OCR Text |
Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH, UTAH National Needs $1,500,000 Park-Syste- m turn to the federal treasury in the form of revenues, a large dividend on the investment. These revenues in the 1020 fiscal year were said to have amounted to approximately 35 per cent of the cost of maintaining the parks that year, while-- the revenues ' this year are expected to amount to 40 per cent of the years cost. The suggestion is added that, should the development program be approved, it is expected that the revenues within a few years will ha brought to a figure approximating the cost of administration, maintenance and protection. The estimates for the fiscal year of 1922 to be submitted by the service for the variops parks follow: , Definite approval of a comprehensive plan for development of --the national park system will be sought by the national park service of the depart-- , mant of the interior in submitting its 1022 appropriation estimates. The estimates total $2,473,504 and provide for construction of roads, sanitary systems, camping grounds and electric lighting, plants for the public camps and hotels, in addition to the regular expenses of maintenance-anadministration. The estimates exceed the appropriation for the current year by approximately $1,500,000 all of which the service plans to use in im eugurating Its development program. The service said It would, submit with its estimates figures showing that each year, the national parks re WASHINGTON. Yosemlte, Yellowstone, $492,300; $575,537 ; Glacier, Montana, $333,100 ; Mount Rainier, Washington, $214,400; Sequoia, ; California, $175,217; Grand $159,000; Ilocky Arizona, Canyon, Mountain, Colorado, $150,000; Mesa 7erde, Colorado, $54,250; Lafayette, Maine. $50,000; Crater Lake, Oregon, $26,400; Zion, Utah, $20,000; General Grant, California, $10,000 ; Mount McKinley, Alaska, $10,000; Hawaii, Hawaiian islands, $10,000; Wind Cave, South Dakota, $8,500; Piatt, Oklaho; ma, $7,500, aild Lassen Volcanic Na- tional park, California, $5,500. And Thereupon Everybody Took Up Golf of OPERATION trains in interstate of mail and mailing of Sunday newspapers on Sunday v ould be prohibited if congress should pass the legislation which will be urged by the reform organization working for strict observance of the Sabbath. The bll- - sanctioned by the reformers provides: Hereafter It shall be unlawful for any person In the employment of the United States to work or carry on his ordinary vocation on Sunday. It shall be unlawful for any person United States, or any of its agencies, or corporation to operate on Sunday to do or carry on any ordinary vocation or business on Sunday, the purany freight, passenger or mall train pose of this act being to express our In the carrying on of Interstate comnational determination to honor the merce. Sabbath day and keep it holy as God e It shall be unlawful for any to be open on Sunday or to de- commands, thereby securing for all and that opportunity for spiritual liver mall on Sunday. It shall be unlawful for any news- bodily refreshment decreed' by our paper or ether paper or publication Lord for the happiness of all men and the safety of all nations. published, or purporting to be published on Sunday to be received, carAny person who does any of the ried or delivered as mail. things above declared unlawful, or It shall be unlawful for any person who procures or aids another shall be or corporation engaged in interstate guilty of a misdemeanor-anpunished commerce, or carrying on any business by a fine of not under $100, nor over or vocation under the laws of or with $1,000 Corporations shall be fined the permission and license from the not less than $1,000 nor over $100,000. . post-jfflc- Anyway, It Boosts See America First tor a glass of wine or beer in his home. .. . The proposed bill goes further than any suggestion heretofore made In con- .. nection with the prohibition move- ment. Drastic penalties are provided for infringement of the proposed law. The second offense would entail a prison term of from six months to six years. In such cases the sentence Is mandatory, the judge being given no discrereform bill is drafted tionary powers. THE latest The binding of American diplomats Senator Wesley L. Jones of Washington and it would forbid all and consular officers is made effective ' American citizens abroad and mem- in this section: That it shall be unlawful for any bers of the American diplomatic and consular services to serve liquors at citizen of the United States or person pdblic or official functions, or to rec- owing allegiance to the United States ognize clubs where such beverages to serve any of the intoxicating liquors are dispensed. The bill also would mentioned here in section 1 at a pubrequire the diplomatic service to en lic or official function, or give official force this provision. recognition to any dub or association that keeps or serves such liquors for The measure would prevent Ambassador John W. Davis from belonging beverage purposes. The beverages forbidden are deto or attending social .gatherings at the St. James club In Piccadilly, scribed as Including distilled, spiritwhich is open to all members of the uous, malt, vinous, or any Intoxicating f of one diplomatic corps. It would bar drinks liquors that eon tain from the table of every American am- per cent or more of alcohol by volume, It might even prohibit a by whatever name they may be bassador.from handing a friendly visi called. diplomat . one-hal- BRITAIN and France celeland so bereft who brated the second anniversary of applied for a place ' the end of the Great War by paygot it, but less than, Unknown to the half the other appll-- , ing tribute Dead. In London the body of an cants for seats were unknown British soldier was buried successful, owing to In Paris in Westminster Abbey. the lack of space. the body of an unknown French After the 100 had been promised seats, soldier was laid at rest under the ' ' ; Arc de Triomphe. . the next to be con- It the Was won War? sidered were those Who the Great British, mothers who lost the French, the Americans?. Was it Joffre, Detheir only sons, or tain, Pershing, Foch? Was It sailor, airman, all their sons, and artillerist?. TAEfi TOTHEJOUXER DEAD , then came women All helped. No need to make comparisons. resistance to the Gercity In offering-bitterewho lost their husbands only. They were given For it was the man in the ranks who won the mans In 1870. had , in Great War. And that Is what Great Britain and accordance with the positions price they .. came mutilated First and veterans oi soldiers world to had. France are proclaiming the, paid during the war. A girl who wrote she 1y- thus the Great War, then troops from Alsace and Lor lost nine brothers kHled- or missing was given a honoring the Unknown Dead. ralne and then colonials. General Berdoulat, gov- d For Unknown Dead Is merely a symbol For ticket, as was also a boy who wrote : ernor of Paris, followed, preceding flags used la Man In the Ranks Dead man The in .Unknown read the coffin might be. my daddy., the late war, behind which came General Falque - As the common man who did his duty, offered his all, Big Ben,", the great clock in the tower (ft and staff, bearing artillery flags, and General : won his fight or gave up liis.life and is unknown, the parliaments building, began to strike the hour Derescas and staff, above whom waved cavalry unhonored and unsung. No citation contains his . of eleven, King George, facing the coffin of the standards name. No decoration is his. This is the man unknown soldier, which was resting on a gun car-- : Faded and shattered flags of 1870, recently rewho won the war and it Is, in his honor that the - rlage, drew a cord that released the union jack from Potsdam and Berlin and carried Jj trieved to a erected Unknowi Dead are buried 'with the pomp and about Whitehall in draped cenotaph war, escorted ' the ' circumstance of state display. the Glorious Dead, and after the last stroke of ; veterans of the Franco-Prnssla- n who resisted car the of heart Gambetta, bearing Nor need this man of the rank and file ever the hour, thousands of people, who crowded desperately giving these very flags to Prussia In Whitehall as far as one could see in either direchave reached the firing line. Many a potential the hour of defeat. . hero never got to the front. Nor need this man tion, remained absolutely silent for two minutes. A delegation of noncommissioned officers of all thus honored ever have got Into the fighting During the brief services in the nave of the n cararms separated this car from the ranks. Many a patriot who did his bit most : abbey the king stood at the foot of the grave, the which the of the unknown upon on lay body riage themselves and ladles was officer. the If loyally princes ranging royal rejected by recruiting soldier. President Mlllerand and all members of he gave liis country the best he had, he shares , either side. The casket was transferred from the his cabinet walked behind It, accompanied by the the honors of Armistice Day. carriage to the altar where the archbishop of three. French marshals Joffre, the hero of the solemn the funeral ritual. conducted In honoring the Unknown Dead the British and Canterbury Marne ; Foch, whose genius accomplished the final As the coffin finally was lowered into Its crypt, French give utterance to their recognitions defeat of Germany, and Petaln, whose defense of a battery of artillery in the adjoining St. James that uemocraoy of service and of sacrifice which Verdun will forever live In French song and story. is the foundation of society and the salvation of park, fired a field marshals salute of 19 guns The procession terminated with delegations . out-accorded honor the even is nations. The ceremony for the living anyone highest military from the St. Cyr and Polytechnic schools; repubside royal rank. more than for the dead. lican guards, colonial Infantry, Senegalese units, Official and civilian France paid honor to tliq Great Britain buried her Unknown Dead ' aviation officers, two batteries of 75s and one of sons fell who of the the nations field of The marshals funeral. honors memory a with the during 155s. As the procession entered Boulevard Salnte Great War, the ceremonies lending a solemn atbody was that of a soldier, name and rank unMichel thdre was heard in the distance, from the mosphere to. the celebration of the second anniknown, selected at random from the silent hosts forts surrounding Paris, the first shot of a 100-guversary of the armistice. Paris,, accustomed to at Ypres whelher English, Irish, Scotch, Welsh, . salute. , and with its national fetes victory days Canadian or Australian is not known. It was observing At 9:30 oclock the profession reached the received at Boulogne with the highest honors' by ' rejoicing, turned aside this year and dedicated Pantheon, where President Mlllerand made a the day to memory and recognition of the sacriFrench and British soldiers. short address. It then continued down Boulevard fice who hundreds of thousands are of solwas of dead, carried through lanes The casket by St. Michel and Boulevard St. Germain, crossing ' diers at present arms to the Britisli destroyer . sleeping in cemeteries along the battle lines. Seine by the Chamber of Deputies bridge. It the Called from its grave on the field of Verdun, Verdun; Flanked by four French and six British circled Place de la Concorde, passing the statues was unidentified of an across French poilu the the body destroyers, the funeral ship steamed Lille of and Strausburg, and proceeded up the ." channel to Dover, passing into the harbor as cancarried with pomp and ceremony through the It' reached the Arc de Triomphe non from the fort roared their salute of nineteen streets and reburied under the Arc de Triomphe. . Champs Elysees. at noon. to of field The which a unidentified honors bodies French marshal is Other soldiers, eight guns. observed all over the Uriited Armistice, was day exhumed from as many sectors of the former batentitled were paid as the casket was carried from States and In many ways. No national celethe destroyer, to the special train for London. tle line, from tlie Belgian frontier to the Vosges, bration was held and where the buglers blew taps The historic Padres flag, used at innumerable arrived at the Verdun citadel the day before. to American dead It was to the Soldier Dead funerals after, the fighting at' Ypres, covered the In a low casemate the eight bodies lay in state - and not to the Unknown Dead. i coffin whose plate was inscribed that night surrounded by a thousand lighted canwas War Baker of asked to authorize Secretary A British Warrior Who Fell in the Great War, . dles, while stern men and weeping women filed the removal of the body of an .unidentified Amer-for King and Country. silently past. On a stand nearby were trophies lean soldier from France for Interment in the from the City of Verdun which were to be de- guard which, escorted the body, j The Immediate planned Victory hall, Pershing square, New York coffin of the the crowded unknown and streets on its trip through the soldier silent posited upon city.- He refused the authorization. . chosen and to accompany the body in its last. from the station to Whitehall was composed ot . ? Mr. Baker said that if the United State were 100 men of all services who won the Victoria journey to the Arc de Triomphe, there to remain to follow-th- e example of Great Britain and France cross. The pallbearers were field marshals and .throughout time. The trophies were the Croix such burial of an. American soldier should be 1ft de Guerre, the Insignia of the Legion of Honor, admirals of the fleet, including Viscount Douglas the amphitheater at Arlington or In some of the the Military Cross, the Order of Leopold, the DisHaig, Earl Beatty, admiral of the grand fleet, and government public buildings. He said that the '. Service sabers -' of Medals, of honor Gen. commander Sir pretinguished Hugh Trenchard, Maj. removal of a body to the planned Victory hall in sented by Chinn and Japan, the Greek War Cross, British air forces. ' . Battalions of guards, with New York would set a precedent and that many the Italian Military Medal and numerous others. their bands, and a few officials made up the rest other cities and towns would not be contented One body was chosen from among the eight by . to be denied the same of the escort. opportunity to show rev' a of native officers Private August Thin, Caen, Brittany, King George was chief mourner, army erence and respect. of the highest rank were pallbearers and the high- . who was a volunteer during the war. At the reWhatever the result, an American precedent est officers of the church assigned the' warriors quest of Andre Maginot, minister of pensions. The has been already set. In fact, America set it for on one coffin his hand veteran and the rest. to final placed its body the world. In Arlington rises a monument, dediveterans choice was the Unknown Dead of a In addition, the entire empire sent representacated more than half, a century ago with cere-- , solemn and Impressive ceremony. . tives to attend the services, and thousands upon raony, on which is this inscription:. In addition, France took occasion to remember thousands massed into the streets to glimpse the Beneath this stone repose the bones of two that 50 years ago the country, defeated by Gerthousand one hundred and eleven unknown solplain oaken casket, swaying on its caisson as it many, owed its very existence for a time to Leon proceeded from railway station to abbey. diers gathered after the war from the fields of ' Aside from members of the royal family, who Gambetta, who took virtual control of affairs in Bull Run and - the route to the Rappahannock. included Queen Mary, Queen Mother Alexandra Paris udien the city was besieged by Germans and "Thfir. remain, could not be identified, but their and Queen Maud of Norway, and a few officials, names and death are recorded in 4he archives of Iqter succeeded in organizing armies JM continue the only witnesses to either ceremony .were .per- ; the futile struggle against the Teuton invaders. ,, their country and tts grateful citizens honor them ' The heart of Gambetta, which had been sons who lost relatives in the great war, as of their noble arniy of martyrs. May they rest : since his death in 1882, .was Inurned In in peace. Sept. A. D. 1866. Of all the witnesses that packed Whitehall or the Pantheon, the national shrine of France. crowded the abbey, a little band of approximate-- , v Armistice day seems destined to come to mean ; The procession formed in Place Denfert to the whole world what Independence day means ly 100 women in the abbey received the most rev- at 8:30 oclock, the head of the column" to America. erent attention. They had been selected for the How better express that nts of honor because each had lost her hus-- . standing in the shadow of the huge statue of the than meaning through Lion of Belfort, whichrepresents the spirit of the honors to the Unknown Dead? and and all her sons. Every woman in Eng- REAT st . . - twelve-year-ol- . 155-gu- ' ' . n ' - , , 1914-191- Cleanliness Is Next Door to Dignity baths of the United States senate, Installed nearly lit years ago, but never put Inte rice,, are now being cleared of the webs and stains of time, and will to shape to offer their luxuries of rm, plunge, shower and electricity the members of the new senate m It assembles. 'harges of extravagance were aimed the baths in congressional debate ;n the power of administration last to Democratic, ing from Republican i as a result the baths, installed in then new senate office building, e shotn of their expensive equip-it- , bereft of their attendants and to gloom. he marble slabs, Turkish rugs and were im proof tables and chairs r to government hospitals, only the marble shells and nickel lugs left in place, are coining low, however, the baths 'k but under a new plan. Mem-- s of the senate themselves will pay the operating expenses, irge part ofunofficial committee has I a special assessments, - the of en charge each user Ich will be levied against tAECO-ROMA- . ned-ove- - , . in proportion to the service ho exacts. The baths will be. somewhat less gorgeous than the original plan anticipated. They will, however, in their luxury and completeness still have claim to comparison with private club installation. ; Senators wilt be able to steam them selves out in a series of marble hot rooms, resuscitate themselves on the drying room cots, Invigorate under one of the several types of needle and drench showers, and float in. the swimming size plunge. . They Iflso can try massage, 'the electric cabinet, or the prickling shocks from the static machine. . ' - . - pre-.ser- yed |