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Show 'I I MAggHJ 1948 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM OANYON. UTAH , ,. ' PAGE FIVE IhJIine Industry ;1 Lpecting Goes Deeper J I Surface Plant at East Utah Property of Newmont, 7, I Where Work is Proving Costly. Jh mineral deposits on or near -- fte Surface combed over, the of a mine today pre- - k: neW and increas,ns Prob I example of this is the ex-it- lion program of the Newmont 41 lK Company at the East Utah irty situated in the eastern V? if the Park City mining region, jv two years ago, the New-'- V i'conipanv acquired control of 'f East Utah company after a "tr'' fugh geological examination a'ilince that time has expended bci $150,000 in exploration. Aiunnel is being driven to sound out Jhe productive possibilities of kU oer levels of the East Utah property where considerable shal- - aowjwork has been done over the Ifui quarter century. The East ..La ' Utah program calls for the driving of a 4500 foot tunnel, of which 2200 feet has been completed. Before the objective is com-pleted, it is estimated that the Newmont company will have ex-pended in the neighborhood of $300,000 for equipment, supplies and labor. This is a far cry from the early days when many an out-crop of ore was found on or near the surface, and is indicative of the risk that must be taken now to develop Utah's mineral resources. It also shows that practicability of encouraging strong, well fi-nanced companies to enter this field to insure the future of Utah's mining and smelting industry, which needs rehabilitation follow-ing the war years when develop-ment was necessarily curtailed by the manpower shortage. by Mrs.' Kastelic, Mrs. Booth and Mrs. Johnston. Refreshments were served. Serving as vice president of the University of Utah Concert bnd, which was featured at a program February 29 at the uni-versity, is Joyce Hansen, daugh-ter of W. E. Hansen. At the uni-versity she is active in Alpha Theta Kappa, honorary music sorority and Orchesis, special dance group. Miss Hansen grad-uated from Bingham high school in 1940 where she was active in Pep club, Dance club, bund and the school paper. LOCALNOTES Fire Chief Louis Williams, Assistant Fire Chief V. E. Brier-le- y and Albert Boulton, all of Park City, spent Sunday (with John J. Creedon and Lawrence West. Dick Walters and Joe Loverich spent Tuesday afternoon visiting in Midvale. Reported in good condition Saturday at St. Mark's hospital was Benjamin McCornick, 38, Copperton, whose foot was crushed when it caught in gears of machinery at Kennecott Cop-per Corp. mine at Bingham. De-tails of the accident which re-portedly occurred about 2 p.m. were not available from com-pany officials. Mrs. S. W. Jacques entertained Monday evening for members of her bridge club. Those present were Mrs. R. C. Rauer, Mrs. Har-old Chesler, Mrs. J. Lynn Booth, Mrs. Carl A. Curtis, Mrs. Tom Carrigan, Mrs. Albert Kastelic, Mrs. Dale Johnston and Mrs. S. J. Granquist. Prizes were won Heber Nichols, Mrs. Ernest Nich-ols, Mrs. Minnie Nichols, Mrs. George Gadd and Mrs. George Blake. Week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Gust were Mr. and Mrs. Dan Goodwin and son of Salt Lake City. Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Finnas were Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Price and fa-mily. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Quayle and son Robert Lee of Garfield were Monday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Miller. Bonnie Olsen celebrated her magazine distributed with ncxi Sundays Los Angeles Examiner. Mrs. Paul Brown and son Douglas of Idaho have been vis-iting for a few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs, W. D. S. Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Cheever and Mr. and Mrs. Allan Peterson of Salt Lake City visited Tuesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Hen-ry A. Cheever. Mr. and Mrs. David O. Stoker visited Friday in Salt Lake City with Mrs. Anne Stoker. Mr. and Mrs. Lenord Pierce of Brigham City were Wednesday guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Peterson and family. Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Armitstead visited Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Martin Hansen of Salt Lake City. A stork shower was held in honor of Mrs. J. H. Fike Friday at the home of Mrs. Roland War-ner with Mrs. Wallace Johnson and Mrs. Warner as hostesses. Those present were Mrs. Frank Davis, Mrs. Ray Watson, Mrs. Richard Steele, Mrs. R. L. Cun-liff- e, Mrs. William O'Connor Jr., Mrs. Kenneth Davis, Mrs. Fran-cis Sax, Mrs. W. A. Fike and Mrs. Afton Jackson. Monte Carlo whist was played with prizes go-ing to Mrs. Cunliffe and Mrs. W. A. Fike. House prize was won by Mrs. Sax. The table center-piece consisted of pussywillows and pink sweet peas. Refresh-ments were served and many lovely gifts were received by the honored guest. Mrs. Sara Loynd of Spring- - ville was a Wednesday dinner guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. S. Brown and family. t Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Cheev-er and daughter Shirley were dinner guests Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Gui-ve- r of Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Peterson visited Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bowes of Salt Lake City. A slumber party was given Saturday evening at the home of Rea Armitstead. Those enjoying the fun were Marlene Diederich, Rea Armitstead, Sue Peterson and Barbara Coward. Delicious refreshments were served. Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Cheev-er and daughter Shirley were guests in Salt LakeCity Friday at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Al-lan Peterson and Mr. and Mrs. Jay Cheever. 17th birthday Tuesday with a delightful party. . Those present were Beverly Allen, Pat Ras-musse- n, Maurine Ray, Norma Cowdell, Jean Gadd, Donna Rae Olsen and Melvin Hardman, Frank Winward and Grant Win-war- d of Riverton. Copperton and Lark Women's Society of Christian Service will meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Clyde Gillam of Lark. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Offret of Provo and Mr. and Mrs. Max Deakin and children of West Jordan were Saturday dinner and evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Harker and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kirkwood of Provo attended the basket-ball tournament in Salt Lake City Thursday. Thursday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Miller were Mr. and Mrs. Heber Nich-ols, Mrs. Emma Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. George Gadd and Mr. and Mrs. George Blake of Copper-ton- , Mr. and Mrs. William Nich-ols and family of Midvale and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Franks and children of Bingham. The occas-ion was Mrs. Miller's birthday anniversary. A candy pull was enjoyed Monday evening at the home of Patty Lee Fike by Lucy Zanardi, Nanette Santistevan, Roslyn Hansen, Mary Lynn Gaythwaite, Karlene Wilson and Leora Hem-mings-of Lark. Miss Hemming-se- n was also an overnight guest. Mr. and Mrs. Eldon G. John-son visited in Salt Lake City Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Jolley. Copperton Ward Relief Society celebrated their annual birthday party Tuesday, March 16. A one o'clock buffet luncheon was ser-ved to 52 guests after which a program was carried out with Sister Florence Pett and Sister Lois Barlow as readers. Singing Mothers also sang two selections. Clark Johnson of Salt Lake City visited Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Eldon G. Johnson and family. "Ben Toland's Gift to Amer-ica" To bring peace between management and labor this ma-rine left an unusual bequest-wri- tten on a piece of wrapping paper. Don't miss this human in-terest story which appears in the American Weekly, that great i I . 4-- :6ierton : I Carol Peterson 562W ' J surine Ray, Phone 535J Ijj "V iperton Study Guild, will next Monday evening, 4 i 22 at the home of Mrs. Dahlstrom with Mrs. V. S. !arl6w cohostess. Mrs. Harry fcNpely of Bingham will speak in sjrt and exhibit some of her ainings, ; . A! meeting of the Methodist pu(h Fellowship group was neldf Thursday at the home of Mrs George Knudsen. Fourteen Inenjbers were present with Dan Prighiore, president, ' presiding. Lata- - games and refreshments yeni enjoyed. Next meeting of he I group will be held next Thursday at the Community pleAodLst church in ' Bingham' kith Catherine Chipiari. as hos- - Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Dahl and son Eugene of Midvale, were Saturday evening visitors of Bishop and Mrs. Rex B. Garrett. Wednesday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Harker were Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Price and sons, Michael and Phillip of American Fork. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Miller and Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Rice' attended a barn dance at Provo Wednes-day. Mrs. Dewey Mayne left Tues-day for Richmond, Calif., to spend a few weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Griffiths. Mrs. M. E. Olsen visited Thurs-day afternoon with Mrs. J. W. Williams of Salt Lake City. Mrs. A. E. Miller celebrated her birthday Thursday with a three course dinner. Those pres-ent were Mrs. Joe Jenson, Mrs. Keith Parker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emil Parker of Murnjy. A reception will be held 1 's evening honoring the coupQe at the Avalon ballroom from eight to eleven o'clock. For her wedding the bride has chosen to wear traditional white satin fashioned entrain and full length veil of bride's illusion. She will carry a bridal bouquet. Wearing pastel formals will be Mrs. Donald Davis, matron of honor; Miss Alta Thome, sister of the bride, and Miss Ruth Bar-net- t, bridesmaids. Marvin Stead-ma- n will be best man. The couple plan to make their home in Murray. O MARCH WEDDING The Salt Lake LDS temple will be the scene today, March 19, of the marriage of Miss Reva Thome, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Silas Thorne, and James UMC II MC - UMC U MC-UMC-U-UMC - UMC - UMC - UMC maw I I customers fgUS( we keep Our customers keep coming back to us, year after year. That means we've pleased them . . . it means that we've delivered fine automobiles backed by dependable, 0rm,mum, economical service. f CANYON MOTOR GO. MAIN AND MARKHAM . PHONE 333 .1 , Z I A & M. CLUB 10 MAIN STREET BEER AND DANCING ' 'Phone 45 "Kest of Service" Ask for Steve or Ray STEVE AMICONE JR. and RAYMOND MARKS Proprietors --! ' BURN UTAH KING COAL PROMPT DELIVERY CUSHING COAL COMPANY TELEPHONE 64 ROSS M. CUSHING BINGHAM CANYON rArfo, "Mr ill I - WH (ujtoc IpiiiliBSr I I llilillllll New... 8 m sWi of fop servfee Today you'll find two signs of top service along highways in Utah and Idaho. There's the familiar Vico-Pe- p 88 sign, and there's the brand-ne- w "Utoco" sign that's replacing it . . . This new sign . . . oval, with the flaming torch of service and the single word "UTOCO" ... is easier to see and identify at any speed. It's part of a great postwar improvement program designed to bring you even better products and station facilities along the road. The 'word "Utoco" means Utah Oil Refining Co. "Ut" for "Utah" "O" for "Oil" "Co" for "Company." ... These top-notc- h products and facilities together with expert, cour-teous, personalized service await you under both new sign and old , ... to assure you more pleasant driying and longer car life. JjL CSfcv TUNE IN! ymfiNy ViThD i the cuy iombardo show. i f !L I Narrattd by David Rom T rr f LCliL!w Nw,l,0n WOO - Bolt - 8:30 P. M., Friday U I VW PEP88 old. ,B" KSl - Sail lak - 9 P. M., Saturday , - ?QiMty ,ul 'p ,n ,MV,C . "UTAH OIL REFINING COMPANY Producer and Marketers of Highwt Qualify PetroUwm Prodwct Sine 1909 COME TO THE MIDWAY SERVICE FOR ARC WELDING ACETYLENE WELDING, BRAZING AND TIRE VULCANIZING GREASING AND LUBRICATION OF ALL KINDS MIDWAY SERVICE PHONE 12 FAT HURLEY J YOUR HNCIS 1 STROHCMMAIWJ 1 v! - M wr- - tit that fights the causes of Here's a potent preservative wood decay. It lengthens the service of your grape stakes, fence posts, mud sills, underpinning, hop poles, and any wood you put in contact with damp eartn. Standard Wood Preservative contains 90 actitt ingre-dients selected for their permanency. Apply trie same as ordinary creosote-a- nd keep your wooden m toppling before their time, IN BINGHAM GAS & OIL CO. --J Deanlta Phn! 12 COME TO THE DIAMOND FOR A GOOD TIME ?50L TABLES FISHER'S AND HAMM'S BEER ON TAP FINEST IN TOWN 499 MAIN STREET HIGHLAND BOY COMMUNITY HOUSE Two movies The Nativity and The Sower were shown at the worship service at the Com-munity House last Sunday even-ing. Sunday, March 21 is Palm Sun-day. In the evening worship ser-vice there will be guests from Salt Lake City, Ogden, Midvale and Park City. Young people who were delegates to the Cleve-land Youth Conference will give reports and messages from that great meeting. Sunday, March 28 is Easter. Easter breakfast for Sunday school young people will be ser-ved followed by Easter Sunday school services. An Easter pro-gram will be held that evening and will include a pageant "The Challenge of the Cross", present-ed by Queen Esthers. Junior children will give three little Easter playlets and choirs are planning special music for the service. Each evening during Passion week (except Wednesday) there will be a worship service at sev-en o'clock. Regular activities of gym, library etc. will be held but will be interrupted for this fifteen minutes to a half hour of worship. Candlelight and Holy, Com-munion service on Good Friday evening (March 26) at seven o'clock. GIRL SCOUTS Brownie Troop 97 enjoyed a St. Patrick's party this week. Games were enjoyed under the direction of Rae Barnett. Mrs. Helen Cunliffe arid Mrs. Emily Ablett prepared refreshments. Baskets of Easter eggs were giv-en as favors. The party also cele-brated the occasion of all nation-al dues being paid. Twenty-thre- e Brownies, two guests and three leaders were present. |