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Show fiute County News, Junction, t'taK Feeling His Oats lis isilii lintiof year ti yaarjsumir.er clathss. aj Authority Sees Ample Motor Fuel for Long Future Schools Pushing1 Music tc Ford . -- cleai8i, fiusiag, xUiritg fad dyiff. a Wa fix U. i ' Baarestod liist Ssia! attetian c&s Weft ts!y.. to ir.il Kc'eu, That the public school band movement Is bringing America to the fore In the music world, is the belief of Frederick Nell Innes, director of the Conn School of Music, Chicago, and internationally known band leader, 'America is destined to lead the world in niuslc says Innes. It does not yet ran!: with Germany, France, Hungary, Italy or England, but we are climbing. Fully eighty per cent of the high schools have some musical organization, an orchestra or a band, or both. Music in the public schools BaasonttSspricfs. r-- idea! GlKsisrs & Tatars, - nl ; . Utah. BfejSeM v , As. .i.ulinral Kour.iluOon) (Sesnt-Korba- Only a fourth of our outs crop go-into porridge and other table supplies, according to a survey by the Founda-tion- . k Agricultural The remainder stays ou the-farwhere It is fed to as many Dobbins and Ilal dies as are left to enjoy It. With the coming of the truck and tractor, a smaller percentage of oats fed to farm animals goes its way to the stable and more-Budinto the pigsty. At present horses consume G7.8 of the oats fed to farm ami swine cattle 13.2 animals, JQ.S. Oat chops have been found to be Ideal for producing rapid growth in young Poultry consume pigs. 5.9 and sheep the remaining 2.3 of the total amount of oats fed to animals. Sears-lloebuc- SHOjjl REPAIRING rave We yoar teles rrd keep you wall keeled & W. Iirmkerhoff Junction, Utah- ft eS - aveyaCTgTror.: Los t 4- - Uto.ii 1927 Automobile IjScenso plots I7o. Savicr River Bridge and Junctic I . I4-d- 2 be-two- an (eat Way Through hdar please America Destined to Lead World, Says Frederick Neil Innes. Corn Acres notify Piute County News, JuncticrUtfft, rassrx' 3Easjvte,5--'ar- OR NOODLE Professor XJ.ear sweeties table- -, etiquette embitters my yountflife HetHmKs hes in the army yet and has to use $. Knife My Now isnt there some Sears-Itoebue- thing to say sos Jig, wont taKe offense Ella, Vat in, starts in to his parX hay wjtk When Sc that glean? and glint, just try this tactful little way of giving hjrn a, hint: My darling please accept from me, with kindest Comp!;mcnt,tKi& Cute insurance policy. It coerp accidents! ' si.ortmacy. Mr. Innea fnrther believes that the time is near at hand when even the ftinailest fpmmunlty will have its band. He thinks that when this condition te ONE brought about that it will be due largely to the incentive given musical training by the public schools of the The modem school is as nation. proud when a musical championship is won by their band or orchestra ns It is when their football heavies go down the field to glory in every gaue they play, he says. The band-oorchestra Is vastly su perio to the vocal class, says Innes, because the boy in the adolescent ptage simply will not sing. He may be compelled to go through the motions, jbut he will Hot actually sing. He refuses for the simple reason that he pas no voice to sing with. Give snail-lad a trombone or a cornet, or any Other instrument of the band and I. is piusical progress will astound even himself. . w one-tent- h THROAT TABLETS ' ksjrojd -- puvjsnuj iroyj $ 9ZS jetidsoq saqnj pun SJut nog pus de Snap ssi3 juoAOjd Aeui ij suicd pun saqou pj pug sasiruq sap snui ojos surejds uisijEumaqi uoijsd3 con aqoEpE3-EiSiuinau dnox spjon sq3nco jEOjqj sacs synpuojq iuojj dipj rdujoid S9Ai3 pens a ooj3snjq aoisijq oqj jnoq-jLjojsEd pjB;snui pauoiqsej-pj- o Bqr jo 3poA sqj jjb op piM siuaipaiSui ynjdpq aoqio puc piei gnuj jo jio amd jo optoa sicuojsnjq -- Sears-Iioebuc- three-quarter- wiid-catte- sjojsbjj pjtqsnj Sllade by Umlwit Pfcarmacal Co., Saint Loult, U. S. A ; HHM 8snd huoO , 9 C-- three-and-a-ha- lf SU3JV9Q V Tired? Sssdown? Take Tanias (Senm-Koebu- If overwork or neglect has taken toll m sjtuiujnj J9p)3jd pus jajijSuq W J3UC3p J3ABIJ USD of your health, let Tanlac build you up. Over one hundred thousand letters to Us tellhowTanlachas built back sturdy rugged health into wasted rundown Sears-Itoebuc- fcodie3. You can rid your system of weakness and pain, enjoy the boon of happy living. Many thousands of healthy others nave done so. Many of these happy folks are your own neighbor?. Front by their experience. Tanlac is natures own tonic and body builder made frojri herb3, roots and barks. Your druggist has it. Over 62 inillion bottles solo. TANLAC fORYOUR HEAIJTfl and-studic- i Tliis Town of 20 Has 44-Pie- j Band ce town with a band has been discovered by the Conn Au-- j sic Center at Elkhart, Ind. Forest Grove, Mich., Is the town, The entire population of 20 Is housed In five dwellings. Small boys throw stones from cue end of the town to the other. Two stores serve the needs pf the community. Yet Forest Groves. band numbers pieces. The hamht lacked paved streets and population. It was not even men-- j tinned on the maps, yet the musical urge" was there. Several of the townsipei) knew something of music, as did several of the boys on the sur? rounding fawns. There were lots of others raring to blow a horn. A meet? ing was arranged, attended by a 100. per cent representation of the town and by farm boys within a radius miles. The band came Into being overnight. Rehearsals r.yre faithfully attended. Band night sees the one street lined with parked automobiles, and Forest Groce, once a jest, has become th- - envy cf the surrounding cotnrnu-pitie- s. A p 4-- k t fpoj will give America this coveted musical ii Prof- - Noodle, 11 .Frederick Noil Innes, Director, Conn National School of Music. i"l gentle way to mz& ham eat with sense? What is the proper Knives HILLS IMPROMPTU SKETCH OF EXPERIMENTAL OIL AN OIL DOME SHALE REDUCTION pAN.T The O. 8. Bureau, of Mines is confident that motor fdd supplies he. ample for many years to meet all needs of the country s millions of automobiles. Harry H. Hill, chief petroleum engineer of the tarrRorbuolt Agricultural Foundation) bureau, here tells the reasons for. this convict ioji, and sketches the Rating their .way through almost advances in .industrial methods which justify his opinions. four million acres of canned corn in By HARRY H. HILL the form of silage is the job American Chief Pctrolsurrj Engineer, United States Bureau of Mines. cattle, mostly dairy cows, accomplish reason why therjj is no oil out. How to shut off the water every year, according to the to worry greaijy about and permit the oil to run out is a probFoundation. It Agricultural fuel for a long time lem with which the engineers have has been estimated tha't they ert 96.0 ahead Is that people are worrying long worked. They have made great of the vast amount of silage while about it. Interest la such a question progress and so Increased recoveries. of the small amount left, swine conat the right time, te the best insurIn earlier times most oil producers sume 2.2. horses, 1.7 and sheep 1.1. Very little silage Is fed to ance against disaster.Oil The Fresident carefully guarded all information and the Federal Corporation about their wells and experiences, but poultry. All silage made on the farm Board have done what was needed, at latterly there is in these Is consumed on the farm because It is tte right time., matters. Geologists and petroleum not a product that can be handled We know that most petroleum bas engineers, once derided by the pracsuccessfully through commercial chan come from rather limited areas and tical oil men, are more and more note. that even from theseonly a small pro- accepted as guides and mentors. New ( Culling Down Corn Surplus'! portion has been taken ouL Cll pro- knowledge is constantly Increasing reduced by pa3 pressure capable of lift- coveries. ing it to the surface when we drill As to Mining for Oil holes is but a small proport'on of all In Lorraine they have dug shafts the oil contained in .the sands Even to the oil eaads and actually from the best pooi3 recovery by the down the sands out, like coal from one-habrought old melhsdo is small, in the most favorable conditions, a mine. But Its costly or one seventh, or Another mining process Is to 6lnk a oftener one-xi- h, Cut a considerable part cf shaft to the oil sand3 and from its what still remains in the ground can bottom drive tunnels In all directions be recovered by methods now estab- through the sands. From these tunlished as technically and economically nels small perforated pipes are driven into the sands, which drain the oil practicable. Producing oil from coal and shales out of the sand3. It flows to larger and by mining the oil bearing eands pipes back at the foot of the shaft and is entirely possible. .Experiments are thence is pumped out. This requires going on in those directions, and if we installing an expensive plant hut In ever fcave to fell back on these re- some fields the high recovery that Is, cbui it Agricultural Foundation) (Sears-If- e I sources we will be ready. For a long assured might justify the cost. time, however, the present methods of understand the process s about to be Whether yoj prefer your corn nicewith improv- Intsalled in a few fields In this counly butt red oa the ear, or in the form exploration and drilling, of roast pork with fried apples, there ing processes to' assure larger recov- try, some companies being convinced it Is practicable and profltable. are ni, the average 23:, bushels of eries, are likely to suffice Oil c:.n bo distilled from coal,- - and Ar Oil Dome Illustrated corn coining to each person In the work Is now, being done much I tut no drauchtriman, maybe I'nited Stales every year, according pm can draw something that- will help ex- along tb's line. Eut more appeal ha3 to experts of the Agricultural Foundation. In 1925 there plain. Hercc a rough drawing of an been mado.by the plan of extracting was a ht more; this year there will oil dome. The shaded part at the bot- oil from shale. The shales of Scotland s have been worked for probably be a few ears less apiece but tom te a deposit of oil bearing sands unare and a of almost century, they rock an stratum with Impervious plenty for all of us just the same. r drilled the hole limited in this" country, richer in oil Less than a fifth ot all this corq above. A Kentucky, j,nd gas pressure caused oil and than these of Scotland. leaves the farm. Excluding a smalj 4-After a while the ga? Ohio Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Wyofraction of the best gruue that Is kept-ou- gas to flow of those pressure wasnt sufficient to keep up ming and California13 are particularly for seed purposes, 81 Just a question rich in shales. It ulti2,850,000,000 bushis ruus around or; the flow and they pumped until cost of the oil. Conthe of even ceased extracting this producing. mately Hogs, )eg3 In the following lorms: with which J1SO.OOD, has of was oil most given gress the Nevertheless, ; cattle, 19.2; 50.3; horses, has lrctalled a plant near the Bureau to the sand still left grains. eliciting 5.1 and sheep, 0.9. poultry Thn the operator drilled the well Rulison. Colorado, to distill oil from It Is which flowed fer a time, but most the Colorado River Shales. of the oil was stsal down there in the calculated that tho ehale3 mined at sand. If the gas pressnre could be re- Rulison will produce about a barrel stored more would flow. So the oper- of oil to the ton. ator injects gas Into one well, restor- s The Use of Oil Shales ing the pressure and causing the oil In Scotland they are working shales to resume flowing from the other. about twenty-fiv- e that After a time the flow will stop again, cf oilproduceton'. Tli8 seams aregal.one from per but still much of the oil will be lefL to eight or ten feet In some fields it has been pcesibe to thick. In Colorado are seams many obtain additional amounts of oil by times as thick and containing much Introducing water In some of the wells more oil par ton. Reduction of shales and forcing the oil to others. The ad- Involves an enormous mining operadition of a chemical such as soda "ash and after the oil is extracted the tion, to the water may assist in removing vast tonnage of refuse must be disthe oil from the sand grains, but neiof. So it is expensive compared ther plain water nor water containing posed with producing oil from wells. phemicals should .be introduced into Ben E. Lindsey of the Bureau of an oil sand except as a last resort, Mines Experiment Station at Bartlesfor It Is, likely thit the water, which Agricultural FoanduGca) ville, Okla., Is confident that exploratravels faster through the sand, will tion, better recoveries, better utilizaOur hay crop furnishes one of the get to the open veils ahead of the oil tion and deeper drilling would furnleh largest cafeteria services in existence, and when the flow is resumed under k enough oil to meet all requirements Agriaccording to the water will come out. pressure for at least 'twenty-fiv- e to fifty years, Seventy-eigh- t cultural Foundation. Saved Nowadays :f It could be extracted in that time. Everything It be Is' million tons. expected, will The gas escaping from an oil well But as a practical matter this will not produeed in 1920, a large part of with It a proportion of gaso- be possible Within that period theTe carries which' will be consumed by cattle. In the old days was lost. will be times of which line, shortage, when oil According to figures put out by the It Is extracted from the gas from Nowadays shaips will be needed to suppleof 51.4 Department of Agriculture, and saved, while the dry gas can be ment the oil from wells, etc. this amount will be ieaten by cattle, forced back into the ground tp mainMeantime federal and state govern41.0 by horses and the remaining tain pressure. ments and the Industry are 3.8 by sheep. The amount of hay One of the menaces to most oil Ing In an astonishing range of inveseaten by hogs Is very slight, only a Is the Inflow of subterranean tigations pools These activities small fraction of one per cent of the water. Water flows through the oil cover such a wide field that even an alfalfa crop. As in the case of other sands foster than oil. and by surround-- , of them would run into fp't crops, most of this hay Is con- lr.g th,- - bottom of tbs well keeps the enumeration tiresome UetaiL sumed right oq the farju yhere It 1$ srown. MR. : of-nia- ny Housewives Big Buyers of Musical Instrument Elkhart, Jnd. Sixty per cent of musical Instruments sold to women are purchase by housewives, It Is revealed in a turvey made by the Conn Music Center hare. The survey was made thrqqgji music instrument dealers In twenty pities, and covered 320 actual transactions. One out of every ten instruments sold were purchased by women, and their preferences for Instruments was very much along the lines favored by tbq men, according to the survey. Of the total number of transactions, q per cent Involved the purchase of a saxopliono, sixteen per cent that of a trumpet, and nine per cent that of a trombone. That youth will be served, especially In music, was well Illustrated In the ages of the- - purchasers. Fully thirty-fou- r per cent of those purchasing Instruments were under twenty-onwhile nineteen per cent years weiti between the ages pf twenty-onpnd twenty-five- , and twenty-onpea pent between the aes of twenty-flvpnd ttdrty. Only per cent flfty-fw- e , q e q pf all transactions, ed persons of. ferry, year? njjjJ. $rwu. |