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Show FRIDAY, NQVEAHiKK .Mm PAGE FOUR THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH --1JW. UifK Singltam SulUttti 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 of March 3, 1879. . !BL!iJ' NATIONAL DITORIAI UTAH SWEKt ASSOtiATION j JOHN ADAMEK. Editor and Publisher Subscription Kate. P't year in advance 2.50 Advertising Deadline Wednesday Afternoon Advertising Kates Furnished on Application en, Tommy, Dunna and --7T James, Norman ChesW ry Nerdin and M Mr. and Mrs. Anthon uM son, Mr. and M,s p',;7:ac and Mr. and Mrs John TV,! of Bingham hav, LU8hl , from El Dorado, ffi marriage of their niece thl to Robert E. Spri,lt! r ft is the daughte, u Mr. a , ,r, John Bressan ghter of Sam T,.,li"ttWwp late Mary Togliat, dents of The SS took Place b'efor, and friends at Mrs. Oreslle FasaXd fcBS and Mrs. O. Lavede, 'M als, 0 W ofBingham M Altoonah was their overnight, guest Monday. No 2 Fire auxiliary were cuests Monday evening of Mrs. Louis J. Arntola. Bridge was olayed and prizes won by Mrs. Joseph Timothy, Mrs. Grant Mil-ne- r and Mrs. Clarence Johnson, Mr and Mrs. Stephen G. Kaw-lmg- s were Sunday dinner guests of Mr and Mrs. W. H- Sparks of Salt Lake City. The occasion was Mr. Sparks' birthday. Dona Raid, a student at USAC at Logan, spent the week-en- d with her parents, Mr and Mrs. Donald G Reid. Mrs. Eugene Morris entertain ed Monday evening for Mrs. A. C Larick, Mrs. Joseph Kemp and Mrs M. A. Cotter- Mrs. Larick plaved high. Tula Pappanikolas of Magna visited Friday with several of her friends in Bingham. Bingham Catholic organization and auxiliary and guests enjoy-ed a Halloween party last Thurs-day evening at BCO hall. Hallo-ween decorations were used the hall. Dancing and re-freshments were enjoyed by 50 couples. A Halloween dinner party was given last Thursday evening by Richard Nerdin at the home of his oarents, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd J. Nerdin. Favors were choco-late suckers made up as pump-kins. Orange gumdrop place cards were set for Richard Niel- - LOCAL NOTES Mrs. Anthon O. Jacobson en-tertained at dinner Wednesday evening in honor of her husband, who was celebrating his birth-day Also present were Mr. and Mrs. Pete Cuevas and family. Mrs. Sadie Wayman and D. Davis of Salt Lake City visited Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs, J. V. Rawlings. Mrs. Charles Bates visited Tuesday with Mrs. Alma Man-tle. They were joined in the ev- - ening by Mr. Bates. Mr. and Mrs. David L. Bills returned last Thursday from a two weeks' stay at Duchesne. Mr. Bills' nephew, Lloyd Palmer of ' ' I LARK : Beverly Seal. Ph. 901J1 Mr. and Mrs. Harold Prater of Seattle, Wash., were week-en- d visitors of Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Kinsley. They have been visit friends and relatives in South) Dakota. They left for their home Monday morning. Mr. and Mrs- Sherman Nell; and son of Riverton were Sunda.v dinner guests of Mr. and Mis. Dell Nell. James Franklin visited in Mid-val- e Saturday. Mrs Dell Nell visited Monda With her ion and family Mr. and Mrs Kenneth Nell of Midvale The Lark ward juniors and scouts went to a social held at South Jordan Tuesday. Refresh-ments and a wonderful time were enjoyed by all. Myrlene Wilcox was a Sunday dinner guest of Gordon Burke of Copperfield. Mr and Mrs. James Reed were Salt Lake City visitors Tuesday Mr and Mrs Thomas Walker recently visited with Mr. and: Mrs. Jack Walker of American Fork Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Draper returned home Monday from Genola v. here Mr. Draper had been pheasant hunting. Mr nnri Mis Horace Seal and daughters, Beverly and Joy, were, Tuesday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Draper. Mrs. Sidney Arnold and Mrs. Carrie Reed and son Kenton were Salt Lake visitors Wednes-day. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Pearson announce the birth of a daugh-ter Saturday Mr. and Mrs Keith Kendall and son returned home Sunday from the east where they have been visiting with relatives and friends. Miss Juanita Pierce will be-come the bride of Wallace R. Butterfield in rites to be per-formed November 13 at Lark Miss Pierce is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Pierce A wedding reception will be given in their honor Saturday even-ing, November 16, at the Lark Amusement hall at 8:30 O pin CACHE CAVE RBSW ONE OF THE GREATEST VfSf-STlfP-H "DhiS SMALL OVEN-SHAPB- O Sii2sr CAVE AT THE HEAD OP ECHO CANYON, WAS - USED FOR MANY YEARS AS A SHELTER JW&Bft. FOR FUR TRAPPERS, EXPLORERS AND iKj&fiW utah pioneers, the cave is 30 FEET L0N6. 15 FEET WIDE, AND flu... FROM 15 TO 20 FEETHIGH. lM Tcave'arNtheRnaes s - k OF 150 "KSONS FROM THE PSA&jS I820STOTHE 1870'S ALTH0UfiH guT A MllE from 30, NEAR CASTLE-ROC- K R.R. STATION, COUNTY, CAVE IS RARELY VISITED. DECEMBER 4th ??? K QUICK RELIEF FRoJ Symptoms of Distress Arlsini frail STOMACH ULCERf due to EXCESS ACll FreeBookTellsofHonuTreafmenttlH Must Help or it Will Co ,t You Nothifl Ovur two million bottlei of the WII THE ATMENT liavo , i, s, ,W tottiM bj rnptomsofdlsonssari ,i,.r-.- t1 W ad DuodenalUtrers.l i. "ECMiItM Poor Digestion, Sour Upset StonuX Gasslness. Heartburn. Slceplesinn, rlr due to Excatt Acid. Sold on lSdavT'traal Ask for "Wlllard't Message" which tM explains this treatment frta at EVANS DRUG COMPANY! J li MiAItl Methonics Check II JKMJiZiSvctfl Si p Avoid trouble this winter! An expert Motor Tune-up- , New Spark Plags, New Battery will save you a lot of grief and make start- - II ing so much easier on Cold, snappy days. When the thermometer goes down, your car troubles go up. I " CHANGE NOW TO WINTER LUBRICANTS j iSIMJ STANDARD f SFuSfei GARAGE 2jJm 425 Main s'- - Phone IB jli BEAUTY FOR MEMORY WE TRY to make every service in our chapel as beautiful as possible guided, of course, by the family's wishes. We try to cre-ate a Memory Picture that may bring some measure of consolation in the years to come. BINGHAM MORTUARY W. V. Robinson Telephone 17 i i SEE THE NEW, ADVANCED FALL and WINTER FASHION FROCKS - I have the complete new line ready to show-thrl- ll-i ing styles you will want to see. MRS. W. A. HORN 5 Heaston Heights Telephone 21 7W l It's time to winter-proo- f your car. " Lcc your Vico-Pe- p 88 station or dealer help you keep your in proper trim by this winter car service plan. Ti , 0iI with the dependable oil Vico. I S & Crankcasc flushing with a great new product jSA MOTO-PUR- J cleans oil screen, removes WlH deposits tending to clog oil Una. JW J 4g 3 Anti-frcczcf- radiator protection and radiator f? flushing. I Battery service including quick charging and Ml) new batteries. JAA 5- - Winter lubricatio- n-, I aa applying special winter El lubricants where needed. In addition, it i, a good idea to have the air cleaner cleaned and the oil filter changed. Qet higher quality product, jPi PIP 88 VICO STATIONS AND DEALERS fPEPSS Sfi Pvl j .. r L aT I r uuHtm COPPER GATE 54 Main Street ICE COLD BECKER AND FISHER BEER ON TAP ALSO EASTERN BEER IN BOTTLES OPEN FROM 10:30 A.M. TO 1:00 A.M. Carrie Doyle and Jack Nichols W Be sure to hear Y the new Electric Hour Jf J "HOUR OF CHARM" I III ALL-GI-RL ORCHESTRA 11 I under the direction of M PHIL SPITAUNY II EVERY SUNDAY J 1 2:30 P. M. - KSL ill Brought to you by fl If J UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. V wmmmammmmmammaammmewmmmmmjmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm t WE'LL SEE YOC AT THE BINGHAM CLUB BEER ON TAP, 10-O- GLASS 10c LOCAL AND EASTERN BOTTLED BEER John Feraco, Prop. FOR BETTER MEATS GIVE US A TRY! POULTRY CHEESE QUALITY MEATS BUTTER EGGS BINGHAM MEAT CO Clarence Robison W. H. Harris Clinton Robison Phone 5 We Deliver iiiipBimniimmimnnm FOR SALE i Two of the finest situated building blocks in Bingham Canyon are now for sale. Six down stairs stores are all occupied with longterm leases by shoe store, dry cleaners, drug store, etc., and rooming houses overhead. Shows an exceptionally good return on the investment. Call us for further information concerning this good buy. CAPSON & BOWMAN, INC. Ill E. Broadway, Salt Lake City Telephone Spotlighting UTAH j Utah Schedules Unique Tourist Promotion Plan In an effort to secure for Utah a more justifiable share of the annual national tourist expendi-ture, the Utah department of publicity and industrial develop-ment will build eight "tourist meeting eenteis" at Utah's eight major doorsteps. The tourist doorsteps are designated as Ka-na- St. George, Wendover, Thompsons, Brigham City, Echo Canyon, Vernal, and the U. S. Highway 91 on the Utah-Idah- o border. Each greeting station will cost approximately $22,000 00 a to-tal of $172,000.00 for the eight and will contain a spacious lounge, rest rooms with showers and an office staffed by trained personnel who will have avail-able various types of pictorial literature, road information, and tlie ready unswer to tourist's questions about what to see in Utah In short, the bureaus will do a complete selling job for the state, encouraging visitors to spend more time seeing Utah's scenic, historical and cultural attractions. If Utah's tourist visitors could he induced to spend just one more day in the state, Utah would realize $30,000,000.00 more in tourist income per season, it if pointed out. Construction Ls scheduled to start iri the near future on the Kanab, St, George and Wend-OVt- r tourist greeting centers, the publicity department announced. tarvarr1 Scholarships Available To Utahns Harvard university has desol-ated its national scholarship to ill act students throughout the United States, and offers an in-vitation to Utah high school seen-lo- r men students to compete for what amounts to seven years of ratis training at the big eastern center of learning. Detailed in-formation may be secured from the Office of the Director of Scholarships, .Harvard University Cambridge, Mass. Utah Sees Huge Business Development More than 415 new firms list-ing seventeen million dollars in capital have been recorded on the corporation records in the office of secretary of state, dur-iii- " the biennial period, July 1, 1(144 to June 30, 1946. The new businesses, a large part of which have been started by war vet-erans, range from specialized laundry service to construction. For the preceeding two fiscal years, only 192 new corporations were filed for operation within the state. National Guard Flags Return To Capitol An Armistice day highlight will be the presentation of the colors the flags and guidons of three Utah National Guard regiments to Governor Herbert B Maw on the south steps of the capitol by Col. Arnold H. Rich, repre- - senting the war department. Im-mediately following the tradi-tional one minute silence at 11:00 o'clock a.m., Col. Rich will re-view briefly the history of each of the units called to federal ser-vice March 3, 1941. LDS Churchman Studies Navajo Needs George Albert Smith, L. D. S. church president, pledged the assistance of hLs church in ef- - Utahns Urged To Send Gift Celery Utahns are urged to send gift boxes of crisp, crunchy, delicious Utah celery to e friends during celery week, Nov -: It is estimated that at least 50,000 boxes will be sent out of the state during that week. Utahns have been shipping this famous product each November for the past twenty-fiv- e years. Features Utah The "National Publisher", a trade magazine serving the week-ly newspapers and advertising agencies of the United States, featured Utah on the front page of its current edition. The page, promoted and sponsored by the Utah State Press Association, states that "Utah is on the march!" and tells the centennial story outlining Utah's march of progress during the past one hundred years. "There never was a brighter moment", declares the page, "to speak your piece in Utah, and incomparably the best medium is the weekly press". Utahn Given High Honor Justice James H. Wolfe, mem-ber of the Utah Supreme Court has been named by President Harry S. Truman to a three-memb- er emergency board to in-vestigate the wage dispute be-tween twenty-thre- e shortlme railroads and fifteen nonoperat-in- g railroad brotherhoods. forts to improve living conditions of the Indians who reside on the great Navajo reservation which embraces southern Utah, north- - ern Arizona and New Mexico, at a three day meet of seventy-fou- r other church and missionary or-- I ganizations at Window Rock, Ariz. Will Survey Milk Situation The Utah Public Health asso- - ciation will make a state-wid- e survey of the milk situation to determine if provisions of a re-- : cent state law governing stand-ard- s of quality and purity are being met. spent playing cards and a late luncheon was served. Mr. and Mrs. Cash Gray and Mr. and Mrs. Nevers were Salt Lake visitors Wednesday Albert Gallegos and Joe Man-zanare- z of Salt Lake City were Sunday visitors at the home of! Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Gonzales. Sunday afternoon guests of Mrs. N. G. Nevers were Mrs. William H. Palmer and Mrs. Marvin E. Cowdell. Last Thursday visitors of Mr and Mrs. Alfred Gonzales were Elevie Martin, Viola Childs and Israel Martin. Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cash Gray were Mr. and Mrs. N. G. Nevers Cards were enjoyed and a late lunch-- ! eon was served. Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Woodland of Bingham spent Wednesday visiting with Mrs. Burt Whetsei. Mr and Mrs. Burt Whetsei and Mrs. A. L. Whetsei and Mary Ellen Whetsei were dinner guests last Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Whetsei. Wade Todd of Layton visited with Mr- and Mrs. Fred Brenner Sunday His wife, Mrs. Lola Todd, who has been visiting with her parents returned home with him. Mrs. Louise Dillier, Delores Phipps, Mrs. Peggy Harryman and Mrs. Arthur Phipps were Salt Lake visitors Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs- Marvin Cowdell and Mr. and Mrs. Everett Cow-- ! dell of Copperton attended the funeral services for their cousin, Perry Tolman of Sandy, Wed-- ! nesday at Sandy. Later they vis-ited with Mrs. Robert Draper of Provo. COPPERFIELD Valeta Nevers Phone 505W e Mrs William Tierney of Bing-- ! ham and Mrs. Robert E. Burke were Salt Lake vvLsitors Wed-nesday. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin E. Cow- - dell were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. N. G. Nevers Tues-day evening. The evening was v- "Watchdog of the People". A lighting editor risked his life to help his community enforce its will on the uni egenerate- Paul Gallico writes about it in the American Weekly, the magazine distributed with next Sunday's Los Angeles Examiner. |