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Show PAGE FOUR THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH FRIDAlLjAPggi8 Mrs 0. S. Jensen, Miss Mabel Neprud, Mrs. A. B. Waldemar and Mrs. Sam Baird spent Eas-ter Sunday in Provo with Don Jensen. The Easter Sunday Masses at the Holy Rosary Catholic church were very well attended, the Rev. Daniel E. Leahy announces- - Miss Vern Bacr visited in Lo-gan last week-en- d. Mr. and Mrs. T and son, Richard, 'of rvc visited relatives in iPn City Easter Sunday. U I William Mitchell 0f Canyon, a senior at 1 sity of Nevada, has bet pointed to Serve on tee which will the, soWt t annually presented 'bv ile nior class to the univers j LOCALNOTES Requiem mass for John Sch-reie- r, 63, was conducted Mon-day at the Midvale Catholic church of the Little Flower. Re-citation of the Holy rosary was said Sunday evening in Midvale i by the Rev. J- T. Torsney, pas- - tor of the Midvale parish. Inter-ment was made at Midvale ceme-tery under direction of the Bing-ham mortuary, Mr. Schreier died of peritonitis in Salt Lake City April 7. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Michie of Heber and Miss Ruth Nelson, a B.Y-U- . student, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elmo A. Nelson Easter Sunday. Mrs. Michie and Miss Nelson are sisters of Mr. Nelson. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Preston of Sunnyside were guests over the week-en- d of their son-in-la- w and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Merl Gleaves of Highland Boy. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Jenson of Highland Boy have as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Hans Jen-so- n of California. The Queen Esther group of the Highland Boy Community House enjoyed a picnic at Millcreek canyon Saturday morning and a theatre party in the afternoon. The six girls were accompanied by Miss Marie Button. The Bingham Luther league enjoyed a skating party Tuesday evening at the Highland Boy Community House. Mrs. Alfred Hedman was in charge of the 16 young people making up the party. The baby and pre-scho- ol child clinic scheduled for Wednesday morning at the Highland Boy Community House was postpon-ed because of the bad snow storm. Miss Ada Duhigg, dea-coness, announces that the clinic will be held at a later date. The Women's Society of Chris-tian Service at the Community church will meet this afternoon at 1 o'clock at the M. E. Com-munity church with Mrs. John T. West hostess at the Silver Tea. The ladies will finish arti-cles to be sold at a bazaar the afternoon of April 26. Plans are also being made for a dinner at the church that evening. Mr. and Mrs. Miles Gaythwaite entertained at Easter Sunday dinner for Mr. and Mrs Fd Shaw, Mr. and Mrs. Ben McA-llister and daughter, Sally Ann, and Mrs. Morris Domgaard and son, Morrie Joe. Miss Mildred Jensen. Mr- .mr, Price to spend a week with her daughter, Mrs. Nick Nass. Mrs. Steve Kalepatses and sons of Lark were visitors at the John Pantalone home Friday. The Copperfield Home Room Mothers held a meeting Wednes day. Mrs. Thelma Barrett, and Miss Stella Klopenstine were Salt Lake City visitors Saturday. Miss Arilla Bullock was a wek-en- d guest at her parents home, Mr. and Mrs- Clarence Bullock. O LEGAL NOTICES PROBATE AND GUARDIAN-SHI- P NOTICES (Consult the clerk of the dis-trict court or the respective signers for further information ) NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of ADELINE MAY-BERR- Y Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigrv-e-d at the office of Elliott W. Evans, Attorney-at-La- First National Bank Building, Bing-ham Canyon, Utah on or before the 4th day of June A. D. 1941. Margaret Poate, Administrat-rix of the estate of Adeline May-berr- y Deceased. Date of first publication April 4, A.' D. 1941. Elliott W. Evans, Attorney l Issued 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 ef March 3. 1879. araw5sa5 NATIONAL EDITORIA- L-LELANI) 0. BUHRKSS, Editor and Publisher Subscription Kate, per year in advance $2.00 Advertising Rates Furnished on Application and eighth grades will take their annual class trip on that day. After the boys return from the "B" there are some athletic ev-ents planned, namely, tennis and track. Then in the afternoon an assembly is to be presented by the alumni of our high school, and following the assembly, an interesting picture show will be given. This will conclude the main events of the day, but in the evening, a big dance is being planned. It is the annual "B" Day dance of which you have heard so. much. It is "girl's choice" and it is at this time that the girls ask the boys to the dance, buy their tickets, and so forth. The gym will be decorated and any-one who goes to the dance will be assured of having a good time. Not only the students, but al-so the general public, is invited to participate in our "B" Day dance and have a "girl's choice". The price of admission is only 35c a couple for students, and 5uc a couple for outsiders. Come one, come all and support the high school and its "B" day. John Anderson r BINGHAM HIGH SCHOOL NOTES STUDENTS GO TO COMMERCIAL CONTEST On April 11 twenty students from the Bingham high school ventured to the Brigham Young University in Provo to the Commercial con-test- There were five teams from the fields of shorthand, typing and bookkeeping. A program of contests was nut. lined throughout the morning with interesting exhibits on dis- -' play in the afternoon. All the i manufacturers of typewriters, adding machines, and other com- - mercial machines had exhibits at the university in which stu-dents could try the machines and a:;k questions about them, which were answered by the men in charge of the machines. bach student was! given a free ticket for a package lunch and a ticket for a matinee dance. Immediately following the dance, an award assembly was given in the auditorium in which the winners of the contests were giv-en their awards. The students from Bingham were unable to stay for the award assembly. None of our collective teams won any awards, but three in-dividual awards were won by John Anderson. He won second prize in second year shorthand, third prize in second year typ-ing, and third prize in combined shorthand and typing. His were a silver medal, three certificates, and a $40 scholar-ship to the Brigham Young Uni-versity. Due to the sickness of the short-hand and typing teacher, Miss Victoria Peternel, the students went to the contest with only one member of the faculty, Mr. E. Odell Peterson. We were sorry that none of our teams won any prizes, but the experience gained at this meet was well worth the time and effort that we put forth into practice. "B" DAY PLANNED AT HIGH SCHOOL April 18 is "B" day at the Bingham high school, and a day has been planned in which ev-eryone can have a good time. As is the usual custom, the sen-ior, junior and sophomore boys will have the job of whitewash-ing the "B", and the freshman boys will carry on the tradition of the freshman class by making a trail up to the "B" for the oth-er students. The senior and junior girls will decorate the gym for the "B" day dance while the boys are up at the "B". They will also com-plete any last minute things that have to be done, and there will be plenty of work for all of them. The sophomoro girls will cook the dinner for the rest of the high school, and every student who does the work required of him will receive a ticket from his adviser which will entitle him to a free dinner. The seventh month at the home of her daugh-ter, Mrs. Dan Evanson. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Myer-hoff- er of Midvale were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Fillisetta Saturday evening. The Justamere club met at the home of Mrs. Rhea Steadman Thursday evening. Cards were played, prizes going to Miss June Seal and Mrs. Floyd Reed- - A late luncheon was served to 10. Mrs. Stanley Beckstead and Mrs. Ernest Christensen of Her-rima- n were visitors Wednesday of Mrs. Horace Seal. Mrs. Ifirold Draper, Mrs. Le-lan- d Nielson, Mrs. Thomas Walk-e- f and Miss June Seal spent Easter Sunday at Midvale. Mr. and Mrs. Max M. DuBols joined Mr. and Mrs. Elliott W. Evans and Mr. and Mrs. J. Wil-liam Grant of Bingham to spend Sunday evening in Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Thomas were hosts Easter Sunday at a dinner at Jeanne's Tea Room-The-had as guests Mr. and Mrs. F. K. Potter, Miss Ann Curtin, Miss Alida Thomas, all of Salt Lake City, A lovely Easter lily centerpiece decorated the table. O Lark Notes Steve James Vranes, son of Mrs. Katie Vranes of Lark, took Miss Dorothy Sophie Kreiutzer of Salt Lake City as his bride in a ceremony performed at Salt Lake City Monday. The couple will make their home in Mid-vale. ... Margaret Brooks Manwell of Bingham and Walter Allen Sease of Lark were married Saturday at Farmington. The Lark Five Hundred club attended a dinner party and a show at Salt, Lake City Thurs-day evening. Mrs. Thora Newbold and son of Pocatello, Ida., visited rela-tives in Lark Sunday-Mr- . and Mrs. Hy Sorenson and family spent the week-en- d in Salina. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Gressman, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gressman and' Elmo Pierce spent Sunday in Provo. ' Mrs. Paul Murphy entertained her club Thursday evening. Five hundred was played, prizes go-ing to Mrs. J. P. Christensen, Mrs. H. J. Sorenson, Mrs. Elmer Gress-man, Mrs. Robert Jackson. Mrs. Robert Jackson and Mrs. E. W. Gleason attended a Navy Mothers meeting and party in Salt Lake City last evening. Denver Wishon of Walker, Cal, is visiting his sister, Mrs- Car-roll Evanson. Melvin Brogden is the owner of a new Chevrolet. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. McDonald and son, Jimmy, spent Easter Sunday in Provo as guests of Mrs. McDonald's brother and sister-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. Geo-rge Hansen, and her sister, Miss Bessie Hansen. Mrs. Dillie Findlay of Albu-querque, N. M-- , is spending a THE WAY TO HELP An advance copy of "You Can Defend America" came into our hands this week. The booklet has an impressive mes-sage for every American who has wondered, "What Can I Do To Help?" The foreword is by General John .1. Pershing who commends "You Can Defend America" to every patriotic citizen. Excerpts from the book are printed with the hope that a hint of the inspiration and the ultimate objective the preservation of our nation will interest you in seeing the message is spread and furthered. Printed in Washington, D. C, by Judd and Detweiler, the booklet will be on sale at ten cents a copy. Write to Moral Rearmament, care of the publisher, for information regarding your copy. You will study and remember the lesson in "You Can Defend America." "Once China built a wall. She lived behind it. She laugh-ed at her enemies. She felt secure. Soon an invader came from the north. Three times China found the enemy inside her gates. They did not storm the wall. They did not go around it. They simply bribed the gate-keepers. Yesterday France built a wall. The Maginot line. Steel and stone. She felt secure behind it.. She put her faith in it. Yet France fell. Why? Something was missing. There was a gap through which an invader came. That gap was not only, in the wall. It was in the spirit of the people. Today America builds a wall. A ring of steel. Ships and planes and guns. But is this enough? Does America have what China lacked? What France lacked? Does she have total defense? She builds her wall. Does she build character? Spirit? The will to sacrifice? Does she build men? Men who pull together? Before our eyes the world changes. Nations collapse. We in America ask? "What can I do?" What can 130 million Americans do?- - Plenty! Behind ships, planes and guns stand three lines of de-fense: Sound Homes, Teamwork in Industry, a United Na-tion. They fill the gap. They must be manned. What You Can Do America needs guts as well as guns. National character is the core of national defense. Congress can't vote it. Dollars won't buy it. It's your job to build it. How? Change! Unite J Fight! America. This land of towering cities and golden prair-ies, of great rivers and mighty mountains. This nation of Washington and Jefferson, of Lincoln and Lee and Bldison, and countless thousands of ordinary men and women, who crossed oceans and plains, who toiled long for little reward, who sacrificed and built our heritage. If this heritage was worth their lives to build, it is worth ours to preserve. "And in support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor." . inmiM QUART No. M STRAIGHT BOUR80N WHISKEY. 90 PROOF SCHENLEY DISTILLERS CORP., N. JRfoKB TRUCKS I Of' ON MMN STREET! 1 itb lo operating ul"' th waMl J fori Truck' ey " --.tar fj ford Dealer today. t ' mmmmT 9 Ww A No matter how you've; shot the ? I t --tt3( J 18 jou can-b-e sure of par on j!itlii2l J the 19th by ordering a Hill and rS2"f I h Hill highball. You'll enjoylhTs ' ' J v Jt I I tucky plenty. . . and so will the i Ull.JU t I other members ofyour foursome. i SoTJJJCky straiGJ Pd J - $ 1 Ur?on whisk frd m 93 Proof gT-- T j ' Pt- - 40 f rational Distillers Products Corp. Pt.Code3q ' Qt. Cods 38 J I Gal. 52 ' SrallSueCoiRitol Clr Tkv mSi Sauterue Sherry j Ziafaodel Angelica Celi fomU White Port Loganberry i fcHrTf, jW3T wrffi Red Port Blackberry : pj"" .' Muscatel Champagaa ili' ''Hfy 8:40 Brandy ' Sweet Wines 20 At" Products of - cohol by volume; Dry ROMA WINE CO, Lodi, Calif. Wines 12 to 14; Brandy 90 Proof Canyon Motor Co. Phone 333 Ma;n jb, m.aJ ( Copperfield Ann -Pantalone The faculty of the Copper-fiel- d grade school will have charge of the monthly Parent-Teache- r meeting at 8 p. April 21 at the school. A talk on "Americanism" will be given by Dr. Paul S. Rich-ards. Other numbers of inter-est will be a reading by Miss Melda Christensen and a piano solo by Miss Norma Tesch. An-nouncement is made of the ap-pointment of a nominating committee to select candidates for office next year. Those acting on the committee are Mrs. John W. Holmes, Mrs. M. P. Madsen,- - Mrs. Vera Peter-son, Mrs. Audrey Gaines, Mrs. Lucille Chestnut, Mrs- - John Pantalone. To assist with the pre school child clinic at the school next month are Mrs. Paloma Moore, Mrs. Agnes Steele, Mrs. Ross Falseiti and Mrs. John Barrett. Relief society wa3 held at the home of Mrs. Agnes Steele Tues-day. The lesson was on "The Tree of Liberty", given by Mrs. Vera Peterson. Those present were Mrs. Sarah McCormick, Mrs. Harriet Bosworth, Mrs. Ro-we- Stevens, Mrs. Paloma Moore, Mrs. Elizabeth Caldwell, and Mrs. Martha Bullock. Ladies Aid was held at the home of Mrs. Eleanor McDonald Tuesday. Sewing was enjoyed by Mrs. .Eva Watson, Mrs. Thelma Barrett, Mrs. William Leather-woo- d, Mrs. Katie Peterson of Copperton, Miss Margaret An-derson, Mrs. Bert Whetsel, and the Reverend and Mrs. Meredith Smith. A delicious luncheon wa3 served. Mrs. Lester Jackson, the for-mer Bessie Gardikas, of Bur-ban- k, Cal., is here for a month's visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gardikas. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bullock were Garfield visitors Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Chris-tensen and children of Salt Lake were visitors at the Clarence Bul-lock home Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Bul- - lock of Lago, Idaho, are now making their home at Nick Gol-ishe- s. Mrs. Grace Williams and son, Paul, of Midvale, were Copper-fiel- d visitors Monday. Joseph Jones has left for Los Angeles to make his home. Mr. and Mrs, Jess Arvilla and Mr. and Mrs. Sid Coward and family of Copperton were din-ner guests at the Josh Crow home Thursday. Mrs. Laura McDonald was a Copperfield visitor Friday. Mrs. James Manos of Farm-ington spent a week visiting with her son and daughter-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. John Manos. Mrs. Pete Carl of Salt Lake City spent the week-en- d with son and daughter-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. Ray Carl. Mr. and Mrs. Joe McDonald entertained at a dinner Sunday. Guests were: Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milner, Mr. and Mrs. Reno Mar-co- n, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Carl, and Mrs, Pete Carl. Nick Golish, Mrs. Mary Borich and son, Pete, were Salt Lake City visitors Monday. Mrs. William Burke and Mrs. John J. Anderson attended the funeral of the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Miller in Mid-vale Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burke Sr., entertained at dinner Sunday, Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Greg-ory Tyson and son, and Robert Burke Jr. Mrs. Ross Falsetti was a Salt Lake visitor Saturday. Mrs. Nick Malkos has left for |