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Show 626. the Gospel of Efficiency . . . , p. 189. (471) William Kent and John Muir: see Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind, p. 173. (472) "should be reserved . . .": "The National Parks and Forest Reservations," p. 567. (473) "Gold stings . . .": "The National Parks and Forest Reservations," p. 563. (473) "All of our precious mountains . . .": "The National Parks and Forest Reservations," p. 566. (474) "Muir, Johnson, and their colleagues . . .": Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind, p. 181. (475) "Those Western Corporations . . .": Johnson Papers, June 18, 1897; Hadley, p. 610. (476) Timber and Stone Act: Conservation in the United States . . . , ed. Frank E. Smith, pp. 602-09. (476) "it costs about as much . . .": ONP, p. 372. (476) "Come! Travel our way . . .": ONP, p. 385. (476) " . . . timber thieves of the Western class . . .": ONP, p. 370. (477) "Even in Congress . . .": ONP, p. 389. (4 77) The shake maker: ONP, p. 384. NOTES FOR CHAPTER XI: NATIONAL PARKS (4 79) Muir's trip in 1895 is described in Shirley Sargent, Theodore Parker Lukens . . . , pp. 27-30; and in JoM, |