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Show PAGE FOUR ' THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1952 Ronald Burke who is station-ed with the U. S. navy at San Diego, Calif., notified his par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Surke, that he will leave Saturday for Pearl Harbor, Hawaiii and will not be back until September. ! COPPERFiELD I Shirley Pantalone, Ph. 106 e The Copperfield school will hold its Pre School Clinic next Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Arp and family left Saturday to return to their home in Spokane, Wash, after visiting a week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Leather-woo- d. Mr. and Mrs, Lloyd Miller, were visitors at the home of Mrs. O. H. Spencer of Murray Wed-nesday. Sgt. Pete Gardikis and Sgt. Red Singerfield, who are station-ed at the Las Vegas Air Force Ba.se, left Wednesday to return back to the base after spending a two-da- y leave at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gardikis. Johnson, Jack Mannion, George Goris and Norman Chesler. Also nresent were Mr. and Mrs. Har-old Chesler who assisted with dancing and Mr. and Mrs. lie-Lo- y Yates. Dancing was enjoyed after which a delicious luncheon of spaghetti and meatballs was served. ening. Prizes at bridge were won by Mrs. James McLeod, Mrs. Ross M. Cushing, Mrs. Anthon O. Jacobson and Mrs. Hosmer Peterson. Dainty refreshments were served. No. 2 Firemen's auxiliary met Monday evening as guests of Mrs. Martin Prigmore. Winning prizes at cards were Mrs. Lawr-ence West, Mrs. Gordon Jensen and Mrs. Leonard Bell. Lovely refreshments were served. Mrs. R. G. Benson will be hostess to next week's meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Reid and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Reid visited Monday night with their mother, Mrs. John Donaldson, of Salt Lake City. Mrs. C. Reid was a Sunday overnight guest at the Donaldson home. A delightful teen age party was given for Mary Agnes Ja- -' cobson by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Anthon O. Jacobson, at No. 1 Fire hall last Friday night.! Guests were Sally Ann McAllis-- j ter, Ann Diederich, Janell Han-sen, Jayle Yates, Joyce Farley, Lexie Stewart, Carma Jean Ray, Jimmy Carrigan, Joe Anderson, Harold Yates, Vivian Butt, Larry : local notes: Mr. and Mrs. David L. Bills had as dinner guests Sunday her brother and family, Mr. and Mrs. William Donohoo and son Billy of Clearfield find daughter, Mrs. Jerry Johnson of Texas. , Mr. and Mrs. Donald Davis and baby of Midvale visited with Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Reid Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. J. Lynn Booth and daughter Shirley visited Tuesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. John Turner of Sandy. A lovely birthday party was given Saturday, March 15, in honor of Geoffrey Page on his eighth birthday by his mother, Mrs. William Page. Guests were Billy Sylvester, Bert Williamson, Paul Cisncros, Floyd Martinez, Michael and Stephan Page. A lovely luncheon was served af-ter which the group attended the show. Table decorations cen-tered around a St. Patrick's day thtnie. Mrs. Marlin Schultz was hos-tess to eleven members of No. 1 Firemen's auxiliary Monday ev-- i ulljj? Imglfam Inllrtm Issued Every Iriday ai Bingham Canyon, Salt Lake County. Utah. Entered ai Second Class Matter at the Pott Office at Bingham ' Canyon, Utah, Under the Act of March 3, 1879. NATIONAL DITORIAI UTAiWEtTMiATION OGAIjO ' JOHN ADAMEK. Editor and Publisher GLADYS L. ADAMEK, Assistant Editor Subscription Rate, per year in advance $2.50 Advertising Rates Furnished on Application for Child's Eye-que- " and accom-panied her talk by showing of a film on eyes, after which an open discussion was held. The new school house is to be dedicated as soon as the weather will permit it was announced. On the third Monday in April, the P-T- A will sponsor a picture show,- - purpose of which will be to raise funds to purchase cur-tains for the auditorium stage in the new school. Isabell Abreu visited with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bare and family of Midvale over the week end. Lark Relief Society is sponsor-ing a square night, consisting of a square meal and square danc-ing to be held at the Lark recre-ational hall on Friday, March 28 at 6 p.m. Admission is $1.00 per person. A good turnout is ex- - pected. Proceeds will go to the new building fund. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Draper left Wednesday night for Gen-ol- a to visit overnight with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Dra-per. Mrs. Jessie Nielsen and children. Barbara and Marty, ac- - LARK NEWS Joy Seal 901J1 LARK P-T- CHOOSES OFFICERS AT PARLEY Mrs. Alta Boyd was elected president of the Lark elemen-tary school P-T- A for the coming year at a P-T- A meeting held at Lark school Monday night, March 17. She succeeds Mrs. Eetty Gillam. To serve with Mrs. Boyd are: Howard Ballard, principal of Lark school, first vice president; Mis. Marie Owens, second vice president, and Mrs. Esther Tibol- - la, secretary-treasure- r. ; Preceding election of officers, the first grade presented a heaith program. Dr. Olivia McHugh of Salt Lake City gave a very in-teresting lecture on "Visual Aid companied them as far as Mona where they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. David Nielsen. The group returned home yesterday, Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Peterson of Midvale were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Peterson Monday, March 17th. Mrs. Donna Ault and daughter LuDonna of Midvale visited Monday, March 17 with her par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. James Reed. Mrs. W. W. Home of Salt Lake City spent four days visiting her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Pearson. She re-turned home Monday. Ezra Albert Clements, 66, Am-erican Fork, father of Steven Clements of Lark, died in an American Fork hospital Sunday at 7:10 a.m. of .pneumonia. Fun-eral services were held yester-day, Thursday, at 1 p.m. at Am-erican Fork. The 500 club met at the home of Mrs. Elva Baum on Wednes-day, March 19. Prizes at five hundred were won by Mrs. Edna Medley, first; Mrs. Mary Gress-ma- n, second, and Mrs. Leola Pe-terson, house. Others present were Mrs. Virginia MeCarty, Mrs. Delta Turner of Lehi, Mrs. Cecily Jackson and Mrs. Olive Allinson. A delicious luncheon was served. Mrs. MeCarty will be hostess to the club April 2. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bigler were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Roberts of Layton. The 509 club met Wednesday night as guests of Mrs. Donna Bardsley. Dinner was served following which five hundred was played. Winning prizes were Mrs. Jennie Ball, first; Mrs. Ina Lofgran, cut, and Mrs. Bessie Bigler, traveling. Others present were Mrs. Millie Wykert, Mrs. Ilia Coombs, Mrs. Viva Sweat, Mrs. Norma Holladay and Mrs. Rita Rostrum. Mrs. Ball will en-tertain the club on March 26. (to TTT1 1 What s wrong i about integration? It's the way ,4dA !operate'toor , ( Many businessmen have made comments like rr.V this: "The way I figure it out, this 'integration' 'IAtI " " you big companies are attacked for is juat a matter K & t t"4)tn'i $ ttSi? f din8 more than one part of a job. So what's w l yirp I wrong about that? It's the way I operate, too r V ' f answr'n? this question let's consider f$' Kt 1 - first what the word means. "Integration" i'Vt' ' r means simply carrying a job through several ' steps. Integration can't make a good company h x V Pt";; bad. It's a method any business may use as it 4 itl competes for your patronage, increasing its effi- -. LJ jy41" VT" ciency and benefiting you by keeping prices fH , : '' Jf' Vjb down. Let's look at the similarity between our V A' operation and that of another integrated fuel- - aawoi mi mia imm m I ' producer whose system is centuries old: lit li t '"" IAjwl I A woodcutter goes Into a for- - LjjjfljJf Nsow lmr tne wooidcuMtter takestthe jC.ffitffi f" and fells trees. Standard drills PllTn next step and cuts the logs into fire-- rrSi into the ground and brings up oil. Jf 1 place size, he has become an inte-- 1!3 If the woodcutter sells the logs 1 i grated business. Like him, Standard then and there... and if Standard ' works to turn the product into the sells the crude oil to some buyer at the well . . . forms you use. We refine our crude oil into gaso- - there's no integration. Each has performed only line, lubricants, fuel oil, and other products. So one part of the job. ' we're integrated, too. When the woodcutter hauls a sr And lr the woodcutter finally load of firewood he extends his Be"8 t'ie firewood to you, his op- - V?g integration. He's now in the 2 eration is fully integrated. Ours is, fr ) transportation business ... as is y too, when we sell you fuel oil. ..or Standard when we use our tank- - sell you gasoline at Company-owne- d ers and pipelines to transport oil from well to service stations. So is integration wrong? Not at refinery, and the refined products from there all. And we make best use of it to bring you better to areas where they'll be used. products at low cost. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA plans ahead to serve you better ?nuAt& aamuck, jjji BourknAat its tet! K MHICKORY i pliTTitT ttiSTwm. K PtOOf 0L0 1"" UCHOty IMST1U1N0 COW, fHHA, fA, jr iii.um 'mm ,i i in r y s- -. fit"', fh Skate Cknp When the minutes count, you can count on your electric range for speed. Cooking gets off to an even faster start with the newest electric ranges because the first surge of heat brings the unit to red-ho- t heat in as little as 30 seconds. And with electric cooking, your family will notice the flavor difference. Chart prepared by the Utah Foundation shows state expenditures la Utah for fiscal year ended June 30, 1951. Total was 173,815,786. SCHOOLS, ROADS ON TOP State Expenditures Soared $4.4 Million in Fiscal'51 oiUM:. ' Ltaunted to $12,300,000, or pared by th UUh Foundation. non. 16.7 Of the total. SSXJeSniSS'J The remaining $16,200,000. or taxation and th relationship of ov- - 22 of total state expenditures, crnmantal coata to the aconomy of T , Utah. Foundation report! will be sent Was Used to SUppOlt the remain-witho-' charge to anr citizens of Utah ig funrtion and sprvfrpe. of guv- - upon request to the Utah Foundation. Daruns Bids., salt Lake city. ernment, such as unemployment Expenditures of Utah's state compensation Payments, penal and correctional institutions, hos- - government for the fiscal year pitals lnstituUonSi health( ended June 30, 1951, totaled $73,- - general administration and 6, or approximately $4,400,- - trol, natural resources, liquor 000 more than in the preced- - profit grants to local eovernment, ing fiscal year. In the tabulation of total state State expenditures for educa- - expenditures, nonrevenue dis-tio- n increased $3,300,000 and ex-- bursements have been eliminated penditures for highways in- - whenever it was practical to iden-crease- d $2,800,000 during the pe-- tify them from available records, riod. On the other hand, unem- - It is believed the resulting compensation pay- - penditure figures more accurate-ment- s declined from $6,100,000 in ly reflect the true cost of oper-fisc- al 1950 to $2,600,000 In fiscal ating Utah state government 1951. than do total disbursement fig- - In fiscal 1951, expenditures for ures. For example, this tabula-educatio- n were $29,100,000, or al-- tion does not consider disburse-mos- t 40 of total state expendi- - ments for the purchase of inven-ture- s. Highway expenditures to-- tories for the state liquor monop-tale- d $16,300,000, or 22 of the oly as an expense of state gov-tota- l, and expenditures for wel- - ernment STATE EXPENDITURES IN UTAH Fiscal Year Ended June 3a 1951 v"rMliVa"3; Vs r .v. v.v.v.vw ps '.v.v.v.v.v.vrTv if.;. (VAfffA c. '.'.'.......'.V.VA M ...j, v. . 9 'jV ."V ...... jy ......... ' f&fl.. W ' V'. .V.V.V.'.V.V.V.Vl i'iii'm in"w' prtytr Sy UTAH fOUNDATiON HEALTH NEWS According to the weekly re- - Eort of the state department of a total of 532 new cases of communicable diseases were reported for the week ending March 14 as compared with 503 for the previous week and 579 for the corresponding week last year. Measles leads the list with a total of 183 new cases. Strep in-fections came second with 106 cases and chicken pox was third with 85 cases. ' The following is a list of all diseases for the week: cancer, 12; chicken pox, 85; gonorrhea, 4; measles, 183; German meas-les, 10; mumps, 69; strep infec-tion, 106; syphilis, 12; tularemia, 2; influenza, 42; infectious hep-atitis, 6; silicosis, 1. |