Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 8, 1919, Page 4

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w) ni ve di PAGE FOUR WHERE TOURING CAR AND BRONCO PARK TOGETHER Furnished by TAYLOR & CLAY Room 212, Oil Exchange Bldg. TODAY'S AARKETS BY WIRE | INCREASE IN CAPITAL. NEW RIG FOR TEAPOT | Directors of the Texas and Pacific approve at the annual meeting April {NEW RIG—Oil Pe.— P¢.— /'6, an increase in the company’s capi- Another rig will be transported to the Teapot region in southern Salt |28, the Peat meee that was | Creek to begin immediate exploitation | ars Se ey ea that upotintions 7 laccording to the arrangements com- ‘or drilling a large part of the Texas | |pleted yesterday between the Fuge" and Pacific holdings, under the same R E COSTS ea MAN | Williams Oil company and A. N. Mc | 11. as were made with the Prairie ;Daniels of Dougias. Mr. McDaniels | /Oil and Gas company and the Ohio | will make arrangements to immedi. | ‘Oil company, for leases of various jately ship the rig and tools. to the |" Tae bi Lead ubrokenvon! \field to get the hole underway as | 2¢Teaeeg The most expensive piece of rope| soon as possible. x | | that was ever faken into considera-| Wealthy. Ri ns are often bur ied | GEOLOGICAL WORK tion of a local court, was a 60-foot in glass coffins. | strand that was introduced as evi- ———E Maps and Blue Prints, Surveying jdence against im Evans in a case | only in the delay that it will cause. Crude Oil Testing a Specialty, Local Stocks New York Curb ‘tried in justice court yesterday even-|The drillers expect to get the re Wyoming Map end Blue Print Co., A er Midwest Refg. ing. Evans was sentenced to serve |0Ut of the hole and resume drilling | p, O, Box 325. Rm. 10, over Lyric Burkburnett. Transformed from, American “10 Midwest Com. — 50 days in the county jail and pay | today on the original’ test of the pal Casper, Wyo. iri Into Veritabl es ; Midwest Pref. a fine of $30 for cutting the 60-foot | grant Gap field. ———— : Prairie Town Into Veritable | Big Bear Menitee piece of rope from a 400-foot guide pica ae SEED oe ie j pean Forest of Derricks by cine Ne Wgemnlile Glenrock Oil rope at the Natrona Power company 5 I aga | oston Wy Ja nae e lant Wednesday. Texas Oil De- | Bi Fc Cosden \n nesday. | | Big Indian ~ = as nc. velopment. Center ---- Obmulgee 2 | Columbine - Sapulpa’ ——. STOCKS AND BONDS (By NONI C. BAILEY.) | Con. Royalty Heun ai ; Daily telegraphic quotations from New York, Denver, ana No, not Fords—I mean real, hon Elnora = . FISHING JOB IN WELL other markets over our private wires. est-to-goodness, bucking — broncos, Catt 4 Place the convenient facilities of our office at your dis- cow-puncher ponies and handsome Jupiter ae 5 68 New ioe ae Soo posal to buy, sel lor obtain the best markets and up to the min- big touring cars, parked side t Maan & Gut 19 toc! Open Close The Mohawk Oil company whieh | ute quotations. as close as rdinessin a pa cing: Naovinwest 4 . 46 yan ase jacned) ‘3 be listed omong the predue Information and quotations furnished upon request on Oh, well, if you park the machines os 08 Be 2a Jing oi companies early next week, Local Oils, New York Stocks, Liberty Bonds and other issues. I don't see why you can’t park bron-, Outwest - = 0% 193% |has had a temporary setback owine 2 cos too. Pathfinder - ion Sinclair Oil 362 | to a set of jars having unscrewed Phone 203 Casper, Wyo. 212 Oil Exchange Bldg. , the strepts are lined on ea - 2 Oe U.S. Steel -- ov from the drilling stem. The company s with touring cars and bron icardy ---- ot ets 0 | now_has a fishing job that_is serio’ cos, and broncos and touring ¢ Riverton Refg. -- ans Liberty ee while their riders crowd sidewalks | Republic - ea | i stores and every nook and corner} Shiloh ~~ = as. | of the town. Millionaires, in the United Pet, ----- «19 : latest cut of business clothes are arm) Western Explr, ~~ 1.00 93.70 93.60 in arm with the typical western cow | Wind River Refg. «24 ee reas | boy in the rough and ready gar! E. T. Williams—- 2.60 =, 94.00 bk ———<< ————— ments of the plains—West Texas Wyo-Kans. - 1.15 maeive a= wD plains Wyo-Tex. - ee arn le ull because of the great Mosher unite -500.00 575.00 , 4th dis -- WYOMING CRUD = OIL MARKET ene is laid in Burk $1.00, Elk Basin ~_ Warm Springs - little town was just a typical Salt Creek — 1.50] Grass Creek town, a few little one- Big Muddy 1.50] Fossil -- along the main street. Pilot Butte — 1.50! Lander --.----------------- two hundred modest home one or squatted about in any convenient di- rection. Then came the discovery ot | the Fowler well, estimated producing 3,000 barrels of oil a day. ' BY TRADERS PETROLEUM The Transformation. The once insignificant, flat little prairie town is now a veritable for est of derricks, towering above the i [4 OR tiny houses, like spires too tall for The stockholders miniature churches. The al oft f the Tra > x . T , me HO: » Trader’s Petroleum compan well is located in) somebo back Secretary Lane Says Total Known aie lied re yard between the chicken lot and the Supply Is Decreasing Fast; ian cern pig pen. n the business street, - 4 mz ca iven new however, is not undisturbed and here timates Given. NEW OFFICERS CHOSEN AT MEETING IN CASPER Following am a share of stock in the Hog an Oil Company. I sold a short time ago for $100, Hee today I cannot be purchased for the enormous sum of $8,000. I represent an interest in 6,000 acres of oil land, all of which is practically proven with a daily production of over 5,000 barrels of oil. The company that I represent has reserve assets of nearly a million dollars and there are eight wells now being drilled on the holdings of my company. This, Mr. Investor, is an illustration of what an investment in the right oil proposition can net you in profits. You Cannot Buy, Mr. Investor You cannot buy me, Mr. Investor, not for even the sum of $8,000, but you can buy stock in the e Om y that owns me and four other shares just like me at a combined valua- tion of $49,000 wo $50,000. The Hog Creek Jr. Oil Company, Mr. Investor, has selected upon the advice of two emi- nent geologists, 80 acres in the original Hog Creek mpany. A well will be drilled on these 80 acres. Our interst in the Hog Creek Oil Company is equal to 50 acres in their which is worth today not less than 100,000 and besides that we share over $1,- Laldined the election of directors plans were 000,000 of their reserve assets. This is yoursif you buy stock in Hog Creek Jr. Oil Com- und there|a store has been/unceremo: Reeth nee can Paed thal total enon to make the comnany dror juuy. An aecurate map showing the holding s of the Hog Creek Jr. Oil Company is print- nuousls meee ane ana gers oil SCAG, in the United States, ex- of pytha n eee ed just below. Study it and then read the next paragraph. Back of therdirty little drug. store, clusive of oil shale deposits in three &¢ shortly as finence Set Notice the big producers indicated on the mup, lying right up close to the Hog Creek Jr. eral prope states, has been exha whose da fountain is the chief at- to the comy i while the known ble oil resources, not counting , hale deposits in the ground « in field storage were ¢ timat dat { 640,600,000 barrets. Distillation of shale deposits in Colorado, Utah and 7. Wyoming would produce 70,000,000,- 060 barrels of oil, the secretary Secretary Daniels also informed the committee that 4,000,000 — barrels would be required by the na traction of the town—Oh, yes, you to timates transnm Salt Cree in Mule Creek ana know goon well Lune to the Senate Commerce jp MG RaIc GN NRETEORIER busily pumping rich mittee immediately preceding the 1,4 will pd developed will be an- of thick green oil at the rate of about purnment of the recent session of oi. od Jate . 800 barrel congress. As a result of the election, J. El- Unde er tower isa thou. Up to last January 1, Mr. Lane... Brock @f Kaycee, was elected sand) On the railroad said a total of 4,198,000,000 barrels |, lent, if R. Holt of Buffalo, n right-of-we sands of | son, of Denver looking strip of |: the the railroad track big enough for : well and immediately sought out the owners and pu teing protected on and on the other by the track it makes an ideal drilling site right in the heart of the field. A well is to 1919, while 8,192,000 barrels would be drilled at once, it is understood. be needed by the shipping board. and everybody is wondering why no- Most of the oil for the navy depart- been produc: sident: Bert Griggs, H. Hanauer, treasur ama director, Lai The building of body thought of that before. ment, he said, comes from the Mid- « Springs ed in a In the gutters are streams of oil, Continent field in Kansas, Okla- of incorpor i with t in the streets are puddles of it, an oma, and Northern Texas, while ye of the Re. even on the play-ground, at the schoo some is obtained from the Gulf coast including land in the secre AT ROGK SPRINGS. PAPERS RENEW COMPANY FILED $200,000 hotel he capftal- holamgs. This is the land of the famous Duke, Knowles and other big producing wells. er Are he ck house, two flowing wells are produc geld . H. An- ing 500 to 600 barvels of oil in: ‘ — < Wexel- day The children, besmeared with rT r WAT We pie black and grease, are no longer sent MIDWES} REFINERY iy Brown, all of Rock Springs, will con- home to have their faces washed —it’s n eoitaleyine first board of iii toreee 5 . no use t's dirty, but they like it G [ Another new corporation which 5 Q ‘ of pros ity that they display it as soa aah Sra Re ayaa ey ies Proud ete (ESSE SUES GI According to New York market s.ve its main office at’ C 1. Can you pict the town as it was s the Midwest Refining com- >t H. Reber and F. H. Oliver are with its people ekeing out a meager PAny is making | preparations for the incorporators. existence, suddenly awakening to find TeRoeE ate whieh it ia ieeneetee aa We eae ai Is there any doubt but what the first, well on Hog Creek Jr. acreage will be other than a SRS Ara child in We will take care of the production of Seaver tile comnane will mm | gusher? Development in this field is staged on such a gigantic scale that an accurate Ponies ae th? Te ee the new Rock Creek field. The com- 4 store at Deaver. Its directors are | record is practicall impossible. There are numbers of wells right on top of the sand and Soandeccaltthankani ly erected several A. B. Duncan, Fred Crosby, Ernest | numbers of others drilling through the black lime right this minute. The Davis well is Fairy Tale tanks at Rock River M. E W. B. Snyder and F, W. reported as making 80 barrels of high grade oil a day and fast drilling in what looks like It, ig snobatheatoryaotoneusood per’ and Greybull plants c, all of Big Horn county. The | another big producer. shoe-maker or one Cinderella be company has a daily seciation of Cody, Wyoming, is the capacity in excess of 50,000 bar- Wyoming Produ wealthy overnight, but it is as if the Co-operative as is an oil investment opportunity far above the average. As you can readily see, company embodies features not to be found in other companies. honest men ave behind this company. It’s Going Fast---Subscribe Now The stock is going fast at par value $10 a share. Every day subscriptions arrive from Successful and 6 eiRMeN Seva talblnT reese] ethe » of the other. Its directors will hand of Midas had touched the tow: "ls. Several large wells have been name oe he other. c 1 ea tanied Grae htne to gold, or! ppleted in the Rock Creek fiel . Horner, J. Martin, L. W. gold-producing oil. All this has y the Ohio Oil company and with Pearson, LN. MeGuffey and 0. L pened in four months. There the completion of the pipeline from p hundred and ¢ the field to Rock and the erec- — producing well the little to’ tion of a small refin it is expected LINCOLN_IDA HO in the field: will ids, while drilling or Burkburnett and those field ure counted in thousa thousunds of others are entire that the production of the show a large iner : DOWN 200 FEET preparing to drill, The total pro- suction is estimated at 451,850 bar- with 150. drillin ipproxibately . in Wichita county, 170 derricks erecte weparing to = tt contributed about! spud in. No oil field in history has Lincoln-Idaho is proceeding sof the amount. Many guch a record, viewed from a number “Pidly with its test well at Water- eras gushers are in the field, andgof angles, such as cont of flow, f#ll in Lincoln county: and is down wells producing from 100 to 500 bar | price received lack of 290 feet. Drillers hope to get oil y ordinary occurrence. duster: The f the wells al a shallow depth and oil interests selling in every direction | producing 2 come in Of Kemmerer are watching the wild- from $1,000 to $20,000 an aerc. within a period of sixty days, which ¢#lting with interest. It is claimed that these fields arc . . rol e yparen > already producing more oil than the jy “wall persentave sn the dewent: RANGER FIELD whole state of Wyoming. paying. eb Ea dave Ata rigrtiies eine) ea ihe ¢ loud seo, at uleust sixty additions) (PRODWUCMONGIS Wicl y is sending an wven with all th need men say he jarment” “led. If not au price $ new wed 1 the The daily the Ran, field,” inéluding ‘all Ss un increase of several rrels he preceding we: . metropolis y and the Big Possibilities in Future. t AT WATERFALL : 8,700 BARRELS average’ prodtuctién’--of 500, Oil men tlticld in th Eastland county, Texas, during the igures will be far below the ac | pate that it wil , Past w was 48,700 barrels, ac- results ut the end of the yeai |the center of of ope cording ta the Ranger Record. This thousand over production figures for all over the country. If you are ee going to invest do not pass up this opportunity. The coupon right below will help you make money—use it. bali tion $150, > treet, Fort Worth, Texan. Gentlemen; Enclosed please find my check for $.....e.ceeeeeeee eee ee ee eee for which enter my applic shares of the Hog Creek dr. Oil Co, 1 fo par value, ful at $10 per share \ddres Company, Fort Worth, Texan. ot | AUTHORIZED: Coal and Oil company have recom- | | mended to the stockholders that they' \tal from $5,000,000 to $6,000,000) | | . | CUnit ress Staff Correspondent) | B (By Mail.) Germany will convitice the world by the policy of her peace conference ‘delegates as well.as the governments policy ‘that she is a changed nation, and can be dealt with as such, according to Philip Scheidemann, widely known German | statesman. | “The delegation to the peace con- |ference will be truly representative jof the new Germany,” says Earls mann, “It will include none of men who are responsible for the | frightful cataclysm of the ; four years, nor any who were othe contaminated by the practices of the jold system. | “It is necessary for us to purge ‘the atmosphere of our own house. |Having suffered enough from the old |system which brot us to the yery ‘edge of perdition, we hope that not- | withstanding the heavy burdens which jpeace will lay upon our shoulders, |we shall come out of this war as ‘purified and better men and enter | the society of free nations on a foot- ing ‘of equality. “The foreign policy which we are resolved to pursue wil] be based ex- ‘clusively upon pacifism and the League of Nations. We social demo- crats have always been champions of these ideals, during the long years when we were suppressed. We are glad finally to have a chance to put them into practice. “We are today the only people in the world that has almost entirely de- mobilized and disbanded its standing army—the only country that has put |the idea of reduction of armaments into practice. Though fully con- scious that this may tempt many enemy politicians to us violence, we confidently believe that such proof of the spirit of international broth- erhood will convince the world that it faces a new and entirely changed Germany. “We hope that the ideals of hu- manity may now retake their rightful place also beyond our frontiers. We fail to understand why the blockade of starvation, enacted against the Ger- man people for the last four years, is still maintained, and we learn with much gratification that America is endeavoring to have it lifted. “Another thing near to our hearts man troops formeriy In Turkey are a particularly pitiful case. Strong bolshevik bands prevent them from returning to Germany overland, dl are systematically robbing them trying to get possession of their arms and ammunition for purposes of an- is the return of prisoners of war. Ger- archy and destruction. We7still hope the Enterte will permit these sol- giers to return to Germany by sea before they fall yictims to the bru- tulities of the bolsheviks. Meanwhile 1 can say we are confident British port commanders will not let our men die of starvation.” ‘YANKS COUNTER HUN TRICK By WEBB MILLER Seer (Urlted Press Staff Correm WITH TIE AMERICAN ON THE |RHINE,—(By Mail-)—In _ handing over the heavy artillery to the Ameri- can authorities under the terms of |the crmistice, the Germans attempted jto work a Teuton trick or two by |tendering guns of antiquated models. , The German officers were frankly sur- prised and disconcerted by the inti- mate knowledge of German gun mod- els displayed by certain American ar- \tillery officers. As a result a large | Percentage of the big guns offered were rejected as of prewar design. The group of German artillery of- rs probably would be vastly in- ‘terested in knowing just how the | Americans ‘knew all about the intri- jeacies of their guns. It is a secret no longer. When the Third army first entered Coblenz the artillery experts found }a young German lieutenant remain- ling behind to turn over certain guns !abandoned by the German Third army. Lieutenant-Colonel Bowley of | the ordnance department engaged the jyoung officer in an argument over the models of guns and insisted that |the German must produce an artil- jlery hand-book to prove that the guns |were of recent model. The lieuten- |ant hied himself away to Berlin and jreturned with the handbook and proved his point easily. But the jhandbook remained in American hands. The valuable information in it concerning German guns Was ‘trans- lated and studied. Then, when the party of Ger artillery officers from Egsen blit! ely showed up and tried to palm of thelr junk guns upon the American army, they ran into a surprising array of knowledge about gun models. They couldn’t understand it, beca they jnever had credited the Americans with any great amount of thoroness. he handbooks also contained a large amount of valuable information about the manufacture of big guns jand steel processes used by tha Essen plant. — «That Wonderful “Efficiency.” Chi io pork-packers now ‘admit their method of han pigs } cages wasteful. |Tn’ anding yas { ather ‘from ie | ay for ting fication: of:the a , even the Squeal | of the pig is lutilized.—Punch Fedor) —— i In sItaly ” the day begins at mid- ne and is Reckonsdi on the twenty- () hour syst em.

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