, Industry "EXAMINE HIS RECORD" Paid Political Adv. by James Mclntyre UTAH NEEDS FARNSWORTH , ihvy j ; f 1 i ' - j X :v l r VOTE FOR E Philo T. Farnsworth, Jr. jj Republican Candidate For UNITED STATES SENATE I (raid Political Adv. by Ed. M. Horriawyl . E p annnnnnnflnnnnnnnnnannnnnnnnnnonnannnna aisnsj:t 1 1 1 bird. 11 erir A Radio Address Delivered by g Burton W. Muasser D g Former State Democratic Chairman El This campaign is tragically I Irusl he would be rejected The Indispensable Man important. It transcends in on this demonstration of am- - It is claimed that he is El importance the campaign of bilious views." indispensable man. This tli 13 every election since the elec- - During Theodore Roosevelt's term candidate is in no se Pg tion of Lincoln eighty - six first campaign for President of the word indispensable mm years ago. It will forever close he was charged with wanting is conclusively dcinonstn Zu the door to an elective mon- - to perpetuate himself in office by his own conduct that h archy or it will open the door for a longer period than eight dispensable. For seven H to a dictatorship. years. On the evening of his one-ha- lf years he has c: Q For 150 years a third term fllst election, realizing that if stantly demonstrated his 1, El by public opinion and Ameri- - he served out that term he' of stability. With a plan Q can tradition has been an im- - would have served seven and any sort for any eonstitutic rj possibility. Never before in one-ha- lt years, he made this governmental activity he ci n American history has any statement: pletely abandoned the p 2 man sought a third consecu- - "The wise custom which form pledges he sacredly m J live nomination for President limits the president to two to us in 1932 and 1Mb'; he El of Ihe United States. No man terms regards the substance volved us in a national t El in our entire history has be- - and not the form, and under unprecedented in the Un H fore this regarded himself so no circumstances will I be a States jduring all of its pe; n indispensable that he should candidate for or accept an- - time history; he destroyed im be elected to the Chief Magis- - other nomination." independence of the Judici 2 tracy of this great repubjic for At the close of the first term constantly degrading it JJ the third consecutive term- - 0f President Taft goaded by 'ore the PcPle ancl by g No such egotist has ever be- - u iU;it for power Theodore pointing to it incompetent n" AfomreericbaenenPrePsriedseindtenut.ntilE1v9e4ry0, Roosevelt, notwithstanding his subseiviant men; he destrj previous pledge, ran again on ?d t,he. independence of . H has adhered to the precedent the theory that he was the le6lslative branch of the gfr ES and to the tradition against indispensable man of Ameri- - ernment by purging all i" P the third consecutive term. ca. Addressing himself to that sons with, whom he disagif g Only a Roosevelt could elaim President Taft said- - an" by granting favors tot bring himself to dishonor it. ' B sycophants willing to I Only the present third term lhJfrT'l1,,'! ncond every bidding; he has circf 9 candidate could indulge in the fnlk . PfPJe vented the Corrupt Practf 3 shame and the fakery of claim- - J" e only one Act b cornpeiiiriarge col 3 ing that he is indispensable ; f " ,(f. shpea8 orations to purchase aj 3 and that the Democratic party Jo sacrifice gT hed handbook has drafted him for a third Jv fhT. ed 10.00 Pr "W! h(? has Z term. a say uch an am- - dermined the faith of L 3 No real Democrat can be in- - ' iou ft" t0,u'd nVl b,e fcar" youth in the greatness of t : 3 sensable to his present obliga- - LV ? ft country by his of 3 tions. No cry of party loyalty Kfor thf th , f. mJQl family to use prestig.it. 3 can deter us. No man owes it J ;, job which the n office 0fFpresys! to my party to foresake the t?" . vls (t0. ptI forfn 13 to enrich themselves; in h i welfare of his country in order C very midst of the adminisfa-I to be regular. thf rest of h! natural life. of the Selective Servi j When Grant " he is necessary to the Act, his own son secured! a 3 indicated that he wanted a government now, why not lat- - captaincy in the air forces. J third nomina- - VT' One who so slightly re- - an office he did not merit .d I tion for President of the United gards constitutional principles, was not entitled to- he bet- - States, the House of Repre- - and especially the independ- - tied, and drove from pulfie sentatives passed a resolution ?"ce of the judiciary, one who life his staunchest friends siih condemning such a course by ls naturally so impatient of as James A Farley John 1 a vote of 233 to 18 and the lpgal restraints and of due le- - Nance Garner' Al Smith, Jdhn i first challenge to the no third gal procedure, and who has so W. Davis and scores and scofcs I term tradition died aborning, misunderstood what liberty of others: he has grasped fcr 3 on ,l was thought that regulated by law is, could not himself and retained me 1 Mr Coohdge might aspire to safely be entrusted with sue- - power than is possessed iy I fun 'o.'"' Dt'"Jocr?tic Sona- - CeSS',ue Prsdential terms. I any other man in the wold I hLP'n,a"' Harrison, Ash- - say sorrowfully, but I say except the totalitarian dicfa-- l fc;, nirli the ful1 Conviction of tors, and thta S nfhpr y Wagener.and truth. a rea, Americarf shouid & nltfnn The man who utu'red those sire; he has dominated $e , a denouncing a third wise words I repeat, was Wil- - legislative branch of our g-- I PriH.m w.,eKj. , Howard Taft. The Roose- - ernment so as to compel it 10 KSdSs5LlS!.0 ,T ""t1 th' mcrican peo- - --ftkX Lt judgetl emphatically and ge lent exc(aot aionye "J ihiM enn tSdSS, is himcomSetf power to mt ird term caudate dV- armour of free' Jt Durin the Past SeVe" InThis letter"to LM; 'S a, restraint against one-ha- lf years, he has speft I rt,tii abuse Pw" Repub- - sixty-si- x billions of dollars, fflO lsSfS, hC"nSi and Democrats alike in excess of $1.00 for evefy - "That I sLuld h"nored precedent, minute of time that has elajJS-charg- e at LriZ th J e wendous power of ed since the death of Chrf: much a rlwtv T, uS, u President must never e started in 1933, and so cfd I faithf thog0UenMN? hK'f of S Hitler. Hitler spent thirty f-- ton serves ofThJ Hi,V, today frxcePt the lions of dollars and built $r Chief Magistrate be not fixed possesses ZUiUtian States himSelt the 8'" by the Constitution or President ?f PMVer as the fhine the world haS 'f practice is JfZ the u"l Stat- - known. The third term Nominally yezr wU Tn tL ZV ad'nimstratio". jdate has sPent sixy"siX t fact, become for his vV I V of, the exec"- - llons of dollars and we f tory shows how easfly that for theTmm T grWn snV in a of almost co- - degenerates into an inherit- - i over a pl?.te "npreparedness. ance. Believing that a repre- - powef t 'iumber' With his With nine million men sf sentative government respon- - h s fL ",.dlsp?nse favors to unemployed; with taxes hifj; sible at short periods of elec- - enen lieT of t0 his er. than they have ever be tion, is that which produces h i,, ,?urs(J he uld with public debt at its gre; the greatest form of happiness And 0f ,rinominated. est height; with a defa.t It to mankind, I feel it a duty to himself did nave i.ts maximum; with scorn do no act which shall Ienomated. his lips for all businesses; w tially impair that iS lievablv'111" of unbe" 2 Scoue for a11 Peoplf and I should and the X 8Hms of maney do not wholly agree with hi the person who. disregarding of ti e , 'Jan Swings surrounded by hundreds f the sound precedent set by an ent r suPerintend- - executive employees and illustrious predecessor, should the vL i!!?uS ?ewers and islators who are mere "yef furnish the first example of Flvnn th n,atlons of the men; counseled by strangely nrolongation bevond the ec- - Hacu h " ell,y-Nas- the incoherent brain-truste- rs wit; ond term of office." Gufftv v. ndergrast, the out political ties, politic In his biography, Jefferson sured machines as- - background or political senie discussed the eligibility of a New Deal or look for convention ifVant morality, we president for a third term and wants Rr 11 ,1 A"the world dispensability in Ihis man af used this language: "drafted" ' And he was nd it not. ; "Ihe example of four presi- - thP ,..-- , In this most important aii ; lJlTlry retirm8 at American trad hed" tragic hour, I urge my fellof . l tha I eiF 61ghth year- - de"t the door ? .and prece" Democrats to preserve of i onii, tvf,rt8AeSS of publlc has been closed frfHtorship form of government by donf- - I sTtnrv tWlf pnnciple is They SnL5 years' ing to a"v man the right f ff L lV it in prac- - it. My fellZ to Pen perpetual I ce of precedent and us slim in Dhe,noc:ats. let not and I will not support ttje j usage; insomuch, that, should L faces as third tenn candidate I gi ! a president consent to be a be closld u e. lntend il to my whole-hearte- d allegian ! candidate for a third t0 election, ever dlctatorship for- - to the candidacy of Mr Wil- - ! Paid Political Advertisement ' bv R n- - I AH gloom disappears . . .wlien j 1 SUfflYBMOOK I -'- appears! ,r . 1 ri4 1 ; Ji v mum" IPSl I Kraturky Slraiglit Y National Distillers Prodiu ta Corp.. New Yor!t 9 --TONES' Happy :f; 1 You're du for a real thrill &jr jr ' when you slip into easy going VLtppy Ilikcri! Here's airy ' 'comfort for active feet ... in Com in., .eel the difference. . . Entirely new . . . Interwoven find out why happy feet art Socks in the Sot mellow uingmg comfortably in Happy tones Df fmg uede. Deep, J HiUr from coa.t to coast! lkh Autumn coIorings. Bingham Merc. THE BIG STORE C. E. Adderley, President I E , For Better Mixed Drinks g Schenley Red Label Ifityr Gets the Call fJ-- J w E MC j!-J- QU KRT B No. 223 f Schenley Red label 72H Grain Neutral Spirits. Blended Whiskey and 90 Proof. Q Copyright 1940, Schenley Distillers Corporation, Nw York Ci'y. CJ 1 BC Carma Gray and Kathivii F.rz entertained at the Paul F- Erz Jiornc Monday evening at a Hal-loween costume party. Prizes at ;arnes went to Lola Beth Peter-son j.nd Willa Dean Hodges. Re-freshments were served eight. Italian-America- n League Dinner As a courtesy to Bingham members, the Italian-America- n league of Salt Lake City held a dinner meeting Saturday even-ing at the Bingham cafe. In at-tendance were: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zaccheo, Mr- and Mrs. Fred Richeda, Mr. and Mrs. Gino Giovacchini, Ern-est Robert Russo, Ruth Colton, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Notti, Miss Teresa Saccomanno, Mrs- - Anna Saccomanno, Mrs. Josephine Mauro, Joe Merabelli, Miss Elsie Gini, Miss D- Gannuscia, Mrs. S. Huffaker, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest F. Mariani, Mrs. Edith Franks, Miss Mary Campana, Miss Inez Bocco, O. Richeda, Mrs. M. Wooley, Mr. and Mrs. John Plant, Miss Mari Jene Wooley, all of Salt Lake City; Mrs. James Tedesco, Mr. and Mrs- Joseph Scussel, John Feraco. Mr. Mariani acted as toast-maste- r. Halloween Fete A clever Halloween party of the week was that given last ev-ening by Mr- and Mrs. J. A. Nord-e- n at their home in Apex Mine-Spook-decorations, lanterns and balloons gave the residence a holiday atmosphere. The twenty-fou- r guests enjoyed dancing and a buffet lunch- M. I. A. Junior Girls' Parly Under supervision of Mrs- Boyd Nerdin, the Junior girls of the Bingham L. D. S. ward M.I-- enjoyed a dancing party at the church Tuesday evening. As guests, who came in couples, en-tered the building, they were taken through a ghost alley. Ducking for apples, a wishing well and fortune telling by a gypsy were diversions, and danc-ing to an eight piece orchestra main entertainment. Punch, witch ice cream, cake and candy were served to forty. f Barrell-Bore- n Marriage Announced Mr- and Mrs. John Barrett of Copperfield have announced the marriage of their daughter, Sylvia Deon, to Ellis Russell Boren, son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Boren of 6 Freeman at Farmington Fri-day evening, October 25. Mr. Bor-en is employed at the Midway Service. t Skeletons, black cats and soft red lighting gave an eerie ap-pearance to the amusement room at the George Knudsen home in Copperton Wednesday evening when Briggie Knudsen was host at a Halloween costume party. There were games with prizes, noisemakers and clever favors for the guests: Patricia Garrity, Helen Wideman, Anna Lee Bur-res- s, Carol Farnsworth, Val Farnsworth, Gerry Dean Gam-mel- l, Billy Taylor, Warren Dean Parkin. Mr. and Mrs- Knudsen took motion pictures of the group and refreshments were served. Firemen, Ladies Have Annual Fete Bingham volunteer firemen of company No. 1 were guests of the auxiliary at a delightful Hal-loween costume frolic Monday evening at the fire hall. All the trimmings for a spooky Hallo-ween festival cornstalks, witch-es, black cats, dimmed lights, were employed by the commit-tee in charge, Mrs- Edith Peter-son, Mrs. Cral Robison and Mrs. Clinton Robison, in creation of proper atmosphere. Hollowed pumpkins were vas-es for varicolored chrysanthe-mums arranged on the long ta-ble set for forty for hot dinner. Favors were black cats and candy prizes were given during games. Later dancing to accordion music was enjoyed. . Members of the KSK club met at the home of Mrs. Garth Ner-din October 21 for a shower in compliment to Mrs. D. O- Stoker-"Stork-was played during the evening and dainty refreshments served to eifcht members. The same ladies met Wednesday of this week at the home of Mrs. Bruce I vie Jr., for an evening of j sewing and a late luncheon. Linda Justine Zorn, seven-weeks-ol- d daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig Zorn of Telegraph, was christened by the Rev. Mere-dith Smith of the M. E. Commu-nity church. With addition of baby Linda there are five gen-erations on the distaff side of the family: Mrs. Beverly Clays Zorn, mother; Mrs. Charles Clays, grandmother; Mrs. E. G. Ball, great grandmother; Mrs. Sophie Sudds of Everett, Wash., great-gre- at grandmother. |