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Show Thursday, April 26, 1928 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH I Ship Runs Aground in Uncle Sam's New Canal H This vessel, the passenger steamer New York, from Boston for New York, ran aground In the Cape Cod canal which recently was purchased by the United States government The passengers were all removed unhurt and the steamship was not damaged. O'DONNELL & CO. Funeral Directors Bingham Canyon Utah Phone 17 Wasatch 6461 Salt Lake Phone ' WhatYouWant How Yon Want It When You Want It j TIT cr "y MJ &m of pmtmf ooroe --U to in Mid wt'l guar-aal- M yom ubtUeiarf werk at prices that are right P(rintin)G MM Get ; iiYour iy ji i: Granite i: Furniture Co. ! ! Isis Theatre Building: ; I ; ; Bingham Canyon ; ; j H 111) r , h H 1' H JJvertisers . j will find this paper an excellent j; medium in which ij to display their j bargains and make theirwants known IIMIJIIi H. lill ll.ll.J Don't Overlook that subscription. If yo r in trrcv rtmenber that we caa always find (oi dm for the MONEY Press Staves Off Deadly Boredom by Giving Suspense to Life By DR. THADDEUS L. BOLTON, Temple University. ' j EWSPArERS are indispensable to the happiness and well-bein- g of mankind, for they supply the stimulus to animation without which the life of the average citizen would become unbearably monotonous. It is difficult to know how we would get along if murders, disasters, instances of banditry, descriptions of crimes and con-flagrations were not brought to us. Suspense the alternation between hope and depression is after all something that our natures demand, and here is where the newspaper comes iuto our routine lives as a saving grace, snatching us from this dreaded lingering death by boredom. Shooting the chutes and riding on the scenic railway in the amuse-ment park supply the necessary prods to children. The modern news-paper performs this function for the adult of higher mental level. What does a horse race in England amount to without its spills? Would boxing bouts be considered worth while by the fans if blood did not flow freely? What does it matter to the spectator whether a conflagration causes $1,000,000 damage, if only the spectacle has been grand and filled with thrills? We cannot possibly attend all the murders, fires, earthquakes, un-successful transatlantic flights and other occurrences of the kind in person. Thi modern newspaper does this for us, and thus saves our from "innocuous desuetude." Island Where German-Iris- h Flyers Landed mm ; i View of Greenly island lii Belle Isle straits, showing the luke on the frozen surface of which the German-Iris- h crew of the plane Bremen landed after their extraordinary flight across the Atlantic from Ireland. Invincible Forces at Work Making for Growth of Internationalism By DR. JOHN RANDALL, Director World Unity Foundation. Popular conceptions of nationalism have been so magnified since the World war as to assume the aspect of a great popular myth. The notion attributes to an international boundary line mystical properties far greater than those it actually possesses. At the beginning of the war the French and the Germans resorted to every subterfuge to make it appear armed forces of the opposing na-tion had crossed the boundary first, solely to gain popular support by an appeal to this prejudice. But coincident with the spread of this glorification of nationalisnl, the world's economic forces have been steadily at work making for inter-nationalism. A hundred years ago most countries might well have styled themselves but today every nation specializes, each is in-terdependent with the others in the intricate economic scheme of the world. Bingham Stage Line Bingham Depot Main and Carr Fork Fhone 41 SCHEDULE Cars leave Bingham at 8, 9 and U a.m. 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m. Salt Lake City Office Semloh Hotel 107 E. 2nd South Phone Was. 1069 SCHEDULE Cars leave Salt Lake City at 7, 9 and 11 a.m. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 p.m. FARES One wav .$1.50 Round Trip $2.50 j "KING" OF COCOS II ; Fred Sutter, who was recently appointed by President IMcnrdo Jim-Ine- z of I'osta Iticu ns ''king" of Cocos Island In the South Pacific, where tlm luryest unfound treasure in the world lies buried. The buccaneer, Captain Morgan, plundered the brig Mary Dyers, laden with ?15,H)O.0:0 worth of Peruvian treasure, and went to Cocos. The crew mutinied and killed each other. Sutter is looking for a queen to marry before he sets out to search for the treasure. I Chinese Flood and Famine Refugees ; ; r p.. Ifl Straw blankets, thrown over a piece of rope, form the only shelter for many hundreds of Chinese peasants who were fortunate enough to escape the famine and Yellow river floods, which have left 4,000,000 Orientals starving in Shantung province. Youths' Disregard of Moral Standards Due to New Significance By DR. MAX C. OTTO, University of Wisconsin. If modern youth looks lightly upon the moral standards of the older generation, it is because young people suspect their elders of making a failure of life. Interviews with hundreds of high school and college stu-dents have revealed the wide prevalence of dishonesty in school work, and that dishonesty was not considered in the moral category of the young people. While the older generation has accepted science with its mind, but not with its heart, youth has taken the new developments of biology and psychology into the fiber of its being, and is trying to make life' insignifi cant in terms of this new world. Hope for the future lies in helping youth in the search for a new form of human exisnce that shall bring a sense of achievement rather than frustration. Good Humor and Joyous Laughter as One of the Articles of a Creed By REV. CHARLES FRANCIS POTTER, Detroit It is high time we abandoned the religion of fear. The New Thought cults have much to teach the churches in the matter of affirmative re-- ' ligion. Laughter is conducive to health. A hearty laugh will cure a cold. Laughing heartily and frequently will get a person in the habit of breath-ing correctly, and correct breathing is the first lesson in health. Some-times a person can get more good out of a stage comedy than out of a doleful sermon by a long-face- d parson. Laughing should be a part of religion. When I marry a couple with a sense of humor, I know that they are likely to weather the storms of matrimony. If I had a creed one of its articles would be, "I believe h) salvation by good humor and joyous laughter." OCEAN FLYER This Is MaJ. James Fitzmaurice of the Irish Free State nir forces who flew across the Atlantl. with T.aron Von Hueueman mid Captain Koehl in the plans Hretnen. Singer's Home Given to War Veterans Mine. Si'huinaim-IIeink- , famous singer, has presented to the veterans of the World war her beautiful estate a Grossinont, southern California, as an expression of her love for the men, who called her "mother." The photo graph shows a corner of the house and grounds. Athletics in Church Needed to Put Backbone Into the Youth of Today By SIR WILFRED GRENFELL. English Missionary. Football, baseball and track men are needed in the Christian church if it is to solve the problem of saving the world. The task is not one for half-hearte- d believers, in an age when theological questions have lit-tle attraction for the young men who will be leaders tomorrow. Back-bone and faith the kind of faith that can be described as reason grown courageous are the properties needed. Faith is not a fool's credulity. It is the power by which human beings with limited capacities visualize the possibilities they hope for. Charles Lindbergh is a typical example of the man who had faith in the thing he sought to do. Youth Looks to Older Generations for Example in Standards of Conduct By REV. HENRY H. LEWIS, Ann Arbor. Mich. Modern youth puts the burden of proper conduct on the parents. Vouth is disgusted with hypocrisy and the habit of older generations to practice things other than they preach. The youth of today believes that what is fair for his parents is fair for him. Youth seeks the cor-rect path, but demands that his leaders be beyond reproach. Young persons are growing more observing, and it is a difficult matter for older persons to mask the errors of their lives from the search- -' u.g gaze of the boy or girl of today. |