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Show PAGE TWO THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH FRIDAY, MARCH 18, I960 aH Oj Ike Week r f "I should have suspected there was some reason why you wanted to come to church early!" Robert Foist and family Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Zano Dumont and family of Midvale entertained with a family dinner Sunday honoring Mr. Dumont't parent, Mr. and Mr. Leonard Miller on their wedd-ing anniversary and Mr. Dumont' mother, Mr. Joe Dumont on her biirthday anniversary. Visiting Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Everett Allinson and boys were Mr. and Mrs. Ned Allinson and family and Mrs. Delia Allinson of Eureka and Mr. and Mr. John Lemmon of Magna. Mr. and Mr. Jack Gressmen and daughter, Helen, and Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Miller of Copperton spent Saturday in Provo Canyon. LARK SCHOOL Lark School ha scheduled a regular A meeting for next Monday, March 21, at 7:30 p.m. at the school. Election of officer will be held. LARK NEWS Marilyn Dalley, PR Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Beckstrom and daughter, Kathy Rae, of West Jordan were Saturday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Foist and family. Mrs. Martha Newell of Sandy and Mrs. Cora McKnight of Murray celebrated their birthdays at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bigler Tuesday. Also present were Mrs. Jayne and children, Robyn and Kent, of Murray. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Hopkin and family vid'ted Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Jim Barnes of Midvale. Dinner guest Sunday of Mr. and Mr. Bert Thoma were Mr. and Mrs. F. K. Potter and John Teach of Salt Lake City. Mrs. Uettia Peterson left Wed-nesday to visit with Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Baum of Murray. Visitors Sunday afternoon of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gressmen and dau-ghter, Helen, were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Peart and Mrs. Allean Farsen of Eureka. Mr. and Mr. LeGrand Beckstrom and sons, Kirt and Brent, of West Jordan visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ijj? Hingliam Hull? tin Issued Every Friday at Bingham Canyon, Salt Lake County, Utah. Entered a Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Bingham Canyon, Utah, Under the Act of March 3, 1879. s&.-- yy N A T I O N A L EDITORIAL JOHN ADAMEK, Editor and Publisher GLADYS L. ADAMEK, Assistant Editor Subscription Rate, per year in advance $2.50 Advertising Rates Furnished on Application DEPARTMENT OF MILLS AT KENNECOTT AGAIN RE-CEIVES MANAGER'S TROPHY For the third consecutive year, personnel at the Department of Mills of the Utah Copper Division have been presented with the gen-eral manager' safety trophy for the greatest improvement in the reduction of accidents. The 1959 accident frequency rate among the 1,400 employees of the Magna and Arthur Mills which process copper ore was 1.43 com-pared to 3.74 in 1958. This was an improvement of 62.7 per cent, said F. C. Green, general manager. The annual awarding of ' a shins et to the plant having the greatest reduction in accident frequency rate wa in-augurated in 1955. The trophy was won the first year by the Depart-ment of Mines and in 1956 by the Refinery. For 1959, the Department of Mines was second with a 35.1 per cent improvement and the Refinery third with a 9.1 per cent improve-ment. The Division' smelter wa not considered in the competition, being a new installation. The trophy i awarded accord-ing to National Safety Council pro-cedure in determining eligibility for outstanding safety achievement. . This is based on the rate of im-provement during the past year over the average of the preceding three years, it was explained. O ' fbe OESCC D"" From The Italy News-Heral- Italy, Texas: A number of years ago this writer served for a time as justice of the peace. At that time we reached the conclusion that many people were pleading guilty to traffic law violations and paying fines unnecessarily. The general attitude appeared to pre-vail that it was useless to try to defend oneself against an arrest-ing officer's charges and that the best way out was to pay the fine and forget it. When time was tak-en to prepare a defense the ar-rested person was often held not guilty. Apparently we were not alone in this line of thinking. It Is now being argued that since convic-tion for traffic law violations will affect automobile insurance rates, new courts will have to be set up to handle the cases because motorists will be less likely to plead guilty and accept a judg-ment of guilty without a contest. It would seem logical to assume as we have done all along that threat of higher in-surance rates will improve driv-ing habits and result in fewer arrests. If this is true and the authorities still anticipate an in-crease in contested cases, then it can only be concluded that thousands of motorists have been victimized by traffic courts. The extent of this cannot be de-termined, of course, until study can be made of the contested cases' expected to arise after the new regulations go into effect and the percentage of convictions definitely known. To our way of thinking this is another argument for the new in-surance regulations. If motorists, arresting officers and judges can be made to realize that n person must be presumed to be inno-cent until proven guilty in traf-fic court as well as any other, then justice will be served. There has been entirely too much think-ing that the handing out of a traffic citation is prima facie evidence of guilt. From The C'hlt-kash- Star, Chickasha, Okla.: Whether one realizes it or not, advertising is perhaps the most wonderful de-velopment of the modern com-mercial age. It is the maker or breaker of business, big or little. It is the one factor of successful sales that is most apt to be over-looked by the merchants and businessmen of small towns and cities. Advertising is . . . the power that will make little con-cerns grow into larger success. It is a science that requires study and be it said, character. M1MBER" From Eva M. Bradberry, McDougal, Arkansas: I remem-ber the winter days of yesteryear, when our living room furniture was three iron bed steads, straw-mattresse-s and "huge feather beds. We had bolsters and cov-ered it up with white counter-panes. I can still see the marble-toppe- d bureau, the stand with a kero-sene lamp, the big family bible on the little shelf under the stand and the big trunk that set be-tween two of the beds. Mom's bed was up front near the fire' place, making it much warmer when changing the baby at night. There were three big rocking chairs by the fire and a four-gallo- n churn set nearby. Three flat irons set on the hearth for years and on the mantle was a clock that has been in the family for generations, calling out the time every hour, on the hour, since grandpa was a baby. I remember bottles of mustard ointment and croup remedies. And how we would put some beans and a ham bone in the iron' dinner kettle hanging on a hook just over the logs in the fireplace . . . and sweet potatoes in the dutch oven . . . corn bread in an iron skillet . . . and sassafras tea bubbling in an iron tea kettle. From J. II. McKinley, San An-tonio, Tex.: I remember when we used to have dancing at the Court House at Pleasanton, Texas. Most of the cowboys wore their spurs while dancing. When they got to kicking up their heels doing the one-ste- p or fox trot, you had to look out or you might get spurred. O By C. A. Dean, M.D. (Q) "Is surgery the only means of curing bleeding hemorrhoids?" Mr. G. W. (A) Bleeding hemorrhoids must be attended to as soon as possible. A complete examination by a proctologist (rectal specialist) or a general surgeon is necessary to be sure the bleeding is from a hemorrhoid and not from some other rectal or intestinal source. If a large number of hem-orrhoids are found (both internal and external), a complete hem-orrhoid operation is the best treatment. If only one or two small hemorrhoids are present, injection treatments or other sim-ilar procedures usually are effec-tive. (Q) "I am 70 years old and weigh 140 pounds. For about a month I have had a ringing sound in my head, a slight headache, swelling of my ab-domen, shortness of breath, cramps In my legs and wheez-ing. I'd appreciate any help. Mrs. L. (A) There are several possibil-ities that could cause these symp-toms. You may have an underac-tive thyroid gland or some strain on your heart. Possibly your blood pressure is. elevated. I sug-gest a complete check-u- p by your doctor very soon. (Q) "My sister has had headaches for a long time. Re-cently, showed a cyst in her head. Is it safe for her to be operated on?" Mrs. A. M. (A) If she is in good condition and the surgeon thinks an opera-tion is necessary I certainly would not hesitate in having it done. It can mean complete freedom of headaches for her. Phone your new item to the Bingham Bulletin at PR or PR i I ntientjfje THE SMOOTHER BOURBON Kentucky Straight Bourbon WMikey 6 Yrs. Old 86 Proof Ancient Agi Diit.Co.,Frinkfort,Ky. .ill , v? ; 'A "" ? fr a' I f : ' ?$ m - 4 Kitchen and cook ' jx- - both sparkle with an ELECTRIC RANGE! v : - , - ? The cleanliness of electric Cooking reflects f '"'p'C7.yiC "j itself many ways . . . kitchen walls, curtains, and v ceiling stay cleaner longer. So do pots and pans l -i-- because electric heat from a wire is as clean r" LJ os electric light. I L 9 - iA. "V UVI IITT1K g3 : UTAH POWIR I IIOHT CO. Bvy flow from your Jofcr TOTAL ELECTRIC HOME I: ;, J ww VS,.,; ' NEW BABY at your house? K Spread the news 7 by long distance NEW, LOWER LONG DISTANCE RATES Now, for only $1.75 or less, you can call anywhere in the country, except Alaska or Hawaii, and talk for three wonderful minutes at the nighttime station-to-statio- n rate or on Sunday (plus federal exciis tax). Mountain States Telephone the awful nervousness and "hot flashes" of CHANGE-OF-LIF- E in scientific clinical tests by noted doctor I Every case tested got striking re- - that tension, irritability aren't lief from awful discomforts of relieved with Pinkham s. See If change-of-lif- e. Nervousness was you don't escape suffocating "hot reduced for as many as 87 . . . flashes" that made change-of-lif- e "hot flashes" 75 ! so hard to bear. Today, get Lydia PinkhanVs Vegetable Compound No Costly Shot. Ned- d- at all drug st0res. Fsmale Ailment Relieved! Results were credited entirely to sleep 8 hours wake up tired? Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable when due to simple iron defl- - Compound. Acting through the ciency anemia, take Pinkham sympathetic nervous system, it Tablets. Rich in iron, they has remarkable power to relieve start to strengthen your iron- - this functionally-cause- d distress. starved blood within one day. Don't suffer needlessly. See if - ilHiiPilCili For faster, more complete relief of headache, neuralgia, neuritis pains, take STAN BACK Tablets or Powders. STANBACK's S. A. (Synergistic Action) -t- he combined action of several medically-approve- ingredients in one e dose-ea- ses anxiety and tension, starts bringing relief stan bac k RTrfTFTTtTS against any fvl I iK il iinjJH preparation HaUJtfjJiflrt 1 i 1 you've ever QcwctBS) Ay' GCuaroniinSd bysywin nuuiv. j, Helps Heal And Clear ItchySItin Rash! Zemo liquid or ointment a doc-tor's antiseptic, promptly relieves itching, stops scratching and so helps heal and clear surface skin rashes. Buy Extra Strength Zemo for VtT 1 1 stubborn cases latiVXAXV o""r55aoJ by LYN CONNELLY current investigation of THE commercials is a new low in comedy even by Congress . . . Even a harebrain could figure out that commercials were exag-gerated in favor of the particular product being pushed ... it has been done for years . . . What's more, anyone who buys a tooth paste because "the mint flavor prevents cavities" or any such similar claim is ripe for picking to begin with ... A sponsor will claim his product contains ura-nium in order to sell it and surely viewers know this to be a fact. Aside from that, the commer- - clals now being tabbed as "phony" because shaving cream is used as cake frosting, etc. have good reason to be phony . . . Surely the good congressmen have ap-peared on television at some time in their career . . . Have they ever withered under the blis-tering hot lights and wondered how performers stand it? Well, performers are adjusted to 1i, but cake frosting would simply melt away, thus the substitution for something that looks like frosting but can stand the heat . . . with that? What started out to be a good thing the cleanup of disk jockeys and music has turned into a comic opera and we would suggest the committee quit while it's ahead. WARNER BROS. Now people who are growing fat from watch-ing TV and eating pretzels may take oft the extra weight by exer-cising to a new hi-- fi album called "Keep FitBe Happy with Bonnie Frudden". . . Bonnie, you will remember, is the physical fitness queen who deplores the softness of today's teens to such an extent that she has put exercises on record In a desperate hope of whipping them into shape . . , It's a good deal and actually quite a good idea . . . The whole family can now keep fit together via the hi-a- . family of Dugway spent last week end with hi mother, Mr. Pina Azzelio. Mike Loverich pent Wednesday and Thursday of this week in Too-ele with his sister and brother-in-law- , Mr. and Mrs. Steve Savich. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Chanak and family of Salt Lake City visited Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mis. Mike Chanak. Their daugh-ter, Tanya,, stayed for a visit with her grandparents. 1IIGIILAND BOY: Mrs. Milka Smilanich returned home Monday from a six week visit in the northwest with her sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. George Piedmont of Vantage, Wash. While there she also enjoyed a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Dino Moretti who came from Seattle to spend a day. Enroute home, Mrs. Smilanich also visited friends in Boist, Idaho. Paul Smilanich of Sacramento, Calif., called relatives here Sunday from Salt Lake City, while enroute on a business trip to Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Attelio Azzelio and ....... " ' m AMERICANA , Famous Spots Harpers Ferry, West Virginia A narrow-ridge- d tongue of land in West Virginia's Eastern Pan-handle is the same wild and lovely spot where Thomas Jefferson stood and remarked, "It's worth a trip across the ocean to stand here and see the sun rise." The war-battere- d and blood damaged city of Harpers Ferry, now being restored as a National Monument records many noted visitors perhaps the most prominent of these, "God's Angry Man." stone steps which lead to the hillside church soon became so slippery with blood of the wound-ed that it was impossible to ascend them. The tourists can still locate the site of Hall's Rifle Works on the banks of the Shenendoah, where the first breech loading rifles manufactured in America were produced. Ten miles to the east Here the tourist can see the tiny brick engine house, (above), now a museum, that served as John Brown's Fort when he staged a daring raid in 1859. Earthworks and gun emplace-ments used by Federal and Con-federate troops during the num-erous battles that raged in and around Harper's Ferry during the War between the States are other points of interest. Nearby and still in use Is the Harpers Ferry Catholic Church and the equally famous "stone steps." During the town's most famous battle in 1863, a Con-federate force under the com-mand of General Stonewall Jack-son swept through the Shenan-doah Valley up to Harpers Ferry, compelling a Federal force of 12,500 men to surrender. In the midst of this vicious battle the Church was turned into a hospital and the natural of Harpers Ferry National Mon- - ument lies Antlctam, site of one of the bloodiest battles of the Civil War. A short distance to the South Is Charles Town, site of several homes which were oc-cupied by the Immediate family of George Washington. December 2, 1959 marked the 100th anniversary of the public hanging of John Brown in Charles Town. The Jefferson County Courthouse was the scene of the trial in late October and early November of 1859. |