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Show - FRIPAY. A?SIt 10. 18M -- THE BIKG1U.M BULLETIN, SHCn AM CAUYOK.UTAIt tAGE FOUR . det, efficient, friendly C. L. Prisk, Bingham Ward Relief Society Will hold its monthly work day at the wardhcuse Tuesday. April 14 starting at 10 a.m. It will be under direction of Mrs. Mohleta Porter. Mrs. Josephine Morris and Mts. Ruth Jacques, and will consist of quilting anJ other work day activi-ties. Lunch will be served at noon. AH ladies of the ward are invited, Tuesday evening the Lark girls and Bluebird girls of the Bingham Ward Primary and -- their teachers, Mrs. DaviJ Dimniick and Mrs. Peter Nielsen held a cundy pull at the home of Mrs. Nielsen. Girls attend- - ing were: Larks Colleen Ander-son, Lynn Ann Swcnson, Sue Ann Dimmick, Robyn Boren and Lm-ergi- Leichtle. and Bluebirds Dana Collings, Carol Nielson, San-dra Borich. Susan Moglund, Belin Serrano, and Irene Tackitt. Light Mrs. Robert King was hostess to the weekly meeting of the Fire Auxiliary held Monday night. Pri-zes at cards were won by Mrs. Boyd Anderson, Mrs. Wally Swen-son- , Mrs. Joe Dispenza and Mrs. Verl Peterson. Dainty refreshments were served by the hostess. Thir-teen members were present. Mrs. James McLeod will be hostess Mon-day evening, April 13. Visiting last week with Mr. and Mrs. Rex Mills were their daughter and family. Mr. and Mrs. Fern W. Pelt and children, Jimmy, Howard land Melanie of Torrence, Calif. The visitors left Sunday morning to re-turn to California. Also calling at the Mills home during the week were Mr. and Mrs. L. F: Pert of San Francisco who were visiting in Utah. refreshments were served. A de-lightful time was had by all. Announcement is made this week that anyone who has sub-scribed to the Improvement Era magazine may obtain free tickets to the Stake MIA dance to be held on April 25. In Bingham, tickets may be obtained from Mrs. Hunt Nielson. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Jacques had as dinner guests Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Adams of Midvale. House guest of Mrs. Mabel Brim-ha- ll is her brother. Clarence New-man of Idaho Falls, Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Jacques at-tended the viewing Monday of Shelby E. Swain at Wing Mortuary Chapel in Lehi. JoAnn Sayatovic, daughter of Pete Sayatovic, left last Friday to make her home with her grand-mother, Mrs. Phyllis Kitt of Long Beach, Calif. Mrs. C. A. Morley entertained at a birthday dinner Wednesday ev-ening honoring Mrs. Esther Clays on her birthday anniversary. Also present was Mrs. Clays' granddau-ghter, Dianne Zorn. J. D. Porter, who has been con- - fined in the Veterans Hospital in Salt Lake City for the past six months, came home from the hos-pital Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Anderoon were hosts to the:r 500 club last Saturday night at their home. Coup'es present were Mr. and Mrs. Dean Ham, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dis-perz- Mr. and Mrs. Verl Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Hosmer Peterson, Mr. and Mra. Leonard Bell and Mr. and Mrs. Verio Kendtick. Prizes at cards were won by Mrs. Dispcnza, Mr. Bell and the Hosmer Petersons. Lovely refreshments were served. T. P. Durrant of St. Ceorge was a Bingham visitor Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Nielsen and family, Royce, Gary and Clifford and Louis Canick spent last Satur-jda- y visiting in Sanpete county. Mrs. Florence Baum who has been visiting with her brother, El-bert Rotfera in Highland, Calif., and a sister, Donna, at Yuma, Ariz., is expected to arrive home Sunday. April meeting of Ruth Rebckah Ledge No. 7 was held Tuesday night at the Civic Center with Mrs. Pearl Rasmussen hostess for the evening. A regular business meet-ing wo conducted after which bridge was played. Prizes were won by Mrs. Mabel Jenson, first; Mrs. Nuudyne Swenson, second, and Mrs Willadeen Householder, consola-tion. Lovely refreshments were served. Washington, the $10,298.72 con-tributed by Utah's federal employes in 1958 was highest in the nation on the basis of iederal payroll. Al-ready this year $12,789.95 or 125 per cent of last year's total has been received, with additional re-turns still to come from Clearfield Naval Supply Depot, Dugway Prov-in- g Grounds, Army Reserve units, and several other federal agencies. Hill Air Force Base employees contributed $6,129.07, accounting for nearly half of the state total. This was almost twice the $3,384.-5- 2 from HAFB last year. The 80 employees of the Veter-ans Administration Regional Office in Salt Lake City, contributed 29 per cent more per capita than the next highest federal agency in the state, according to Mr. Wright. UTAH FEDERAL EMPLOYEES LEAD NATION IN SUPPORT OF "JOINT CRUSADE" DRIVE Utah's federal employees, who led the nation last year on percent-age of payroll contributed to the Federal Service Joint Crusade fund drive, have already surpassed their 1958 record in the current cam-paign, it was reported today by Ralph B. Wright, president, Union Bank & Trust Co., Salt Lake City, and state treasurer of the Joint Crusade. William W. McBride, regional manager of the Veterans Adminis-tration, was accorded special recog-nition for a dual role in this achieve ment first, as schairman of the Joint Crusade for the state of Utah and secondly, as head of the fed-eral agency with the highest per ccpita contributions. The Joint Crusade is an annual campaign approved by the White House for solicitation among fed-eral agencies and military installa-tions in support of CARE (Food Crusade), Crusade for Freedom (Radio Free Europe) and American-K-orean Foundation. According to recent word from owner of the Prescription and Medical Arts Pharmacies in Salt Lake City. Mr. C. L. Prisk is the type of man who would be an asset to . any community, not only because the successful conduct of his busi-ness plays a definite part in the general civic scheme, but because measure of his value to our county lies in the fact that Mr. C. L. Prisk is untiring, xealous and remark-ably successful in the promotion of civic betterment. It would be hard to estimate the annual dollar and cents value of such a man to his community. We are glad of the opportunity of pay ing tribute to C. L. Prisk, a man of honor, foresight and ability. Mr. Prisk rightfully deserves the credit for these achievements in the field of business and to this tribute from the publishers of The Bingham Bulletin. UNUSUAL BUSINESS ABILITY DEMONSTRATED BY C. L. PRISK Logically, a man who earns the position of one of the city's lead-ing business men should be con-nected with one of the city's lead-ing business enterprises. A man who deserves that position is mo- - I V i : J ' ' ' Y 1 ! - v "'- - 'I t , i .. l t Y " A TEXAS BELLE . . . Actress Shirley Price Is one of the bath-ing beauties In the new film, "Some Like It Hot." Shirley Is from Dalian, Texas. HALF-PA- ST TEETH I'M GOING TO BE COM-- X J I PLETELV FAR,BQBO.ZtLm - ff LISTEN TO YOUR SIDE OF AT I NJ--L J 7HE ST0RV RE 1 DON'T FORGET APRIL 24 I II Will Ill M I fX':' 'v'Si'-'- ' . 'W I " 1 j CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT Due to the small amount In-volved, we do not accept want ads except on a er basis. No ad3 taken by telephone. AMAZING COLOR s RESTORER FOR FADED UPHOLSTERY A wonderful new discovery re-stores your faded, soiled fabrics to their original glorious colors as it banishes soil and grime--all in one easy operation. Just sponge on Clean-Tin- t fabric color I Right in your own living room. No messy spraying, no special equipment. The color-ric- h suds lift out the dirt as the fabric drinks up the color; and so inexpensive! You can w at lIO the cost of reupholstering. Permanent and guaranteed. Free test sample with each bottle. Guaranteed! Full details at your local Hard-ware, Furniture store pr write Strevell-Patterso- n Company Salt Lake City, Utah o)topri- - Sr:', Everything stays so l much fresher and clean-e- r . ,t I kitchen walls, cur-- b J tains, pots and pans . . . 1 because there's no grimy N smudge. Electric cook- - jng is clean as sunlight! "' r- - 5 i t MIDVALE, vacant 2 BR. Brick. Full basement. Lovely fenced yard. $1,000 down. Terms. j Nice 2 BR. Rambler. Part base-ment, garage. East Midvale. CRAWFORD REALTORS AM AM FOR SALE; house, with furnace and ' basement, wall to wall carpeting, at 17 Hegland Avenue, Bingham Canyon, or Phone PRospect . LOTS FOR SALE CHOICE LOT ON SO. GRANT STREET IN MIDVALE FOR ONLY $1850.00. Phone AM "Contact Lenses". For free infor-mation or consultation, write or call Utah Contact Lens Association. 17 Eachanga Place, Salt Lake City EL ACCORDION LESSONS YOUR HOME OR MINE. INST. FUR-NISHED IF DESIRED. AM AFTER 5:00 P.M. 3tn v!t5 WAKE UP AND READ! :: ,'yy,''y' Vy'-'- : - - - Continuous ' ! : . Srtop.A-Pc.- rt ; : - " ' fortn 'j - Forms ' " " 1 , Manifold; VgjgS Checks j See THE BINGHAM BULLETIN i 8EUEVH MS, HEU J ( HUSBAND IS NO ) 'take a. LOOK at tmk NEWSPAPER AP GALS, THERE FULL OP BARGAINS LI WE'LL SEE YOU AT THE BINGHAM CLUB BEER ON TAP LOCAL AND EASTERN BOTTLED BEER Sam Feraeo, Prop. LEGAL NOTICES ijpir YOU serve lot of sand-wiches, IF make them ahead and itore in the freezer. Mayonnaise doesn't do In fillings If the sand-wich Is going to be frozen, but all these ways get around the jse of this Ingredient nicely: Ground roast beef, ham, lamb, pork and veal, after roasting and eating, can be mixed with roast THIS WEEK'S RECIPE Avocado Sour Cream Dressing (Makes 1 cup) ii cup sieved avocado 14 cup commercially soured cream 3 tablespoons lime or lemon Juice I teaspoon sugar V4 teaspoon pepper V4 teaspoon salt Few grains cayenne pepper Dash of tabasco sauce To prepare avocado, cut In halves lengthwise, remove seed and skin. Force fruit through sieve Combine with all remaining ingredients and blend thoroughly Serve on mixed greens or . cabbage which is finely shredded. gravy tor moistening Season with prepared horseradish or Worcestershire sauce. Cream cheese freezes nicely and makes a good filling when mixed with chopped, stuffed olives and salted peanuts. Chopped chicken livers make a nice moist filling for freezer sandwiches If you add mashed hard-cooke- d egg to them and spice with s bit of catsup. Flaked tuna fish makes a good freezer sandwich filling when you blend It with pickle relish and moisten with soured cream. Plenty of hard-cooke- d eggs? Mash them fine with a fork, add cooked crumbled bacon, blend In a bit of soured cream and a lit-tle curry powder for flavor. festival will be held at Brigham Young University in Provo. Bing-ham's play was judged the best in region four and so it will represent the region for one-ac- t plays. The title of the play is "Bitter Wine and it was directed by Terry Kas-tani- s. On Saturday, Vicky Merrill, Jimmy Chadwick( Merlin Bateman and Dianne Zorn will represent Bingham High School for d stories, humorous readings, radio speaking and dramatic readings. Girls Club Every year the Girls Club holds its spring dance. The theme for the "girls choice" dance this year is "Picnic" and it will be held on Fri-day. April I 7th. The dress is apron and overall. Art Exhibit Bingham High School was hon-ored by being asked to put on an art exhibit at the Salt Lake Public Library. This is the first time any single school has had this privilege. Approximately 35 paintings were submitted. Much credit should be given Mr. Dean Bishop, whose ex-cellent art instruction has brought out the talents of these young ar-tists. BINGHAM HIGH SCHOOL NEWS (Continued from page one) Bingham High's ttrack team placed second in a three-scho-track meet held on Monday. The other two schools participating were Tooele and Cyprus. Baseball The Bingham Miners won their opening league game of the 1959 baseball season last Monday, de-feating Tooele 6 to 5. The Miners were hosts to Murray Thursday (yesterday) fpr the second league encounter. Next week's schedule is as fol-lows: Monday, April 13 Bingham at Granger, and Thursday, April )6 Bingham vs Cyprus at Magna, District Orchestra and Band Festival Today The district orchestra and band festival will be held at the Mt. Jor-dan Junior High School Friday (to-day) at 7:30 p.m. Bingham High's band, under the direction of Reed Newbold, will participate. State Interpretative Festival Friday and Saturday (today and tomorrow) the state interpretative NOTICE OF PUBUC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the City Council of Bingham Canyon, Utah, will hold a public hearing April 22nd at 7:30 o'clock P.M. in the Princess Theatre, at which time protests will bo heard, if there be any, to the adoption of a compre-hensive zoning ordinance for Bing-ham Canyon. Utah, said ordinance having been recommended for adoption by the Bingham Canyon Planning Commission. Details of the proposed ordinance and map will be on file in the City Recorder's office and may be ex-amined during office hours until the date of the hearing. All property owners are urged to be in attendance at the afore-mentioned public hearing. JOE DISPENZA, Mayor HOLY ROSARY CHURCH (Continued from pajre one) final preparations for the carnival. Youth Canteen Chaperon schedule for the youth canteen for Saturday, April II all team captains: Mr. and Mrs. John Andersen, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Murano, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Fullmer, Miss Connie Mochizuki, Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milner, Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Bianchi, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ablett, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lovat and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Arritola; for Tuesday, April 14 Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Florencio Griego, Mr. and Mrs. Scotty Robertson and Mrs. Mae Redmond. St. Paschal's AUaf Society To Meet Wednesday St. Paschal's Altar Society will meet this coming Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. Mrs." Pete Garduno re-quests that all members try to be present to complete plans for the carnival. |