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Show FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1956 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH PAGE THREE Relief Society will bo held on Tuesday, May 29th at 10 am. in Copperton LDS Wardhouse. Ev-eryone is invited to attend. Tuesday night the MIA pro-gram was given by the MiaMaid classes. The program was: song "Oh Rose", reader, Elsie Stoker; girls Patricia Curtis, Linda Abplanalp, Connie Tanner, Kar-en Olscn, Janice Nix. Teacher is Mrs. Armitstead. The Copprrton Elementary School A chairmen entertain-ed all officers and workers who have assisted in A the past year with a luncheon at the school. The sixth gradr accompanied by their teacher, Mr. Turner, en-joyed a hike and picnic Thurs-day. iMr. and Mrs. Howard Harker, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Stoker and Mr. and Mrs. Keith Nosak of Midvale enjoyed dancing m Salt Lake City Tuesday evening. "SCHOOL'S OUT ...unci away we go!" Mow much more fun your family Summer can be when you're free from concern about your car . . . your home . . . your security in the months and year ahead. Read about American Family Independence through The Tra velet in their latest ads in Life, The Saturday Evening I'osl, Time, and Newsweek. Then plione us. We can show yM tne way to American Family Independence. REX B. GARRETT Phone 558 Copperton, Utah Phone Your News Item to 91 jmmm: . 1 r kT y i Ilk' tWr tmi"' wu9 3 6 YEAR OLD Kentucky StnigM Bourbon Whiskey 86 PROOF IrSCy WATERFILL AND FRAZIER DISTILLERY CO.. BARDSTOWN, KY. n COPPERTON CONFECTIONERY AND UTOCO GAS STATION "WHERE YOU'KE A STRANGER ONLY ONCE" TIM AND RUTH ABLETT DROP IN AND SEE US OPEN 8:00 A. M. TO 8:00 P. M. DAILY stannnsQHEHancsncacanEnnnnnnnna FOR BETTER MEATS- -r GIVE US A TRY I POULTRY CHEESE QUALITY MEATS BUTTER EGGS . BINGHAM MEAT CO, Clarence Robison W. II. Harris Clinton Robiuon Phone 5 We Deliver MgaaiiagonngpnsgBannc3CTC3Kig fyggsji master ".- - likes . 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Chrysler's ingenious new roll-awa- y action rear t Dotted tins showt the Other hsrdtops Chryslers longer roof, window is the secret It Dermits full-siz- e short root typical of have short rear win- - greater room, and bet- - a roor, other hardtopi. dowt indicated by ter visibility are the and the rear seat IS back where it belongs. This means cramped broken line above. result of two-par- t roll- - Best nf ft,:, A.,lnnr nit Vm. head and leg room. Chrysler's window, ex. away window. Rear s- - all, naratop nas the Solid outline shows tend aU the way to the ment rolls forward. AHEAD features that make the PowerStyle Chrys- - Chrysler's longer roof. back of the rear seat. Forward segment down. ler the success car of 1956! See it now! THI D CAt , , . tlQOtSl lilt Ot All UNI CAi$l , . . lSZ:Jr.T ' " . "v, L . . wA CHRYSLER NEW YORKER NEWPORT HARDTOP ADDERLEY' & NICHOLS 87 Main Street - Gingham 88 j "May la safety check month . . . Check your car . . . check accidents This man can give you dependable Jp?& delivery of 7W& THE k3O20 CHRISTIAN aJbS&i SCIENCE lll&O MONITOR ' Vt?z2r IMrrutlontl msppa Housewives, businessmen, teachers, and students all over th world read and enjoy this inttrnational newspaper, pub-lished daily in Boston. World-famo-for constructive news stories and penetrating editorials. Special features for the whole family. Th Christian Science Monitor One Norway St., Boston IS, Mast. Send your newspaper for the time checked. Enclosed find my check or money order. t year $16 0 6 month $8 Q i months $4 Name Address City Zone Stole PI-I-WE'LL SEE YOU AT THE BINGHAM CLUB BEER ON TAP LOCAL AND EASTERN BOTTLED BEER Sam Feraco, Prop. : copperton : Elsie Stoker 555-- R Bobbie Lee Johnson Ph. 536-- Guests at the home of 'Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Foster for a week were their grandchildren, Chris-tine and De-bbi- Foster. Mr. and 'Mrs. Earl Davis and children, Rick and Tamcra, and Mr. and Mrs. Matt Kuru of Standardville visited recently with Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Johnson and family, iBobbie Lee and Johnny, Mrs. Hannah Smith, Mrs. Jennie Krickson, Mrs. Carl Buskness and daughter Carla, Mr. and Mrs. Eskel Johnson and sons, Bill and Mike. 'Mrs. Albert Pollock and dau-ghters, Linda and Claudia, Wed-nesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Wynne Foster and family, Christine, Kathy and dubbie are now making their home in Kearns. They formerly lived in Murray. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Grant visited in American Fork with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Anderson and children, Eddie, Claudia and Kathy. Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Long and daughters, Lin da and Claudia, were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pollock. 'Mrs. Hannah Smith of West Jordan visited with Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Johnson and family Thurs-day. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Coleman and daughter, Rena Joy, visited with Mrs. Clinton Coleman and children, Terry, Denny and Lar-ry, of Colorado who are visiting for a few weeks with Mrs. Cole-man's father in Salt Lake City. Rena Joy Coleman visited with her grandmother, Mrs. Stoker in Salt Lake City Tuesday evening. Johnny Johnson, Jimmy Wil-son, Clifford Butt, Kent Simkins, Harold Susaeta, Paul McMullin, Dennis Scroggin, and Maynard Berg, were among the many jun-ior high students that attended the outing at Saltair Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Ben McAllister left Wed-nesday morning for California where she will spend a few weeks visiting with relatives. Pinochle club met Monday night as guests of Mrs. George Dahlstrom. Prizes at cards went to Mrs. Tory Tobiason, Mrs. Art Fike and Mrs. R. L. Cunliffe. Mrs. Kenneth Davis won the bingo prize. Other members present were Mrs. J. W. Johnson, Mrs. Alton Fike, Mrs. Dick Steele and Mrs. John Adamek. A tasty late luncheon was served to nine. Enjoying dinner and games at the home of Barbara Brown Sat-urday evening were Joan Cow-del- l, Joan Johnson, Bobbie Le Johnson, Joyce DeCol and Kay Lou Cook. (Mrs. Clinton Coleman and children, Terry, Denny and Lar-ry of Colorado are visiting with her father in Salt Lake City and in Copperton with Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Coleman. Mrs. C. Coleman visited with the L. C. Colemans Wednesday evening and attend-ed the graduation program. IMr. and Mrs. Bill Eager and son Danny of West Jordan were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Cheever. Mrs. Dave Stoker and family, Elsie, Connie and Johnny, were dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ashel Caldwell of Salt Lake City Monday. Mrs. Dean Malan and new son came home from the hospital last Friday. ' -- "v- ... , , ... The Power of Memorial Day i . ; r by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale ; ' ' - ' v. .,...,:. ....... f, T had the privilege of growing up in small Ohio communities in I K ; I the early part of this century, and one of my most inspirational I VI ' JL memories centers around Memorial Day and the old soldiers of Sj M ; theCivUWar. j L"3 j To me. Memorial Day was one of the most moving of all the na- - j tional holidays. I was stirred by the speeches and martial music from ,i e bandstand or cemetery on what we called "Decoration Day." i 1 There was something about the newness of life that the Spring had 3 brought; soft sunshine falling on the fresh green grass of early sum- - i , mer, the misty hills in the distance, the sound of stirring national jj songs, and above all, the softly flapping flag in the gentlo breeze a i k .s3 .. J speaker told us of our country, the deep devotion of its heroes, $ lWi and recounted once more the stirring episodes of our heroic past. ' And many a laay summer afternoon, I sat on the coping around t jty3 VY. 1 the old courthouse listening to the veterans of the Civil War tell of tj S their experiences in the epic struggle between the States. A boy's S 'fS ' imagination quickly sent him off behind long columns of blue or grey, fe'.V',7V and to him, such names as Antietam, The Wilderness, Shiloh, and iJcV ' Gettysburg became very real and meaningful. i?i&B I Those old soldiers used to talk gratefully of Lincoln's insistence M : m& .1 " ' " " ' p i t1? $ 1 tne 8tru88le, the widow and the orphan, were to be given not charity, r j but their rightful due as the dependents of those brave men who had I ' V 4 ' ' Jught to preserve liberty and to keep the Union intact. It was re- - J v' 'I ' garded as a sacred duty of the nation, and the nation kept faith with f MS4J i its veterans. jj J XJ"' 3 n ose days, as now, were many who had been disabled by the J K4J 'puja struggle. Their ability to Compete in life had been reduced by wounds I y'j suffered in battle. Even as a boy I remember hearing how it seemed , they were thought of only on such days as Memorial Day, when ; ( orators, fervent in their patriotism, remembered, if only for a day, ' P 'ong cont",uing sacrifice made not by those who had died in i "' 5 battle, but by the disabled who were to live for many years following 11 04 ' the great struggle. $ MiTK'?V '' The heroes of World War I and World War II and the Korean A' l(ii&Jii War are, of course, men who, with no concern for themselves, gave 5 - KK'S.W 'I their lives that freedom might live. We can never do them adequate tk 1 honor. And, we must never forget them. They died in their young j t i'llpWtl life, forsaking the opportunities of the years that the rest of us miyht I Jfi 'S. 5 live and develop our highest hopes and dreams. ' '"l However, there are other living heroes who deprived themselves of I : i:r either physical, emotional, or mental health for us and for their fellow i jf'fv countrymen. It would be as wrong for us to neglect or forget them as j k T'$fc fifW V their buddies who today sleep on some Pacific Island or in a European S E('2ji --i cemetery. A hero dead or ft hero maimed and disabled are both due A ' ipiffl V our equal gratitude and our unceasing devotion. f iS k"kr,:df i i We must never forget that the most effective way of honoring those 1 ' OSv $ J J 'mve 'et' ' t remember the living disabled, that their lives may j s f y be rich and full. They are a great asset to our country as the living 3 ' ' embodiment of devotion to freedom. A country is recreant indeed 1 g rJv' A- - J which does not everlastingly keep alive grateful appreciation to those t - ' who suffered disability to perpetuate everything that we Americans '4 'p'yvl hold dear. ij ,: I'Vi wl I There could be no better time than on Memorial Day to resolve & lli' 1 if v J that we shall gratefully support the honored men and : t X. I 1 women who have suffered disability from the wars of OTJ IW-- M the United States. nr tM 1 : ; A I (WrilUn ipcially for ths Dliabled Amerlcon Vlrani, R 'ili'M ,dnl0 Tag 0r9aniXa,'0n' CROSSWORD PUZZLE T2 T 4 5 6 7 1 9 10 H 12 13 T ' I13 u 8$ 15 !ftT5 . 2. MmM 22 23 S& WW:W1a faMx WW-- 28 29 30 j3" 32 34 35 36 "" " " " IT" w! 39 WZ, 40 m W W 44 35 45 46 47 48 SO SI 1111s tit l33mn " IIP 56 S7 58 59 60 61 62 m- m 63 W?- 64 65 66 67 68 -----70- " gTi it 74 1 - 1 1 1 3 1111 I I I PUZZLE N. S9S ACROSS 82 Hearing property text book 1 Earthy organ 28 Domestic 90 401 iRora. deposit 64 Swap 28 Drinking num. B Wild hog S3 To capture vessel 51 Leased 10 Rodents again 29 National 63 Takes It 14 Alms box 59 Transgressor monument In easy 13 Badgerlike 63 Dry Phoenix, 65 Item of animal 64 Locations Arizona property 16 Early Irish- - 68 Smooth 30 Cant 58 Knocks man rounded pro- - 32 Frankfurter 67 American 17 Cools tuberances 34 Sun-drie- d Indian 18 Rugged crest 89 Tree brick 88 Prong of of mountain 70 Hackneyed 38 Sat for fork 19 Notion 7i English boys' portrait 80 Observe 20 Flitted school 38 Afray 61 God of lova 33 Armed forces 72 Fortune 38 The urlal 62 Skating with legal teller 39 Ski" arena authority 73 Upper house 42 Move fur- - 85 Anger 24 Alleviates of French Jlvely 60 Metal 27 Japanese Parliament 48 Elementary 67 Greek letter sis "w"-- r Hiiii 33 Cookies 1 Deposited IE IN A IT I IE I A fl SI S S 37 Rocky 2 Killer whale I. Ik Li LJ. I. , LJ pinnacle 3 Genus of I I rWJ I I f B I 38 Minute maples S A S H II E R S J1 Y I I I grooves 4 Subdue 1 v I I pi cl 40 Female deer 5 Kind of nails L15 haJ ELlljE --S 41 Heavy East 6 Rowing im-- T P R SJ V ' nLT3 "T" X Indian wood plement p L " It T t k M nln (l t 43 It cuts face 7 Goddess of LiS-- V T MM U hair (pi.) Infatuation L L E EgJ P ESTS 43 Kiln 8 Soak TEACHES "3lA El 44 Japanese 9 Slumbered r 7-- tt wb ?CT . 1 1 1 statesman 10 Dried grape L V fl ' E P JE L 45 Swimming 11 Assists IB IE U 0 T EUR I A Iq S 3L I A 40 Wager 12 Woody plant 7Ib"iT o lnl L 110 17 T 47 Dame 13 Body of water 2LL i IL "J 1 49 Compass (pi.) J I L E Tl S SE1 point 21 Consume SEES SLFD TeFnr AO Set of pro- - 23 Fertile spots ' r I 1 I I I I fessed on desert opinions 25 Landed Answer to Punlt Ne. SOt |