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Show PAGE FOUR THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH FRIDAY, JANUARY 18,1952 CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our sincere appreciation to friends, neigh-bors, and relatives for their many acts of kindness and assistance, messages of sympathy, also the beautiful floral offerings in our bereavement, the death of our beloved wife and mother, Mrs. Ruth Helen Thornton Palmer. William Palmer and Family; Copperfield. natural resources to communities throughout the state. The lec-tures are jointly sponsored by the Associated Chambers of Commerce, Salt Lake City Cham ber of Commerce and the U. of U. Bureau of Business and Econ-omic Research, of which Or. Nelson is a director. Other guests at the meeting were Wright Voelker, Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce, and Wal ter Horn of the Mining Associa-tion. Next regular meeting of the club is scheduled Monday, Janu-ary 28. was played after which a delight ful luncheon was served. Prizes were won by Mrs. Virginia Mc-Cart- y, first; Mrs. Lil Marshall, second, and Mrs. Cecily Jack-son, house. Others present were Mrs. Mary Gressman, Mrs. Elva Baum, Mrs. Leola Peterson and Mrs. Edna Medley. Adult class of the Lark MIA enjoyed a er Tuesday evening, January 15, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bing-ham. Games were played after which refreshments were served to Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hillier, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Nell, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Whiting, Mr. and Mrs. R. Clyde Crump, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Pearson, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Arnold, Mrs. Virginia Seal, Mrs. Donna Bardsley and Mrs. Jessie Nielsen. "Breath of Life" Famous ac-tress Helen Hayes tells in her own words how she is dedicat-ing her life to helping victims of polio how the polio death of her daughter changed her life. She takes you into an iron lung ward, introduces you to some of the patients. Don't miss this heartwarming story in the Am-erican Weekly, that great maga-zine distributed with next Sun-day's Los Angeles Examiner. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Foist and daughter Judy entertained Wed-nesday, January 9, at their home at a lovely dinner for Mrs. Nora Mcintosh of Mt. Pleasant, Mr. and Mrs. LeGrand Beckstrom and son Brent and Mr. and Mrs. Guy Beckstrom and son Darrell of West Jordan. Leslie Seal of Tacoma, Wash., and Miss Carol Davies of Mur-ray visited with Mrs. Virginia Seal and family Sunday. Janu-ary 13. Mr. Seal is a brother and Miss Davies is a niece of the late H. M. Seal. LARK LIONS CLUB v HEAR ECONOMIST An illustrated lecture on the significance of mining in Lark to the nation's present war econ-omy was presented by Dr. EIRoy Nelson at a dinner meeting of the Lark Lions club held Tues-day night, January 15.' Dr. Nelson, director of research for natural resources committee Of the Utah Association of Cham-ber of Commerce Executives, spoke on the importance of Utah LARK NEWS Joy Seal 901J1 LARK P-T- A MEETING SLATED MONDAY NIGHT There will be a regular meet-ing of the Lark school P-T- A held at the old schoolhouse next Mon-day night, January 21 at 7:30 p.m. it was announced. All mem-bers are invited to attend. Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Newell of Blackfoot, Idaho, visited Satur-day and Sunday with their son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Birler. Mrs. Gwen Crump left Tues-day afternoon, January 15, for Baltimore, Md., where she will join her husband, Petty Officer Cal Crump. Mrs. Crump is the former Gwen Sandstrom, daugh-ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Sand-strom, and Cal is a son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Clyde Crump. Junior Gleaner class of Lark MIA spent Tuesday evening bowling at Murray after which luncheon was served at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenton Reed. Those attending were Donna Linck, Joy Seal, Don Ferguson and Rex Wittke. An enjoyable evening was had by all. Lark Ward MIA Tuesday. January 22 is "Bring A Friend night at Lark Ward MIA. A large attendance is ex-pected to be present and a spec-ial program is being arrange.V Mrs. Norma Holladay enter-tained the 509 club at her home Wednesday evening, January 16. A delicious dinner was served after which five hundred was played. Mrs. Belva Steel was an invited guest. Winning prizes were Mrs. Millie Wykert, high; Mrs. Viva Sweat, cut and Mrs. Ilia Coombs, travel. Others pres-ent were Mrs. Donna Bardsley, Mrs. Bessie Bigler, Mrs. Jennie Ball and Mrs. Ina Loigran. Mrs. Bardsley will be hostess to the club at her home on January 23. The 500 club met, Wednesday, January 9, at Lehi as guests of Mrs. Delta Turner. Five hundred GIlji? Hmgljam lullrtin Issued Every Friday at Bingham Canyon. Sail Lake County, Utah. Entered at Second Clan Matter at the Pott Office at Bingham Canyon, Utah. Under the Act of March 3. 1879. ma!SSW5S?srl NATIONAL DITOWAl JOHN ADAMEK, Editor and Publisher GLADYS L. ADAMEK, Assistant Editor Subscription Rate, per year in advance . . $2.60 Advertising Rates Furnished on Application Councilman H. N. English, "Aye". Councilman Elmo A. Nelson, "Aye". Councilman G. L. West, "Aye". Councilman Joseph Timothy, "Aye". Councilman Marlin R. Schultz, "Aye". Mayor C. A. Morley, "Aye". Passed by the City Council of the City of Bingham Canyon, Utah, this 10th day of Janu-ary, 1952. (SEAL) C. A. MORLEY, ATTEST: Mayor EUGENE MOftRIS, City Recorder "' - ORDINANCE NO. 46 AN ORDINANCE PROVIDING FOR SALARIES OF CITY EMPLOYEES AND OFFICERS Section 1. Effective from Janu-ary 1, 1952, the following offic-ers and employees of the City of Bingham Canyon, Utah, shall re-ceive as full compensation for their services the following mon-thly compensation and salaries, payable monthly or semi-month- ly as determined by the City Council: Recorder $325.00 Marshall 325.00 Policeman 300.00 Superintendent of Water .Works and Sewers .... 325.00 Superintendent of Streets 325.00 All other employees shall be paid such wages as may from time to time be determined by the City Council. Section 2. All ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict with this ordinance are hereby repealed. Section '3. In the opinion of the City Council, it is necessary for the peace, health, and safety of the inhabitants of the City of Bingham Canyon that this ord-inance become effective imme-diately, and therefore this ord-inance shall take effect upon its first publication. Councilman G. L. West made a motion that the foregoing ord-inance be adopted. Councilman Joseph Timothy seconded the motion. Roll Call vote was as follows: TOSS YOUR HAT irRmG I : copperfield : Shirley Pantalone, Ph. 106 e e Ronald Burke of the U. S. na-vy who has been stationed in San Diego, Calif., has been tran-sferred to San Francisco, Calif., according to word received by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Burke. Pfc Wayne McCleese of the U. ,S. Marine Corps arrived home Saturday to spend a ten-da- y leave with his wife, Mary, and son Ronnie. THURSDAY. JAN. 24 thru .SUNDAY, JAN. 27 The COLISEUM . Salt Lab Op SKATING Me V OF1952 EVERY EVENING AT 1:30 MATINEES SAT. A SUN. 2.30 niCiS ITei fecletferfJ EVENINGS SAT. A SUN. MATINEE $3.00 $2.50 $2.00- -$ I .SO MAIL OftDMS TO GLEN BROS. MUSIC CO. 74 South Mcin SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH U.S. Needs Civil Defense A-Bo-mb Would Kill All Persons Unprotected in One-Ha- lf Mile (Thii it Ik third vf t trrirt cf trticUt M civil dtfrnu, band m ikt boeklrt "Tku It Civil Dtftnjt" frtfarid by tht Frdtrtl Civil Drftntt Adminittrtum. It may br etttinrd fr$m tht Sufmnlndtnt if DacMmnti, Cntrnmtnt Pruning Qffu., Wummgttt, D. C, jfr Ira crnli.) By MILLARD CALDWELL Ftderal Civil Deftiue Administrator Don't be surprised if you hear a siren blowing and learn that your community is being alerted for an imaginary atom bomb raid. If it is organized, with-in minutes, air raid wardens, first-ai-d teams, doctors, nursesemergency rescue squads, and other civil defense Sunnv yroolt II 86 PROOF KENTUCKY WHISKEY A BLEND 65x GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS THE OLD SUNNY BROOK COMPANY. LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY COME TO THE DIAMOND FOR A GOOD TIME POOL TABLES FISHER'S AND HAMM'S BEER ON TAP FINEST IN TOWN 499 MAIN STREET COPPER GATE BAR AND CAFE 54 Main Street Telephone 290 BEST BEER ON TAP ALL POPULAR BRANDS OF BEER IN BOTTLES AND CANS Jack Nicholls, Prop. units will spring into action. Hundreds of cities, towns, and mall communities in the United States today are making sure that they will be ready to do their part if, and when, the real atom bomb hits them or cities near them. These imaginary raids have shown what well-train- and coordinated civil defense personnel and equip-ment can do against enemy attack. However, don't act as if the alert signal you hear is just an Imagi-nary air raid. Act as you have been trained to act Do whatever you have been told to do. Civil defense prepares you for that split-econ- d decision of knowing how to act what to do. Within one-ha- lf mile of the center of an explosion almost everyone without proper protection will be killed. With-in the next half-mil- e fifty per cent of the population will not arrive. From one to one-and-- half miles away eighty-fiv- e per cent will liire. Beyond two mile from the center of the explosion yoa will survive but there will be work for you to do. Civil de-fense prepares you for that too. With the proper protection YOU may live, but thousands will be killed instantly and many others will be wounded and in need of Immediate care. Every street within the major damage area will be completely blocked with rubble, and hundreds of persona trapped or buried in the wreckage. Fires will start within- - a matter of minutes in many places at once. Food Supply Destroyed These are the main things which will happen, but there are others. For instance, a large part of the city's food supply might be de- - troyed or cut off. The water supply might be knocked out. Regular communications might atop entirely. Much of the transports tion system certainly would atop. Thousands of survivors would sud-denly find themselves homeless, without food, clothing, shelter, or money.- - What could happen without civil defense? Ask the Japanese anyone of the few survivors at Hiroshima or Nagasaki. They had almost no civil defense as we know it now. When atomic bombs hit their cities, the population was almost com-pletely unprepared. Result: the people panicked wildly. Many thousands were needlessly killed or hurt, families were scattered, and property was lost or badly dam aged. Thousands were left homeless with no one to csrs for them. The wounded and helpless, who might hare lived, died becaoss proper civil defense was not or. gsnlzed to save them. Factories Would Be Useless But there was something of even greater importance to nation which was fighting for its life. Tha fact that there was no civil defense meant that the factories left stand ing after the atomic blast could not operate. Without civil defense a nation is helpless. With it, people and pro duction centers can get up and fight back. Casualties can be cut at least in half. Our nation car) live again and fight back to win I Civil defense U self defense for you and for our country. (This next article will discus what are the biggest civil defens problems.) I I "Mother says, 'Snooky drink lr plenty of HOGAN'S milk if JT Ti-'-V- " you want to sleep well at V J jfiZr morn'n2'' 1 fuess there's more oJ to mHk than you can see in I ss uMMMhmmiM.MM I y ec if TMis'sptciAu ulSk I lir, LL i r idiot. I SALE" CROWD KtEPafoMINOl .WSIKaTN L.M aIVUI. you wont ( pcalbabS&Is HUH to show WAPPsecvKnoN, Vf""VVrJ-AH?- y HAVE ENOUGH jWHeTHeY Zl jtlllSUBMST OCT MY CAR cars to go jLee .themJl and ru. Blow nou y I lfirS'5v- - ro iywyBEp.j, j PAY OFF ALL YOUR BILLS WITH A LOAN FROM PIONEER FINANCE COMPANY Have LESS to pay each month and only ONE place to pay. There'll be more LEFT OVER for your living expenses. Quick, quiet, friendly service. PIONEER FINANCE COMPANY 29 EAST CENTER MIDVALE 1010 111 I WE'LL SEE YOU AT THE BINGHAM CLUB BEER ON TAP LOCAL AND EASTERN BOTTLED BEER Sam Feraco, Prop. HISTORIC DOCUMENT One of the most prized docu-ments of American statecraft, Abraham Lincoln's first draft of the Emancipation Proclamation, ' has been presented to the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church of Washington, D. C. Gift of Barney Balaban, presi-dent of Paramount Pictures Cor-- 1 poration, the church was chosen as the most suitable recipient of these historical papers since it was the place of worship of the Civil War president, and would afford the public the opportunity of viewing the famous work which reflected Mr. Lincoln's deep concern for human freedom ' The document will be housed in the church's Lincoln chapel. After long preparation, this original draft of the Emancipa-tion Proclamation was read . by Mr. Lincoln to his cabinet on July 14, 1862, when it was de-cided to hold the measure until it could be supported by mili-tary successes. Autumn brought the victory of Antietam and sub-sequent issuance of a prelimin-ary "warning" proclamation on September 22. followed on Janu-ary 1, 1863, by the issuance of a revised and final Proclamation of Emancipation in which all slaves were declared "forever free." The original proclamation in Mr. Lincoln's characteristic hand writing was a key exhibit of the Freedom train. Privately owned until now, the document becom-es for the first time continuously accessible to the public. O : local notes;. Mrs. Peter Smith of Copperton was hostess to the birthday Club on Thursday afternoon of last week. A lovely luncheon was served followed by bridge. Mrs. H. R. Gust was an invited guest. Winning prizes were Mrs. Ben Price, Mrs. Frank Finnas and Mrs. Howard Hausknecht. Oth-ers present were Mrs. B. O. Pum-phre- y, Mrs. Norman T. Jacobsen, Mrs. Bert Mitchell. Mrs. W.D.S. Brown, Mrs. Charles Sax, Mrs. Helen Sullenger and Mrs. Charl-es Carey of Midvale. Entre Nous club were enter-tained at the home of Mrs. Miles Gaythwaite Thursday night, January 10. Bridge was played and prizes awarded to Mrs. Dean Ham, Mrs. William Ablett, Mrs. W. C. Carter and Mrs. Hyman Smernoff. Lovely refreshments were served. WBA met as guests of Mrs. Peter Smith of Copperton Mon-day evening. A regular business meeting and installation of offic-ers was held after which bridge was played. Prizes were won by Mrs. Helen Sullenger, first, bingo and draw; Mrs. 11. R. Gust, sec-ond, and Mrs. Howard Harker, consolation. Lovely refreshments were served. 100,000 American casualties, and 8,000 Americans murdered, as a triumph in foreign policy, 'but it will be hard to convince the Am-erican people that this is true." Lewiston, Pa., Sentinel: "The American public is vitally con-cerned over the low ethical stan-dard indicated by the scandals in the iRFC, the Bureau of Inter-nal Revenue and the Department of Justice. We do not feel that it takes an ethics professor or a student of the Bible to know that acceptance by an official of gifts for special favors is wrong, that using a government position to further his own private finan-cial interest or his business in- -' terest or his friends' or campaign contributors' interest is wrong. Oconto Falls, Wise., Herald: "A talk given over the radio recent-ly contained the statement that graft and greed are not to be found in one political party only. This is true, but when one party is in power for a longer than us-ual period, naturally, they also accumulate more of this type of person." Clarissa, Minn., Independent: "No matter what the age of a man, woman or child the drama of Christmas thrills the being; the words "Merry Christmas" always carry hope for the days to come, and because of this the godlessness of communism can never win." Morrison, I1L, News: "Horrible to contemplate, isn't it, that Am-erica is running, not walking toward a totalitarian dictator-ship? So what are we who cher-ish our freedom going to do it? For one thing, we can lend encouragement to thone Congressmen who valiantly are fighting this centralization of power in the hands of the bur-eaucrats in Wasohington." GRASS ROOTS OPINION Babylon, N. Y., Eagle: "It may be that the administration looks uoon the war in Korea, with its myy, runt wwmw vwm.il nuyiMiwy mrnvmrnmit ,, iN- yt Mi It , i Beauteous Peggy Wallace as seen in the pageant of Oriental splendor, the Scheheraiade, the fabled Arabian Nights produc-tion which will be enacted as part of the $1,000,000 musical. Skating Vanities of 1952, when it appears at the Salt Lake Fair Grounds Coliseum, on January 24 through 27. The show, with ISO artists will present 9 mas-sive numbers and 32 acts and specialties in celebration of its 10th anniversary tour. |