| OCR Text |
Show 1 j L-- " TIIE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH w.i;ii, fciiiu skiama here are few sights more He to on airman than lie billowing from an air-- t front which human beings inot escaped. The Conri-- tj air command, waging easing fight against the id enemy fire, seeks to in-- ct military personnel on ,er methods of fighting air-tfir- es and saving personnel ped within. In the left ground above personnel are tt fighting a blaze in the loge of an old aircraft :h has been saturated with )lineand set afire. At right, Antonio Rutiago, Delano, f, keeps the foam hose on iming section of the plane the instructor, John A. mey (background) keeps ) e watch, f 3W,rJ::v.v..J( VJlvf ,. iWiktoiktf fcwtite.mj. L.,wJ.i,., ffri ,i, .ft. .W.mMimMim Not all CAC personnel training is done outside. Here, they are shown getting instructions on it should be done before they actually do it. These men were members of a class to graduate from a school at Shaw air force base, Sumpter, South Carolina, after taking a two-cour- se in how to kill flames in the event a plane came in for an emergency landing and caught Below, personnel are shown under close observation of instructors as they battle the flames and e a dummy from the cockpit of a salvaged Boeing B-- that was brought in for the school. mmK- - 'mm Q Eflecfing the responsibili- - of Aching which falls on "ctors in the fire fighting 'ol- - n instructor is shown lQt right os he leads and ,llcts a young student as f'9hflames of an old y airplane of the U.S. ,!"ce. o o o BRILLIANT HALFBACK OT UAVY ANO ARKANSAS W f'WC, IS raui.LV EFFICIENT ON THE CINDER- - AfSf y ..Jn I PATH. HE TIED THE FOkMCR OLYMPIC 110- - ' I I MA F METER HURDLE KIT CORD WT FINISHED X )' S3J SaV SECOND TQ THE UNITED STATL3' PORTEII rTTT'BCDP US'Nvi A ?"-I-O" BLOW. UjS" SENT IT TRAVELING WAHAyy 135" M.P.H. --jE2B3SEaOBSSr' iJWi ' 7j d ' 7 m5 H,T 'T yvvlt- - '"t$2?Mtui J'i'S ''' tlh IXRING A BALL VME AT THE PLYMOUTH, MASS, ? V , E ji 3w HaK CCWECTON. 4 PLAYERS AND A ijTi 'V?'' -. V V? i GUARD WENT TO FIND THE BALL. THE ' uSmmmv 'APRlSONFRS NFVFF? CAME RACK. Guest Room Beauty tr irrtfeTftfa'ft U--. 7479 NEW BEAUTY for your linens 1 All for the fun of embroidering these water-lilie- s, of crocheting this simple edging I Something different! Pattern 7479; transfer one motif 5x19to; two 4Vixl3&. Crochet directions. Our improved pattern visual with cany-to-se- a churt Mud photna, and com plete directions mukei needlework eaiy. Send 20 cents (In coins) for each pat-tern to: The Sewing Circle, Needlerraft Dept., P.O. Box 116. Flnthush Stutlon. Brooklyn 2fl. N.V.I P.O. Box 5740. Chi-cago 80, IU. Rfwlnr Circle-Nedlerf- Dept. 584 W. Ksndnlph St.. Chlcass HO, III. Enclose 20 cenU tor puttern. No. Name Addrese Sturdy Lawn Chair Is Simple to Build yOU CAN build this handsom lawn chair by following the pattern method of construction. This and many more projects can be built at the lowest possible cost if you want to "build it your-self." Solve your lawn furniture needs by ending 25c for Lawn Chnlr, Pattern No. 32 to Easl-Bll- d Pattern Company, Dept. W, Pleasantvllle. N.Y. THE NEIGHBORS WILL ) LOVE ME FOR THIS ) ofLIFE? Ar you going through the func-tional 'middle age" period peculiar to women (38 to 52 yrs.) ? Does this make you suffer from hot Hashes, feel to nervous, hlghstrung, tired? Then do try Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. Plnkham's Compound, also has what Doctors caU a sto-machic tonic effect! v LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S K'und i ' And Your Strength and Energy Is Below Par It may be caused by disorder of kid-ney function that permits poisonous waste to accumulate. For truly many people feel tired, weak and miserable when the kidneys fall to remove excess acids and other waste matter from the blood. You may suffer nagging backache, rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness, getting up nights, leg pains, swelling. Sometimes frequent and scanty urina-tion with smarting and burning Is an-other sign that something is wrong with the kidneys or bladder. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment is wiser than neglect. Use Doan's Ptlis. It is better to rely on a medicine that has won countrywide ap-proval then on something less favorably known. Doan't have been tried and test-ed many years. Are at all drug stores. Get 0oan s today. HBy JIM RHODYgjjv Cane Polers Adept After a recent demonstration, this writer is convinced that there must be scores of cane pole over the nation who could give the expert tournament casters some real competition. Everyone knows that the tourna-ment competitors, equipped with 5 Mi or rods, lightning fast, diminutive tournament reels, with no level-win- d attachment, are able to hurl a one-hal- f or three-eight- s ounce tournament weight the length of a football field, or farther. Light lines also aid the caster in this performance. But how many know that there are some cane pole fishermen who can east a minnow and small sink-er that same, or greater, distance? But to the tyro, the ability to duplicate the cane polt angler's dexterity and adroitness is sing-ularly difficult, and it is only after a long trial-and-err- method that the beginner becomes proficient if he ever does. There is no almost-"alive- " action of the rod tip here to aid in deliver-ing the lure. In fact, few cane rods have enough flexibility to permit the lure to put an arc in the rod at any Btep of the casting procedure. Getting to the performance we witnessed,' we saw a cane pole fisherman, with a minnow and small sinker attached to his line, throw more than 100 yards of line off his reel and this from a sit-ting position! He did it repeatedly and seemed to think there was nothing unusual in the feat. His line tested 15 pounds and his reel was a beaten up model, with level-win- d attachment, which was then more than six years old and hadn't cost more than $8 when he bought it. The performance was one of which any top-fligh- t caster could have been proud and was of a quality to attract as amazed spec-tators several fly-ro- d users and plug casters who happened to be on the lake at the time. How It Started According to the legend, the story of how artificial lures caine to be Invented has an af-finity with so many of the gad-gets that enhance the pleasures of fishing they were first en-visioned by a country boy. He was the driver of a six-mu- le team and was expert at handling the long bullwhip which he rarried over his shoul-der. One afternoon, the mules stopped at a creek to drink and the boy noticed that trout were leaping hungrily a few yards away. He thought, "Gosh, one would taste good for supper!" He climbed off the wagon and be-gan cracking his whip against the surface of the water. Sud-denly, a fine trout leaped and struck the red tip, or tassel, of the bullwhip. The boy landed that fish, then stood in his tracks and by the same method managed to catch a good mess. And that, they say, was the beginning of the rod and reel, flics and plugs. 'Stratoline' Does Job Without a lot of technical blather involving obtuse theory and theor-izing, the Cortland line company has come up with a triple-tape- r fly line that seems to be what the doctor ordered in the matter of easy and effective fly casting. Their "Stratoline" is made in all the popular tapers, but in sensible dimensions and weight distributions which do the job a perfect fly line is supposed to do. Cortland has managed to put the "weight forward" principle of line construction in its proper perspec-tive and, as a result, the "Strato-line" almost "casts itself." We tested an HCF line on an Heddon rod, and were delighted with the results. The quick taper of the H-li- to C, the length of which tapers quickly to F, brought out the ulti-mate in rod action and ease of casting. Turtles Voracious Game Manager Harold A. SteinkS of the Wisconsin conservation de-partment wonders how many trout go into the making of a snapping turtle. Steinke shot a snapper which had a 10 by shell on the banks of Jenning's creek. He found the turtle's stomach contained three brook trout, six and one-hal- f inches each and still in full color, plus one four-inc- h chub and two seven-inc- h lamprey eels. 4 SPORT LIGHT Big Name Horses Are on Trial By GRANTLAND RICE HE NEXT FEW days and weeks of racing will find a flock of celebrities in the headlines. Their names will Include Citation, Coal-tow- Capot, Ponder and a few more. There have been three big fea-ture races with the same weights so far the Derby rXC" the Preakness -- lA and the Belmont. a' Capot not only ipXgJ two out of I . I three but also ran ffv f 2 in each start, fe, Capot's on top but he still has a L.VCt$l battle left. L-.i-l. J The ls no lonS-e- r a n Grantland Rice y question now that 0lympla won the Derby for Ponder. Capot could pick his own pace in the Belmont, but some horse with speed had to go after Olympia in the Derby. Capot was the only horse with the speed to challenge which in turn cost him the race. If the Grerntree horse could win the Trcakness and Belmont because there was no pace-maker to kill off first, he could surely have taken over the Derby under similar circum-stances. But for all that, Ponder was the surprise horse of both the Derby and the Belmont. He will still be dangerous over any stretch of ground beyond a mile, especially at a mile and a quarter or a mile and a half. His form from class nas bounded far up and if Capot falls away later on, it is quite likely that Calumet's stretch run-ner will move up. In the meanwhile it will be in-teresting to see when and where Citation will run again. Jimmy Jones says the champion is ready. "We have been in no hurry," Jimmy says, "to get him working too soon with Coaltown on hand. There is nothing to be gained by running Citation against Coaltown." Whether or not Citation Is ready, Calumet has no great worry with Coaltown, Ponder and Wistful on hand. It is only natural that Chicago should get the call with these standouts, due to the matter of weight assignments. If Calumet can get her stars in at 330, it would be rather foolish to take higher weights. In the meanwhile Hollywood Park ls quite anxious to know what Calumet will do about the $100,000 Gold Cup race on July 16, where Coaltown and Citation can get in at 132 pounds. The hitch here may come from Ben Jones' statement that 130 pounds is all that any horse should carry. The extra two pounds would make little or no difference, but It might leave an opening for increased weights later on. In any event the next few weeks should be replete with In-teresting turns, now partially covered by the fogs. Citation, especially, is due to break Into the headlines soon. Make The Target A Barn So far this has been a formless baseball season in the main and the main reason is quite evident the pitching. It isn't so much a matter of the base hits and runs that have been accumulated. It isn't so much a matter of the home runs driven in winning flight over the fences or into the stands. It has been largely a matter of bases on balls. I can't recall a season where so many passes have been issued day after day. Eight or 20 have been on the menu. Teams get 13 hits and 20 runs. They get 8 hits and 11 runs. There isn't any reason why a big league pitcher shouldn't be able to get a pitch across the plate at least a reasonable number of times. But It is nothing to see some pitcher open up any given Inning by filling the bases on passes. Pitchers will tell you that if they give the baiter a good ball to hit, he'll probably hammer It out of the lot. But isn't it better to have him do that with nobody on than to fill the bases first and then hand the batter a grand slammer? I do not remember another season that has ever yielded so many grand slammers, a home run with three on, as 1949 has offered with the campaign only a quarter over. Lack of control has also been responsible for so many home runs. The pitcher rapidly works himself into a hole and then has to split the plate. At least he has to try. The order of march today is to first fill the bases or walk at least two men. After this the home-ru- n ball, squarely over the middle with little on it, is served up. QHWJfESSISH - By Harold Arnett TWO STUNTS TO OO MTU "T cam'Mmsy -- 7 f Coax HAN6BX. TOk I IM HANGING OUT GARMENTS TO fA 1 AIR, SUSPENP THE HANGERS f?A A WITH CLOTHESPINS, AND THE J s I WON'T BLOW OFF. SIMPLY ff r As? J S '' TAKE AN ORDINARY mt$U I '"f ' CLOTHESPIN, DRILL HOLES WiWMLJ ' THROUGH THE LEGS AND J . INSERT THE HANGER A SiV.PLE METHOD OF WIPING HIGH 'SzS'' CEILIN&S AND WALLS WITH A DUST CLOTH IS TO DRILL A HOLE IN THE (W END OF A 6ROOM HANDLE, AMD INSERT A WIRE COAT HANGER, AS II 0"-- 6 SHOWN. THE HANGER IS BENT, AND fttiu.EPN THE DUST CLOTH IS HELD IN. PLACE Handle , WITH A HEAVY RUBBER BAND. |