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Show PAGE FOUR THE BINGHAM BULLETIN of West Jordan FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1962 GIVE SHARES IN AMERICA FOR CHRISTMAS SAYS MISS U.S.A. V "No Chrintmns shopping problems for nif," say Marel I.cilani Wilson, Mis U. S. A., a she hang U. S. Savings HoiuN on her Christmus tree. Saving Honda are guaranteed to fit and guaran-teed to please long-lastin- long remembered Christmas gifla that never go out of style. The beauty queen from tlie 30i!i state Hawaii know that when she gives a U. S, Suvings Uotid for Clirixtniu she also is giving a Share in America the present with a future. BETROTHAL REVEALED Mr. and Mn. Willard M. Bills of Riverton announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Mia Linda Bill to Jack Anthony Butterfield. Parent of the future bridegroom are Mr. and Mr. Leslie M. Butter-fiel-alto of Riverton. The engaged couple have circled January 18 a their wedding date. Setting for the nuptial will be Riv-erton First Ward Chapel. A recep-tion will follow. Bishop Allen Stocking will perform the cere-mony. Engagement Announced Announcement i made of the encasement and approaching mar- - WOMEN'S CIVIC CLUB XMAS PARTY DEC. 12 The annual Christmas party of the Bingham Canyon Women' Civic Club will be held at Immaculate Conception recreation hall on Wed-nesday evening, Dec. 12, it is re-ported. Ail members are urged to attend. ST. PAUL'S W.S.C.S. TO MEET DECEMBER 13 The Woman's Society of Chris-tian Service of St. Paul' Methodist Church, Copperton will meet Thurs day evening, Dec. 13, at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Myrtle Thomas in Lark. All members are invited to come out. riage of Miss Claudia Ann Zdunich to James Russell Johnson. Making known the nuptial news are parents of the bride-elec- t, Mr. and Mr. Joseph E. Zdunich, 187 E. 7570 So., Midvale, former Bing-ham and Copperton resident. Mr. and Mr. Reed R. Johnson, 7452 So. 100 West, Midvale are parents of the future bridegroom. A January 12 wedding date has been et by the couple. Setting for the wedding and a reception hon-oring the couple will be the Crest-woo- d Villa. Mr. Johnson has attended West-minster College. Martha Circle met Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Charlotte Murano in Copperton. A very lovely one o'clock luncheon was served after which bridge was played. Prizes were won by Mrs. Neva Jensen, Mrs. Nellie Chester, Mrs. Kay Sonne and Mrs. Myrtle Thomas. The meet-ing wa the group' Christmas par-ty. 22 guests were present. Obtaining a marriage license in Salt Lake County recently were: John Raymond Dick, 23, West Jor-dan and Dorthea Jeannine Dunn Sanders, 22, Bountiful; Larry Emil McEntire, 21, Salt Lake City, and David Dimmick and family, Wayne, Sue, Janna, Randy and Ronnie of Bingham, Mrs. Alta Sorensen of West Jordan. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Nielsen and boys, Royce, Gary and Clifford of Riverton and Mrs. Eu-nice Raye Collings and family, Da-na, Kathy, and MacNeil of Murray, A delightful time was enjoyed. MacNeil Collings, son of Mrs. Eu-nice Raye Collings of Murray, was honored with a family on Sunday in celebration of his ninth birthday. Those attending were his sisters, Dana and Kathy, Mrs. Alta Sorensen, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Nielsen, Royce, Gary and Clifford, Mrs. Erma Dean Dimmuk, Wayne, Sue, Janna, Randy and Ronnie, and Mrs. Maurine Nielson and Carol. Mrs. Ruth J. Kidd, Miss Ruth Claire Kidd and Mrs. Esther Row-land of Midvale attended the Am-erican Institute of Banking meeting and program held at the Mountain States Tel. c Tel. Building in Salt Lake City Wednesday evening. A book review was given by Miss Helen Kimball who reviewed "50 Years Ago". Door prizes were drawn and refreshments were serv-- , ed. Mrs. Kidd won a prize. Susan Kay Bolton, 1 8, Copperton. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Feraco, for-merly of 482 Main Street, Bingham Canyon, have moved to their new home at 539 East 6340 South in Murray. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Brentel and family, who formerly resided at Rear 339 Main Street in Bingham Canyon, have moved to 134 West State Highway, Copperton. D. V. Dimmick of West Jordan who is recovering from an opera-tion performed last Tuesday, upent a night with his son and family, Mr. and 'Mrs. David Dimmick, Wayne, Sue, Janna, Randy and Ronnie of Bingham. Helping Mrs. Alta Sorensen of West Jordan celebrate her birthday last Tuesday were Mrs. Maurine Nielson and Carol, Mrs, Erma Dean Dimmick, Wayne, Sue, Janna, Ran-dy and Ronnie of Bingham, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Nielsen, Royce, Gary and Clifford of Riverton and Mrs. Eunice Raye Collings, Dana," Kathy and MacNeal of Murray. Sunday visitors of Mrs. Maurine Nielson and Carol were Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Carolyn Abrim and Larry of Rose Park. Helping Mrs. Maurine Nielson celebrate her birthday on Saturday were Carol Nielson, Mr. and Mrs. BINGHAM FIREMAN'S ASSN. LADY AUXILIARY The Ladies Auxiliary of the Bing-ham Fireman'a Assn. met at the fire hall in Bingham for their week-ly business meeting and election of officers last Monday night, Dec. 3. Those elected to office for the com-ing year are: Mrs. Robert King, president; Mrs Ross M. Cushing, vice president; Mrs. Verio Kendrick, treasurer; Mrs. Leonard Bell, social secretary and Mrs. Mae Stillman, flower com-mittee. Mrs. Jack Householder Jr. was hostess to the social following the business meeting. Bridge was play-ed and prizes won by Mrs. Dean Lipsey, Mrs. Verl Peterson, Mrs. Cushing and 'Mrs. Phil Sanderson. Lovely refreshments were served by the hostess. 1 5 members were pres-ent. The Auxiliary will hold their an-nual Christmas party next Monday night, Dec. 10 at 7 p.m. at the fire hall in Bingham. Committee in charge are iMrsr. Harold Chester, Mrs. Lawrence West, Mrs. Hunt Nielson and Mrs. Verl Peterson. Dinner will be served at 7:00 fol-lowed by exchange of gifts and bridge. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Haus-knech- t, who formerly resided at 108 West State Highway, Copper-to- n, have moved to their new home at 319 Monroe in Midvale. THANK YOU I WISH TO EXPRESS THANKS TO THE PEOPLE OF COPPERTON FOR THEIR SUPPORT IN MY ELECTION AS TRUSTEE ON THE BOARD OF THE COPPERTON IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT. ROSS M. CUSH1NG you go. ' jPWijjsji jj the bourbon Rpf3it to beat Also Available BOTTLED IN BOND' -- M Waierfei-Frazi- er THE GREAT KENTUCKY BOURBON FOR OVER 150 YEARS K PROOF,. .0ISTIUCD AND BOTTLED BY WATERFIIL AND FRA2IER DISTILLERY CO., BARDSTOWN. KV. 1 i 1 So different...so versatilc.thcy go where they are needed in and out of the homc.and they keep on giving year after year. These are just some of the reasons an electric portable appliance makes such an exciting gift for some-one special on your list. 4 PORTABLE ELECTRIC DRYER PORTABLE ELECTRIC DISHWASHER. washday. i2tZTZ - She'll hear Christmas work-save- r, bells all electric, its safe and clean as elec- - Handles anything from fine china trie light. Less fading and yellowing. . to pots and pans. Washes, rinses, dries, sanitizes. Roll-aroun- d model PORTABLE ELECTRIC BROILER needs no special plumbing or installation. jTFI PORTABLE ELECTRIC DISPOSER &jpftJ "p whisks away after- - 1 lUr r(mm fi meal scraps...from --jJLli 1 J, w potato peelings to S 7 bones. Sends your SSssss 8arbaSc chores Plug it in anywhere on the down the drain! . patio, at your summer home, in J Just plug in your the family room,., goes where cfc4-ts- r portable model, good food and fun are wanted. 4-- at anv UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. E:" ruuy from your dealer now. GRAND OPENING"" December 11th RUBY MAY'S BEAUTY SHOP 7902 SOUTH 2200 WEST WEST JORDAN FREE GIFT WITH EACH HAIR DO CHRISTMAS SPECIAL NAME BRAND PERMANENT WAVE $10.00 FOR . y Q m.50 for Q(S0 CHILDREN 12 YEARS AND UNDER $6.25 HAIR CUTS INCLUDED PHONE AM FOR APPOINTMENT i SEE US FOR EXPERT SERVICE AND QUALITY PRODUCTS-DEAL- ERS IN: CONOCO PRODUCTS ADDERLEY & NICHOLS COPPERTON Phone PR A STANPARD MEASURE nnnn OFUNGTH LIUULI A fDPKCIOU$ STONEEDDD g8r M h the mwi tquwM. Hm Uhwi I Uy iquorti form m Anaofem, Sie aofotioe f wMcft Mw TV TCCZei nwwllry tt Mw WmIi. r I (mng aNOWAW) 3ojinow'S Agra --z raVA- - :SMA4$NV Isaias says: Keep on hoping I The Church opens his prophecy on the First Sunday of Advent, and reads it every day at the Divine Office until Christmas night. St. John the Baptist says: You must be converted. You must change your life. He fulfills his office of Forerunner on three of the Sundays in Advent. Finally there is Our Lady. She dominates the whole of Advent, from the beginning to end. These weeks form our Lady's month, par excellence. Looking at her, we can see o easily what our attitude of welcome should be. Every day, as she went to the fountain, as she did the housework at Nazareth, talked with her neighbors, travelled tow-ards her cousin, Elizabeth, from getting up in the morning to going to bed at night, one thought was uppermost in her mind; one certain-ty ruled all her actions, the Child Who was growing within her her own child and her Lord! During Advent, we celebrate the Feast of the Immaculate Concep-tion. This love which surrounded the Blessed Virgin, which preserv-ed her in the state of grace from the very first instant, this love i us all, since it was for our salvation that ahe wa chosen to be the Mother of Cod. There i a prayer which reign over the period of Advent, the An-gelu- i, the perfect summary of the mystery of the Incarnation. The angel of the Lord declared unto Mary and we have shared this declaration, it has come down to us. Behold the Handmaid of the Lord and behold us, His servants. And the word was made flesh for always and for all of usl IMMACULATE CONCEPTION PARISH (Continued from page one) ing to that mystery to us so that we can share it. God's Eternal Love appeared in this tiny infant born of the Virgin Mary. The submission of Jesus, His himil-it- y and strength, His adoration of the Father, His offering to men, His peace, are all offered to us, and communicated to us through the Eucharist bound up in the whole celebration of Christmas. It is we who must be born to the life of the Son of Cod. The word only became one of us that we may each become Hi. The important thing for us js the approaching Christmas, for eternity is today I The graces of Christ's na-tivity must reach us through the repetitions of Christmas. We, hu-man beings, are made like that; nothing ia perfect or complete all at once, but our whole existence, human and divine, ia progressive, repetitive, accomplished by a suc-cession of strokes and beginning over and over again. Cod knows that quite well! The Christian Lit-urgy is His instrument. To pass through Advent and to prepare for Christmas, we have three spiritual guides: Isaias, St ohn the Baptist and Our Blessed Lady. FIRST LADY . . . Mrs. Jacque-lin- e Kennedy brushes a strand of hair from her eyes at the watches welcoming services for West German Chancellor Kon-ra- d Adenauer on White House lawn. S' If . ; fkv y 'id A J FULL CIRCLE ... The late Marilyn Monroe's career appar-ently came full circle as a quar-terly magazine announced that it would run a special series of nude photos posed for shortly before her death. Marilyn, early in her career, posed in the nude for a calendar. IpMEMBER" From Lewis Winder, Fresno, Calif.: I remember in the early 1900's my brother and I were teenagers back in Ohio, near At-wat-south of Cleveland. We would take large umbrellas, get up on the barn, open them and jump down. We thought we were very daring. The farm next to ours was va-cant and had an orchard, which was used to pasture sheep. We frequently would tease the big ram until he would come after us, then we would' dodge behind a tree. We liked the owner of the farm very much. One day, we noticed that the shingles had been taken off one side of the roof of the old house. We pitched in and tore the shingles from the other side. A few days later, the man discov-ered what we had done and came to see our father. We had to ex-plain that we mistakenly thought he intended to shingle the other side of the house. Sliding down hills on sleds, and skating on large ponds was win-tertime sport. At school, we played fox and hounds. One boy would be the fox, others the hounds and we in for miles through the woods. other and I did janitor work r 50c a week. We banked the love with coal and had a warm tire going early each morning. We had an orchard of 2S0 maple and sugar trees and making ma-ple molasses in spring was a great event. (Send eontrlbstlons Is this column to The Old Timer, Community frees Service, Bos , Frankfort, Keatuckjr.) JUST HOW DO YOU INTEND TO BEQUEATH YOUR MONEY? wLD Man John Jones was a shrewd fellow. Everybody knew that. When he retired from the bank he had all his money in farms, and with his retirement he turned his whole attention to managing them. He had a proper little wife, who was his same age of 66, and four , married children ranging in age from 36 to 44. There were those who said his farms were worth $100,000. His world was in good order. But Old Man Jones got to age 69, then three months beyond it, and then he died. Old Man Jim Smith had been his lawyer all these many years, and when the funeral and the weeping were respectfully dis-posed of, Mr. Smith read the will he had hplped Mr. Jones prepare. Mr. Jones allowed, according to the will, that the farms had been good to him and Mrs. Jones and that they would be good to the four children. Whereas, Mr. Jones decreed that the farms would be kept intact, that the in-come from them would go to Mrs. Jones until she died. Thereafter , the four children would be equal owners and would equally share , the income j Since tlie (arms were found to j be worth about $130,000 instead of i the repined $100. (m and had been ' t netting between 4 and 5 per cent, this meant that each child would get about $1500 a year Since there was enough other property to take care of taxes and leave the farms intact, everything was set Mr. Jones, his will said, thought this was nice. But it was in 1957 that Mr. Jones died, and in 1958 that his wife followed him. At that time six of the Jones grandchildren had grown up and married, and of the six one had had the mar-riag-annulled, a second was suing for divorce, and a third was back borne with mother and I pouting. Nine more grandchildren were in various stages of growing up Then came 1960. A Jones daut;h. ter, with five children of her own. died of cancer. Whereupon five grandchildren became fractional owners of those farms A Jones son, returning from the funeral was killed in an automobile ac cident along with his wife and four more grandchildren got into the pie. With divorces and annulments yet. And some ol them living in community prop srty states. No ... I don't know how it'll come out. But if I am still writ ng this colmun in 20 years, and you're still reading it, I'll make i check of the courts and see how hings are going |