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Show I I PAGE EIGHT THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH Y'LY J Shirley Neuffer of Midvale is Visiting a few day; with MaRecu Nelson. : LOCA j, NOTES Dan Harvey of Salt Lake City, chairman of the state organiza-tion department attended the Eagles meeting last Thursday evening A tewing bee was held Tues-day evening at the home of Mrs. David I, Bill! Others present, were Mrs. W V. Robinson, Mrs. ROM Cushing, Mrs John Morris, and Mrs Frank Rino The group are making draperies for BCO hall. savings bonds. The half-mont- h report showed E Bond sales up 28.5 per cent, from $175,334,000 in the first half of June to $225,237,000 in the comparable July period. At the same time E bond redemptions dropped from IMmI $258,325,000 in of 1.3 per cent ln m - were at the January 1946 and E demptiona at the toW ni July 1945. a NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING To members of the Bingham Canyon Junior Chamber ol Commerce: Notice is hereby given that a special meeting of the member! of tlie Bingham Canyon Junior Chamber of Commerce oj Bing-ham Canyon, Utah, will be held; at Bingham Club in Bingham' Canyon, Utah at 7:30 p.m., Mon-day, August 12, 1940, for the pur-- , pose of considering and passing on a proposition to incorporate said association into a corpora-- 1 tion, not for pecuniary profit, under the laws of the State of Utah, to be known as the Bing-ham Canyon Junior Chamber of Commerce, and to consider and determine upon all matters and things necessary and proper to be considered at said meeting aforesaid. Dated this 26th day of July, 1946 by direction of the Presi-dent. Dan Delaney, Secretary. ' WEDDING ANNOUNCED Mr. and Mrs Silas Thorne an nounco the marnage of then daughter, Afton, in John R, Tackitt of Lot Angeles at Reno, Nev , on Julv 23. They plan to make their home in Nevada for the present. ' t0l Si 8 JL More prospects dotting Utah's mountains such as the one above are needed to restore Utah's metallic reserves to normal basis. HEALTH NEWS For the week ending July 19, local health officers reported a total of 261 resident and non-re.ide-cases of communicable diseases as compared with 146 cases for the previous week, and 28(3 cases for the corresponding week last year. It is interesting to note that there were no cases of the follow-ing communicable diseases re ported for the week; diphtheria, infantile paralysis, meningitis Rocky Mountain spotted fever and typhoid fever. Four cases of pulmonary tu berculosLs were reported; 1 from Carbon county; 2 from Salt Lake City and 1 from Summit county One case of tularemia was from Millard county. The infection was probably transmit-ted by means of fly bites. There were four resident cases and one nonresident case of t fever reported. In all five cases the probable source of in-fection was raw milk supplied by home-owne- d cows. . There were four cases of ma-laria fever reported all of which were contracted outside the Con-tinental United States. The totals for the week are: chickenpox, 38; measles, 50; mea-Isle- s (German), fi; mumps, 45; pneumonia, 8; scarlet fever, 11; tuberculosis, 4; tularemia, I; fever, 5; whooping cough, 16; gonorrhea (resident), 17; gonorrhea (nonresident), 20; sy-philis (resident), 24; syphilis (nonresident), 9; dysentery (un-classified), 1; malaria fever, 4, and lymphogranuloma venereum, 2 O RHEUMATISM ;md ARTHRITIS I suffered for years and am so thankful that I found relief from this terrible affliction that I will gladly answer anyone writing me for information. Mr.;. Anna Paul., P.O. Box 825, Vancouver, Wash Pd. Adv.-NUE-o- Laboratories Analysis of the mining situation ln Utah followInK the Second World Wur Indicates a period of higher cost production for most of the metal producers, During the war naturally many mine workers went Into the armed forces and this combined with the general shortage of workers forced mining companies to place virtually all workers on production to meet needs of the war machine and thus neglect development work. Development work in a mine Is Just as necessary as the planting of spring seeds on the farm, us a ton of ore Is mined another ton must be round Naturally with an unbalanced operation for so many war years much of the available ore in Utah's mining districts was mined and the known ore reserves reduced to a low level While the situation is nut alarm-ing it will be mandatory In many of the producers to Increase the ratio expended for development its com-pared to production In order to catch up and once afaln operate on a balanced basis. In addition ore bodies are becoming mure and more difficult to tind as work pro- - ceeds farther and deeper under-groun- d Rehabilitation of the under-ground mines probably will re- - quire several years and there is no doubt in J lie minds of the operators that the industry can !) placed once aguln on a safe and stable basis. However, the cooperation or all agencies will aid materially ln expediting that time and in doing this the best Interests of the business an:! industry of the state will be served. on behalf of the Treasury de-- , partment to thank newspapers, radio and other publicity and ad-vertising media and their adve-rtisers for tremendous support in space and time devoted to urg-- ; trig Americans to buy and hold BOND SALES INCREASE IN FIRST HALF OF JULY Americans bought $13i,057,OOU more of U. S. Savings bonds dur-- j ing the first half of July than in the first half of June, National Savings Bonds Director Vernon L. Clark reported today to Chas. L. Smith, Utah state chairman Sales surged up 45.7 per cent a-- 1 bove the mid-Jun- figure to jreach $443,514,000, the best half--j month's volume since January, he said. "This marked increase result-- i ed from the June-Jul- y Back Your Future' publicity campaign which stressed investment in bonds as security for the future and their purchase as a check against inflation," Mr Clark said. While stiles were increasing, redemptions were holding steady at the new 1040 low achieved in June, according to his report "It does not take an economist to figure out from these facts that Americans are convinced savings bonds are both profitable and safe and not to be sacrificed except in a real emergency", said Mr. Clark. The director took the occasion Y Polo Shin V Don't moon, Goon (Hurry up) and get a shine !get hp) to swoonderful Reel Meet (JAM SESSION) Polo Shirt. Your favorit, slanguage done up in print . . . red, green, brown on white. You'll L Jack and Jilling (going steady) with (his smooth number round the did Small, medium and large. Get yours today at: Bingham Merc, THE BIG STORE PHONE 14 15 CLASSIFIED ADS 50 years ago my friend and 2 partners mining a lease on U. S. Mines made good money. Com-pany raised royalty to 60o. They blasted and caved mine. Have just returned from there- Need 2 partners with enough funds to sink shaft 300 ft. If interested address Engineer. P. O. Box 679, Berkeley, Calif. WANTED Expert radio repair-man. $1.50 per hour, time one-hal- f overtime. Good working conditions, steady employment. If not first class, do not apply. Ahlander Hdwe. & Mfg. Co., Provo, Utah. 3tn HELP WANTED Exoerienced man for cutting and installing auto glass. Good working con-ditions, steady employment. Ah-lander Hdwe. & Mfg. Co., Provo. Utah. 3tn f MID-SUMME- R CLEARANCE! BALLET SLIPPERS LADIES SHOES All Leather Solid Leather Pumps Black Brown and White 150 PAIR lo50 PAIR Solid Leather Pastels and Plaids Two Groups 2,00 1 ' 2.00 and 3.00 woT 'Stc ladies blouses Finest Grade Pastels and Plaids Cotton 1.50 EACH 2.00 EACH TK LADIES SKIRTS wm Good for Fall Wear I'aslels and Plaids S0C EACH 3,00 EACH TODDLERS WOOL jyg $PJjI)5 SUSPENDER SKIRTS Cotton Chenille Good For Fall Wear I .true Size 1.00 BACH 1.00 EACH LADIES BLOUSES "NS White Sheer COTTON DRESSES Rayon Short Sleeves Suitable For Fall Wear l.oo each soe LADIES BLOUSES I cTsZls Kayon Poplin uLHvIVu Black, Gold. Blue, Green Heavy Cotton -- - Red, Blue loOO EACH 100 PAIR MENS 0XF0RDS jLAlrV JUl I J All Leather Heavy Cotton Brown and Tan Tan and Hrown Size 10, 10, 11 5.00 , u h 5.00 PAIR RAYON GLOVES White Cotton Bright Colors Tailored Stles IOC PAIR 1.00 EACH PRINCESS THEATRE Sunday and Monday, July 28-2-9 1:30, 6;45 and 9:00 p.m. MOST IMPORTANT ASTAI" LUCILLE BAIL PRODUCTION SINCE LUCILLE BREMER M THE BIRTH OF J: fanny brice MOTION PICTURES! Jw JUDV 0MlAN0 KATHRYN GRAYSON UNA HORNt A f GENE KHLT B M MMES MELTON n. R'JPHT: --r victor MOOR f I f ReD SKItT0N ' J jZ&n ISTHIR WILLIAMS 'JVV JrW --""V . CLf WILLIAM POWEU "Hf i gfC A MARION BELL . WQgP i I BUNINS PUPPET : f tmM aL. cvdchari$si v V tfAX) HUME CRONTN Ai I 9 it ROBERT LEWIS V VIRGINIA O'BRIEN IL81IFIEQ IN TECHNICOLOR o7ZNkZL mm ., by ARTHUR FREED TAX EDUCATION This is the fourth in a series of tax discussions presented through the courtesy of Bingham Junior Chamber of Commerce Tax Study Committee. It is interesting to note from a research report of the Utah Foundation that more than $60 million dollars have bei n collected at the close of the fiscal year 1946 from the Utah sales and use taxes since i nactment of the sales tax in 1933. Collections from this source brought $8,388, 4K6 into the state treasury in 1946, nearly five times the amount collected m 1934, the first full year the tax was effective. Utah is one of the 3 states now Imposing u general sales tax. The adoption of the sales tax as major source of state revenue was primarily a result of the severe depression of the thirties, wheih brought heavy new burdens of welfare costs to the states at the same time that demand for reduction of property-ta-burdens was widely pressed. Revenues from the sales and use taxes are earmarked by statute for relief purposes. The 1945 legislature provided that if the balance of the relief fund exceeds $6,900,000 on the first day of any quarter, such excess shall be placed in the state general fund All funds in the relief fund are appropriated to the governor for carrying out the welfare and relief programs of the state. Sales and use tax revenues constitute an informative index of the business activity in the state. Collec-tions have increased rapidly and continuously throughout the period since its adoption. The heavy expenditures by the federal government in Utah on war construction and the general boom in mining, agriculture and industry, which pushed payrolls and income to unprecedented levels, resulted in sales tax revenue peaks not envisioned when the tax was enacted The report of the State Tax Commission m 1936 com-mented that the revenue from this source "has exceeded that which was estimated or expected " This was after the year in which collections totaled slightly under $3 million dollars, where-as 1946 collections exceeded $8 millions. We should pay close attention to our tax problems We should learn more about them The opportunity to listen to Stanley J. Stephenson, man-aging director of the Utah Foundation will be made available to Bingham Canyon residents on August 13, at the Bingham Fire hall No. 1. at 8 o'clock. TO OUR PATRONS: ' 14 28-2- 9, I FOLLIES", which plays separate and distinctly different Drt! whfKtUre is a REVlIE j" technicolor. It has that you would pay $6.60 to see on it N not tied together bv a storv. It is a r. York stage and is presented in the M 1 Z1EGFELD !ifR0GRAM I DAYS win Ball and the Zifeld gHTvf!?' Bunin's PuPPet' Fred Astaire' 'l --' A WATER BAI I FT u i l 1 lrinia O'Brien. 3- - NTMBER PLE VSF Williams; I I' JAY THE TWO l)OLI RS . MELTON and MARION BELL; ulEART OF MINE ? with Edward Arnold. Victor 1 AJWEEPSTAKES a dan K TICKFT Lwitl1 Fred Astaire and Lucille Brc Lam Frawey; Cdy with Fannv Brice, Hume Croyne 8 I m 9." WHEN TELEVgiMLENA ORNE; I 10. LIMEHOUSE BLUrS F2MES a com skit with Red Skelton- - 1 r BABBIT S and a h chorus- - I 13 BEAUTY, M sun" fIDE with Gene Kellv and Fred Astaire; 1 Knowing vsha, vn " aySn- - I King t0 ' sure tW you wil, enjoy Ziegte.d . HAROLD CHESLER M NO EXCHANGES - NO REFUNDS ALL SALES FINAL! BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH ' lj CAPITOL CLEANERS AND DYERS CLEANING SERVICE IN BINGHAM AND COPPERTON SERVICE DELIV ERIES TWICE WEEKLY FOR PICKUP AND DELIVERY SERVICE CALL MRS. FRANK PETERSON 562W |