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Show I 3 b-- THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH . fffT'i u U4fc i adin, Ritin and Rhythm MiiiiiaMfafH 1 1 t' Vii V n iif l-f- tmitmi ',T"lfi)iiriniiiiiiiii urn fit Children are having mort fun, teaching is better and better paid and there is less cost as a fourth compatriot, "Rhythm," joins the venerabU "three R's" of education. Clay instruction (top) in piano, lil. this in York, Pa., schools, i now beina aiven in hundred m of schools. photo above, boys and girls join in this brass class at Oak Park, where children are taught to ctively in groups. New methods are revolutionizing music teaching and bringing it to more if children every day. In photo below is shown how wind instruments are taught to boys and aspire to elementary school bands. According to a survey by the American music confer-perce- nt of all people believe music should be taught on the same basis as other subjects. fe- - tf&ffi y'fn ttr '"its, V vkV'tt iV ! . J !'l i f ;ivf1rr?"YAl ; I L . O o o Learning cooperation is a most important of the musical instruction given these Milwaukee girls, and they find that each must ac-comodate her flute playing tc the other's in order to get thi desired harmony and tone. o 0 o "3 the theme of Qnd "operation, are taught S'0"Psin the Oak Park Her the children are "istruction on the l1tal Percussion instru-,h- e orchestra cjfmbals, bass drum ,s drum. 1 0 o t '5 the: fik3t competito Trv TC WIN BOTH THE HiGH AND LOW BOARD OLYMPIC DTVIN3 J' CHAMPIONSHIPS. Jt1 M AUS&UAN with the PW' y GIANTS, SET A MAX? LEAGUE --47' 3 KXCORD IN 1955 PY NOT HITTING b-j- " INTO A LXXl.E PLAY DURING vEf? 25,000,000 THE ENTIRE tCASON.1 GOLF BALLS WERE SOLD IN 1948. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Junior Frock in Gay Contrast Yoked Beauty for Sub-Teene- rs 4::;fjMi 8330 --w r;;,'.,;, .' 'uj'Hln: pRETTY enough for party wear, f''fl159' I rlllH practical as a back-to-scho-i T11 Yb , , ' .,, WLJimw drcss ls this ykt'd style for yuns girls. Make the yoke and pockets Two-Fabr- ic Number in contrast and trim with tiny pOR DAYTIME or date-tim- e a ruffling. stunning frock for juniors that Pattern B330 rcimci In mir 4, n, 1C uses two fabrics very effectively. nnd n yearn size . p.. rd of The comfortable sleeves are H yard contrust. trimmed with buttons in threes. BKWIN"r,r,.p ,.ATtkrn i.f.pt. 530 South HrlU St. I'hlcBie 1, III. Pattern 8359 Is for ntrs 11, 12. 13, 14. Enclone 2.1 centi In coin for each Ifl and 18. Size 12, yarcii of 35 or pattern denlred. 3W tnch ; yard contraHt. Pattern No. Site Send today for vour ropv of the Spring . and .Summer FASHION (14 panel of at-- Ham tractive, wearable Btvlea: iprrlal de- - ... slKns: free puttern printed Inside tin Addreaa book. 25 cents. ASLEEP Tomorrow Night without being awakened If you're forced up nightly bertim af urgea, do thia: Start taking KOI.EY FILLS lor BluBKuh Kidneya. They purge kidneya ol waatea; they aooth thorn Irritation! cauaing thoa urge- - Alao allay backachea, leg paina, painful paaaage from kidney inaction, llnlea you Bleep all ntght tomorrow night DOUHLE YUUH MONEY BACK. At your druggiaU AGENTS WANTED We have Just expanded our opera-tions to Utah ana Wyoming and we are Interested in securing depend- I able persons to represent the Idaho Mutual Benefit Association In these two states. Full time agents are most desirable but applica- tions for part time agents will ba considered. Persons between the ages of 30 and (10 most desirable. Our "Future Security" plan for full time representatives will ba I promptly furnished to persona In-- I terested. There is an opportunity for a good income for full time I representatives and a chance to I add substantially to your Income I on a part time basis. Salea ex-- I peiience la not necesaary but would ba helpful. A complete sales kit. aales supplies, complete B Information about Idaho Mutual, I necessary Instructions and aales helps are furnished by the As-- aoclatlon. Write to IDAHO MUTUAL BENEFIT ASSOCIATION, Iiahe Mataal Rids., Boise. Idaho. "TtZsL fotmifar Only yog con I (S? PREVENT j FOREST FIRES 1 Crispness that speaks for Itself 1 - t , Hear Rice Krlsplessnapl cracklel -- - pop I in milk I Dee-Uclo- -- J tmjm i I energy food. America's favorite CJ wl0&& iyisrtfw'' I SPORT LIGHT , Baseball Born 166 Years Ago B fRANITI AMD KCF -- 1 w........ TT SEEMS RATHER peculiar, with baseball rated as the national pastime, with the game sweeping the country today, that no set re-cord of baseball's beginning is at hand. Abner Doubleday has been credited with taking a commission from the dying Lincoln, which of course never happened. Baseball came in before Lincoln or Doubleday were ever known. I have had records showing that base-ball was a game around 1840. A n game. Will Irwin, one of our greatest writ-ers and reporters, jnce wrote several articles proving that Gen. Abner If"2? ' fy "mm Two Ways to Hit There are two ways on tap when It comes to the matter of hitting a baseball well. One is the system Nap Lajoie used some 40 years ago. The other has a standard bear-er In Ted Williams, one of the best of the moderns. "I believe in making a pitcher put one over the plate," the Red Sox star tells you. "If a ball is two inches wide, I'll let it go. That's why I wait so late to swing on many occasions. You can tell in advance whether a pitch is going to be good, wild or near the cor-ners." Nap Lajoie never liked this system. "I make up my mind in advance," he said one day before a game. "I make up my mind to sock the next one if H Is anywhere close. I'd just as soon swing at a ball eight Inches off the plate. The main point ls that my mind Is all set to hit this next one. Naturally if it's a bad pitch or too wide, I'll let it go. But you certainly get more timing in your swing when you are mentally set to hit the next one." "I never worked much on either theory," Ty Cobb said. "I always wanted to hit the ball as solidly as possible. It might be over and too low. It might not be over and just the right height. There is one thing you have to watch in batting. That's your balance, keeping your weight back of the swing. "One of the chief faults In hitting is overeagerness or over anxiety. This makes you throw your weight forward too soon. As you step into the ball, your hands and body must be work-ing together. "Young ballplayers, especially, fall into this habit of lurching for-ward ahead of schedule. Their weight is out of place. I used to keep an old-tim- on the bench to watch me when I get into a slump." He'd tell me what fault I was committing swinging too fast swinging too fast waiting too long waiting too long bad foot action. "It would be a smart thing for managers to have a veteran ob-server on the bench today to check on mistakes or faults. In both golf and baseball the player can rarely tell what he is doing when some-thing goes wrong. Your pro can help you in golf. You should also have a good pro to help in base-ball." Doubleday had rantland Rice notMng tQ dQ wHh the discovery or Invention of base-ball. As Will Irwin is the most responsible person I've ever known to go fully into the subject. I'll go along with him. Now a worthy reader in Pelham, N.Y., sends me a copy of a letter that has been in his family since 833. The letter was sent to "Mr. vVilliam H. Butler. Nathaniel Hall, Nathaniel County, Pa., March, 1833." The sender was Charles C. Cain. Here is a portion of the 1833 etter: "I suppose nowadays you play ball considerably. If I can Judge by our conditions up here, it is the time of the year to play ball. I think it was a great pity that we couldn't teach these lazy rascals to play that beauti-ful game Base Ball." I have seen correspondence be-or- e that proved to me baseball vas played around 1840 and there vere fairly good teams before 1850. It is only natural that different ypes of games were played in .lose early days. It may be that leneral Doubleday was the one .ho measured out the modern dia-non-but there were many changes ear after year such as under-an- d pitching and out on the first ounce. No game springs full blown ,ito existence over night. This letter to William H. But-ler, written March 22. 1833, re-ferring to baseball by its right name is the first recorded in-stance I know with full proof attached. This makes baseball 116 years old which brings it more dignity and tradition. BUQUSEHOLD ilillNTSlS On the bias. Try cutting the thread on a slant when threading a needle. It will point the thread and make it much easier to thrust through the eye of the needle. Time enough. In making perco-lated coffee, allow the brew to percolate for only five or ten min-utes after the water begins to be amber in color. e Wash line technique. When washing heavy blouses, shirts, etc., hang each one separately on a wooden clothes hanger and then on the line. They will dry more quickly and in better shape than when pinned directly to the line. e Overdone. Take a look are there too many things of no value on the mantel of your living-room- ? e Add the juice of one orange to apples, peeled and chopped, ready to be cooked for apple sauce. The orange juice gives the sauce a golden color and a delicate flavor. e Experience taught her. One mother who sends a boy and girl away to college makes a list of the things packed in each trunk and secures it to the lid of the trunk on the inside with thumb-tack- s. This way she gets back at least a percentage of the things originally sent. Sprinkle plain muffins, just be-fore they go into the oven, with a mixture of melted shortening, brown sugar and cinnamon or nut-meg. e Consider the mop. Floor mops, as a rule, are somewhat neglected when it comes to washing. Give your mop a good bath in boiling soapsuds every week or so. Soda added to the water will loosen the dirt wonderfully. e Dry in no time. A quick way of drying stockings is to squeeze them as dry as possible, then roll tightly in a turkish towel for five minutes. Hang in an airy place and they will dry in a jiffy. e Deposit rubbers here. A wooden box or carton placed inside the kitchen door to be used as a re-ceptacle for rubbers and galoshes on rainy days will save the home-mak- er much linoleum cleaning. 3fVk.MFT01f1XT1 By Harold Arnett CANVAS SEAT FOR CHILD'S USE AT 7HB & t THEATER fm BY STRETCHING A CANVAS ,,til'TT. SEAT ACROSS THE ARM OF fffft f t lTmS A TH EATER CHAIR. YOU I af y V CAN CREATE A SEAT POR lWZUM 1 I M A SMALL CHILD, SO H 2uMaML CAN SEE OVER THE HEADS TMQLs OP PEOPLE IN FRONT. & vjf jf THE SEAT CAN BE FOLDED 7 ' AND CARRIED IN THE POCKET. IT CONSISTS Pys, p . OF A PIECE OF HEAVY f7 canvas with wire hooks SKYROCKET HOLDER sewed to the coders. MADE FROM WIHDOW . SHADE ROLLER IP VOU REMOVE THE SPRING ASSEMBLY FROM AN OLD WINDOW ' lN, SHADE ROLLER, YOU WILL HAVE A ""h dandy holder for shooting sky-- - w (' rockets, the rocket stem FITS f INTO THE HOLE FORMERLY USED 'W FOR THE SPRING. SAW OFF THE SOLID " ' ' "J END OF THE ROLLER. TO THE CORRECT W-- V . LENGTH, SHARPEN IT TO A POINT, Js " AND POSH IT INTO THE GROUND |