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Show OIL INDUSTRY to determine whether n flow of oil can bo secured by Unking a well. Wilt a!o bo put in ASSURED THE PRESIDENT! MESSAGE President Roosevelt has heat his first to Congress and it Is ono of tho best messages ever sent from the Whito Motive. JnUead of tho usual political arguments, it contains dean cut statements of tho President's velws on public questions, most of which will bo approved bythopeoplo of tho country regardless of their political convictions. It is a mes.vago that appeals strongly to tho pcoplo of tho Western states. His recommendations for tho building of storage reservoirs and tho establishment of forest reserves in tho arid states by tho government, tho breaking up of tribal relations of tho Indians and tho abandonment of tho reservaof tbeChincso tion system, tho of a exclusion act, and tho construction canal across tho isthmus aro particularly pleasing to tho pcoplo of tho west. Tho trusts, tho interstate commerce law, tho Cuban question and tho Phillipino question aro handled in an ablo manner and in language that docs not suggest dotiblo dealing. Tho messago is entirely free from partisanship. President Roosovclt is starting in mes-F.ig- o Our Yast Oil Shale Deposits to be Opened all-aroun- CAPITALISTS TAKE HOLD OF IT And the Property will be Worked on a Commercial Basis. After months of patient effort, tho Bald Mounts! a Oil company has succeeded in getting capital interested in tho great oil shalo deposits, and from now on, tho work of developing them, and getting tho oil. industry started hero on a commercial scale, will be prosecuted a3 fast as money can week tho company succeeded in getting Mr. I A. II. Franklin ono of Utahs foremost mining operators, and Mr. John E. La-- t ' alright My son, get all tho enjoyment you cn out of your cigarette. Tho time is coming when youll have to smoko acorncob pipo and buy bacon with your mazuma. DuBois, a Pennsylvania capitalist, out hero to look over tho property and witness tho extraction of tho oil and gas from tho shale, by means of a retort built by tho local company and so well pleased wero thoy with tho showing that a few days later Dr. Franklin returned and closed a deal with tho local company for a majority of tho stock. Tho gentlemen camo down hero as tho guests of Superintendent Wclbyof the Rio Grande Western in his private car. A banquet was given in their honor by the Bald Mountain Oil company at II. P. Larsens residence. After the closing of the trade Dr. Franklin and Mr. Dubois wero elected members of the board of directors Wednesday evening. The first actual work on the new industry will begin next Monday when ground will be broken for a three hundred foot tunnel that will tap the shale deposit at .a depth of several hundred feet. The contract for this work has been let to E. P. Thomanderand he will push the work night and day until it completed. , As soon as possible machinery for extracting oil from the shale will be secured and it Is altogether probable that a drilling outfit d ro-cnactm- push it . NO. 11 lUMIUAIM, BAM'LTi: COUNTV. UTAU.DI'OinilllMl fl. 1001. VOL. 11 OIL INDUSTRY Tho establishment cf an oil industry hero is a great thing for this town. Its benefits will be so great that it is now impossible to thorn. Employment will bo furnished for many men when once tho work gets properly started, and tho cash income to tho city from this source alone will bo a appreciate great factor in this citys future. . Our pop- ulation is bound to increase, capital will ' be attracted here, the workman and their families will furnish a local market for much of the produce of the farmers Sind prosperity will reign all around. In addition to the machinery for extracting oils from the shale, heavy drilling plants will be brought in that will endeavor to find oil by driving deep wells, and it is possible that in sinking for oil they will demonstrate the depth at which artisian water can be found in paying quantities. Already the transformation has begun- A number of heads of families have received profitable employment, and as the develope-men- t of the oil fields progresses the number of workman will be inpreassd until this city and its surroundings are a veritable hive of . RUDE PERSONS. Socrates said to a .certain man who was vexed for having saluted one that did return his civility: It U ridiculous In you to Ikj unconcerned when you meet a sick man in tho way, and to bo vexed for having met a a rudo fellow. Every person encounters rudeness onco in a while, and tho temptation to boiudo in reply la strong Thcro aro a certain number and of persons in tho world who seem to bo at pains to say and do what is offensive- - Now' it is a clerk in an office, now a salesman, now' a conductor, now a capitalist, now a lawyer or a doctor that commits a rudeness. Rudo people ato met in every station of society, and no ono escape their incivility. Rudo women seem to bo even moro numerous than rudo men, for they aro safe from a physical or verbal rebuke. A man cannot transcend a certain limit of bail manners without danger of being knocked clown, but a woman may say anything that comes to her tonguo and still bo ill-spok- secure. Instead of exciting our anger, rudeness should cxcito only pity for tho persons that has been guilty of it. It is his misfortune that ho is rudo; not the misfortune of tho ono to whom ho has betrayed his infirmity. RuJness harms tho ono that commits it, not tho oro to whom it is .addressed. When tho rudo man should ho making friends ho is engaged in making enemies. When ho should bo smoothing his own way ho is putting obstacles in it When ho should bo advancing ho is going backward, and when ho should bo helping himself hois helping his competitors. Pity him. Tho rudo man is like a cripple Ho is IIo is not fighting lifes battle on equal terms with other men. He has not had advantages in his youth, perhaps, or ho is congenitally weak. Ono should not bo vexed at him, poor fellow. Ono should treat him with extra civility and consideration, as ono treats a sick man. When men have had a littlo experience m tho world they soon aro convinced that rudeness is a very expensive infirmity, and they try hard to cure themselves. Ono seldom finds a rude man in high place. as a rule, are more approachable, affable and courteous to strangers than are subalterns. It is easier to talk to an admiral than to an ensign, One is less likely to be treated rudely by the president of a railroad than by the junior clerk or the office boy. Men learn, as they grow in years, that politeness pays. Bulletin. do-fccti- vo. Major-general- s, - industry. .Oh, fair false creature I cried the young man despairingly. And the lady cast down her eyes and was silent. For she knew that her teeth were store teeth, her complexion French, one eye of glass, her smile a fake and her hair excelsior- - |