Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 1, 1918, Page 4

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cP ES] ee) Fae bee +e 44 Bsons . hn SIO AD A TN FE AE Fi AO ow Cie Are as Ms hn Ras Gf ehib Bm __ O A of we Ge thi mi Mi it He te ch be of lox co ve bie fo tes mi do aS ou th on ha th: pe bid ne ob ne fo. bu on ca) we ab. ac’ da ths me be asi ray MOHAWK WILL BE Drillers Resume Work Today to American Bessemer ---.-- 04 06 | Explore Sands 1,000 Feet | ors Fee Pi Boston-Wyo.--- 14 AT | Bringing in Better Than $3,000 From Further Down fetes edie 08 ‘10 | Big Indian ---. . .20 2B | Source Usually Wasted The Mohawk well on the Emigrant} Big Five _- ‘013 02 | Gap dome which gave so much prom-|columbine _ -08 -11 | The Salt Creek plant of the Mid- storage tank. The gasoline is held ise of coming in a producer last! Gente ___ 008 .01 | west Refining company in the Salt in suspension in the gas much like spring, will start drilling again to-|Cons. Royalty. .68 0 babes Sey is Ow mene: ppons au | Bikh Sf a7 “a5 "77 | barrels of gasoline per day from the z 2 ane vie be rg an | " BR; Williams. 2.45 2.60 | gas that formerly went to waste from 2Nd it only takes’ compression to con- around 1,800 feet and as a result the|Glenrock Ofl-.- 3.25 8.374 | the wells there. — ji a officials are somewhat up in the air|Helca-Wyo. - 00% 008 This gasoline is a very high grade as to where they are |Jupiter —_ 02 .03 | naptha that is too light for use as sii | Glenhurst P Biers " a Rani esd santogise phatase Kinney _- 57 .60 |and it is therefore brot to Casper be lost in the air in the usual run of Jocation of the well fif thé geological) Merritt. = 20.50 21.00 | and mixed with other heavier grades the fields. At the same time when ce ea oe Meta advice they ea | Midwest Cori: ‘96 98 | at the refineries here. this gasoline is mixed with heavier drill a few hundred yards further to|Midwest Ref 113.00 114.00 The process of making this naptha grades of oil such as kerosene, it see if there should happen to be a| MMi 01k 024) is to take the gas as it comes from then makes a good grade of motor ped sand under the formation they| 45 -50 | the wells and compress it to a heavy fuel that can be used in cars. ae in. | tae eee pressure in a gas driven compressor. ok aire way Bot ee higher aces 7 ‘ .0 08 | The: machines h th of napthas and also the lower fuel 3 the! se grea! push the gas ° * santa hat ba Yak of te abioeiet 02 03 | into a very small space in the cylin- Oils that would otherwise be sold for to the well and his surveys have),,- 202 203 | der and from each fcot of gas so low price are made to pay a profit. disré. da’ a_ possibility Abst thersand| renee n= yale -12 | compressed, a few drops of gasoline Jn the early days when compressors raised bing: quavtibiy as\ to. thiacand joey: so= 01 014 | form and run to’a special tank under Were first used in oil fields it was tered is a stray and that the United Pet... -04 ‘ the cylinder and thence to a regular|customary to let the lighter parts hl y hed: b Wyo. Blackfoot 00% 008 evaporate in order to make a gaso- Embar has never been reache Y Wt asterh sits ot “£0 60 Mite fit for tue: market. the drill. | Wind River Pe. 28 25 - The hole is now around 2,000 feet| Young and will be drilled to about 2,500 or/ 3,000 feet before calling the location a dead one. HUGE WEATHER WAP ON COAST LOS ANGELES, Cal., Oct, 1.— (Correspondence of the Associated | Press.)—A 6,000-foot cross sectional view of southern California’s cele-! brated weather is presented daily by | the Los Angeles station of the United States weather bureau thru the ar- rangements with Dr. Ford A. Carpen-| ter, the local observer. These ar-| rangements consisted of the estab- lishment of iwo sub-stations at near-} by points. One is at San Pedro, | which is at sea level, and: the other | is on the summit of Mount Wilson, | 6,000 feet high with the Los Angeles; station between. At each station the current wind direction, velocity and maximum ve-; locity and the temperature are auto-/| matically recorded. In addition, the observers determine the elevation of | fog above ‘sea level and the relatives humidity. This enables Dr. Carpen-| ter to present a daily picture of the weather conditions in this vicinity} on a scale possible in but few other; places in the country. This meteorological data is avail-| able to numerous branches of -the| military service in addition to com- | mercial,, agricultural and maritime} interests. The cross-sectional data} is especially appreciated, Dr. Carpen- ter says, by commanding officers at the military aviation camp at March field, 70 miles east, and the Arcadia} balloon school eight miles northeast | of Los Angeles, while the navy has placed a man on duty to co-operate |, with the official displayman at the} San Pedro station where fog, storm | and small craft warnings are dis- played. 4 pS po a WAR TEACHING BAKERS TO USE | UP THE WASTE | SPOKANE, Wash., Oct. 1.—(Cor-| respondente of Associated Press.)— | Immense economies hereafter will be practiced in the baking industry as a result of lessons taught by wartime thrift, according to Charles. Iffland of Chicago, international secretary of the Bakery and Confectionery Work- ers’ Unio of America, who paid a visit here recently. { “Before the war taught conserva- tion,” Mr. Iffland said, ‘tons of flour and bread were wasted every day thruout the United States be- cause the bakers did not realize what the waste meant. “Our industry never again will see this great waste. The extravagant of flour, sugar, fat and other in- gredients that once were thot to be indispensible to good bread now are known to be unnecessary to a palata- ble, wholesome loaf. “I am speaking thruout the West partly for the purpose of preparing the way for our returning soldiers. The problem of receiving them back into the industry without upsetting contlitions will bea huge one. Our urion is preparing to receive its merhbers who went across just as they left us, and we will do every- ine vin our power to reestablish t! F 1 WANT YOUR BRICK WORK On Contract or P. ntago Call for Estimate PETER CLAUSEN | Ontario. | | | Allen Gil..-.-. 25 382: } #3 SHOSHONL A STAR causacries For |ON WY). (IL MAP Wind River Pet._ .19 TODAY AS GIVEN ae ‘a BY WASHINGTON || “Neves Interctea ar The following casualties are re- New Field orted by the commanding general of as = : hal the Acaeelcas expeditionary forces? Sshoshoni is becoming quite an oil | Killed in action-— 124 center. The town that formerly was Missing in action_ only a little outfitting place for the Wounded severely. | sheepmen on the range there, is now Died from wou.ds...._..... 10 | SPFeading itself, and the people of, Dad Peak waridhat andeoth: the place are showing the right spirit ey causes _.-_--_.___- _ 10 jin the matter of town improvement Wounded, degree undeter- | by making things easy for travelers. mined 4 The hotel has been remodeled and enney _allgntly: ~ 4 | is now a first-class, small town hos- | telry. The townspeople got together | Total — f | and built a road from Shoshoni to Killed in Action | the Maverick Springs field and also George Evans, Belt, Mont, \installed guide posts upon same so Albert H. Michael, Hudson, S. D. | that even a stranger in winter may Wounded Severly | gasily follow the trail without dan- W. McCue, Scottsbluff, | ger of becoming lost on the plain. More than all that, the people of Shoshoni have banded together to show the traveler a pleasant time Thomas W. Hill, Olney Springs,| during his stay in a quet way, and he Colo. is made to feel at home by the Charles Kersten, Stanton, Nebr. . | townspeople. William H. Lackey, Stonington, Colo. Darrel G. Sturn, Sargent, Nebr. Wounded, Degree Undetermined Floyd King, Taber, Idaho. Missing ‘in Action Mike Cogura, Bear Creek, Mont. > Owen Nebr. John T. Birdsell, Kearney, Nebr. ‘Lercy Fleischermann, Froid, Mont. ‘AL PIGKERTON KILLED IN | FALL FROM WYPO OIL RG Al Pickerton, a rig builder, was this month at Sioux Falls, S. D., has| Silled at Wypo near Lander Monday. been called off because so many of| He was ‘working on a rig and fell a| the women are busy with war work. distance of 16 feet landing on ay (AE alee A pipe block. His “head was crushed} Among those are taking a spec-| @nd his death was instantaneous, | al course in agriculture at the Onta-|_ The home of the: dead man is not o Agricultural College are more| known and a telegram to Casper,! than twenty-five ers from the va-| where it was supposed he resided, rious Catholic convents in Western failed to locate his family. Later The Mississippi alley Suffrage Con-| | | | IGHT ideals of tire build- ing, high yee 4 standard, are responsible for Firestone’s | mighty hold ‘on public favor. Right ideals of service are responsible for the mighty growth of our business, | A complete stock of Tires, Tubes; Rims and Accessories | at your command. Callany time, EARL C. BOYLE | f1€ So. Jnckaon. Phone Roan. 231-237 North Center Telephone 9 | | | f cooling as in steam. The plant is bringing in more than The eyes of the army. The airplanes are going over, thousands of them. There must be more to follow, thousands of them. Let us turn our own eyes inward— search our own hearts—and see that no selfish slacker dollar remains unconsecrated to the service of the men we love. Would We Not Die for Them— Our Fighting Men in France ? Then let us BUY for them—all the bonds we can—with the same great unselfishness with which they-fight and die. This isthe spirit with which they and we—fight- ing—working—saving together—will as Go Poder Queso 7 PANDUGTION USUALLY LOST 1S MAD DRILLED DEEPER ==? "===. 79 PAY BIG RETURNS AT SALT CREE 00t 1 |Casing Head Plant of Midwest Refinery in Oil Camp water is held in suspension in steam} dense the gasoline to a liquid instead .07 ‘10 | it comes from the big compressors $3,000 per day that would otherwise OHIO BOY TELL: OF HOT BATTLE WITH THE BOCHE By FRANK J. TAYLOR (United Press Staff Correspondent.) AN AMERICAN HOSPITAL IN FRANCE, Sept. 2. (By Mail.)—How the Polish troops from America helped stop and wurn back the Hun tide that attenipted to sweep aroun Rheims in the first days of the last German offensive was told today by Stanley Zalesny, who is almost re- euperated from the wounds he re- ceivéd in the fighting. Stanley Zalensy is a Cleveland boy by adoption. He went from Poland to Cleveland to be free from German kultur, and studied in the Cleveland schools. He is a clean-cut robust American boy, now, with a slightly Polish accent, and wearing the uni- form of the Polish Legion, to which he volunteered. “We were near Suippes, east of Rheims,” he said, “just before the, offehsive, we found Americans were on our left, and we were glad. We wanted to fight alongside of them. Our outfit was made up to a large extent of Poles from America and England. So we were English-speak- ing, tho we had a French genéral commanding us. He had two Rus- sian Polish generals under him. “When the Germans came over there were lots of them, and the ar- tillery was heavy. We knew the Americans would hold them on the left, and the French on the right, so we shoved them back, and went over after them. I was with the first Polish troops to get to the German trenches. ‘| with soven others of my company. d| They are hoping to get to the Russian | blue uniform with distinetive square-|mulates and crystallizes, look We got into a pretty hot place, and it was bad. Six of them woe peste EP 2 t e i Ts TI takin to the American hos-('ayiuibie or # passant asso ne 420 2 pital and cared for by the Americans, Wolcott! | je eee 27-20 and were glad to get back to our own! List your property with us. ®'The Americans. I am having the time Security Loan company, room 4, Kim. of my life, and feel fine now. You | bull Bldg. 3 2-114 can see how well we are 4 ere nee Young Zalesny speaks Russian and | MONPY to loan on everything. Phe se. some Germah in addition to Polish | piag. mene LATE 9-111 and “American.” He says that most of his comrades speak Russian too. PHYSICALLY FIT AT ANY AGE It isn’t age, it’s careless living that front now, he says, because they be- € lieve they could do more good, not|}puts men “down and out.” Keep only fighting, but by. the influence your internal organs in good condi. they might have among the Russians |tion and you will always be physically and Poles who could be shown that/ft, Watch the kidne; the German must be conquered. The kidneys are the most over. The Polish Legion: is interesting,|worked organs in the human body, especially to the Americans who en-| When they break down under the counter these rugged ¢haps in French] strain and the deadly uric acid accu. Out} topped hats, and an abundant vocab-| These sharp crystals tear and scratch ulary .of standard American slang.|the delicate urinary channels causing Their devotion, bravery, and high| excruciating pain and set up jrrita. morale excites praise everywhere, {tions which may cause premature de. panes ‘i generation and often do turn int) Wi FUNERAL T LSON 0 BE deadly Bright’s Disease, One of the first warnings of slug. HELD 4 P. M. WEDNESDAY gish kidney Scion is pain or stiffness jn the small of the back, high colored The funeral of Mrs. W. L. Wil-|or scanty urine, loss of appetite, in. son, mother of Mrs. H. J. Buchanan, | digestion or rheumatism. will be held Wednesday afternoon at Do not wait until the danger is 4 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Buc- upon you. At the first indication of hhanan, 440 C, Y. avenue. Interment trouble go after the cause at once, will be made in the Casper ceme- Go' to your druggist immediately. Get itery a rtial box of GOLD MEDAL Haar. (Mr. and Mrs. Fred Close, son-in- lem Oil Capsules, imported direct! law and daughter of Mrs. Wilson, from the laboratories” in’ ‘Holland, of Kansas, arrived in Casper this where they have been in use for over morning to attend the services. two hundred years. They will give al. IOGS Sic oe OM most immediate relief. If for any cause they should not your money; will be refunded. But be sure to getig GOLD MEDAL. None other is genu.! ine. In sealed boxes, three “han —ACY, Look at your doors arid windows and see the necessity of having All- metal Weatherstrip. No job too small or too large. We do them all. Then I was Sent out on a patrol inevitably WIN]. “Our Limit Is All That We Can’ Buy Bonds to Your Utmost! This Space Contributed _NATRONA POWER CO Phone 271-J. 9-17-tf * sees us, 2 to Winning the War by Phone 69 —

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