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Show THE JORDAN JOURNAL, MIDVALE, UTAH St. Louis Honors Rogers Hornsby C]'. Doubleday, Page & Co.) J 1.1 IMMMXMXMXMMMXMXXXXMXXXXXXXXXMX~O~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WNU Service wild dog she had shot-and thought aging cry to Plerrot she !'topped to ha<l die<.! ! gather it over her shoulder as he ran WAKAYOO The evening before Plerrot and Ne- past h<'r. She lo~t only a monwnt or peese had built a shelter of balsams two, ann was after him. Fifty yards Synopsls.-Part wolf, part dog " behind the big rock, and on a small nheacl of her Pierrot gave a warning -when two months old Baree baR his first mretlng with an white plot of sand l'ierrot \\'!ts kneei- .shout. na1·ee ha<.l turned. Almost in enemy, PapayucldH<'W (you n g 1, lng over a fire prPJlaring hren kfast the same llre~tth he was tearing over owl). Fighting hard, the antagwhile the Wlllow arrnnged her hair. his hack trail, <.lirectly towar<.l the onists are suddenly plunged Into a swollen creek. Badly buffeted, He raised his head to R]lPak to her, Willow. lie did not see her in time and half drowned, Baree Is finaland saw Bnree. In that instant the to stop or swe1·ve aside, and N (•peese ly nung on the bank, but the ~pell was broken. Baree saw the manflung herself down in his path. For an water has destroyed his sense of or two they were togetlwr. instant a Like feet. his to· rose he as beast lonely lost, Is he and direction :tnd hungry. }'or m:tny days his Baree felt the smothf'r of her hair, and shot he was gone. ltfe 11! one of fear and dlstresR. Scarcely swifter was he than Ne- the clutch of lwr hands. Then he He meets various creatures of pet•se. squirmrd away and darted again to· the wild and goes through a ward the hlmo en<l of the cnnyon. she · !" pere mon vous, ''Depechez He Is learning thunderstorm. more and more. He strays into cried. "It is the dog-pup! Quick-" Nepe<>se sprang to her feet. She the trapping &"rounds of Plerrot In the floating cloud of her hair she was punting-and laughing. Pierrot Nepepse wounds and Nepeese. sped aftPr Uarce like the wind. Pier- came baek wildly, un<.l the Willow Baree with a. rifle, but he esrot followed, and in going he eaught pointed beyond him. capes. Baree recovers and learns nature's secrets rapidly. ''I hn<.l him-and he didn't bite!" up his rifle. It was difficult for him to catch up with the Willow. She was she said, breathing swiftly. She stlll like a wild spirit, her little moccasined point!'!l to the end of the runyon, and Chapter IV feet scarcely touching the sall!l as she she sait.l again: "I had him-and he ran UJl the long bar. It was wotHlerfnl didn't bite me, Nootawe !" -7For two 'br three days Unree's ex- to see the lithe swiftness of her, an1l That was the wonder of it. She had cursions after food took him farther that wonderful hHir strenmlng out in 'been rr<'kle~s-and Raree had not bitaway from the pond. But each after- the· sun. Even now, In this moment's ten her! It was then, \Yith her eyes noon he retul,'ned to it-until the third excitement, It made Plerrot think of shining at Piet'l'ot, and the smile fa<l· ing slowly from her lips, that she day, when he discovered a new creek. spol;e softly the word "Barec," which and Wakayoo. The creek was fully in her tongue meant "the wild dog"two ;niles buck in the forest. It ii'ang a little hrvther of the wolf. merr,ly over a gruvelly he<l and be"Come," erie<.! l'ierrot, "or we wlll tween cliasm walls of svllt rock. It lose him!" formed deep pools and foaming eddies, and where Baree first struck It, the l'ieiTot was confident. The canyon air tremhle<l with the distunt thunder had narrowed. Bnree eould not get of a waterfall. It wus much l'leasunter past them unseen. Three minutes later than the dark ancl silent bea,·er BarPe <'nme to the blind end of the strf'a"m. It Ref'meel poR~essed of life, canyon-a wall of rock that rose and the rush and tumult of it-the stmight up like the curve of a dish. song and thunder of the water-gave Feasting on fish and long !lours of to Baree entirely new "ensations. lie I' sleep had fattent>d him, and he was made his way alon~ it slowly an<! cauhalf winded as he sought vainly for tiously, and it was because or this an exit. He was at the far end of the slownes~ nnd cantlon that he came dishlike curve of rock, without a bush sud<lenly• and nnohserved upon "'akaor a clump of grass to hide him, when yoo, the big black bear, hard at work Pie1·rot and Xl'j)Pese saw him agai:l. fishing. Nepeese made straight toward him. Wak:i~·oo stood lmPe-(IPt'P in a pool Pierrot, foreseeing what Baree would that had formed hehind a snnd bar, do, hurried to the left, at right angles and he was haYing tremen<lotisly good to the end of the canyon. ., luck. Even as Rart>e shnmk hac·k, his In and out among- the rocks Baree eye~ poppi;J.g at sight of this monster sought swiftly for a way of escape. he had seen hut ouce bpfore, m tlle In a moment rnm·e he had come to the gloom of night, one of "'akayoo's big "box," or cup of the canyon. This was paws sent a great splash of water high a break in the wall, fifty or sixty feet In the air, an<l a fish landed on the wide, which opened into a natural pebbly shore. A little while before the prison about an acre in extent. It JCke1·s had run up the c1·eek in thouwas a beautiful spot. On all si<.les but Rtmrls to spawn, and .the rapid lowerthat lending Into the coulee It was Ing of the water had caught many of shut in by walls of rock. At the far them In these pri~on pools. Wakayoo's Full In His Path Stood Wakayoo-the en<! a waterfall broke down in a se1·ies Huge Black Bear. fat, sleek body was evldencP of the of rippling cascades. The grass was pros11erity this clrcumRtance had McTaggart, the Hudson Bay company's thick underfoot an(] strewn with flowbrought him. Although it was a little factor ovet· at Lac Bain, and what he ers. In this trap Pierrot had got more past the "prime" season for lH'arskins, had said yesterday. .Half the night than one fine haunch of venison. From Wa11:~.yoo's coat. was splendidly thick Pierrot had lain awake, gritting his it there was no esenpe, except In the and hinclr. teeth at thought of it; and this morn- face of his rille. He called to Nepeef.:e li'or a ;tuarter of an hour Baree ing, before Baree ran upon them, he . as he saw Baree entering it, and to~ watched him while he knocked fish out had looked at Nepeese more clos ly gether they climbed the slope. of the pool. 'Vhen at last he stop11ed than ever before in his life. She w s Baree had almost reached the edge there were twenty or thirty fish amon!'( beautiful. She was lovelier even th n of the little prison meadow when sudthe stones, some of them dead ani! Wyola, her princess mother, who w l'l denly he stopped himself so quicldy others f'till flopping. From where he dead. That hair-whlch made m that he fell huck on his haunches, and lay flattened out between two rocks, .stare as if they could not believe! his heart jumped up into his throat. Baree could hear the crunching of Those eyes-like pools filled with wo · Full in his path stood Wakuyoo, the flesh and bone as the bear devoured derful starlight! Her slimness, thqt huge black bear! .,1ls dinner. It soun<led good, and the was like a flower! An <.I McTaggat!t For perhaps a half-minute Baree fresh ~mel! of fish filled him with a had saidbetween the two perils. He hesitated \ craving that had never been roused voices of Nepeese and Pierthe Floating buck to him there came an heard by crnwtlsh or even partridge the rattle of stone;: caught He rot. excited cry. un(ler their feet. And he was filled In spite of his fat and his size, "Hurry, Nootawe! with a great dread. Then he looked \Vakayoo was not a glutton, and ufter into the bl!nq canyon. He cannot e at Wakayoo. The big bear had not he hael eaten his fourth fish he pawed cape us now." an inch. He, too, was listening. moved all the others together in a pile, partly u came She was panting when he nut to him there was a thing more covered them by raking up sand and to her. 'l'he I<'renclt bloo<.l In h disturl)ing than the sounds he heard. stones with his long <"law!<, nne! finished c:lowed a vivhl crimson in her chee It was the seent which he caught In his work of !'aching. hy ht·eakine: down and lips. Her white teeth gleam the air-the mnn·seent. 11 small bul~nm snpling F<o that the fl~h like m!JI{. Baree, wat<"hing •him, saw his head lum· he 'fhPn we1·e PntirPiy CIJilC'('ale<l. "In there!" An<.! she pointed. slowly e\·en as the footsteps of swing bereel slowly away in the direction of They went in. nnd l'iel'fnt became more nn!l NepeesP the rumbling waterfall. AhPad of them Uaree was runn Twenty ~N'•'JH!s aftPr the last of for his life. lie sPnsed instinctiv ly more distinct. It was the first time 'Yakayoo hn!l disapppnre<l in n turn of the fact that the,;e wonclprful t ·o- Bnree had eYer stood face to fn<>e with the rt·eek, Ban~e was untle1· the hroken legg-e<.l beings he had looked \ u on the big- lw:u·. lie hn d watrhed him balsam. He flraj!ged out a fish that were all-powerful. And they ' ere fish; he had fattened on Wakayoo's "us f.: till alive. lie ate the whole of after him! lie could hear them. 'e- prowess; he had held him in splendid about it, and it wn~ delicious. neN>P WI>< following almost as l'W tly a we. ~ow there was something Bnree now found that \Yakayoo hiul as he could run. Su!ldPnly he tu ned the bear that took away his fear and lloiVPd the food Jl!'OhlPm for him, and into a cleft between two great r eks. gave him In its place a new unrl thrllllng confidenee. Wakayoo. big and ~his day he did not return to the Twenty feet in, his way was b, powerful ns he was, would not run beaver pond, nor the next. The big- anel he rnn back. When he darte from the two-legged creatures who bear wns Incessantly fishing up an1l straight up the canyen, Nepees pursued him ! If Baree coul<.l only get down the rrePk, and day aftc1· dny not a (!ozen yards behind him, a past Wakayoo he was safe! Baree continued his f<>ust,;;. saw Pierrot almost at her side. For a wrek life was exceedingly Willow gave a cry. pleasant. Anel then came the hreak- · "i\fann-mana-there he is!" Baree has lots of trouble the change that was de><tlned to mean She caught her breath, nnd without the aid of his parents. ilS much for Baree as that other <.lay, where What next? long ago, had meant for Kazan, his into a copse of young balsams great Like disappeared. hat.l Baree man-hrute the killed father, when he entangling web her loose hair it pt•tled tn the edge of the wil!lernPRS. (TO BE CONTI.NUEV.) dutnge came on the rlay her in the brush, and with un ncour· Thi~ when, in trotting around a great rock near the wnterfall, Baree found himself face to face with PiPrrot the hnn· BananB~.s ter and Nepeese, the star-eyed girl who hn.d shot him in the edge of thP ~learing. Mackintosh put them up for sale John s. l\lackintosh, wh J died in It was Nepepse whom he f::tw ti1·st. \Ynshington t·ecently, was f r nlmost and a few cut·ioslty seekers bought a Cf It had IH•en Pierrot, he would have fifty years :m exvorter In Bost n. op· bunch or so. H~> hai·angul'<l their turne<l huck quickly. But again the erating a linr of <·Iipper Rhips. With quality and tried to impress upon the blood of his forehear was rousing eYery ship came some curio ity. One Ilostoninns the deliciousnPss of the strange trenlhlings within him. Was it day a ship returned frol)'l , entral fruit. llut his ventu1·e failed. like this that the first woman h:HI America, an<.! the maRte · showed looked to Kazan? :\Iuckintosh an elongated y llow fruit Caves of Elephanta Baree stood still. Nepeese was not that grew in clusters. Not far from Bombay, India, are th€' rr.ore than twenty feet from him. Sh.:! Mackintosh regarded it warlly; the famous caves of Elephanta. Ii::lephanta sat on a rock, full in the early morning ship was half-full of such cargo, and is an island long held as a sacred sun, nnd wns brushing out her won•lerhis Scotch prudence 'VUS aroused. place by Orientals. Ths name was ful hair. Her lips Itartecl. Her eyes I-Jven after he had' eaten one u.nd pro· given by the Portuguese tl'om a co los· shone In an Instant like stars. One nounced It delicious, he was not cer- sal scullll ure of an elephant. A serle11 hand remained poised, weighted with . tain they could be sold. of subterranean temples are hewn ':."le Jet tresses. She recognized him. lnhe them?" cull you do "What right out of the solid rock. Columns She saw the white star on his breast skipper. the of quirPd the natural rock are ieft standlne ot and the white tip on his ear, and unhnnnnas," them ~npport the roof, says the Cleye to call nnt!Yes "The der her breath she whispered, ''Uehl PI I" PP!tler, lanrl answered. sailor the moosls '-"Tbe dog-DUJi' '" Jt wQ" the , 1 f ~, I J 1 ~ I Herewith Is a photographic reproduction of the bronze medal pre:;ente,l to Rogers Horn~by at St. Louis on Saturday, May 22, as a toltf'n for his haYing won the honor of being the most valuable playe1· in· the Natlor.al league for the season of 1fl23. This medal, cast f1·om a svecinl de;;ign by a ~ew York artist for the ~attonal league, wa~ presented to the champion ~utsman on II.ornsby day, a great day for St. Lou1s fans. James l\1. Goul<.l, prestrlent of the Basei.Jull 'Vriters of Amerlea, made the presentation. There were ceremoriies at the St. Louis park, and President John Heydler was there to repre;;ent the league. The NaIn addition to the medal Hornsby nlso received ~1 ,000 in gold. tional league thus adds a material rewar<.l to the honor accorde<.l its most valuable player each year. Sets World's Record There are now ~7!) public swimming pools throughout the United States. * • • The cost of laying out golf links in the United States varies from $30 to $120,000. • • • Bill Johnston has been ranked among the trn lea<ling A&tericun tennis player:; since 1!l13. * * • • Skilled toreadors are becoming f'Carce in Spain, wjwre the bullfight is beginning to lose Its popularity. * • • The Toronto Cricket club Is the oldest club of its kind in Canada, having pluyed a match with the Upper Canada college DO years ago. • • • • Americans will pitrt!cipate In the French motor boat show In Paris, October 7 to 17. It will be the initial show of the kind in France. • • • Experts declare that a team match between the ten heRt profes!';ional golf· ers and the ten lwst amateurs would undoubtedly be won by the latter. • • • Here Is a photog'r:l!Jh of Lillian Copeland who broke the world's record recently in I..os Angeles for the woman's shot put. Lillian is from the• Pa><u<lena Athletic and Country club, unci by putling an ei;;ht·pound shot 33 feet 814 inches established a new world's record. H. L. Collins, captain of the Australian cricket team now competing In Eng-lund, Is popularly known In his home lund as "IIorii'eshoe Luck." * • • Mlle. Curabet Is the first woman In France to referee a rugby foothall match. Thousa-nds of funs saw this noYel sight during a recent game in Paris. • • • The Cubs, like the Hobins, are goIng at a fast 'clip. • • • 'Yalter Johnson seems to be like Tampa, getting better every year. • • • Old men who r ."use to quit: "'alter Johnson, 'l'y Cohh, Chjtuncey Depe\v. • .. * There probably also will be many home runs made after the game en1ls. • • * Fran!' Brazill of the Los Angeles club makrs as different moves· befo1·e taking a swing at the hat. * * • Babe Ruth, who began at the top with the Yanks, is gradually working clown into the organization. * * • Walter ,Johnson still holds the American league reeord for wil<.l pltches-21 In tile season of 1!)1 0. * * • Bill Ptutell, fomter big leaguer, has been named manager of the Columbia team of t!)e South Atlantic association. t Cold Welcome • • Starting with only 12 clubs in 1880, the Amateur Boxing association of England now contt·ols 300. .. • • A number of tram~ piekcd for pen· nant contPnders in ~larch seem to he IH'<king up tf·n or fiftef'n games for a good start. • • L. S. Guischnrd. '27. •star pitr·her of to Cargo of I I 1 the TTniYersit~· of ~outhem California ha;;ehall tl'UIIl, was eiPded captain of tl,e Troja11 lliamotHI men. • • • Kpnneth L. "Tug·• Wils0n, nthh' tlc dlr<>etol' at the l'\orthwu;tem tmivPrsity, clPnie,; rPpnrls that the sch(,ol expects to drop ha~elmll as a varsity Rl •ort. • • ?ll:mager Tyrus R. ('obh says that rect·uit pite·hers who start off at a fast puce generally p\·en up with thf' vetPruns near the eud of the !'eason, it they do not fnll below them. • * • With Neht a memhrr of the Clneinnati pitching stuff, fan~ wondPr if the club can han~ a more brllliunt-looklng squad. There are now three leftbanders on the Hed staff inl'iuding Nehf, ~f:ty nnd llixey. I I 1 1 ............. 11 I I I I I• I I I I IC] I CHILDREN'S Major Leaguers Can Qualify as Golf Pros fiJ (@, I Though golf has been banned by a number of the major league managers, and on some teams may not be indulged in during the playing season, a number of b!g league ball players are competent enough to get jobs as golf professionals. Foremost among them Is Pep Youngs, the Giant outfielder, who showed his heels to a number of pros in the '.rexas championship this year. Pep can shoot most of the southern courses In tlle lower seventies, and <.lo it conslstentlJ•. Sam Rice, the Washington outfielder, Is another. Sam has a trunk full of golf trophies and, despite the opinion of many, golfing has not injure<.! the hatting ability of these two men. Thet·e are many others. Arnol1l Statz, the former Chicago White Sox outfiel1ler, earned the sobriquet of "Jigg-er" becnuse of his golfing abilities. NURSE RESUMES HER DUTIES 1 Praises Lydia E. Pinkham'• Vegetable Compound ••r have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's ! c::.............................................................................c . SCIOTO COUNTRY CLUB NOW READY Course Pronounced Fit by George Sargent, Pro. Vegetable Compound for some time and r==-~~~;'7"...,1 would not be without it in the house. As I e.m a children's nurse, I have to ba on my feet a great deal and your medicine has helped me wonderfully, I was ly able to do my housework when I began taking It, and now I am a strong and well woman, able to do all that and go out nursing besides. I have also used the Sanative Wash and found it beneficiai."-MRS. GERTRUDEl L. STEWART, 103 Davis St., Greenfield, Mass. ===... Valuable for Weakne1e "I have found Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a valuable medicine for weakness."-1.\I&s. J. A. PIETSCH, Box 397, Lancaster, Pa. Hundreds of letters like these are received by the Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Grateful women from Pennsylvania to Washington, from Texas to Illinois and from Rhode Island to Nebraska say that their health has improved since taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. FOR OVER · With the formal opening of the club's 1926 season, the Scioto Country club course ut Columbus, Ohio, which will be the scene July 8-9·10 of the national open championships, was pronounced fit by George Sargent, the home "pro." who in 1909 won the national open, and who for half a dozen rears has been president of the ProfeRslonal Golfers' Association of America. Two 18-hole handicap tournaments for the club memhers formally Inaugurate•! the reconstructe<.l Scioto couJ·se. In anticipation of the national open the course has been partially rebuilt. "It will take the best In the trick hag of 'any golder-pro or amateur," Sargent predicted, "to keep the upper hand of the S.cioto course '"hen the national open is run off ln July.". The course always was difficult enough to bring out the best-or the worst--in any player's repertoire. But its greens have been rebuilt, some of its holes lengthened and one shortened, and other changes made. 'l'hls Is the basis for Sargent's prediction that superfine golf will be In order for the national open. Scioto Is the more difficult because It look!! easy. It Is severe without being unfair. The utmost a<.lvantage has been taken of its gentle, naturally undulating terrain and its long watercourse so as to bring out the best golfing skill. The reconstructed Scioto course Is 6,675 yards in length, measuring the Individual holes from the center of the tees to the center of the green. Par for the course Is ~till 72, althOugh as rebullt it Is considered to be harder than the former layout, for wlllcll par was also 72. zoo haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. ta~hA ~ ·e10\D i)} HAARLEM~ correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine GoLD MEDAL. - -- ,- ~- - STOMACH TROUBLES quickly leave. Green's ~ugust Flower is a stomachic co1·recti ve, has been used for GO years and has given relief to thousands suffering with Indigestion, dyspepsia, constipation, etc. At all druggists. 30c and 90c. If you cannot get It, write G. G. GREE~. INC., Woodbury, N. J. HINDERCORNS RPmoves Corns, Cal- louses, etc:., stops all paln, ensures comfort to the feet. makes walking easy. !;e by mall or o.t Drug&lsts. Hiscox Ohemieal Works, PatchoiUe, N. Y. Blood Reveals Sex Blood can reveal sex, according to <•xperiments eonducted recPntly by Dr. Dewey C. Steele of the University of Wl~consin. Doetor Steele used the blood of cattle and found that when the blood Rerum is diluted a hundred times and then properly tJ·rated with <'hemicals a few drops of methyl green dye can be lntt·oduced. turning the blood serum to green if it came from females and red If it came from malf's. Grimes Still Good A mile race between Paavo Nurmi nnd R. A. Hose of Xew ?:euland may he a feature of the English Amateur al'soriation traek :mel fielel meet in Stamford Bridge, London, in July. Culticura for Pimply Faces. To remove pimples and hlackheads ~mear them with Cutleuru Ointment. Wash off in five minutes with Cutlcura Soap nrtd hot watC'I'. Once clear keep your !'kin clear by uFing them for I dally toilet purposes. Don't fail to In ctude Cutlcura Talcum. Advertisement. • Approval of Wn Iter C. Hagen as cap· tain of un A1nMi<'an team of profes~lonal golfers which will invade Great Britain this ~·ear was announced hy the I'rofe>lsional Golfers' ussociation. * * • Van Gilder Is Winner - Resino . . .. A girl at· the CniverRity of California put the eight-pound shot 38 f~·et ;j inehes, thereby winning the women's <"hampionslJip, and causing soher reflection, no doubt, among the ranks of her suitors. .... BU~~l·!~~~~g~, UniYers!ty of Oregon at Eugene haR ninP hnnd-ball courts. They are used by the faculty and studentf' during the day and busineRs men of the city can occupy them in the evenlugs. • • YEARS Perhaps "\VherP have I seen your fnee be"Probably right where ~·ou fore7" see it now." Burleigh <!rime,, one uf the few remaining Rpltl:rallers In tl'e National league, is more than holding his own this year with the Brooklyn Dodgers. lie Is winning games with much reg ularity. Blessed are the lnno<·ent, haYe a li)t to learn. Buddy Ryan Insisted on Writing His Own Wires Slg Hart, fighter of the bantam class bark in 18!:1;), later a politician, and a handler of fighters, was in 1D04 manager of Buddy R~·an, famous welterweight. Slg doesn't think all fight~rs are dumb, but he thinks they have their peculinrities. Hurt and Hu<ldy had gone to Port Huron, where Buddy was to fight ?lfike Ward. At the hotel as Sig and Buddy parted to go to their rooms before the fight, Hart turned to say: "I'll send that telegram you usually send to your mother. Buddy, and tell A Hand Sprafer will be .............., her everything Is 0. K. and I'll sign your name." FREE with every purchase of "Ali right," said Buddy, and went 1 quart can of/ FLYOSAN on toward the elevator. Slg went In June 30th. to write the telegram when he felt a tu~ on his arm. It was Buddy. Seckel Fritchman Company "Walt a minute, Slg," sa!J lhe boxer, Boise, Idaho Although the St. Louis Browns have "I want to send that telegram. 1\IothBagley Nelson Company n<>t been able to strike their stride so er knows my handwriting." Salt Lake City, Utah fur this season, Pitcher Van Glider Buddy was strong tor details which DISTRIBUTORS has "hown good form and Is winning may explain how be rose to titular most of his games. w. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 25-1 hei~rhts. Kills f'LI·E by the Room ills BUGS Wholesale j I I |