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Show ' THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH FRIDAY. MARCH 18, 1960 PAGE FOUR Walter Murray started working at the Bingham post office as cus-todian on an hourly basis on Mon-day, March 7, according to Edwin W. Johnson, postmaster. Mrs. A. D. Bentley was hostess to her evening bridge club at her home Wednesday evening. Prizes at cards were won by Mrs. Jack House holder Jr., first; Mrs. Dean Lipsey, second, and Mrs. A. J. Sargent, consolation. Dainty refreshments were served. A record hop will be held at the and Mrs. Delia Delia Lucia; St. Paschal's Mrs. Isabel Avila, Mrs. Arnold Conzales and Mrs. Frances Gonzales. Carnival Ticket Captains To Meet Monday. March 21 Monday, March 21st has been circled for the next meeting of the parish carnival ticket captains. They are requested to meet at the BCO Hall at 6:30 p.m. Holy Rosary Altar Society To Meet Next Thursday Holy Rosary Altar Society will meet Thursday evening, March 24 at the parish hall at 7 :0 p.m. Silver shower. St. Paschal's Altar Society Slates Bake Sale Friday, Mar. 25 Mrs. Anita Benavidez, president of St. Paschal's Altar, Society, an-nounced that a bake sale will be held Friday, March 23 at the Lark store at I I :30 a.m. West Jordan Stake House in West Jordan this Saturday night, March 19, from 7:30 to 10:45 p.m. The dance is open to boys and girls 14 to 19 years. Young people will be personally interviewed in order to get membership cards. Entre Nous Club met last Thurs- - WOMEN'S CIVIC CLUB March meeting of the B:ngham Women' Civic Club was held at the Civic Center Wednesday even-ing, March 9, with Mrs. Dean Ham, Mrs. William Swainston and Mrs. R. C. Stevenson, hostess for the evening. Mrs. Ham welcomed mem-bers and special guest Mis. Joel P. Jensen. Program for the evening was a book review, excellently given by Mrs. Jensen who presented "Rally Around the Flag Boys" which was very much enjoyed by all who were present. At the bus'ness meeting conduct-ed by Mrs. Stevenson, president, the 1960-6- 2 officers were nomin-ated and elected. They are: presi-dent, Mrs. Marvin Throckmorton; first vice president, Mrs. James Xanthos; second vice president, Mis. Ross M. Cushing; recording secretary, Mrs. Hosmer Peterson; corresponding secretary, Mrs. H.L. Goff; treasurer, Mrs. Clenn Hueb-ner- ; historian, Mrs.Guy Delia Lucia and publicity chairman, Mrs. Sam Feraco. A St. Patrick's day theme con-sisting of green candles in gold candalabra flanking a beautiful ar-rangement of yellow mums and decorated the lace cov-ered pom poms serving table. Lovely refresh-ments were served at the close of the meeting by the hostesses. The annual Gad-Abo- night has been set for April 6, Mrs. Stevenson reported. It will include a dinner alter which members will attend the University of Utah Theater play "The Gazebo" starring Robert Q. Lewis of radio and television fame, at Kingsbury Hall. . Members will be contacted about their reserva-tions. Religion Classes To Be Held at Copperton Seminary The BYU Adult Education Cen-ter in Salt Lake City is pleased to announce that two classes in relig- - day night as guests ot Mrs. Verl Peterson. Mrs. Robert King was an invited guest. Priies at bridge were won by Mis. Dean Ham, Mrs. Bob Cr.rler, Mrs. Hubert Dowd and Miss Kay Braun. Lovely refreshments were served by the hostess. Miss Mildred May was guest speaker of the Methodist Youth Fellowship at- - Centenary Methodist Church in Salt Lake City Sunday night. Mrs. C. A. Morley was hostess to her bridge club at her home Mon-day evening. Mrs. Lillian Nelson of Midvale was an invited guest. Priz-es at cards were won by Mrs. John J. Creedon, Mrs. O. J. Graham, Mrs A. J. Boberg and Mrs. John O'Brien. Lovely late refreshments were ser-ved by the hostess. ion will be offered in the Copper-to- n Seminary during spring quar-ter I960, it is reported. These are informal classes; no BYU credit is attached and there are no prereq-uisites for enrolling. Both classes one. Church His-tory and the other, Old Testament, are to be taught by La Mar C. Ber-ret- t, principal of Copperton Sem-inary. Classes start next Thursday, March 24, and consist of ten ses-sions, ending May 26. The church history class will be at 6:45 and the Old Testament class at 8:30. Regis-tralio- n will take place at the first class meeting on March 24. Tuition fee is $10.00 for a single enroll-ment, or $16.00 if two enroll from one family. Mr. and Mrs. Verl Peterson and boys, Buddy and Ricky, were din-ner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Ham of West Jordan. Social science meeting of Bing-ham Ward Relief Society will be held next Tuesday, March 22, at 10 a.m. at the church with Mrs. Mary Raby giving the lesson. All ladies of the ward are 'invited. O AMERICAN LEGION TO MEET MONDAY, MARCH 21 American Legion Post No. 30 is holding their next regular meeting Monday night, March 21 at 7:30 p.m. at the City Hall, according to Bill Hennings, commander. All members are urged to come out. In attendance at the Intermoun-tai- n Bankers Clinic held in the audi-torium of the Utah Power and Light Co. building in Salt Lake City last Thursday afternoon, March 0, were the following employees of the Bingham office of First Security Bank Mrs. Ruth J. Kidd. Mrs. Zenaida Fregoso, Joyce Jackson, Madeleine Sanchez and Connie The group viewed two film strips on supervison and public re-lations and enjoyed a lecture by Dr. Howard Bellows on the differ-ent phases of banking. Last Thursday night, C. A. Mor-ley and F. C. Oswald, from the Bingham Lions Club, attended a regular meeting of the Holladay L'ons Club held at Pete Harman's. Mr. Oswald was guest speaker of the meeting and spoke on the'Utah Park Reclamation program. Weekly meeting of the Fire Aux-iliary was held Monday night with Mrs. Robert King hostess for the evening. Bridge was played and. pri-zes won by Mrs. Verl Peterson, Mrs Verio Kendrick, Mrs. Joe Dispenza and Mrs. Wally Swenson. Delicious refreshments were served. Mrs. Dean L.'psey will be hostess next Monday night. Eight ladies from Bingham Ward Relief Society attended the visiting teachers social held at the West Jordan Stake House in West Jordan Tuesday, March 1 5, starting at 10:30 a.m. There was a program, a film on visiting teaching was shown and luncheon was served at noon. Over 400 ladies were in at-tendance. Those attending from here were Mrs. Hilda Allmark, Mrs. Erma Dean Dimmick, Mrs. Selma Bentley, Mrs. Lenore Nichols, Mrs. Blanche Spanos, Mrs. Olive Thome, Mrs. Marda Nielsen and Mrs. Eva West. Patsy Nielson, between quarters at CSU at Cedar City, arrived home Wednesday night to spend a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hunt Nielson and family. She will be here until the first of next week. Mr. and Mrs. Don Stuart of Hol-laday visited Wednesday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Aimer Berg and in the evening called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Gust of Cop-perton. title of Homemaker of Tomorrow. On April 23 nil state winners and thd r chool advisors will begin an expense paid tour of historic in the east and will end in Wash-ington on April 28 where the na-tional winner will be announced. Constance Lael Holland of South High School. Salt Lake City, rated tecond in Utah and will receive a $500 scholarship. UTAH HOMEMAKER OF TOMORROW NAMED FROM DIXIE HIGH SCHOOL Utah's Betty Crocker Momemak-e- r of Tomorrow is Christena Cox of Dixie High School, St. George. Miss Cox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Malin Cox, received the highest rating in a written ex-amination on homemaking knowl-edge and attitudes administered to 4,392 senior gOrls in 72 schools throughout Utah. She will receive a $1,500 scholarship and becomes a candidate with 49 other state winners and the representative from the District of Columbia for the By Thomas Collins PROBLEM WIVES WORRY OVER LIFE ON PENSION ,f.p0 wives customarily turn Uinto problems for men about to retire? "My wife has turned into one . . . probably the biggest single problem I have with retirement. "My company has me tabbed for April 1 six weeks after I reach 65. I'm not too concerned about it. I'll get $312 from my pension and Social Security, and I have our home paid for. That will De adequate, if what I have learned from other men at the company Is true. My wife doesn't see It this way. She thinks that we can't come down from $925 a month (my salary) to $312. She writes the checks at our house, and she says that if everything has to be cut to one-thir- d (which is what my retirement will mean) she can't balance the check book. She gets somewhat frantic In tell-ing me that we may have to keep the furnace on only one day in three during the snows of Jan-uary and that we can cut down on meals. If this sounds cracky you should hear her other ideas. "Be that as it may, she is frightened. Can you give me any advice that will reassure her or at least dispel some of her dis-may?" Yes. You take over the check book. A wife who has leaned on the broad shoulder of a man for d years will naturally feel some apprehension when, at 65, his shoulder evaporates to one-thir- d its size. So she's not nec-essarily cracky. To assure her that $312 a month and a home are sufficient for re-tirement (most people who are retiring have much less) the sim-plest step Is to broaden her knowl-edge. To do this, a husband could borrow $1,000 on the home and take his wife to visit the smaller communities In Florida, Arizona, California and the Rio Grande Valley of Texas. There she could see couples by the hundreds who are doing all right on $200 to $250 a month, and who own no real estate. It often is not enough to tell a wife. You have to show her. And a husband must realize that retirement requires a new per-spective on a standard of living. You can't live on a $925 life on $312 pay. You just can't. Moving may be the best way to get the new perspective. Wives are not the least of pensioned man's problems. Some-times they are the most. And when they are the most, it is usually in these areas: PRESTIGE The wife who has civic and social connections, and who is bucking the presidency of the West End Ladies Society or an Invitation to a dinner at the Plushboltom house, is afflicted The best treatment is to move, but to a place where you can get a snob postmark on letters back home. Something like Palm Beach or Monterey, even if you live in a tent at the city limits There is no cure for the affliction., but you can transplant it to an environment you can afford. For a topy "I the Srvr Ooldrn Vfr; booklet by Thomas Collins. sen S.i culls In coin (no stumps! ts Dfpl. "NVV.NS", Box 1117'!. (irnnd Central Station, New York 17, N. V. O . JORDAN SCHOOL BOARD AWARDS CONTRACTS Contracts for three rush pro-jects were awarded Saturday at a special meeting of the Jordan Dis-trict Board of Education at Sandy. Security Construction Co. was awarded the contracts for construc-tion of six-roo- m additions to the Midvale and Mt. Jordan Junior High schools with a total low bid of $178,211. These classrooms must be finished by time school opens in late Aupjjst. R. K. McCullough Co.. with a low bid of $34,000 was awa rded the contract for alterations to the stnge and auditorium at Bingham High School. The work must be completed by May 24 when the school's com-mencement exercises are scheduled, said Marvjn G. Jenson, board presi-dent. Mr. Jenson said the two six-roo- m additions are needed to house the large influx of junior high school students which will come into the schools this fall. It will delay the construption of a new junior high school for a year or two. .... .Mh .v.wunMI St. Paul's Community Bingham Church School 9:30 a.m. Copperton Church School 10 a.m. Morning Worship at Church I I :00 a.m. Evening Worship at Community I louse 7 :00 p.m. This is the third Sunday of Lent. Attend church, pray many times a day and read your Bible daily. This will prove the most monderful Len-ten season you have ever known. Easter will be a new found joy. Holy Rosary Rev. John J. Sullivan, pastor Sunday Masses: ' Bingham 9:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.; Copperton 8:00 a.m.: Lark 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. WcekJay Mass in Sisters Convent, Bingham, 7:00 a.m. Confessions Saturday, at Lark 4:00-5.0- p.m.'; at Bingham 7:30-8:3- 0 p.m. Mc nday, 8:00 p.m. Instruction classes. Tuesday, 7:00 p.m., Perpetual I p Novena Devotions. Friday, 7:00 p.m., Legion of Mary meeting at rectory. Lenten Schedule: Wednesday 6:30 p.m. Stations of the Cross at Lark. Thursday 6:30 p.m. ' Stations of thj Cross at Copperton. Friday 6:30 p.m. Stations of the Cross at Bingham. Copperton L.D.S.' Aaronic Priesthood " and Elders Quorum 9:00 a.m. Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Melchi7edek and Sr. Aaronic Priesthood 5:30 p.m. Sacrament Meeting "7:00 p.m. Quorum of the Seventies will give the program this Sunday night, Relief Society, Tuesdays, 10 a.m. M.I. A. Tuesdays 7:15 p.m. Primary, Wednesdays, 3:20 p.m. Bingham L.D.S. Aaronic Priesthood 8:45 a.m. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Sacrament Meeting 6:30 p.m. Sam Miera, a member of Bing-ham Central School faculty, will be guest speaker. Relief Society, Tuesdays, I 0 a.m. Primary, Tuesdays 3:30 p.m. M.l.A. Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m. Lark L.D.S. Priesthood 9:15 a.m. Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Sacrament Meeting 6:30 p.m. Seminary students will present the program this Sunday night. THE SMOOTHER BOURBON Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey 6 YrJ. Old 86 Proof Ancient Age Dist Co., frtnkfort, Ky. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT Due to the small amount ln-- -' ' volved, we do not accept want ads except on a cash-wlth-ord- er basis. No ads taken by telephone LOVELY NEW SPINET PIANOS $15.00 down $15.00 per month all are fresh from the new packing boxes. None have been bounced around on a salesman's truck. Over 25 different models and styles to choose from. You will be happier if you call at our show rooms be-fore you buy. Summerhays Music Co., 3719 South State Street, Salt Lake City, Utah. . 3 bedroom brick splitlevel, draped, carpeted, landscaped, big back yard, close to new school, church, shopping, quiet curved street, trans-ferred owner selling, $1600 down-assum- e our loan. 9866 Amber Lane, AM Sandy, Utah. P MURRAY Cute 4 la R Shake, looks new. Large lot fenced $10,500 3 BR Brick close to State Street. $4000 buys Equity, assume balance. 3 BR Brick, lVi baths, $2300 buys CI. Equity. CRAWFORD REALTORS AM AM AM FOR SALE HOUSE IN COPPERTON. Joe Bithell, 107 East Park Street, Phone PR FOR SALE Beautiful buff brick 3 bedrm., 1400 sq. ft., full bmt., 1 ' bath, 2 fireplaces. Convenient to everywhere and everything. 20 min. to Bingham. 1527 West 4920 South. Inquire 1288 West 4800 South or Phone AM HOME FOR SALE OR RENT by owner 3 bedrm., 1 'j bath, new furnace, water heater and paint, in Kearns. Call AM Easy Terms. 2tp PIANO FOR SALE. Beautiful spinet to be picked up in Salt Lake County, reliable party may purch-ase for balance due. Contact Daynes Music Co., 15 East 1st South, Salt Lake City. 3t j n INGROWN NAIL hurt,ng YOu? fJrM Relief! A few drops of OUTGRO bring bleotod relief from tormenting pstn of Ingrown njll. OUTGRO toUKhn thekin underneatb trie mil. allows the nil ta be fit nl 'J,Jf'"; vent further pln and ducomtort. OUJUKU Is svnilable t ell drug cwmwre. COLDS Relieve aches and pains of colds with STANBACK Tablets or Powders. Also use as gargle for sore throat due to colds. STAN BACK'S S. A. (Synergistic Action) reduces fever, brings faster, more complete relief. Remember ... Snap back with STANBACK! CONSTIPATED? Medical reports show how folks over 35 can establish regularity After 35, irregularity often be-comes a problem. What you need is something that aids nature and helps establish regularity. Such an aid to regularity is the daily use of serutan. Here's medical evidence: A group of men and women took serutan daily under medical supervision. In case after case serutan, taken daily, helped establish regularity. So, for real relief from constipation after 35, try serutan, powder or granular. SERUTAN UK "Read ( Backwards" J OPEM FOR MPETIM SOTER'S Beautiful HUB PAHIC HOMES Split Level and Ramblers. Priced from $12,000 to $15,900 I NO LOAN COST I 5 EXCITING NEW MODELS I TO CHOOSE FROM 1 CHOICE LOCATION QUALITY CONSTRUCTION THROUGHOUT I Brick construction, oak floors, mahogany cabinets, copper plumbing, Asphalt paved roads. Sidewalks with hi-ba- curb and gutters, City sewers and water in and paid for. Large cemented driveways with reinforced wire mesh. Foil back crack resist-an- t dry wall. 220 wired for dryer. Plumbed for automatic washer. Choice of colors I Turn west at 80th South State Street. Follow signs to sales office. 1 HUB PARK REALTY 600 South Adams Street, Midvale I AM EL 5- - 8382 DA A treasure chest of ancient fossils Th rugged canyon country in northeastern Utah, a spectacular attraction, is overshadowed only by the remarkable dinosaur quarry there. Great numbers of fossils have been excavated in this area-m-ore than in any other place in the world. This fascinating region is preserved from 'nosur National Monument. Bones representing eleven species of TTJsT' dinosaurs, including 23 complete, or LJ T,g.jri 2 skeletons, have been yielded from this graveyard. Some fossils can still wonderful past "een ernbedile:' " rock ledge. Throughout the entire colorful state of SSSS!&3 Utah, the V S. Brewers Foundation works constantly to maintain the sale of beer -- widale under clean, wholesome conditions. T a 111 ifflHyPISS? BEER end ALE.. HOMES FOR SALE Betty Hgts. Sub. 7500 SOUTH 6C0 EAST MIDVALE, UTAH 4 MODELS TO SHOW SMALL DOWN PAYMENTS HU 5-24- 71 HOLY ROSARY CHURCH by Connie Mochizuki Curia Meet In Salt Lake City This Sunday, March 20 Mrs. Ralph Murano. president of Holy Rosary parish Legion of Mary announced that a Curia meeting will be held in Salt Lake C ty, Sun-Ja- March 20 at 2 p.m. in the Cathedral School. Following the business meeting and bearing in mind the great importance of de-votion to Our Blessed Mother in the Legion system, the yearly Acies will be held in the Cathedral of the Madeleine at 3 p.m. at which time Auxiliary members as well as ac-tive members will assemble to re-new the individual Act of Conse-cration. Catena Legionis will be re-cited. A sermon will be given by the spiritual director and the Acies will terminate with Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. It is neces-sary to stress the importance of attendance on the part of members since the Acies is a central annual function of the Legion. Any Aux-iliary member who has not been contacted by the Logon of Mary and who desires to attend kindly call Mrs. Murano at PR and arrangements will be made for transportation. Easter Flowers Collection will be taken after each of the masses throughout the parish for Easter flowers starting this Sunday, March 20 and continu-ing till the Sunday before Easter.-Mcmber- s of the altar societies will be asked to collect in their respec-tive churches. Church Cleaning Church cleaning for March is being done by the following mem-bers of the Altar Societies. Holy Rosary Mrs. Lucille Bianchi and Mrs. Rita Ugarte; Immaculate Con-ception Mrs. Caroline Murano |