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Show BIG Oil INTERESTS FRIDAY. FEBRUARY lg, THE SUE. PRICE. UTAH EVEKY PEIDAT. PAGE EIGHT PLAN CM Of UINTAH AND CARBON (Concluded From Page Bis) Another Going In. Incorporation articles were filed at Salt Lake City last Monday by the Circle Cliffs Oil company with a million dollars capital and shares at one dollar. The company, made up of Iowa, Wyoming, California and Utah men, takes over the leasing ermit granted to M. J. Golhlierg for a section Incited near the center of the Circle Cliffs structure and close by the well now being drilled by the Ohio Oil comiany. Forty thousand shares of the stock are paid up and sixty thousand will remain in the treasury. In the articles the purposes of the r or (oral ion are set forth to include a general oil drilling, producing, transjiortiiig, refining and a selling business. It is also understood that Ihe mnijiany will undertake active drilling ojie rations in the near future and has made extensive plans for the undertaking. A number of the men identified with the company have had considerable oil exjierienee in other fields. isfartory arrangements ran be Unless usually favorable signs are in error, there (should be a score or more drills pounding away on various promising structures in Utah before the end of the summer. Besides the Ohio and the Carter, two other of the Standard Oil family the Ka so tiling and the Midwest prospecting activities in Utah and have tiled applications with the federal government for prosjwrt-in- g )eniiil on what they consider promising oil structures in the southeastern art of the state. The applications of the Ohio in Circle Cliffs and Caiuville fields have been issued and at Huulingtou it is operating on ground leased from the state and individuals. Information is received from Washington, D. C., APPLICATIONS FLOOD THE that the interior department grunted OFTICE AT ZION OF LATE the applications of the Carter. Midwest and Kasoming eomimnies in the Increased interest in the prospecCircle Cliffs field." tive oil fields in Eastern and Southern Utah is evidenced by the fart that last Saturday was a record day Big Acreage Secured. Siure the mineral leasing land law at the Salt Lake City land office fur went into effect in February, 1920, filing of applications for leases to it is estimated by Gould B. Blakeley, prosiect for oil on government land. register of the Salt Lake City land A steady line of applicants waited office, that at least two thousand ap- their turn at the counter from the plications to prosect for oil have time the office opened in the mornlieen received in the Salt Lake land ing until eloaing time in the afterdistrict, representing all of the at ate noon. Register Gould B. Blakely that forty applications were of Utah with the exemption of the Vernal district, taking in the north- filed, the most received in one day eastern corner of the slate. This since the government oil prospecting would mean that approximately five act became effective on February million acres have been aplied for in 25th of last year. A total of twenty-fou- r the Zion district, irrespective of the applications were filed on Frihomestead under the day. The land applied for is not conlarge acreage laws. Figures jire not mailable for fined to any one field. The descripthe Venial district, but there have tions in the applications received lieeu a large number of oil applira-tiou- e show tracts located in Emery, Garfiled there ae well as homestead. field, Kane, Carbon, Wayne end San To men who have folftiwed oil devel- Juan counties. Delay in action on applications by opment throughout the United States the prosjiective oil movement in Utah the land dejtartmeut at Washington, is one of the most stuendous in the D. C., bus lately caused considerable anxiety on the part of a number who history of the eouutry. ef-lect- eon-templ- ed have applied for permits during the pist few months. Some of the applicants in the Ssn Rafael field, where drilling operations have already begun, have sent representa- tives to the national capital to urge immediate action on their applications. In the event oil is struck before applications fur land in the same geological structure are granted, the permit is denied and the land is (eased to the highest bidder. The flood of applieations received in the past few months has caused a marked increase in the cash receipts in the office of Heber C. Jex, receiver for the Salt Lake district. Filing fees for oil land applications range from ten to thirty-tw- o dollars, de-lending upon the amount of land applied fur. Kinee February 25, 1920, more than two thousand applications hate been filed. The majority of these are for tracts, the maximum acreage allowed, which requires a filing fee of thirty-tw- o dollars. THAT DEPENDABLE FORD QUALITY I Ford durability began back in 1903 when Henry Ford started expert menting with vanadium steel and heat treating processes. He knew that a more exact tempering of steel for motor car building must be worked out. Vanadium, it was learned, when added to molten steel, gives to that steel And now other alloys have been a greater toughness and adhesiveness. found which are superior to Vanadium. With the Ford Motor company constant progress is the daily companion. The Ford products car, truck, tractor grow in quality daily. Heat treating tempers each part so that it will best withstand the wear or tear to which it is subjected. Ford chemists and analysts have created formulas and standard specifications for every individual part of the Ford car not only for the steel, but for everything from pneumatic tires to top. Ford durability isnt a matter of accident. It is a matter of painstaking thoroughness in laboratory and factory. The Ford is a car of precision of standardized values. Order your Ford Tear now. No matter how fast they may be made the demand multiplies faster. Order today for we can make fairly prompt deliveries Runabout, Touring Car, Coupe, Sedan, Truck and Fordson Tractor. four-secti- DOINGS OF THE OILMEN THROUGH EASTERN UTAH Alter many efforts Enoch C. cashier of the First National Win-stru- Bank of My ton, has been successful is getting some very influential California oilmen to investigate the pros-Iiecof the oil fields of the Uintah Basin. The first oil well supplies to reach Green River were unloaded there last Friday by the Ohio Oil company, and ts are being hauled to the holdings at Cainville by G. IL Fran. One truck oierated by the Ohio made a trip from Caiuville to Green River in nine hours. ALGER AUTO CO. Ford Cars , Tractors and Service 919 Main Street PRICE, UTAH Production of rrude oil in during the first nine months of 1920 amounted to 740,707 tons as eomiiared with 693,983 tons for the Rou-man- eorresMinding jieriod of 1919. ia The output for the month of Septemlier, 1920, was 1)9,448 tons or over three thousand tons a day. This shows a favorable increase over the preceding year, when the average daily production was around tweuty-fiv- e hundred tons. , "The Story of Petroleum, a four-remotion picture showing procedure in the oil industry from the time the survey is made until the crude oil is refined into three hundred articles all vitally necessary to modern industry, was presented to a large audience at the Salt Lake Commercial club last Friday night. In connection with the picture a lecture was delivered by Prof. Fred J. Pack of the University of Utah. el If you want to change your wife s her dearest opinion just tell her friend thinks exactly as she does. tl-a- t R. E. Moss puts on Atitiier Watchmaker Itutilier HtamiiK, punches. Ink pads and off lie sup, lies. The Bun. PRESERVING FRUITS BY FREEZING URGED Has More Natural Flavor Than Canned Product. take care of the volume of work now being done by R. E. Moss Jewelry Store, another skilled workman has TO been added to the force. The new man is H. D. Fletcher and he is now on the job. Customers are assured of expert work and with this additional man at work, prompt service is possible. Bring us your Useful In Making Ice Creams and Sherbets and for Cooking Plea, Preserves, Jellies and Various Other Deoserts. That the utilization of freexlng storage for the preservation - of berries, other small fruits and tomatoes could be profitably extended Is the belief of 'specialists of tlie bureau of markets. United 8tates Department of Agriculture. Many Ice cream manufacturers and cannera would be benefited by adopting practicable methods of holding such products for manufacturing purposes, ray the specialists. It is pointed out that the preservation of fruits bv freexlng la cheaper than canning them, especially when tin containers ere scarce and costly as at present ; and that the frozen fruit, held at the proper tenqierntures, has a more natural flavor than canned or dried fruit The experimenters found fruit preserved by freezing to be fully as satisfactory as fresh fruit and superior to canned or dried fruit for use In making Ice creams and sherbets, and for cooking Into pies, preserves, jellies and other desserts and confections. The frozen fruits after thawing are not well suited for eating alone In e raw state, but are considered very palatable when eaten before they have completely thawed. When used hs Ingredients for desserts and confection best results will be obtained If they are combined before they are free from Ice. RABBIT PIE Skin, draw and cut a rabbit Into pieces; put Into stew pan sud cover with boiling water. Cook until very tender. Remove meat from the broth and concentrate the broth to about one-hn- lf. rick the meat from the twines In as large pieces as possible. Thicken stock with one tahlespoonful flour per cupful of broth and pour over meat Add two tahlespoonful salt and tensponnful pepper. Line the sides of a baking dish with crust, either a rich baking powder biscuit dough or pte paste, add meat mixture, cover with crust and bake In hot oven NO minutes. - . Orchestra. NCLE SAM line determined to muke life every one of his 140 bands In the United States army as pleasant and profitable as is humanly possible. Hereafter, according to announcement by MaJ. Gen. 1. O. Harris, the Adjutant General of the Army, a man may enlist to study music who has had no musical Army-traine- d whatsoever. training, bandsmen find so many opportunltlea In civil life today that the regiments have great difficulty in keeping their men, once they have become finished musicians and have had their temperament well ordered and disciplined by their army experience. A tremendous demand exists for their services In factors and Industrial plants, easy jobs st good pay are waiting for army musician. There they are Immediately assigned to the band, now an important part In welfare work among large corporations. Toduy the army will take any man and teach him tlie Instrument to which he Is best adapted, or the one nhich he may desire. The young fellow who yearns to learn march music and Jazz, will be sent to the Seventh ltecrult Depot band, Columbus barracks, Ohio, when preparations are now being made to train two hundred musicians for the army, under my direction. I may say that here the road to a finished musical education lies open to any man with musical training, talent, temperament or aspiration. For the finished musician there Is the probable opportunity that he will be able some time to organize and conduct his own band the goal that beckons every bandsmen who has the truly musical spirit To those mew whose training Is Incomplete. or whose main quality is musical talent and desire to develop It the army holds out Inducements that cannot be approached In civil life. These men may be accepted for enlistment In any fighting branch of the array they desire. They come to the Columbus recruit depot for enlistment and here they are immediately tested as to their musical ability or capacity to receive instruction. i one-eigh- th Main Street at the Clock FRANK J. WEBER. Leader United State Army; Lately of the St Louis Symphony By Band ! rgBSSfun,&$ iSQ&izaroonr If the recruit has sufficient training he Is Immediately reported for assignment to an army band, where his Instruction continues In the higher grades of music. If he Is found Insufficiently schooled for Immediate assignment but bus a musical temperament susceptible of training, he will be placed with the recruit depot bntid for Instruction. In either case he receive regular, systematic training as an Instrumentalist and In band routine. and gains musical experience such as la difficult to obtain In any organization outside the army. The educational feature Is not confined to our recruit depot bands, but Is continued In all army bands. To men with special qualifications, who can pass the required examination, an added Inducement Is held out two-yea- r course at the United States Army Music school. Any bandsman In his second enlistment may become a candidate for tbe free scholarship at the Institute of Musical Art of New York city. This , Institution supervises the InstructU at the United States Army Mu school. The director of the Institute exsw Ines the candidates for enrollment end selects five or six men for tbe scholar shijiH. Olliers who display marked ability but who fall a little below tbe pussiiig mark, are iiermltted to re assistant main and take the one-yea- r band leader course at the school. The course of training for recruit has been, adopted after, a thoroup B study of the best methods found The most practice foreign armies. features have been taken from everi available source end combined Into American system which has alreW achieved valuable results. A word about puy. The nn7 slclan has no anxiety about his fooo food good, wholesome, strength-givin- g qn clothes, no there Is worry about ters, heat or light; there Is no apT henslon as to sickness or doctors bin He has, besides these, many ad tages, a healthy environment Jfj ful companionship and the opportr nlty to broaden his point of vlewWi association with many different UP1 of men. lie is assured of ample tin to practice, ample time for Pi nor Is there any deduction while Jie is on furlough. All musicians receive more mono, than privates, as well as other pr1 lieges; and they are eligible to all noncommissioned grades, from slclan, third class, to band leader. In conclusion, I can safely say tbi os builders of morale, and as w taluers of tbe fighting spirit made American troops Invincible dr tng the great war, the hands of United States army demonatrtt their value beyond all question. lelJ : 'b! |