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Show i PAGE FOUR THE Church Must in a Practical Way Meet the Competition of the World TIMES-NEW- NEPHI. UTAH S. K EAST FAILS TO GET GOLF GAMES Speaker to Replace Ty Cobb By W. A. DOSS, Illinois Jurist. SPEAKER has landed wltb the Philadelphia Athletics. The outfielder came to terms with Connie Mack, and as a has gone Into training wltb the Athletics at their quarters at Fort Meyers. The addition of Speaker to the Philadelphia roster gives Mack a veteran outfielder with Trig at center, Al Simmons at left and Bing Miller In the right corner. Speaker commented on his stay with the Washlngtons as a most pleasant relationship and referred to Bucky Harris as one ot the greatest managers In baseball. As to his new affiliations the "Gray Eagle" said the Athletics had fine prospects, and that be looked forward to playing under Mack wltb great satisfaction. Asked what he thought of the approaching pennant scramble and the Yankees, Trls replied: "Of course the Yankees are a great machine, but the Athletics and other members of the circuit are bound to furnish plenty of opposition. The Athletics were second last year, and like the other clubs they will be out for the championship." Speaker was born In Hubbard City, near Dallas, Texas, August 24, 1883. From the Houston club he went to the Boston Red Sox In 1907 for his first major league assignment. The Sox paid $400 for dim, and In 1903 sent him to Little Rock, then Trls speaker. repurchased him in the same year for $500. By 1909 he was a regular. After the 1915 season he was traded to the Cleveland Indians for Thomas and Jones and a cash consideration of $55,000. In the middle of the 1919 campaign he was mode manager of the Indians, succeeding Lee Fohl. It r was Speaker's first experience as a and for the first and only time In his career as a regular player for about twenty years his batting average slumped below the .300 mark. His average for TKIS HILE "Methodism" has had a vital influence on American life for more than a century, it might be better to consider whether the church has exercised real genius in solving the more pertinent problems before it now. The na infnl fart i that in scarcely any church that I have observed within the last year or two ao i see a great percentage of attendance of younger people. Unless the older membership in attendance at these church services be replaced or increased, it is a mere matter of time until it can be mathematically seen that death will eat away the major portion of the present church attendance. I am not criticizing the young people if they should not be drawn to uch an emotional way of gaining a spiritual lesson, but the point is: Joung Peopie attend in any considerable numbers any strictly uiurcii service now r It may be that because of the advent of the auto, radio nnvimr v tures, etc., the young people have acquired unconsciously to themselves or us a sort of standard of religion and morals to which old or former ways ol religious observance will eive wav. Frankly it must be admitted that this is a kind of competition or to the form of success which our church must meet. It would be useless for us to deny that there is competition, and we must demonstrate that our plan, cur product, is superior and better if we are to have it survive. I have complete confidence that our younger folks will ultimately very largely adopt the plan which proves to most efficiently develop the best Christian men and women. W "'u player-manage- was .29G. In 1920, Speaker made a big comeback and enjoyed one of his best seasons, batting .388 in the dash of the Cleveland club to an American league pennant and a world's championship after a series with the Brooklyn Robins. Tris exceeded his 1920 average with the Indians In 1919 Highest Ideal of Universities Should Be Teaching Resistance to Evils with a mark of .389. After the 1920 campaign, Speaker resigned from the Indians and joined the Washlngtons, wltt whom he played in 142 games for a batting average of .327. Spenker has played In three world series, two as a member of the Red Sox in 1912 and 1915, and the other with the Indians. 1925, By ARNOLD BENNETT HALL, President University of Oregon. The first hypothetical objective for the reorganization of the first two years of a university curriculum is the development in the student of the consciousness of the eternal conflict between intelligence on the one hand and mysticism, prejudice, bigotry and intolerance on the other, and the developing of those habits of intelligent behavior which will best equip him to resist the forces of darkness. The second hypothetical objective would be the organization and direction of the emotional life of youth until the organized emotional complexes, or sets, would tend to operate in behalf of altruism, nobility and righteousness, rather than in the interests of the opposing forces. If the first course in chemistry were a course that told the history of the science of chemistry, showing how it started in mysticism and how slowly and at what a cost the intelligence of man gradually supplanted the forces of mysticism and ignorance, they would come out of that course at the end impressed with the fundamental significance that the science of chemistry had been a triumph of intelligence over the forces of darkness. They would find the same thing true in geology, in physics, in social science and in religion. s C-- - (.q -- ; m o "a2 3S 2 u S a ,.'. 8;S ihXM - "2 2-- m tobD -J3 S5 - OM -- eieic. OO U, CM .A . V V a m fcica -- ? J OSa s' MM oo n w2 J tia o3 M . f e 3 e. . mO - " . m2 "S" kj 5 jii -..A.M " . -l 2 dm Kii 3 tiai B;; ibhC r- Mi g hti 3 3 km "33 St Interesting Tournaments. It has been many a long year since the eastern section of the Dnlted States was awarded so few big golf tournaments. And practically all ot the tournaments have been awarded. The amateur goes to Brae Burn, near Boston ; the open la to be played at Olympla fields, near Chicago; the International matches for the Walker cup will be played at Wheaton. The solons have sent the women's national Into the sticks to Hot Springs and there's no chance of getting the P. G. A. News Notes X It's a PriviUg to Liv in Utah At the annual meeting of OGDEN the Weber Central Dalfy association it was shown by reports that the business had Increased 21 per cent in 1927 over the business transaction in the preceeding year. It also was shown that the cost of collection ot dairy products had been decreased by the volume of business. SALT LAKE Disbursements of the state highway department during the month of February amounted to according to statistics compiled In the office of John E. Holden, state auditor. Of the total amount, was expended for the maintenance of roads throughout the state; $13,792.37 went for equipment; $1016.-8- 9 for traveling expenses, and $388A8 was listed as suspense. . SAUNA In the Salina coal district ot Utah a federal survey just completed shows 170,000,000 tons of coa) awaiting mining activities. PROVO The aviation committee the Provo chamber of conlmerce recommended recently that the Provo First ward pasture be used for a landing field for aircraft. According to L. W. Nims, chairman of the committee, the best available field for an airport is the pasture. The chamber of commerce will recommend to the city commissioner that this larid be set aside and the necessary steps taken immediately for the drainage of the pasture and the building of $184,-023.0- 7, All of which leaves the metropolitan district, the largest section in the United States, with no prominent tournaments except Its own local events, the Metropolitan Amateur and open. This condition presages a rather dull tournament season In these parts, but, If it does nothing else. It means a lot of action around Boston and Chicago. It Is doubtful If any section ever had as many interesting events as falls to the lot of Chicago this summer. The Open, the Walker Cup, the Western Open, Western Amateur, Western Women's and a flock of other events that Is unprecedented. It seems as if a determined attempt Is being made to satiate Chicago golfers. Or else the solons aim to stimulate Interest to fever pitch. It Is doubtful which of the two Is correct Nevertheless, the Chicago district Is to be rich In tournaments. Thus fur the only event on the horizon In the East Is the New York State Amateur, an Interesting affair, but by no means a major event The LOGAN Winter is doing its best in public links championship Is to be northern Utah to make even the most plnyeJ on the famous Cobble Creek optimistic forget that spring must arlayout, near Philadelphia, but that rive eventually, according to word re-- ' still Is not in the metropolitan disceited from that part of the statu trict Sleet and snow fell heavily lately. From 1895, when the first official in Logan Wednesday morning with a amateur championship was held at temperature about 40 degrees above Newport, until 1906 some 30 events tero. were played and all but nine were CEDAR CITY Four thousand dolheld in the East, around New York, lars has been appropriated by tht However, Philadelphia or Boston.' since 1900 there has been a change of county commissioner of Iron county for Improvement of roads off the main venue. The West principally Chicago, has held just as many tourneys of highway. Fifteen hundred dollars of this amount will be expended in the national importance as the metropolitan district Parowan valley, Parowan and Para gonah district; $2000 will be used In Cedar Valley, and $500 on the bridge Jocltey in Limelight at Newcastle, providing that the localities interested will contribute a like amount in labor or materials for tha improvement of these roads. SALT LAKE Utah will receive out of an appropriation of authorized by the directors ot the Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph company for expenditures in 1928, according to Orson John Hyde, state manager. The former sum il r part jot a program of tele phone development in this state, which will call for an expenditure of $04,-613.- s. run-Way- 5s 22 "n's f Chicago Is Allotted Many Friday, March 9, 1928 $13,-219,0- Laxity of Parental Ruling Threatening Youth's Sense of Morality and Propriety By REV. J. D. MATTHIUS, Indianapolis J3 g (Lutheran). h S We look with apprehension and with no small degree of alarm on the future of the present-da- y generation when we consider how little ia done for the proper rearing of the young. The growing sentiment of the present day is to permit children to have their own way and not to punish them for wrongdoing, and a crime wave is sweeping the country which threatens to submerge and inundate all sense of morality and propriety. Many of the most pronounced criminals are young people. Many of the young folk, known as criminals, have had a good edu cation, but they lack religion. The minds of so many parents are set only on giving the child a good schooling. They are content with having the child advance in its studies and of having its name on the honor roll and they urge the child to accomplish great learning, but the way to heaven is not thought and spoken of. Only the mind of the child is developed while the soul is permitted to die and waste. In rearing children it is most important that both parents and children recognize the divine authority to govern children, given to the parents. It is the parents' sacred duty to govern and the children's sacred duty to be governed. D --"a -- SS M (i; ss,--- - m Il CO J g c3 I O c3 t "S2 sa a j5: i.'5S - s. ti'o g a's" a'g- " ,.5 3 5 b O a" - na'a's- e ; sa'- -' z o a j Idea of Everlasting Punishment Has No Part in the Faith of Judaism By RABBI STEPHEN S. WISE, New York. Judaism considers death as not the end of life, but merely an t in a fuller life. It urges the unquestioning acceptance of death as the will of Cod, and none of the Jewish prophets has enlarged upon the topic by telling anything of a future life. Judaism does not believe in hell or everlasting punishment Life is not to be as if good deeds are to be rewarded and bad deeds punighed. Judaism is not a religion of fear. It says nothing of a hell after life, but teaches that a hell in life should be avoided. Judaism does not subscribe to a system of rewards and punishments. There is none of ths terror and horror in Judaism that is found in religions which hold wii th specter of everlasting damnation for the naughty. inci-.len- -' "- Ss - a- "s a o s " .a - -a- '-s 33? m a,a" s- -s - Si s5 -"-- -- s as 33 -s a" Si sa " it! J i i" i C h c . . S Zi? 3 s -- sa " 'a -- EmS sa- - 331 33e 'a' ".s: "2 "i- -'s a -- a- 2l - Sm- - 2m Si -- m pjM He lit 2 o 5 2 a I McGraw at Races Argentina has deckled to send a cer team to the Olympic games. soc- The Boston university Is to have a new stadium seating 42,000 people. Walter Lultke, Cleveland Inflelder, has been sold to the Newark club of the International league. Bill Tllden will play en exhibition college early lo May before going abroad. tennis match at Tufts Paul Hevere was m watchmaker by profesHlon, bu' A. A. U. snys he rode horseback as an anmtpur. Harry Layne, Syracuse star, led the international league In stolen bases last season with a total of 50. Tough on Miami. Jurt when business lookeil like picking up, along ciitne a bunch of boxing Impresarios. Col. Henry Breck en ridge, former asbeen seOlympic sistant secretary of war, hns lected CHptaln of the 192S fencing tram. CEDAR CITY An earlier tourlsi travel to Utah is manifest from reports in large eastern cities, with additional inquiries directed toward Utah's parks this year. MURRAY An egg grading station has been established in Murray where small egg producers may bring eggs by the case, have them candled and aM S3? z. a - --- 0. ""a" Sz-- i !"a lis e "s 2a 25. -- lf 2 iH o M .5" " five-yea- MM a a a-- ? Z - "mm S o - a'a"- S far-dista- nt Modern parents are eager for the new knowledge of children and scientific methods in child care and the parents' problems are those which deal with health and normal growth, discipline and education. s- I'i Iss'a 5i f ! tion. m ssa s "a-- 3 5ia --- tt 3 - ao-- M By DR. ADA HART ARLITT, University of Cincinnati. Frogress of civilization has demanded radical changes in the relation of parent to child comparable to the changes in industry or farming. Under a simple civilization child care correspondingly was simple, but modern progress hag presented a new problem for the parent. Under the conditions of our complex living the radio, the newspaper, the telephone, the automobile place us in contact with parts of our country and even with remote parts of the globe. Children come in contact with a constant flood of new ideas and influences. Under these new conditions older methods often break down or need modifioa Z aSi t33 - Sia 33? s - - . . " JssJ j aji "m S-- m'" S2g - g-- MM ; f tf sSwW- i- - 2 r.M K 5 - w . w 1 22 "; cti &a3 r- -- l s Zr H jl I. ."-,- CO Z ZZJ jS's 15 ti S sa fa S ;"g ao . Parental Problems Increase in Proportion With the Progress of the World 2SS5 ss ii 2 2 Photograph shows i. J. McGraw manager of the New York Giant, m the Havana Jockey club racea. K.k.h after McGraw went South he had signed most of bis regular team and a few rookies. graded, and shipped to New York, receiving me price q acted - in New York on the day of arrival. Last week five cars of eggs wew shipped, at a total value of $40,000 or there abouts, Gottfried and Marshall of New York, largest egg dealers In the country, As many as being the purchasers. three cars a day have been shipped from this section in the short time the grading station has been in operation. COALVILLE B. W. Matteson. Hiding wltb the reckless abandon of bis forefathers, an Indian Jockey senior highway engineer of the United has crashed into the limelight of the States bureau of public roads, Ogden Tla Juana racetrack. He Is Jockey district office, and K. C. Wright, dis J. Frye, a trict engineer for the state road com Klamath Indian who lives In Myrtle Point. Ore. mission, inspected the work being The other day Jockey Frye, riding bis done on the relocation of the Linooln Orst winner, piloted the hlffhw&Y. made nprpfmnrv hv pnnatm.. Valucla to Its "maiden" victory. tion of the Echo reservoir, recefry. They Tound 125 men and 100 head of animals at work, and expressed them selves pleased with the progress made. Nemo Leibold Only F. F. Smith, construction engineer, New A. A. Manager accompanied them on their inspectn. .vy , w With one exception, all of the .later UBUIB UI UIUU tIQ will not be organized into a corpcjntt A. A. teams will face the barrier tion similar to the Weber Rlvei Water In April with the same leaderUsers' association the move to this ship as In 1927. The change Is end offered by J. R. Murdock to the at Columbas, where no season Utah water storage commission being Is complete without from one to defeated at the meeting of the comthree pilots Nemo Leibold, sucThis action was mission, recently. ceeding Ivy Win go. The others are lined up this taken after a committee appointed by the commission had submitted a report way: Jack Lellvelt, Milwaukee; Nick Alien, St Paul; Mike Kel-lesaying that plan was not feasible. RUPERT Recognizing this locality Minneapolis; Dutch Zwll-linKansas City; Casey Sten-gl- , as enpeclaily adapted to the growing; Toledo; Bill Meyer, Louisof seed beans, a Pennsylvania seed ville; Bruno Uetzel, Indianapolis. company with western headquarters In Hozeman, Mont, has recently contracted for the production from 400 acres of beans to be grown by farmers Jack Delaney to Train In the vicinity of Rupert. by Continued Fighting LOGAN Movement of families Jnrk Kelaney la going to do his training In the heavyweight campaign for employment purposes are Inagainst active opponents In the roped dications that the Blackfoot sugar facarena. Joe Jacobs, his manager, de- tory, owned by the Utah-IdahSugar clared. will company, open again this year. "IX'Inney figures he can keep In better condition by taking on one op- According to Manager Douglas Scalley ponent a week thnn if he settled down It Is not a question of whether the In any training catnip Jacobs said. factory would run this year, but "Jack Is willing to battle on the basis question of how it will run. of n fight a week." SMITHFIKLD filackfoot Received Numerous opponents are tn proa-per- t shout an Inch of snow, according to for the lirloporter, Including the ruggpl Jark Itorinnlt. ti nay be the local weather prophet, but fhe storm Is not expected to nch as spcured for a bout at St La-- i. fat south as Salt Lak d ' |