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Show FRIDAY, AUGUST i7 B PAGE Foi l; THE BINGHAM BULLETHN. BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH --- accordingly scorned 13,000 miles awav IjTTW Ulljc Itngham lullrtm Issued Every Friday ut Bingham Canyon, Sail Lake County, Utah. Entered as Second Class Matter at the Poit Office at Bingham Canyon, Utah, Under the Act of March 3, 1879. j nil NATIONAL .DITORI AL IttiWtatf ASSOCIATION igSATlOy LELAND G. BURRESS, Editor and Publisher Subscription Raic per year in advance $2.50 Advertising Hates Furnished on Application me nothing. 1 ' Everything uh.U ZMff .spells quality unsu.Das:". .11 rest of this tirjjd oly ' here, which ,., , ricl much of. You uticl I il! M In USA", and I hop . wPK ins to despoil t,,at bono?V Furthermore, ,1!:v has any political tend" viating from those w"& constitution, is not entity E respect shown through K before many month, r "Just another lonesome town GI who A.isa huMm-tippl-a nice cold tn.n. ..W1 Chicago Charlie!" anJI are mentioned todiajj . ?h bucket heel rotated by sweep, method old as Moses Hund-reds (hump-backed- , Holy cows un h thcr.thither-an- d yon of ed The vast majority theie litth P'P1-- ' a,L ve0etarT an and very poorly developed, .; being taken in life and in hundreds of bushels be-i- n deat- h- of the was'ed to feed spirits world beyond, That .s themmA the wholesale starvation. idealogy calls tor a Grange allegiance to animals Mos en. and Sikh Princes, levied Farming as we Know i u ers. practiced in very few cases, and hen only under European superv-ision- Four seasons do not exist hen We have the Win-er in the jungle. season and the Monsoon, or rainy season. During January ahd February, three blanket, are needed to keep a GI warm. Out Bashas ol split bamboo are very crude, open air affairs, but they e the only home we ve known for two long years, so we have become used to them. British withdrawal from In-dia would be disastrous. Britain owes the Indian army to the Moslem and Sikh Princes levied much the same as the German Hessians of revolutionary war days. Without this army, Britain would, in my opinion, have had Ghandi's hordes throwing open India's gates to the yellow-bellie- d founders of "The Greater East - Asian Co - prosperity Sphere." Jap skeletons on the Burma battlefields are a satisfy- - ing, though ugly sight take it from me! "America is a land blessed with the envy and admiration of all. This foreign home land of mine, interests. I know ing foreign though nothing of their religion, I've seen their "Towers of Sil ence" upon which they place h their dead to be devoured b vultures. Of course you ve heart on the other hand, of the HmrJU Burning Ghats", where Sa die wood (very costly) is used to cremate the richer Hindus. I v seen both of these body desecra-tion- s (desecration from a Chris-tian viewpoint) and they aren t nice to watch. The Pharsee WO" men, they say, are the most beau-tiful in 'India. Their men choose only one a pleasing circum-stance when you think of the harems among other big shots, but don't ever ask a GI if he has seen a concubine, those dames are personal property! Most well-to-d- o Indians of the merchant class, be thev Hindu or Moslem, on the other hand, choose only one wife Holy gosh! Ain t one enough? "The American army makes its own life over here. s, coco cola plants and even a brewery are ooerated by GI s. we eat Indian flour in our bread to some extent, also we eat pota-toes, cabbages and radishes pro-duced in India, other than that, most of our chow is produced, processed and canned in the U S Of course, we in the forward areas get very little fresh stuff, for it would spoil enroute from the government supervised farms I've had ice cream on a couple of occasions but coke is as for-eign to me as the Taj Mahal and the Indian princess or whom it was built. Don't mention corn-- 1 willy to me, or I'll blow my top! "It will be a vast relief when all Americans vacate this land of brown-skinne- d people; a re-lief only to the Americans- I may add. I can feel a great pity for the many Anglo-India- n wo-men (1 2 British) who are em-- j ployed in U.S. army posts in the cities, for they live a life of dis-- ! honor in the eyes of their people,- FIGHTIN' BINGHAMITES REPORT The following letter, which gives a good description of India was received this week by the Victory Flag Society from Cpl Arthur V. Mangrum: "Feeling in a serious mood this morning I thought I would en-lighten you a little about this land of India. "India, from the west coast to the India-Burm- a frontier, is very much the land God completely forgot. From the torrid reaches of the Sind desert to the muddy, filthy Ganges river with Cal-cutta at the mouth; and thence northward and east up the Bhra-maputr- e at the source of which near the Burma border is where the lonely GI has existed for almost two years. "There is a better side. Even here, in this hot and humid clim-ate, we can see on clear days the snow-cappe- d peaks of the, Hima-layas. Here, of course, is the eastern extremity of the moun-tai- n range. Extending westward through the Mt. Everest region to the fabulous land of Kashmir; from there we come to the Khy-be- r pass Peshdwar being the last vestige of civilization before entering this wild, murderous frontier country of sword-wieldin- g tribesmen who live off plun-der from captured camel cara-vans. "The people of this conglomer-ate land are what makes it what it is. In a population pf over 0, the vast majority are Hindus. Hinduism supposedly sig-nifies religion, but not as we know it. It is a caste system much like that practiced in the Euro-pean feudal society during the dark ages. A Maharaja is king of his domain the Raja his prince. Among these high-cast- e Hindus exists a tolerance only for their own kind. The lowest Serf class Hindu may not touch either food, drink or person, or in any way despoil or contamin-ate the Caste type Hindu. In oth-er words, these "untouchables" as they are known, are nothing. Among their millions arose a great leader I forget his name. He was educated in England and is universally known for his bril-- 1 liance. He is trying to form a union of his millions with the Moslem league, to perpetuate a balance of power against Mahat-m- a Ghandi's Indian Congress. Ghandi is in control of a propa-ganda machine unparalled ex- - cept to that of the late Nazi rat factory in Germany. The 90,000,-00- 0 Moslems want to form an in-dependent government and take in the "lUttouchables", but by Ghandi's skillful technique of setting his 1,000 odd Pagan Gods onto these 80,000,000 or so super-stitious "untouchables" such a merger is impossible. A mess, isn't it? The other one-Go- d worshippers besides the Moslems, are a group of six million Sikhs a sturdy, intelligent and handsome race whose men are the traffic cops, policemen, and taxicab owners of peace-tim- e India. During the war, this group supplies the In-dian army with 18 per cent of its personnel. "The Pharsees, however, are the great industriaists; their interests include the hydro-electri- c plants, airplane factories, automobile plants and virtually all India's industrialism exclud- - FOR SAL- E- K.tchen cabuMV 2 dining room tables 6 rhl' one bed. two dressers, SB: enamel, 2 hd monkev heating water, 3 Cononl.- ,- --B See Mrs. Ross Falsetti 588 M perfield, or call 197W. iJB, FOR SAL-E- 7.00m JM brick home 2 2 acres chS' R ground, Dlenty of water frX trees, gara ie barn chicken coon good locomn AM' S8500, one-thir- down, baliJB ' easy terms. Inquire at 232 wB '" alch St . Midvale, Phone mX vale 708. - -- B REFRIGERATOR K REPAIRING SERVICE I Other Electrical Appliance!1 Inquire Iff 309 Main St. Phone 3rl Bingham I anyon V FRESH CUT FLOWERS AVAILABLE AT ALL TIMES NOW OUT OF OUR NEWLY INSTALL-ED REFRIGERATOR FLORAL BOX. GLADfOLAS SNAPDRAGONS GARDENIAS SWEET PEAS ROSES ASTERS ALSO FAMOUS CALIFORNIA CALIENTE POTTERY. Call in and see our floral Display. BINGHAM MORTUARY W. V. Robinson Telephone 17 gjggfjl Stylish, Guaranteed Ml GLASSES flRra A Made By Craftsmen. Ljggp Factory To You MODERN OPTICAL OFFICES THROUGHOUT THE WEST 273 South Main In Salt Lake City MBwHBm welcome lo Vni!jJi ... " a ' I,.,---.- .. ' I STmT a"dA nood rntTl 'duplication of transmission facil- - Tr It "f S ities- - helP the entire Many these projects call supply of each assure . J",. for dams which am may also produce trie power. elec- - est possible use at the lowest practical W This involves issues that should be dis- - O . - - m cussed and settled now-rv- ers fo cross , savirgs made possible by this in advance. p an snuld be passed along to the users of electricity, under regulation by State I Many of us in the power business have Commissions or other properly constituted had a long experience with riverside re8ulatory bodies. This will assure all the plants, in the production of both steam- - "ehts of river development and hydro-- I generated and hydro-electri- c power. In Pwer without the added expense of fairness to all taxpayers and in the inter- - government going into business and est of the many million users of electric- - comPeting with its own citizens, ity, we think we ought to outline our A ..J. convictions and suggestions on river Government in any business endan- - development and flood control. 8ers all business. Government in business escapes many normal business obligations, 1 When a dam is proposed, all of its eniy free mail, pays no federal taxes, purposes should be clearly defined in the fCW' if "" other taxes' little or n0 legislation flood control, navigation, ir- - interest- - H government can sell electricity rigation or power. And just as clearly n basis il seU shoes, groceries, the benefit to the people affected should automobiles, or anything else the same justify the cost way- - Government may properly regulate business in the public interest but should 2 If power is produced at government ,pera'e busness. It should not play, built dams, it should be sold to existim! I gamC fr which !t makes the mkS' power systems, without special privileze nothtrv,OTds government should not or discrimination. This will to be utnP'ro and pitcher at th J'll!uie - aaiejmwj - L UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. DON'T MISS IT-S- ALT LAKE COUNTY FREE FAIR THE EVENT OE THE YEAR! Aug. 22, 23, 24, 25 . GRAND PARADE, WED. AUG. 22, 6 P.M. . HOME ECONOMICS EXHIBITS . TWO GREAT FLOWER SHOWS . PLAIN AND FANCY NEEDLEWORK . BOYS, GIRLS, 4-- H F.F.A. CONTESTS . GIRLS' STYLE REVUE . GAY MIDWAY . CROPS . MINERALS . LIVESTOCK, CROP JUDGING CONTESTS . PIGEONS . RABBITS . PETS . POULTRY . DAIRY CATTLE . SHEEP . SWINE . HORSE PULLING . HORSESHOE PITCHING . BASEBALL . SOFTBALL . TENNIS AT MURRAY CITY PARK i AUSPICES S. L. COUNTY COMMISSION NIGHTLY AT (1:30 P.M. AT THE FAIR RACE TRACK 5 THOROBRED RUNNING RACES NOVELTY TRACK EVENTS VAUDEVILLE ACTS Entrance off State Street or Thruogh Fair Grounds. GOVERNOR'S HOUR- -4 P.M. AUG. 23 1 SEE US FO-R- . RADIO REPAIRING . COLEMAN HEATERS . VTCTROLA RECORDS . DISHES . OCCASIONAL CHAIRS BINGHAM RADIO SHOP Hugo Dellagnola, Prop. Phone 146 M lllllHH FOR BETTER MEATS GIVE US A TRY! POULTRY CHEESE QUALITY MEATS BUTTER EGGS ' BINGHAM MEAT CO Clarence Robison W. H. Harris Clinton Robison Phone 5 We Deliver muuu ! COPPERFIELD Phone 505J Mrs. W L. Leatherwood Mr. and Mrs. Nick Nevers and Billy, Valela and Norma Nevers; left August Hi to spend two weeks at Scofield with relatives. Tuesday was Mrs. W. J. Tier-ney'- s birthday arid Mrs Robert Burke entertained at a family dinner at the Burke home. Gentyieve Vhetcl honored Boyd Whetsel Friday at a party celebrating hi sixth birthday There were nine children pies ent to enjoy birthday cake and ice cream. LaWain Miller and LaRaine Caldwell won prizes at games. Mr. and Mrs. Chris Bapis and family celebrated V J day at Layton Wednesday. Mrs Harry Gardikis pent the week-en- d in Salt Lake City at the home of Mr. and Mrs Le tei Jackson. Mrs. Maude Hocking and Mrs. William Allmark of Bingham were Friday evening visitors of Mrs. Klma Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. Liston Bray and son of Murray called on Mrs. El-ma Thomas Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Lenard Mann and family of Bountiful were Sunday evening visitors at the LaMar Bray home. Mrs. Paul Miller entertained 15 young friends of her daugh-ter Monday evening, compli-menting Pauline on her ninth birthday. Those receiving prizes were Donna and Junior Golesh, Pauline and Shirley Pantalone and Connie LeDesma. Mrs, Miller had a large cake and served a delightful luncheon. The honoree received lovely gifts. Mr. and Mrs. Pio Ben of Mid-val- e were visiting friends in t 'oppcrf leld Wednesday. Mrs. Ernest Arp of Midvale and small daughter spent Tues-day in Coppcrfield at the W. L Leatherwood home. Mr. and Mrs. John Tomac and family attended the Harvest Days celebration in Midvale last Friday evening. Mrs Ben Harmon of Salt Lake City was a week-en- d uest of Mrs. Vivian Mattsort. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Leather-woo- d spent Wednesday at Mid-vale. The Community House Boy ScOUt troop plan to attend the summer Court of Honor and swimming meet at Tracy Wig warn next Sunday evening. Home Guards met Monday at the Community House for skating and a business ses-sion, j Questers and Queen Esthers met Wednesday evening for sup-per and a surprise party honor-ing Miss Mabel Zimmerman who worked for two months at the Community House during the ab- - sence of Miss Ada Duhigg on a lecture tour. Miss Zimmerman will visit at Albany, Mo., before returning to Selma, Calif., where she is a public school teacher. A lovely gift was presented Miss Zimmerman. Mrs. Annie Swenson spent three days visiting her daughter--1 in-la- Mrs. Arnold Antell of Salt Lake City. She also enjoyed Harvest Days while at Midvale as guest of friends. A drive up Dry Fork canyon was enjoyed Wednesday even-ing by Annie Gerbich, Mary and Ann Casich, Mary Loverich and Mr. and Mrs. Fay Mitchell. Mr. and Mrs Jack Robbins of Sandy and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gobbis and Mr and Mrs. Nick Dokos, all of Midvale, visited at Joe Scorzato home Wednesday evening. The Scorzatos accom-- ; panied their guests in a visit to the Dokos home. Platoon Sergeant Joe Osoro and Sgt. James Brisk of the ma-rine corps, stationed at Clearfield, visited here Wednesday ev ning. Brisk is a cousin of Mrs. Mike Gavich. Manuel Osoro, George Balich and Joe Scorzato spent V-- J day at the Osoro home. They cele-brated heartily. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Smith and son Spencer left Wednesday ev-- I en ing for Yellows mne. Mrs James NordbeVg and Hel-en left Monday to return to San Francisco after a five-wee- k visit at the Martin Pechina home. Marko Yengich and Mary Pas-qual- i, along with Mr. and Mrs. Pete Pasquali, spent V-- J day in Wyoming. Mrs. Matt Pazell spent all day Thursday at Bingham at the Pe-ter Niksich home. Sgt. Thomas Cameron and wife and small daughter Carolyn have gone to California to spend two-week- with relatives. Ernest Massey of Murray spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. George Balich. Mr. and Mrs. Red Coombs of Lark spent Wednesday visiting Mr. and Mrs. Primo Lovat. Thursday dinner guests of Mr and Mrs. E. A. Beck were Mrs Samuel Day, Mrs. Louis Day. Mrs. Erickson, Mrs. Laura Terry, Mrs- Margaret Day, Mrs. Blanche Day and John Day, all of Mid-vale. Mary Loverich, Ann and Mary Casich spent Tuesday evening visiting Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence j Knight and drank a toast to the future. Pfc Nick Barich visited Mr. and Mrs. Steve Stilinovich of West Jordan Saturday. iviary Casich was Honored on her eighteenth birthday Thurs-day, Augu ) 16, at a party given at Mary Loverich's home. Those enjoying supper and dancing in-cluded Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Knight, Harold Madsen, Martin Pazell, Eddie Osoro, Marie Az-zeli- Annie Gerbich, Ann Cas-ich, Cpl. Eugene Taz.er, Vincen Miola- HIGHLAND BOY.' Mary Casich Pat Snow of Salt Lake City spent Sunday visiting Mr and Mrs Harold R. Barton. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brimhall returned Monday from a two-wee- k vacation at Idaho Falls, Ida. Betty Brimhall entertained six girl friends at a Slumber party Saturday and served a delicious waffle breakfast next morning. Miss Mabel Zimmerman direct-ed the Story hour for little tots Tuesday at the Highland Boy Community House. Cub Scouts meet at 6:30 p.m. tonight, Friday, at the Commu-nity House to plan their over-night hike and the cooking class-es they are to begin soon. Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Pool of Salt Lake City were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. George Addy Miss Alice V. Brown left Tues-rfa- v evening to visit a month at Kansas City, Mo. |