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Show . TltE BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH FRIDAY. OCTOBER 14, 1980 pmmm WOMEN'S CIVIC CLUB HAS VERY INTERESTING MEET Halloween lantern decorations and colors centered a lovely white crochet-trimme- d cloth covering the center table in the meeting room of ihe Civic Center for the October 12 meeting of the Bingham Canyon Women's Civic Club at 6:30 p.m. Mrs. Marvin Throckmorton, pre-sident, opened the meeting, greet-ing members and guests, and gave a short resume of the activities of he club during the summer months. Announcement was made of a change in the annual GFWC Vogue I'attern Sewing Contest, that high school students from the ninth thru the twelfth grades would now be eligible in the competition, form-erly for club members only. Pledge of allegiance to the flag was given, led by Mrs. Throckmor-ton. Croup singing of "1 he Star Spangled Banner'" was led by Mrs. Jack Householder, Jr. with Mrs. James Xanlhos at the piano. The club prayer was given by Mrs. Mike Zampos an dthe minutes were read by Mrs. Hosmer Peterson, record-ing secretary. T:n. Rnr,n rtmiokter of Mr. and Fire Auxiliary met Monday night as guests of Mrs. Lawrence West. Prizes at bridge were won by Mrs. Joe Dispenza, first; Mrs. Hosmer Peterson, second; Mrs. Boyd And-erson, consolation, end Mrs. Leon-ard Bell, bingo. Lovely refresh-ments were served by the hostess. Thirteen members were present. Mrs. Grant Milner will be hostess next Monday night. Tin Sullivan who formerly re-sided at 443 Main St., has moved to the High School Apartments in Copperton. Mrs. Jim Sullenfrer left laft Sat-urday for San Diego, Calif., to spend two weeks with her sister, Mrs. Mae Clark. Linger Longer Club met Tuesday evening nt the home of Mrs. John Nilsson of Sondy. Invited guests were Mrs. Guv Murray of Rivers de. Calif., Mrs. Dominic priano and Mrs. Barbara Young. Contract bridge was played with prizes won by Mrs. Priano, Mrs. J. T. Davis, Mrs. Florence Bruno and Mrs. Younsr. Lovely refreshments were served by the hostess. Mrs. Alice Brisk left last Satur-day for Denver, Colo., to visit two weeks with relatives and friends. W.B.A. meets this Monday even-ing, Oct. 17, at the home of Mrs. Heber Nichols of Copperton at 7 o'clock. All members are urged to come out. Ann Marie Sybrowsky, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Axel Sybrowsky, who has been living in Salt Lake City, has moved back home to live. Mrs. Maybelle Torgensen of Monroe is visiting with her daugh-ter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Hunt Nielson and family until next week. Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Bentley en-tertained at a birthday dinner Sun-day honoring their daughter, Deb-bie's second birthday. Others pres-ent were her brother and sister, Bobby and Julie Ann and grand-parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bentley. Bingham Circle W.S.C.S. met at the home of Mrs. Rex Mills Wed-nesday afternoon at I o'clock. Light refreshments were served at the close of the meeting. Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Ross M. Cushing is Mrs. Cushing's aunt, Mrs. Scena Tracy of Salt Lake City. Mrs. A. D. Bentley entertained at a birthday party Wednesday of last week for her daughter, Julie Ann, who was four years old. The afternoon was enjoyed by Billy Huebner, Susan Jo and Steven Householder, Jon and Carl Sargent, Mike Anderson, Buddy Peterson, Celece Swenson and Bobby and Debbie Bentley. Also present were several mothers of the youngsters Mrs. Wally Swenson, Mrs. Boyd Anderson, Mrs. Verl Peterson, Mrs. Jack Householder Jr. and Mrs. A. J. Sargent. A lovely luncheon was served by the hostess. Mrs. Russell Boren, gave a detailed report of highlights and her im-pressions of the activities of GirFs State held in June. Miss Boren's attendance at Girl's State was spon-sored by the Civic Club. A vocal solo "My Own America" was given by Mrs. Elwin Winn, ac-companied on the piano by Betty Mae Winn. Mrs. R. C. Stevenson gave a re-port on the General Federation of Women's Clubs campaign and distributed a pamph-let issued by the General Federa-tion: "Lead Your Community to the Ballot Box. Responsible Respon-sive Citizens Must Vote." Quota-tions from the pamphlet: "As Re-sponsible Responsive Citizens our Responsibility is to know the elec-tion laws and procedures for quali-fied voters, be informed on the campaign issues, the records of the candidates, and the principles for which they stand. Be intelligent and informed voters. Our Privilege is to exercise the right to vote afford-ed American citizens, be qualified voters and vote in all elections, preserve our democratic heritage by voting for those who represent good government. Our Duty is to participate in the General Federa-tion of Women's Club Campaign and other community efforts, endeavor to have 100 per cent voting record for clubs, raise the state voting percentage." The pamphlet showed Utah in third place in the nation for votes cast in the 1956 election. Mrs. Harold Brown of Salt Lake City and Mrs. Ted Wilson of Boun-tiful, representing "The League of Women Voters of Utah" discussed the functions and accomplishments of the League and the importance of voting and voting intelligently, of being informed on the campaign issues and the records of candid-ates. The Halloween motif was also carried out in the dainty, delicious refreshments served to 20 mem-bers and guests by the hostesses for the evening Mrs. Zampos, chairman: Mrs. Householder and Mrs. Albert Pollock. Dinner guests last Saturday ev-ening of Mr. and Mrs. Aimer A. Brg were Mr. and Mrs. Delmer Berg of Bountiful and Mr. and Mrs. Den Stewart and daughter, Vickie, of HolUdny. Mrs. Eugene Morris entertained her 7 o'clock dinner and bridge club at her home last Friday night. Members attending were Mrs. Odell Peterson, Mrs. B. J. Santistevan, Mrs. O. S. Jensen, Miss Mabel Ne-pru- Mrs. Robert Bailey, Mrs. E. V. Knudscn, Mrs. A. D. Chrijten-se- n and Mrs. Harold W. Nielsen. A very lovely dinner was served after which bridge was played. Mrs. Peterson and Mrs. Bailey scored high for the evening and Mrs. Nielsen von the bingo prize. Mr. and Mrs. Rex Mills had as dinner guests Monday evening her father, Edward Heather, M ss Ada Duhigg and Miss Mildred May of Salt Lake City and Mrs. Clara Thomas of Rupert, Idaho. Mrs. Eugene Morris, Mrs. A. D. Christensen of Copperton and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Morris and chil-dren, Stephen and Karen, of Mid-va- le spent Sunday in Portage visit-ing with Mr. and Mrs. Josh Hawks and family. Mrs. Joel P. Jensen entertained et a lovely bridge luncheon at her home in Midvale last Saturday. There were four tables of bridge. Guests attending from here were Mrs. Eugene Morris and Mrs. E. V. Knudsen of Copperton. NEW HOMES IN SANUT Low DOWN PAYMENTS 2 BEDROOM HOME WITH BASE-MENT nd ATTACHED GARAGE. 3 BEDROOM HOME 1 V4 BATHS CARPORT BUILT-IN'- FULLY IMPROVED LOTS $100 Down $25.00 Month Conuet LOUIS D. NELSON AM FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT Due to the small amount In-volved, we do not accept want ads except on a cash-wlth-ord- er baste. No ads taken by telephone VARIETY OF NICE HOMES AVAILABLE IN MAGNA, GRAN-GER, KEARNS AREA. Call Jeanno Hubbard, BY Horn. Realty AX WILLING TO ADVERTISE POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER RADIO STATION K S 0 P for the Democratic Party on Mexican Fiesta Program by Adam P. Medina Phone AM Salt Lake City FOR SALE 3 Bedrra. shake large) living, dining room and! kitchen fully carpeted and drap-ed. Fireplace, 1 Vt baths. Landscap-ed and sprinkling system. Good Holladay location. $18,500 Call CR or see at 1763 Field-cre-st Lane. 3tn RIDERS WANTED FROM COP-PERTO- N OR BINGHAM Will arrive Salt Lake 8:00; depart 6:00 Call Larry Johnson PR FOR SALE Frame Home in Midvale. $6,950.00. Large lot. 121 South Main St. AM Inquire 103 3rd Avenue. 2tp HOME FOR SALE in Copperton. All storm windows and doors, in-sulated. Call Rosa Scroggin, PR after 6:00 p.m. 3tp ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF Tffi OFFICE OF OR SAMUEL P ROBISON VISION SPECIALIST AND CONTACT LENSES 4963 SOUTH STATE STREET Phone AM (Next to Murray Theater) EYE EXAMINATIONS COLORED AND CLEAR CONTACT LENSES STUDENT VISUAL PROBLEMS , PARTICIPATING IN KENNECOTT'S EYE : EXAMINATION PROGRAM FOR SALE BY OWNER INCOME PROPERTY IN HUNTER. WILL SACRIFICE. CY 8 5941. OLDER HOME FOR SALE IN MAGNA Make offer 2872 South 9050 West Phone BY or CY OPEN FOE ENSlPECffllON I SOTER'S Beautiful HUB PARK HOMES I AS LOW AS $12,000 FULLY CARPETED I . Split Level and Ramblers E I Priced from $12,000 to $14,800 NO LOAN COST 5 EXCITING NEW MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM CHOICE LOCATION QUALITY CONSTRUCTION THROUGHOUT Brick construction, oak floors, mahogany cabinets, copper plumbing, Asphalt paved I roads. Sidewalks with hi-ba- curb and gutters. City sowers and water in and paid for. Large cemented driveways with reinforced wire mesh. Foil back crack resist-ant dry wall 220 wired for dryer. Plumb ed for automatic washer. Choice of colors in tile, painting, linoleum, built-i-n oven and range. Turn west at 80th South State Street. Follow signs to sales office. HUB PARK REALTY 613 South Hoover Street, Midvale AM AM 52 DA RESPONSIBLE PERSON WANTED TO SERVICE AND COLLECT FROM AUTOMATIC VENDING MACHINES IN THIS AREA. ABSOLUTELY NO SELLING, ALL ACCOUNTS WILL BE ESTABLISHED AND TURNED OVER TO QUALI-FIED PERSONS. AGE OR PAST EXPERIENCE NOT IMPORT-ANT. A FEW HOURS WEEKLY NETS GOOD INCOME. RE-QUIRES CAR AND $600 TO $1800 WORKING CAPITAL TO START. (FULLY SECURED) WRITE GIVING FULL PAR-TICULARS TO: SELF-SERVIC- 2208 WHITE HENRY STEW-ART BUILDING, SEATTLE 1, WASHINGTON. BELMONT NOW 7 YEARS OLD ::;r::vi::':: N::'v jr.:'::'-'::- yyy,yyy''yyy :::::::'::::'::;X::;i,t", v:x,:':x':: ' f v :, ,y. .' . .mi ' 1 I rl J ' "l A - k . 'i r, - - v You don't need a seat on the stock exchange to enjoy this fine 7 Year Old Bourbon. SAME NOW 7 YEARS OLD PL?E BELEU30LW THE LIGHTER BOURBON STRAIGHT tOURSON WHISKCT N fROOf BELMONT 0IST1UIN8 CO.. UWRENCE8URQ. 1N0. mmmHmmmMmmsBBmBmmaKmmmmMSBmBaEmmmHmammmmm SEE US FOR EXPERT SERVICE AND QUALITY PRODUCTS DEALERS IN: CONOCO PRODUCTS CHRYSLER AND PLYMOUTH CARS ADDERLEY & NICHOLS GARAGE Chick and Ren Phone PR to 29.2 per cent in the latest est-imate. This increase hat been essen-tial to keep pace with the growth of established cities as well as the establishment of new ones. City delivery service has been started in 800 communi-ties in addition to the extension of literally hundreds of routes which were already in operation. This re-quired the equivalent of 31,000 more letter carriers to serve ap-proximately 9,000,000 more Am-erican families and upwards of 700,000 more business concerns. "There is perhaps no better way of demonstrating the Department's ever-improvi- efficiency than by showing just how steadily the an-nual volume handled per man-ye- ar of employment excluding crty car-riers has been increasing since 1953. In that year the total handled by one man was 132,000 pieces of mail. For I960 the corresponding figure was 157,000. "It is, of course, true that all the additional services has made it nec-essary to take on many new em-ployees and that our total increased from 506,520 in 1953 to 562,868 on June 30, I960, but as pointed out in the original I960 report fig-ures, the workload increase during this same period was nearly 25 per cent. "To my way of thinking that's the story in a nutshell and I ser-iously doubt if there has ever been a story just like it in the entire his-tory of the Post Office Department. I am also of the opinion that lit would be impossible to overempha-size the importance of this story not only for today's operations but for the years that lie ahead. "In a recent speech on this sub-ject by the postmaster general he brought out that by 1970 our popu- - lation is expected to be 208,000,-00- 0 and that our annual mail vol-ume by then wiill be more than 90 billion pierces. The U.S. Bureau of Standards, an entirely separate or-ganization, estimates that our mail volume will be doubled within the next 25 years, and it all fits into the same picture. "It was in another speech about the Post Office Department that another official expressed his senti-ments about the situation like this: 'We are proud of our record. We have no apologies to make and no regrets to express. What has been done was once said to be impossible, Now it is history.' Those are also my sentiments." population growth, according to advance information from the An-nual Report of the Post Office De-partment which has been made available to Postmaster Edwin W. Johnson. Although subject to last minute revia'ons, the year's total has been estimated as 63.6 billion pieces of mail which includes about one bil-lion pieces of parcel post. It was stated that J. is would mean an in-crease of nearly 25 per cent over the corresponding figures for 1953 when the annual volume was 50.9 billion pieces. During this same period, it was pointed out, the revenue of the De-partment also has shown an im-pressive gain with an increase from $2,091,714,000 in fiscal year 1953 to $3,276,800,000 for fiscal year I960. "There is not much we can do about how much mail we have to handle from day to day or how many people are making use of the Postal Service", Postmaster Johnson stated, "but the whole Department keeps busy in devising ways and means for doing the job not only more efficiently but more econom-ically. As 1 recall it, that was the way President Eisenhower outlined the principal objectives of the De-partment when Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield was being sworn in back in 1953, and that's the way we have been operating ever since. "We can't deny that we still make mistakes and that the human ele-ment still plays a vitally important part lin daily operations, but the statistics in the Department's an-nual report offer positive proof that we are making progress on a natio-n- wide basis. As an example, while the mail volume showed an increase of nearfy 25 per cent, the employment increase during this same period amounted to only I I per cent. "By way of explanation, it should be mentioned that the employment figures based on thousands of man years are first worked out under two separate headings, city carriers and 'all other', and then combined for the over-al- l percentage figures just mentioned for fiscal I960. "It should also be mentioned that there has been a steady and sub-stantial increase in 'city carriers' each year as compared with 1953, ranging from 4.5 per cent in 1954 ALL TIME HIGH NOTED IN NATION S MAIL VOLUME A new e high in the na-tion's mail volume was reached during fiscal year I960 ending June 30, which continued the steady up-ward trend of the past seven years at a rate which even exceeds the HAU'ITTEIWI JGEORGE - BEING AS YOU HAVE TWO KIDS 1 riSrTA MCOLLEGE, ANPMNE V SB ( ) STARTS NEXT YEAR, hr m I I THOUGHT YOU A3. IJ MIGHT GYEME &y ( 7 A HINT AS TO J By Lyn Connelly "new face" la TELEVISION'S In all Us glory with the fall season here and it'i going to be interesting to note the next several weeks whether all these miraculous changes in pro-gramming predicted by the net-works will actually transpire . . . So far, according to advance pub-licity on new shows, It sounds like more westerns, more mystery and more comedy and we fail to see where there is anything new or astounding in any of it. We were amazed to find one Saturday evening, while conva-lescing from a brief illness, that we wen; obliged to sit through 3V4 consecutive hours of shooting, both in western and in crime shows . . . Of course, there was no compel-ling force gluing us to the set but we had a morbid curiosity that insisted we find how long a period of shooting one station offered . . . That was the answer . . . The fol-lowing week we watched Welk, followed by Jubilee USA followed by a polka party, which is a lot of corny music but at least it doesn't produce nightmares or raise blood pressures. CAPITOL: Popular band leader Glen Gray and his Casa Lotna orchestra come up with a mint julep of an album entitled "Swing-i-n Southern Style" that should prove as heady as magnolias to hi-- fi addicts . . . Flavored with Dixie honeysuckle are such favor-ites as "Yes Sir, That's My Baby," "Stars and Stripes Forever," "Co-lumbia, Gem of the Ocean," "Car-olln- a In the Morning" and "Dixie" amongst others. A new voice in the record field is well equipped to answer die challenge of "The Many Moods of Ann Richards" . . . Ann does "I Gotta Have You," "Everytime," "When the Sun Comes Out," "Poor Little Extra Girl," "I'm Late," "By Myself' a.:d "Be Easy, Be Tender." |