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Show t ht j I I-J FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1953 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH PAGE THREE I ' , SPQRTScoiM This an' That I'ee Wee Reese told Dick Voung, Brooklyn writer, that he's not sure he ever wants a managerial Job. "I do enough worrying about my own hitting," he said. "lm-aRln- e what it would be like to worry about all 25!" . . jm j IMersall, with the Bosox. Is being called the "best outfielder in base-- 1 ball today bar none." . . Walter Johnson produced the largest num ber of shut-o- ut games of any I major league pitcher . . . Men and women of the Hebrew faith from 27 countries have been Invited to i participate In the Fourth Macca-- j biah (Israel Olympic Games) to V b he'd t Tel Aviv In September. Among the events will be foot-- , ball, basketball, handball, volley- - '' ba". hockey, tennis, gymnastics, I boxing, wrestling, weight lifting, fencing, cycling, shooting, bowling and swimming . Horace Stone-ha-president of the Giants, has tentatively accepted an Invitation fur a trip to Tokyo and other Jap-- ( ancse cities for a series of post season exhibition baseball games. RETAINS TITLE . . . Maureen Connolly, 18, of California, beat Doris Hart at Wimbledon, Eng-land, to keep her title. Scores were 8--6 and and 16,000 watched the match. it-rcffC- iJ dot from other dltort From the Rising Star Record, Rising Star, Texas: "Sure Fire Way to Kill Your Home Town" Get all the city will give you, but don't give anything in return. Talk cooperation, but don't cooperate. Never accept an office. It Is easier to criticize than to do things. Don't do any more than you have to, and when other people willingly and unselfishly give their time and ability to make a better town, howl because the town is run by a clique. Don't pay your taxes. Let the other fellow pay his and then you ride like a parasite on his money, then fuss because the streets arc not kept up. Never attend any of the meetings that are for the town. If you do, arrive late, don't have anything to say. Wait until you get outside and then cuss the ones who tried. Or, when there, vote for everything and then do noth-ing - Look at every proposition in a selfish way If you are not the one that gets the most out of it, vote against it. Never consider what it will do for the town as a whole. Don't do anything for the youth of the town. Just forget that they are the leaders of tomorrow. Keep your feet on them. If you have good leaders, don't follow them. Don't work on any committee. Don't say anything good about your town From the Kankakee Journal, Kankakee, Illinois: The custom of having civilian and military execu-tives doing duplicate Jobs in the Pentagon is now being blamed for much of the Defense Department's manpower troubles. Newsmen covering the Pentagon say It Is common to And a $750-a- - month Colonel and a $600 a month civilian sitting at a tandem desk doing work which probably could be done by either. The Colonel generally U in charge but the civilian furnishes the know-ho- From the Lake County News, nammond, Indiana: Americans ought to recognize that the senti-ment for some kind of high-leve- l explorative effort to find common ground with the masters of Soviet Russia is deep and widespread in Britain and western Europe. It is simply a fact of which any realistic planning must take ac-count. Yet when diplomacy gets down to terms and cases, the essence of the matter is that Britain, Amer-ica and their North Atlantic allies seek the same objectives and are not far apart on their methods. It la better the differences of view be voiced and discussed in good temper than be bottled up. But remembering that Stalin pinned his expectations of Communist success on divisions among the free na-tions. "M""-'aWriffia-- ii Vi Tjj AUSSIE BOXER . . . Five-mont- h old "Winnie", Australian kan-garoo, dona boxing gloves to re-hearse for his part In movie be-ing made In New York city. 1. lljrlup la made from Jtitc. The 1'. S. Import! most of lis supply from U) Pakistan; ibi t!n rhlllpplnr; (c) Korea. 2. A plum- - lis 11 re funned by four right lines, of which no tw arc parallel Is (a) a trapezium; (b) a trapezoid; (c) atrapeio-- heilron. 3. Thoth Is the (a) God of love; (b) God of hate; (c) God of wisdom a. id magic. avsw i:ks 0))U1 puV UJUl)sU JO poij g ' Uiti J(1 nj , jt SEE US FOR FINE COMMERCIAL PRINTING LETTERHEADS ENVELOPES INVITATIONS WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS IJUSLNESS CAHDS STATEMENTS PROGRAMS WINDOW CARDS BOOKLETS TICKETS HANDBILLS ALL TYPES BUSINESS FORMS AND MANY OTHERS TOP QUALITY LOW PRICES FAST DEPENDABLE SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY THE BINGHAM BULLETIN TELEPHONE 91 m ccc THE BULLETIN FOR FINE PRINTINGI BOTH 86 PROOF . OLD SUNNY BROOK BRAND KENTUCKY BLENDED WHISKEY CONTAINS 65X GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS THE OLD SUNNY BROOK COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY NEW MARTIN MOTORS NOW ON DISPLAY 10 HORSEPOWER AND 7 ft HORSEPOWER TERMS IF DESIRED FISHING TACKLE OF ALL KINDS AT COPPERTON SERVICE STANDARD OIL PRODUCTS Phone 20 Fat Hurley lSJ The pioneer spirit that overcame great obstacles in establishing oor state has been the Inspiration for Utah's growth and development. In mining, men of courage and determination opened up a great Industry which to date has produced a total of 4 billion dollars worth of minerals, to help create better living for us all. COME TO THE DIAMOND FOR A GOOD TIME POOL TABLES FISHER'S AND IIAMM'S BEER ON TAP FINEST IN TOWN 499 MAIN STREET PET PEEVE ) (l?f 10. Scott SW bless them! who In- WOMEN going fishing with their husbands should be locked up "Very well," says I to the wife, 'if you insist. But you have to help us catch the bait." "Certainly, dear." says she. So at 10 o'clock In the evening we take off for the creek to catch soft crayfish, better known to local fishing circles as 'mushpots ' I explain to her, once we're on their hard shells and how they are almost helpless while in that state. Also, how the bass will bite on them when nothing else will lure them. As we wade the creek, I shine the bright light among the rocks She sees a crayfish. "There's one," she says. "It might be at that," says I. "Go ahead and grab it." She grabs. It's a hard one and the big pinchers close on her thumb. "Mur-d-e-r-r!- " she screams and jumps completely out of the water. When she came down she grabs me around the neck and hangs on. Down we both go. As we sit In the stream she un leashes her violent temper. "Beast!" she screams at me "You knew that one was not a mush-pot.- " "Why don't you give up, dear, and just go home." "I will not," says she. "And In the morning you'll take nie ahmff And every time my hook needs baiting you'll bait it. You're uoing to help me over fences, carry my equipment, light my cigarettes, rub on mosquito lotion, untangle my line, string my fish, and love every minute of it." "Yes. dear." says 1 "I'll dn it, but you can't make me love it.' I AS OTHERS SEE US By Elizabeth Hall GREG HENDERSON looked at watch on hi wrist and continued his indifferent saunter along the shad; path of the small park. It was only three o'clock. Too early to find anyone at Pete's though in an hour or so they would all be hurrying in for their first drink of the evening. Janet, his wife, was, of course, at work. Idly he sat down on a bench without noticing the seedy-lookin- g individ-ual occupying the other end until he spoke. "Hello, Henderson. Good day for meditation in the open." Recognizing him as one of the regulars at Pete's Bar, Greg re-turned the greeting. Uncannily the man whom Greg remembered vaguely as being called Jones read his thoughts per-fectly. "It's a little early to find anyone at Pete's," Jones said. "You're Henderson, aren't you? Returned from Korea with a lot of Migs to your credit." "Only three," he answered. "There's better guys than me in the air out there." "And better guys that will stay out there." It was contempt in the voice but somehow Greg did not feel that it was directed to-ward him. More as if it were turned inward. "How long you been home?" Jones questioned, peering at him thrr.ugh eyes that were almost im-perceptibly filmed. "I don't know. About a month " Creg's surprise firmed his tone. "Ey Grd, it was a month yester-day." Where had the time gone? A few days to look around and get ac-quainted again is what he had as-sured Janet Then a job, and Janet could stay home. She had worked enough while he was gone keeping things going until he got back A month And this morning he did not even wake up before she left for work. 'That's the way it goes," he saiJ "First the days, the weeks, then the months. After that come the years." The cold resignation, the calm absence of any emotion made Greg turn and study his companion. Meeting Greg's scrutiny, Jones shrugged deprecatingly. "You looked in the mirror late-ly?" he asked Greg. Greg did feel anger then, hot and quick but as quickly it died. His eyes had been bloodshot this morning and there was a faint puffiness under them. He had had a little trouble holding the match steady for his first cigarette. "Sorry, fellow, didn't mean to insult you." There was compas-sion in his slurred voice. "Do you know my name? Jones is my first name. The rest is Middleton." Recognition followed blankness in Greg's mind. "Jones Middleton," he repeated eagerly, admiringly. "You've got the D.S.O. and everything else too. I read about it. I remember the celebration." He stopped abashed. He had not connected the spruce upright figure in the uniform of an airforce captain who had ridden in a big open car with the mayor and chief of police in the parade. "Yes, I remember the celebra-tion," Jones said, the complete absence of inflection indescribably pathetic. "The only thing is it nev-er ended." "Time enough to be going to Pete's. Coming?" he asked. Oreg stood up too. "No, I'm not coming. I'm going to meet my wife downtown, and tell her to give notice to her boss She is going to quit her job." Jones looked at him carefully. Greg straightened his shoulders before that understanding look. For a moment Jones' back stiffened too. He raised his hand in a hall salute. Greg returned It with a complete military salute. i "Thank you, Captain," he said, and stood there watching Jones shuffle away along the path. 1 LAFF OF THE WEEK I II II ' I ' ' I l i In'r il mmmmmmm,m,mm MM "It's Easy to Tell a Good Steak from a Poor One The Good One is 50 a Pound Higher" Crossword f P f I 4 I4 I7 I P no i" I , Puzzle rj o il horizontal ii fi 1 Est Indian timber tree I I I I 4 Brilliant W 20 7- T- 21 colored flih " Space 'M, fky yuodUn F"p W2 --pr I 13 Simple W 14 Wild buffalo i4&. of India Z7Z,ir ffl'ZWT" 15 Kind of fish 7, 17 Man'i , W 18 Fastened nickname yA 77 31 W, a 33 ; 19 weep yM. y 21 Pastry 22: 22 PAlmr.g 34 'ZTZ 35 Z7, 36 24 Duped 'A TYA 777, 27 tang marsh 7M 777, 7W, 28 (firsinhseseggs 3? j8 3 Z77y jgf- 29 Dntch i.ililr.) 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