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Show J FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1939 THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH . 4 TflO" POUT Mr. and M'rs. Ray Carl . Bj Mr. and Mrs. Renold Mari, were guests at a swimming partj -- at Salt Lake City Friday. i every Tuesday night. Mr. Brown-ing U instructor; Miss Thelraa Korous returned to her home at Salt Lake City after being the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Lottie Williams, for two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Carl enter-tained Mr. and Mrs. Renold Mar-co- n at dinner Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Evans of Pleasant Grove are now re-sidents of Copperfleld. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McDon-ald entertained the D. D. club at their home Thursday night. Five Hundred was played and M'rs. Laura McDonald, Qeorge McDonald and Renold Marcon won prizes. Mrs. Margaret An-derson was a substitute. Robert Price of Ogden visited at the home of his aunt, Mrs. Alvln Cole at Telegraph over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Scott and sons Lynn and Neil are leaving Monday to make their home at Jordan. Ernest Ferry of Portland, Ore-gon, is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hoine. Mrs. Ferry has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hoine, for the past month. Copperfield Agnes McDonald The Ladies Auxiliary was en-tertained Monday evening at the Office Building Ty Mrs. Thelma Barratt, Mrs. Flossie Anderson and Mrs. Ida Mugfur, hostesses. Winning Five Hundred! prizes were Mrs. Francis Qulnn, Mrs. MVles McDonald, Mrs. Renold Marcon and Mrs. Dorothy Shep-herd. A hot luncheon was served to sixteen members. Nick Mastoris of Davis is vis-iting Mike Callas for a week. Mrs. William Parrlngton, who has been staying at the horns oft Mrs. Dan Sullivan, is now vlslt-ini- g her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Burt Wetsel. A birthday party was given by Mrs. Clarence Bullock for her daughter Arilla Saturday evening. Attending were Carraela Chela, Annie Pantalone, Edith Leather-woo- d, Margaret Mannlon, Hazel and Juanlta Skinner, Thelma Ko-rous, LaVern Cunllffe, Willlmay McDonald, Viola McDonald, Rose Pazell, Mary Petraca and Agnes McDonald. Prizes were won at games and a dainty luncheon was served. Miss Margaret Anderson motor-ed to Salt Lake Tuesday on busi-ness. The Ladles Aid honored Mrs. W. E. Scott with a handkerchief shower given Thursday evening at the Office Buildlnig. Mrs. Scott received a, lovely remembrance from the ladles. A sociable even-ing was spent. Persons wishing to secure their citizenship papers will be Interest-ed to know that they may attend classes at the school auditorium I tUltr Imrtijmn HitUrtin laaued Every Friday at Bingham Canyon, Salt Lake County, Utah. Entered a Second Class Matter, at the Postofflce at Bingham Canyon, Utah, Under the Act of March 8. 1878. I UTAH stoEfuS ASSOCIATION K LELAND G. BURRESS, Editor and Publisher Subscription Rate, per year in advance ?2-0- , Advertising Rates furnished on application. ly; Tap Dance on Roller Skates, Waneta Skinner; Reading, Gall Shelley. The majority of these numbers were chosen from the amateur program given every Tuesday and Thursday noon.. The that was presented at home may not have been as elaborate as the one given at Jordan but It wa9 a g! program and pro-ved to be entertaining. Paul Richards Tep Clnb 1 Going To Present Drill With a smile on their faces and rhytbm in their feet, the Mlnerettes will perform a drill between halves at the basketball game between Bingham and Grantsville at our gym Friday evening, January 20. forty-tw- o girls will display their clever and attractive uniforms for the first time. Therefore, everyone follow the crowd and support your team and your school. Agnes McDonald --O r" I hope I haven't bored you, but watch for the next Miners party. It la surely not going to bo bor-ing. Gerald Larsen Seventh Grade Party Although it was Friday the 13th, the seventh grade dldnt witness any bad luck, but had a fine time during the sixth and seventh periods at a party. They danced the Schottlsho, which sounded like the Jitter Bug from the lower floor, Waltz and the Lambeth Walk. Music was ob-tained from the Bingham Radio Shop. Refreshments of yum, cook-ies, and ice-crea- sandwiches were served buffet style. Mildred Sumnlcht Library Adds New Books Sixty-seve- n new books have been added recently to the Bing-ham high school library and are now available for circulation. The circulation for the past quarter is a.s follows: fiction, 1,232, showing a de-crease of 187 as compared with last years' record. Non fiction, 716, an Increase of 260. Reference and magazines, 1187, an Increase of 862. Some of the non fiction books Include: Margaret Armstrong Fanny Kemble, biography of a great ac-tress; Morton 0. Clark Cap-tain. OutraJgoous, a hilarious voy-age; Eve Curie Madame Curie, biography of a great scientist; Elizabeth Eldridge etiquette for college girls; Frederick A. Kuuimer The Great Road, story of M'an's Pro-gress; Anne Morrow Lindbergh Listen! The Wind, the Lindbergh's South Atlantic Flight; Mason & Mitchell Social Games for Re-creation, (games for every occa-sion; Beatrice Pierce Young Hostess Entertains, how to enter-tain; Cornelia Otis Skinner Dithers and Jitters, Humor and Nonsense. Among the new fiction are to be found: Arthur J. Cronin, The Citadel; Lloyd C. Douglas, Magnificent Obsession; Walter Edmonds, Drums Along The Mohawk; Jo-sephine Lawrence, If I Have Four Apples; Margaret Mitchell, Gone With The Wing; Charles O. Morris, Birds Without Straw;-Howar- Pease, Jungle River; Kenneth Roberts, Northwest Pas-sage; Elizabeth Seipert, Young Doctor Galahad; Francis Wallace, Razzle-Dazzl- e; Paul Wlmg, Take It Away, Sam! We hope that our circulation will Increase even more in the near future with the coming of these new books. Thelma Hansen Junior High Presented Assembly For Entire Student Body While the Senior high school presented an assembly at Jordan high school, the Junior high pre-sented a similar program to the student body of Bingham high school. The follou-iii- students partici-pated in the program: Trumpet Solos, Russell Love-less, Robert Siddoway; Piano So-lo, Gordon Ramsey; Clarinet Du-et, Beverly Anderson, Reah Lou Olson; Harmonica and" Guitar Duet, Richard Jones, Gordon Ra-msey; Tap Dance, Patricia White- - WHY HE WENT AMERICAN !"; By William Hard The waiter was British. I had known him a long time. He enter ed my room with my breakfast, 'j: I said to him: ,;; "Sin prised to see you. Haven't . j seen you for a long time. Where've t you been?" .ji "Back In Scotland," aald the I falter. "And I took my wife and the little glil. That's why you j, haven't seen me. We stayed there four months." .J This waiter Is a very home- - ? loving man. I could imagine htm performing domestic duties for ! grandparents. I said: "Seeing the old folks?" "That wasn't really It," he said, j and hesitated. "Perhaps 1 shouldn't ask you," ! 1 said. :' "Oh,. that's all right." he said. "It was very interesting. My wife j and I went back there to try to j find out if we really wanted to be Americans." He stopped and busied himself, j with "the eglgN. He Is not too j communicative. Or else perhaps he j felt that he had successfully a- - i roused my curiosity. He had. I was unable to resist. I brazenly asked him: ; "Well, What was the answer?" j "We are going to be Amerl- - ) cans," he said. ; "Ah!" I thought to myself. "Running to cover. Too many chances of alr-rald- s over there." I was slightly annoyed. I said: i "You must have been over I there at the time of Munich. Very disturbing, I suppose." ! He looked at me reproachfully and almost Indignantly, t "I met the Germans once," he wild. "I wouldn't mind meeting them again. That wasn't the ! point." Again he stopped. One thing I i don't like about the British Is !' that they make me so garrulous. things, with style. But how they cost! I couldn't buy thm. Every-thing there is Just In two classes. One for the rich. One for the poor. And the thlnigts for the poor! We'd call them terrible here. No style. No comfort. No nlceness in them. "My wife kept noticing it all the time. She's the real reason, If I must tell' you, she's the real reason why we decided the way we did. She couldn't get all these cheap American gadgets for her kitchen over there. The poor people over there do without them. She was accustomed to them, and she couldn't get them. She couldn't afford them over there. Here she has all those con-veniences. They make them here at cheap prices. I don't know why they do. But they do. And my wife can't get along without them any more. She lias to have them. "And the little girl. I think perhaps It was mostly the little girl that made my wife talk to me the way she did. You should see the dresses for little girls over there. No cut. No hanig. No nlceness. A nice dress for the little girl would cost a couple of pounds. Here Iny wife can get a sweet dress for the little girl for' a couple of dollars. Not very good material, you know. But a fine cut! Nice! It makes me feel she can meet anybody In it. "Here we get all sorts of nice things, done cheap. Over there all the nice things are done expens-ive. So we made up our minds. If we'd had money, we might have settled down over there. But we didn't have It. So here we are!" He stopped once more, but this time It was to smile and to add: "You should ace my wife shopp-ing now for the kitchen and the 'By their fruits'! The wife Is right." I said to the waiter: "I hope your little girl grows up to be Miss America. She seems to have given us some new citi-zens already." From America's Future. it They stop, and I ask questions. 1 j asked one now. I said: j "All right. All right. Come on i with it. What was the point?" j "Well," aald he. "a man with j my income can't buy the same j kind of things for his family over there." 1 At last his slow-burnin- g Scotch 'l flax had caught fire. He now pro- - ' ,' ceeded almost tumultously for 1 him. He said: j "The nice things are all hlgh-- priced over there.' They're for i people with money. In the shops iT Jhere we lots and lots of nice little girl!" "But have you applied for your papers?" said I. My cominig new fellow-America- n permitted himself to be flip-pant. "Trust my wife," said be. "You ought to write a natura-lization ode." aid I. "to the Statue of Liberty and the ." And then 1 reflected: "The proof of any pudding even of liberty is in the eating and, If one may say so. in the wearing It's in what It gives, PAY NO MORE! - uniUERSRL credit tompflnv ill CODE NUMBERS Colli. Rd Port Qta. 933 Gals. 934 Calif. Whits Port JjL Qui. 938 Gala. 946 Colli. Muacatal Qta. 972 Gala. 973 Colli. Sherry Qta. 1038 Alcobol J0 by Voluma Sons and daughters away at school (or living in other towns) are as near as your telephone. Enjoy a voice visit as many families do regularly. J The operator will fie glad to tell you rates to any towns , THE MOUNTAIN STATES TELEPHONE I TELEGRAPH COMPANY I 1 ----"- .'tmmmmammmsmm I MATTRESSES REMADE 4 Spring Mattresses, $8.00 See us for Furniture Uphols-tering and Cleaning. Call For and Delivered Each Wednesday Local Phone Bingham 91 OVERMAN MATTRESS CO. 2763 So. State, Salt Lake City WHITE PORT fSgfSgl Paradise MUSCATEl QUART .&-22- Z& (Amber Sweet) Code No. ( QUART ! 947 ! fl lVV CodeN- - SWEET WINES DRY WINES I yH. AIC0H0L208Y VOLUME ALCOHOL 12 BYVOIOME Served with Wild Game, Red Meata or Lamb j .At CODE NO. n A 818 Paradise Burgundy (Red Dry) Fifth Al H 818 Paradise Burgundy (Red Dry) Gallon -- 'I V 827 Paradise Zlnfandel (Red Dry) Gallon I JM &8 Paradise Zlnfandel (Red Dry) Fifth A ti Served with Fish, Fowl or 1 Eggs j j 81S Paradise Rlmllng (White Dry) Fifth Iff 1 1 825 Paradise-Sautern- e (White Dry) Gallon i f AS 828 Paradise-Saut- e rr.s (White Dry) Fifth ' V ' ffV Served tor All Occasion jAll if 032 Paradise Port (Red Sweet) Quart i' v- - 040 Paradise Pdi (Red Sweet) Gallon ; 1 1057 Paradise Angelic (Amber Sweet) Quart I fi; 1058 Paradise Angelina (Amber Sweet) Gallon 71 Served as a Cocktail or with Soup 111 A or Any Time of Day f M At 1035 Paradise Sherry (Amber Dry) Quart tA f 1043 Paradise Sherry (Amber Dry) Gallon Al 1 FAMOUS BEAUIIEU BRANDS ;?f aV I The King of All Occasions 'A ! 867 Beaulleu Burgundy (Red Dry) Fifth J L Y 813 Beaulleu Haute Sauterne (Mel. W.) Fifth f, I ; ,B ly 991 Beaulleu Muscatel (Sacramental W.) Gallon ; f j If 915 Beaulleu Sparkling Moselle Fifth t l (Champagne Type) Jr 917 Beaulleu (Pink) SparkUn; Burgundy Fifth J I m ygg" ww. .... . Hie Clean,' Modem Fuel for Furnace, Stove, Stoier RECOMMENDED AND SOLD BY: UTAH LIVERY & COAL COMPANY Bingham Bingham 338 LARK MERCANTILE COMPANY Lark Bingham 502-J- 1 JUDGMENT During time of bereavement, it becomes necessary that some one person or group of persons be depended upon for the 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 Embabner Telephone 17 Old - Age Insurance Benefits Are Availale Applications for claim blanks for lump-su- benefits under the Foderal Old-Ag- e Insurance pro-visions of the Social Security Act niuy cow be obtained from local postmasters, who will distribute them, upon request, to wage-earne-in covered employment who have attained age 65 since December 31, 1936 and to the representative of families of co-vered wage-earne- rs who have died since December 31, 1936. Announcement of this new ser-vice was made recently by William i. Huyward, manager of the Salt Lake City Field Office of the Social Security Board, who point-ed out that It would provide additional channels through which eligible claimants may contact field offices of the Board with the proper information required to make a claim. "The two types of paymeuts now being made are to workers who have employed In cov-ered Industrial and commer-cial occupations since 1936 and who have reached age 65 since that date; and to the es-tates of workers who have been employed in covered industrial occupations and who have died since 1936", Mr. Hayward said. "Both types of these payments are based on 3 Mi per cent of the worker's total earnings in covered employment since 1936." In Utah, 53 claims for lump-sum benefits had been certified during November for a total of $3,319.15. The average single payment In this state for Novem-ber was $62.63. This brings Utah's record to 876 claims for a total of $37,322.25 to date. Nationally, the figure at the end of November, .1938 totaled 260,-78- 2 claims paid to date for a total of $10,697,111.83. O ;i NUISANCE ADVERTISING With all the attention being given by groups in the ! state to the attraction of tourists and the advertising of 1 scenic Utah, it is paradoxical that a problem drawing na- -' ! tiomvide action the removal of the billboar-d- is not under ' consideration here. . . 4, The billboards used for posting of large signs and ad- - ?! vertising has drawn fire on two counts: as a menace to j highway safety and as a disfiguration of the landscape. 1 Today as never before the natural beauty of a state is f un economic asset It is estimated that with proper advertis-in- g and promotion Utah's tourist business will become her ?! largest industry, and may some day bring the state one hundred million dollars annually. '; Public efforts must be made to preserve the natural ' loveliness of this state if it is to attract tourists. As a blot '( on the countryside the gaudy and ever-multiplyi- billboard f and signs are doomed. The sooner this is realized the better j for Utah and her tourist-attractio- n ambitions. H Last year Americans on pleasure bound spent $5,000,- - f 000,000. With that much money to spend they have a right 4 to enjoyable scenery. T In the same period 37,000 were killed on the highway Ji and 1,000,000 injured. In the interests of safety driving i ' should' be made as easy as possible. The billboards and road-- i side signs which distract the attention of the driver every f few feet with dazzling or blinding advertisements are one j i of the hazards which can be eliminated. I Vermont and Virginia have already passed bills regu- - I ! lating outdoor advertising and a bill will be considered in I ' New York state legislature this month. A Massachusetts j supreme court decision rules against unnecessary ugliness f and advertising on the public highway. I All over the country Automobile associations, tourist ! bureaus, chamber of commerce groups, highway commis- - ;j sion groups and others are campaigning against the bill-i- s board. i There are two ways this can be done effectually. One ji is to write a card to the company advertising via billboard and tell them you will not buy products so advertised. An-other is to write your legislator telling him that in your opinion such advertising is a nuisance. Either way yoa do your bit toward upbuilding of Utah as one of the potentially most promising tourist states of 1 the union. BINGHAM HIGH SCHOOL NOTES New Jackets Worn By Members of Miner's Club Finally, but I'm sure they were worth waiting for, the Miner's Jackets have arrived. The em-blems are the same as those of other except In color, which is reversed. If you have been wondering what 37-- 9 or 38-- 9 stands for, stop wondering be-cause It is not a convict's num-ber, but the year the Miner en-tered the club and the year he graduates. This applies only to Senior members. The Juniors get their turn next year. Boy, how that white "Miners" stands out against the black Jack-et. While the "Econ" class was at Walker Bank recently you could sve the "Miners" on the back of th Jacket the full length of the bank, and that Is some distance. Ask any "Econ" stu-dea- t. The compliments have been numerous nd the Miners wish to thank everyone who has compli-mented us. There have been sev-eral who have gone so far as to say that these Jackets are the best the Miner's dub has ever had. |