OCR Text |
Show PAGE SIX v , ..... THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH ' FRIDAY, OCTOBER 81, 1952 was served to nineteen members. A business meeting was conduc- - j LOCAL NOTES j Mayor and Mrs. C. A. Morley entertained recently at a lovely dinner party at their home in honor of Mr. and Mrs. J. Lynn Booth of Salt Lake City who have recently moved from Bing-ham. After the delicious dinner, moving pictures taken by Mr. and Mrs. Elmo A. Nelson were shown to the group. Others pres-ent besides those mentioned were Mr. and Mrs, Earl T. James, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Jimas, Mr. and Mrs. Elwood T. John-son of Bingham, Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Curtis and Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Smernoff of Copperton. A lovely gift was presented to Mr. and' Mrs. Booth by the host and hostess. Everyone had a good time. Martha Circle met Wednesday, October 15th at the home of Mrs. Bessie Kemp of Midvale with Mrs. Myra Larick as cohostess. A lovely one o'clock luncheon birthday anniversary was given by Josephine Gonzales and Ann-ette Lepore at the Lepore home on Tuesday, October 28th. Guests were Danny and Benny Gabldon, Kathy Weichman, Rose, Butch and Louie Ortiz, Johnny Steph- - ans, Robert Chacon, Jerry and Vicky Gomez, Lena Rodriquez, Hanky Menna, Ray Morris Gray, Jimmy Belcolori, Billy Martinez, Jesus Lopez, Lupe and Jessie Lozano, Pete and Tresa Stalli-vier- e, JoAnn Lepore and JoAnn Sayatovic. Each received a favor and Halloween decorations were used. Prizes at games were won by Pete StallivTere, Billy Mar-tinez, Danny Gabldon and John-ny Stephana. Refreshments were served. ted by Mrs. Mary Zaccaria, pre-sident. Afterwards bridge was played with the following win-ning prizes: Mrs. Maude Myers, Mrs. Zaccaria, Mrs. Myrtle Tho-mas, Mrs. Hazel Robbe and Mrs. Margaret DuBois. Next Circle meeting will be held in Copper-to- n at the home of Mrs. Lola Camp on November 5th. No. 1 Firemen and auxiliary held their annual conjoint Hallo-ween dinner party at the fire hall last Monday night with a large crowd in attendance. In charge of arrangements were Mr. and Mrs. James McLeod, Mrs. Lottie Rawlings, Mr, and Mrs. Harold Nielsen and Mr. and Mrs. Hos-m- er Peterson. Table decorations were carried out in a Halloween motif. A delicious dinner was served after which bingo bridge was played with many prizes given. Mrs. John J. Creedon will be hostess to the auxiliary' next Monday night. A delightful party honoring Michael Melendez on his sixth By LYNN CONNELLY REMEMBER the old slogan, "It's fooled T" It used to bring to mind the vaudeville magi-clan- s . . . Nowadays, thert'i sim-pler and even mors plentiful proof that million! of people Just can't wait to be fooled . . . With an aver-age of 3 6 person In every family In the nation, maybe the 8th, isn't a radio mystery fan . . . "Mr. Keen. Tracer of Lost Persons." heard regularly on CBS Radio, has been posing his riddles to an eager public for more than 15 years . . . Many a dialer whose parents used to require him to finish his home-work before he could listen to Mr. Keen's current Investigation now has youngsters of his own on whom to Impose similar restrictions. Philip Clarke plays the shrewd and skilled old tracer, with James Kelly assisting him as Mike Clan-cy .. . After all these years. Clancy has yet to reach the finish line head of his boss ... Mr. Keen enjoys consistently high audience favor, if only for the fact that sach night he engineers the tri-umph of Justice in a way that makes us want to go out and com mlt mayhem for falling to see the key clue. IDOL CHATTER President Truman is tald to have received many lucrative offers for a variety of public appearances af-ter next January, Including lecture tours and a video series . . . The State Department has been report-edly experimenting with long-rang- e TV transmitters that could span the Atlantic with Voice of Ameri-ca telecasts . . . Sam Levenson may awltcb to NBC because of CBS' failure to provide him with his own program spot . . . Jackie Gleaacu, now a CBS star, has been named to lead this year's Thanks-giving day parade in New York. Rural area viewers using high TV antennas, have nothing on a na-tive in Puerto Rico . . . Unwilling to wait for local TV, he erected a 74 foot tower and claims he gets good reception from the U.S. . . . Surveys continue to show viewer annoyance with TV commercials, particularly those advertising to-bacco and beer. ', Brigham Young University. He is a member of Val Hyric social unit at the Provo school. Miss Nielson has attended the University of Utah, where she is a member of Alpha Chi Omega. Many prenuptial festivities are being planned in honor of the charming bride-elec- t. ... Betrothal Announced Wedding bells will be ringing in late November for lovely Miss Norma Nielson, whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Nielson of 28 Harmony Ct., ore announcing her forthcoming marriage. Miss Nielson will become the bride of J. Donald Boren, a son of Mr. and Mis. Ellis Boren of Bingham Canyon, in a nuptial ceremony to be solemnized in the S.ilt Lake LDS Temple. Following their marriage, the couple will make a home in Pro-vo, where Mr. Boren, who is a former student of the University of Utah, will continue studies at NOTICE TO BINGHAM RESIDENTS Winter Is Near Here Are Some of Our Kali Specials $2.50 Complete Weather Stripping $1.50. Complete $2.25 Window Stripping $1.25 $28.50 Stoor Door Now $18.50 Many Other Bargains DEAL RIGHT LUMBER COMPANY 1193 West 21st South Phone Salt Lake MffiMEl'g BDAY FOAM LATEX First tima CHILDRENS KNIT PILLOWS. iJ ANYWH"el SLEEPERS : ,,3.99 S50 PC. . su, ,.4 1.00 " I 1 5 E T : V 100 WOMENS 1 H NYLON SUPS ; r ' FET SLIPPERS i II 8 salad forks j'jjS ' "" 1 buM,r knif 51 GAUGE 15 DENIER $ 1 sugar shell CHINA TABLE ' NYLONS orig'ina Rogers LAMPS Newstock 5gc SILVER PLATE : 10.00 MINIATURE ; 100 WOOL DOLLS itlrt? ,S BLANKETS STANDING VALUE ?i 1ftA PENNEY'S EVER HAS 4 Pounds 4A AA KNOWN! Exquisite serv- - ;, 6 Colors AViVW R ice for eight, made by the , , , world's largest manufac- - ' CHENILLE 3 RAYON , SPREADS Ifir; I MATERIALS Chest with tarnlsh-ra- - Single or A AO slstant lining 4.00 Reduced Ma ' Double Size 4YO f 4 Plain or Print v CLASSIFIED DEPART ME I? T Due to the small amount In-volved, we do not accept want ads except on a cash-wtth-ord- er basis. No ads taken by telephone. MIDVALE. MURRAY Beautiful lovely brick on South Roosevelt, gas heat. Owner transferred. 3 bedroom frame near Grant Ward, near State Street. 2 lovely brick ramblers, AVt rmsM attached garage. New section of Murray. State Street Grocery building, stock, good wilL Excellent In-come. CRAWFORD REALTY CO. 5558 South State Street Mur. 1816-- Mid. 292-- Mid. MSB Mid. 218-- IN SANDY In attractive resi-dential district. 1 block from LDS Second Ward Chapel mod-ern 2 bedrm. home, gas floor fur-nace. 30-ga- L gas hot water tank, garage, large lot 75 x 100 ft. Call Mid. 450-- before 8:30 a.m. or after 4:30 pan. M APARTMENT FOR RENT furnished at $47.50. Call 85. GOOD TERMS MIDVALE $7.200 4 --room basement home with coops for 500. Cinder block double garage, large lot well landscaped, excellent location. Make us an offer. Call Bagley. Salt Lake KEYS REALTY CO., 15 Exchange Place. Salt Lake City 3 iiAUiniiRIrA I Wkleir ' Jackets Twills, Meltons, LeathersJ' Leather Men 8.95 to 27.50 Filson Waterproof Pants and Jackets and Wool Cruisers Bingham Merc. Phone 14-1- 5 The Big Store TO THRIFTY' AQ BUYERS Twelve times each hour, a hundred times every working day, ft car is financed through TIMEWAY, the Intermountain West'8 most . popular' financing plan. TIMEWAY is a service of First Security Bank and means prompt and friendly arrangements for the pur-chaser . . . convenient, money-savin- g terms ... a minimum of details and no delay. When you buy your next car, be surejnd specify TIMEWAY financing. - . . Vr, Ask your dealer for "TIMEWAY" financing, or apply directly to thta bank, . 71 MnA fwUW lUwrYpyrtw COflODCE Retention of Utah's L en Law will CONTINUE the benefits to our old folks, continue the service to our schools, protect teachers' salaries and State public buildings without additional tax payments fromyou. RepeCll of Utah's Lien Law would mean either your taxes raised OR your public services decreased. $3,800,000 per year would be taken fron old age welfare, Utah schools, teachers' salaries and State public buildings and services. Thirty-tw- o other states have lien laws or other similar laws including the Federal Government controlled District of Columbia and Governor Stevenson's State of Illinois. The only Individuals who would gain from repeal of the Lien Law would be the heirs of the benefited old folks. : REMEMBER Utah's old folks can't lose their homes under the present Lien Law as long as they live. Don't be misled . . . think of YOUR POCKETBOOK . . . and your choice will be . . . A Vote AGAINST Repeal of Utah's Lien Law November 4 (Paid political advrtls.mnt by Citiz.ni Cemmllt. t. Pr.i.rv. Utah'. Old Ag. Pwnion Qcnk.ll lomnty, S.crtwy, 1533 tail tth South) |