Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 18, 1918, Page 4

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TOTAL CASUALTIES. REPORTED GROSS 78,000 MAR THREE WY | Additional Losses Due for Announcement During) Weeks to Come; Many Homes to Be Plunged Into — Sorrow on Tardy News of Late Sacrifice Fe Se a ne pence Expeditionary forces to date | ota! .434, including those given out by the war department) pivcion from the Sand Draw field. for publication today. Officials at Washington have declined! This wacoline bomes psc ss tis gad to estimate the total losses suffered by the United States but wells of the Producers and Refiners with indications that the announcement of casualties will con-|in the Sand Draw. and is the con- tinue for three weeks at least the number will not fall short densate that is formed in the drips of 100,000. from the gas of the big weils. Three Wyoming boys, Arnold Rah- $ The Producers and Refiners are man of Wheatland, Verner Watkins CURTIS Pj LLING shipping gasoline condensate to Lan- | of Laramie and Arthur, Tisdale of |der for the use of the Lander refin- Wayworth, the first two killed in ery there and are getting $2.10 per action and the last named missing, barrel for same. are reported in casualty lists for Sun- a little lower in flash test than regu- Immense Saving in Oil and Coal) Seen in Prospect for Distri- bution of Iron Mountain Supply Here GAS FROM SAND ORAW Gasoline is now being marketed in day and Monday. lar ‘motor fuel ‘and the refinery is Of total casualties given out to mixing it with the higher cuts from date 17,434 were killed in action, the stills and thereby making a suit- 5,573 died of wounds, 6,249 died of | able fuel for motor cars or engines. disease, 1,480 died of accident, 40,- | 916 wounded in action and 7,782) missing in action, including prison- | ers. Notwithstanding the fact that fighting ceased a week ago, the re- ceipt of messages informing rela- tives of casualties is to be expected, | an irony of fate that is doomed to) plunge many happy: families into sor- row. Mrs. H. H. Marsh of Casper! received such # message last week} telling of her husbands sad fate and) reporting his death in action on Oc-} tober 14. ——— Furnished By TAYLOR & CLAY Local Stocks Bid O13 .08 American Casper has an abundant supply of Bessemer “al gas about twenty miles from Big Bear - here but the needs of war have kept| Big Five this much needed fuel from the city.| Boston Wyo - | Frank G. Curtis is now in Washing-| Big Indian — 7 : jton trying to push the plan thru so| Center --- The following casualties are an-| thot his company can go ahead with! Columbine — nounced by the commanding general the laying of the line. Con. Royalty -- of the American Expeditionary forces} 4 9 inch Gaspen wanes 2 and given out for publication Sun- Elkhorn _. Hecla -- line connected with | Dresser couplings and about eighteen BOYS KILLED, MISSING IN AGTION 9 SOLD IN RIVERTON This condensate is TODAY’S MARKET REPORT © IANS ROCK: CREEK TO BE BIG FIELD OF THE STATE WGTORY OF ALLIED FORETOLD BY STATUE AT. ALBERT, RESIDENTS THINK Expenses of about $1,500,000 a month will continue thruout the winter with the probability of an- ~ AT SALT GREEK 'SUR’S OPINION | THREE DEATH onal at | Conditions vated by Neces- | IS VINDICA TED he es of Ro wat Get area treasury officials at Wesh- LUSK FIELD | Wilbur J. Gibson, a Denver atto: | ney, recently made an official tri: | to Rawlins and the Rock Creek fieli | of the Ohio Oil cémpany. © On his 2- | turn Mr. Gibson was very favor:bly impressed with the outlook of the Rock Creek field and stated vhat i | would soon become one of the large | per Doctors for Long | Loans to the allies willnot be shut | "a5, Gane eS sn clone Journey Jeff at once, but if the call for aid/to the No. 3 and that the hole would =e < nee, WE i do better than 500 barrels if allowed ae tes detpbeany ene Salt Creek is in the throes of an| many months it will be under a NeW 't9 produce to capacity, ‘The other me jepidemic of Spanish Influenza, there| program providing for peace and re-! Yells drilled by the Ohio are so far visitor yesterday en route to the |heing about 170 cases in that village | construction loans. The government’s apart they show the field to be miles regular doctor! policy for assisting in the financing) Lance Creek field and thence to Den-/to date. With no a he in extent. ver and Oklahoma. Mr. Sur will | there it is doubly hard for those suf- Fad the great es oat ie uid : ke five ; i fering with the disease as well as | torn sections 0’ urope is rot ye : make five locations for wells in the fering with the disease os well ts tor ulated. GEOLOGICAL WORK .- Lance Creek field for different com- panies. Mr. Sur is one of the first geolo- gists to assert that the Lance Creek field would in time become one of the |to Salt Creek every day or, two. May Drop “Liberty Loan” Term The week end brought three deaths {9 stimulate the outporing of ad- from influenza at Salt Creek with qitional billions in the spring for gov- many who are desperately ill. ‘ernment bonds, officials are consid Midwest Cook Victim Maps and Blue Prints, Surveying Wyoming Map and Blue Print Co., Crude Oil Testing a Specialty P. O. Box 325. Rm. 10, over Lyric was employed as a cook at the Teapot| ome.” the Midwest Refining His only relatives are his | The government’s financial jagent in many important reconstruc- tion measures will be.the war finance Mr. Sur is returning from an ex- C tended trip to Montana and the | Station for Northwest and his reports on that |COmPany- great oil producing fields of the West 2 ering new directions for appeal. The| < ead tis tpeatetion ta being! sealiced. ieee, W- Elwill, aged 88 yours: |term “liberty loan” may be dropped, sesrers Mize The late Mr. Hall and Mr. Sur were “ed Sunday morning at & loca’ wos_|and “victory loan,” “peace loan,” or| ————————— I the discoverers of tlte Lance or Lusk | Pit#l after a two weeks illness of in-\ «rebuilding loan” adopted, with the 1 WANT YOUR BRICK field. fluenza and pneumonia. Mr. Elwill slogan such as “bring the boys WORK | On Contract or Percentage Call for Estimate } CLAI part of the country is favorable as | P&Tents who live at Port, South! corporation, whose powers Congress {} 41¢ so. Jackson. regards oil and gas deposits. Wiples Sneea ing company Wil shortly be asked to broaden to| = ee } —— OER ODE 5:6 enable it to adv funds to enter-| —— | le it to advance funds to enter-| STORAGE i had charge of the funeral services|), ; 5 Sot re. fohnson Co. | viich were held from the Bast Sec-|Rtset essenual, nor peace, to the in 11-18-2t | ond street chapel thsi afternoon. In- terment was made in the Casper | cemetery. Fatal to Engineer Why not let Handbury put your plumbing in the winter?) Phone 988. Household Goods, Pianos, Etc. Storage House cn Burlington Tracks 2 CHAMBERLIN FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING CO: |dustries converting from war to nor- |mal production and possibly even to rebuilding ventures abroad, Expenditures, appropriations, bond issues and taxation were discussed Stanley Trezona, engineer at No.| today informally between leaders of | 1 stati t Salt Creek for ‘the Mid- % fs i Tslepbone :205 day (after "a aliort lines lof' faflu-| rations. and expenditures. a0 tan ae etro ologist will be open for engagements be- enza and pneumonia. He is survived) consistent with futur ilitary ods | s Suture military needs /| tween Nov. 18 and Dec. 18, Wire New York Curb : * A 1 |by his wife, Lena, one daughter, put there was divergence of opinion Midwest Ref. -- 00 |Mamie, and one brother, Tom Tre- regarding immediate fiscal policies. || °T Write Midwest, com. _ 1.09 | zona, who lives in South Dakota, aa aus |] 503 CommonWealth Bide., Midwest, pref. The body was taken to the Grant) White House Cafe seryes you! Reaver, Cole, Merritt - = street chapel where the services will right. 10-26-39t | Glenrock Oil! be conducted later. Cosden —_ | Burial in Kansas < | Lib Okmulgee The third influenza victim at Salt) 1 Sapulpa - =. 7.87 Creek during the day was Mrs. Nina| erty Bonds Wanted Houston Oi 74.00 76.00 | Epperson, aged 25 years, who died BOUGHT FOR CASH—TOP MARKET PAID ts Wl Oklahoma P 9.37 9.50 |Saturday after a short illness. The : ee body was taken to the Grant street The Security Loan ‘Co. New York Stock Exchange | chapel and was taken last night over ws ipr Senay wiles Cy eel Jepiter ieoika the Burlington to Esbon, Kansas, for! No. 4 Kimball Bldg. Phone 702 es + ere 169 |at n mountain. The lines inside| Kinney - 17 a eee | interment, Sw ———— = a - ied from accident and other the city limits which would” serve the . : igh Low Close : : causes —- -- 13 | @bmestic users of the fuel would be| Northwest - “BB | Mex, Pet Ob Meee U.S. NAVAL GUN \' SMP OD LL I EL IAF ELS IAT DL, Died from airplane accident. 2 |jgid in the alleys and services run Outwest -- 08g) Pesan OF : “354 853 ee A BEST BOWL OF CH TOW i Died of disease___-_ 47 | from same to the houses in the same, Pathfinder - oh “U. me ee 101 983 1008 TO BE PEER OF & ILI IN TOWN Wounded severely -_- 98 |manner that the water lines are now) Premier -- = ue |e ER ee F "| 15 AT THE CHILI KING LUNCH Wounded, degree jin uso-except that gas lines are sel-| Picardy -—- = age o| Liberty Bond: GHOST © j mined |dom buried over four feet under the| Riverton Ref. --- “1 | gh ale ale : PA RISIAN | Back of Grand Central Bar. All kinds of Sandwiches 1 Wounded slightly surface. | Republic - 2024, | 19.90 r opular pri Quick service, highest quality a Missing in action-_ ‘With low pressure mains to serve | Soh e ue | STINTS y, | La pslepae asshig a s , | the city, the house service pipe would| United Pet. 09 WASHINGTON, Noy. 18—Had the 7 VME MD D1 af fA of Jin) Total -_-» ‘ab Mus ee over tae inch andin thal (eee 4 war continued, naval experts say, the Se) ee lease Of large buildings, an: inch and| Wind River Ref-—— arack: |nignacass United States would have developed | ——— — Rose L. Williams, Bethany, Neb. |& half or two inch service will give | ae ee oer Ty gel cardidas 28 | adong xange gun shooting 400/milse. IN WAR TIMES, CONSERVE MATERIALS Murde A. Ross, Stacey, Mont. plentiful supply. The pipe is iron) WY0omar “30 ae). Ath dese => ~ 98.00 98.00 | ; i ee Don’t discard that Broken Casting, but bring it to us to be | Joseph Kainz, Poplar, Mont. and generally black pipe only is used) \WYO°Te$ ------- ne nn nnn eo oes eine Smelter Co.if Welded. We save you time and money. Clarence E. Craver, Victor, Colo. | 5 that the cost of piping is normal. | Oey MOTE D tone Welders and Brazerg of Cast Iron, Steel, Aluminum, Bronze | _ Thomas W. Hughes, Brayman,|"’ Gas itself acts as a reearrera 9 REFINERIES OPERATE DRILLING FOR FIRST Oi having, enlarged: to sughiaw cxteny Fea hen nce ERLE EOE CUA eee 5 Mont. |mpon iron, and gas lines that have| Semen 2 ean a OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING SHOP Fred Carl Jordan, Herman, Neb. | péen in service for half a centu: Arnold Rahman, Wheatland, Wyo. | tirely of black iron pipe are sti Verner Watkins, Laramie, Wyo. | ing good service. Henry Schnell, Plevna, Mont. | - For domestic use there is no bet-| William J. Winter, Nampa, Idaho. /ter fuel than natural gas. It is in-| Samwel 0. Woodward, Baker, | stantaneous in its heating qualities) Mont. like electricity and also like that serv- | [ies it can be used for developing | power, heat or lighting. The installa- |tion of gas pipes in a house already a ee ee ] Year; has effected a tremendous de- enced SEs | velopment of,her oil industry. Today | there are in operation in this. state ity | 500 barrels daily. They are capable ] MORE | of refining double the amount of oil DUST DURING 1917, ry en- ll giv- OF OWL INDUSTRY THERE UBy Associated Press] DALLAS, Tex., Nov. 18.—Under the spur of war, Texas in the last Died of Wounds William Kelling, Hardy, Neb. John A. Delinger, Sand Point, Idaho. John T. Phillips, Omaha, Neb. Burnard G: Shurtland, Yuma, Cold. Wounded Severely Martin Goetsch, South Sioux City, Neb. Raymond Arthur Morris, Wheat- ridge, Colo. | produced in the Texas field last year. Herbert I. Hanson, Sioux Falls, | | Rieles of unsuspected volume have giit Greek _ "150 Ss. D. | | been opened and made to aid in HieiMuddy © 150 John P. Madiera, Colorado Springs, | BEING FORCED Tf WAL j keeping ships and army motors at pilot Butt ~ 150 Colo. | | top speed. SES ss . : 5 | iratve cons cig? ones Elk Basin _ ~ 1.85 Wounded, Degree Undetermined | F bs in the coastal region where 10 re- Gince Creek _ ~ 185 Lewis Richard Morrison, Denver, | Reine. Gusta thes -Lten hit ineries are in operation, the first poi} Sanapience Colo. | j anit of which is nearly completed is a}. nder 12 " Oscar A. Jackson, Springview,|@fder by the war than the news-| big oil plant on the Houston ship, = mae Rie Neb. ° paper business, particularly in the} canal. It is intended to have a ca- represent an investment of $8,000 Theodore H. Seaman, Lamar, Cole. | smaller cities and country towns. The! pacity of 20,000 barrels a day and 000 to $10,000,000, | large metropolitan papers have prob- | ably, suffered least. During 1917. | more than 1,200 publications went | out of business. After making allow- | ances for new papers started, it ap-| | pears that there was a net loss of | 62 dailies and 569 weeklies. | | The mortality statistics for 1918 | will probably show as great a loss, Glenn S. Gibson, Kimball, S. D. George Fellows, Amherst, Neb. Vernon M. Hill, Timberlake, S. D. James Platte Hubbell Jr,, Colorado Springs, Colo. Anton G. Kiesler, West Cliff, Colo. Earl H. Moran, Dell Rapids, S. D. Howard S. Pierce, Juniata, Neb. John J. Reefe, Royal, Neb. * = * for’ the shortage of paper, the in-| aif te oliptte Wilgon, “Weesigs:; cheating cost of all kinds of supplie ape: “Wounded Sli, htly and the higher wages, together with| e heavy call upon newspaper men John M, Claymore, Laplant 3 > a mijlitary service,.has been more | ! ceonaten Srem, Bigstone, S, D.| Severe this year than last. . D | And perhaps one of the serious ‘features of the situation is that the people of the country probably do not realize the most valuable portion of | ¢ press has sustained the greatest | Mf) Jows. Under popular. government the | y country press, inggaving not only) country “weeklies, but the smaller) dalies, is the real voice of the peo- The following casualties are re- ported by the commanding general of the American Expeditionary forces and given out for publication Mon-| Killed in action_ Died of wounds- Died of Disease_ We Give | Money- Missing in’ ection ple. Editors of large metropolitan S 5 papers donot have and cannot have) Totals «mn anon ea the cl touch with the people that aving Killed in Action le Henry Meade Palmer, Madison, 4) °° Service essary incident in the life of country editor. Just as Wash-! Neb. fi ‘ " ~e & cia x inigton, D. C., is the poorest place in| x s can J. Henrickson, Fenny ile, | the country to get a line on the poli-| —we have genuine Ford | tical thot of, the nation, so the big | city new: er office is the poorest | place ‘to get a correct picture of na- | tional thot ‘either “political or other- jwise. : Will Hawes, Deloit, Neb. Gilbert Miller, Rogerson, Idaho. Paul R. Martin, Hershey, Neb. Alvin Munson, Humboldt, Neb. Robert E. Prigan, Margo, Mont. Died of Wounds | Isaac J., Harvey, Wauneta, Mont. |, in time saves nine.” ae if you are in the market to buy or ce]. Oil stocks, see Taylor & Clay, 212 “IN TEXAS, SHOW GROWTH 1S STARTED IN ENGLAND ‘THE UNIVERSAL CAR Your Ford car will give satisfactory and money-saving service for years if you just give it decent care. shop look after it, making replacements and essary, let us keep it tuned up and running smoothly, sure have all ‘the ser- vice and comfort you could get from a brand new car. It’s all in the knowing how. Our workmen are skilled make the regular Ford prices as estab- lished by the factory. Bring your Ford car in and let us look it over—“a stitch | e5 | evening and is a bouncing girl, C. J. showed his usual good taste by pick-} ing a winner, as usual. Mr. Hochenauer is a full-blooded | American despite the sound of his name, and has been covering the ter- ritory around Casper for the Mine & Smelter Co. of Denver for over a) year. The firm specializes in mine : supplies and also has been supplying the oil men with small tools and fit-; ings, and be 118 S. David Across From Shockley’s. Phone 611-J HARDSTOFT, Eng., Nov. 16. —| The Marquis of Hartington has start- ed the drilling macninerg of Eng- land’s first oil well. The operations are the result of a four year survey by Lord Cowdray’s geological staffs. At the ceremony beginning the drill- ing Lord Cowdray said it was im- possible vo forecast the quantity of oil which might exist half a mile or more below the surface. WYOMING CRUDE OIL MARKET Warm Springs — -$1.00 eepete, ur When You Are in Trouble, Bring. Yo CAR TO US OR PHONE 79-J Best Mechanics—All Work Guaranteed EAST SIDE GARAGE Let our repairs when nec- ' ave an Electric Washing and Wringing Machine We have different sizes for.all needs and will be glad to arrange monthly payments if desired. “Gust Call and you'll parts — we ied of Disease = : Seay: if Capt. Julian G. Guiteras, entered eerie Tae pita eal GARAGE = N t Colo. Try our'compartment plate lunches. bs = a rona owe “Tice B. Clark, South Stage Lodge | White Hoyse Cafece 10-26-50 231-237 North Center. Phone 9. = =) te O. Pole, S.D. ; | ae Be cl a Hen A. Harding, Denver, Calo. The phone number of the Blu¢ 4 P h one 6 9 : Missing in Action Front Grocery has been’ changed. | Arthur J. Tisdale, Waywor! * 4b, Wyo. Call 4:58. Seen eee oo ee Ei iQ nee

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