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Room 212, Oil Local Stocks Amalgamated Rity American -- ---- Atlas Boston Wyoming Buck Creek - Black Tail Bessemer -- Big Indian -- = Burke Oil = Con. Royalty --- Cow Gulch - Columbine - Casper Ranger -- Ask 0 +75 .02 18 Great Western Pet. Hutton Lake ---- -03 -13 Mike Henry Oye Se 05 Kanney,—.- <--- -70 Lance Creek Rity. -90 Lusk Pet- —-.--- Lusk Royalty Lusk Petroleum Mountain & Gulf Mosher Oil --.-- Northwest Outwest - Picardy Riverton Refg.- ~~ Rity. & Pr. Corp. Sunset = Buck Creek ---- Tom Bell Royalty United Petroleum Wind River Refg. 44 Furnished by TAYLOR & CLAY Exchange Bldg. | Williams, E. T. -. 1.50 1.55 Western Explr. __ 3.90 | Wyo-Kans. _ 2.75 | Wy-O-Tex, 222 -= 31 j Vatts. Stanley Green — 50 75 Mosher ~-__ - 600 700 | 200 Club - 800 400 Teapot -_ 90 100 New York Curb Midwest Refg. 176 Midwest Com. _- Midwest Pref. __ Merritt ~___ Glenrock Oil - AJORD Ce a Okmulgee P. & R. Sinclair Gulf f Salt Ck. Pr. Assn. Wst. Sts. O. & L. Pr. & Refg. Com. Mexican Pet. Texas Oil __ Sinclair Oil U. S. Steel _ 99.52 94.80 93.66 94.12 94.16 95.04 94.04 99.90 Victory Loan _ WYOMING CRUDE OIL MARKET Warm Springs — Balt Creek -- Big Muddy Pilot Butte -_ NEW PASSENGER, FREIGHT DEPOTS AND ROUNDHOUSE ARE STARTED AT LUSK The Chicago & Northwestern rail- road has launched its new building program at Lusk with the probability that it will be able to handle the rreatly increased volume of traffic to the o@ center of Niobrara county with better results than have possible since facilities there overcrowded. The improvements include a new freight depot, 96 feet with a 12- foot ceiling, a new y enger depot measuring 22x144 fe nd provid- ing all modern conveniences, and a new roundhouse which will have stalls for ten engines and ample space to accommodate the machine hops. The freight depot will be ready in 30 d the y ver station will y for use Octo- ber 1, it ij MANVILLE GAS FRANCHISE 15 SOUGHT BY COMPANY MANVILI Wyo., July : tition has b filed by George J. Fisher, John W. Dennison and John F. Harki, an attorney, all of Lusk, before the state public service com. mission for a certificate of public convenience and necessity, for the in- stallation and operation of a gas plant at Manville. Major A. A. Dieleman was consult- er regarding a franchise and the mat- ter was then taken up with the state public service commission. A hearing was granted in the matter on July 14. 29. > Some of the African tribes pull their fingers until the joints crack as a form of salutation, and one tribe has the curious fashion of showing friendship by standing back to back. and Money to SMITH’S AUTO SHOP Ford Cars Contracted All Work Guaranteed 224 W. Third St. Phone 1086 ————_— ANNOUNCEMENT We wish to announce to the ladies of Casper that we have purchased the beauty parlors of Miss Delia Lenehan in the Smith Building and will endeavor to render the same courteous treatment and service as given in the past. We wish to solicit your patronage and assure you now that we will always strive to please you. MISS NELLIE QUINN. MISS NELLIE POTTS. Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate « Greater CasperBrokerage Company Room 101 :-: Wyatt Bldg. Phone 1104 List Your Real Estate Wants With Us for Quick Action ~THERMOPOLIS PLANS ON EARLY SUPPLY OF GAS Fortunes in Oil Is Now Desti- tute, Claim been actually starving. Before the war this part of Ru- mania produced big fortunes in oil, being one of the greatest sources of European supply. Today its wells are in ruins and the people are des- titute. The invading armies requisi- tioned everything that could be pried loose and transported, paralyzing one of the wealthiest industries in the Balkans. Worlters for the American Red | Cross, which is distributing relief in the form of foods and medicines thru- out the country, have found people eating bread made of leaves, twigs and bark from trees. People were bartering the coats off their backs for small portions of corn and coarse bran. In one place the relief work- ers found a small local hospital in which the patients slept on boards with no mattress and little covering. | children, the oldest only nine years - 1.85, “There is no doctor nor medicines - 185 in this village and absolutely no way —--- 1.80} of taking care of the sick. maeweceeceee-ee 1.26 other village which I visited the en- | tire population of 500 persons was a ae The Yellowstone-Wyoming compa- | ny, which recently opened northeast of Thermopolis, is said to have 000 worth of stoék providing it tak over a municipal plant for the di tribution and sale of gas. that good profits could be realized. A gas engineer recently went over the ground and made estimates on the | construction of a si the field to the town, the probable | immune a big | ser on the Golden Eagle dome, | offered the latter town $75,- |hauling tools s- The gas |land was validated in most part by would be sold to the city low enough | Riverton people, who are anxious that |the first test be made this season. nch main from | Works are generally supposed to be At home they found five fatherless of age, cooking a meal of tree bark and bran, while the mother was out at work in the fields. _ “Typhus is prevalent and there is an increasing amount of smallpox,” says one American woman’s report. In an- 1 with some obscure form of con- agious di: i OHIO TO START WILBGAT ON FREMONT STRUCTURE The Ohio company is said to be and equipment to a new id to be located near Co- The structure s nant creek in Fremont county. Men attending the pans in salt from cholera, small-pox, cost of which, together with a dis- S¢atlet-fever, and influenza. ibution system, would amount to $250,000. i Home cooking at the Harvey. POLL LLL ALAA ALLL EAA FILLE LL A Ad dd ddd d ddeddhn Stags are bred in China for their horns, the horns being cut while soft each year and used in the manufac- ture of medicine. WYOMING NATIONAL BANK, Depository. JOHN BRYNE, Stockman. ROBT. J. VEITCH, County Commissioner, Natrona County. T. A. HALL, County Commissioner Natrona County Rumanian District That Produced) list of directors and officers: | treasurer; Wei; Moses, Mos Guy Reed, Fred H |Milton McWhorter, directors. The plant will have a capacity of 200 barrels a day McWhorter process, jed highly efficient in treating the} ‘heavy oils of California. Announce- ment is made that the company will} be able to contract crude from the} |Lander fields in the event no im-| mediate production is available from the Lance Creek field. The com-} pany owns 500 acres of land and yard facilities along the Chicago &| Northwestern. 1 CAN OF REROSENE PAID PIROT, Serbia.—(By mail.)—Ke- rosene distributed with other relief supplies by Red Cross agents here was received as if it were gold. A short time before the mayor of Pirot had paid $110 for five gallon can of the precious liquid. During the entire Bulgarian occupation the in- habitants of this district had no lights in ther homes after sun down. Bread had been selling at 50 cents a pound and the poor, unable to pay such a price, were living on corn- meal and oats. Now, with the arriv- al of tons of American flour and car- loads of other supplies the situatior is much relieved. Dozens of childrer have been found in abandoned houses living on the} charity of neighbors. Mothers are ready to give up their children to any- one who will give them food and shelter. There are thousands of or- phans with no one to care for them. The number of widows is distressing- ly large. which has prov-| The famous rug-making industry here is at a standstill but the Amer- icans are trying to re-establish the peasants at their old trade. As the Bulgarians took all the machinery, metal and tools of any value, the workers in mechanical trades now are without implements. a Read the Tribune want ads. i PER UNIT J. J. GIBLIN, Fiscal Agent TRUSTEES: Che Casper Daily MAY RUN LANDER ERUDE sss oo assos-r sx w » we |tor car tire exploded Sunday night) |about 11:30 The Oil & Refining company of | Boyle’s Lusk, in whieh’ Milton’ McWhorter of} Ware’s nose and cut his face badly | California is the controlling factor, Mr. Ware, who is the night bbe x Ser is completing its refining plant and| man at the Boyle rage on Nort! BUZEU, Rumania,—(By mail.) —| will Bs a ready to contract oil.' Center street, Po eee Here in the midst of one of the| Lusk capital assisted in financing the tire when it exploded, the steel rim world’s greatest oil fields, people have Venture as indicated by the following| striking him in the face. Reed, vice president and|the secretary; They found Mr. Ware unconscious Harry | on the pavement in front of the gar- Hargraves, George H. «Howes and | age, and will use the) great delicacy by the Japanese. CA ALE LILZILAZLELLZLELLZELLLL ELE LLLLECC CCC COCO DPD TD OD a ANNOUNCING The Mule Creek Oil Syndicate OWNERS OF 1240 ACRES IN THE HEART OF THE MULE CREEK FIELD. 600 UNITS TO BE ISSUED AT $50 The holdings of the Mule Creek Oil Syndicate are surrounded on all sides by locations and wells now drilling. In all, ten wells are now being drilled in close proximity to the holdings of the MULE CREEK OIL SYNDICATE, and seventeen choice locations adjoin the land of the Syndicate. These wells are being drilled b faith in the future of the field. The MULE CREEK OIL SYNDICATE is capitalized at $75,000.00, which is divided into 1500 units to be sold at $50 each. At this time only 600 of these units will be disposed of, the money derived from this sale to be used for the im- mediate development of the company’s holdings. y the Ohio, the Midwest, and other responsible companies, all of which have unbounded _ A thorough investigation of the Syndicate and its holdings will convince investors of the merit of the company and the advisability of an immediate investment in the units. Every requirement of the so-called “Blue Sky” law of the State of Wyoming has been complied with, and the plans and purposes of the Syndicate will bear the closest inspection, which is invited at all times. We advise the immediate purchase of one or more of the units of the Syndicate, and believe that rich returns await in- vestors who are willing to take a chance with us. For further information, phone or call at the office, 312 and 313 OIL EXCHANGE BUILDING. Phone 1176. Brokerage Co. HENNING HOTEL We Recommend E. T. WILLIAMS AND CONSOLIDATED ROYALTY As a Splendid Investsient ~ WELL AT FERRIS General Petroleum Said to Have Struck Strong Flow and Capped Well in front of broke o’clock garage, it Harry RAWLINS, Wyc., July 29 A re- port claimed in Rawlins to be well founded states that the General Pe troleum ¢ rilling on section 16, Ferris dome, struck a strong flow of oil at about 3,000 feet ane that the well has been capped while | aken to protect the com- holdings in that region. Se rigs are being moved onto the The General Petroleum well est in the field, the marked in drilling preparations on the was repairing The explosion woke up people in| Ideal and Wyatt apartments. | Market Quotations. Tel, 1155 ——————— | Salted whal t is considered a| at dateaey ba Hee Tacailee, Read The Tribune ads. leases. is the dee: increase e the structure also is credited to utton, ey OMPANY [Fie Producers Retiners? cor poration is said to be pleased with the foutlook for big production from the ‘Ferris dome, where it encountered foil at 900 feet in section 25. The discovery is highly significant, it is believed, The company has_experi- “Casper’s Pioneer Brokers” Daily accurate quotations from New York, Denver and Lusk over private telegraph wires. All local oil stocks bought, sold and quoted. ; PL Apoyo nat Instant service. List your stocks with us, we will eat Salt sr eaeeibh (a8! Betis get you the highest possible price. \" ‘The Sand Hills company is again Ask for our Market Letter ‘in shape for drilling after having had 411 Oil Exchange Bldg. ‘to pull 1,800 feet of casing follow. Casper, Wyoming ling the collapse of the lower joint Production is expected within a few [hundred feet. The Ohio company is erecting a ‘new rig on section 15, close to the ‘General Petroleum well. and consid- ered to be on the crown of the tome. The drillers will be ready to {spud in the last of the week The E. T. Williams Oil is the latest to enter the Fe NEW YORK OIL ving acquired holding: at $80.00 Reeeinzin Wee tunes. ONE SHARE UP Ed Good, who was drilling at 1,406 ‘feet with a well on’section 34-19-88, BLAS VUCUREVICH Telephone 711-W. *xperienced the misfortune of having Phone 1133 Will Buy Any Amount —of— 9, this rig struck by lightning and burn- fed to the ground. A new rig is be. ‘ing erected in its place and the beam ‘should be bobbing within a few days. The Lost Soldier Oil company has two outfits drilling north of the Lost |Soldier field and has leased some of its land to others for drilling. The AYLO |Idaho Drilling company leased 120 T. L R & CLAY, Inc. jacres on section 10-26-89 and is STOCKS AND BONDS |down 1,100 feet ‘with its first well. The Cub Oil company is building « standard rig on 31-26-89 and will \spud in within a week. Ogden capi- talists are back of the project. Oil men are watching closely the | progress of Midw drilling on see- |tion 16 in the Separation Flats. re | gion. The hole is down 2,400 feet Daily telegraphic quotations from New York, Denver, and other markets over our private wires. Place the conveuwient facilities of our office at your dis- posal to buy, sel lor obtain the best markets and up to the min- ute quotations. Information and quotations furnished upon request on Local Oils, New York Stocks, Liberty Bonds and other issues. = and some trouble has been experi. Phone 203 Casper, Wyo. 212 Oil Exchange Bldg, enced with water. The same’ com- es | PANY, Has) moved anophen rign to, ite jholdings on section 6, three miles |west of the section 16 well. The company has a rig in tho |same vicinit The K ing company is down 1,400 feet with its test and expects to encounter oil around 1,900 feet. Gas and a showing of oil developes at 910 feet in this well. The Wyor i nd Oil com- pany is casing off ¢: 10 feet in well on Cow Creek and is optimistic over later results.” The American Oil Workers’ cor- poration has a rig on the ground in the Crook’s Gap section, where the jconcern has leased 16 sections from the Fremont Oil company. anges JUNE EXPORTS EXGEED RECORD MONTH BY 200 MILLION, SAYS REPORT A remarkable jump in exports dur- ing June brot the total for the fis- cal year 1919 to more than billion dollars, a new record, jing to a statement issued to {the bureau of foreign and d jcommerce, department of con The June expor seven | 000,000, which ex previous |high record, establ April of this year, by mo $200,000, 1000. The |year were i exports export June of last $484,000,000. fiscal for valued at for the 5,000,000, 0,000,000 f the is more than three ts for 1914, the last I Exports since the armis tice was ved in November are c¢ ® timated at ab 900,000,000, The ® excess of exports over imports for |-he fiscal year 919 was $4,129, & 000,000 inst $3,000,000,000 th previous r and less than $500, ® 600 in 1914 % orts for June were valued at 3 J00,000, a falling off from the iy ‘ of $ 000,000 recorded for » but.an inerease over the $260, & 600,000 for June of the pr. t ar. Total imports for the wr just closed are ed at 096,000,000, as i 4™500,- 000 for 1918 4 The remoyal of wartime restric. tions caused a decided increase in the exports of gold, from les than 1,000 each «in April and May $83,000,000 in June. Gold ex ports for the fisc $117,000,000 for year amounted to i st $191,000,000 1918, Exports of silver fel oft 2 from $29,000,000 in May tc 3 000,. C. W. KITTLE, Merchant {000 in June, but increased. ‘trom {$139,000,000 for the fis l year 191% to $301,000,000 for i919 S. E. PHIPPEN, Oil Operator. 10,0 shdpe aaa Shea Mey Crea Shefinphe of coffins. — Read the Tripune aas, TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1919°