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Show ; J ii - ! ' i! f Unirerial Microfilm Corp. J Ml Pierponi At. I t Afternoon VSV (i 'y " ' V . ' (jC' s. " &' ' t'fy MtnnZ VOL. 69, NO. 49. An Independent Newspaper BINGHAM CANYON, UTAJI, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 19G0 Oldwi Weekly In Salt Lak County TELEPHONE PR 36 SPECIAL MUSICAL PROGRAM AT WEST JORDAN JR. HIGH NEXT THURSDAY, APRIL 28 A special musical program, fea-turing Jordan District' Bingham and Jordan H'gh Schools combined band and chorus will be held at West Jordan Junior High School next Thursday, April 28 at 8 p.m. A special invitation is extended to all patrons of Bingham and Jor-dan Hiigh School to attend this special musical treat. ANNUAL CLEAN-U- P WEEK SLATED APRIL 25th to 30th The anrual Spring Clean-U- p Week in Bingham Canyon, spon-sored by the City of Bingham Can-yon will be held ni-- xt week Monday, Aprl 25th through Saturday, April 30th 'inclusive it is announced. During this period all rubbish and trsh of any kind put out regardless of what it is, will be picked up and hauled away daily by the street de-partment. Residents ore urged to clean up their yards. O COUNTY TO GIVE UP TUNNEL TO COPPERFIELD The Salt Lake County attorney's office will prepare a resolution for submission to the Coutty Commis-sion for abandonment of the traffic tunnel from Bingham to Copper-fiel- d. The commission ordered tha resolution drafted after with Kernecott meeting Copper Corpora-tion officials who had asked that the county repair the road through the miile and one-quart- tunnel. The resolution will provide that the tunnel revert to Kennecott for maintenance as a private road. Commisson Chairman Lamont B. Gunderscn, in charge of roads and bridge, said his department surveyed traffic through the tunnel during a period. Ho said 300 cars carrying 1,200 men passed through the tunnel. He said of that number, 1,195 were Kennecott employees and tha other five were employee of an-other mining company. "Public use of the tunnel is be-coming nil," he said. HOLY ROSARY PARISH CARNIVAL THISWEEK END Plans for the Holy Rosary Parish Carnival to be held at the Civic Center in Bingham Canyon this week end Saturday and Sunday, April 23 and 24, have reached the final stage according to Ross Pino and John J. Creedon. At the final meeting of the ticket captains and general committee held last Monday evening at BCO Hall, it wus agreed that all parish organ-izations will do their utmost in responsibilities with their that effort will be made (assuming a var'ety. of vounpsters 6 to 60. Refreshments will be served bj the Holy Rosary Altar Society un direction of Mrs. Boyc Anderson and Mrs. Kenneth Moore Immaculate Conception Altar So ciety wi!l be in charge of five booths. Chairman of the apron anc fancy work booth is Mrs. Mae Red-mond and assisting her will be Mrs, Agnes Milner, Mr. Marguer't Arritola, Mrs. Ann Bononcini, Mrs, JoAnn Csoro and Mrs. Gay Ken-dric- Novelty booth chairman it Mrs. Pauline Muhar and assisting is Mrs. Mary Johnson, Mrs. Rose Zan-aid- i, Mrs. Eva Guarascio, Mrs. Vir-ginia Susaeta and Mrs. Leona Sus-net- a. In charge of the Sweet Shoppe is Mrs. Caroline Murano and as-sisting her is Mrs. Emiily Ablett, Mrs. Theresa Pazell. Mrs. Katherine Miola, Mrs. Delia Delia Lucia and Mrs. Jane Kastelic. Working in the booth featuring Grab Bags will be Mrs. Gladys Quinn, Mrs. Mitzie Muhar, Mr. Marjorie Osoro, Mrs. Ann Dcllag-nol- a and Mrs. Rose Markovich, and working in the Teen Craft Shoppe will be Mr. Marguarite Anderson, Mrs. Maurine Osoro, Mr. Ann Zan- - o.. iui: ouu1 mVf i, A 1 o. r --win i mo. ji, ras-chal- 's Altar Society will be in charge of the Pull Tab with Mrs. Anita Benavidez and Mr. Joe Cruz. St. Paschal' Men' Organi-zation will be in charge of three booths with Joe E. Martinez, Hernandez, Joe Cruz, Tom Gonzales, Pete Garduno, Adonais Gonzales, Gla Garcia and Jesus Avila in charge. The Holy Rosary Men's Organization will conduct the remaining booths. Festivities are scheduled to begin at 2:00-- p.m. both Saturday and Sunday, The Men' Club will hold a parish social a t8:30 Saturday ev-ening to which all members of the parish organizations, their partners and guests are invited. The carni-val will reach its climax on Sunday evening when winner of the prizes to be given away that evening ore announced. To be given away are: a portable TV and stand, model 88 308 Winchester rifle, Polaroid land camera, bowling ball, bag and shoes. Remington Mall power tool, fishing tackle box and reel, a toaster and a portable mixer. . : o BINGHAM HIGH SCHOOL NEWS by Athena Floros Cheerleader Tryouts Held Monday afternoon tryouts were held for varsity cheerleaders for the coming year. Those chosen were Tina Boren, head; Claudia Butter-fiel- d, Ardith Beckslead, Sylvia Smoth and Athena Floros. Practices Held The combined choruses of Jordan and Bingham High Schools prac-ticed at West Jordan Junior High School Monday morning for a forth coming concert. The bands from both' of the high schools practiced Tuesday afternoon. Student Council The Student Council members held their luncheon Tuesday after-noon. Principal Joel P. Jensen and Vice Principal Don Parr addressed the student. Nominating Convention The Nominating Convention will meet next week to vote on candid-ates for student body officers for the 1960-6- 1 school year. Minerette Club The Minerette Club has been selected as one of the best pep clubs in the state to attend the Invitation-al Drill and Track meet at Brigham Young Un.versity Saturday. They will receive a trophy for their par- - ticipation. Danca A matinee dance, sponsored by the Sophomore Class, was held Fri-day afternoon. Sport On the sports front, Lad luck has plagued the Miner the last week. In baseball the Miners lost to Murray 3 to I last Thursday after-noon and to Tooele 5 to 2 Monday afternoon. They entertain the Jor-dan Beetdiggers here today, Friday. Came time 4:00 p.m. In track Jordan defeated Bing-ham last Friday 96 23 to 35 l3. In tennis the Murray High ten-nis team defeated the Miners' team 4-- 1 in Region Four competition last Thursday afternoon. The Miners also lost to Tooele 5-- O t ST. PAUL'S COMMUNITY Bingham Church School 9:30 am. 1 Coppeiton Church School 10 am. Morning Worship at church in - Copperton I I :00 a.m. : Highland Boy Community House I board meeting 3 .00 p.m. Board members' pot luck supper 5:00 p.m. s Evening church service at Com-munity House in Bingham, 7:00 p.m. Dr. La Verne Bane, Methodist i minister and a professor at the Uni-- i versity will preach and show color-ed slides of the Holy Lands taken on a recent trip. 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. Weekday Mass in Sisters Convent, Bingham, 7:00 a.m. Confessions Saturday, at Lark 4:00-5:0- 0 p.m.; at Bingham 7:30-8:3- 0 p.m. Mi nday, 8:00 p.m. Instruction classes. Tuesday, 7:00 p.m., Perpetual Help Novena Devotions. r:J 7 nn r t . i i lutijr, ivu p.m., icgiun oi iviary meeting at rectory. COPPERTON L.D.S. Copperton L.D.S. Aaronic Priesthood and Elders Quorum 9:00 a.m. Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Melchizedek and Sr. Aaronic Priesthood 5:30 p.m. Sacrament Meeting 7:00 p.m. Relief Society, Tuesdays, 0 a.m. M.I.A. Tuesday 7:15 p.m. Primary, Wednesdays, 3:20 p.m. BINGHAM L.D.S. Priesthood 8:45 a.m. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Sacrament Meeting 6:30 p.m. Home missionaries. Relief Society, Tuesdays 10 a.m. Primary, Tuesdays 3:30 p.m. M.I.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. SPRING HAS COME hinwEiy million StwW&ZlfXte H :,1cAW customerv EiN-rtS.-- . W'' iM 'HIGHLAND BOY COMMUNITY HOUSE Attend Luncheon and Meeting Misses Ada Duhigg and Mildred May attended the Parsonage Club luncheon and business session at Centenary Methodist Church on Monday noon. Monday evening and " Tuesday morning they attended tha Theological Institute at Westmin-ster College. Dr. Nels F. S. Ferre was the lecturer. He is known all over the world for hi theological preaching? for his authorahio nf many books. It was a rare treat to hear him. Senior M.Y.F. Tuesday evening 1 3 member of the Senior Methodist Youth Fellow-ship went to Magna for a swimming party. Next week they are to meet in Richard and Bob Rauer's homo for a social, the following Tuesday in Jim Wilson' home. Attending W.S.CJ. Meet In Montrose, Colo. Wednesday morning Mrs. Agnes Groves and Miss Mildred May join-ed a chartered bus at Midvale for a tr'p to Montrose, Colo., for a dis-trict meeting of the Woman' So-ciety of Christian Service. More than a 100 delegate will gather there from Utah, Nevada and west-ern slope of Colorado. The Salt Lake area bus will return Friday evening. Guests The Wesleyan Service Guild of the Methodist Church of Tooele were Miss Duhigg's guest at tht Community House Wednesday ev-ening. They are the business and professional woman's group of the) Woman's Society of Christian Ser-vice. B.HJS. DANCE CONCERT SET FOR MONDAY, MAY 2 Bingham High School will pre-sent their annual Dance Concert at West Jordan Junior High School on Monday evening, May 2 at 8:00 p.m. it i announced. Over 100 girls are taking part tin the pro-gram. Admission is 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for children. Everyone is invited to attend,. Make plans now to come and see this how. O RESULTS OF LOCAL CANCER DRIVE GIVEN Contributions to the Cancer Cru-aad- e just conducted and completed in Bingham and Copperton totaled $293.51. Of that amount $152.60 was collected in Bingham , and $140.91 was collected in Copper-ton- . Mrs. Verl Peterson and Mrs. Boyd Anderson were chairman and in charge of the drive in Bingham and Mrs. Hosmer Peter-son and Mrs. Clair Johnson were chairman and heading the drive in Copperton. They wish to express thanks to all ladies who helped in the house to house can-vass both in Bingham and Copper-to- n and to thank everyone in both areas for their wonderful support and contributions to the drive. o TOOELE MAN SEEKS STATE DEMO POSITION Ray L. Pruett, Tooele business-man and county surveyor of Tooele County announced today he is a candidate for state chairman of the Democratic party. Mr. Pruett currently is serving his second term a chairman of the Tooele County Democratic organi-zation and ha been active in party work for the past 28 years. He is present chairman of the state patronage committee, a mem-ber of the state finance committee and chairman of the 2nd Congres- - ' ' K" : f r , t " Mvs j- - , . 1 ,4 . sional district organization. He won the post of county surveyor in the 1958 election on a wrjte-i- n ballot, A life-lon- g Democrat, Mr. Pruett has been active in politics in four states and has worked closely with leading party members in many parts of the country. He is a native of Arkansas and a graduate engineer of Arkansas Stale College. During World War II he served as chief engineer at Wendover Air Base. He also is a former inspector of construction for the U. S. Corps of Engineers. The state chairman candidate is past president of the Lions Club, and member of Elks, Eagles, Ma-sonic Lodge and El Kalah Temple. LOCAL NOTES COPPERTON CITIZENS SEEK ZONING ACTION Citizens of Copperton, located approximately two miles below Dingham Canyon, have petitioned the Salt Lake County Commission to zone the entire area properly to enable it to "grow along orderly lines." Morris E. Johnson, county zoning director, said the future proposed zoning would also include Lark. Studies will begin in a few days toward zoning, Mr. Johnson said. JOSE E. MENA Jose E. Mena, 63, of Bingham Canyon, died Sunday, April 10, in a Salt Lake hospital of a heart ail-ment. He was born Nov. 20, 1896, in Mexico, to Sostemas and Tomaza Moreve Mena. He was a member of the Catholic Church and had work-- ed as track walker for Kennecott Copper Corp. He has no known relatives. Requiem Mass was cele-brated Monday at 10 a.m. at St. Joseph's Catholic Church. Burial was in Washington Heights Mem-orial Park. - - Mrs. Larson's third erade class at Bingham Central School enjoyed a trip to Salt Lake City Wednesday. They visited the capitol and the museum. Highlight of the trip was a train ride in Denver At Rio Grande Western Railroad's crack vista-dom- e streamliner, the Prospector, from the D & RGW RR station in Salt Lake City to Midvale. Mrs. Pete Nielsen and Mrs. Eunice Rae Collings accompanied the young-sters, providing transportation. Funeral services for Mrs. Ada Lee Bithell Young, 73, of Salt Lake City, who died last Friday at 9:55 a.m. in a Salt Lake hospital of na-tural causes, were held Monday noon at 260 E. South Temple in Salt Lake City. Mrs. Bithell was the mother of Joseph Bithell of Cop-perton. Interment was in Mt. Olivet Cemetery. Weekly meeting of the Fire Aux-iliary was held Monday night with Mrs. Phil Sanderson hostess for the evening. Prizes at bridge were won by Mrs. Leonard Bell, Mrs. A. J. Sargent, Mrs. Robert King and Mrs. Ross M. dishing. Lovely refresh-ments were served to twelve mem-bers. A gad-abo- night in Salt Lake City will be held next Monday night. Mrs. Helen Sullenger was hos-tess to her afternoon birthday club on Thursday of last week. A lovely one o'clock luncheon was enjoyed after which br'Jge was played. Pri-zes were won by Mrs. W.D.S. Brown Mrs. Heber Nichols and Mr. Pet Smith. t BINGHAM WARD DINNER SLATED NEXT WEDNESDAY Bingham Ward is sponsoring a public dinner to be held at the Civic Center next Wednesday, April 2 7. Beef and pork will be served. Early dinner will be served at 12:30 p.m. for men working afternoon shift. Serving will be from 4 to 7 p.m. Tickets are $1.50 for adults, 75 cents for children or $5.00 for a family. Everyone is welcome to attend. MEETING HELD A meeting was held Wednesday morning at the City Hall between officials of Kennecott and the com-mittee representing the property owners but nothing was concluded, it ia reported. Dick Steele, who ha been con-fined in the LDS Hospital for the part five weeks, came home from the hospital yesterday morning (Thursday). STATE - COUNTY SAVINGS BONDS SALES "Durjng the first quarter of I960 residents throughout the state pur-chased a total of $4,915,419 in U. S. Savings Bonds," W. Russell And-erson, Bingham District Bond chair-man, announced. "March sale alone amounted to $1,625,394 in the state," he con-tinued. "Of this amount, sales of E and H savings bonds in Salt Lake County were $609,795, bringing our total to $1,958,378, or 24.9 per cent of our I960 sales goal." Sevier County moved into first place in the state, with 40.2 per cent of its I960 goal already, at-tained, the chairman reported. " V, IMMUNIZATION CLINIC AT CIVIC CENTER TODAY The regular Bingham Immuniza-tion Clinic will be held at the Civic Center today, Friday, from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. Triple shots (DPT.) and Quad-rige- n (D.P.T. and Polio) second shots and booster will be given to children 12 and under. Small pox and typhoid, third shots or boosters, will be given to people of all ages. SAFETY PROGRAM AT KENNECOTT PROGRESSING VERY RAPIDLY A attractive and comfortable as regular eye glasses, these i modern prescription ground safety glasses give Dell A. Chrtstensen : needed eye protection on the job. i j Safety glasses for eye protection, I like the automobile, have come a j long way since" the turn of the cen- - I . turv- - - This is especially true in industry i says E. K. Olson, director of safety J for the Utah Copper Division of I Kennecott Copper Corporation, as J he announced a new eye protection I program for the company's 7,100 1 employees. j Safety glasses today are a far cry I from the bulky, uncomfortable and t unattractive "bi-foca- issued to 5 employees 60 years ago. In those 1 day, heavy, thick lenses in steel j t grames gave the workers the ap-pearance of the movie's mad sci-entists. To prove h:s point, Mr. Olson reported that employees of the Utah Division are presently taking ad-vantage of a new prescription safety glass program at the rate of 100 a week. Under the new program, inaug-urated March I, any employee can obtain safety glasses, plain, tinted or both, free of charge. He only needs to pay the cost of the pre-scription. (Continued on page three) Homer R. Smith, 63, of Salt Lake City, brother to Mrs. Ruth Christ-ense- n and Miss Ina Smith of Bing-ham and Clayton Smith of Midvale, passed away Easter Sunday, April 17 at 10:15 p.m. in a Salt Lake hospital. Mr. Smith had lived here with Mrs. Christensen for several years. Funeral services and burial was in Brunswick, Mo. CLEAN UP---A JOB FOR EVERYONE It s time to clean up and paint and make the com-munity more beautiful. In communities throughout the country you will find homeowners painting, cleaning up around the yard, and planting flowers and shrubs. It's a spontaneous effort to beautify and make the community more attractive and a better place in which to live. Join this effort. Make it a united effort for community betterment, as supporting your local organizations, institutions, mer-chants and endeavors. FISH AND GAME HIGHUGim Resident juveniles of ages 17, 18, 19 and 20 years who hunted game in Utah last year should present their 1959 license when applying for a I960 hunting or combination hunting and fishing license. This reminder was issued by the department of fish and game as spokesmen listed the answers to many recent questions concerning the new law effecting licensing of juvenile hunters. The law became effective April I, this year. Under the new law all 17, 18, 19 and 20 year old persons must either show the 1959 license in evi-dence that they hunted last year, evidence that they have passed the regular training course, or evidence of comparable training in the safe handling of firearms. All juveniles of the ages 14, 15 and 6 years must show a certifi-cate in evidence that they have successfully passed the required gun safety training course. License agents may not issue any type hunting license to juveniles age 14 through 20 year without the required credentials at the time of purchase. An award in recognition of the "outstanding quality of financial records and record keeping" was recently presented to the Utah De-partment of Fish and Game by the state auditor. The department books are audited completely once each year a well a on a continuing basis. Carp may be taken with the use of bow and arrow on any water open to angling provided the user of this equipment is properly lic-ensed. I II Jl I IHiII.IIJ,iM ' Mr. and Mrs. Roger Kelson of Magna are the proud parents of a new baby boy born Wednesday, April 20, at Holy Cross Hospital. He weighed seven pounds. Mrs. Kelson will be remembered as the former Nancy Peterson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Peterson of Lark. Mr. and Mrs. Cirilo Martinez of Bingham Canyon are the proud par-ents of a new daughter born at St. Mark's Hospital Wednesday, April 20th, |