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Show . THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM. UTAH First Under-Wat- er Photos of life-Savin- g 1 i jryy";,w'wyiwiww fei,v..,-irr,l.i,i- . i 1 If s.-- . v'- - iiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iirniirl 'A A demonstration of life-savi- Is shown above, photographed for the first time under water, as staged by members of Boston chapter of the Red Cross. At left, three swimmers enact role of "victim," untrained rescuer and trained rescuer. Victim grabs would-b- e rescuer about neck; would-b- e rescuer gets panicky, grabs victim. Trained rescuer drops down on both and breaks their grips, prying both apart as shown in first and second photos. Right: Rescuer flexes knees for spring that will shoot both to surface. fL turmoil of 0f the tie crash of planets J f,has arisen as to which type in com- - 4 flcient 1 tithe fdlow who s il fss to one W 3 I come in m one of i Kate follow wilh" J it ny fiins and proper J if I put the matter up 1 lis, fUer, bridSe P,ayer n ) and a close iuuu of all sports where he might pick up a worthy wager-a- nd on the right side. Mr. Sims promptly went for the knock-biee- d entry. "I know in golf," he said, "that it pro-vides a more com-jlortab- le stance, and it also allows you to I nivot much mor ' M freely." out his Point Mr- - Sims f , random brassie and , bowlegged golfer had J , peat effort, whereas party had no Jtneed this respect knees bearing In," wtinued, "you are bal-i- e start. You are all iis point further, artisti-lanciall- y, Mr. Sims then rst nine holes at Garden me under par. A d side I can t case of two star per-)n- e was Ruby Robert i, who stopped Jim Cor-- i ion City, Nev., some 45 i terrific puncher espe-li- s weight, which was 165 pounds. One day orkoul with Kid McCoy, bout Fits gave the Kid ering. As the operation place, McCoy's keen I how Fitz stood how be was. this stance, a natural id at least part of the Kid tied a towel around just enough to permit around, but getting the he knock-knee- d effect. :laimed as a result he uch harder puncher lat- - added leverage," ac-th- e Kid, "that did the m: ithewson was the most pitcher I ever saw. It ides that being knock-- d his balance tremen-untin-g in part for his Ion could barely get of s toy balloon he'- s knees. is, Hans Wagner was as is a barrel hoop. You a horse a short one igner's wide-spreadi-wn many great football also were on the bow- - "nal Stance 'tings out the point that uetor Alex Morrison al-a'- an inward roll of fight foot left foot on H, right foot on the This naturally comes to the knock-knee- d par-- a slight start along that be admitted that the e is the straight-legge- d J Bobby Louis, fHagen, pi. Jack till Til-pt-f there lion that N take- - more one Nooted. ' Hi Pj " Walter I'lance Hagen ore naturally from a Wyer than from one Fed side at least gen- - FSely a matter of bal-rera- e. There is cer-Pw- er tobe gotten from I 'eet than from the f. .I"1 g6t an taside f' were is no outside fest Ball Player Nw the greatest ball Id If!?" Coakley. AthleUcs' star! ln was Louis Sock-O- a who once played C;T1 lasted onJy had everythin- g- ltferdcHeBabe Rrna's-- IIS, 8SebaU he co"ld L wh d as j abihty." fiSj PRIVATE MANN ("Eugene L Mann of Wenatrhe, Wash., at tin age of 65, hat entitled in that slate and been atsi fined to M. I', duty. This is hit third war. He i-- the head of three corporations and spent the last ten days playing golf and ar-ranging for their operation in his ab-sence." News item.) I Chuck my golf bag In the cellar-H-ang my golfing togs away; Tell my corporation staffs that I will not be In today. Put my slippers In the discard I'll not need the things for I've Joined up with the U. S. army I am only sixty-five- ! Released by Western Newspaper Union. A WIDESPREAD rumor, sup. posed to have originated in New York, indicates that the Yankees have more than a fair chance to win the American league flag. This whispered bit of propaganda proba-bly is designed to frighten the seven (count 'em) other clubs in the league. A close examination, however, dis-closes a germ of truth in this s, back-fenc- e gossip. The rec-ord, open to anyone Interested, re-veals that there Is considerable day-lig-between the world champions and the closest contender. It might not be amiss to point out to Boston, Cleveland, Detroit, etc., that while the race is not always to the swift, the hare usually is a much better bet than the tortoise. ' In 1941 Outfielders DiMaggio, Hen- - rich and Keller averaged quite a bit over .300, hitting more than 90 home runs. To date these individuals are bat-ting around .250 some 80 points be-low normal. When they hit their usual stride the future will be even darker for the junior circuit hopefuls, and that sad moment may lp3 ' - 1 - is . 1 come any time. Charlie Keller Happier Leagie In the National league things are r bit happier, though not all is se-rene and placid. Brooklyn looks too good. St. Louis may come through and break up the Yankee-Dodge- r combination. The Cardinals are looked upon as the only team with enough stuff to trip Durocher and his Gowanus Goons. The Cardinals are a scrappy club, but have looked better on paper than in action. They were headed for the 1941 series when injuries weakened them for Brooklyn. The same ex-cuse won't hold up in 1942. Two league positions seem quite secure as of this writing. The Yan-kees will gallop away with first place in the American, and Philadelphia will refuse to be edged out of last place in the National. The 14 other positions will be more bitterly con-tested. The Record of a Great Hitter Seventeen years ago a young fel-low named Paul Waner was socking the ball all over the diamond at Paso Robles, Calif., where the Pittsburgh Pirates were in training. Today Mr. Waner is set to join the select ranks of players who are responsible for 3,000 or more hits a total reached by only five other players in mod-ern times. Ty Cobb leads the list with a mark that no one will ever ap-proach. The Geo-rgia Peach ac-counted for 4,191 runs, umers woo Paul Waner compiled 3,000 or more hits include Trls Speaker, 3,515; Honus Wagner, 3,430; Eddie Collins, 3,313, and Na-poleon Lajoie, 3,242. Cap Anson, who wound up his career before the turn of the century, hammered out 3.081 hits. Three-Yea- r Record In his first three years, with San Francisco in the Pacific Coast league, "Big Poison" hit .369, .356 and .401. That was from 1933 through 1935. With Pittsburgh in .36, Paul ait .336, climbing to .380 the follow-In- g year. He stayed comfortably above the .300 mark for the next ten years, slipping to .280 in 1938. His major league average for 16 years Is 340. He led the National league three times-.3- 80 in 1927. .362 in 1934 and .373 in 1936. Dry statistics don't tell the com-plete Waner story. Paul claims a curious history for his hitting abili-ty. It seems that his father bought t farm outside Oklahoma City, at Harrah, Okla. Paul and his brother Lloyd, "Little Poison," both learned to hit by batting corn cobs with their hoe handles. Unquestionably a corn cob is an tlusive target especially when the slugger is armed with nothing more than a hoe handle. But such prac-tice seemed to develop a singleness af purpose which stood the Brothers Waner in good stead. It made their later work seem as easy as shooting Bsh in a barrel. 5PORT SHORTS B The left arm of Ray Lamanno, rookie Cincinnati catcher, is an inch and a half shorter than his right. Several years ago he had a bad case af blood poisoning and almost lost the' arm. n The St Louis Cardinals have pur-:has- Catcher Sam Narron from Rochester of the International league. . Cleveland Alexander is B. Grover living on a farm in Nebraska. B Brooklyn has been a member of seven different baseball leagues. I NEW IDEAS I By RUTH WYETH SPEARS CIt Y;K""JS SCROLL JWJjCS'Jrrl PATTERN RULED use heavy - lLF. :" 1 xirl PAPER H H . WOMEN today are not the flrsr a war-tim- e short age of floor coverings. The glow ing Oriental rugs of the Colonia mansion ceased to be importer.' during the Revolution; and th simple hooked rug made from ok clothing began to be developed. Then, as now, scroll borden around a flower motif we;e popu lar. The posies were designed ac cording to individual taste bu: scroll patterns went the rounds a neighbors who traced the patternj on the burlap or canvas rug four dation. Today wax crayon is gen crally used for tracing. You wil find it easy to make a cut-o- ut pat tern by first ruling paper into one inch squares and then copying thi curves in the sketch. NOTE: If you wish to make a tcrol pattern be sure to clip this diagram am lave It as tt Is not In any of the bookleti which Mrs. Spears has prepared for read era; however. Book 5 contains two deslgm and directions for making original da signs. To get a copy, send your order to' MRS. RUTH WYETH 8PEARS Drawer 10 Bedford Hills New York Enclose 10 cents for Boole 8. Nam Address Eat oranges f psrfid at 'dsissrt' f Box lunches sre tastier and more healthful when you include oranges. , They're delicious and the J best way to be sure of your viumin CI Few foods have f much. It's easily lost in i cooking. Yet needed daily, 'j since you do not stori it. i Oranges also have vita-mins A, Bi and G; calcium, and other minerals. Those stamped "Sunkist" re the finest from 14,300 growers. Ideal for iuice and recipes. They kttpl IN SAN FRANCISCO 'hi kld ';f'- Superb accommoda-tions, fine cuisine, and distinctive service await today's travelers at this city's largest, best located hotel. 1000 ROOMS 1000 BATHS FROM $4 SINGH $ OOUBU II Stick away my trusty driver-Co- ver up my irons well; Tell my locker-roo- companions I'll be missing for a spell; To the boys down at the office Say I'm leaving 'era quite cold Once again I am a doughboy Who says sixty-fiv- e is old? in In the drawer put my golf balls I'll not need 'em any more; There will be no hooks or slices In my present type of war; Let my varied business interests Run along as best they can. For the third time In my lifetime I'm becoming Private Mann. I have five more years to travel Ere I'm three score years and ten; But my feet feel only thirty They're the dogs of younger men; Age is only what you make it On the links I'm pretty fit-- Half the effort spent in golfing Will suffice to do my bit. V joined up to fight the Spaniards Back In eighteen ninety-eigh- t; was in the last world fracas, And I never join up late; This big war completely dwarfs 'em Now the main bout makes its bid; In those others I was merely A "preliminary kid!" L'ENVOI So It's Johnny blow the bugle! I'm a real old hand at war; Tee up all those Axis partners! . . . Private Mann Is calling "Fore!" PRIVATE PURKEY ON THE USO DRIVE Prescott S. Bush, National Chair-man, USO Drive. Dear Mr. Bush Like every other service man I want to do my bit to boost the USO witch is now mak-ing a big drive for more dough to make life for us more comfortable. If the general public knew what the USO had done for the U.S.A. it wood be serprised. I got a idea for the whole story In a nutshfell and here (t is: GIVE TO THE U.S.O. S O 8 And the U. S. A. Will win the war P. D. Q. O. K. We used to sing about keeping the home fires burning. The USO is moving the fires right Into the camps and furnishing coal and wood. It has brung all the comforts ot home right to the army and navy. Why, Mr. Bush, a jeep now lives better than a general used to and some times I gess when the war is aver and I get back home I will be squawking how I miss all the com-forts of army life. If you keep on doing so much for us you will have to start a drive after the war to raise dough to see that we have as many comforts at home as we used to have In war. Good luck to the USO which rates AAA with U and with I for what it does for- the U.S.A. Oscar Purkey. . Heinrich Himmler, Gestapo chief, delivered such a glowing tribute to the splendid, brave, humane quali-ties of the late Herr Heydrich that even Heydrich, if he could have neard would have sat up and de-manded, "When do you start talk-ing about me?" "The whole town of Lidice was leveled to the ground and the name jf the community extinguished for-ivr- ." Nazi statement. Wanna bet? I Keep 'Em Loaded and Keep 'Em Flying IMIIIII.II.H.,"-,- .! f.tf-f---y- .. ......II ILII,lllW.i,L..l ...?rw 1 liiil ' j Y: 'T V--- ' a vl ... t.rnHmmmmmmmmmmKmimmMiuMy 1iimi"-1- ' " .v... rMiiMtf'i Minimi At an army air depot somewhere In the western part of the V. 8., huge transport planes, "the flying box-car- of the army air force, ship freight on wings to foreign battle fronts. At left the loading crew Is transferring freight to waiting "flying box car." Inset: Poised for flight are these air freight planes, to any air field in case of an emergency call. War Heroes and Symbol of Their Purpose Thirteen British and American war heroes' visit Independence hall, Pa after being given a rousing welcome In New York. $SS2 Liberty Be..-- the bell which ,s the whose cause they performed their heroic 23? TL Soes thenmwent to Washington to visit President Roosevelt. I Plead for Lives Stark terror written on their hag-gard, unshaven faces, these five Frenchmen, accused by the Nazis of being saboteurs, cringe pitifully on their knees somewhere in Occu-pied France. Their fate? We leave that to your Imagination. Swell Falla "FaUa," the nation's No. 1 Scottle, owned by President Roosevelt, did his share in the national scrap rub-ber salvage campaign by rounding np balls, rubber bones and other gadgets dear to the heart of a pop, and donated them to the drive. Messerschmitt Flies Over U. S. - 1 ' " """""iiri"L 1 Xi O " .... The first part in the Ai jj Jf1 JtlDerr ,cluded 18 cities The tour to boost "'eovef.W9!,0sh0t down over England. Included in the S."cadeTas a Br tish Spitfire, famous fighter plane. |