| Show TALKS WITH TRAVELERS Maj RB Stallion has over 100 men working for him down oh the Colorado river MldWL Richards of Emery county at the Cullcn yesterday 1 am glad to hoar that he Is meeting with success for If any man deserves It he Is the man He hab blown In a great deal of money and It Is right that he should have some return Mr Richards remarked that he had been lately I all through the Henry I mountains and RobUers Boost and did not find any tough gentlemen to trouble trou-ble and make afraid In fact they i seemed to have all gone and Sir Richards I Rich-ards did not look for any more raids In speaking of the oil evidences through the Green River country ho said Because Be-cause oil oozes from the ground IB n6 evidence that the deposits are near the surface I am an old oil man from Pennsylvania and on the Watson farm where the oil came from the ground In a stream oil was struck at 300 feet down and on another form where the oil came out the same way they were 1600 feet down before a flow was truck I think It will require a 1000 to 1600foot well at Green River to reach the oil The reason it oozes up So Is because the II gas forces the oil up through cracks and crevasses to the surface S That coal find two miles from Salmon City will e for Cf wl prove a godsend 1or the people In central and southern Idaho said A J Macnab at the Cullen yesterday The vein Is I eight feet thick and appears o be o indefinite length and the further down the shaft In sunk the better the coal becomes The last samples showed nearly 30 percent per-cent of fixed carbon I was not known before that there was any coal In Idaho and the discovery l of this fine vain gives the people of the Slateadditional hopes for Us future Mining Interest In the Blackbird slrlcWc especially looking look-Ing up and our people generally are feeling good I d I V Guess we will have a railroad through Ophlr before long said Manager Man-ager ID W Clark of the copper properties prop-erties there We have been hauling ore fourteen miles to Terminus the fag I end of the narrow gauge But the new line will pass within four miles of our plant and a tramway will be perfectly I feasible to the railroad At present we are putting out ore to our full capacity I but before long when the water supply becomes better we will be able to do I more Mr Clark in the course of conversation conversa-tion remarked upon the sad lack of church privileges at Ophlr which made him feel badly He was unable to board a street car and ride to church neither could he telephone for a carriage so he had given up and resigned himself Calmly as possible to the local churchless church-less situation and Is a great reader of religious periodicals S I |