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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER. HYRUM. UTAH Penetration Into Secrets of Nature Causes Faith Losing Spot for Winning Pilot of Man to Expand By CHAPLAIN shifts In the management of the St. Louis Cardinals form of the most unusual chapters of recent baseball history. even they do not seem to have handicapped the clubs good in the pennant races. In four straight seasons, with as showing many different pilots having a hand at steering the ship, the Cardinal banner has finished fourth, first, second and first in the National RAYMOND C. KNOX, Columbia University. THE ELIGION ck U) it suffers and stagnates without increasing knowledge; becomes opposed to progress. With enlarging knowledge, religion becomes more charitable, more spiritual, more capable of doing its real work in the world. As men penetrate farther into natures secrets, as they give us a better understanding farther and in which we live, as they make known to us more of the universe of the origin, the development, the laws of life, we are to think of them not as destroying faith, as is sometimes foolishly charged, but as men who make it possible for our faith to expand and grow. Dr. Robert A. Millikan, one of Americas most distinguished scienScientists imbued with the spirit of service, which is the tists said: essence of religion, and religion, guided by intelligence, the intellectual and the effectiveness . . . of science, can, between honesty . shadow of doubt, transform the world. without them, this vision, prefigured when Christ was born, be not far disMay His and Kingdom shall come ! , tant, In the Three Wise Men who came from the East the church has seen the sjonbol that Christ fulfills the hopes of all men everywhere, anc that in Him racial barriers are to be done away. It is further a symbol that men who are seekers of truth, who are striving to understand the world in which' we live and the mystery of life, are naturally attracted to Him who declared: Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free. In Him they find the answer to the profoundest questions that can be asked what is life for? What is the purpose which all of our powers, our knowledge, our resources, shall serve? For unless we have found the purpose for which to live, life is bound to be only a baffling, a futile thing. It is never sufficient to have merely something to live on. What each one of us needs is something to live for. Without aim, men surrender to cynicism and despair. Phlegmatic Public Conscience Enables Moneyed Evildoer to Evade Justice By EDWARD J. FOGARTY, Warden Cook County (III.) Jail. American psychology and conscience, especially in relation to crime, to a crisis in the national life of the country, which in ten years will have reached such proportions as to make the United States a dangerous place to live in. Money has law and order roped and hog tied. The man with money considers himself above the law, because the law is powerless to restrain him. Why? Because public conscience is phlegmatic or doesnt bother, and public sentiment, in many cases, leans towards the evildoer rather than denounce. him. One means which would effectively counteract the general trend of psychology in crime is to adopt the English way of thinking in relation to the criminal. There punishment follows quickly the commission of crime, and the criminal, no matter from what station in life, nor how wealthy, knows to a certainty that if caught, he will have to pay for his act. In this country, on the contrary, many months frequently pass before the accused man is brought to trial, and in a large number of cases material witnesses have disappeared and the state is unable to - ' - ' " prove its case. Our jails are overcrowded, our penitentiaries taxed to capacity, it is truebut hat in itself means nothing. To restrain a criminal for time before his trial with the hope always that he can beat his case, is no deterrent. Take a cross section of prison inmates throughout the country. Analyze them and jmu find the poor man who cannot afford a tricky lawyer, or the criminal with neither influential friends nor political pull. In the meantime wealthy malefactors of our country roam the streets, dictating to the law with a fairy wand of gold. is heading Current Unemployment to Be Blamed on the Limitations of Markets By PROF. SUMNER M. SLICHTER, Cornell University. league!. Bill MeKechnie, who probably considers it bad luck to win a pennant, is shifted to the Rochester Internationals win-uln- has occurred in farming, manufacturing, mining and railroading. Build ing construction and the repair trades have taken up some of the slack. Between 1923 and 1928 wre might place the net drop in employment at ' and 1,000,000. The most remarkable thing about this increase in unemployment is that it has occurred in the face of a rapid increase in spending by the public. Debits to individual accounts indicate the people of the United States spent at least more money in 1927 than in 1923. In order to diminish unemployment there must be a change in rela tionship between wages and other prices which would make it profitable for employers to use more labor. Speculation in stocks and. land should he discouraged. A program of public work might cause more money to be spent for labor. between 500,000 one-thi- rd It Teaches Man That He Is Incurably Selfish Science a Failure Because ' By HARRY WARD, Professor Union Theological Seminary. In order to explain man, science must compass God. It is not enough to study where man came from and his behavior with, his kind, past and present, and to try to take him apart by analyzing his mind, emotions and physical reactions. To learn what man really is, he must be put back together again and considered in his relations with God. The note of doubt almost approaching despair in all the worth-whil- e literature of the present day came because the World war has shown that wan has failed to learn to control himself. The machine age has largely conquered the forces of nature, but when its inventions are used to promote war and when it permits the cruelty of organized sports and prostitution, evils that even animals do not know, it is a failure so far as mans ' control of himself is concerned. Science fails in helping man to conquer himself because it teaches that man is incurably selfish, and this age is inferior to a more Godfearing generation that believe not only in salvation from sin but in the . conquering of sin itself. Man needs God, but God also needs man for the working of on human beings on this planet. Him-d- f g Game of Football Pays Debt on Ohio Stadium Cobb Seven seasons of football at Ohio State university wiped out a debt of T.v Cobb, the greatest player the game has ever known, will be in baseball uniform at the training camp of the Browns next spring, Dan Howle.v more than $1,750,000 on Ohio stadium. Now fool ball has been given the ten-yetask of raising another $1,750, 000 to add other athletic plants to the campus. Plans contemplate the erection of five buildings to harmonize with a new mens physical education building, an armory and an aviation hangar, financed by legislative appropriation. The new units will be a varsity mens field house, to coat $500,000; an intramural sports building, $500, 000; a swimming pool, $250,000; a womens field house, $300,000, and a boathouse on the Oleutangy river, to cost $100,000. One hundred thousand dollars are to go for steel frames and glass to inclose the stadium, making it avail able for recreation. year-roun- d Will Aid Brownie Batters While Training said. There won't be anything official about it, Howley said, but Ty will be at West Palm Beach and will work out with tlie Browns. He is a good friend of mine and told me recently that he would be with us at camp. He will be able to help my hitters a whole lot I believe. It will be hard to keep Ty out of a uniform after his long career on the diamond. Indiana and Purdue battle annually for the old oaken bucket trophy. The trophy is just that ' Thomas A. Siano of Waltham, Mass., has been elected captain of the 1929 Fordham football team. Paavo Nurmi Here Eighteen Men Will Be Lost by Graduation in June Cornell faces its next football season with the smallest group of regulars that it has had In years. Eighteen men will be lost to the squad by graduation this June. This number includes practically the whole regular forward wall, the only part of Dobie's team that furnished any ray of sunshine to Cornells gridiron showing during the past season. Sam Wake-majf Quincy, Mass., is the only regular lineman who will come back. Both ends. Captain Schoales of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and Wrample-meie- r of Cincinnati, Ohio, both regular guards, Worden of Enid, Okla., and Waterbury of Ithaca, center, Kneen of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and John Anderson of Glendale, Ohio, tackle, will be missing from the picture next fall. In addition Alexander of Westfield, N. J.t and Parker of Tampa, Fla., regular ends, and Steinberg of Syracuse, tackle, fade out. The backfleld loses Dietrich of SL Louis, Mo., Beck of Trenton, N. J., Bristol of Oceanside, N. and Lyon of Kansas City, Mo. The regular backfleld men remaining are H. Johnson of Charleston, W. Va., M. Johnson of Greenwich, Conn., N. E. Scott of Attleboro, Mass., and C. T. Hoffman of Douglaston, L. L Other senior members of the squad who will be lost to the team include Sherman Allen of Fair Haven, Vt., Wesley Bender of Rockaway Beach, N. Y., William Ibold of Cincinnati, Ohio, Bernard Katz of Philadelphia, Pa., and William Quest of Louisville, Ky. Dobie can look for little help from his freshman team as there are only a few men in the aggregation who look like varsity material. Bob Stevens, of Lakewood, Ohio, yearling quarterback, is the most promising of the newcomers to the squad. Other members of the freshman team who saw regular service during the past season inciude: Thomas Scott, Glen Cove; B. W. Langston, Wenonah, N. J. ; A. L. Larson, White Plains; J. E. Estabrook, Fayetteville; W. C. Martin, Rochester; I. V. Tullar, Ithaca; J. C. Martinez, Itlmea ; Frank H. Warren, Chicago, 111.; Andrew E. Tuck, Syracuse; W. P. Beyerle, Baltimore, Md. ; L. M. Handelman, Patch-ogu- e. Walter Heinecke, Stanford center, called signals for the Stanford team in the majority of their games in 1928. Donie Will Have to Suffer Alone Though he has been at Iowa for several seasons now, Bert Ingwersen still is the youngest coach in the Big Ten. Donie Bush, spirited little of the Pittsburgh manager Pirates, ran into Johnny Evers at the National league meeting in New York. There was a rousing welcome between the , Frank E. (Bull) Brown, of r has signed a contract to umpire in the American assoclalion in 1929, Pi;ts-burgh- one-yea- two. Certainly glad to see you, Ill chirped Donie. Johnny, get some rest from the umpires now that you are back In the league. Im Nix, nix, said Evers, off umpires for life, so youll have to suffer alone. Billy Gibson, former manager of Gene Tunney, again announces his retirement from the ring this time, he says, for good. m m Paavo Nurmi, sensational Finnish sprinter, is in this country seeking suitable quarters for the Finns who are to participate in the 1932 Olympics at Los Angeles. Marines Labor-savin- g It may be figured that since 1920 a decrease of 1,800,000 employees the losing the International league pennant, but losing the little worlds series to Indianapolis. Branch Rickey yielded the Cardinal helm to Rogers Hornsby in 1925. After winning the pennant and worlds series In 192(5. Hornsby was traded to the Giants. Bob OFarrell succeeded to the managerial role, after capturing the most valuable player prize, but was deposed and then traded to the Giants. McKeehnie, elevated from the job of coach, led the team to another pennant and is now shunted to the minors. He had no better luck after winning the pennant and worlds series with the Pittsburgh team in the year 1925. What these developments appear to need is not an explanation but a psycho-analys- t. - , after world's series to the Yankees. The man he trades places with, Billy Southworth, moves up after Natives- of Guam Excel devices and mass production are not the cause of current unemployment, but limited markets are. The public in recent years has not increased its buying of manufactured and agricultural goods, but has been putting its money into stocks and bonds, land, insurance, electricity and education. CORNELLS GRID SQUAD IS SMALL in Baseball The Chamorros, natives of the small island of Guam in the Far East, have become so Americanized since United States occupation in 1898 that they defeated a team of marines in a baseball game Thanksgiving day by the conclusive score of 10 to 3. The most friendly rivalry exists between the sailors of the naval station, the 370 marines and the 15,000 natives. Many basket ball and tennis The sports are keenly contested. greater strength and size of the Americans is pitted against the quickness and agility of the Chamorros. The marines, while taking their defeat good naturedly, did not wish the details published. Rugby Gets Too Rough for French Spectators Rugby football has become so rough in France that newspapers everywhere have begun a movement to clean up e the game. A match between and Bergerac has brought the movement to a head. A Marmande player virtually strangled the Bergerac captain, Beaussoleii, during game while thousands of spectators looked on. Beaussoleii was carried off the field unconscious, with his tongue hanging out and foam on his lips, while Marmande rooters howled, Well done! Kill him! Police had to be summoned to keep them from attacking the rest of the Bergerac team. Mar-mand- Kubale Is Named Head Coach at Centre Edwin Edwin Kubale, who was graduated from Centre college in 1924, afier playing in every minute of every football game for four years, has been selected as head coach of the Centre , football team to succeed Boise resigned., Kubale, whose home is in Fort Smith, Ark., is now assistant coach at Texas Christian college, ne played center on the famous Colonels team that beat Harvard. His appointment was announced in chapel by President Turek. Pott-hoff- ' A giant tackle, Paul Jessup, 6 feet 7 inches tall, will lead the University of Washington football eleven through tfie 1929 season. Ace Coming Back - Bob Russell, quarterback of the Nebraska team of 1928, probably is the biggest quarterback of all time. He weighed 205 pounds. What Will ijour( do i i When your Children Ciy for It There Is hardly a household that hasnt heard of Castoria ! At least five million homes are never without It If there are children In your family, theres almost daily need of its comfort And any night may find you very thankful theres a bottle In the house. Just a few drops, and that colic or constipation Is relieved; or diarrhea checked. A vegetable product ; a baby remedy meant for young folks. Castoria Is about the only thing you have ever heard doctors advise giving to Infants. Stronger medicines are dangerous to a tiny baby, however harmless they may Good old Castoria! be to grown-upRemember the name, and remember to buy It It may spare you a sleeps. less, anxious night. It is always ready, always safe to use ; in emergencies, or for everyday ailments. Any hour of the day or night that Baby becomes fretful, or restless. Castoria was never more popular with mothers than It Is today. Every druggist has it. Animals Can Foresee Changes in Weather If you see a bull leading the herd like a colonel at the head of a battalion, you may be sure that rain is on the way. The bull leads the herd like that wdien he is angry, because his temper has been milled by the prospect of rain. To see a bull licking his hoofs is also a sure indication of rain. In fact, some animals make very reliable guides to impending weather changes. When a dog seems sleepy, disinterested, and evinces a sudden loss of appetite. It is a sure sign of a The continual heavy fall of rain. cackling and quacking of ducks and geese and other poultry is said to indicate rain. Blind Golfer thirteen-year-olBarton Cooper, blind boy, took up golf a little more than a year ago and lately plaed nine holes' on the municipal courts at San Diego, Calif., in 43 strokes. He plays with a caddy and gets his sense of direction from him. Ten-foputts are not at all unusual after the caddy rattles the pins in the cups. d In Tampa, Fla., police are ordered to ascertain whether or not a couple are married before they reprimand them for getting in automobiles. Mush" March, outstanding star of the Regina Monarchs championship hockey team, has signed a contract with the Chicago Black Hawks. Joe Dugan has been given his unconditional release by the New York Yankees. Dugan probably will catch on with some National league club. ,. e Frank Isabell, White Sox second baseman and former owner of the Wichita club of the Western league, wants to get back Into the game. one-tim- Reigh Count, champion of the American turf and winner of the Keintucky Derby and other stake events, will run in England this year. three-year-ol- d The Philadelphia girls field hockey team has never been beaten in Intercity play and two goals is the highest score ever made by an opposing team. Lee Meadows, once ace of the Pittsburgh Pirates, who was forced to quit the game last season because of a sore arm, declares he will return to the game this season in better shape than ever. S. Jordan Played Baseball 60 Years Ago David Yam Yaryan, catcher with the Birmingham (Ala.) club, was operated on for appendicitis recently, the second time he has had this done in the last year. Chick coach at New York university, says that when a team plays against a team with that fellow Harpster on it, it has to play against ten men and a coach. Meehan, Fred Haney, third baseman, has been purchased from the Indianapolis American association team, it was announced b.v Clarence Lloyd, secretary of the St Louis Cardinals. Toledo of the American association has purchased Lou Brower from Oklahoma City, and Des Moines of the Western league, has bought Jimmy Cronin from Mission, Calif. Baesball experts have perhaps the best definition of amateurs we have come across. If those five guys Washington traded to Boston for Buddy Myer arent amateurs, what have you? SAME PRESCRIPTION HE WROTE IN 1892 When Dr. Caldwell started to practice medicine, back in 1875, the needs for a laxative were not as great as today. People lived normal lives, ate plain, wholesome food, and got plenty of fresh air. But even that early there were drastic physics andjpurges for the relief of constipation which Dr. Caldwell did not believe were good for human beings. One of the pioneers In the great American game of baseball is David Starr Jordan, former president of Le The prescription for constipation that land Stanford university, who is now nearly eighty years old. He gives he used early in his practice, and which an account of his introduction to the he put in drug stores in 1892 under the name of Dr. Caldwells Syrup Pepsin, game in The American Magazine. is a liquid vegetable remedy, intended When baseball first got under way for women, children and elderly people, In thisf country," he says, we sent and they need just such a mild, safe the blacksmith from our town over bowel stimulant. This prescription has proven its worth to Buffalo to see how It went, ne is now the largest selling liquid brought back such glowing reports and has won the confidence of that we organized the Gninesviile laxative.whoIt needed it to get relief from eople with red and shirts white Zouaves, eadaches, biliousness, flatulence, inditrousers, and challenged all comers. gestion, loss of appetite and sleep, bad I was a Zouave and developed jreath, dyspepsia, colds, fevers. At your into a heavy hitter, once knocking druggist, or write Syrup Pepsin, Dept. BB, Monticsllo, Illinois, for free three home runs In a row. I thought bottle. trial the game offered a promising field of endeavor until one day I crashed, into the catcher when both of us were after a pop fly, and broke my nose. However, I never lost my love of baseball, and I played with the QmcA Relief I A pleasant, effective Stanford faculty team until I was ayrup 35c and 60c sites. And ternally, ute PISOS Throat and Then I reluctantly gave Chest Satve, 35c, up the game because my batting was slumping and my speed was slower. fifty-eigh- t. e. ' |