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Show FRIDAY, NOVEMBER THE SUN, PRICE, 21, 1021 FRIDAY. UTAH-EVE- RY PAGE SEVEN to hay that farm eenaese fsrunrs had bean furnlshiiig nillk filled with typliuld germs to tlir in ills ('lilted States Ilia local stu-rieiit- M Dollar For Dollar Quality NuvnI loaned Ongrrs tliu navy 3uu,U00 with which to buy and That equip that farm. money wasn't given. It was loirntd. Tlie total eoat u waa fund plus running Merchandise Included In that loan. Tlint farm In today one of the I met In the United R hue 825 of the Hinton. t row you ever saw, profit able, pedigreed, licit li v. of which more t lut ii -- on ore filwhva freeh. It liu.--i in Id buck fSO.OuO of il: l i'T.iweil money. It I..-- s t:i;ii.iiuii more ready to pay i.a k If I'onurvH And :t Is gittlng mi'l heiti-- In every I'i'ir il iv " ' t hi i i.in pr i.il ex- '''I II. him y cnulil h-- That is what you are assured of if you get the habit of making one of these stores your trading place. And, we are sure you will get the habit if you make a few purchases. Our winter stocks are complete. That we have a good basis upon which to make this statement a visit and inspection of what we have to offer for winter wear und for the home will convince you. In our collection of warm underwear you will find the best values that were ever offered. Sturdy shoes with wear built into them may be had at remarkably low prices. They'll stand the test of winter weather. Everything to eat, wear and use. t'i. 'fy 11 l - I'll ..oil. l I't l.c fhuMglit I.p'y liny til trot tio.. 11 il ;''i II .1 i r.--- J; '111- II. - J ' I I M WUH ! I'll.l 'Si'S- - liii'l r.!l- - WASATCH - STORE CO. Winter Qaarten, Clear Creek, Cattle Gate end Bnnnyiide. Di-He- at Coal la neat Appreciated Wliere Moat Used. DR. SANFORD BALLINGER iH-ntl- st Service. Office, Second Floor Silvagnl Building PRICE, UTAH. X-R- ay Carbon Fuel Company Mines At Rains, Carbon County, Utah Miners and Shippers of Lump, Nut, Slack and Assorted Sizes of COAL Of the Very Highest Grades Best For Furnaces, Household and Other Uses. General Offices, Clift Bldg., Salt Lake City. L F. RAINS President and General Mgr. Bi-He- at la Beat Appreciated When Moat Vied. Coal BRAFFET & PATTERSON Lawyers Tavern Building, South Eighth PRICE, UTAH OLIVER K. CLAY Attorney At Law St Suita 105, The Electric Building. PRICE, UTAH. L. A. McGEE Attorney At Law Room 5 and 6, Silvagnl Bldg. PRICE, UTAH. H. L. PRATT Attorney At Law Suita 105, The Electric Building. PRICE, UTAH HENRY RUGGERI Attorney At Law Office at the County Courthouse, PRICE, UTAH. B.W. DALTON Attorney At Law at the County Courthouse, Office PRICE, UTAH. F. WINTERS Physician and Surgeon Office, Carbon Hospital. Phone Id Proprietor Carbon HonpltaL PRICE, UTAH DR. W. George j. constantin! At Law Attorney PRICE AGENCY COMPANY Suita II, Silvagnl Bldg., Formerly Occupied By Price A Fouts. PRICE, UTAH FERDINAND ERICKSEN Attorney At Law Geo. E. Nelms 717 Judge Building, BALT LAKE CITT, UTAH. Manager CANNON ft FETZER Architects 312 Electric Building Price, Utah Insurance Service That Serves Accounting and Auditing Real Estate 506-50- Templeton Building. 8 SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Members of American Institute of Archltcta. A. KOPF STUDIO High-Gra- de Portraits and En- largements. Second Floor Price Commercial and Savings Bank PRICE, UTAH jTe. FLYNN Uoenaed Undertaker and Embalmer Telephone II. PRICE, UTAH. Ambulance Service Doctors get very little from people WALLACE ft HARMON Undertakers and Lice need Embahnari PROFESSIONAL Fitzgerald Block, Id! West Main Street Office Phone 158. Rea Phone 116m PRICE, UTAH ho whistle while they work. CHARLES RUGGERL JR M. D. Physician and Surgeon Offlea Phone SI Residence 100m. SUvagnl Uldg.( Price, Utah. DR. E. BERTOT FAINT SHOP Aato and Homo Painting. Signs. 661 Main R.M. JONES Street Phone IIS. PRICE, UTA1L and Surgeon UTAH CONCRETE ft STUCCO CO Engineers and Contractors istetrics and Diseases of Children. Offlco, Silvugni Block, Price, Utah. 715 West Seventh South Street Malt Lake City. Utah. DR. J. A. JUDY Phone Waanrth 16X6. Salt Lake City or 267m. Price. Utah. Plijrak'lnn and Surgeon Phjrttk-la- Efice Telephone 163w. Trice Commercial and Saving Hank Bldg., Trice, Utah. DR.H.B. GOETZHAN iHlltlMt Ray Work and Extraction. The Price lommercial Uunk'Hldg., Price, Utah. DR. J.W. HAMMOND Licensed Abstractor of Titles Abstracts of title furnlahed to any piece or tract In Eastern Utah. Fire Insurance written in the heat companies ileal eatata, lonilR. etc. Second floor ol silvagnl Bldg.. Price, Utah. LS. EVANS Dentist The Electric Bldg., Price, Utah. DR. GLENN WILLIAM RICHARDS Dentist Nitrous Nurse la Attendance. Office, Rooms 302-- S. For Dray Work or Transportation to Anyplace, at any time, Call B. 117-- F. McINTIRES Dodge Can. y, Oxide and Oxygen. Miles Building. Office, Tel. 201. Use. 204w. PRICE, UTAH gn Wesley Mel.. Hinrui the hitler an man who had Just been graduated from the academy ns nn honor man inaugurated a campaign to get enlisted men of officer cn liber. The Incoming elans has 70 eiilleied men in It. AiUohJett lesson of what can he done In this way Is the experience of George Nelson Itoblllard. He enlisted In the navy In 1010. He wus Bent to the Oklahoma as an apprentice seuinun and went through the regular routine for enlisted tneu. In So far as the atatiatica go on winter sports no woman has frozen to death wearing silk boat and cutout alippera. Jfrt&ZCSZZf&f&Sr' JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN d OUHTLESM this navy song waa warranted In the days when It wna written. Rut Its old stuff now. The United States Naval academy at Annapolis, Mil., Cradle of the Navy," doesnt seem to he such an awful bad sort of place. And It's a fair guess that the who 1,000 undergraduate midshipmen are off in four battleships for a three-month- s' practice cruise In European waters will not he In continuous need of pity. It wns back In the old days before the Civil war that the middies used to cruise around on Chesapeake hay. It was In the early Fifties that the practice cruises were begun. The first cruising middles navigated C'hesaiienke bay on the John Hancock and finished up on the sloop of war Preble off the coast of Maine. During the Civil . war the middles got tlielr practice on Union ships searching for Confederate privateers. One of the Inter practice ships was the famous old sailing frigate Constellation, built In 179$, which took a summer cruise every jeu r from 1871 to 1N!C. in the period of Articrlcun naval decadence ufter the Civil war the middles got their practice on almost any old kind of hull tbut would flout. At that their lot was happy compared with that of the middles of the still older days. Originally a midshipman was a sort of messenger hoy on a ship of war to run errands for the o Ulcers. The old sea dogs of early days did not believe In educating these embryo admirals and gave them few By time-honore- advantage!. In the American navy of a hundred years ago the middies were so much to be pitied that they came to be a scandal. They were a penniless, a knocked a bout, and ragged lot llerea what usually happened when one of our warships touched at a foreign port The middles took ashore with them everything portable end salable sextants, chronometers and the like determined to have a square meal at all costa. Nowadays a middle has clothes, lots of clothes white service, blue service, dress uniforms, etc., In those days there etc., a whole wardrobe. weren't clothes enough to go around. Why, the scarcity of clothing got to be a Joke all along our coast. It wns well understood that not more than n third or a half of the midshipmen's mess could be counted on to sttend a governor's ball or other social function. Bo the hosts and hostesses had a good laugh over the minority representation and the Imre majority" that stub! aboard slilp. Spcuklug of clothes, everyone knows that a uniform plays havoc with a innlden's heart. Why, no less than ten of this years class got married the minute the graduating exercises were over, Chaplain Sydney K. Evans performing seven marriages right on Hut spot. Doubtless there were some rcnl romances; the fame of the sullor ns a lover Is world-wblAnywny, an ensign from Arizona married a maid from Charleston, H. 3. ; a hero from New York city ruptured a bride from Halifax, N. 8., and an embryonic admiral from Utah made an AnnnpnHs lienuty strike her colors. And when the l,wm undergraduates went n board the warships for foreign waters bound wbnt a scene wus staged at Santee basin. Girls, girls, girls In the crowd on the dock to any farewell for three long months and maybe forever and not a few of them In tears ns subchasers and cutterj carried away the middles to the Mg fighting ships, out on the bay. These are the warships of the equadron: Wyoming (flngRhln). New York, Texas and Arkansas. Vice Admiral Newton A. McCully Is (he squadron The senior officer aboard the flagcommander. ship, representing the Naval academy and In direct charge of the middles, is Commander Charles -- half-starve- e. d OAtfaaiev C&AKBZ We're poor little who have loet our way Bah! Bah! Bah! Cruising around on Chesapeake bay Bah! Bah! Bah! Gentlemen aailore from over the lee. to Bound hell for eternity; God have pity on such aa we Bah! Bah! Bah! Navy Song. mlda Slayton. The itinerary of the cruise Includes Brest. Weymouth, Rotterdam, Antwerp, Gibraltar and I'ontu Delgnidn. It was In V.H2 that the experiment of putting the middies of the two upper classes on hatlleshliis of the Atlantic fleet was first tried. The experiment proved a great success. These practice cruises are much alike. The first night Is usually spent at anchor, while the middies are getting settled In their quarters and being assigned to the various technical divisions. Its a picturesque night; landlubbers struggling with hammocks would make u fetching circus stunt. At dawn the and the bugle rouses them from uneasy slumlx-re cries are heard: "Hiss and shine I Up, you lubbers I Lash and carry! Ilit the deck. Bailor I Iley I Show a leg there I" Thereupon the lubbers certainly rise. They may or may not shine In a strange world of g nnd and what not. Howlot ever, middies are now as ever a and soon get down to business. They are usually allot ted the starboard side of the ship, with the reguiur enlisted force on the port side, nnd they are sent In rotation to every purt of the ship. How the times huve changed, now tlmt steam has supplanted sail! When Admiral Mahnn hie name Is a household word In the navy liegnn Ids days at sea a common drill for the middles, with the aid of a gunners mute, was Up topgallant masts and yurds and loose sail to a bowline I To do It in three und u hnlf minutes from the time the topmen and the masts started together from s tho deck wus seamanship. Nowadays a man tending water In the lire room takes Just as much pride In holding the glass steady and doing n good Job of coaling the fires. Pretty soon, with ships rndng oil for fuel the middles will no longer have cause to dread the fireroom; Indeed, oil has already almost superseded coal. The gentlemen aailore will soon be fixed so nicely that they will not even be forced to listen to the remark sarcastic, If the new secretary of the navy, Curtis D. Wilbur, has hie way. Secretary Wilbur la an 1888 Annapolis man himself there's a tablet In the gymnasium recording his record high kick and someone must have talked real mean to him In his day. Anyway, he said at the graduating exercises this year: RmI leadership le based upon rsspset for tho loader and such loedorshlp can only bo eohleved by tho possession of powers worthy of rsspect. Professional ability and accomplishments are the best foundation for permanent leadership, but there la an altogether different baste of leadership which finds Us source in the heart rather then the head. Such leadership may command the ardent affection and even devotion of the follower. Unless your rule over the 86.000 enlisted men of tho navy ho tempered by firmness. Justice, symin many cases pathy and courtesy their services may be loet to the nevy. Remember especiallyof that sarcasm or biting witticism atantha expenseman enlisted a subordinate, especially If he Is and thua Incapable of retaliation, la unmanly and fatal to one's standing an an oflleer. While the ho amused, the object sycophantic bystander may In hla soul which may of it linn received a wound not heal. It la a safe rule. In dealing with a mnn under you, to put yourself, hy Imnslnatlon. In hla plnre. Wbnt 1 crave for you Is that you may have and bo worthy of exercising moral Middles of the present day arc not starved on tho battleships nf tho Atlantic fleet and when they are at the academy they gel pure milk und good cuts galore from (lie academy farm. Funny to think cf sailers running a farm, Isn't It? Hut Hint's JuFt wbnt tho bureau of supplies and accounts docs. Till pnrtlnihir bureau, by I he way, Is suld to bo one of tlm most efficient business in existence. Hear Admiral David Its head and It Is hank, gents furnishIs at potter ings store, grocery store and nearly everything else, all In one. And here's pnrt of what Herbert Corey says about the furm In the Chicago Dully News: It sounds Incredible. Bailors are persona !n land. breeches who go ehoylng about the But the sailors of the United Btatce navy are perUeten: haps tha beat farmers In tha United States Near Annapolis. MS., the United Htalee navy a farm of more thaa 60 sores. It was foroed C. s old-tlin- deck-scrubbi- boiler-stokin- liard-bolle- d flrst-clus- first-cla- ss beil-muzxl- ed mi addition he attended the Oklahoma's Annapolis cIush, which wus organlxed u board fur the purpose of coaching enlisted candidates. He then went to Newport, R. I., und Joined the N. A I. C. This NuvnI academy preparatory class conmen sent tained the pick nf the navy's front all alilps and station to compote fur Annapolis appointments. Finally llohilturd was transferred to AnnniK-lls- , discharged from the navy and sworn In as u nihlshlptiiuii. He was graduated this year und has been assigned to Uis New York navy yurd. A young fellow has to la a good tlmil of a chap to get Into Annapolis, lie must he between the ages of sixteen and twenty, unmarried, lie must be of good moral character, pliyslcully sound, well formed and of robust eunstltutlon. The preliminary physical and mentul examinations ure rigid Hut they aro easy compared with the constant tests of the course. From 40 to SO per cent U dropjied before graduation because of Inability td keep up with the game. I ld you ever stop to think of the responsibilities of the commander of a United States warship In foreign waters even In times of peace! Well It is something tremendous. Aside from being responsible for the safety of the sldp and the small army aboard, ho represents the United Mates lie Is the United Mtutcs to all Intents und purposes. So he must he lighting man, navigator, disciplinarian, diplomat and patriot all kinds of man, euch one Just about HXl pc.r cent efficient. Mo Uncle Sam ciiimot afford to waste time at his Naval academy on material tlmt weakens under test. The course at the Navul academy simciuUzes on requirements of the naval service. Instruction Includes tin following; discipline, seamanship, ordnance and gunnery, navigation, steurn and murine engineering and navul construction, electrical engineering, physics, chemistry, mathematics, astronomy, history, tactics, naval hygiene and physiology, modern languages, drawing und phyaL-cu- l training. There are SO Instructors, practically all of them naval officers. The midshipman binds himself for eight years. Including the four In tha academy. He must furnish Ids own clothing and books and receives $730 a year from Uncle Sam. The Naval academy was founded in 1845 by George Bancroft, secretary of the navy In Polk'a administration. In those daye It was called the Naval school and the boys were naval cadets.' Along sbout 1808 Uncle Sam complained to congress that the buildings were old and Inadequate Congress told Uncle Sam to go ahead and fix tha place up right Uncle Sam did to the extent of And along about 1008 Uncle about 112,000,000. Sam completed by far the finest and naval school In the world. There Hre 200 acres on the Severn river at Annapolis. The buildings Include Bancroft boll, with Memorial hall at Its center, Dublgren bull, the Armory, the Seamanship and Gyinnuslum building, the Steuin Engineering building and the Cbupel, with a dome 210 feet high. In short, the United States Naval academy la first Institution. This le emphasized by the fuct thnt tho present superintendent Is no leal u mnn than Admiral Henry H. Wilson. He la himself a gruduute of the academy rlusn of 18S1 and thus bus worked hie way up through all tho grades from midshipman to comuiuudi-- In chief of the Atlantic fleet Thu graduating cluss this year numbered 525. They have been assigned by tho Nuvy department to ships and to shore stations. Not ull of the graduates will remuln In tlw service. About CO have nvulh-- themselves of the privilege of resigning. In nceurdance with an orhav.i der of the Nuvy department. Twenty-fiv- e uccepted commissions In the Marine corps and seven have Joined the surply corps of the navy. Commencement week at Annapolis Is a great This performance and attracts many visitors. yeur there was a mimic war game, In addition to the dress parade. The climax Is the farewell ball In Dahlgren hull. Tide year Mrs. Wilson beaded the receiving line and more than 2,000 attended the balL Secretary Wilbur presented the diplomas and made the commencement addreoA best-equipp- r d |