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Show ANOTHER RIG IS TAKEN WELL-LOCATE- D SINK REDUCES HOUSEWIFE'S KITCHEN WORK j x fa f Iw Bis) I and it was at this time that he enter rd the businetta. The sjieaker in an interesting man ner toll of the big growth of Tulsa, Okla., from a struggling town of only a few hundred jieojile to a city four hundred and tifty thousand barrels of oil a day and a insulation of several hundred thousand Iieojile. Colonel Newell roueluded by saying that he exjiected to visit Utah again next June and that he. hud ho of sums great things hupjieiiiiig w H DOINGS OF THE OILMEN THROUGH EASTERN UTAH E. S. Rorquist of Trice has been granted a jiermit to prospect for oil in the San Uafael section. Oil company incorporations with the secretary of state are numerous. Some of them are meritorious. Others most questionable. Ute Oil company of St. Louis, Mo., has made applications to iesae four thousand and fifty acres of oil lands In the Basin country. W. 8. Callaway of Pueblo, Colo., expects to develop the roming summer a very large aereagw of shale lands to the east of Vernal. The Royal Dutch Oil company announces from Holland an increase in its capital stock from four hundred to six hundred thousand guilders. The Lehigh and Wilkeabarre Coal company last Monday declared a special cash dividend of 150 tier cent on its close to ten millions of stock outstanding. General Superintendent Littlejohn of 'the Utah Fuel conqiuny was in Trice last Saturday from Sunnyside, That ramp is fsst getting hack to its former production. Myton Free Tress says that George E. Mulvry of the Basin country an: interested at Farnham now estimates his wealth in seven figures. He has made his money in oil lands and shale. Japans production of erode petroleum has declined steadily since 1916, last years output being only bout half of 1 per rent of the world's supply. Price has no monopoly on being the gateway to the San Rafael and the Circle Cliffs fields, thinks Myton s Free Tress. Green River is a very strong rival. The Dutch Shell ieople are expecting to send a rig into the Duchesne 1 hfx h you. Take SSaff lw t kMlituK. mndsMuas uud I 1 1 Ripple model, silk lining Springwear. .... and a very clever desip, at efta-te- Keady-tu-We- pur. Appnrei sr HH lHWHWWWWHf, . (MQ QfY imwwminiHiniiiMWHWHWHwkt .A Wide Seld Silk Taffeta Girdle with Bow on side Seld price for the liest grades produeed held from wells in the North Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas is only IF3.50 a barrel, and Pennsylvania crude bringing $0.50, shows part of the jNMtsihilitieB in the vayof profits to lie made in production of oil from shale, says the De Beque (Colo.) New Kra. J. II. Ginet, inventor of the Ginet process for extracting oil from shale, stated last week in Ie Deque that he ia offered sixteen dollars for all the shale oil he ran produce. As shale oil is coming into great favor for use in dressing ores by the flotation process, the jiriee of sixteen dollars a barrel is not out of proKirtiun when compared with quotations on other flotation oils. Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering quotes the lowest priced oil at rents a gallon, which is thirty-fiv- e eqtnvalent to $14.70 for a barrel of forty-tw-o gallons, while the highest oil is quoted at $1.90 flotation priced a gallon. As the most conservative estimates as to the cost of producing shale oil do not exceed three to four dollars a barrel eight to ten eeuts a gallon it can easily he figured that enormous profits will lie the reward of those who engage in the manufacture of shale oiL TtirouIiout Our Store. Here you eiijoy the saying Made of Wool Tricotine, the most popular cloth for For Flotation Work. Sixteen dollars a barrel is offered IXSTmTlOX E Stow. TIk Largvwt Mia in Department MoreouOncnUMiJoi Uiunumil your rnonej adtauuweof thfa MVtirt unity 1 1 1 1 1 that time. for shale oil, while the highest posted NATION-WID- TI1UKK OF THE XKMT ONES FOIt SPKIXO A pro-ducii- ig lief ore rExEY t'OMPAMA Tmu..Ml..ue KevliUM Prevail In Concluded From Cm 11, Prices Talk! INTO SAN RAFAEL SILL FRIDAY, MARCH FRIDAY. UTAH-EVE- RY PAGE EIGHT in a Wall-Planne- d Kitchen Like Thia a Good Sink la of Flrat Importance. One of the biggest savers of time, strength, and labor in tlie kitchen Is the sink. Yet many women are struggling along with none at all or, at best, a poor and badly placed one. The following suggestions In regard to sinks are given by household specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture : The else of the family and of the kitchen must determine the else of the sink, but s short sink with staple table and shelf room near It may be more convenient than a long sink. Two smaller sinks, ons for the table dishes near the dining room and the other for general use in the kitchen, are very convenient. No Cracks or Square Comerai The material should be the best available, nonsltsorbent of grease as well as of moisture, and there should be no cracks nr square comers to Increase the work of keeping It clean. A wooden sink, even when It receives an annual coat of paint will absorb moisture and grease which attract Insects, and Is likely to be swarming with bacteria and to sour" and have an unpleasant odor. Even dralnhuanta of wood are not recommended nnlees they have a waterproof finish of varnish, oil, or paint If a wooden sink Is necessary, it la better to have it metal lined, provided the sheets of metal, which la usually tin, slue, galvanised Iron, copjter or lead, are soldered where they are joined and all parts of the sink, Including the tope of the aides, are covered with the metal, so that there la no chance for the wood to absorb moisture. Another plan Is to have a cement sink bnllt Into a wooden frame and lined with sheet copper or tin. Iron sinks of good quality art superior to wooden ones, since they do not absorb grease or moisture and are durable. They are easily kept clean if smooth (and they will soon wear smooth), bnt they have the disadvantage of neither allowing dirt nor proUnless claiming their cleanliness. the front la protected by s strjp of wood, the dresses end aprons of the worker are likely to become stained with Iron rust. A soapstone or a slate sink Is durable, but sometimes becomes uneven with wear, and If this happens much brushing and. scrubbing are required to remove the sand and grease that country west of Myton in the very near future. It will go in by way of the Trice to Myton road. W. N. Wetsel, the general suierin-tendeof the Carbon Fuel company, was in Trice last Saturday. His people are going along with the usual output of about twelve hundred tons daily. Chicago oilmen argue that the outlook is for a shortage of oil rather than an excess of crude in the rather near future. Outlook for gasoline consumption is much better than a month ago. Jobbers are out of gasoline and there is less motor fuel oil in country tanks than ever before, but the market still waits. nt 1 n kitchen ware. The double sinks, with one basin for washing and another for draining dishes, are very convenient, but unfortunately they are relatively expensive. A small sink with a robber stopper for Its escape pipe may be used as a dlshpan. The plumbing should be easy of access, and therefore It la better that there, should be no coset under the sink. Hooks or shelves under the sink or near It will accommodate everything usually kept In the dark, often musty, sink closet" of older kitchens A "sink closet" can be kept sweet end clean but It means extra work to do It Location of Drain Boards If possible, there should ba a wide shelf or drain board on each side of the sink on the level with the rim of the latter, one to receive colled dishes and the other clean ones Some housekeepers have these covered with sine. As in all other places where It is used, the metal must be neatly fitted and closely fastened down so as not to leave any chance for loose,' rough edges or to provide breeding places for Insects or a lodging place for grease and dirt If there la no pises for permanent drain boards sliding or hinged shelves may be used. A d person usually holds the dish In the left hind while washing or wiping It And Ik dishcloth, dish mop, or towel In the right hand. It Is convenient therefore, to have the dishes move from right to left as they pan from dlshpan to rinsing pan, and from rinsing pan to drainer and tray. This should be kept In mind, and provision made for soiled dishes at the right and for a drain board at the left of the sink. light-hande- ago, hut information was received last week by Manager Strung which would indicate that operations will lie resumed within a very short time. It is estimated that four days of drilling will complete the well The people of Southeastern Utah are awaiting the completion of the Moah test well with the utmost faith that it will prove to lie a winner. Every indication would point this way, for aince the well was spudded in lar.t June the formations penetrated have been regular and exceedingly hard and tight with just enough showing of oil and gas to convince the operators that when the first sand was cut by the bit it would prove to be iay. The Midwest Oil company has takOwing to delays at Washington, en over the leases hold by the MidD. C., which held up issuance of per- west Refining company at McElmo, mits, work at the Big Six well down Colo., and will spud in there next at Moab was susitcndcd three weeks week. These cover a large area on a structure which has lieen mapjicd by Harrison & Fiat on, consulting geologists, and which is analogous lo several structures a few miles to the west and across the Utah line. About twenty miles north of McF'lmo the Republic Oil eonqwny holds a large tract on another structure which wil be tested this spring. To inerease interest in the oil activities now being carried on in Utah, business men of Trice are making plans for an excursion to the San Rafael and Hnntington oil structures , during the latter part of this month, llnns now lieing discussed include in the mobilization of a hundred autoremobiles to carry the city's guests to the varioui points of interest. Definsurite time for the excursion will lie announced later when the bridge over the San Rafael river has been comacpleted. Members of the Salt Lake City Mining and Stock exchange an is in clients interested in the fields are to he invited lo make the trip from We I rice as guests of the Trice Cliamler of Commerce. It is understood that the brokers are planning a trip to Trice and the adjacent fields. They are exjiectptl to make up one or two The Benjamin Jewelry Company We are making Price our home and are now ready to care for your needs our line. New goods constantly being ceived. People of Carbon and the rounding counties will find a fine supply of Diamonds, Watches, Rings and all cessories. Our Repair Work the hands of a man of long experience. guarantee. Call In. BENJAMIN JEWELRY COMPANY Two doors west of J. C. Penney Co. Wl 1 gather in the depressions when vegetables are cleaned, dishes washed, etc. Like Iron, they do not show wliether they are dean or not. Euameled-lrosinks ire smooth, last well with careful use, and may be easily kept clean, but they are more expensive than Iron. Porcelain sinks are similar to the enameled ones, but their price la almost prohibitive. Perhaps the Ideal plan, if cost Is not to be considered, would be to have an enameled or porcelain sink for the tableware In the kitchen or the pantry near the dining room and an iron or soapstone sink for the heavier A Underdrop.... special Pullman which will be parked in the Trice railroad yard during their stay here. Automobiles will be furnished them for the trip to the Swell and to Huntington. fc H I I x K WWHWWiU A Distinctive Style for Women with taste. Priced Very Low rn 07 .DU Jpj . a w pa H Boliva i mo rn doth. Lose tore fall silk lining, a very pretty model, WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW a yw a v. P Buying More we Bay For Less Selling More We Sell For Less its"!itt rion futon-wtt- te h J. C. PKXXKY COMPANY A FRICE, UTAH, Store No. NATION-WID- E J2 I X KTITCTIOX Shoes placed outside hotel rooms at As an exercising machine a dui is buildbeen invented having roekn be has can for and ing guarded cleaning sulphuric night acid factories, must of the raw ma- against theft by a new lock for which forming a complete oval, enabling u terials for the latter being found in keys are carried only by authorized occupant to torn himself over it either direction. that country! persons. 1 The Finnish government suiier-phospha- te Rubber stamps, punches, ink pads and office supplies The Bun. Ninety-seve- n per cent of die without making a wilL ' Canada is discussing the of the muskox as s source of wool s poaeibiK-tie- ft ? tI ? ?? ? t? ?? ? t? ?? t? t? ? ? ? ?? ?9 9 ?? ?? ?? 9 ?? ? V 9 ? THE UNIVERSAL CAR THE FORD COUPE More and more this fine enclosed car for two it will carry three u growing in popular demand. Strongly built, thebut rests upon that body marvelous Lord chassis. It brings to its owner modern day convenevery ience; easy riding while sliding plateglass windows make it breezy and ht.weather; lustproof and water proof when the windows are closed it is cosy and comfortable in inclement and wintry weather. Then there is the durability of the car, coupled with the low of the first cost and the saving of money in operating expenses. economy every other Ford car is that unsurpassed Ford After phind it, and is given by the army of Ford dealers scattered all over the tSe1 her with some fifteen thousand authorized garages, until the Ford owner is always within immediate touch of dependable, reliable service, where the genuine made Ford parts and the genuine Ford methods are applied in the care of this car. . Ford Coupe admini1 ers fo a great variety of 71 owner, from the physician to the traveling man, from the engineer to the architect, and then for a pleasure car for two it is unbeatable. We ask your early order if you want a Ford Coupe, because we want to make delivery as Quickly as we can, but we must have a little time. Come in and talk it over. ALGER AUTO CO. Authorized Ford Sales Service. Postoffice Box 786 Phone 153 J ( |