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Show THE JORDAN JOURNAL. MIDVALE. UTAH George Washington University Girls' Hockey Tea1n Illinois Banker, Wife and Little Son Murdered Nation Building Many and Better Sohools Hundt·ed!'! of new public IIO!toolb,luses a1·e being built througl.o•lt the Unill'd States, snys u survey by the Indiana Limestone Quarrymen's association. "It Is surprising how many states have been caught In the wave of school-house hulldlng,'' says the sur~·e~·. "Tills should be a record year. The prnce~s of replacint-: uilap!dated stru••tures very lik!'ly will continue for at least another twelve months. "One fact st:mds out sharply. 'I'he one-room country SI'Jwoihonse Is deft. nltely passin!!. So a1·e the old threeroom shed~ of learning. State boards of ed•Icatlon r·eport u remarkahle re' diH·tion in the nwnher of sehoolhouses, 1 due to construction of consolidated sl'hools-, each of whlrh replaces several one-room shells. New scl1oolhouses ure modern anti soundly constructed. rn recent months trainloucls ' of stone h~tve been shipped from the I I The George Washington university girls' hockeT team Is credited with b\'lng one ot the fnoste~'>t playing u~gre~a tlons of clul.J wielders on the Atlantic coast, despite the fact that hockey is a new woman's sport at the Washington school. Tlte team, top row, left to right: )I!sses Bllz:tbeth :l!iles. Mar.v Lutz, Allee Graham, Lon!se Omwal,e, Allee Ha!n('s, Betty Brandenburg, El!zabeth Hastings, Jel'sie Booth, Ruth Jackson. Middle row: 1\Iae Hnntzberg-er, J,ou!~e DeBose, Mary Knapp, Leah Cute, VIvian noub, Alice Adams. Bottom row: Abbie Burlre, Helen ~!iller and El!zabeth DeKay. MOSTIL HAS BEEN Catcher's Bow ~s Run WITH SOX 5 YEARS Scored Proved Costly Frank Bancroft, late business manager of the Cincinnati Heds, while manager of the famous Provluence .rays, wns experimenting with a young- cntcher of no mean ability. While catching a game one day, the score a tie in the twelfth inning. th«.> ~·mmg catcher ran tar back to the right of the grantl stand and marle n pl1~noroenal cntch of a foul fly. 'fhe nutlltnce, naturally uppt·eciatin~ the _satch, began to applaud and shout for the young man. He at on<·c turned to 1he ~tand and, l'~nwylng his maslc autl glo'>e, made ~:<>vera! elaborate bows in appr<>cintion of their plautlits. rn the meantime the man on third base, !'le<>in~ him bowing and s<'raping to the nmlience, broke for home and won the game. On returning to the clubhouse after the game, Bancroft gaYe the young catcher a tongue lashing for noticing the audience and letting the man score. The young fellow, nervNlS and excited, admitted to Bancroft he was -a "little on'" In the play. "Yes, and you'll be further off tomorrow." The catcher left the club that night. Leading Base Stea1er Joined Comiskey's Team First in 1918. John Mof<tll of the White Sox, who led the American league In base steal· ing during the past season with a total of 81 steals, has just finished his fifth full season as a member of the Chicago club. He has never playPd with any other major league club, unu the only other professional team of which he has ever been a member is the Milwaukee club of the Amet·ieun association. • Mostll started Ills professional career ns a second baseman with the \Vhite Sox: In HllS. lie purticipat.eu in only ten games with the Chicago clqb that "'h!le there are one or two who have expressed thero~elves as not In favor of changing from the old system of determinln_g the length of a game by the stop watch to the number of plays, It Is Interesting to note that the spectators and coaches who were Jn attendance at the Brown-Boston game at Providence when the "play system" waf! glyen its first tryout. are loud In their prai~e of the experiment and faYor It· continnanl'e. Coach Charles L. Whelan liked It so much that he wnnts it adopted for future Boston university games. Like the mq_ 1 berlng of the players, 1t is going to"""tuke considerable time to show whetlter It will be universally adopted or not; but those who are advocating It and those who have seen it tried belle'>e that it will he a part of the rul<> of the game some day. Unusual Gridiron Names on "Big Ten" Roll Call Never were there so many warriors with unusual names playing football in the Big Ten as were announced this fall. D'Ambrosia Is the name of nn Illlnuis player, and then there is that famous Mkhlgan pair, Pucklewartz and Oosterhaan. And then come Urldil of Ohio State, .:i-Httenwallner and Greathouse of Illinois, Crofoot of W!Rconsin, Nydahl of Minnesota, Ho wig, Raffensperger and Krasuskl (){ ;,-a, Th reltall and l\-Ierkobrad of Purdue, Palmeroll of Michigan, Apltz of Chlcvgo, Dyldnsen, Salmi, Prucha and Zaiser of Indiana aad Bovik uud J{ulpp~ of Northwef<tern. urdue Is in Shape Now that the toot bull season Is m·er basket bnll bas heen taken -·~ und Is In full at Pnr<lu<>. Coach Ward Lam· bert rcp..,rts his rnen are In !'Jll('ndld shnpe. The photograph shows Georfje Spaulding, capt11'n and forI\ a rd. .. I I ljporfinY §Qui~sj, • • • Wh;1t do go! fers ami fishermen to lie about In the winter? I School llnd • • • ) I .. • .,'· <· Benefited by Visits of Parents ; We \\onder how mnny parents who fhould visit the public school teuchers of their cltil<lren do so? Not many, probnhly; perhnps becuu~e the schools Reports have It that Wulter .John.. are <·onsidet·ed so good today that pnrson i:; to purchase the Toledo Ameri- <'nts fePI such contacts are superftn· can A~sodation club. ous. Other parents feel that the teach· • • • .I e:-3 are :;o l!usy th11t to visit them Is After n man gets n look at himself, an imposition on their good nature. In Major's c:u·toous he feels like SHY- Stili <lthers are too bu~y themselves 1 lng, "Hello, brother," to Nick Altrock_ 1 to take time during the day to go to • • • I the school building and manifest n It Is n~snmed Bnbe nuth will devote personal interest In their children'~ part of the winter to looking over the Important "ork. Those who follow literature he sig-ned tluring the season. the old-fashioned course nnd visit their • •• • chlldt·en's rooms in school at least The nora! nnd Anelent Club of St. 1 once or twice during a semester are Andrews, Scotland, has vetoed adop- j richly repaid for the effort. They u:;;utlon of the stnndard American golf ally come away with a deeper res11ect ball. tor the lndiY!rlunl teachet• and for the • Institution; und more often than not The Minneapolis American Assocla· they learn useful facts about the terntlon club w1ll return to San Antonio, remroent, aptitude and personality of Texas, for their spring training next their own child which enableR them year. to act as parents mor·e Intelligently. • • • The oldest rowing organization In School visiting Is bene~cla\ all around. the United Stutes Is the Atalanta Boat The community needs nwre of ft.club of New York. The club was South Bend 'I'ribune. formed In 1848. Boston unci Chl<·ago have IJeen members of the National lengue since 1876. ~ "• • • • I l'uradise vulley, 5,500 feet up tlte side of Mt. Rainier, will be kept open this winte r for snow and Ice ~;ports, according to an announcement by th e national park service. Visitors will have to enter the second or third story windows of Paradise Inn to get a rl'ommodations, as the famous hotel wilt be burled under fifty or .-cty feet of snow, but once Inside they w!ll find warm rooms, electric lights and good food. PICKED BY For Graves of Unknown Soldiers Fonrteen million Amerlcao families are home owners today, a .,urvey by the Indiana Limestone Quurymen's association shows. "America, perhaps rlghtful!y tagged the most extra vagnnt natior. In the world, spends in one year the colossal ~ 8Uil1 of n<>arly $~,000.000.000 t<Jr automobnes. rts tobacco hill runs almost 1 as ttlgh, while candy, cakes a ltd Ice b cream and the like consume another $2,000,000,000. Yet \Ylth all this seemIng disregard for tile future the great 1 enterprise of homemaking ls by no means oYerlooked. Hesidential bulldlng belng upproxl· mutely no pPr cent of tile year's est!· 1 ~4 mated $6,000,000.000 construction •pro- , t~ grum, homemaking I!'! easily the big· f,~j gest business of the country. t ·j !r '.. "ZIGGI~" I • • • · Hamilton college and Colgate will resume football relations In 1!)~6. after a lapse of 16 years, It has been announced from Ilnmllton. ..... f:! r1 • • • One ot the old-time football series w111 not be renewed next fall as Williams college will meet Unh-~·sity of Pennsylvania Instead of Columbia. • • • I How far would college football hnve gone if it had been mismanaged as professional wrestling and fighting have been? The answer Is, Not far. * 1 Home Owners Increase and Pittsburgh In the world ~et·les sixteen were formerly of the Southern association. • I • Ot the fifty players who represented 1 • Pitcher O'Neil, rlght·hander of the Salt Lake club of the Pacific Coast league, dropped In on Doc Knight nt Rochester, N. Y., to have his wing worked on. Duty of Owning Home !· •' ,.:·, ! Every roan Is morally obligated to f;, provide shelter for his own. The WN1d 'i cannot furnish it free-man Is not do' The football team ot the Collej::e of Ing his duty as a hushand, pnrent or !'~-·~. the City of New York went through citizen, unless he turnlshe~. the moat ~- j << t11e entire season of 1922 without a <'omfortable shelter his Income wlll H rightly permit. regular captain, an acting captain be~:~ Man Is In rlebt whether he owns or Ing appointed for each game. ,,~ ij~~~~·~~~~t t. • • • rent~ hy a monthly promlroe to pay. 01> 2 · Haskell Indians, who pitch their Tf hy some plan the rent money can l:von 1,68~ white stone markers over the last resting places of unknown tents at Lawrence, Kan., on the few be applied to conserve all the advanof renting and protect one from Amencnn soldter dead in Frnnce the United States government wlll chisel occasions they s,re home, will create ta"es " a footiJall record in the trunsportatlon , nil the disadvantnges of f<ame and In thi~ legend: "Here rests In. honored glory an American soldier known but to field this searon. ~:heir schedule take. ~ the end Insure the owner>:hlp of the j God." For graves of Chrlsttan.s the cross will be used, and for those of Jews property such a proposition should he tlte "Star of David" design. them 17,000 miles hy rail. i • • • I I I favorably cons!tlered for Its two-fold advantuges. • Captain Billy Burch Spruce Up, Clean Up . J I Lebanon Troops Relieved by French II' I' LIJ(e a je wei ~xpert IJlcklng out a .• l!awless pearl from a heap of imlta1 tlon ones, Florence Z!egfeld, "Glorl1 tier" of the Arnerlcltn girl, lighted I on the blond beautiful person of a otm Boston' mlsl! Bett Lee Coo er Y hg t d ed 1 ' Ty t t P .' as s e r"U g a ong remon s ree •• 1 It did not talre long to persuade her t t lth "ZI 1 ,, 1t0 8 i I gn a con rae w gg e. I -------------------------------- 1 If eve1·y resident of the city would talre the proper cnre of hi~< premise~<, ! there woul<ll)'t be any e~'esore~ left- • and nothing left to rriticlze, the Hushville (Ind ) nepubllcnn remarks. rt doesn't r·equire very mul'h time and 1 expense to f<et out some shruhhery and plant flowers nnd hnl'lhe~ and keep the lawns well trlmmetl. We can't live for<'ver, but \\'e <'fill enjoy life more while \\·e 11re here If we make \ltll' surro tllHiing~ as pleasant as poflsible. non't shru;.r your ;;ltnuluers and complain that it's "too much of a task." for it isn't. :\"othing is too hlg a task for the man who makes up hl~ mind to do it. Father of Two Children Is Freshman Grid Star One of the Rtars of the Unh·e1·~ity of Penns~· I\'llnia freshmen football team this season Is Rev. Charles II. Urhnn, pastor ot Gra<'e EYan~elical church, I'hllndelphia. (;rhan, who has plared taekle ln all the frc<:hmen games, Is 1he father of two ehlldrc•n a girl eight years old, and a lHJy, four: Coac·hes Clark Craig und Frank Dewhirqt said that Urhan i" one or the bo>st linemen they haYe seen at the university In years. He iR six feet one Inch tn hei~-:ht and weighs 102 pound~. Dewhirst said If Urban turn!! out for the \'arstty next fall he Is almost sure to make the team. Urban Intends to do so. ..•. • • wa~hlngton year and he had a hatttnf aYerage ot .27S. At the start of the season of 1910 he was sent to the Milwaukee club un<ler an optional agreement. He was used in the outfield a~ well as at second base by the Milwaukee team that year. He took part in u total oi' 132 game::~ anrl batted .2G8. He remalned with the 1\Illwaul,ee team durIng all of the following season. He also played second base an<1 in the outfield during that campaign. lie participated in 155 games that year and batted fer a percen~age of .318. At the end of the season of 1!)20 :lfostil was recalled by the White Sox and he has remained with them ever since. Since rejoining that team he has played only In the outfield. He particip».ted In 100 games in 1921 and batted .301. In the following season he took part In 132 contests antl had a batting average of .304. In 1923 he participated In li'\3 games and had a batting average of .2Vl .w JS)U .lln.£tll partlclpa~ed In 118 games and batted .325, the highest of his entire major league rareer. This year he played tn 153 contests and had a batting average of .ZW. Max Carey of the Pirates, who led the ba~e stealers of the Na:lonal league dm·ing the past sea~on, hns now finished his fifteenth sncces:;lve season ns a member of the Pitt!'!burgh (·lub. He star~erl his professional career with tile South Bend team of the Central league in HJO!). Late In Hl10 Cnrey was ohtalned hy the Pirate!! and he has been a member of the Pittsburgh club ever since that time. Chance for Winter Sports on Mt. Rainier ! • • • John Mostll. Berlfurd-Biomnln~oo dlstrictforsu~ l ~~~-------------------------------------------~ use." 'l'homas .J. Vernia. rr<>~ident of the association. ~ays euucational building lta:s accounted for nearly ~;; per cent of the nation's enormous ronstructlon 'l'wenty-two cities In Ohio have b<>x:total in rc•·ent months, while $225,· ing comm isdons. OOO,O(l() was ~pent last yf'nr In replacI Yale is planning to send a rowing Ing antirJuated school structure--S. crew In the 1!l2S Olympi<:s. • Determining Length of ... Game by the Stop Watch Mystery surrounds the murder, at their home near Batavia, Ill., of Henry W. Jeske, banker and farmer, hl.s wife, Eva, and their six-year-old son Halph. They were slain as they returned home In their automobile and the murderers fled In the car, which was found three miles a'vay. The house was ransacked but not robbed. The Illustration show1 the victims and their residence. r HIS LIFE THREATENED I• Couldn't Convince Jury They met for the first time ror some months. I Photo;::mplt shows Capt. Billy Burch, the renter of the New 'fork American hocJ.ey team, as he a[lpe:ll'N in 1 liD al'tlon rose, on the rink wl<ich is the srenp of tile dally practice or his months." team. His team opened ttt l'ew York I "Really? 'Yhat was wrongr• "Nothing, really, only the at the new ll.udison Square gnrdcn. wouldn't believe It I" I II Arrest Jn Kenosha, Wis., of an nl· I.leged blackmailer has brought out the juf7 fact that Charles W. Nash, multt· mllllonalre president of the Nash Joseph Kanaun, commander of the Christian volunteers In Lebanon Motor company, bas recently recelvtd (wearing cap), \\ utchl~r, entr~ of the French regulars who relieved his troops three Black Hand letters demandlnl atter their buttles with the Drusee. $10,000 from him ~~ pain ot death., |