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Show ' PAGE TWO THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1959 hope that they have helped you with your federal income taxes in tome way. INCOME TAX FACTS We hope you have already filed your 1958 federal income tax n. If not, then you should put this paper down and get that re-turn in the mail right now. If you find for tome reason be-yond your control it ii impossible for you to complete your federal income tax return for filing by midnight Wednesday, April I Sth, then you should request an exten-sion of time in which to file your return. Extensions are usually granted, for good reason, for a ninety-da- y period; although the Director may grant an extension for as long as six months, if the circumstances warrant. Requests for extensions of time are filed on forms furnished by the Treasury in triplicate, end the re-quest must be signed by you or your duly authorized agent. These forms are available at your local office of the Internal Revenue Service. All requests for extensions should be on these forms and three copies are necessary. However, if you are unable to secure the forms, a letter will do. Your application should clearly set forth the full cause of the delay and the probable time that you will be able to complete your return. It should give your full name and address as it will appear on your tax return when you do file. If, by reason of illness, absence or other good reason, you are un-able to sign this request, then any person in close business or per-sonal relationship with you may do so, provided the reason and rela-tionship are clearly stated in the request. In such case, the signer of the request will be considered your duly authorized agent for this pur-pose. Extensions are usually granted for a good reason, such as illness, accidents, inability to secure all the facts necessary to complete your return, etc. Extensions are never granted because you are unable to pay the tax. If you cannot pay the tax due, file your return anyway. Uncle Sam will send you a bill and you will have to pay it sooner or later. He will charge you 6 in-terest, but there will be no pen-alty. If you do not file your return on time, Uncle Sam will charge you 5 for each month that your return is late, up to a maximum of 25. So you see, it is a lot better to file the return even if you can't pay the tax. This scries of articles have been brought to you by the Utah Society of Public Accountants, F. H. Carl-ton, vice president, Salt Lake City, as a public feature service, and Slfjf Bittgljam Siillrtttt Issued Every Friday at Bingham Canyon, Salt Lake County, Utah. Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Bingham Canyon, Utah, Under the Act of March 3, 1879. NATION A I EDITORIAL UTMiMASSOcKriON Si association JOHN ADAMEK, Editor ar.d Publisher GLADYS L. ADAMEK, Assistant Editor Subscription Rate, per year in advance $2.50 Advertising Rates Furnished on Application The Pittsburgh Civic Center, to be built at a cost of $20,000,000, will have the world"! largest re-tractable dome. The movable roof. 415 feet In diameter, is to be made of nickel-containin- g stainless steel ' and will convert the open air sta-dium to a weather-proo- f auditori-um at the touch of a buttoa --s LAFF OF THE WEEK " w s. b n s i U 'i "The salary Is forty dollars a week, but we'd never hire anybody stupid enough to accept It." LARK NEWS Jackie Dalley PR Mr. and Mrs. Frnnk Peart of Eureka and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Nelson and daughter, Rye Ann, of Genola spent the day and wrre dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cressmen and daughter Helen. ' Mr. Denton Moulton of GranRer visited with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Moulton and family Thursday ev-ening. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Allinnon attended the funeral of Mr. Allin-son'- s uncle, LeGrand Gale, Wed-nesday in Beaver. While there they stayed overnight with Mrs. Gale. Mr. and Mis. Welby Rushton and children, Sandra and Russell, of Mesa, Ariz., were guests of Mrs. Carrie Reed over the week end. Robyn Peterson, daughter of Mr. and Mja. Robert Peterson of Mid-val-visited with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bigler, overnight Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hill and chil-dren, Kaye, Sandy, and Kirk, of Salt Lake City were Sunday morn-ing visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Max Lovell and family, Lucy Jane, Dee land Marilyn. Mr. and Mrs. Ramon Neilson and daughter, Nancy Lee, of Emmett, Ic'aho, were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Neilson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Reed and daughter, Scnja. Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ned Sorenson and family, Ned Jr., Neil, Ricky, Mac and Virginia, were Mr. and Mrs. Ray McCarty of Salt Lake City. Mrs. Cecelia Hopkins of Delta visited with her son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Hopkins and children, Ronald, Judy, Mike and JoAnn, from last Wednesday to Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lemmon and children, Anile and Benny, of Mag-na visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ever-ett Allinson and sons, Danny and Billy, Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. LeGrand Beckstrom and sons, Brent and Kirk, of West Jordan visited Tuesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Foist and daughters, Judy and Karen. Sunday evening visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Hopkins and fa-mily were Mr. and Mrs. Jim Barnes of Midvale. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Walker and daughter, Marsha, and Mrs. Jessie Neilaen and family, Wayne, Virginia, Marty and Barbara Jo, attended a family dinner Sunday given by Mrs. Virginia Seal of Riverton. Mr. and Mrs. Max Lovell and children, Dee and Marily, spent the day and were dinner guests Sun-day of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hough-ton and family, Calvin, Linda, Douglas, Sharon, Bob and June of Payson. Sunday afternoon visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Edwards and fam-ily, John, Marcine, Linda, Connie, Dewey and Dave were Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Peterson and family, Mar-lo- Marilyn, Renee and Ronald of Ogden. Attending the Primary general conference in Salt Lake City last Friday from Lark were Mrs. Hazel Sorenson, Mrs. Sylvia Hopkins, Mrs. Ruby Hansen, Mrs. Russell Armstrong, Nancy Nealley, Sonja Reed, Marilyn Holladay, Lucy Jane Lovell, Lorraine Rostron and Jack-ie Dalley. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Nealley and daughter, Nancy, had as dinner guests Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Mike Connor of Salt Lake City. Other visitors at the Nealley home Sun-day were Mr. and Mrs. Mel Dever-al- l of Taylorsville and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Nealley and daughter, Sharon of Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cressmen and daughter, Helen were dinner guests Thursday afternoon of Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Pierce and family of Murray. A. L HOHMAN IS CITED FOR LEADERSHIP Community building is not con-fined to elected city officials or men in public office. A. L. Hohman, and manager of The Florsheim Shoe Shop illustrates this point. He is one of the outstand-ing business men in Salt Lake City. His keen insight, ideas, and execu-tive ability make him as man fully capable of handling any situation which might confront him. The services which Mr. A. L. Hohman renders to our community are done because he has a fixed belief in its future. His well or-dered endeavors and keen business foresight have always been source of admiration and respect to all those who know him. Mr. Hohman is known to thou-sands as a progressive business man. His reputation for the honest conduct of this business" is very gratifying. He may always be de-pended upon to len ' his time and energy ' to any undertaking which will benefit the city as a whole. A. L. Hohman' record of is one of which he may be well proud. His value to Salt Lake City is an established fact, and we hasten to give him the credit which is justly due. Mr. Hohman is man who many are proud to call a friend. SSlBll By LYN CONNELLY JOHN NEWLAND, host and of ABC-TV'- s new week-ly series, "Alcoa Presents," is a great admirer of people who boost others to success . . . His reasoning reflects aid he received from three well-know- n TV per-sonalities: Fred Coe, Robert Montgomery and Loretta Young, all of whom had enough faith in him to give him a chance and ultimately put him where he is today . . . "My morale was pretty low in 1948 after two years in Hollywood, so I returned to New York." he said . . . "Fred Coe gave me a role in 12th Night on TV and from then on my acting career spiraled upward" . . . Dur-ing this period, Newland devel-oped an appetite for directing. "I feel the theater and tele-vision have a responsibility to say something in addition to en-tertaining and I knew there was more to the business than act-ing, so I turned to directing . . . I was appearing on 'Robert Mont-gomery Presents' on which I eventually did more than 100 plays, when I told Montgomery I wanted to direct ... He told me to observe and study the tech-niques of production . . . I took note of technical problems, cam-era movements and similar de-tails and one day I told him I was ready ... He gave me the chance." From then on Newland com-bined acting aftd directing . . . In 1956 he was asked by Loretta Young to direct and act In her TV shows , . . "Now I'm really enthuslastio about 'Alcoa Pre-sents' . . . For a change we're doing something different . . . Our sponsor is giving us a lot of free-dom and we're getting wonderful stories." AMONG human afflictions, has a unique dis-tinction. The more civilized man becomes, the more of a problem, and the fewer, his teeth become. "Man has proved too clever for his ' own good, dentally speak-ing," scientists have observed. Evidence indicates that dental decline began when man, more inventive than n pri-mates, resorted to using tools in-stead of teeth. The decline has continued ever since. Today, despite progress in other areas of health, dental disease is our most widespread chronic aliment. From it, few persons escape; to it, no social stratum or age group is immune. As of August, 1957, 21.6 million American adults about 13 per cent ot the total population, or 1 out of every 8 were edentulous. Since the proportion of those com-pletely lacking teeth increases with age, about 65 per cent of all persons 75 or older are so affected. Even by age 35 more than two-thir-of Americans are in need of bridges or dentures to replace lost teeth. Decay not only Is prevalent In childhood; according to some In-dications, it may even be increas-ingly prevalent. Pcridontal dis-ease is on the increase; once re-garded as a serious enough prob lem of middle age, it is turning up now in a large proportion of those to young to vote. Currently, 07 million people in the U. S. have decayed teeth re-quiring treatment. The backlog of unfilled cavities has reached 700 million. Lump in other prob-lems as well as caries and 00 per cent ot all Americans, it is esti-mated need dental treatment. Already, although only 40 per cent are getting treatment, fami-ly dental bills total $1.7 billion annually. If, indeed, all the people who need dental care went to the den-tist to get it and all 07.500 dentists in the country worked 24 hours a day to give it, it would take years just to catch up, one American Dental Association official noted. That oral environmentaf condi-tions today notably, a diet high in sugar and starch are bad for dental health has long been rec-ognized. But only recently has it become clear just how bad dental health is and how much worse it seems to be getting. A study oi nearly a quarter mil-lion U. S. Public Health Service beneficiaries from 1948 to 1952 in-dicated that by retirement age (65), the average person has more than 26 of the standard of 32 teeth in the "DMF" category-decay- ed, missing or filled. Even for the age group 15 to 24, the av-erage DMF rale is 14.4. SEE US FOR EXPERT SERVICE AND QUALITY PRODUCTS DEALERS IN: CONOCO PRODUCTS CHRYSLER AND PLYMOUTH CARS ADDERLEY & NICHOLS GARAGE Chick and Ren Phone PR 11 Phone your news items to the Bingham Bulletin at PR or PR Strengthen America's Peace Power. Buy U. S. Savings Bonds The US. Government does not pay for this advertising. The Treasury Department thanks, tor their patriot donation, Ths Advertising Council SEE US FOR FINE COMMERCIAL PRINTING LETTERHEADS ENVELOPES INVITATIONS WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS BUSINESS CARDS STATEMENTS PROGRAMS WINDOW CARDS BOOKLETS TICKETS HANDBILLS ALL TYPES BUSINESS FORMS AND MANY OTHERS TOP QUALITY LOW PRICES FAST DEPENDABLE SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY THE BINGHAM BULLETIN TELEPHONE 91 "I REMEMBER"! BY THI OLD TIMERS From E. O. Anderson, Peters-burg, Indiana: I remember the one-roo- m log cabin I was bom in back in 1880 in Dubois County, Indiana 4 miles from Ireland near the Pakota River In what was called "Hog Heaven." We were a group of happy chil-dren; a boy and two girls. The cracks of the log cabin were filled with clay mud. The chimney was built of sticks and clay and the fireplace was very large. Many times, mother cooked our meals in it. We did not know much about Christmas, a few sticks of candy, an orange, and a box of fire crackers. Mother made all our clothes. All livestock were "out" then and every man had his brand or mark. Woe to the one who was found in possession of an animal with someone else's brand or mark. There was little corn to feed the hogs. They ate acorn and beech nuts. Sugar was made from the sap of the maple tree and mother dried all kinds of fruit. Wild tur-key was plentiful, as were the squirrels. Father would go to the store once a week, but seldom brought much home. That was about 70 years ago. Dad and Mom are asleep now, waiting "the Resurrection day" but I always remembered how good they were. to us children. And, I would love to live again in that one-roo- m log cabin. (Send contributions Is this column is Ths Old Tinier, Communllr Fross Service, Box Sv, Frankfort, Kentucky.) AMERICANA Cities To So Sioux City, Iowa i' . V" p A?&$r Sioux City, an enterprising city of 83,991 population, is located on the banks of the Missouri River in Northwest Iowa at the junction of three states, Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota, in the heart of one of the nation's finest agricultural areas. Its early history dates to the days of the Lewis and Clark Expedi-tion, when in 1804 that famous party of explorers buried the only member of their group to die during the expedition Sgt. Charles Floyd, on the site of what is now Sioux City. The real story of the early history centers around a famous Sioux Indian Chief, War Eagle, whose friendship with the early settlers earned him a gold medal presented personally by President Van Buren. Sioux City is one of the nation's leading livestock and meat pack-ing centers. The Sioux City Stock Yards comprises 80 acres of land, is devoted exclusively to the handling of livestock. As a grain center, Sioux City ranks as one of the 14 primary grain markets of the Midwest. While it is Iowa's second largest city, Sioux City leads the State as a wholesale center. More money is involved in this com-mercial activity than any other. From a trading post that supplied guns and blankets, it became a great wholesale market which now reaches into seven states as m, major distributor of every class of merchandise. Sioux City ranks well industrial-ly, too. Over 300 manufacturers produce food products, automo-tive tools, dry cell batteries, fish-ing tackle, candy, leather goods, ladders, furnaces, and many other items. Corn, cattle and concerts tell the story of Iowa's second city. Sioux City's patronage of musical arts is symbolized by the Sioux City Symphony Orchestra, the Concert Course, and the world-famo- Monahan Post Band the latter having won one internation-al and seven national champion-ships as well as the title "Official Band of the American Legion." |