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Show FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 194, PAGE FOUR THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH ' NEW JOBS I ullj? Singljam Sullrtin Issued Every Friday at Bingham Canyon, Salt Lake County. Utah. Entered as Second Class Matter, at the Post Office at Bingham Canyon, Utah, Under the Act of March 3, 1879. Rwsjrn. NATIONAL 6DITORIA! iiTiucf&TrlccniaTiAir inP&f ASSOCIATION UTAH fMacZ LELANI) G. UUI'JIESS, Editor and Publisher Subscription Rate, per vcar in advance $2 00 Advertising Rates Furnished on Application Income Tax "Don'ts" DON'T prepare your inc0fr tax return until you C: carefully read and undent! r the instructions accompanyir'' the forms. ' DON'T delay in making your income tax return.V problems deserve careful Wl1 and the early assembling ". your data expedites this. DON'T destroy the da' from which your return I compiled. You will need th for possible rechecking verifying the return. DON'T overlook any item c schedule on the form whk you are required to fill 0li; They are all necessary t0 exact 4 computation of your k come tax. DON'T omit any explani tion or information that is K sential to a complete audit t1 your return. An ounce of ct may save you a pound of m'. necessary expense and tin' and annoyance both to yj and your Government. Bingham Mortuar TcIElO!B4 E7 John S(m(iffl. I Kmhw, n Hill Plu&iv S4 KENTUCKY "1 ,; jTKAIGIIT BOURBON WHISKEY 93 pof p-- I As enticing as the I OLD CELLAR at Grandfather's farm ...REMEMBER? Quart, Cod No. 2 57 iy"""""'" Pint, Cod No. 258 jd5- - 'iPint,CodNo.259 l Who ""r&s. ff Sfer fa'. r BINGHAM & GARFIELD RAILWAY COMPANY Ship your freight via Bingham and Garfield Railway Fast daily merchandise cars from Salt Lake City ir. connection with the Union Pacific System. Use Copper Brass piping for $4,500 cottages only cost $48.87 more than galvanized iron piping and will Last Forever T. H. PERLEYWITS, J. H. CULLET0N General Freight and Pass. Agent Ageni Salt Lake City, Utah Bingham, Utat v. Let us know if you expect to move, if you want any changes in your present listings, additional listings or advertising. The next telephone directory closes soon $uil caff the Jefefjlione JSuiine&s Office , I GET IW STRETCH OUT:, and e-i- oy NEW COMFORT was the keynote as A soft, steady, gliding new Ford ride ff ft fOflf we made plans for this year's Ford. that takes good road or bad in a sat- - JElH Get in, through the new wide doors! isfying new kind of stride. And notice I m Stretch out, in room to spare! Seating the quietness of this big Ford ! E1GA fKOfi'' width has been increased as much as There's news at your Ford Dealer's 7 inches. Knee-roo- and inside length that's too good to miss! News in corn-ar- e greatest in the low-pric- e field. fort. News in value. And news in a Then take the road and try its ride! "deal" that you'll find easy to take! CANYON MOTOR CO. Bingham Canyon Phone 333 A YOU CAN HUY ANY OF THE FAMOUS STANDARD OIL PRODUCTS AT n. MIDWAY SERVICE STATION 292 Main Street Marvin Myers, Prop. BINGHAM SERVICE STATION 14 Main Street Charles Haynes MOONLIGHT SERVICE STATION Between Bingham and Copperton Vedalakes and Campas, Prop. NOVEL PRODUCTS. New industries, unknown in 1900, have made jobs for 12,000,- - 000 people, and the future out-look is even brighter- - In show-ing my copy for this column to a famous engineer, he said: "You have omitted many new things such as textiles made of glass, clothing made of skimmed milk, food derived from grasses, not to mention heatless stoves and household appliances oper-ated by radio. Cotton and other products of the farm will be us-ed to produce paving blocks, building materials, and furniture of all kinds. Messages and mu-sic will be carried by simple light waves, while luxuries now pur-chasable by onlv the rich will be enjoyed by all." If we must look back to 1929, at least we can heed its lesson. It taught us that the need of 1941 is a modernized viewpoint that is unselfish instead of per-sonal, and national instead of local. This applies alike to de-fense efforts and to "normal pro-duction. Consider the huge of funds available for in-vestment w hen businessmen sud-denly get this new viewpoint! The more thoroughly this situ-ation is analyzed, the more tre-- , mendous loom the possibilities. The peaks of a dozen years ago may come to look like foothills. Those who fail to develop this new viewpoint in time will sure-ly someday regret this attitude. O My? How He's Growing! - t,Zi"&z ..... f && ffi 11 . I 1 MINERS' HOSPITAL BILLAPPR0VED Now th-i- t II. 15- 53. the oc-cupational disease bill, has been passed and sent to the governor, interest of miners on legislation is focused nn I J. B. 23, provid-ing for a miners' hospital in con-nection with the Utah state sana-torium, which was p:is;ed by the house this week-Ther-was some objection to removing the sanatorium from the control of the state board of health, but it was not strong enough to result in the bill be-ing changed. Representative L. Rulon 'Jenkins (D), Weber, said he favored a miners' hospital, but thought it would be unwise to transfer the sanatorium to some other control, "because tu-berculosis is not only a. miners' problem ' but a state problem," and the board of health has su-- i nervision of methods for control before the hospitalization stage is reached. Representative Edward Scher- - er (D), Carbon, one of the spon-sor- s 01 the bill, charged that the state board of health has been unsympathetic with the move to establish a miners' hospital and has not proved itself qualified to administer the new institution. lie declared the board has failed to provide proper segregation ol disabled miners in the quarters now being used for their housing near St. Mark's hospital. Doctor's Letter Read Another sponsor, Representa-tive Kay II. Leavitt (D), Utah, said that in his opinion "the re-cord shows the state board ol health is not competent to hand-le the miners' hospital." He read a letter from a doctor who had handled industrial cases for many years in which it was stat-ed that silicotic patients would not be endangered if kept in a separate building, and it would be an advantage to have the miners' hospital in connection with the sanatorium so that the same heating plant and admin-istrative statf could be used-Mr- . Leavitt said there is now about $155,000 in the miners' hospital fund, obtained through sale of lands granted 45 years ago by the enabling act, and the bill provides that this money shall go to the proposed new in-stitution. The bill provides that silicosis sufferers would be housed in a building separate from that in which tuberculosis patients are hospitalized, so that they would not be exposed to this disease. The care to be provided by the miners' hospital would not be limited to those with lung dis-orders. Mr. and Mrs. Val Clough and daughter, Patty, of Salt Lake City, spent Sunday with Mr- and Mrs. Harold Clough. wants to give up air condition-ing and streamline trains? Be sensible about present condi-tions. TODAY'S UNSURPASSED RICHES The trouble is that when we think of the "Good Old Days", we see them through a rosy mist that blurs reality. We a'ssume that we could go back to the free-and-ea-ways and the of the 20's, and stTTl have the new inventions, the modern comforts and the other-nove- l riches which we now en-joy. It is human nature to glam-ourize the past and grumble at the present. Everybody, there-fore, who is falling short of his best efforts today because of a vague, nostalgic longing to be back in 1929, may well take stock of current progress. What glory of 1929, for in-stance, would compensate us for erasing the network of air trans-port routes, grounding our planes, and thereby slowing up traffic in passengers, mails, and express? The modern, compact, mechanized and insulated home makes the oldtime cumbersome residence seem like a barn. Where is the woman today who willingly would surrender 1941 heating equipment, washing ma-chines, and refrigerators? Who customed to the appearance and performance of today's models would be a bunch of junk. No-body of today could tolerate the ancient radios and phonographs-I-the agricultural regions, a Rip Van Winkle who fell asleep in 1941 and awoke in 1929 would be aghast at the loss of lightweight combines and trac-tors for the smaller farms. He would see farm equipment strip-ped of its rubber tires- Stores everywhere would be bare of today's beautiful new fabrics. Manufacturers in dozens of lines would be handicapped by lack of modern plastics and ply-woods. Engineers' talents would be blighted without today's al-loys. RIP VAN WINKLE IN REVERSE Suppose that some of these people who are neglecting 1941 in futile yearning for the "Good Old Days" could get their wish and wake up back in 1929. Their first feeling would be that the country had been blasted by a bombing raid. Hundreds of miles of today's sleek highways would be reduced to their orig-inal rocks or rutted mud. Every 1929 automobile to anybody ac- - CUKE FOR CROUCHES Any man or woman in busi-ness today who is gloomy and discontented because of illusions about former years is failing to face the facts. It is all too true that here-and-the- re somebody personally may not be so weil off but that is life. The coun-try as a whole has achieved a progress that cannot be match-ed in all history. Population growth alone has given busi-ness concerns nine million new customers since 1929. Electnc power production has risen to all-tim- e highs- Taller charts are now needed to plot the fresh peaks being reared in output of petroleum, steel, and machine tools. Technology was never so triumphant and we see 1929 completely dwarfed by today's advances in invention and dis-covery. Hence, I say that the forgetting of 1929 is the first step in the of 1941. Now is tne time to "make hay". When we become realists and admit these truths, how many people including Republicans would really want to go back to the conditions of a decade ago? Even statistics show that the nation has got some worth-whil- e things from the increased na-tional debt. May not our. point of view be wrong and unneces-sarily selfish and local, when we withhold wholehearted energy and enthusiasm today because of homesickness for a period that actually was one of the most cockeyed on record? Re-member that for every adven-turer who rode high and hand-some in 1929, hundreds of preach-ers, teachers, and parents were heartbroken at the epidemic of irreligion and the collapse of character. Joseph F. Smith, director, and the excellent cast won plaudits jf a capacity crowd. Plenty of suspense, a liberal sprinkling, of comedy and knife-edge- d satire made the play good entertain-ment. George K. Fadcl as Moe Fink-lestei- n gave a performance that alone would have carried the mowing. However, able support was provided by Robert E- Han-sen as Baron Max von Alven-sto- r, attache to the consul; the charming Marianne Newton as Sophie Baumer, the consul's wife; Merrill B. Tew as Karl Baumer, the villainous German consul; Hays Gorey as the pos-ing Bund leader. Otto Horst. The several highly dramatic scenes were as deftly handled by the cast as the caricature of nazi propagandists was manag-ed by the Boothe pen. The come-dy bit between Virginia Stewart Hair as the comely German maid, Frieda, and Finklestein, in which he negotiated a date with little help from speech, was amusing-Norma- M. Dean was Dr. Jen-nings; William I. Spere appeared as Thomas Denny; J- Grover Kelly had the part of Captain Mulrooney and Aaron Moll was the radio announcer. The Gemmell club entertain-ment committee is to be con-gratulated on bringing such fine entertainment to their members-Tha- t accomplishment was with-out doubt much appreciated. O PRODUCTION FROM U. OF U. RECEIVED WITHPLEASURE What goes on in the German consulate of a large American town was revealed in the pre-sentation of "Margin For Error", Clare Boothe's mystery melo-drama, well-receive- d at Bing-ham high school Saturday ev-ening. Under auspices of the R. C. Gemmell Memorial club and Bingham high school, the pro-duction was a repeat perfor-mance of the 45th annual Uni-versity of Utah varsity play which had previously been stag-ed in Salt Lake City and other Utah cities. THANKS As a taxpayer and property owner of Bingham Canyon, I wish to publicly exoress my ap-preciation of the efforts of May-or Ed W- Johnson, members of the city council and Bingham volunteer firemen, which result-ed in an average reduction of 30 per cent in fire insurance rates set by the Board of Fire Under-writers of ,the Pacific on pro-perty within the city. Mayor Johnson worked per-sistently for several vears to persuade the Board of Fire Un-derwriters of the Pacific to make a new survey in Bingham Can-yon and to consider lowering the fire insurance rates here. His success means an annual saving of thousands of dollars to Bing-ham property owners. Signed Peter J. Pitchios O WAKE-U- P CHEERUF Babson Says, "Forget 1929 and Make Hay" Babson Park, Florida, Febru-ary 21. I wish that readers of my column and this includes some of my Republican friends would quit writing me about "Good Old 1929". Ninety per cent of our burinessmen. bank-ers, and investors can make a better record in 1941 if they first "ui a tl 'nip rloth nnd wipe 1929 from the blackboard of memory. Ninety per cent of our employes, too. can add to their welfare this year if they will auit hankering for the "Grand Old Times". Let us debunk the myth that the 1929 era was an economic heaven on earth, in-stead of just the opposite- That bedtime story is dangerous fic-tion because the fake glamour of 1929 still tempts some of us to underrate the expanding pos-sibilities of 1941 and to over-discou-its potential opportuni-ties. It is well to be realists, and today that means to be optim-ists. |