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Show FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3.J958 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH PAGE THREE I Across yi 'Ri pc2 I ' Xt?r?t t S'-" ideas from other editor i that nobody will believe them. Dis-order-ed nerves and a bad digestion are common because of back-bitin- From the Chickasha Star, Chlck-ash- a, Oklahoma: Various problems concerning agriculture are widely and continuously discussed. But there's one major problem that we don't hear enough about and Its name is fire. The Department of Agriculture tells us that fire losses on the na-tion's farms have shown an almost steady increase over the past 18 years. In that span of time, the loss has gone up about two and a half times from $64 million in 1940 to $152 million last year. Fire is a menace anywhere. It is particularly so on farms. Fire protective facilities are often of limited value, at best, and in many instances are or vir-tually so. When fire strikes, espe-cially in the hot dry season, the chance of a total loss Is high. Inflation has brought with it an-other and related problem. The house or barn or other structure a farmer built 20 years ago will cost twice as much today if it has to be replaced, and perhaps more. That goes for equipment and pos-sessions of practically every kind, large and small. The consequence is that farmers like most of the rest of us are under-insure- From The Lincoln Times, Lin-coln, N.C.: 1. Keep skid chains on your tongue; always say less than you think. Cultivate a low persua-sive voice. How you say it often counts more than what you say. 2. Make promises sparingly and keep them faithfully, no matter what it costs you. 3. Never let an opportunity pass to say a kind or encouraging thing to or about somebody. Praise good work done, regardless of who did it. 4. Bo interested in others, inter-ested in their pursuits, their wel-fare, their home and families. Make merry with those who rejoice; with those that weep, mourn. Let every-one you meet, however humble, feel that you regard him as one of importance. 5. Reserve an open mind on all debatable questions. Discuss, but don't argue. It is a mark of supe-rior minds to disagree and yet be friendly. 6. Let your virtues, if you have any, speak for themselve", and re-fuse to talk of another's vices, Dis-courage gossip. 7. Be careful of another's feel-ings. (Wit and humor at the other fellow's expense is rarely Worth the elfort and may hurt where least expected. 8. Pay no attention to remarks about you. Simply live so proving work in machino account-ing. Mr. Crowther becama one of the Division's top award winneri for hit) suggestion on improving pay-roll deduction card processing. The suggestion is expected to result in an estimated savings of $1,218 during the first year it is in effect. Meanwhile, a total of 4$ addi-tional suggestions paid employees $ 1,375 during the month of Aug-ust for an estimated savings to the Division of $5,466. Other top award winners for the month included: Ward L. Brunson of Magna, who was paid $500 for a suggestion on eliminating losses of metal bearing material through sampling work in the Utah Arthur Mill flotation experimental section; Farrell J. Roberts and Wallace B. Cameron, both of Magna who shar-ed a $170 award for a suggestion regarding a grinding attachment for sharpening gun drills. Since the inauguration of the Suggestion System and Patent Plan program at the Utah Copper Di-vision in April of 195 7, a total of $30,623 has been paid employees for suggestions improving opera-tions, work methods and safety. Some 865 employees shared in the payments for an estimated savings to the Division of $74,055. rity years ugo the 12 southern r' ' ! had four wood pulp mill with u ...' -- d capacity of 50,000 short tuns, which was then 2 per cent of the notional pulp output for paper making. Today, 67 south-ern pulp mills can produce some 13 million short tons, 67 per cent ' of national capacity. A colliery In South Africa, sup-plying a new plant, recently put Into service a convey-or belt nearly a mile and a quarter in length, the longest conveyor to be found on the African continent. The belt carries coal from mine to distillation plant. SUGGESTION AT KENNECOTT IMPROVES ACCOUNTING Salt Lake City Kenneth B. Crowther, of 5082 South 550 West, Ogden, employee of the machine accounting section of the Utah Copper Division of Kennecott Copper Corporation, was recently paid $305 for a suggestion im- - : copperton : Betty Mae Winn, 643-- Athena Floros Ph. 654 a Tuesday Mrs. Ray Cowdell visit-ed in Kearns with Mrs. Norma Jones and son, Denny, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cowdell and child-ren, Debbie and Michael. Mrs. Louis DeCol and daughter, Joyce, spent Tuesday afternoon in Salt Lake City where they shopped and later enjoyed lunch. Mark Kay Doman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Doman of Mid-Val-spent last week end with visiting Nicky Floros. Mr. and Mrs. George Abplannlp enjoyed dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Max Ivie and daughter, Kathy,, of Bingham. Wednesday evening Mr. and Mrs. . Clinton Poulsen attended a birth- - day party given in honor of their son, Don Poulsen of Midvale. Mrs. Ray Cowdell and Mrs. AM bert Ray were luncheon guests Monday at the home of Mrs. Al- - j bert Cowdell of Sandy. Later they visited with Mrs. Ed Parker and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Oliver. Mrs. Ray Larsen and Mrs. Ron-ald Huntsman spent Wednesday afternoon visiting in Provo with Mrs. Jane Larsen. A lovely patio birthday party was given Saturday evening by Mrs. Kay Olsen in honor of her daughter, Sherri, and Larry Wayne Wilcox of Midvale. Other guests present were Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Beckstead and children, Gary, Glen and Steve, of Riverton, and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wilcox and chil-dren, Marjorie Lou and Becky Lane of Midvale. Mr. and Mrs. Earl DeCol and children, Randy, Lynette, Jerry, and Shelly Fay, of Riverton visited Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Louis DeCol and family. Miss Sharon Rawlings, former resident of Copperton, visited Wed-nesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Nick Floros and family, Athena, Pam, and Nicky. They later at-tended the football game. Mrs. Ray Cowdell spent the day Friday visiting in Orem with her mother, Mrss. Daisy Draper. Mr. and Mrs. Neldon Chadwick spent Sunday evening visiting with their daughter and son-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mellen and child-ren, Bobby, Jerry, Billy, and Steven of Salt Lake City. Dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ray Sunday evening were Mr. and Mrs. Ken-neth Ray and children, Steven, Suzie, Ricky, and Michael, of Salt Lake City. Mrs. V'ida Rae Russell and chil-dren, Robyn, ReNae, and Roylane, of Kearns are spending the week perton members are invited to at-tend. Mrs. flosmer Peterson and Mrs. Stanley Long attended an execu-tive board luncheon at the Midvale Junior High Wednesday. Mrs. Elva Jensen and Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Winn of Midvale, for-merly of Copperton, are spending a few day visiting relatives and sightseeing in Elko, Nev. Miss Sherri Olsen was honored with a birthday party Tuesday af-ternoon in celebration of her I Ith birthday given for her by her mo-ther, Mrs. Ray Olsen. A weiner roast was enjoyed and fun games were played. Guests attending were Christine Winn, Claudia Long, Barbara Jimas, Mitzie Muhar, Mar-jorie Garrett, Christine Johnson, LaDean Robison, Ann Stocks, Ann Marie Zanardi, JoAnn Dellagnola, and Randy Chestnut and Myra Wilson of Bingham. Sherri receiv-ed many nice gifts. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Poulsen and daughter, Kathy, visited with friends and relatives in Fairview and Mt. Pleasant Sunday. Mrs. Hosmer Peterson and Mrs. Stanley Lorig attended a P-T-clinic held Friday, September 26, at West Jordan Elementary School. Mrs. Peterson was in charge of membership and Mrs. Long was in visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Poulsen. Dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nick Floros and fam-ily Sunday afternoon were Mr. and Mrs. Gus Pappas and daughter, Melva, of Magna, and Mr. and Mrs. Nick Mastoris and daughter, Rose-an- n of Salt Lake City. Mrs. Bill Densley and children, Cindy and Douglas, of Kearns vis-ited Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Louis DeCol and family. Mrs. Albert Ray was luncheon guest Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Melba Sadler. Other guests present were Mrs. Phoebe Johnson and Mrs. Hazel Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Miller enter-tained at a family dinner party in honor of Mrs. Edgar Hocken of Newport, Ore., Tuesday evening. Other guests present were Mr. and Mrs. Heber Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. George Blake and Mr. and Mrs. George Gadd of Copperton, Mr. and Mrs. Vard Tucker of Delta, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nichols of Bing-ham and Mr. and Mrs. William Nichols and son, Blaine, and Mrs. Jane Rico of Midvale. Mrs. Hocken returned to her home in Oregon Wednesday morning. She had been spending the past week here visit-ing with relatives. charge of programing. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Winn and children, Christine, Janie and Chucky enjoyed dinner Monday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Barnett of Salt Lake City. Mrs. Eugene Morris visited with Mr. and Mrs. Dee Christensen Sun-day. Mrs. Rusty Throckmorton, Mrs. Nan Walters and Mrs. Fae Poulsen attended the matinee of "South Pacific" and enjoyed lunch in town Wednesday. Mrs. Luella Willis iss now re-cuperating at home from an illness for which she had been hospitalized. O j Copperton School A Copperton Elementary School P- - (TA president, Mrs. Betty Norden, and her staff wish to thank all who . helped with the fair held at the I Copperton Grade School last Fri-day. It was enjoyed by all who saw it. There were many fine exhibits and the "Foreign Lands" was out-standing. To all who attended or had exhibits, a hearty thanks. Mrs. Mary E. Yates, resident of Midvale, is spending a few days re-cuperating from a broken arm, at the home of her granddaughter, Mrs. Berniece Foster. Copperton Ward Relief Society officers would like to announce the coming of their opening party and work day. It will be next Tuesday, October 7, at 10 a.m. The day will open with a party and then special guest, Mrs. LaRue Hamilton of Riverton will present her renown-ed gift ideas to members present in preparation of work day. A lunch-eon will also be served. All Cop- - 1 HALF-PA- ST TEEN ppdbjr--- i II p gJJ SOMETHING Itf 4 ?s7 ihis iveefcsy? y patterns.! XC 1539 JJ Iff fH0TO'6UID Combination slip and pantie Patterr No. 1539 A WELL filling slip and pantit combination designed in half sizes to fii the shorter, fuller figure to perfection. No. 1539 with PHOTO-GUID- is in sizes. 12'i. H',, 16',. 18',, 20',, 22',, 24',, 2o',. Size J4'1( 35 bust, slip 4V, yards of ; panfisj, 1 ' yards. Needlework Pattern No. 223 Gay colors and simple stitches art used to embroider these love-bir- designs on linens and wearables. No. 223 hat hot-iro- transfer color chart. Send 35c for each combination slip and pantie pattern, 25c for each needle work pattern ladd 5c for each pattern for mailing) to AUDREY LANE BUREAU, Dept. "NWNS," 367 West Adams Street. Chicago 6, III. SEE US FOR EXPERT REPAIR SERVICE AND QUALITY PRODUCTS DEALERS IN: CONOCO PRODUCTS CHRYSLER AND PLYMOUTH CARS ADDERLEY & NICHOLS GARAGE Chirk and Ren Phone 88 why Ancient Age can say: If JusjLUJ M ISeU II gun o) oj i1isy III n l!J li liuo The answer is on the Ancient Age That's why, no matter when or label. It clearly reads, "Distilled and where you buy this superb bourbon Bottled by Ancient Age Distilling ... the fact that it's all distilled at TdV Company." The word "distilled" the one distillery assures you of uni- - yrv tells you that we, and we alone, make formity. The distinctive taste and w'jj-- V every drop of Ancient Age ... that bouquet are always the same ...drink l!p$' we use nothing but original and after drink, bottle after bottle. t??rK'' genuine Ancient Age Bourbon. Try Ancient Age tonight. After Jlihy What's more, Ancient Age is made one taste you'll understand why we 'axnatti in one place only ... at the distillery continue to say: "If you can find a v9y7"?B. in Frankfort, Kentucky. better bourbon ... buy it !" bB5 mimtMwPI KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 8 YEARS OLD ss proof I ANCIENT age distilling co frankfort, ky someone aivay at school ? keep up on the news by long distance Remember, rotes are lowest otter 6 P.M. and oil day Sunday always lower when you call Mountain States Teltphonn BBBHDkaH WE'LL SEE YOU AT THE BINGHAM CLUB BEER ON TAP LOCAL AND EASTERN BOTTLED BEER Sam Feraeo, Prop. Here NT There Paul (Bear) Bryant, the football coach Alabama University is count-- Ing on to put the Tide teams back in the national spotlight, has the ninth-be- st coaching; record of any coach at 108 major colleges in the nation. The record doesn't tell the whole story, either. Bryant took over head coaching Jobs at Mary-land, Kentucky, and Texas A & M when football was at Its lowest. His record for 13 years: -8 (.688 per cent) . . . Bryon Pool and Lonnle Kirkpatrlck of Carmi, 111., smashed their own record when they won the 1,069-mil- e Mis-sissippi River Marathon for out-boar-from New Orleans to St. Louis. Their time: 29 hours, 29. minutes fastest any man, boat or motor ever made the trip. The second place finishers were less than three minutes behind. Twenty-ei-ght boats from nine states started the race and the first nine finishers beat the race record of 44 hours, 19 minutes, set by Pool and Kirkpatrlck in last year's race. OS ROAD TO RECOVERY . . . Dodger catcher Roy Campanella at his first open press confer-ence since he was paralyzed in an auto accident on January 28. CROSSWORD PUZZLE 1 3 5 ' 6 1 la 19 no t . : Jil ) lis TTi Wz.7o Si- 57 25 2T 27 28 Siv 29 " """" " " - v 32 IT" ?M: W -. " " n w --1 35 :;S 3 37 38 39 40 - m 44 45 46 !w' ::-- '.''.' 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' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 50 Mark as paid 13 Fruit Ipl ) B4 Babylonian 21 Operated Answer to Puztle So. 517 STATEMENT REQUIRED BY THE ACT OF AUGUST 24, 1912, AS AMENDED BY THE ACTS OF MARCH 3, 1933, AND JULY 2, 1946 (Title 39, United State Code, Section 233) SHOWING THE OWNERSHIP, MANAGE-MENT, AND CIRCULATION OF 1 he Bingham Bulletin, published every Friday at Bingham Canyon, Utah, for September 30, 1958. 1. The names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor, and business mr.nagers are: John Adamelc, Bingham Canyon, Utah. 2. The owner is: John Adamek and Gladyo L. Adamek, 443 Main St., Bingham Canyon, Utah. 3. The known bondholders, mor-gagee-and other security holders owning or holding I percent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities are: None. 4. Paragraphs 2 and 3 include, in cases where the stockholder or security holder appeals upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduciary relation, the name of the person or corporation for whom such trustee is acting; also the statements in the two para-graphs show the affiant s full know-ledge and belief as to the circum-stances and conditions under which stockholders and security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and secuurities in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner. 5. The average number of copies of each issue of this publication sold or distributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers dur-ing the 12 months preceding the date shown above was: 612. JOHN ADAMEK Sworn to and subscribed before me this 1st day of October, 1958. MAE ST1LLMAN (SEAL) Notary Public My oom. exp,;r Jaoutry 9, 1962. |