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Show PAGE TWO THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH FRIDAY. MARCH 27, 1953 ing to kindergarten next year were invited to attend. Refresh-ments were served. Newly elected officers of Lark school P-T- A will be installed at an installation tea to be held on April 20. LARK NEWS Joy Seal 901 J 1 LARK MIA GOLD AND GREEN BALL TONIGHT Annual Gold and Green Ball of Lark Ward MIA will be staged tonight. Friday, in the new Lark school house at 8:30 p.m. It's theme is "Shamrock Ball". Queen Joy Seal and her attendants, Ra-N-Holladay and MarJean will reign over the social event. Clarice Bergman and her orchestra will provide music for dancing. A real nice floor show will be presented at 10 p.m. Mrs. Viva Sweat was hostess to the 509 club at her home Mon-day night, March 23. A delicious dinner was served after which five hundred was played. High score was won by Mrs. Juanita Michaelsen, cut prize by Mrs. Norma Holladay, and traveling prize by Mrs. Rita Rostrum. Oth-ers present were Mrs. Donna Bardsley, Mrs. Ina Lofgran, Mrs. Esther Tibolla, Mrs. Millie Wyk-e- it and Mrs. Bessie Bigler. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bigler were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Roberts of Layton March 15. LARK LIONC CLUB HOLDS ANNUAL ELECTION Election of officers was held at the regular business meeting of the Lark Lions club held Monday night. Those elected to serve dur-ing the coming year were: presi-dent, R. C. Weagel; first vice president, Joe Tibolla; second vice president, Bert Fields; third vice president, Miles Davidson; secretary, Walter Abplanalp; treasurer, Leonard L. Miller; tail twister, Howard Bare; Lion tam-er, Eldon Bailey; two year direc-tors William Fahrni and Clyde Gillam. Mr. Fahrni was in charge of the evening's program and show-ed three pictures on the world and people and customs and habits. Definite arrangements have been made for creating a play-ground area at the school and $200 has been donated toward that project. Spring clean up of out of doors throughout Lark is to start as soon as weather per-mits. Mrs. Jessie Sandstrom is con-valescing in the LDS hospital after undergoing an operation there Monday, March 23. Mr. and Mrs. David Nrelsen and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Nielsen and daughter Peggy of Mona visited with Virginia Lee Nielsen who is a patient at the Primary Child-icn'- s hospital Sunday. An adult education course on child psychology sponsored by the Lark is being held at the Lark school. The course start-ed lust night, Thursday, and will continue tor the next six weeks. Pete Mickelsen is the instructor. pre-scho- tea was held after he study course Thursday night. 11 mothers having children go- - and the fourth, fifth and sixth another. Meeting April 13 Our next P-T- A meeting will be held on Monday, April 13 at 7:30 p.m. at the school. At that time we will elect P-T- officers for the school year 1953-5- 4. We will also play bingo and prizes will be given. Refreshments will be sold and there will be a baz-aar. A fine evening's program is planned. "June Haver's Retreat From ' Stardom" Here, for the first time, is the powerful human story j behind June Haver's decision to J become a Nun. It's a stirring ac- - ' count of the great spiritual mo- - i timations and personal tragedy J that induced her to give up fame and fortune for a life of devout obscurity. Read it in The Amer- - 1 ican Weekly, that great maga-zine distributed with next Sun- - day's Los Angeles Examiner. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Cowdell were visitors at the home of Mr. Cowdell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cowdell of Sandy Tues-day. Christ Poulns was dinner guest last Thursday of Steve Callas of Salt Lake City. GIRL SCOUTS Copperfield Girl Scouts held their regular meeting Tuesday in the Copperfield school building. Color guards performed and the girls then practiced on their by-laws. Frances Ann Starley then appointed girls to be on the pro-gram and refreshment committee for the Mother'! day tea which will be held in May. Those on the committee are as follows: refresh-ments Jeanne Sanchez, Martha Miya, Frances Starley, Rose Kawaguchi: program Elaine Hatt and Frances Starley. The girls are glad to welcome three new members to the troop Gloria Gallegos, Dolores Martinez and Erma Rodriguez. Next week the girls will bring their own lunch and expect to have an en-joyable evening. Jeanne San-chez, historian. UPPER BINGHAM SCHOOL NEWS Student Council The student council of Upper Bingham School will sponsor a : COPPERFIELD : Shirley Pantalone. Ph. 106 e Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Miller vis-ited Tuesday at St. Mark'i hos-pital in Salt Lake City with Paul Hanney of Randolph who is con-fined there with illness. R. E. Burke returned home Sunday from St. Mark's hospital where he was confined for about a week. Mrs. Alice Tierney, who has spent the past several weeks vis-iting with Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Hart and family of Klammath Falls, Ore., returned home Wed-nesday. She will make her home at the Miller Apts. in Bingham. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Leather-woo- d and family returned home last Thursday from a two weeks' visit in Texas with Mrs. Leath-erwood- 's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Bryce and family. Mrs. N. G. Nevers of Copper-to- n was a dinner guest Wednes-day night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Miller and family. group of films Friday morning, March 27th (today) through the courtesy of the Salt Lake County Library audio visual department. The films will be "The Circus Comes To Town", "The Navaho People" and "Willie the Skunk". The student council has provided a group of records from the Salt Lake County Library also. One set of records goes u ith our film "The Circus Comes to Town". It is a book of records played by the bands witli Baniuni and Bail-ey Circus. We also have square dance and patriotic records. Pre-Scho- Tea April 2 Annual Pre-Scho- ol Tea will be held on Thursday,, April 2 at 1:45 p.m. at the Coppertield school, Miss Freda Jense n, primary sup-ervisor of Jordan school district, will bo the spi aker." There will also be a display of art work the kindergarten students have done this year. All mothers who have children entering kindergarten next fall are invited. First Grade Our first grade has been study-ing birds. Brent brought a lovely bird book for us to look at. We made some paper birds and they are hanging from the ceiling of our room. They look like they arc flying. Norma says we paint-ed a lot of pictures for our room. We especially like our little red paper bird house perched on a real apricot branch. Lillian says "I like to sing about how March winds blow so strong." Leslie Ann says I want to read and read and read all the time. Of course I like to play too. We all like Carol's big painting of Gary fly-in- p his kite high in the sky. Im-munization shots are being given in our school now. Angie thinks the little mercurochrome rabbit on my arm is cute. The nurse painted it when she gave us our shots. Third Grade The third grade is dramatizing the story of "The Boy Who Went to the North Wind". We are go-ing to play it in a program for the whole school. We have writ-ten Easter stories and painted lovely Easter pictures, Fourth Grade We are learning about out-grea- t country and we have made a map mural showing the pro- ducts and many interesting things to be found in our country. We have also studied transportation and we have a three dimensional frieze of the many different ways of travel. We have made Easter baskets of colored paper. All the grades are preparing special as-semblies which will be presented in April and May. The kinder-garten, first, second and third grades will present one assembly u Smglfam lullrtin Uiued .Every I riday at Bingham Canyon, Salt Lake County, Utah-Ent-er d ai Second Class Mailer at the Post Office at Bingham Canyon, Utah, Under the Act of March 3. 1879. --sswSVasr NATIONAL EDITORIAL UIAH'siMfAWOCWFION jK'g" JOHN ADAMKK, Editor and Publisher GLADYS L. ADAS1EK, Assistant Editor Subscript ion Rate, per year in advance $2.50 Advertising Rates Furnished on Application 1Iaieamie rpHOMAS C. DYKE, 2305 Bell Street, Columbus, Georgia, believes that uncontrollable fear was developed in him when he had to quit school at the uge of thirteen and bo Ui work In the coal mines to help his dad make a living He always wanted to be a mining or civil engineer and the only way to get the education was by Correspondence Courses He wa lunched at for wasting hit time studying correspond-ence courses rather than being out having a good time with the rest of the boys who said, "Whoever heard of coal miner being anything but a coal miner." He was even called a 2x4 Correspondence School Engineer by a famous lawyer before the Court of Claims. All this had a bad effect. However, lie thinks the one thing that had the greatest effect in bringing on chronic fear, a fear of people, was a lack ut association with his fellow men. After all, to get a technical education by corre- - CARNEGIE ipondence requires a tremendous amount of time, and the exclusion of practically everything else. He put his heart and soul into his work and into research and study to become an Engineer He would work In the mines all day and study at night. Many times he stayed up all night studying. But by persistent diligent effort he reached his goal and established himself as an Engineer. The next problem to conquer was fear. He read Dr. Emerson Fosdick's book on "Being a Real Person" and "Personal Achievement," by Roberts, as well as all other available data. Still h? was afraid of people! Then he decided on a night course in public speaking, where he had to stand on his feet niuht after night facirii those fearsome people. The first time, he didn't do so well, nor the second nor the third. Then he begun comparing notes on himself ui each gathering. Why even the third time he did a little better than tut fust and those people didn't seem so fearsome after all Suddenly he realized they were not so different from himself, lie was one of Ui . world of people. And once that idea filtered through his brain, he no longer afraid of people. Certainly not lie was one of them! THE BAFFLES By Mahoney MYQOSH-JUS- T b CAREFUL OF THE H g f FIVE MINUTES jl ICC --AND LOOK J ' l 1 rVjf i TO GET TO. I OUT FOR rt VUV1N x I i i g well? right on ) 7 i 1 T n &J tT TIME AND SAVED n fJ t v H j Ijtwkr BUS FARE f7 r tt"PHE tyrant is dead! Long live the tyrant!',' With these words one newspaper described the death of Premier Joseph Stalin of Russia and the announcement that Georgl M. Mai-enko- v would replace him. That was probably the most correct de-scription of the eventi In Russia, which still hat the western world speculating fcnd guessing, of any given. Because Joseph Stalin wet tyrant. He Was a bank robber, en agitator, oppressor end murderer of miUloni-Mb- e total number of people killed by hie direct orders will never be known. As for hit successor, authorities on Russian government end personalities de-scribe him a cunning, plotting, cruel, ruthless paper pusher. And it is feared-- he lacks Stalin's pa-tience and my plunge the world In a blood-bat- h that will be Us dAfttruftlozi Too much has already been writ-ten about the man Stalin and the trail of death and misery he left behind him. It Is the future that concerns the free world, and par-ticularly, the future of Russia. At present this seems to be the situation in Moscow: 1. The men in the Kremlin were concerned, and still are, about the reaction of the Russian people over Stalin's death and the appoint-ment of Malenkov. That becomes evident as they have continuously broadcast an appeal to the people to stand by the Communist Party 2. With every day if becomes more evident that anyone who thinks a revolution will break out Is engaging In wishful thinking All Indications are that Beria has the nation firmly under the control of his secret police and Malenkov control over the government be comes stronger with each pas. ing The tree world waits with fear and uncertainty tor a glimpse at the new regime's policies and fu-ture plans)1 There has been no shedding ai tears over Stalin. But neither has there been jubilation. The future is too uncertain. There Is not likely to be any early indication of future policy for this regime which consists of Mal-enkov as Prime Minister, Marshal KlemenU Voroshilov as Soviet Presidium, and L. P. Beria, V. M. Molotov. Nikolai Bulganln and Lazar M. Dagonovleh as deputy chairmen of the Council of Min-isters. fc It does appear,' however, that Malenkov will spend considerable time consolidating his position and absolute authority. After that it if anyone's guess. ' day. - The most Ironic thing about the whole situation, from the time Stalin's illness was announced until his death, was the actions of the Russian people themselves They flocked to church those that un-officially allowed to pray f.ir a man who neither believed in Cod or the Church and who did every-thing in his power to discourage worship In Russia. It becomes evident, then, tha: the Communist masters of Russia have been unable to remove from the average Russian that religious spark and need for spiritual guid-ance for which they have been noted in the past. As long as it persists, perhaps there is after all gome hope tor Russia and the Rus-sian people. annnnnonnnnnnDnnncnonannnnnnsn f FOR BETTER MEATS GIVE US A TRY I y POULTRY CHEESE QUALITY MEATS BUTTER EGGS BINGHAM MEAT CO Clarence Robison W. H. Harris Clinton Robison Phone 5 , We Deliver aoDDnoQaaca Hermitage BRAND 02 I FULLY Zsss&l AGED! ; ViSi 86 PROOF !J THIS WHISKEY IS 4 YEARS OLD THE i OLD HERMITAGE CO.. FRANKFORT. KY. Short story of a long shopping list 'tl staiSe;' ::ry:'f' iSSV jpi!ssv.t enivM. . CaVwMvw CJ V i n mm nwv. I i'"J Sri i If you wen to jot down all the different kinds pr- - fcSSS"1 - f of goods and services Standard Oil Company TaT JjeS3 of California buys, your shopping list would be ' wT about 50,000 items long. Over the years, we've JLfi uaT TT been growing as a customer as well as a supplier tfe "Tw" Trft here in the West. g7p5., I P But the most important aspect of our "shop- - i, . From groceries to drilling pipe, Standards l ping, we believe, IS where we do it. You might purchases in locar communities mean buai. think that a large company like Standard would ness to merchants aij through the West. i centralize its buying in a few metropolitan 'rr4m. ' "' f areas. Actually, our purchases are made in hun- - ' V-- " I dreds of Western communities. The almost ) infinite variety of Standard's needs from lfife1 paper clips to propellers, from produce to pro- - ggf llllllflft fessional services has made the Company an 7 important factor in the economic well-bein- g of We buy building materials-lum- ber, roofing. Western towns and cities. plumbing, carpentry, and supplies for our oil fields, refineries, plants, and offices. Last year Standard was a very good custom- - er for a great many firms more than 10,000 ft JL JL 1L J? Jfit JtL Jt large and small suppliers, to whom we paid f i ) ItoI tCfl I more than $125,000,000. We've always bought JJ mf fullWlW locally wherever possible and practical. We do it l II Wif j' jh4 Ii fj 1(111 not only because it's good business for Standard, II 31, J I JiflIT J I HUH J! r but also because it helps the growth of the West. We know that our long-ru- n prosperity Wu V" e Bervicef .f doctors, nurses, pharmacists, lawyers, engineers, depends on that Of the communities we serve. drilling contractors, and many others. surveyors, STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA plans ahead to serve you belter SEE US FOR FINE COMMERCIAL PRINTING LETTERHEADS ENVELOPES INVITATIONS WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS BUSINESS CARDS STATEMENTS PROGRAMS WINDOW CARDS BOOKLETS TICKETS HANDBILLS ALL TYPES BUSINESS FORMS AND MANY OTHERS TOP QUALITY LOW PRICES FAST DEPENDABLE SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY THE BINGHAM BULLETIN TELEPHONE 91 . . ! NEW MARTIN MOTORS FOR 1953 NOW ON DISPLAY 10 HORSEPOWER AND 7 HORSEPOWER TERMS IF DESIRED AT COPPERTON SERVICE STANDARD OIL PRODUCTS Phone 20 Fat Hurley |