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Show PAGE FOUR THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1353 Local Happenings e APRIL WEDDING Lighted candelabra and floral arrangements of pink carnations and gladioli formed an attractive background for Mr. and Mrs. Kay D. Butt, as they greeted reception Ruests Friday evening, April 2(1. The event was held at Grant 10th Ward meet-inghouse. Earlier in the day the bride, the former Miss Margie Ilene Lund, exchanged wedding prom-ises with her (bridegroom in Salt Lake Temple rites. Elder George Q. Morris of the Council of the Twelve officiated. Following the ceremony the bridal party gathered for a wed-ding breakfast at the home of the bride's brother in law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Lat-imer, 350 S. West Temple. The lovely bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Lund, Mt. Pleasant. Parents of the bride groom are Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. R. Butt of Copperton. At the reception the bride was WW WW W - attractively gowned in a model of lace and tulle underbred with satin. The molded lace bo-dice wa.s styled with long sleev-es tapering to lily points over the wrists and a The full skiit of tulle Was enhanced by an inset of lace with a flounce of pleated tulle encircling the hemline. Her fingertip veil of sheer bridal illusion cascaded from a crown of pearls and she carried a bouquet of pink and white roses. Attending the bride were her two sisters, Miss Ruth Lund, maid of honor, and Mrs. Latimer, Mrs. Roger Howell, Mrs. Warren M. Hunt and Miss Louise Ro-berts. Their Ballerina length gowns were in shades of coral and blue taffeta with net over-skirt- s. Vivian Butt performed duties of best man for his brother. Ush-ers were Wynne Foster, Kenneth Beckstrom and Raio Eastwood. Entertaining at prenuptial par-ties have been Mrs. Melvin J. Lund, Mrs. Howell, Mrs. Latimer and Mrs. Clinton R. Butt. Bingham Ward MIA gave the program in church last Sunday night. They presented their mu-sic and speech festival. Opening the program was a welcome by Mrs. Irene Shatter. Narrators were Dorothy Slotte, Jeanne Sanchez and Carma Ray. Num-bers were: voice of scripture, Karen Bell; reading from scrip-tures, Sharon Porter; talk "Free-dom", Russell Shafter; speech, "My Work In MIA", Carol Hog-lun- d; talk "Clean Speech", Rich-ard Johnson; talk "Power of Prayer", Toni Stewart; five songs by the chorus "American Prayer", "1 Have A Testimony", "Let Us Oft Speak Kind Words to Each Other", "Prayer Perfect" and "I Shall Not Pass Again This Way"; closing prayer, Madeleine Sanchez. Music was under direc-tion of Mrs. Beulah Stewart and speech was under direction of Marcele Speirs. House guests over the week end of Mr. and Mrs. II. R. Oust were their son and family, Mr. and 'Mrs. Russell Gust and child-ren, Susan and Terry, Mrs. Lil-lian Hoggan and Frances Fields, all of MoGill, Nev. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Becksrtead and family of Delta spent the day Monday visiting with Mr. Beckstead's sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Shafter and family. Another brother, Ned LeRoy Beckstead of Los Angeles, Calif., visited at the Shafter home Tuesday. The parent-teach- er conferences held Thursday, April 19 and on Tuesday, April 24 at Bingham Central school were reported well attended. vention there Thursday through Saturday. She will give a workshop on folk danc-ing. Ten members from Ruth Re-bek- ah Lodge iNo. 7 made a visit to the Magna Rebekah lodge last Friday night. Those going were Mrs. Helen Sullenger, Miss Ag-nes Sullenger, Mrs. Willadeen Householder, Mrs. Ruth House-holder, Mrs. June McLeod, Mrs. Naudyne Swenson, Mrs. Mabel Jenson, Mrs. Charlotte Murano, Mrs. Helen Peterson and Mrs. Delia Delia Lucia. Bingo was played after the meeting and refreshments were served. Mrs. Sullenger and 'Miss Sullenger won prices at bingo. Regular meeting of Ruth Re-bekah lodge No. 7 will be held next Tuesday, May 1st at the Civic Center at 7 p.m. according to Mrs. Naudyne Swenson, sec-retary. Mrs. Delia Delia Lucia will be hostess. All members are invited to attend. Eagles Auxiliary will meet Wednesday evening May 2, at 8 p.m. at the Eagles liome. Hostess will be Mrs. Anna Murray and Mrs. Eunice Collings. All mem-bers invited. Mrs. Virginia H. McDonald of the Bingham High School iacul-ty- , left Wednesday for Reno, Nev., to attend the Southwest Annual Physical Education oon- - Retail sales on a nation-wid- e basis for all kinds of stores will climb to a new peak this year, it is predicted, with sales near the $173 billion mark. The greatest eaters of cereals In Europe are the Turks, who con-sume an average of ISO pound each a year. Although Michigan is best known as an automobile producing state, It actually manufactures 81 per cent of all types of Industrial goods. Limited Job opportunities for older people, coupled with a rising average life span, have come to mean that at age 60 the average person can look forward to fifteen years of life but only nine years of work. Llederkranz cheese is made only in Van Wert. Ohio. The tangy. g cheese was discovered ac-cidentally by an apprentice 63 years ago and named after a New York singing society to which it was first served. CROSSWORD PUZZLE II 12 13 14 Im:;;:.! J 16 17 IS 19 imiM III 112 jlJ $1 --""i&Ts p i8 - ; m mmm irm ww ' tAlUt mjmmi iss msjbsv --mmm JV w mm uutf iWtyi MAs 30 " 32 33 34 31 W :m .:.::;: ffifr :::; W 4klU mm. i. . U 1111W 1V1 59 60 61 ip", 62 63 64 64 TT mm " . t. 6? T n - - M.A 1 : 1 7S I I I I M I I I I : 111! j , PUZZLE So. 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L 2. 5 E JJfHf 0 R E 8 42 Liked 8 Compound e E R , E M E TE U 71 IT Intensely ether ' EJ I I XI 44 Unruly 9 Golf team NO TE 5 8 E H outbreak 10 Division of PLANNED STa E S T 0 R Tl 43 To wander school year .LLJL n p 7T nTa T"777n about 11 Winged 47 Approaches 12 Tree .!LL" INSET ESSE 49 First woman 13 Courag t r T Inlr Irlnl TTTH 50 Orderly 21 Without I M3lal I "l I1 ul 3I sequences 23 Gone by 32 Narrow 23 Bird's claw Answsr to Pauls N. 3!M IPenney'sJ endofthe MONTH BARGAINS BOYS SWIM TRUNKS "style : 1.00 6 ONL-Y- BOYS WINTER COATS $3 & $5 WOMENS SLIPS ST$2 & $3 CANVAS PLAY SH0ES,sf 2.49 WOMENS SPRING COATS $10 & $15 SILK HEAD SQUARES wSZi!sr 1.00 COTTON BRAS SIZE 32 TO ZS 50C MENS NYLON SOCKS STSZl .. . 506 TODDLER GIRLS NYLON DRESSES 2.00 TV SERIES for Everyone This Week: "THE CROSS AND THE CROWN" Station KUTV Channel 2 Saturdays at 1:43 p.m. (Sunday i to b announced later). CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT Due to the small amount In-volved, we do not accept want ads except on a er basis. No ads taken by telephone. FOR SALE BY OWNER 4 rm. house, full basement, 6 ft. sun porch, garage 24 x 40, approx. 3'2 acres ground. $5,000 cash. Call Arnold Beals, AM or at 5850 So. 6th West, yy LOST Monday, April 16 a pair of bov's glasses. Phone 404 or see Mrs. J. B. Archuleta. 637 Copperfield. LOST Boys red tricycle Mon-day night near 586 Main St. Reward. See Adolph Trujillo at 586 Main, or Phone 514. FISHERMEN Hand-tie- d flies. $1.00 dosen, 10c each. Contact V. Forsnes. Phone 32. HOME FOR SALE 4359 West 5570 So Kearns. 2 bdrm. home with att. gar hardwood floors, carpeited Iv. rmu hallway and one bedrm., new water healer, storm door and windows. Lennox furnace, lg. lot, beautifully andscaped. Completely fenced with lifetime chain link fence. Good value. Must see to appreci-ate. Call Bingham 159 or Call EM KALM ft CO. 313 East 9th South Salt Lake City FOUND in Copperton, a set of car keys. May be claimed at Bulletin office by identifying and paying for this ad. NEW MIDVALE HOMES READY FOR OCCUPANCY Large brick, massive fireplace, birch cabinets, many extras. Price $15,950.00. 3 BEDROOM SPECIAL Lovely 3 -- bed room brick, built in rane and oven, dining room opens to patio, full basement. Price $14,950.00. HONEYMOON COTTAGE 2 bedrooms, large kitchen with built-i- n laundry, attached garage. Buy now and decorate. Only $12,950.00. G. Grant Martineau HOME BUILDER AND DESIGNER AM AM AM 26 IN 1924 Charles H. Winn started as a brakeman ac be called a tradition. In all, 691 men at the mine, the Bingham Mine of the then Utah Copper Com mills and refinery are the sons of Kennecott em- - pany. Today, as a locomotive engineer at the mine, ployees. And hundreds more are related in other he still is helping to produce copper. What started ways as brothers, uncles, nephews, cousins and as a job 32 years ago, has turned into a career at in-law- s. This family allegiance to Kennecott tells Kennecott Copper Corporation. And two more only a part of the story of careers in copper, generations of Charles H. Winn's family are follow-- Anothef chaptef $ ing in his tootsteps. Kennecott honored 206 employees who had com-- His son, Charles E., joined the Kennecott fam-- plcted 20 years of continuous service and 51 other ily in 1951 when he started as a trackman at the employees who had completed 30 years of service, mine. He is a dispatcher today. Of Kennecott's 6,500 employees, 1,019, or nearly And his grandson, Kenneth W. Foster, started one-sixt- h, have served 20 or more years, a total of with Kennecott in 1950 ai a trackman. He is now more than 30,000 years! a payroll clerk. jpjtn so many long-tim- e employees and father The "like father, like son" history of the Winn son teams serving Kennecott, it must follow that family is repeated so often at Kennecott it can well the Kennecott tradition is careers, not just jobs. Mhnnecott Copper Corporation 0l---; -- - "A Good Neighbor Helping to Build a Better Utah" jannnnaacnnaacnnccnnnnEnnnnnnn FOR BETTER MEATS GIVE US A TRY I POULTRY CHEESE QUALITY MEATS BUTTER EGGS BINGHAM MEAT CO. Clarence Robison W. H. Harris Clinton Roblson Phone 5 We Deliver WE'LL SEE YOU AT THE BINGHAM CLUB " BEER ON TAP LOCAL AND EASTERN BOTTLED BEER Sam Feraco, Prop. |