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Show FRIDAY, July m. THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH " "" """ --i Betty Barnett, Mary Mr. and Mrs. AmTT"" - Misses: Brown, Ruth Fennell, Jane Mc-Kell- Patricia Shilling and Ma-rion Pett. Mr. and Mrs. Sunday in EuS and Mrs. Clarence Gcurg David Curry returned home Friday from St. Mark's hospital in Salt Lake City where he had been receiving treatment for a heart ailment. Miss Dorothy Hansen left Sat-urday evening for Brigham City where she visited with relatives until Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Mayne and children, Keith and Shirley, are vacationing with relatives in Mackey, Idaho. Ray Pett. Donald Isbell. Ken-neth Ray, Willard Nix, Delmar Schick, and Bob Nichol return-ed home Saturday evening from a three day stay at Tracy's Wig-wam in Mill Creek canyon. Mrs. H. K. Brown was hostess Tuesday afternoon at a party honoring her son, Tommy, on his birthday. A luncheon was served to the following youngsters: Er-m- a June Gammell, Joyce Han-sen, Margaret McKellar, Carol Peterson, Margaret Nix, Shirley Watkins, Marvin Pullan, Davie Breckon, Jerry Mike Curry, Don-ald Bennion, Bobby Pullan and Don Stoddard. Prizes at e,ames were won by Carol Peterson and Donald Bennion. Mrs. R. G. Frazier with Jean Fraier, Marion Pett, Betty Bar-nett, and Mary Brown accompan-ied Miss Marjorie Arnold to Salt Lake Friday evening where she planned to visit several days with relatives before returning to her home in Gunnison. Miss Patricia Shilling hit Fri-'da- y to spend Pioneer Day with her grandmother, Mrs. McGann of Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Finnis and son, Walter, are vacationing with relatives in Minnesota. Miss Adiene Hudson spent Wednesday and Thursday in Salt Lake City as guest of Miss La Von Spaikes, formerly of Copperton. Miss Helen Loveless attended the farewell testimonial held Sunday in Sandy Second Ward chapel honoring President and Mrs. James P. Jensen who left Wednesday for the East Central Slates Mission headquarters in Louisville, Ky. Mr. and Mrs. Jen-sen were accompanied by their granddaughter, Miss Carma Rae Jensen. Copperton I By Mary Brown Miss Jean Frazier left Monday evening for the South Rim of Grand Canyon in Arizona where she will spend two weeks vaca-tioning with Miss Pinky Moore, a Wasatch Academy classmate. Mrs. F.. J. Cowdell returned home Friday from the Bingham hospital where she has been re-ceiving medical treatment. Leo Thorne and daughters, Mis-ses Nina and Carol left Monday afternoon for Los Angeles, where they will join Mrs. Thome and parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Henkel. Mr. Henkel in receiving treatment at the Soldier's Home in Sawtell. Miss Marjorie Arnold of Gun-nison was the house guest of Miss Jean Frazier Thursday and Friday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. S. O. Reunion of Salt Lake City spent Sunday af-ternoon and evening visiting at the home of Hr. and Mis. B. I) Bennion. Mrs. George M. Nix was called to Oakley Saturday because ot the serious illness of her father, Charles Hollstroni. Mr. and Mrs. Orville Warner aiid daughters returned home from a two week's vacation in California Thursday. They usit-e- d the fair at San Francisco and various points in Southern Cali-fornia. Mr. and Mrs. Bud Nichol and tamily visited relatives at Eme-- ' ka Friday. Miss Jean Frazu--r wa;. hoteas at a house party Thursday eve-ning honoring her school 'friend and guest, Miss Marjorie Arnold jot Gunnison. Guests wt-r- the Issued Every Friday at Bingham Canyon, Salt Lake County, Utah. Entered as Second Class Mailer, at the Post Office at Bingham Canyon, Utah, Under the Act of March 3, 1879. NATIONAL 6DITORIAU UTAH141. sfMf ASSOCIATION !jfJt, I.KI.AND C. JU'UKKSS, Kditor and Publisher Subscription Hale, per year in advance $2 00 Advertising Hates Furnished on Application nM M 290 Copyright 1940 Lincoln Ntwtpaprr Fftura. Inc 01 TIED at THE DlSTIlUW 90 PROOF ltr Distillers coW'1 ill :fe&wlf Pf. No 61 Qt. No 60 H i THE IA8GEST SLUING SISAlGnT WHISKEY IN THE WOBlD WHO WORKS YuH CHEAP z ADVRTISIH! fnW7 ECZEMA mMMttBEFORE and 12 DaysAFI TREATMENT WI1 COLUSA NATURAL 01 Just as it comes from the ground in Colusa County, California, credited by other users with producing relatively as remarkable r as above pictured in relieving irri- - tation of external . . . mmtmmmmmm PSORIASIS. .ATHLETE'S FOOT IWtntto FEELBtlTtll ECZEMA.. ACNE.. POISON OAK Colusa Natural Oil Capsule SUNBURN . . BURNS AND CUTS Guarantee cB0t Try colusa natural of ?ocNS.SawW HEMORRHOID OINTMEi get in three days. SdJ oily i U tint. I himubh " Weblb EDiruag Binghamanyon, Maj BINGHAM & GARFIELD RAILWAY COMPANY i Ship your freight via Bingham and Garfield Railjf tast daily merchandise cars from Salt Lake Wj connection with the Union Pacific System. I Use Copper f Brass piping for $4,500 cottages only cost $48-8- J more than galvanized iron piping and will f Last Forever J T. H. PBRLEYWITS, J. H. CULLEg General Freight and Paw. Agent J I U Salt Lake City, Utah BtofW18' i THE SIGOQU YOU CAN BUY ANY OF THE FAMOUS STANDARn ' OIL PRODUCTS AT j MIDWAY SERV ICE ST VNON 292 MAIN ST. MARVIN MYERS, I'UoP BINGHAM SERVICE STATION 14 Main St. CHARLES HAYNES MOONLIGHT SERVICE STATION Between Bingham and Copperton Vedalakes and Canrpas, Prop. TEST FOR PATRIOTS Excepting nlv C.reat liiitain, totalitarian powers now control three-fourth- s of the world. Only the slight, strained barrier of the l'.ritish isles lies between America and the ne-cessity for Mime faz-reachi- economic adjustment to pro-tect the American laborer, industrialist and producer. During the past lot) years America has developed the finest social order that has ever been known in the history of the world. Our economic gain:! have been made possible be-cause tlKre has always been a market for American goods in foreign lands. Our export trad, has been far above our import trade. If the dictators obtain control over the world, with the exception of the Americas, we will be in a sphere of oi.r own. The totalitarian powers will deal with the regi-mented that come within their sphere, and thus leave a solitary America holding the sack. The United States cannot hope to compete with the regi-mented people of the rest of the world and maintain short working hours, good housing conditions, high rates of pay which afford our people the high standard of living to which we are accustomed. If Great Britain falls, Europe, Asia and Africa will be ruled by dictators from IJerlin, Moscow and Tokyo. No doubt we in United States will, for a time, somehow maintain com-mercial intercourse with the rest of the world. But our manufacturers, farmers, miners and private firms will not be trading and competing with producers and workmen like themselves. They will face unheard of conditions in attempting disposal of surpluses in com-peting with products of the enslaved regions of the rest of the world. They will be competing with totalitarian monopoly crea-ted over peoples who work as slaves and who are driven to labor long hours at bare subsistence wages- - Under these con-ditions there is no overhead because private ownership has disappeared. Haw materials are bought and sold at govern-ment fixer prices. Can the free economy that Americans have known survive in a world that elsewhere comes under direction of military socialism? W'e must make a choice : we must either organize Amer-ica to face this impending crisis by sacrificing willingly many of our liberties; or we can drift aimlessly along, until the blow strikes and we stand alone as a nation, are gradually impoverished and then finally destroyed by an inner social upheaval because we are helpless and impoverished, or worse, fall under control of the totalitarians. If we decide that what we have is worth putting up a stiff battle to maintain, we shall have to sacrifice much to rearm to the hilt. We shall have to use our food and raw ma-terials that are necessary to totalitarian governments as in-struments of war. Our government will have to assume direction and con-trol of foreign trade, domestic industries, sale of raw ma-terial and regulation of prices. The American standard of life will be inevitably low-ered. Americans must prepare to take that on the chin. If we can't, or are too slow and are too stupid to see what's coming, democracy as we know it will be lost. Let Labor prutest against this charge. Let it denounce those who use Labor as a cloak for cruelty. Let each one of us look at his own children and imagine lliem in a similar situation. And then as a father let him bring his weight to bear on those in power, asking in the name of huinanity to "let the children in." Thousands of fathers and moth-ers in distants lands will be ever-lastingly grateful for what Amer-icans may do for their children, and He Who once said that "inas-much as ye have done it unto one of the least of these, ye have done it unto Me," will look down in approval. of little children with dead minds who escaped the mercy of death. Little children are coming to America as rapidly as they can be convoyed to safety. Generous-so- u led men and women in this country are opening their homes to these children. Thousands more are offered shelter. Then-i- s no lack of welcome for them. But under existing laws only a few may come in each month. There is scarcely a family man in this country, no matter how straightened his circumstances, who would not open his home to one of these children and share with il all that he has. But there are tho.se in this country, who for reasons of their own, do not want to let the chil-dren in. They remind us that the immigration laws pf the country were made to protect American Labor. They were but what has Labor to fear from little chil-dren? They have no nationality prejudice, nor can they take any-one's job. Those who are oppos-ed to their coming whisper in the ears of politicians with a weather eye cocked for votes, that Labor won't like it if red tape is cut, and the quotas are filled several months in advance. WASHINGTON, D.C. Accord-ing to the latest Gallup survey the rise of Wendell Willkie in public favor shows definitely that the feeling against big business current a few years ago has been substantially altered. Willkie's two chief points of appeal, as an-alyzed in the thousands of com-ments gathered in the survey, are his business ability and his personality. Even among those voters who oppose him, the chief reason cited is lack of political experience rather than his con-nection with the public utilities. Every night, as we turn the dials of the radio, and every morning as we pick up the pa-per, we learn of the latest fright-fulnes- s which threatens the re-maining victims of Hitler's "hlitz-krieg- " screaming bombs which produce insanity for and machine-gu- n fire which seems always to attack the help-less Meanwhile thousands of little children have been sent to what are presumed to be "places of safety," only to find that no matter where they may flee, they are pursued by their relentless enemy, to whom, apparently, neither at,e. nor sex makes the slightest di Terence in his hunt of victims of his state. Within a few months, many tliousands of little children from the Continent, who have been sent to England as a place of last resort, as well as other hundreds of thousands who are native to the soil, may become victims of the attacks which Hitler prom-ises to make and all that will remain will be the dead bodies of little children who could not save themselves, or living bodies light. Germans have admittedly migrated in large numbers to Mexico, Argentina, Brazil and other Latin-America- n na-tions during the last few years.. The warning is unmistakable. While governments may maintain at least a semblance of democracy throughout most of the Americas, it is evident that the seeds of treason and treachery have already been planted by strong German and Italian minorities. In Norway, these seeds blossomed in key army positions and resulted in the downfall of a decent, law-abidin- g, neutral nation. This has led observers to the conclusion that an attemp-ted invasion of this hemisphere might be greeted not with bullets and united American action but by treachery that would allow Germany and Italy to gain imjiortant bases for future military operations. If the groundwork of Nazi revolution has already been prepared in some of the South American countries, it is evi-dent that the United States, in its present unprepared state, would be hard pressed to prevent a successful landing in this hemisphere. Once installed, a Nazi force would bo hard to dislodge. At best it would mean military operations, costly in men and money. Futherniore, the distance the United States fleet and other armed forces would have to travel to attack such an ex-peditionary force might be farther than the distance from America to Europe, while the distance from a Nazi-dominat- ed Africa to South America is only a few hundred miles. In the face of these facts, and with clear cut warnings that Nazi influence in South America may be greater than most people realize, it seems evident that the first line of de-fense for the United States lies in Europe. Only Gibraltar and the British Isles, strongly defended by the English fleet, stand between the totalitarian nations and America. Nazi and Fascist forces must be checked at these points while the United States rebuilds its defenses. America's front line is still in the Old World. Scottish Rite News Bureau AMERICA'S 1RONT LINK UKS IN THE OLD WORLD The day after Italy threw its weight again.st an already beaten Fvance, the president ot the largest country of South America made a speech that could be interpreted in no other manner than approval of Mussolini and his philosophy of government. Later, the head of the Brazilian government re-pudiated his stand, but the fact that such a statement could come from the top man in a responsible American govern-- . rn.ent was disturbing. A few days later, a Nazi plot to seize Uruguay came to CULTIVATING DICTATORSHIP At Units it siein.-- : slranftc that dictatorships can in any instance overcome democracy in any land. It sterns almost iaii,i;ible that in this modern age people will submit to the brow-heatin- tactics U' an overdeveloped racketeer when they mud just a.i well govern themselves and point toward a soal ui auMicieiiey and happinos for themselves and all people stir-iovndi-them. The answer is, of c.nme, economic. Those in the dem-ocrats which have fallen for the line of the dictators have done because they have been denied real self trovernment by tal.-- leaders and tiny feel that under the totalitarian setup they can at least receive the necessities of life even though the-- T come at great individual cost. Th dictators have been shrewd enough to capitalize upon the weaknesses which have been made in the setup of the de-mocracies. A recent example of this was the response of the ("erman leadership when they were accused of controlling the press of their nation. Their reply was that the press was not free in any nation, that hi all of the democracies it was in a large measure controlled' through economic pressure by in-terests the operation of which is detrimental to the welfare of .society as a whole. One may gather readily the case with which such a charge will penetrate, of course, even in such a democracy as the United States It will be recalled that during the last presidential contest it was estimated that more than seventy-fiv- e per cent of the large newspapers of the nation were op-K)F- ed to President Roosevelt. In spite of that he won by a huge majority, carrying almost every state in the nation. That was an example of the measure of confidence the public has in the larger papers of the nation. And one can appreciate what a fertile field that might develop into for the sowing of the teeds by the damnable dictatorships. Undoubtedly false leadership points eventually to dicta-torship. The case of France is an excellent example of that-Le- t us keep that in mind and lend our efforts to overcoming the false leadership which stands as a threat to representa-tive government. As individuals we can do that and it is our duty as good citizens to so occupy ourselves. Sun Advocate, Price, Utah |