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Show rRIDAT, OCTOBER PAGE TWO DECREASE IS SHOWN IN CAS PRESSURE AT VfilSCO An apiNirent decrease in the gas pressure at the Cisco well of the Utah Oil Refining company has induced that concern to defer plans for starting auothcr hole nutil it can be determined whether Well No. 1 can be controlled and continued to a depth sufficient to test all the saudspwrites Oliver J. Grimes in last Sunday' 's Salt Lake Tribune. The lessening of the pressure bus not been great, but the well does not appear to be making as much gas as a week ago. reparations for anchoring the casing by cementing at the top are under way and it is1 expected that the work will lie finished some time this week. If the pressure is reduced sufficiently Well No. 1 will be eoutiuued snd the equipment from Famhain east from Price probably will be used for that purpose Instead of starting a new hole. It is probable, however, that another well will be drilled lower on the structure. Encouraged by the developments at Cisco and by those in recent months in Northwestern Colorado,' the Utah Oil Kefining is preparing to drill a test well on a recently discovered structure between Vernal and Jensen in the Uintah Basin. The site is yet to be selected, but probably will be in Bee. 23, Twp. 5 South, Range 22 East, or about midway between Vernal and Jensen. The test will start in the Maueos shale snd it is expected that the Dakota sand will be reached within fifteen hundred feet, and the base of the hlcKlmo is something around three thousand. The company is moving in a National machine from Nack, Colo., where it has been stored since the completion of the Hill Creek test about two years ago. The Utah Oil is preparing to drill several validation holes on the Cisco structure to prosiert the ground of other leaseholders. Fifteen-inc- h holes will be S List of Nominations0 Election, November 4, 1924 rnunYWi miU PARTY TICKET BEPHMTPROCBIVfl PIK HUT o O For President For F resident CALVIN COOLIDGE For President JOHN W. DAVIS CHARLES W. BRYAN For Vice President BURTON K. WHEELER Presidential Electors J. P. SHOWALTER . LYMAN SKEEN Presidential Electors F. C. BOBO MRS. INEZ KNIGHT ALLEN MRS. HENRY C. TAGGART MRS. VINA HOLDAWAY MRS. ROSE IL HAMBLIN JOHN W. AIRD MRS. H. Presidential Electors J. HAYWARD NEIL M. MADSEN THOMAS For Cong. Representative, let Diet. FRANK FRANCIS For Governor Q For President ROBERT M. LA FOLLETTE For Vice President CHARLES G. DAWES For Vies President o O F. KEARNS W. For Cong. Representative, let Diet DON B. COLTON For Vloe President J. TOY For let Diet Cong. Representative, For Governor For Governor CHARLES R.MABEY GEORGE II. DERN For Secretary of State For Secretary of SUte For Secretary of Bute JAMES W, FUNK H. started, so that they may be continued in case the test develops commercial oil Crescent-Eagl- e has succeeded in cleaning the hole to the bottom and reports oil oor.ing over the top of the easing at the rate of about a barrel a day. The management estimates that the well as it stands, if pumped, probably would make from three to four hundred barrels a day. Drilling ia to be resumed, probably today, as the bit apimrently has only eracked the top of the saml, in exjiectation that further penetration will iiermit the well to flow in commercial quantity. E. CROCKETT For SUte Auditor For StaU Auditor JOHN E. HOLDEN For State Treasurer For Btete Treasurer JOHN WALKER For Attorney For Attorney General General HARVEY H. CLUFF For For SupL Public Instruction DR. C. N. JENSEN SupL Public Instruction For Justice Supreme Court For Justice Supreme Court DANIEL N. STRAUP For SUU UepresenUtlve For State Representative W. Would Pipe the Gas. MOAB, Oct. 2fl. John T. Barnett of Denver has filed an application with the public utilities commission of Colorado for fiermiasiun to eonatruet a pijieline from the Utah and Colorado state line east to Grand Junction to eonvey the gas from the Utah Oil Refining companys well near Cisco to the Colorado city. Barnett, in his application, states that he has made tentative arrangements to purchase the gas and that the distributor of the manufactured in Grand Junction desires to handle the natural gas. He ia president of the Moutain Producers Oil eomiwny, a subsidiary of the Midwest Oil and Refining. E. ANDERSON J. E. PETTIT For District Judge For District Judge B. W. DALTON DILWORTH WOOLLEY . For District Attorney For District Attorney A. W. JENSEN For County Commissioner, Term For County Commissioner, 4-- Term Term For County Commissioner, S-- Term SAM WOODHEAD For County Commissioner, EUGENE SANTSCHI tor For County Attorney County Attorney HENRY RUGGERI SANPETEJETSBUSY People Over the Range Presistent For the Gooseberry Project The next imTortnut step in the plana for building of the (looseberry Valley reservoir, which will provide a large amount of additional irrigation water for Northern Sanpete county, will be the hearing before the state engineer on the application of the Sanpete Water Usera association for the appro iriat ion from the Gooseberry and other adjacent creeks to lie Used for irrigation purismes in this valley, says the Mt. Pleasant Times of last Friday. Although protests opposing this application may be presented officials of the association are confident that the filing will be accepted and the allotment allowed as asked in the application. A detailed report bn the project was recently submitted to tho association by Engineer George D. Clyde, who gave estimates of the cost of the various undertakings. These are: Project No. 1. Includes the condam on struction of an eighty-foGooseberry Creek, a tunnel six thousand feet in length to carry the water Into Cottonwood Creek on this side of the range, construction of a canal miles long to divert two and the waters of Bulger Creek. This project is designed to provide eight thousat an estimated cost of and acre-fedollars yer acre-fothirty-fiv- e Project No. 2 includes construction dam, tunnel, Bulger of a ninety-foo-t Creek canal and an additional canal eight miles long leading from S wens Canyon. Would furnish 10,500 acre-fedollars at a cost of thirty-fou- r ot six-tent- hs - et ot et per acre-foo- t. Project No. 3 includes units as in dam Nos. 1 and 2 with a hudred-fuo- t and canal three miles long to bring water from Brooks Canyon. Would at furnish thirteen thousand acre-fea eost of $31.20 per acre-foJust which of these three projects will be undertaken by the association will depend largely upon the result of the hearing before the state engineer, which will determine the amount whieh will be available for use ia this valley. et ot (Seal) County Clerk of Carbon County, U PRORATE AM) GUARDIANSHIP Lake City, Utah, on or before the 18th Notices Consult County Clerk Or day of December, A. D., 1924. RANKERS TRUST COMPANY1, AdministraRespective Signers For Further tor of the Restate of Tantllie Dundun-akl- s, W'ho Waa Otherwise Known Aa IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF CAR-ho- n Teta Dunis, Deceased. Wilson McCounty, State of Utah In Re Carty, Attorney For Petitioner, Estate of Ida May McDonald, Deceas- First pub.. Oct. 17; last Nov. 7. 1924. ed. Notice to Creditors: Creditors of the above estate will present claims NOTICE FOR T C BLI CATION with vourhere attached to the underof the Interior, United signed at the law office of Rraffet A Plates Land Office at Salt Lake City. Tavern Patterson. building, Price, Utah, Oct. IS, 1924. Notice la hereby Utah, on or before February 1, ISIS. given that William Lilly of Bunnyxlde, ANNE & WHITMORE, Administra- Utah, who on Irecember 16, 1922, trix. made Homestead Entry No. 032062 for First pub., Oct. 17: last Nov. 7, 1114. KttNWU, See. 18, Twp. 16 South, Range 14 East, Salt Lake merIN THE DISTRICT COURT OF CAR-bo- n idian, haa filed notice of intention to County, State of Utah In Re make three-yeto establish proof, Estate of John N. Galanls. Deceased. claim to the land aliove described, beNotice to Creditors: Creditors will fore the clerk of the district court at vouchers claims with attached Price, Utah, on the 2Slh day of Nopresent to the undersigned at the office of vember. 1924. Claimant names ss witRraffet tt Patterson, Tavern building. nesses Dan Stevenson. Frank Morgan on or tefore M. 1, G. Utah, Trice, February Rotonakis and Nick Manoi.sos! KHE88IE N. GALANIS, Ad- all of Columbia City, Utah, iet.i v ministratrix. TAYLOR. Register. First pub., Oct. 17; last Nov. 7, 1914. First pub., Oct. 17; last Nov. 14. 1924. PROSPERITY AGAIN Basin Country Showing Up Well pared to Previous Tear. Com- Despite dry year conditions in the Uintah Basin it has shown steady improvement till that section is again flourishing, says J. 1L Rayburn, secretary of the Salt Lake City Chamber of Commerce, who returned to Zion from there last Monday. Rayburn. X. J. Hansen, chairman of the general committee on the Uintah Basin, and W. H. Kllimm, chairman of the good roads committee of the chamber, made a trip to all towns out there to investigate plans for keeping open highways to lhe state capital during the coning winter. Savings accounts in the banks of Venial total $145,000, while a little over two years ago they 6tood at At Duchesne and Myton steps banks. are being taken to Those in these cities failed following deflation. Increase in the production of alfalfa seed, poultry and dairy products that ran be shipped by truck for a fraction of the market price, is given as the reason. From Yen.al almost all business is done, however, with Grand Junction, Cola, jobbers. Roads are better and the freight charge is ten cents a hundred less from Vernal to Watson than to Price, Rayburn says. Tour oldfashioned man who goes to lied with the chickens has a son who stays up all night with them. $45,-00- 0. Martin Conway of Beacon, N. Y for years had been laying away and building up a nestegg with which to tju prise hia wife when they grew older. He died suddenly, leaving his widow needy. In clearing out old pieces of furniture which she could not sell at the time when she needed money she gave an old stove to Joy Dceb if he would carry it away. Deeb decided to renovate the stove and foil rctm grate a bag which he as opened to Mrs. Conway about to be evicted ?r0'" was found to contain fl-U- P- No girl ever succeeded in n a husband that suited all the There ia a difference betwu dom of speech and that of scr SNKf ar m. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE FOR PUBLICATION Non Matter of the Estate of Pantille of the Interior, United Otherwise Was Pundunakia, Who States Land Office Salt Lake City Known Aa Fete Dunis, Deceased. Utah, Oct. 11. 1924.at Noth herel will present claims with by given that Louie Fricksnn ' Creditors of vouchers to the undersigned at Salt Utah, who on April 18, 1921 made Homestead Entry No. 029484 for Fall Needs Now DE-partm- . Sun-nysld- T4cnclulii Winter Is Coining So FigurejYoi 8WA4NWU. Sec. 1. Twp. e, South 16 Eart, Salt Lake meridian! has filed notice of Intention to make three-yeAustralia Samoa proof to establish claim to the land above described before "SYDNEY MHO NT UNC" the of the district court at Price clerk Five and a half days to Honolulu, Vi??' " ,h 21 da of Novemlier! nineteen days to Sydney by the favorClaimant names ite U. H. mall and expire steamers. P. C. Jones. Joe Miglore,asJ.witnesses R. V tons urn. 10,000 rot Sonoma. Sierra. setti and A. Paolasso. all of Sunnyside Hsidaopmont. Rated Lloyds 100 At. F. EI TAYLOR, Register. Sailings from Ran Franetaco, October First pub., Oct. 17; last Nov. 14, 1914. December till Hth, November 18th. and every twenty one days. Honolulu There is some dispute about which 9220; Sydney and return, SM5; Round political party eaused the and return, s. $1200. Rook the world, now. Ocean Steamship Co.. 2 Tine deflation, but we are all agreed that somebody let the gas out of the war Yon cant ignore a mortgage off street, San Francisco. Send for bag. folder. the family home. ar lo. auvamages or trading at general stores, moaeieu uu plan of ours, cannot be over estimated. You can everything you want under one roof and save time unsi money both. Look 0 your blankets. Don't wait snow flies, but get the best values today. Both cotton s W'ool in many colors and at prices to suit the requiremen of any housewife. Big underwear values. Warm, w wearing underwear for the children at remarkably prices. Also for every member of the family. Shots a rubber footwear. -- first-clas- s, first-clas- s, post-bellu- first-clas- pic-ta- re m CARBON-EMER- Y STORES CO. Hiawatha, Mohrland, West Hiawatha and Heiner GEORGE E. McDERMAID, Supt |