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Show THE JORDAN JOUR...~AL, MIDVALE, UTAH Cornell's Star Pitcher Is One of Best I• I 1~¥ It's Almost Impossible to Wear • Them Out! USKIDE .T. A. !lfull!l.(nn, C'ornell university pftchPr, who defeated the Unlver~lty ' of \·irg-lnhl, without ullowlng a hit or run. He Is considered one of the best 1 eollege pitcher·. SOLES The Wonder Sole for WearW••r• twice aa long •• boatleather t -and for a Better Heel "V. S." SPRING·SlE.P H~Wia United States Rubber Company Water lor Morocco City Mnlllla, ~IoroPco, which has been In the hands of tl\e Spnnlards for more thnn 400 years, h u!Jout to be provlced for the first time In lts history with a pnhlie water supply. Gan~s of \\ orl,t.rs are now !'n;;·,ged !n luyin~ cem!'nt pip!'s to bring the water from the Yasinen, nnd It Is hoped tl nt within a s·JOrt time tht> municipal uuthor!tiE-> wlll be able to furnish the inhul>.tnnts with suwclent watt'!' for d.inklrg nnd hygienic purposes. Star Is Given Medal ~************************~ ~ Adams and Marquard ~ ~ Are Oldest Pitchers ~ ~ Raile Adams and Ituhe ~l1rquurd runk as til€ oiLiest pitch· ~ er~ In the • ·ationul league in "Cint of service. 'l'he formE-r ~1\r:;t st<'pped into the llnwllght in tOO!) when he hurled the l'i· rates to three world :series trl· ~ umpl!s o\'l'r the Detroit 'l'lgrrs. i\farqnurd has been in the main '~ tent :since WOS. ~ w-.Iter Johnson of wa~hlng ton is the only m ... jor league gum.er to outrnnk tl.eru In length of r!'gime. Joltu:;on cnme ~ Up In 1907. * * * * * * * * * By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN tn,; best thing a!Jout the national parks of the Unite1l ~tates Is that they are Y<'Ur:>-srt Rpnrt forever by Ct>ugre><!'l as niltfiral history muRe· ums, S<'ll'ntlfir and edurutlonal exhill· its and puhllr recreut11n places tor the American peovl('. The outstnnd !n~ feature of today I~ the promise of tt e fut•Jre. '1'1te ever-lncrca In;; ". Tntional l'rcrk Army" of enthusl· ast:,;- n<'w an Ol'gan!zf•d J;on·e nf ap!)ro:-:.hl atl'ly li.OOO,OOO memh~ rs of uhout l~:'i uffillatr>d organizationskts In ten years tr1.r: fon.wd the n. t'onal parlt moH'mlnL from t forl•1rn l op€ Into lt (' ln·est nonpditkul ISl ue of t'l(' tlrces. The "proof of the IJ'UIolng" H thE' N .t.onul <'Onftrrrnce c.:n Outdoor Ut>cre'1tlc n. This w s orr1n'zed la~t summer at Wnst.lngton upon tl•J ln\t.ntive of Presirlmt Cool· ldge and hdfl Its SN'(·TI!l annual meeting n few •layR ago. 'l't•€' fulcra! gov£'rnmcnt now stand>! us • guirle, philosopl.er u'ld friNHl" of the p!'ople In nil phuS('ll of optdoor recreation, u~ w€'11 ns active pnrtil'ipant and 1\n,.nclul supporter. The "Army,'' h<Jw!'ver, retain,; Its orgni'izatlon and contlnu£'~ to d£'al directly with congress-which pay,; attention. One result of this ls that Secretary Work of the Interior department hus se£·n hls way clear to announce u national paa:k policy based upon three hrond principles: "Fir~t. that the national parks nnd n·1t1onal mon· 11 ents must he maintained untou<'he<l by the Inroads of IHOriern rhillzntlon In orr1er thnt unspoiled bits of native Awerir·a mny be pre!'!!'rve<l to be enjcyl'd by future generations as well as our own; "Second, that they ure set apart for the use, edneatlon, health nnrl pleasure or nil the people; "Third, thut the national Interest must take precedence In all decisions affecting publlc or private enterprise In U1e parks unrl monuments." So live an Issue Is the "National l'ark Movement," so manifold are Its activities and so wide are its ramifications that It would take volumes In· stend of columns to cover the situation. Only outstanding features of special interest to the whole country can be touched on her€', nud then only in outline. Then' are now in the natlonul pp,rt; system nineteen units. The twentieth-Utah National parkhas bPen authorized; the acquisition of certain privately owned !nods within Its boundaries will compl!'tel~· establish it. Two more national parks -Shenandoah and Great Smoky In the Appalachl· ans-are appar!'ntly In the making; the Sixty-ninth congress Is lik!'ly to pa:;s upon these projects. The totul attendance at the national parks and at 10 (out of 31) national monuments In the 1924 sr11son "as 1,670.008, compared with 1,4!:!3,712 for I!J~:l-a satisfying Increase in Ylew of the fact that lust year presented many conuitlons unfavorable to Arnertrun tourist travel, Including unemployment, forest fires unrl the toot-and-month disease ln the Soulhwe~t. Favorable conditions this senson point to a '~'rY large attend:WrP. n.,rky Moun· taln In ( l)lor:Hlo-the moqt popuJ., r of all t!Je nn· tiona! pnrks· led ns usual; Its visitors numbered 224,::.:11. OthE'r figures nr£': Hot Springs, Arkansas (merl!cinnl) Hi4,17:i; Mount Hain!e1·, wa~hing trn, Hl1,4n: Y!'llowston€', Wyoming, 144,15R; Yosemite, (''llifornia, 10~. ;f\4; Grund Canyon, Arizona, 108,256. Featllreq of this s!wwlng are: The !urge lnr·re~t<;e at l\Iount na~nler, the 1923 attencl nnct' being 123,708; tl e fad that YellowstonA Is showing nsults und.!r an intensive syst~'m of publicit}\ the 1922 att~>ndnnce belng only 98,223; the <!!'crease In Yosemite's visft(hl'B from 130,040 In Ul23. Most of the more Important nntlonal parks are now officially open to visitors. noeky Mountain, Yosemite and Grand Canyon, are open all the y~ar; so are Hot Springs and Platt {Oklahoma. medicinal) and Lafayette (~falne) and Hawall Glacier (?.footana) and Mount Ralnier open June 15; Yellowstone June 18; and Crater Lake {Ore· goo) und Mount 1\IcKinley (Alaska) July 1. most of the national put·ks the visitor will find improvements in roads anti trails and uuto eamps. 'l'his Is lmportaut, inasmuch as approxhnntely three-fourths or the ,-!~!tors trave\ in their own ears and u !urge proporUon n~es cntnllS. · 19~0 y[,ltors, howe,·er, will find a vast amount of lmprOY(lll('llt. ruder the • 'ational l'nrk Hlghwu~·s act of 1024, authorizing the approprlutlon of $7,500,000 for the currying out of a three-years' road and trail construction program, $2,[ill0,000 Is nvallahle thl~ season nn1l work will be pnsherl. In HoLky ~Iountain, whleh has bePn allotted $140,500, six prujects wlll be l)enelited; the Fall Hiver Hoa•l end the High Drive will get most of the money. 'l'he forn cr road, which crosSE'S tl1e Contlnl 'ltal Dlvfdp on the "Roof of the World'' at nn eh•,·ation of 11,707 ft>et, Is the IJ,hest automohlle highw.:y in the nntlonal parlt sy~tem and possibly t11e TUOst l"<'enLC on earth. c:tar,er gets $153,000 und or th!J! $110,000 Is to be sp~::•tt on the 'l'rrmsmo•.mt.lln Hoad oH•r the Coutln!'nL.I D1vlde. This ronrl is bndly nPeded, "!nee th!'rc Is no roacl through tl•e park and to gf't from thr I~u~t Entr•. nce to ll1e \Yr,;;t Entrunce rail shlptt ent nf cars i D!'CP~sury or n long dctonr lly wny or Helena, :Mont. All the nutlon'll '(:.:..!'k:> ~har€' :n tt.e apprV)riut.ou. In addition the serr tnry of the Interior Is authorized to approve projects und rna le admtlonal contrncts to thE' extent of 1,000,000. The slt1Intlon us to tt..e proposed national parks ln the Appalachian~ ls briefly this: A rommisswu nppolntE·<i hy Secretary Work report€'11 last DePernber upprm in~ arcns In the lllue Hi1lge mountains of Virginia unrl the C:r!'at Smol;y lf'ountnins or 'l'Pnlll'HSel' :>ncl reeommendlng the former us the mort• accessible. Several national park bills were thereupon introdnl'ed. Con~ress then rms~ed 11 bill provldmg for a more complete burvey of these two arens und of ~lammoth Cave nnrl its surrounding~. nnd for recommendations by the s('c:retary us to boundarle~. Appropriation of $~0,000 was made for expenses, option~. etc. Recretury Work appointed n commission, which Is at work thi~ summer. Thi~ uctlon hy congress does not commit it ti• the establishment of any of the three proposed parks, hut would ~eem to indleate its willln~n!'ss to consider 11 departure from the pr!'vlous policy of refusal to purchase lnnrl for national park tJUrpo;lel!. All three areus are privately owned; the rost of l'llCh would be at leu~<t a million dollars. 'l'he ex!Htlng natlunal paries, except Lafayette (donated), have bei'O crented from the public domnin and from the national forests. The Ecological Soeiety of America has asked co>ngress to establish a national park In the Glacier Bay region of southeast Alnskn. An ecologist ls n sort of botanical evolutionist who wants to know l:ow nature adapts itself to circumstances. In the Glacier Bay region there Is eternal warfare between lee and forest. A glacier overwhelms a forel't. A new forest springs up In the de:structlon left behind. In this region Is the :Muir glacier, with a ReR front 300 feet high and more than a mile long. It throws down fragments as big ns a skyscraper and the waves rock a hlg steamer a mile away. Why not Muir National park-If the ecologists nre granted their request? In the meantime f'resld!'nt Coolidge has created the Glacier Buy National monument of nearly 2,000 square miles. The Redwoods of Cnllfornla, first cousins of the Big Trees, are safe from extinction, even If the proposed Redwoods National park is not cr!'uterl. Save the Hedwoods Len!;Ue has raised more than $750,000 !or the purchuse of virgin nclwood groves at North and <outh Drervllle Flnts and Bull Creel;: F'lot. Tli('se groves are lntenrle I to be a pnrt of the Humboldt State Hedwoorl pnr'c. The groves contain many trees more tbun 2,000 years o d, 350 feet In height and fifteen feet In diamete'r. Pres!dPnt Coolidge l1US made a nutlonnl monument of the Cnrls!Jad C'ave In the southeast corner of New Mex~co, near the Texas state line. Congress hail madA ::.n npproprlntlon for the driving of n shaft into the cave; access Is no.,.· by rope-and· bucket through n hole In the root. Movlng pictures of lts Interior as revealed hy explorers with t0rches show an underground world unbelievably funtast!c. The cavern seems to !Je It~ a class by lt11elf In extent, size of chambers and richness of ornamentation. One chnmb~r Is nearly a mile long, and approximately GOO feet wide, with a roo! of unknown height. Any e!'tlmate ot the extent of the cavem 111 purely e-uesswork. ' ~ ~ * * * ~ * * ~I * *j * * * * ~ * * ************************** JK; m~~lter !uno fllell your c11r runs no it must have perfect lubrication to keep Also Plays Baseball 1· the good work up I ~ Oil is perfect lubrication. It resists heat, resists dilution, and re" tlliam G. Ulle:l, :;erond IJ:..;;eman aists friction more effectively than any on l\I!clilgLn's champlon<hlp confer· oil ;vou. can buy. ~ Oil is !'nee nine ln~t season has been award· 1 aerv1ce msurance. • • ed the western mPdal for scholustlc und nthiPtlc prntklency. y-ou want MonaMot'>r Oil. Ask any He Is tbe fil·:;t bnsrhall t>layer to g!'t ~ customer. the a\\"ll''tl in many year;;. lie was MonaM~or Qil @mpa.ay recently eiP<'terl to l'lli Be• 1 Kappa San Francisco, Cal. Los Angel.s, CaL conf~reure yo!~: ~a~/~~~~ ~~r:~~ ~~~ 'l'l1e pictures given herewith show suggestive j of typical nutlonal pnrk l'<<'enery. No. 1 Is Trick Falls ln Glnrler-mN"'ly one of hundreds of na·:rlng form>~ nnd sizes In t'te parks. Nos. 2 ond 3 are contrasting tr·ulls; there are thousnnds equally nttructlve. 'fhe:se two are In Rocky Mountain. College Oarsmen Favor • 'o. 4 Is a gc•od llkenel's In sllhouette of Director Stephen 1'. ~lather of the national pl!l'k service, Shells Made by Pocock a unlque figure 11moug fl'rlernl olliclals.. He Is a l\Iuny rueing ~hells used hy univerrich enthu:slust who tlcvotes all his tine to the national parks and annually h1'~nds on them In donasltl!'s in the Unit!'tl Stut~ s have been 1 designed and coustructed by Georg(' tlons n1nn? times the amount of hl$ s.11ary. lie F oolisit Fears wu'l appointed by !:'ecretm·y LanP tn the WI son 1 Pocock of Se'lttie. Poco k's father 1 Fr!'net Cor ml Antoni 1 Bnrthc my cabloH; I' hanging rclmlnistrrtlons ver~· properly 1 an l grandfather w~r€' sl ell !Juilders. lwve rontlnu<d him in his post for twelve years. I Ills gra'ldfuthcr built the fir8t r· cing said •. t u rl'C ct-. ion in ( •1.ragl · "Tl ere ls uo cl. n~<'r of u bol~he\lk Thr pen sketch, No. 5, Is aftrr 11 s lirlted color 1 ~!tell in Great Bri',lln. Ills fn•lwr. n. revol 1tion in F' ·an e. Thosr who dr:m tng by H. Brn••e nornfall In the • ·atu~e l\IagaI 0. l'oroLk, was ro\\ lng manager ot qu 1· 1 r d wail on:- sue! an h~ard zine of thut ldn,ly hi~ 6 ame nunul, the wapi.! or l~atl n, l<:u.,' ncl, for l<:l y• rs. He re- dan er as th • rN~ r I 'YJf •>f t te i•tle Amerlnan elk. It fs extln<'t In Most of lt· former •fred for a t ne, but Is .t.;:un bul d· boy who rr P to I i'l 1r <> h• r'' hed in tlt habitat·. There ure still son et!.!lng hk€' ~O.C•OO elk lng sl ells In l<~n~;l .::ld. roll clle of the o'~ht , nu s1 Jlwr : In the two Yellow~tcne hcmls, but n.dh:ul 11 c. sures Ho W.!ll I as (,eorJ€' Pocock llui't "'Oh, 1 1 vv.·r, '<ll'\'\ !'r, l dr ''llllt j I ".II be nccPssury to pre\ ent t!-Jf'_r e.xteruln 'ton. ~1 ells that se\'C :1 An· 1k. n um ••·.1 was a tkk of ~.111dy and eJ.tr Ill).; It The wlLter :mows drive t'te e k frcm their sumHrs I ave 1: \f'll IJ.Pt r)rdH'l for bo t[t. up !' ., mer feeding grounds In the mountu ns , nd forre !lcor1;e !'OClJCk anrl h s l.rcther .r 1e them !Jeyond the purli lines. '!'ben hunters-so Htll!Jtlr lluzel, ull·A'1leriean full!J.ek, to Am•ri<'n in Wl•J nnd s~tt'ert In A11 thluvn c•qmE \\ t•h 11 €' wai er ,,-h. • t \'annou,·er, ll. ('. AftlT t\\O ''E r!S culled-slaughter them-or they starve on lands nn1] lh e on I Y f orr- le tt ~r man ut 1•.! · J ~er\ cs 11n ortl r 1 f I t~h. ulreudy strip[)ed of forage by cattle unci by hay- I gers roll<'gE•, is now dividing ltis time tlwy eo Hl' to Stn•tle. makers. The won'm!'nt to add wough tE'rrltory !Jetween br.sehnll and track. Ue Is 'Shell,; h<\ e Plum.,ed," rem •ked to Yellowstone on the sul.ilh to feed these herds Is J the left tiel!le: und le~ding hitter of ?eorg(', l'ocod;:, ''1 ha\·f> se!'u a 1 the appnrently doomed to failure; the rnuchers op- the Hutger~ 'nrs!ty nme and lwldn 1ha1 Vol',, ... nu have been responsible poRe It und the forest ,ervh'<', In its efforts to of the shot-put record at his college. , for many." make the national forests a comp!'tltor of the national parks, Is pluun;ng •'muss tT•'reat!on" ln the ~:eglon. lncld!'ntally the Izaak \\'nlton league Is rnlslng n fund of $100,000 for the purchase of lands Ike ~l.thonet, former C'relghton unl· for tile feeding of the Yel1ow:;tone elk In winter. Pitcher Hurry Lee has finally signe1l versity. star athlete and shortshop on :\o. 0 shows Tlmberllne House (11,500 fel't eleva- wlth Omaha. that institution's baseball teum last tion) on the trail up LongH peak !n Rocky Mounyen r, has heen signed by the l'ittS· New Haven hns obtained Outfielder tain. '.fhis famous shelter, famlllur to the majority burgh Pirates. IIownrd Crump f1·om the New York of the more than 1,:'\00,000 visitors to noclcy Mountain since Its estu!Jllshment in 1915, figured largely Glunti:l. • • • Bob B!'sch!'r, formPr ~tar of the in the tragedy of last Januarr which cost the lives Dick Wade, St. Paul outfielder, has, ~atlonal league, and with l<'ort \Vorth of l\Iiss Agnes W. Vaile, secretary of tl1e Denvl!r chamber of commerce, and Her!Jert Sortlu.ad, care· been playing u sensational pinch-hit- of the Texas l!'ague in more recent years, has been signed by Decatur of taker ot Longs Pl'nk inn in Tahosa valleJ'. Miss Ung role. • • • the Three-I league. Vnlle, a member of the Colorado )fountllln club Raymondr (Rosy) Gore, stur pitcher • • • nnd one of the most noted mountuinc!'rll of the "Larry" Kopf, former major leogue country, and Walter Kiener, an experienced moun· of Maylor university, has agreed to Infielder, has been engaged as busebnll t!dneer from Switzerland, left Tlmberllne Itouse at join the St. Paul team. • • • conch at St. Xn vier college. He fornoon, descended to Chasm lnke to East gorge and Tulsa hns released Frank Cuporal, merly played with the Cincinnati climbed up the almost perpendicular 2,300-foot East Face of Longs Peak. 'fhey art'hred on The veteran left-handed pitcher. He was Heds. • Summit (14,255 feet) at 4 o'clock the next morn- unable to reach his proper form. • • • Outfielder Boh Y!'ach and Pitcher Ing. Here they were beset by a storm of wind Louisvllle has sent Jim Hargrave~. big Alex Ferguson ot the Boston Red Sox and snow. They attempted to descend the north slope to Boulder Field. MIS!! Vaile became ~ righthander pitcher, to Saginaw of the: were traded to the New York Yankees 1 In exchange for Ray I~rancls, south· huusted. KiE>ner kept on to Timberline House, Michigan-Ontario league oa option. STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS • • • paw pitcher, nod $8,000 In cash. where he found a rescue party. He led the way Foater·Milbum Co., Mf~r. Chem., Buffalo, N. \'. • • • Chick Thompson, with Kunsns City bark to Miss Voile, who was found dead. In the B!ll Cunningham, untll re('!'ntly out· meantime Sortlnnd had !Jecome lost from the res- on option from I'lttsbnr~h, has been stunning game for the Blues. fielder for the Boston Brnves, ha6 playtllg a cue party. Searching parties, recruited from Flstes • • • come to terms with Sacrumento. lie l'urk, did their !Jest In vnin. MiHs Ya!le's body Memphll'l bus releas!'d Jnfil'lrl!'r Phll hall be!'n a holdout since hclng sold wns recovered with difficulty. Sortland's body Tnnuer to Knoxville of the Sally by the Nutlonnl Lengne club. was n•>t founu nntll February 25, near Longs Peak • • • Inn. Kiener lost most of his fingers and toes from . '!'Cilgue. Knoxville is a Mernpl is farm. • • • Put Shea, plteher from :.;n n Fr, nristhe effects of freezing. '!'he rescue parties using I Tlm~'erline Honse n!'nrly froze to dent 1 In the J llarry Keef!'r, plteher. has been ob- t:'o, Pa<'lfic C'onst IP<lgu€', has heen ramsl.ur·J;lc olJ structure. An cd!'l'].lL.lte f;helter Is· 11\lnert on ortlon from the Bol:iton Red' signed hy !\like Kt>lly, mannger of the 'i'lneur •lis Am£'rlcan Assorlr.tlon lmpervtlnly needed, a;; wore th, n a thousand vlsl· ~ox by J >rse~· City of the Tntunation al leup e. dub Ill'>; n:;ceml Lont;::; Peak-by tl.e reg-ulnt• trailHe Owes His 40 Years each smnmer :md tlrer€' Is no other shelter. of Constant Good Health \\'Inter sports In the national pu.rks are lncreasf ·om ('hlnn an I lm ia. h 11 some of the Gloves for Summer lng in popularity, Hocky Mounta.n, un nil ~ear I to Beecham's Pills 1. tl·><t tea gt>wns u~ well. .l h s~ 111 f<'ashion uecrirs the c nan •ntul prr] si,t ol' n I mg rn; • r.f ri< 11 urn•" dt>, I park, had vis tors all winter ond its March pru· "I am 57 vean old and commeneeJ to be't troubl~d W<th conoc.patlon when I was g1·am nttract10d more thun 2,000 pnrtlc'pants and fritlv cuff and th(' sil.. lwnd coverin::s fll'tPniug at one si \(', c d •r1 users )f sixteen. thPm'scn·€'>; excel It n•ly to 1 ·roYici • ii'U!l spectutors. Mount Halnler hHd 'nG:trly 10,000 vlsl- I "In ISS+ I started taldns Beechatr,. Pi I > bark ,a•i't with lrr••c·.t It t•n·n 111- l othet remeJl:s having falled. I have not had t(Jrs durlng the winter, eag<:'r for "int( r sports. tl.e r\P~tred efEer>t>;. Tl e cuffs are elt· a sick day In all the -40 vcara." t: (' bottom Tt e ''nat fall> well helow Sequoia nnd,. General Grant nn•l Yo:semlte were b. ohler€'11. ,;lt,rred, p'pe1l rut!. ell !I'll the knee. f. Louis Loeffier, Roc:hestet. N.Y., ..,., en scraml•lerl. The ~;wrt r,lo\ l's nre pl pular. I'or FRLE SAMPLE-write glimp~!'S I • ALL WOR UT? AROUND THE BASES • • • ••• • I • DOAN'S PikcLS Use Cuticura Soap I And Ointment To Heal Sore Hands l: \ I A coming feature of the national parks Is their educational use, with the aid of nature illllles, museums and natural history lectures. Yosemite gees 11 good start with the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial museum. Its cost Is $70,000 and It wlll b€' opened this summer. ~everal of the other park1 have made modest beglnnjn&'&. a mo"t u•tiver:o;·lly wnrn ,, hen frock of the wenrcr I;; sleeveless. the New Apron Front& The new npron front:,; 11rP. v..ry sltiiUully handled In the new frocks :Kot onl; much of the fuvorite tea nnd 1ue frequently of a contrn~t!ug ..onsumed by l!:ngllsll society comes rna terinl• Chine&e Tea Gown B. F. AUen Co., 417 Canal Street, New York Buv from your drua:Kiat In ZS and soc boxee For conJnP4tion, biliOt.ts~s, .Jick he:adacM~ and other di&esti•e atlmmts <a~ Beecham's Pills |