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Show Thursday August 2, 1928 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH Two Great Tennis Champions Helen Wills, American and International tennis champion, with Uetie Lacoste, French star and holder of the American singles championship, as they appeared at Forest Hills. (Tainted Blood Strain on the Financial Resources of the United States By HARRY OLSON, Chief Justlci Chicago Municipal Court. of every dollar of taies in the United State? goes to pay foi HALF results of defective blood streams in the population. of crime and care of defectives consume half of all taies because the feeble-minde- d and the emotionally abnormal continue to multiply, many of them inevitably becoming lawbreakers. The policeman, the lawyer and the judge have been dealing with a medical problem about which they know nothing. Law enforcement can not solve the problem because the normal people don't need law enforce ment and the mental defectives won't pay any attention to it. A border line class Mists, nevertheless, for which enforcement of law is a deterrent The juvenile court will have to be abandoned for something else. A-lthough the juvenile court is an advance over the police court in dealing with children, it fails to straighten out crooked emotions and wavering intellect in children born defective. The press frequently makes news out of the condition of mental ami emotional defectives. Their acts make news, because they are out of the asylum. If they were in the asylum nobody would pay any attention to them. In the next ten-ye- period there will be two or three times as many murders unless we adopt a new method. Look at the fool idea we've had in education that you could take all sorts of children, put them into the public schools'like a clean sheet of paper into a printing press, and have them all come out alike. I 'i I Jk Jk ...v.r NURSES know, and doctors have declared there's nothing quite like Bayer Aspirin for all sorts of aches and pains, but be sure it is genuine Bayer; that name must be on the package, and on every tablet Bayer is genuine, and the word genuine in red is on every box. You can't go wrong if you will just look at the x t tlx trad mark of Beyer Moufetrj " r MonocetlceldUr of BtllcylletelJ . Kumrlla. join OrltOn!, Nationally Chartered. Stronneet "Proteetant Womin'i Order 111 ' World, font rolled by Women. Write Haiti O, Cooper, H00-N- , 1Kb ft., blrmlniham, Ala. MEN'S NK1KWEAR1 New Selling Method. Urn or Women. Snappy Stylea. New Deela-- Weekly. Popular prlwe. HI profile. WI8. NEV1N, 121 federal St., Ultuburtjll, Pa, WHAT 19 CHKISTIANITVT , Our Chart Kn.m Ailum to t'hrlut Anewer Thla (juration. Why o many Denomination Our t'hart (loU'a Cartoon of Wortlljr Nation Anewer thla Great QueMlon. Who la the Man s of Itey. JIMIt W'hfit will take piece . . when HI rower take the I'rceldont Chair f Thi ee and Every Seemingly Impoaalbl Qoee-tlo- n Anewered from the nible. No Creedl Sunt Bible Truth your f'hlld can Understand. Charm and fluid"-- . I. THR Him K CHART COMPANY Do 153, Ml. A - - I Augrlre, Calif. AOENT8 WANTED To Geol a Burn Use Hartford's Balsam of Myrrh Mouey be. forflret bottle If not tolted. AlldekJor. ALLIS FOOT-EAS- E Stops the pain of Corns jO and llimlons and you can (Vv walk alt day In ease and r t&i comfort. Nothing gives l(TJrVpsucli relief to not, tired, 1 ( "fV7 aching, Inflamed 01 swol--k ten feet, blisters or cal- - luses. A little . ALLEN'S PrS? ) fOOT-EAS- E sprinkled In II I lfi1 eaci ehoe 'n the mornIn8 Iff ll 1 V will mateyonforgetabout li f A) tight shoes. It takes the I JV friction from the shoe. ys use it for Dancing and to Break In New Shoes. For Free Minnie nml Foot. Rase W&lkirur Doll, sddree ALLEN'S FOOT-EAS- Le Hoy, N. Y. In a Finch, Ua Alien's Foot-Ea- RICH MAN'8 CORN HARVESTER Poor Dian e once Only 3b with bundle tyin A-ttachment; sole la every tat free catalog EbomD. Diclutu ot banceter Vrotfreg Co. baliii W. N. U, Salt Lake City, No. 28. GLORY IS FLEET ON BALL DIAMOND Net a Member of 1921 Champion Giants Remains. nusebull glory passee rupldly. Fans see Id the Yankees one of the great eat pennant-winnin- g aggregations ever presented on the dluinond, but they don't stop to think thut of the team tliut won the Yankees' first pennant In 1021, only three men remain Iluth, Meusel and HoyL Gone are all the others. You may retail that the Yankees won the first two gumus of the ID'Jl series and then lost five of the nest Nil pimcs to a team thut would not he denied the New York Wants. That performance ranked the Slants us even greuter than the Yanks, but now the glory of these 19U1 (Slants has with the snows of yesteryear, writes Ed Hang In the Cleveland New?. Today not a single Giant of WJ1 continues In a Mcdraw uniform. Krlsch, lliineroft, Karl Smith and Art Nehf are still lu the National leugue, but they ure ugalnnt and not for the Giants. The pennants of NCI) were won by Cleveland und Brooklyn. Today only four of those Cleveland Indians con-tinue on Cleveland's pay roll Horns, Joe Sowell, Jninleson and Utile. More sweeping still are the changes that have taken place In Brooklyn. Look over Uncle Hobble's pay roll and you will tlud not a single player who helped Brooklyn to Its pennant of eight years ago. Washington lias today only nine of the twenty-on- e players who partici-pated In the world series of 1U- -4 and Pittsburgh retains but seven of the eighteen men who took part In the series of I'.rjft three years ago. The survivors are Grantham, Traynor, Wright, Barnhart, Smith, Meadows and Kreiner. Evidently big league managers are convinced that the way to win pen-nants Is to provide a steady Infusion of new blood. This new blood cods a lot of money and more often It falls than succeeds, but bnsebull is a busi-ness now and the crowds evidently tire of old faces In the same old uni-forms. Things were different In the pioneer days. From 1880 to 1880 Inclusive, Anson's Chkogoes won five pennants In seven years, and In that period Anse had practically the same team. In 1880 his lineup reud this wuy: Anson, first base; Quest, second base; Williamson, third base; Hums, short-fto- Uulrytnple and Gore, outllelders; Kelly nnd Fliut, catchers and outlield- - ers; Corcoran und Goldsmith, pitchers. In 1880, Pfeffer hud replaced Quest at second base. Jimmy Ityun und Billy Sunday lyul been udded us outllelders. while Flint und Kelly devoted them-selves to catching exclusively. Clark-so- n und McCormlek were doing the pitching. Thus In seven years, three men hud retired and five new men had been added. Moreover, Anson's entire pay roll cost a great deal le? per year than Is now paid Babe Ruth Individually. Yet when It . Is all said und done, Anson's team did as much In its time ns the Yankees have done In later years. 1. e.. won five pennants In seven years Sports Are Great Help to Right Citizenship Games and sports were advocated before the National Education asso-ciation by James Edward Itogers, di-rector of the Nutlonul rhyslcal Edu-cation service as means of "teaching those traits of character that are es-sential to good citizenship." Asserting that the world needs sportsmanship in Its international and business relationships, he declared that physical education "tenches sport not for sport's sake, but for the sake of sportsmanship." "There Is a close correlotlon be-tween physical fitness and personal ef-ficiency In business, success In human relationships and happiness at home and abroad," he sold. "A physically tit' person Is more likely to be efficient, happy and use-ful. A physically fit nation Is better prepared to meet any emergencies either from within or without Indus-trial waste from Inefficiency and Ill-ness can be substantially reduced through better physical fitness pro-grams." BASEBALL NOTES gjj Garland Buckeye, pitcher for the Cleveland Indians, has been released unconditionally. Art Jahn, outfielder of the Phillies, has the biggest bunds In baseball. He can hold six balls level In one hand Hooks Walker, right-hande- who pitched for the University of Fenn-s.vlvnni- a, has been signed by Washing-ton. The San Francisco Seals hove clinched the Pacific Coast League pennant for the first half of the split season. National league has a "professor of umpiring" In Hob Enislle, who teaches the young arbiters to call them as they see them. Ty Cobb, member of the Philadel-phia Athletics, Is forty-tw- years old and has been playing major league baseball for twenty-thre- e years. e e Oklahoma City, leaders In the West-ern league, Is the youngest club In Class A baseball today, the team's average age being twenty-three- . e Uncle Wllbert Robinson Is one of the few managers In baseball wearing specs. Maybe they are double vision and muke his Dodgers look twice ns good. Paul Easterllng, Detroit's young out-fielder, has been released on option to Toronto of the International league. He may be recalled on a moment's notice. The Eastern league will this year offer a prize to the man adjudged the most valuable to his club. The selec-tion will be m;f:e by a group of scribes. Tom O'Hara, boss of the Denver Country club cuddles and dean of this count i'j s cuddle masters, has trained approximately 30,000 boys in bis thirty yeurs of service. Al Fons, star pitcher of the Holy Cross baseball teimi will day no more college baseball, having signed to play with the Milwaukee P.rewers of tlip American association. e Not being able to rind a landing place for Hubert Atkinson, after plac-ing him temporarily In the Southeast ern lea-iiie- . the Wushfngtnns h.ivc handed the yoongffpr his release. e e Kali Stanley, pitcher for the Steven on Diamond Hall team of Minneapolis, struck out twetity-o- players In a seven-irmhi- frrv.'f with the P.ubhles Safe team of St Paul, winning 1 to 0 e e e Willie Katnm hs'.s emerged from Ids flatting slump and is hitting the hall hard once more. A few years ago he specialized In to irft center. Now he Is hiinc'iig singles down the. left field e Before the guce of .l ine 'Ti. Infield er Howard Freigau of the lirooklvn llobins was released to the Boston I '.raven on waivers Thus. Ilornsby L'i'ts another former I'ard'ni.l who played with him at S' l.on'n e e The new press box nt the Cobs park will lie the finest In the majors when It Is compb'ted It Is siisnr'tn'ed Just under the upper t!er ai d Is be-ing constructed In such a manner that It will he entirely with glasg paneling for co'd weather secli h fs encountered both early nnd bite In the season Strain Iwif " to be nno'lw welcome feature . Cleveland fans are-layin- pi; us for a "day" for outfielder 'barley Jamie-son- . They say tiN good and faithful work over h Ioiir jietiod of years en titles him to some special reeogni tiro. A Cleveland newspnrier has tak en ti(i thp Idea and the plan is to pui over ".lamieoti Day" as a big cent later In the season. Nation's Public Schools Must Set Moral as Well as Educational Standards By DR. MARTIN G. BRUMBAUGH, of Pennsylvania. The hope of tomorrow lies in the public schools. What's needed is - rot that the schools should teach arithmetic but teach being honest-No- t that the schools should teach to parse but to behave. ! The American people went into a jnzz 6pree after the war. We bought things whether or not we had money to pay for them. We be-came the most extravagant people the world has ever known. But when men become extravagant and wasteful their morals decay. When Sweden gave physical examination to its young men of military age last May, only 8 per cent were rejected. In the United States, at the beginning of the World war, 27 per cent were rejected and with a much lower physical requirement. The explanation is that for a genera tion the Swedish youth has been given careful physical instruction in the 6chools. Any child who buys an education at the cost of health pays a price too high either-fo- r the individual or the state. We haven't yet seriously approached that problem. j What are we doing to solve our Americanism problem? All immigrants A who (l(mt learn English in five years should be sent back. Our churches are losing membership not on their rolls, but in their pews. The home has failed to take up its share of the moral problem. It's not a problem we face, but a mother-and-fath- er problem. And now in the schools you've got to set the moral as well as the educa tional standards. America is suffering for need of great spiritual lead ership. Pirate Pitching Ace ' (,- - .: i " y.-'- v ' - ) '. Carmen Hill, pitching uce lui the Pittsburgh Pirates, continues to be as effective on the hill as ever. Special Duty Placed on Last Homecomer Governor Gore of Went Virginia was tariilng at a Charleston luncheon about oil trembles. "Strong measures ure needed," he said, "to save our oil reserves. Yes, we must cut to the root of the evil not just resort to expedients, like the paterfamilias. "A paterfamilias with a large fam-ily of daughters said to a friend one day: "'With nil these daughters of mine . '" coming In at ull hours my night's rest Is naturally much broken up, and for some time the consequence was that I'd oversleep myself every morning 'M and be late for work at the offlce. Bad business.' , "The paterfamilias looked gloomy, then he brightened up. "But I've hit on a splendid expedi-ent now,' he said. 'I've mude It hard and fust rule that the last girl In calls me on her way to bed.'" Impossible to Prove Fact of Immortality by ' Any Scientific Reasoning By DR. WARNER FITE, Princeton University. There is no use arguing over the question of immortality on a scitn tific basis because there can be no scientific proof one way or the other If we do believe in life after, death we shouldn't do so on any ground? which the spiritualists can offer because no one can tell whether their "messages from the dead" are true or false. If we stand by the standpoint of science, we are virtually driven away from any belief in immortality. It seems to me any such argument is more or less naive, and we can keep on talking till doomsday without proving anything. As long as we stand by scientific fact immortality is not visible, and is something utterly difTicult to reconcile with the scientific point ot view. To my mind any believer in immortality cannot accept the scien title world of fact. I do not see how anyone can be a thoroughly con vinced scientist and a believer in the other world at the same time. New Screen Method As a substitute for gluss etereoptl-co- n slides, film strips muy now be shown on a from u flashlight projector and this method hus been mude simpler still by u cumeru which enables the operator to muke his own negative rolls, says Popular Mechan-ics Magazine. A length of the film which will give as inuny pictures 88 would :0 pounds of gluss slides weighs hurdly an ounce. The rolls eun be printed directly on positive film for use lu the projector. With tills outfit, travelers may have a convenient rec-ord of their trip to show their friends nnd the uppuiutus Is especially serv-Iceub- le to lecturers, etc. Twins Are Professional Players on Selma Team The James boys Ebb and Fob are believed to be the only twins In pro-fessional baseball. They are members of the Seltno team In the Southeastern league. Former stnr athletes at Alabama Polytechnic Institute, the James broth-ers look so much alike that even their friends have difficulty in distinguish Inc which Is which. Kill), who captained his college, Southern ('(inference championship baseball team, hits been signed hy Selma as a catcher und Fob placed ns a first baseman. The brothers have been Inseparable In athletic life. Fob played a leading role In "Stark l.ove." a feature picture of one of thp teadins film companies, when It was made In the South two tnrs ago. Farmert' There are now ut least IU.800 farm-ers' associations In the United Stales, with a membership of over 2.000.000 farmers, doing a busi-ness amounting to an-nually. In 10ir. ihere were only 5,424 associations engaged In buying farm supplies and selling farm products. Wins Over Paddock ! if V I i '1 . 'A 3 I'l.nk Wjkiiil ot CileuUule ti.gi si l.tml. who lieat t'liurley I'addoclL In "the race of the century." before khe crnwrTof "OTKK) spectators Thai watched the Southwest Olympic tfy out m the Los Vnseles co!iseui i Religion of Today Too Intent on the Advance of Moral Hazards By REV. DR. SCHERER, New York. j Religion is a desperate sorti into the things that ought to be. Oui religion at its best is an adventure in the friendship of Jesus; add tt j knew nothing of security, lie condemns anxious precaution it? heathen ish. lie knew no safe life and no safe truth. The only caution He eve: j exercised was against living by bread alone, which ip materialiftn against worshiping himself and the devil, which is cynicism. Such rirkr ' He did 'ot care to take. He gave Himself to higher hazards. ITis 'if' was a reckless fling for goodness, for which He gave all. Religion of today is too tame, too timid, too tepid. It lacks tie heroic note. Most of us refuse to take any intellectual hazard. We sr j ; afraid of new truth, lest it disturb faith. In the same wnv we ,.r i all moral hazards, for fear they will unsettle us. j An impossibility She "1 am very sorry hut you must forget me." He "Impossible I You see I'm a memory expert." Slotted sails are now put on many English yachts to secure Increased speed. Bicycle polo U being played ut the Bngatelle I'o'o g ont d-- ; in Paris and Is meeting Willi great enthusiasm, e e Uichnrd A. Chilian, Naval acud emy rowing (ouch, was appointed olii cinl crew in utor of the lios'ton Ath letJc uysociation at the age of nine teen. Over 2Hr(i seats for Indiana uni versity's seven lil'.'S home football grilles have already been reserved, ex vetdinjr rny s advance sale In Its history. Alfred Shruhh, veteran Knglish run ner, (still retains more amateur and professlur.nl world's records than any-othe-living middle or long distance trod: num. e Jimmy Mcl.atnin. Northwest light-weight, literally grew up In rim: logs, having been the po. se- sor of fo:p amuteur boxing medals before he was fifteen years old. Soldiers field. Chkago. will have seating accommodations for MO.imo football fans next fall. A cnpjcilv crowd may see th Notre Dame vs. Navy game October t M. Only four am .tear golfers have suc-ceeded in winning the United Stales open championship since it began In 18f).V P.obby Jones. Jerry Travers. Chick Kvuns ' d Frm-i- s Ouimet. e e P. nl Smith, ti e O egon miner vie ill Pnrthlld and who ' ti s .! i i ' e i n' trrti i nt noiitii! i i k v . .A . !;eii' lui New York i . .. . .. c';,,. is in iiif. ' I of Rocks Work Is a game to piny, if one has sporting blood. "; If you seldom express your opinion, people will ask for It. Mere Instilling of Book Knowledge Not First Principle of Education By AGNEjyJOYSEN, Minneapolis School Principal. Educators are not satisfied with the work of many of our graduatec i Some of these boys and girls go out into the world and do not succeed j in fact, some are absolute failures. Emphasis must be placed on honesty rather than accuracy. th knowledge of how to serve rather than the acquiring of men informal top and the desire to serve rather than a certain number of 100 per ceni averages. , ,i Superintendents, principals, teachers and pupils must unite in thi w.omrnon interest- - must sacrifice, if necessary, the old Jraditional standards of gaining much useless information. Academic subject mat ter may be the means to the end, but never the end in itself |