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Show FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1057 APF toUR ' ' JTHE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM OANYOM- - VTAtt r Fishermen along the coait of Brazil go to sea on peeled-lo- g rafti called jangadas. Centerboard, iail and steering oar complete the craft's primitive design. better diagnosis and better re-cord keeping toy families for genealogical purposes. A prime research center on muscular dystrophy is located in Salt Lake City headed by Dr. Frank H. Tyler, of Salt Lake General Hospital and the Uni-versity of Utah. Mr. Wooley, a Utah native, has spent most of his business career associated with newspapers and magazines and in fund raising activities. He spent about 20 years in New York City, where he was on the staff of the New York Herald Tribune. During World War II he served on the staff of Yank, The Army Weekly-Mus-cular dystrophy is an ail-ment in which the muscles de-generate, leaving the patient ex-tremely weak. It has varying degrees, and varying ages of on-set, but most often strikes chil-dren between the ages of 3 and 6, usually becoming fatal in the late teens or early 2t's, Medical science knows neither the cause nor the cure. The Muscular Dys-trophy Associations of America, through its chapters, usually or-ganized by counties, fosters re-search to find the complete means of control of the ailment, engages in public education to facilitate the adjustment of pa-tients, their families and friends, and provides patient service .to facilitate the care of patients by their families. The disease is known to be about 35 per cent inherited. How ever, some authorities believe that it is 100 per cent inherited, but that those cases where no known ancestor was afflicted, the number of generations skip-ped were too numerous to trace. Utah statistics are incomplete, but authorities believe that while the beehive state rate for the ailment is about twice the na-tional average, this due only to MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY SECRETARY NAMED Peter B. Woolley, of Bountiful, has been named executive secre-tary for the Muscular Dystrophy Associations of America, Inc., to cover Utah, Idaho and Montana. " m,. cy Jo will remain with her grand parents for a few weeks visit. .Mr. and Mrs. Josh Hawks and family, J. D. and Julee, left Wed-nesday morning to return to their home in Portage after spending two weeks here with Mrs. Hawks' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Morris and other relatives. Julee who has spent the past six weeks with her grandoarents returned home with her parents and bro-ther. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Thomas arrived home Tuesday by air frpm Great Falls, Mont., where they attended the funeral of Bill's ibrother-in-la- Mr. and Mrs. Stanley W. Jac-ques attended a missionary fare-well party at Union Third Ward last Sunday honoring Lee Ash-to- n, son of Mr. and Mrs. .Ralph Ashton of Union, who is leaving soon to serve in the Gulf States Mission. Visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ira E. Moss late Sunday afternoon were Mrs. Leon Taylor and daughters, LaDonna and Ruth Ann, of Ogden. Mrs. Taylor is Mrs. Moss' youngest sister. Linger Longer club met Tues-day evening at Midvale as guests of Mrs. (Florence Bruno. Prizes at contract bridge were won by Mrs. Mae Stillman, Mrs. Aimer Berg, Mrs. Pete Smith and Mrs. J. T. Davis. Mystery sister gifts were exchanged. Delicious re-freshments were served by the hostess. Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Bentley and children, Bobby and Juli-ann- e, left Tuesday for Green Hiver, Wyo., to spend Memorial day with Mrs. Bentley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Kraft. Yvonne Sarrao, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Sarrao, who is majoring in physical education at the University of Utah, was awarded a six quarter medal for being active for two years in the Women's Recreation Association. Yvonne graduated from Bingham High School in 1955. , Spending this week with Mr. and Mrs. Ross M. Cushing is Mrs. Cushing's aunt, Mrs. Scena Tracy of Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton William-son and family, Bert and Nancy Jo, left Wednesday night to visit until Saturday in Vernal with Mrs. Williamson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Downard. Nan- - lunches. But the Chamber of Com-merce and the Manufacturers have not mentioned such fiscal matters as the hard money policy of tight credit and high Interest which added $1.1 billions to the budget for national debt Interest; nor the 27 H per cent oil depletion tax allowance which costs the IT. S. Treasury some $750 million a year; nor the billions in rapid tax write-off-s In 5 years instead of 20; nor the lease-purcha- pro-gram which is costing the govern-ment about double to own public buildings that it did when the Gov-ernment built them itself on bid contracts; nor the policy of letting private Industry do jobs which the government has been doing Itself. Under this policy the Govern-ment has been divesting Itself of PRESIDENT EISENHOWER, from the White House, got his dander up, and de-cided to make fight to preserve his budget of $78.1 billion, the big-gest budget in the country's his-tory. The President, at the start of his campaign found himself in an almost untenable position. Even his chief of the Government's fis-cal policy, Secretary Humphrey, has declared the budget could be cut considerably, and should be. When members of the Congress, In spirit of cooperation sent a form-al request to the President ask-ing him wherein cuts could be made in the budget without en-dangering security or the Presi-dent's programs, Mr. Elsenhower, rather superciliously sent back word that was not his job, but the lob of the Congress. Had the Pres- - many services which it has been doing Itself for years, and turn-ing these jobs over to private in-dustry. When Government off-icials complained It cost them more money, Mr. Brundage ruled: "The decision to continue or discontinue an activity as being in the public interest should NOT depend pri-marily upon whether the product or service can be produced cheap-er by the government. As a gen-eral guide our policy is that ap-parent cost or savings should not be the deciding factor where ade-quate competition exists." Of course iff anybody's guess, but the best Informed people in Washington predict the budget will wind up with a cut of up to $4 billion, even though it might be that some of the top flighters might be hurt, like for Instance. Secretary Charles Wilson, who says all this hue and cry for budg-et cuts by his friends, "Gives me a pain." ident then and there, sent back a second budget message, saying that at the time the Budget was presented at the beginning of this Congress, it appeared the money would be needed, but that after some consideration, he believed it could be cut, and had pointed out where, there is every likeli-hood the Congress would have gone along with him. Now, with his program of legis-lation endangered, he found it too late to compromise and con-sidered an all-o- fight to retain his budget requests. Even his friends of the business communi-ty, members of the U. S. Cham-ber of Commerce, and the Nation-al Association of Manufacturers are demanding huge chunks be sliced out of the budget But even these demands do not get at the real fat which could help the tax-payers. They cite cuts in foreign aid, (arm supports, social serv-ices, aid to education, even school Approximately 100,000 new cases of tuberculosis are being reported annually, at the rate of one every five minutes. o Via fie.Sez Canal the distnnce f.im London to Bombay is 6,300 miles and it Is 10,800 miles via . the Cape of Good Hope. There are more than two dozen Elaciers on Mount Rainier. Their square expanse constitutes the largest single-pea- k glacier system in the United States. Jute, East Pakistan' chief ex-port crop whose fiber makes cloth and burlap bags, grows 8 to 10 feet tall. It is planted in water, usually in small jungle patches. Harvested with long knives, the stalks are tied in bundles and left for three days until leaves drop off. Then the bundles are placed under water for two weeks. ' The soft pith of the plant ferments and the long, tough fibers can be stripped easily from the stalks. Fly ash, formerly a wasted by-product of coal consumption in generation of electricity, now is a valuable manufacturing raw ma-terial, used in a multiple number of products, Including ready-mixe- d concrete, building blocks of cin-der and concrete, road base coking material in highway construction, as a' sand substitute in sand blast-ing, and many others. The oldest American college abroad is Robert College in Istan-bul, Turkey. Located on the Euro-pean shore of the Bosphorus, It was founded in 1863. Mold doesn't necessarily mean that cheese has spoiled. Trim off the mold andrewrap the cheese properly. - "" " " 1 The Code of Hammurabi In 2250 B.C. recognized that the eye was so Important that severe penalties were given to physicians who caused the loss of an eye of a patient. Farewell Party Held At Bingham Central Harman's in Sugarhouse was the setting .Monday night for a very lovely dinner party at which Mrs. Ella M. Lee and dau-ghter, Mrs. Ivie, and Mrs. Helen Sullenger, who are leaving the school system this year, were honored guests. Special guests wre Supt. and Mrs. Reed H. Btvkstead. The event was host-ed by Bingham Central School personnel. Besides the above mentioned those attending were Principal ar.d Mrs. Ira E. Moss, Mrs. Maude Stillman, Miss Bea-trice Stringham, Mrs. Virginia Seal, Mr. and Mrs. James Peter-son, Mrs. Ethleen Burnham, Mr. land ,Mrs. Gam Stoker, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Crawford, Miss Neva Cropper, Mr. and Mrs. Louie Spera, Mr. and Mrs. Hugo jBianchi, Miss Faye White and Mr. and Mrs. Coray. A gift of luggage was presented Mrs. Lee and bedspreads were presented to Mrs. Sullenger. Gifts were made possible through contribu-tions under Jordan Education Association, Jordan School Dis-trict and Bingham Central School. Veterans will be collecting $2.9 billion by 1960 in government pen-sions and bonuses for military service, notes a survey of the Twentieth Century Fund. A PAUL F. KENNER PUBLIC-ACCOUNTA- NT INCOME TAX PLANNING AND REPORTING GENERAL ACCOUNTING AND AUDITING if Waterfill the (WiSfewW or Sl KENTUCKY BOURBON faastl 0'S6 WATEKIU AMD FtAIItl DISHUKT COMPAHT. IAIDSTOWN, KiMTUCU CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT Due to the small amount In-volved, we do not accept want ads except on a cash-with-ord- er basis. No ads taken by telephone. FOR SALE 3 New Brick Homes 1 2--bedroom. 2 3 bedroom, located in . Sandy, near achools and Salt Lake Cily bus. For in-formation call AM Greenwood. i USED FURNITURE BEST OFFER TAKES ALL OR ANY PART. MUST SELL Call Bingham 235 11:00 AM. to 4:00 P-- FOR SALE: home, $8,000. Modern, carport, full basement, gas fixtures. Near ten., church, business. 12972 S. 1770 West. Riverion. Ph. Bing. 625-- FEMALE HELP WOMEN 18-5- to address and mail our circulars at home on commission. Write GIFT FAIR. (Dept. 8), Springfield. Penna. 3 SALESGIRLS WANTED Clean, pleasant work. Experience preferred. Call Mike Levenlis. Bingham 235, 11 A.M. to 4 P.M. $6500 buys cozy 3 bedroom frame near Sandy Grade School. $4250 buys 2 bedroom. West Jor-dan. Nice lot. $1500 buys excellent lot on Red-wood Road near West Jordan. Lovely 3 bedroom brick, two baths, Midvale. CRAWFORD REALTORS AM AM AM Drive with core . . . everywhere! , ,-''r- H ' 0r "i mrm f'""" mtmmK loves to cut loose and cover the miles! If you're looking for a real "escape artist," -- not with Chevrolet's nigh-perfor-a car that loves to step out and get ance V8 on the pulling end. You've got $B5w IxZi&KF away from it all-w- ell, it just happens up to 245 horsepower here for the Kjvjjm that Chevy was born with that urge, biggest helping of driving pleasure found fQlgMP tggry If there ever was a car that loved to in the low-pri- ce field! t. cut loose and cover the miles, it's this Chevy's new Positraction rear axle fCHEVR 0LETfl one. Yet it's so easy to handle that it (optional at extra cost) adds still more - Vf1 even makes city traffic seem a bit pleasure. It delivers greater power to J lighter and parking places a bit bigger, the wheel that grips, not the wheel that get a wlmg deal on Chevy's pretty easygoing out on the slips. You have surer control and better raE champion! highway too. Not pokey. Far from it. traction on any road surface. , You fad, for example, there isn't a hill Stop by your Chevrolet dealer's around that can make it breathe hard before another good driving day goes by. available at extra cost. Only franchised Chevrolet dealers JijlM jjj.tij display this famous trademark See Your Local Authorized Chevrolet Dealer e OPEN HOUSE 334 COTTONWOOD STREET Brand new 3 -- bedroom brick home, dining room, Yorktown birch kitchen with snack bac Vo baths, laundry, attached garage. F.H.A. Terms. Ask about our complete CUSTOM HOME SERVICE if Plans and Design Counsel ir Mortgage Financing Available ir Expert Construction Service ir Reasonable Prices For The Best In New Homes Contact jgEHERraHTRACTOilBEDEjS Wto'5m!i1gAH 5-15- 11 NEWSPAPER ADS SQUEEZE MORE OUT OF YOUR ADVERTISING D0UAR. v ,7 VEHI AND SO 1 EASY TO USE..J Julius Caesar imported the first giraffe to Europe in 46 B.C. The animal was exhibited in Reme. Diseases of the heart and cir-culation are responsible year In and year out for at least 150,000,-00- 0 lost man-day- s of employment I Or FRIEDA S A U1TI COMBS TO MOtiE.il ...BUT UT& FACE IT TManaged to qet r'4 c?f every one of my ( pay checks for go years lf structress, was unable to be pres-ent due to her husband having had a heart attack. The grand president was also unable to be there on account of a stroke and sent the gTand vice president to represent her. Concluding the day's events was a banquet in the evening followed by a dance. According to all reports every-one had a wonderful time. j Attend BLF&E Convention Representing B. L. F. & E. Oquirrh Lodge No. 844 and their auxiliary, Galeena Lodge at the state meeting of the Brotherhood and Ladies Society at Milford last Saturday were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bentley, Mrs. Mamie English, Mrs. Anna Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Nielsen, Mrs. Eunice Rae Collings, A. L. Nel-son, William Ablett, Miles Gay-thwait- e, Jloy Pratt and Mr. and Mrs. .Martin Jensen. Attending from. iMid-Valle- y Lodge of Mid-vale were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shafter, Mrs. Nora Austin and son, Arthur, Mrs. Joy Bills, Mrs. Leajherwood and two other la-dies. A cocktail party was held Friday night for those attending the meeting. Saturday sessions included conjoint meeting of the ladies and the brotherhood in the morning and at noon a lun-cheon was served to the joint group. During the ladies after-noon meeting, the brotherhood were taken on a tour of Milford and also toured Old Horn Silver Mine. Emma Hoffman, grand in- - "I REMEMBER" 8Y THE OLD TIMERS ' From Mra. John Harris, Lin-coln Park, Michigan: I remember the old "Town Square" In a south-ern Iowa town where the stores went completely around the four sides. In the center was the park, enclosed with a hitch rack, we called it. It was a heavy chain running from post to post where the horses were tied. At one side was the Town Pump here the tired folk went to quench their thirst; where the children washed their faces, flushed from the summer heat; their dirty hands and their dusty feet. Nearby was the white band-stand,, with its gingerbread trim-ming. Once a week band con-certs were given and sometimes the Church women would have an ice cream supper. Sometimes it would be held on Saturday nitei when the country folk came In to bring their produce, do their shopping and then would congre-gate with the town folk In the park for a good visit. The young folk walked arm In arm around the square, munch-ing on peanuts and popcorn bought from the friendly old vendor on the corner. The children played tag and leap frog, stopping ones In a while to get a dish of ice cream and good home made cake. About nine o'clock the farm folks would begin their journey home, in all manner of convey-ances, buggies, wagons, horse-back and some afoot. Once in a while on the 4th o: July or Labor Day, we reallj celebrated. The bandstand and all other stands decorated with red. white and blue bunting. Tht band played martial music and the speakers held forth for hours we thought. Between the park and the stores would be a Merry-Go-Roun-a Ferris Wheel and one there was a dog show. If we had twenty-fiv- e cents o spend foi pink lemonade and popcorn, wt were in seventh heaven. |