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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH , Newo Notes j; ! ! It a r riviUgo A REAL BANQUET tt dn-- n, 1h day arrived and Hr and Mm Everglade Kite art kitting on a h khruli to a swamp when gr Anter M very talL It wak In lea. Mr, and Mm Everglade Kite w in color of Date, toil n I heir wing t color w it dmlci and on theli t lull wt.hb wen itpied with whit j Their hilt wet trry thin and long ! and at th end they wen hooked, a J Hitt I the) looked trry different from other Ilird Their t ill and clawa wee Mark ! and ilo-l- r fret wen of a beautiful ang color, Tlu-l- r eye had re-- ring around the h they thought wer trry will, pupil, h i- 1 flii. children cr all shade , ,rwn. Inti, yellow and whit. "I .ild Mr. Everglade Kilt Ihli-k,- " t lo her roiiOn. "Ihnl w littv Ih tliocmnlera In Ih worfil" I agree wliti yu. my dear," said lx-- SALT LAKE It it estimated Hut the moubteiQ stream of l'tW r Hu. develop 1,17.; fcoreepower, one troth of 1111)1 L bees dci rlipcd to dal, UTAH Oae fifth of ike retire of Utah I underlaid unh fos), and Ike recoverable amount tntr4 to l about JX.Iil wm.tK'U with aa addition) SUbodboOft-ttrn rt ai! lira, Everglade Kha UafiquH anj had la going to gif tiled llarlf relation Id ro. In III following day and to bring their rt.tl Th In to LU UTAH --AX MARY GRAHAM IK Mr, j j ' 1 f fUidH at difficult lo mine, 04 elute dep th l tum kor am rrr-rulik 0 to 400 fct, nil of frtm ex', of an tret of lo? ejet.ro DUCHESNE Cietab Mr ful milrt lojlitttc n oil c.r.n-t.- i of ;i e, 111 -t her mtndn. "We really Ihlt.k o. too," nld Mr f ciirN, we father rwnnol Kile. BRIGHAM CITY " f- -w WMfcie i.ur lime ililnkln a lx ail klua-a- , hill we mut admit Ihnt we dn our range and anyar beet were ciecl 4-- y benefited In Roxehler cai:..' or ,.io feet In Juxl h am way llinl you do." Funday rainstorm. The storm began They were all very proud of llieir Saturday night and ctnHnurd until Monday morning and wat rcneral in orange feel, hv to khlne their ehoes and mak llieir own Ibla accilon. Damage to hay in tbo "Have you a nice hush your huila. Sira. Everglade Kite asked her field wit alight by ferstin of the abort Much a program of work and aurh irlc dl duration of the aiorm. cousin. It Is lovely," said the cousin "and dplln aa to conduit soon prove whether or not GARLAND Factory strert, ono ol lit cadet has "real aluff' In hint If h hasnt, H noon I expect lo lay (wo bcnultful the main atrreta of CarLad, ml part hi scholarship full I low par, and If, at prewldie eggs." of Ihe atate highway, la r.ovr txrn up 'i "How very, very nice," aald Mr. and la being newly graded and trrated viously tu tid. hr keep i h rule, out he ! Neither birth, family. Influence nor wcnllb Everglade Kite. "I do bet lev will with a heavy coat of oil. Traffic count at Went I'olnt. do exactly the same thing." through Garland has been rapld'y InThey limited some more, and Mr Of course, to ihe average American, youth. II creasing tbo last few yenr with tl.a would seem easy lo "lienf lie game" and 'o cover Everglade Kile showed the father growing tourist traffic and the Increasup hit rule breaking, so Unit he would md suffer ing population la th surrounding the penalty for It But at West I'olnt "healing country. the game" la not a popular xrt and here Is Mr-Th- ree ci-- s of word rcr where Ihe "All Right comes in. from the Anderson hipped recently 1 SiipjMVHe. fur Inainnce, that Ihe cadet leave Ills b.ucrs herd, the Andrew (i.isten-se- n mom, the barracks or Ihe post, and In dilng so he and Orval and Ben Chriktensen meets a "Inc" (a tad leal officer). If llie lac herds, the Evart Jensen, J. 0. Lamm Inquire, "nil right?" nnd Ihe rndet replies "all and O. C. Doke herds to tho Thomas right I" It most decidedly 13 all right. Mini It lo Woistenholmo & Sans company, Inc., tay, these two word are a complete explanation of Philadelphia. Twenty cents a pound of his action, that n's leaving nis room. Hie Imr was advanced to the growers, with a rack, or the post Is not an Infraction of Hie rule contract that the word wiil not be For, gay Ihe rules. "an 'all right,' Involves Hie pur definitely sold until the market setpose of a visit, a well as the (dace. No cm Id may tles. report 'all right when lie Is going anywhere 'or un COALVILLE Train service over unauthorized purixise And here Is another and new line of the tnlon Pacific the even finer Interpretation of Ihe rule. If a cadet around Echo reservoir was started reIs naked all right T' his answer should refer to (lie when forces of the railroad comcently time (hat the question was asked nnd not to the pany began tearing up of tho old line Had a Beaut.ful Tima. moment that the answer was given." So you see through the reservoir bed. The bea cndel's action which Is not all right one minute birds all around the swamp and the ginning of service orer this line is the he all next may apparently right the minute, hut niun.v tine markets they had in which culmination of about IS months' work he can not take advantage of the apparent comto do llieir shopping. on the part of the Utah Const ruction with rules the within that short space pliance The children played about and had company and the Union Pacific comof time, for the code of honor of West I'olnt auys a beautiful time and soon .Mrs. Ever pany, who contracted for the construc" "no glade Kite called to every one to tion ot the new line as a part ot the Another of th guiding principles of the cadet, come to the banquet. construction program of the Echo dam ns set forth In the "ITebes Bible Is this: "Qtiib It vvas served In a hush which was and reservoir. orIn bllng, evasive statements, or technicalities almost completely surrounded hy tall A rough estimate FARMINGTON der to shield guilt o. defeut the ends of justice grass. ot the damage done Sunday afternoon will not he tolerated. The code of the soldier deMrs. Everglade Kite was very fond by the wind, rain and hall that swept mands courageous and fearless n..nesty In selling of style, so she gave all the birds lit forth the truth, regardless of consequences." So tie napkins mnde nnt of green leaves over Davis county showed $1G0,000, as follows Farm crops, cherries, $12,000; when the cadet answers all right" It means Just and they had plates of flat stones apricots, $3000; peaches, $7000; rmall exnctly that and not a whit less If the thing he which were very small and dainty tomatoes, $5000; $25,000; onions, fruit, Is doing when that Inquiry Is mnde Is not ull right They were given knives nnd forks then he says nothing and accepts the demerit of little twigs In case any of the food $10,000; peas, $15,000; hay, $3000; grain, $5000, making a total of $87, , which he has earned. For cadets do not tnuke was too much to eat without eutting 000. Damage lo buildings, etc., small exruses. Explanations citing exrenuating circumIt up. though the birds knew tlmt It stances or adequate reasons for failure In the vvas easier for them to use Iheir buildings, $13,000; public buildings, Bill performance of duty may he si hinitted. honked bills than any knives and $15,000; telephone lines, $10,000, and barns, $35,000, a total of $73,000, mak"Offenders of the code of honor are never granted forks. Immunity." Still It did make a very fine appear ing a grand total of $160,000. And those rules nnd this code of honor npply tng banquet. SALT LAKE Sheep inspected durto all from the lowliest plehe to the most outFor their first course they had In ing the month of May as reported to standing member of the first class. There Is a sect soup, and nil the mother rela tha state board of agriculture by Thos. rather widespread popular belief tlmt In most of tions said it was delicious. Redmond, state sheep inspector, numour educational Institutions athletic stars can bered 194,053, of which 19,805 were Of course they asked Mrs. Ever "get by with anything" But that distinctly is not glade Kite how she mnde It and the classed as exposed ar-- 19,052 vro true at West Point. Take t lie case of Cadet Cagle fathers asked Mr. Everglade Kite dipped to eradicate sctjies. Of tho Red Cagle, as you probably have heard of where he got such Infected sheep, 1400 were infected with very fine insects. him, the outstanding hackfield star of the foot-bnl- l The children didnt ask any ques- scabies. The larger number of exteam and next years captain. Last winter tions. They just ate and enjoyed It posed sheep came from Grand county. Cagle obtained n leave of absence which he spent thoroughly. In San Juan county 14,000 exposed in New York city. When he returned to the mad Next they had snake salad, which sheep were dipped. Sheep shearing emy he was late, through no especial fault of his. of course, sounds quite awful to us, has been completed, according to the by a very short time. But was this breach of but then we think worms are pretty report. In the central and southern rules overlooked In the case of this great footdreadful and yet we know how rohirs parts of the state. ball star? It most emphatically was not For the and other birds love them. VERNAL Trains are now running next month "Red Cagle vvas doing 22 hours of For dessert they had herry pudding from Mack, Colo., to Watson, Utah, punishment tour," 22 extra hours marching at with insect sauce, and they had fine over the Uintah Railway companys attention on the campus. If you will march for an swamp water to drink. tracks. Monday, for the first time in hour at attentiou you will soon appreciate that They thought it was quite the best several weeks, the company success22 hours In a month, or nearly an hour a day drink they ever had. fully overcame the landslide that tore extra, Is no Joke nnd least of ail would if seem And after they had finished Mrs a half mile of track between out so If you were doing it for what might seem to he Everglade Kite passed around little and Baxter's Pass and covered a very unimportant reason. Tlfink hack over the acorn cups filled with 200 feet of rock and dirt No grass with extract, It number of times you have been late to an apwhich took the place of coffee, and was experienced In crossing difficulty pointment and offered as an excuse for your tardi which was made out of the Juice of the reconstructed track, but no other ness an airy Sorry, old fellow !" and then see the long grasses near Mrs. Everglade trains were run for several days until how you would feel if you hud to pay for it the Kites home. the new fills several hundred feet way Red" Cagle did for his tardiness. So one and all said It was certainly had settled sufficiently to make deep, But remember that discipline at the military a real banquet. the road entirely safe. academy comes ahead of anything else. Four UTAH While years of such discipline, of such practice, in many sections of What It Look Like hy the young nmn who are enrolled Utah were attempting Monday to rethere, by their training in scrupulous regard for cover from the sudden storm disaster duty, hy their doing the right thing because it of Sunday, Idaho rejoiced over a heavy is the right thing, according to the code of honor rainfall which promised to be of incannot but result in making men of high physical calculable value to the crops of the and mental standard. G 1 of dollars cf r!to. ' v'u-arThose four years have brought a knowledge to and damage buildings property was thumb with a hrmmer. and physique thut couldn't very well be obtained from the stricken area in repoued any other place; have given that insight Into men Utah, while the produce and fruit of A Teaer that few colleges give; have formed and molded the unfortunate sections suffered conIs le It to take away one syla character that neither knows nor shields crime possi The heavy winds which or deceit; have breathed into it that spirit of the lable from a vyord of five syllables and siderably. caused the damage in Utah were no Is Is What left the word? syllable corps exemplified hy Its motto: Duty, Honor, Answer: The word of five syllables ibsent In Idaho, which accounted fT And that Is why the term officer Country." the difference in results from the and gentleman." when applied to a West Pointer is monosyllable." Take away the first rtorms means exactly that I (j liable mo" and nosy liable remains. niT fr dur-Mi- SCOTT WATSON By ELMO N JINK 13 yuna "itio gallicml In the llie I'liltrtl FImIi ntvn c) iniuiftiiim Mi liury acuih'tuy mi ttml liter 10 relm, N. ceive from the hnr.d of of llie ts ieinr of out anil MaJ Hen. Wllll.tm It. Fmlih, l of llie academy, their Ji'li'iiip of graduation. And thereby wu atltletl to lit rtill of llie I idled State army llie name ( i.f fltt-rand gentlemen." Mark lliut phrns well, fur It In more me.m ng I lion a (ears from a ciimihI rending of It. an I a hut Dial meuii Inf la you will come to untleolaml a III lie further alone. (n July I there will arrive at the academy worn 400 young men who come from every part of th United Flutes and from every level of the dlrenvlllod aoelely which charm terlze auih a democracy aa the United States of A merle. For these newcomers are the raw inalerlal from which the office ra and gentlemen" of four yeara lienee are made, (hiring the two months Immediately following I lair admission to llie academy they will sM'iid In an Intensive mlllinry training before they are officially accepted Into the Unlied States corps of cmlets This period, the moat rigid and exacting of the entire four years at West I'olnt, will be spent under a group of selected In atructors from the first dnss, known as ihe "Beast Detail," supervised hy officers if the tnetleul de partment of the academy. For these newcomers In kaydet slung," are now Ihe "beasts " And It Is not until Ihe termination of "beast barracks," followed by a hike of abiut a weeks dural Ion. that these members, now known as "plehes." are absorbed Into the corps ns the fourth class and take op their new academic duties the first week In September. The motto of the United States Military aond emy Is Duly, Honor, Country. During the preliminary training of Ihe newcomers lids summer one of the first things they will lenrn Is the renl meaning hack of thnt motto. Here Is that meaning as It Is Interpreted In 'Hug'le Notes," the little handbook which the "knvdets" cull the Plebes Bible." 11I3 ), tmk3r- ikuiIWW - eire-wltlitlh- e Ptr umt-iltlelite- a Trophy "Point In-ti- Th motto of the corps, the standard by which very cadet regulatca his personal life Is "Duty, Honor, Country. Country" needs no definition; Our Country, rlsht or wrong" Is the patriot's slogan throughout the nation. But the standards of Duty" and "Honor" at West Point are distinctive and rigid; and because. In civilian life, the general attitude as to these two principles from time to time and from place to place, the following pages are devoted In great part to a definition of the attitude of the corps In matters of duty and honor: lm Graduates of West Tolnt have always Inspired and set the standard of duty In the army. That they have been able to do bo. Is due entirely to the Inculcation of a keen sense of duty and to the faithful, conscientious and cheerful performance of every task Imposed upon them while at the academy. Only he who has acquired the habit of discipline. of duty, and of lustlce can be trusted to act aa a leader in a profession which deals with the lives of men Performance of one's duty Implies far more than mere obedience to the letter of the law. In othei walks of life, technicalities and evasive tactics are condoned and even lauded as an Indication ot cleverness. In the army where the lives are the price of failure there are no technicalities and an order Is given, a statement received at Its face value. When It becomes a soldier's duty to ole an order. It also becomes his duty to look beneath the surface of that order for Its spir.it, and In so doing to put his whole being Into Its' performance. A fearless readiness to assume responsibility and the determination to do, not just the Job. but the whole and ihe best job are what Is xpected of a West Pointer. Every cadet Is expected to make It his Individ ual and personal obligation to maintain the highest possible standard of duty and to do everything In hia power to discountenance and discourage any act or spirit which might place a premium on th nonperformance of one's duty. HO OK Honcr Is the most cherished principle of life; It Is the beacon which guides every one during their stay at the military academy and during the career of later life. The fundamental principles of honor, their application to specific acts and problems, and th methods of administering and enforcing thess principles and applications, have long been deaig-hate- d by the general term, the "Honor System" Almost all educational institutions have honor systems, vsrying in severity, efficiency and effectiveness honor systems ty which I a greater or teas degree, students cousidri themselves bound snd which exert a varying degree of Influence on of lives the th several institutions At the peak of the varying scale stand Ihe honor system of tl.e corps, representing the best, ths most steudfastiy n upheld, the most prat Ileal slid, at once, ideal of honor in the world. The basic principles of ths honor system are; no lying, no cheating, no Now ull of this miijr Mound very much like l be type of thing tlmt you will mid in miy of Ihe student lumdtMMikH, which are lvon to members of the freshmen clus.-- t In uny educutionul Institution In the United Slates. And to the cynical-mliulfwho Imve observed the break down ot honor systems In various Instil ullous, this statement from "Bugle Notes" may meait nothing more thun a similar statement in other such handbooks. But here lies the UilTerenee: At West i'olnt honor Is a living reality. (Jo there, as did the writer of this article, and you will quickly realize thut fact. It Is not because the cadets go about their business with a conscious air of virtue; it Is not that they parade the fact that their honor is to them the dearest of all things; it Is not that there Is a visible evidence of a rigid adherence to a code of honor set forth In formal phrases and exemplified hy apparent effort. But It Is a part of their every day ' fe nml ns such It finds Its phrasing In a single expiesslve colloquialism. For the heart and soul and watchword of the West Iolnt code of honor is expressed in Just two words All Right." Cadet life at West I'olnt Is one of rigid discipline, hedged about hy many restrictions. The cadet has a certain time for doing a cerluin tiling, he Is supposed to he In certain places for certain If tie is not In those duties at certain times places or performing those duties he will receive demerits, those black marks for which he must make amends, usually hy doing punishment tour," which means that he must simml some of the extra time thut he would ordinarily have for leisure marching at attention on the campus. Enough demerits received for Infraction of the rules of the academy m. y lead to his expulsion. Cadet life Is one of Spartan simplicity. Cadets are not allowed to have or receive money; they cannot smoke except In their own rooms; they cannot leave the reservation except at stated times. Christmas leave is only Issued a year and a half after the cadet first enters In addition to the four daily dPllls In Infantry field artillery, cavalry and coast artillery lesson must he learned: mathematics, from simp'e alge bra through the latest wrinkle. In calculus and least squares; philosophy, chemistry, electricity, French and Spanish. English ami history. Cadet rooms must he swept out and cleaned hy the cadets themselves four time daily and they eye-ter- half-truth- DUTY, HONOR, COUNTRY I West Point, thy Duty Is to me As from the Vestal Hearth a flame X Thats in this land and oer the sea X Through all the decades still the same. More precious tar than tame. West Point Honor Is to me $ As straight thyfrom heavn Ihe light of life; To keep me firmly knit to the. True to my best in peace or strife. 5 I guard it as my life. I I West Point. Our Country Is to me beloved and fair. The Mother-BanWhose dear vales long have sheltered me. I am Whose duties proud to share. Whose uniform I wear. James E. Briggs, 'IS d. t ! I y I X X I y i 71 barrel. The ekule ompv 47 tUoe t f oil per i n. PROVO Tbo recent Morin I a been a boon lo fruit and other crept !u l ;k s I county. While tome of th be ttrauberrle viik covrrej nuy MvmuJ. little fruit will be be greatly bent St 4 by the crop Mortn, crptcUliy the hay, pram, t toe and truck garden crop, PAROWAN Fro.t fow4 clty In the make of Runday'a wind i!vin In Iarowen, and a similar rud o vlaited the town Monday n'gbt Tues;ml day tu more pleasant. The FunJay did considerable dsmaje, blow. Inc down tree and breakinc a larro plate (last window in a loc:. factory. billion -., Qraduation : half-truths.- 1 At-ch- self-restrai- fs V |