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Show Salt Lake Children Build Sand Castles t 0 0 & ti Gratify Longings During School Time SAiT LAKE children building castles in tha sand at the kindergarten department in the new William Stewart building at the University of Utah. The children are Gerald Rosenblatt, Larry Bennett, Jack Leary, Olive i May Guillotte, Harold Anderson, GeDrge Green, Pauline Pingree, Tim Sheahan, Laura Smith, Harvey A. Hatch, Donald Duckmore, George Relf, Loralne Mcintosh, Leonard Stewart and Wellington McDonald. Vesta Edwards ! and Villetta Cowley, teachers, are standing at the rear. - -1 . .. . z t k New Process Retains All Joys, but Eliminates Dirt Stains. THE newest method of building casttes in the sand, winch retains re-tains tho joys without the dirt, has been inaugurated at the University of Utah kindergarten school, which was recently opened for childreu of throe and a half to seven years of age. That children delight in playing in sand has long been recognized, and recent re-cent psychological investigations have shown that this desire is founded on a natural need, officials of the kindergarten kinder-garten department explaiu. But modern mod-ern civilization does not admit the propriety pro-priety of dirty children and science haa been called upon to Revise means of retaining the good without the had. This has, been accomplished by the use of thoroughly cleaned sand, which does not soil the clothing or the hands. About seventy-five Salt Lake children chil-dren attend the kindergarten at the University' of Utah, and those in charge say tfiere is nothing moro popular with the little ones than the sand pile. |