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Show HIE JHTLLETTN. BINGHAM. UTAH , Navy's Muscle Man Designed to make the American tailor the most physically perfect sea fighter in the world, the U. S. navy's physical edu-cation program got off to a fine start when Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox appointed Lieut. Com- - minder Jas. J. Tunney, U. S. N. R to be head man. Already the pro-- gram is showing wonder- - ful results. These pictures take you to the naval op-- crating base at Norfolk, Va., when Tunney gave his personal attention to the program. Right Lt. Tunney arrives at office, j ) a.m mmnnimuiw'HHJ yfWg ' i (j " I ' , k 1 Y ' i i h - As vi ht I. - a The youngster standing in front of Tunney can now boast he "put 'em up" to the world's undefeated heavyweight champion. Tunney (left) prescribes for the "bay window" acquired by a rookie sailor, who will soon be-come "streamlined." Swimming is a required part of the recruit's training. This item on the curriculum meets with unanimous approval. ML) .: f2F ""..a,. MMaawilMlwMW WMMMfi xUMCA VPS AND DOWNS ...Lt. Commdr. Tunney supervises one of the exercises of his program here. Instructors are college trained physical experts who will carry out the new program inaugurated by Tunney at the various naval training stations. t It B as - Leading the morning exercises which are part of the daily drill schedule, Tunney goes through all the exercises himself before ask-ing his charges to do them. t --f rn'SK. 11! fTj, 4 t,i ft si y inn ii.mwi w nnnmaimwiiiii' a m it, j ; i - I; ill I I' &;:-i.- i v W Tunney watches Uncle Sam's new sailors turn out, make up their beds and put all their gear in ordr. Kathleen Norris Says: Moral Code Result of Long Struggle (Bell Syndicate WNU Service.) I aMmiM)m b vMfiw Soma women never cease getting into romantic mischief. They go on into wrinkles and gray hair, mill looking for conquests, still secretly proud because men continue to bt $elfuhly attentive to them. fiy KATHLEEN NORRIS words that used to TWO an enormous part family life are "duty" and "morality." These terms went out of fashion a long while ago; our younger generation wouldn't know how to apply them to general behavior. Duty, they think, means doing certain disagreeable things whether you want to or not. And what a nerve any-one has to tell you what you should or shouldn't do! Morality means not lying, not talking scandal, keeping your word, keeping your thoughts and your actions pure, conquering in your soul, as much as you can, feelings of hate, revenge, jealousy, lust, anger. Not being intemperate. Not being proud. Not being selfish. "Isn't it comfortable to be good?" one of the wisest women 1 know A WORD TO THE WISE What a pity we are so re-luctant to heed good advice! Children don't like to hear about such disagreeable things as "duty" and "morality." And when an older woman tells a younger one that the way to insure the happiness of her marriage is by patience, tolerance and forgiveness, the younger woman is likely to say something about not want-tin- g to be a martyr. But the prevalence of this attitude does not alter the fact that only through obeying the rules of morality can we achieve that larger freedom which is so different from mere will-fulness and which is the only real basis for a lasting happi-ness. Let Kathleen Norris tell you why she might have helped the Georgianna of this letter if she had knoivn her mother twenty years ago. saia one day. Secret of Married Bliss. So that when an old wife talks to a younger one, and advises her to make humility and patience, for-giveness and understanding a part of her wedding outfit, she is not ad-vocating a course that leads to mar-tyrdom. She is giving the bride the secret of married happiness. She is telling her that she will be hap-pier in the long run, will indeed be one of the truly successful and con-tented women of the world, if she goes into matrimony armed with a sense of duty and a strong deter-mination to keep the moral law. Once that law is accepted firmly nothing else matters. Here is a letter from a woman whose experience unfortunately is enmpuhnt tvrtlinl fnrlav Tt la 4ucf "I went to Reno, and feeling lone-ly and blue, associated there with a group of very rich people who thought of only good times. Among them was an attractive man of 50 who devoted himself to me. I con-fess that my mood was one of reck-lessness and irresponsibility. I made several trips with him to San Francisco and let him make me some very handsome gifts. "But all the while my heart was steadily turning back to Frank, and the security and happiness we had known in our home, with our beau-tiful little girl. I longed for them both, and for my husband's advice and understanding. When I re-ceived a letter from him saying that he felt the same way, and that Tanva nppHpH hr mnthpr mv hort possible that if some good mother, 20 years ago, had given her a sound respect for morality and duty her story might have been different. "Twelve years ago 1 was madly in love with a doctor I will call Bill," she writes me. "He loved me, too, but he didn't want to get married. It hurt my pride to be the one most In love, but there was no help for it, and even though I knew he wasn't any paragon, I was weak enough to give him everything he asked. First Love Renewed. "After awhile he went away, and I formed a deep affection for an-other man, Frank. Frank was the one in love now, but I liked him so much that eventually we were married, had a nice home, and a son and daughter. Five years ago we lost our boy, a grief that caused me a serious illness. In this illness mv nftnl" urae Tlill urhr, ViaA nrtmo was filled with joy for the first time in years. But 'the Squire,' as I call my Reno friend, also wants me to marry him. He has been three times divorced, but in two cases it has been to free his wife for a mar-riage she desired. The first time it was from a woman 28 years his senior; he was but 27 then. Seeks True Happiness. "Can you help me find my way to true happiness through this mesh of mistakes? I know I am a foolish, weak woman, although I have never consciously done anything that could hurt anyone but myself. But I do want to be happy even though I am 32 now and don't expect the raptures of young love again. The Squire has little money, but he lives in New York and knows everyone worth knowing. To go back to Frank, on the other hand, means my old environment, my old friends. back to town, and soon the old in-fatuation took possession of us both, with Bill the more ardent this time. He was married now and had two little girls. "Frank discovered our alTair and was heartbroken, as I was also, for he had always been the kindest and best of husbands, and had never 1 known of my affair with Bill. We were divorced, and Bill was divorced by his wife, and he and I were mar-ried.' Wretchedly unsuited to each oJiier, this union was doomed from the first; Bill was always talking about his first wife and how wonder-ful she was, and I soon discov-ered that he was taking his daugh-ters to lunch once a week and that often she joined them. wisdom?" Georgianna, who writes this let-ter, includes a picture of herself, a pardonable bit of vanity, for she is a beautiful woman. Slim, well-dresse-with a smart hat sweeping off her face and her hands in the pockets of a magnificent fur coat, she looks capable of getting into a lot more mischief before she is through. Such women, in truth, never get through. They go on into wrinkies and crimps and gray hair still looking for conquests. I have no advice for her. She wouldn't take it anyway. But if I had known her mother 20 years ago I might have been able to say some-thing that would have been helpful Something about morality and duty. BIS matter of expecting even the THIS football teams to win all of their games or most of their games Is point all of joint if a point can have a Joint Even the Yankees and Dodgers, good enough to carry off a pair of pennants, won only two-thir- of their starts, and football should be Judged in much the same manner. There are too many strong teams In the field today for old grads to keep expecting one victory after an-other. Many have now even reached the point of tossing out teams that happen to have lost a single game. On this basis where would the Dodgers have been last spring when even the Giants beat them three straight to open the season? As Bob Zuppke once said, "Out in that Big Ten I can lose every game and still look good." And that might be true. Accidents, tough breaks, injuries and other details can often make a difference of two or three touch-downs in a game. The psycholog- - ical setup has wide ranges. The main answer is that any team playing a first-cla- ss schedule can look back on a good season if it can win a majority of its starts. Last season, for example, Minnesota won every game yet Minnesota had the closest possible calls against Michi-gan, Northwestern and Ohio State, with whom just a slender flop in luck the other way might have brought the gallant Gophers three setbacks. That's the way football is. One or two breaks, especially in the passing game, can raise an abnormal amount of Cain. It has been that way every season, and this should be no exception. The 'Next leaf Job Messrs. MacPhail and Durocher of Brooklyn's Dodgers are not think-ing at the moment of any revenge on the Yankees next fall. Their first move will be to stall off the Cardinal charge. Sam Breadon and Branch Rickey both believe that said Cardinals will ' ' I v - LEO DUROCHER be much harder to hold in check next spring and summer with so many crack young pitchers on hand. Against this Wyatt, Davis and Fitz-simmo-of the Dodgers have a com-bined total of 107 years or 108 years by 1942. "You might also add that we can't be expected to have another such run of terrible luck," Rickey said. "That will make a terrific differ-ence." The 1941 World series is now back with the g archives, but thev are still talkino- nv,, t "w-f- Gordon, the vjz Oregon Flash. Gordon did something more than bat .500 in the series and reach first 14 times in five games. He killed infield drives that would have whis-tled safely through Dodger de-fenses, and this makes a major dif-ference to any pitcher. The Yankees slipped at least four hits to the right of second that Gor-don would have been waiting for or at least would have handled with-ou- t breaking his neck. The Yankee star is remarkably quick starting in either direction, and he is even quicker with his hands. As a freshman at Oregon he was the most promising-lookin- g young football player the West coast had seen in years, but abandoned the gridiron for a diamond career Joe McCarthy wants none of his athi letes playing football. viuiuuu uas less tension on big days than any other ball player in the game. There Is no situation that can tighten him up. And the game can't show you a finer snorts-ma- n. A Call for Help "Now that the World series is over," writes a fan. "how about helping out a few of us duffers' Some time back you wrote some-thing about 'live hands' in golf. How do you get live hands?" Dead hands and dead wrists are usually the result of leg and body tension. This tension tightens up both hands and wrists, and leaves nothing left but a shoulder or a body lunge. speaking of sports! By ROBERT McSHANE ;i lUtoaao by Waitem Nwipapw Union Ted Williams, the WHEN walloper of the Boston Red Sox, won the 1941 American league batting title, he called to mind a couple of great swatsmiths of a bygone era Hugh Dully and Shoeless Joe Jackson. Duffy has been called the greatest hitter of all time. Back in 1894 be was fashioning a truly great bat-ting average, hitting well above .430. Toward the end of the season, Duf-fy's friends wanted him to quit in order to protect his great mark. Duffy turned thumbs down. lie went up and took his cuts right in order. When the season had ended, Hugh had batted an unbelievable .438. Williams boasted a .405 average this year when the Red Sox pulled into Philadelphia for the final three-gam- e series of the year. Williams' friends, like Duffy's, urged him to sit the three games out. He had bested the .400 mark and would be the first American leaguer to do it since Harry Heilman hit .403 In 1923. In fact, he would be the first major league batter to turn the trick since Bill Terry hit .401 in 1930. The Hard Way Like Duffy years before, Williams said no. He went up the first day and collected only one hit in four trips. For the first time In werks his average dropped below .400. The future looked black for Ted, but at least he had refused to back into the championship. The next day they played a double header. Ted stepped up to the plate for the first time and belted out a point winning hit That happened four times In a row and a question-able decision robbed him of his fifth hit. In the second tilt Ted collected two for three. Altogether it was six for eight and the average zoomed up to .406. in the matter oi siyie, muiams reminds one of Shoeless Joe. The latter, like Williams, was on the tall, loose and lean side. Williams is free of all tension at the plate. So was Jackson. All pitchers looked alike to them. Both have had al-most perfect hand and wrist action and both hit anything and everything offered to them by baffled pitchers. Jackson and Williams have other attributes in common. Both weighed 175 pounds when they entered the big time. Both were tall men Wil-liams six feet three and Jackson six feet one. Both hitters were born that way. They belong among the natural hitters, along with Nap Lajoie and Babe Ruth. In handing out honors it is im-possible to overlook Rogers Horns-b- y, holder of a five-yea- r record that belongs among the all-tim- e great-est. From 1921 through 1925 Horns-b- y averaged slightly more than .401. During those five consecutive years he batted .397, .401, .384, .424 and .403. Bowling the Right Way By LOWELL JACKSOX (This is one of a series of lessons in bowling bj Lowell Jackson, one oi the country's outstanding bowlers. Mr. Jack-so- n has eighteen 300 games to bis credit and has a league average ot 210.) CORRECT STANCE A bowler should take his position on the ap-proach from 10 to 15 feet behind the foul line, depending on the num-ber of steps in his approach. The body is held erect with the shoulders squared at the pins. The weight of the ball rests on the left hand (right hand if the bowler is and the ball 7? frTX Before the delivery. is held between the belt and the shoulders. Do not crouch or swing the ball at this point, because it is unnecessary and wasted exertion. Your feet can be together in your stance or the off foot can be extend-ed about six inches forward. Be careful not to stand u,ir Pointing mward or outward. They should be pointed directly ahead at the alley. When in this position you are able to swing forward comfort-ably. SPORT SHORTS l.06."4 freshme" football play- - six ii l'Cmhioeraen thSatante colleee ly 190 pounds. y-- Lions r;Whizz"", White. Detroit has been placed by the Detroit draft board in Class A He subject to call i November. C. Joe DiMaggio's 19 putouU is rr.orc than any other outfielder ever in 3 fiVe-g8m- e senes Wlr,d L Coach "Muddy" Ruel has signed with hPrt" Cntract t0 White Sox. New Linen M In Easy iWv MWM Pattern 701 "fJIS AND HERSf Mrs."-t- he fa ration for linens tel motifs in easiest si practical and decoral 1 Pattern 7082 contains a t of 12 motifs averaRing 4'Jl illustrations of stitches; mtt To obtain this pattern ter.t: Sewlnj Circle Needle 117 Minna St. San Fr Enclose IS cents in tern No I Name Address , WMITI OK "" V1UJA fooi MlTi ITTER Tf RAZOR BUI ASK YOUR DEALER;? OUTSTANDING EIX SKENT Doabto ir RlADEe "TAKING THE COUNTRY! KNOWN FROM COASt CUPPLES COMPANY St. - I HOTEL BEN 1' OGDEN, UTAH runilr Botmi tot 4 VFf Air Ciei Lnnf fW Dining Boom Ceftefl"?1 Hom f Rotry - Klwinl--B- " Ehni-Opl'i,- t1; Chimlxr f Cmmwi Hotel Ben Lot OGDEN. 0T Hubert K. VWA Give a Thok Mam sit V 1. ' Q For, in our town.. 9 like ours clear aos5 S . . . there's stesdf 8 l" goinKon.Changcs.n 8 ""r'Ve'Wlt SO ureprices-the- se' .ffect our living O is ably covered in aJrl 8 . Smart people o in w Q folio" f O current events, S ments as closely J O . They know wh J 8 America, j where money buy f America's Contfl America has furnih world the character t: ton, and if our Amefc tions had done nothur alone would have entf the respect of mant Webster. I Hidden Reasp There are not unfr-- j stantial reasons under customs that appear t Charlotte Bronte. |