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Show PAGE TWO THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1955 .jUiugljam SuUrtiu Issued Every I riday at Bingham Canyon, Sail Lak County, Utah. Entered at Second Clan Mailer at the Pott Office at Bingham Canyon, Ulah. Under the Act of March 3. 1879. --zttirg&rrss NATION A I EDITORIAL JOHN ADAMEK, Editor and Publisher GLADYS L. ADAMEK, Assistant Editor Subscription Rate, per year in advance $2.50 Advertising Rates Furnished on Application directly into substantial amounts of electricity has been prac-tically doubled in the one year since its announcement, accord-ing to J. D. Maher, manager of Mountain States Telephone at Bingham. Bell laboratories scientists have Increased the battery's efficiency to 11 per cent comparable to the efficiency of the best gaso-line engines. When first shown, the battery had a 6 per cent ef-ficiency. Mr. Maher said the announce-ment of this new stride toward utilizing the sun's energy came shortly after Bell scientists had also succeeded in developing a miniature electronic "brain" cap-able of computing complex math ematical problems in 15 thous-- 1 andths of a second. The new electronic brain, call-ed TRADIC (for Transistor-Digital-Computer- ), was developed for the U. S. Air Force and can operate flawlessly in planes fly-ing at supersonic speed. It uses transistors, another laboratories EFFICIENCY OF BELL SOLAR BATTERY INCREASED The efficiency of the Bell Solar Battery man's first successful device for converting sunlicht Tuesday ninht visitor of Floyd Reed was J.ie Csborn of Los An-geles, Calif. LAROEWS Diane Reed, Phone 908-J- 1 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Johnson are the proud parents of a new baby boy born Monday, May 23 at Cottonwood Maternity hos-pital. Awaiting his arrival home is an older brother, Bobby. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Holyoak and daughter Roberta, of Moab, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Reed and family Thursday, May lUth. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sonne and family, Shirley and Robert, are making their home back in Lark after living in New Mexico for three years. , Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Arnold were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Verl Reed and family of Sandy Saturday, May 21. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Reed and family, Diane, Dixie, Natalie, Suzanna and Michael were Sun-day visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ro-bert Graham and family, Ronald, Jerry and Robert of Salt Lake City. Mrs. Carrie Reed spent Thurs-day, Friday and Saturday of last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Verl Reed of Sandy. The 500 club met Thursday, May 19 at the home of Mrs. Olive Allinson. Prizes at cards were won by Mrs. LaVae Johnson, Mrs. Delta Turner and Mrs. Lot- - tie Dalley. Other members pros-- ; er.t were Mrs. Elva Baum, Mrs. Leola Peterson, Mrs. Cecily Jack-- : son, Mrs. Lil Marshall and Mrs. Mary Gressman. Lovely refresh-- 1 ments were served. l X f , i is, Si. f i j - I Efficiency of tho Bell Solar Battery has been practically doubled in the one year since its announcement. Ill efficiency is now as high as 1 1 per cent. Here a Bell Telephone laboratories engineer, compar-es the electrical output of the battery, pointed out by the arrow, with tha total energy available from the sun. LAFF OF THE WEEK liill rfAfifes 1 "But be can't be through already ... be Just started!" ii'igiilandbo'y: Mrs. Francps U. Hawkins Ph. 5!)8-- Mr. and Mrs. Joe Zupan and two daughters of Lehi were Sun-'1'i- y visitors at the home of Mrs. Zupan's brother, Mr. and Mrs. jjoe Stoivato and family. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Beck and children, Bob and LaRae, and Mrs. Beverly Shea and sons, Ricky and Randy, of Bingham visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs John Day and family of Draper and especially with . Mr. Day's son, Richard, who was home on leave irom the navy. Mrs. E. A. Beck spent Monday evening at the home of her dau-ghter, Mrs. Beverly Shea taking care of her two grandsons while itneir motner went to me gradu-ation exercises at Bingham high. Mr. and Mrs. Marko Yengich had their little daughter, Rose Ann, baptised at Holy Rosary church in Bingham on Sunday, M iy 15 at 1:30 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. John Sarich of Taylorsville were named the godparents. Later in the day tho group enjoyed din-ner at Harmon Cafe in Murray. Sunday evening visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Scorzato and fam-ily were Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Xaiz of. Mid vale. Stan SU.tt of Midvale called at the Joe Scorzato home Wed-nesday. pggo iy Haomm I LEFTOVERS present a constant to the homemaker. Add these to your die and use at a good example of interesting wayt to employ them: practical test as part of the tele-phone system this summer in Americus, Ga., where experi-ments will determine the useful-ness of the battery in supplying power on rural" telephone linea. development, instead of vacuum tubes and is believed to be the first computer de-signed for aircraft. It is capable of doing 60,000 additions or sub-tractions, or 3,000 multiplications or divisions, a second. It can run through an entire problem re-quiring about 250 different steps of computation in less time than it takes to say "Tradic." Mr. Maher said both the Solar Battery and Tradic are expect-ed to have wide uses in many kinds of industry in the future. In the telephone system, both may soon play an important part. "Tradic uses the same tech-niques that may one day in the not too distant future be applied to the telephone central office to automatically switch calls faster and more reliably than present systems," Mr. Maher said. The battery will have its first Bacon left from breakfast can be crumbled Into the peanut butter jar and blended together for a tasty spread to use on bread or crackers. Celery, mushrooin or corn soup makes a good sauce for a casse-role Blend with asparagus, too, RECEIPE OF THE WEEK Plxia Pennies (Makes 48) can tomato sauce ' teaspoon garlic salt teaspoon oregano flakes 48 thin rounds of toast or round crackers ;i tablespoons softened butter 2 cups cottage cheese 4 pound MorzareUa or Muen-ste- r cheese Mix together tomato sauce, garlic and oregano. Toast bread or crackers lightly and spread with butter. Spread each with cottage cheese and top with 1 teaspoon tomato mixture. Dot :?ach with a small cube of cheese. Broil 2 to 3 minutes intil cheese melts and pizza s nested through. top with a bit of grated cheese and broil until bubbly for a good vege-table combination. Leftover pie dough rolled with sharp or Blue cheese can be cut in straws or rounds. Bake until crisp Store for future use to serve as appetizers or accompaniments with soup or salad. Mash leftover Ash with mayon-naise. Add some chopped celery or pickle and lemon juice to give It tang. This makes a good sand-wich or stuffing for tomato, which may be heated ' through in t'le oven or served cold. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Hawkins and son Jack and grandchildren, Wayne and Linda Grubb, spent yesterday, Thursday, at Thistle visiting with Mr. Hawkins' bro-ther and wife, Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Hawkins. W u.s. f J SAVINGS ) VBONDS Detective work by telephone locates lost bike ... saves family s45 The young son in the family was frantic. Me had left his bike at the ball field and was un-able to find it. The youngster's mother got on the telephone to try to locate the bike, without success. She was about to give it up for lost, ' when one final call to the man in charge of the field brought the goo'd news. By luck he . had found the bike and was waiting for the owner to claim it. This family discovered as so many others , are doing every day that telephone service doesn't cost it pays! So let it work for you to save money, to make things easier in many : ways. Now that tve mention it, aren't there some calls you should make right now? Name withheld, but story is an actual case taken from Telephone Company files. ff ff Telepfioni people In Utah work every day to make your telephone service an even bigger value. km P0BHB3SSE3iS extra ago TITTTT;,- -, ...You can Ust tha smoothness of 2 extra $f years at no extra cost mellowed to old partition. pWeiKY extra ClUallty frWiOHTIOURBON WH1SKH 1 '"A" Kntucky-mad-al- l straight bourbon. ""u WT .$ Famous for Its natural old-tim- a Kentucky flavor. PiSM extra VOl UO fit rv;r-- ...Itsfrlandiy price is a value that can't be beaten. ' i'j!;Si'!'.i!?y'; r" rrifrmrr 4VV .j. - - 4 ' v 1 a treat worth l fj Uj repeating; 0 v ; t STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY . 86 PROOF . ECHO SPRING DISTILLING CO., LOUISVILLE, KY. I ,ANP NOW FOR THAT RECORDING-- WHICH l& TOP?? IN SAIE , ii Vou!d buy Tbi ifl$y o Wx5 1 COPPERFIELD Jeanne Sanchez, Phone 465 e Mrs. Mary Miya and daughter Joyce Ann of Lead Mine were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Teddy Kawaguchi and family, Billy and Rose, Tuesday and Wednesday. Congratulations and best wish-es to seniors from Copperfield who are members of the 1955 graduating class from Bingham High school who are: Jose Cor-dova, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Cordova; Johnny Gardikis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gardikis; Soloman Valdez, son of Mr. and Mrs. Salvador Valdez; Ruth Ann Barton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Burl Barton; Elsie Benavidez, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Bi n-- , avidez; Rose Hardman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hardman, ' and Jenny Ochoa, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Filomeno Ochoa. MANY members of the Congress again worried about a re-turn of the "hard money" policy of the Elsenhower adminis-tration which was Inaugurated early In 1952 and then quickly abandoned as the nation's economy began to spiral downward. The return to this "hard money" policy was heralded by these fac-tors: The unannounced boost In in-terest rates from 3 to 5 on disaster loans to farmers; the Federal Seserve Board's recent boost in rediscount rates to private banks; and. the attempt of the Treasury Department to carry out the provisions of the Hoover Commission report on Gov-ernment lending agencies. The Hoover report, if carried clatiu. composed of the largest j New York City banks. As of today the cost of borrowing money Is at the highest rate since early 1053 and at a time when not only small business, but large corporations are seeking trenien dous amounts ranging into the billions for expansion of facilities and inventory And Interest rates are still going up The United States Treasury, the highest credit risk in the world was paying only about H"o interest on y loans in 1954. Today it is paying over 1V4 for the same loan And at the same time some government bonds are as low as 89, or 11 points under ar. ripe for purchase by the money interests who hulrt them for par or over, and sell out, would undermine or eliminate the lending and insuring activities of federal agencies, placing such lending in the hands of private banks at higher Interest rates. It would cripple the Rural Electrifi-cation Administration, place all price support loans of the Com-modity Credit Corporation In the hands of private banks, and in-terest rates on all these. Including the Federal Housing Administra-tion, the Home and Housing Ad-ministration and the Veterans Administration, would be governed by recommendations of . New York bankers. As a matter of tact, according to Representative Wright Patman, of Texas, the Hoover Commission report carries out the same recommendations made about two years ago by the New York Clearing House Asso-- With interest rates on commer-cial loans so high, banks are turn lng more to consumer credit loans Today consumer credit debt stands at well over $30 billions on install-ment sales. A recent survey of banks shows this class of loans now accounts for about 22 of their total loans, something they wouldn't touch a few years ago And the survey showed 30 cents out of every dollar of gross income earned from bank loans comes today frrm installment credit loans. In the meantime the Con-gress is wrestling with about 73 loopholes in the tax code which was rewritten in 1954, some of them costing the federal Treasury billions of dollars And by strange coincidence all these tax loopholes were In favor cf the big Income earners. Upper Bingham School Last edition of the Upper Bing ham school paper came out on May 24 after which students were dismissed for the summer. On Saturday, May 21, the jun-ior patrol officers were guests at a party given by Sheriff Geo-rge Beckstead in Salt Lake City. Attending from Upper Bingham school were Tommy Mannos, Julie Ann Sanchez, Lourdes Vas-que- z, Henry Adachj and Mar-garet Gallegos. DaiieCarmmeI Come years ago Mr. and Mrs. Mary G. Hedlund, 331 Central Avenue, Pasadena, California, applied to the Childrens Home Society for an adoption. Due to the war and to tha many many application which they had to make, they were put off from year to year until finally six years had elapsed. But finally a society wrote them that a district worker would be out that weelt to interview them. That very spring Mr. Hedlund had started his little woodworking business and their financial status was on a rather precarious footing, so the district worker felt that any added responsibility would be too much for them at that time. Mr. Hedlund agreed with her but Mrs. Hedlund didn't It required several meetings and conferences to convince her, and when she finally realized that the door had been closed to her, she turned on her husband with torment and misery in hex soul She o ... 1 11.. L11 1 Her husband took her for a ride one beautiful CARNEGIE starlit night, and as they drove around he told, her to of all the things they had to be thankful for, la other words, to count her blessings. She says she honestly did count her blessings and found that she had a great deal to be thankful for. and It certainly minimized her despair. Overcoming this obstacle she feels has made her a better person, and she has found great happiness despite tha fact that aha has been deaied what the to much wanted. |