Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 1, 1919, Page 4

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ote; PAUL FUUR a 4 GREAT REFINING CENTER 1S SEEN Casper to Be Seat of Operations in! the Northwest, Says Oil City Derrick ‘rom the Oil City Derrick.) bids fair great refining World in a few years, with the present for new plants and additions to ts carried out. » Sinclair interests are expected to start construction on a refinery of no smal! dimension next spring and now the New York Oil company has Casper to become one of the oil centers of the also taken up the proposition of build- |‘ ing a refinery here to take care of the crude in a more profitable way than at present The present plants of the Midwest Refining company and the Standard Oil company of Indiana are the last word in refining methods brought up to date and these great works that are now the largest in the whole northwest a stepping stone to the real is hidden in the future years. when after a period of rush work in order to meet war needs, the Midwest and Standard shut down somewhat on the strenuous toil that had made the industrial district west of Casper city hum with li short- sighted ones stated that it ‘ked the h point in Wyoming oil history and because of the clouds on the industrial horizon, due to the war, this was al- lowed to gO unprotested to the public. Now it app that not only was this ng, but the most sanguine did the great possibilities that are not opening up for the oil men of the north- west territory From indie: ions and reports by those who have examined the fleld closely, | the Salt Creek field alone will be able to produce for many years to come, and there remains the chance of an oil pro- duction still to be or Muddy sands below the first and second Wa Ci ks, Which arg the producing horizons at present. From the recent report of the treasury de- partment to the depletion of the present wells, it was concluded by the experts that each well producing f the first Wall Creek will aver 000, rels, before the point is reac where it is no longer worth while to pump. NEW TEST FOR ‘TANDER REGION Oil Field Workers” etema@arocration to| Drill Baldwin Creek; Other Field Notes Gap on the id well om the Forest - ranch on Baldwin creek, six yuth of Lander, Wyo. The out- cropping of the field is said to 3 stand saturated ®ith oil, The J oil ld Workers’ corporatic wanced by employes of the shipyards, Washington Sand Draw Wells to Start r the Producers and ation has made new we in the Fremont county © will be start future re company in this field. Mike Heury Down 900 The Mike Henry Oil compan down y 900 feet with its well on section , Mule Creek field. Material for a second derrick on section delivered to the field. SECTION 26 WELL 19 nearl MAKING 200 BARRELS Midwest The No. 1 well of the on section 28-36-64 in Lance kis es timated to be a 150- $o ‘| pro ducer according to company report to-| The well is pumping steadily | The first sand in thi ed at ob pr ond sand w was plu being sec company week in this ‘Dow’ t Complain of | High Rent, Casper Man Tells “Chian” peuple who high rent should invest Thus quotes a form mow a resident of Casper feet er was struc da off and pr ed from the expects trouble well The next first sand. for the eyenne man on a visit in his former home town this week. He points out that rents make the wages fly in Casper am paying $60 a month for a five house, while many are paying more for five and six room hor s often neces na small are so high or two familic AN OPULENT HELP. Applicant: 17m afraid, mum, TI can't take the place. Lady: But the wages are liberal and the work is pot hard. ‘ Applicant: That's all right, mum, but you haven't any sa- rege for me run about err found in the Dakota | REA Lesert | rj ments must be kept up, to say nothing PUTIN HAREMS Today’s Markets by Wire : || Furnished Daily by T: & Clay, Dg 9 Floor Oil nee Pe yo. Local Oil Stocks ;Wyo-Kans ----<!4..-- pict pti Bid Ask Wy-O-Tex ,<,é---.-) neuses: Amalgamate oyalty, t-ee$L.25 $1.50 New York Ourb ‘Stocks| American ~ 08 Hs ‘Atios i “06 Open Close- 127 Midwest, Refining = -$1 Midwest Common .. -50 Midwest Preferred -39 Merritt Bessemer — 1.15 Glenrock Oil ed aney |B -18 Cosden ~+-. +ses - jColambine 45 Okmulgee P. & R, = 1,06 1.05 Sinclair Gul€ -..-<..--- 59.00 .29 Salt Creek Prod. Asgn.. 53,60 29 West. States O & L.. 15 Prod. & Bet. Com... 03 3 Mexican Petroleum - 55 Texas Oll . - 337.00 331.00 Lance Creck Royalty 38 | pei "31 Sinclair Oil 61,00 61.12 U. 8, Steel - - 109.75 109,00 Lusk Petroleum 4 Mountain and Gulf — Mosher Oil Units Stanley Greene --$ 456 $ 50 Northwest - 5 /Mosher —_ 5.00 6.00 Ontwest “4, 200 Club 3.00. 3.60 Picardy Teapot --- 90 1.00 Riverton . Royalty & Prod, Corp- Sunset — Tom B Gate --. Wind River F Williams, E. T. Western Explora' 1 Royalty 1.26 Ist 4% 's . | gna aes 145 3rd 4 3.86 | th rn . $1.00 | Elk Basin ~- 1.50}Grass Creek - 1.50 i Lusk -- - 1.50 ° Lander Warm Springs =. Salt Creek _ Big Muday Pilot Butte — MRS, SAM SERVICE TO-READ RED. GROSS DAWE STARTING SUNDAY | Organization Perfected at Meeting of Executive Com- | mittee Friday Begins to Function at Once; Di- vision Chairmen also Named for Campaign Ps Ata meeting of the Red Cross executive committee held yestetday afternoon, the Natrona county organization for the Red Cross drive which starts tomorrow and continues until November 11, was com- bee Mrs. Sam Service was named as chairman with Mrs. 0. G. Jack- son, Mrs. M. J. Gothberg, J. S. Mechling and Mrs. B. B. Brooks as her ursistants on the manageme git | al AUTHOR'S WIFE IS ‘ co.| TO WRITE HISTORY - i 70F WOMAN'S PARTY * Superintendent George Wilder have charge of the public schools, *bdell of the Standard refiner nelair of the Midwest 1 ‘y of the Burlington r hulle of the Chicago & 5 the you need was used | cr those in | ft is pointed out that wnless the Amer- | ican Red Cross continues its work, thou- sends of children will die of starvation ed Luropean countries, which hove not urned to normal conditions jsince the war. ‘There are still hun- |dreds of disabled men in government | hospitals and large corps of Red Cross ary nd student nurses for whom tie Red Cross provides extra comforts. Jin devast » | Posters, solid 25 bclegpmaiays seeretaries and, iture mak- thing ordinary Z | beys and their other funct won: heets, the harrowing or tho ci- but simpiy an echo of Oc- tered furniture and mirrors was me to leave an echo. “ the old cabinet maker, whom) ee to give first ald to the tron’ Aor miler and srem were the + his are getting rarer and rarer,. Re&l antique pieces are bex coming fewer and fewer. Still the de- mand increases indirect ratio with the diminishing supply. “Hence the antique factories are booming. and their prices be them. If you are wise you will act il tely ‘upon the .timely little household hint I have given if The only main essential is: “have y 2. little furniture ager in your hom: ulated metropolis cherishes in: its bos: . It seems. that the tortures in: flicted on perfectly new square four- stately king tg in these well cham- bers are equal almost to the horrors of the Inquisition. Burly workmen ‘maul aud buffet: them. Huge iron chains are dragged across their immaculate Surfaces and last and crowning Injury they are shot full of UM Ponies. with birdshot. Just think of hjring men for such a job when the movers revel in doing) eR it for the mare joy of the thing. When 2 . these professional wreckers (I am _ re- ferring now to the antique factory hands not the movers) get thru with a brand new shiney piece of. perfectly good Grand Itapids furniture even an expert would swear G. Washington slept in it at least one night at one of his 57. varieties of headquarters, * Now just think of me possibilities: open to you! Women’s magazines and Sunday papers tell you ‘how to make dressing tables out of packing boxes. work tables out of cheese boxes and | portieres out of old tin cans. But here's faprize household hint exposing to you ‘how you may age your own antique fur- niture right in the family flat. Almost every well regulated Ameri- can -family has two or vbree willing little workers right at the home and fireside. Of course you may have in- tended to make a premiere danseuse out of little Dorothea and a second Mischa Elman out of Percival Harold. Still it were much “better to let them follow | their true and natural instincts and de-) E Styl fee. fleere ee velop into star pertarrecrs dn te. Eat | DAREVEVIL DEAD—Rodinan Law, ing, room of some antique furniture fac-| eas tory and in thelr embryo stage vat Pave eee poate pertormer. i in the them prepare for their yocational fu-|W°Fld, and brother of Miss Ruth ture by turning them loose doing piece | Law, aviatrix, at Camp Sevier Hos- work on thé family stuff. | lle, S. C., of pulmonary You will be amazed what satisfactory} is dead. Law was’ the results will be obtained in a remarkab-| first mam to drop from an airplane with a parachute, first to drop from! ly short time. Visiting friends Viewing the battle scarred fronts of what 4). plane into water and first “human fly.” short space agone was a 1919 suite from McBerry’s. department store will mur-' Most Complete Line of C Sianeaninn WHEEL Tos and BICYCLES © ; in the City. Priced Very Reasonable Casper Sporting Goods Co. entertainment and _— diversion, Red | Cvoss houses at the hospital canton- of the expensive local work in every community among returned soldiers and | te Should disdétor overtake, At Red | | %; funds will provide help, equip hospitals, pay for nurses.and for ve- a few reasons why ev- r should renew his membership during the next e but kers will present the m: tonight purposes of the attention in e ter in and tomorrow and the ar: ve will also receive ree geen pulpit. | Ub eatre UTTOMAN MUST GIVE UP GIRLS Mrs. Inez Haynes Irwin. ovat Inez Haynes Irwin, wife of Will Irwin, the author and war cone zespenuent, is in pWaabinntan iss he first history of tional Wovens party. Mrs. Irwin is her- self the author of a dozen books and | 4s a constant contributor to mia; ce For several years she ‘bag ee a member of the Nati Woman's party’s advisory council. _ Red Cross Moves for Liberation of | Wamane w Turkish Armenian Refugees Sold into Life of Slavery Fire Department Is Called Out Twice as Hallowe’en Prank | TIFLIS, Armenia, via Paris (By Mail). Turkish Armenian refugees whose daughters were saved from death for a life af slavery in Turkish harems, have appealed to the American Red Cross for aid in obtaining their freedom. is estimated by officials of th moniah government that 30,000 gir thus held in slav An executi committee to arrange plans for their liberation has been named and will sturt work wt once, : These girls, daughters of Hallowe'en rowdies took their spite} - out on’the firemen’ last night,’ the; fire pparatus being called twice to fire box ‘o. 7 at Fourth and Secon streets, Box o. 6 at Grant and Fourth streets had been tampered with by celebrating “kids” but the alarm failed to register] from this box. No accidents occurred] fromthe Van and Bitlis ions, disap- on the two runs down Center street, peured during the massa of 1918, altho the last alarm of the night called Nothing was heard of them for months Chief Oscar Helsts is bed and it was believed they had been slain Tee by the Turks. Recently pitiful appeals for libera- tion have been coming from them from b (+ Anatolia refugees 0, i.) Seurr of the Home company of Denver visited here yester: day. head of the industrial welfare depart Most “of” the “girls that they have not changed Mr. Sinelair‘and Mr. Scurr are old schoo} religion mates. Colyne! Uaskell,| high) commissioner of the allies to Armenia, hus been ap peated to for military aid. Ne definite auswer has yet been given but he is hopeful ef being able to offer a show TS ONL IL EXPERTS: Dil Field Maps Blue Prints Of force as a background for diplimatie Py Re ports tide Wuekntuskad toe catenoial’ b ching | ming Map & Blue P Print Co. uecgessury for the work of liberating the OnBer 325. Rm. 10, Lyric Insyrutice| He visited with Burke Sinclatr,| mént/ot te Midwest Rettig company: 149 W. Second ao Phone 214 ccecrgene-nesmeenerence orrpsmenntraerensve-remtceswoe: mene eetes SeSe nes weer ar seer e ter er ar esaee ois Gates Oil Co. SS AS We offer a limited amount of this stock at $1.25 a share. The company has considerable produc- tion and has valuable leases in Oklahoma, Louisiana and Wyoming TAYLOR & CLAY * Incorporated | Oil Exchange Bldg. Office Open Evenings oii sid i iit 1 Pane . | (SeaaM ae aaaTa TOIT eas: Lester Brokerage House { 156 N- Wolcott Phone 1142 ‘ hh) N > her, nce here and once : re ever did you : 1 old pieces, my |ed eer it. wun't for the Sanity jail here they have been watched | cation. Th carefully and all precautions taken ‘0 | where the prevent their escape. | Letter ; 411 Oil Exchange Bldg. 4 Phone 1133 ei “Casper, Wyoming bon ‘oti OlL "| , 3 * C, Jowmgon ana Raiph Hawk ‘charg: with the theft of several motor cars id the two men who broke jail twice, | at Glenrock, will a Su, ADD ion or ‘only place in Colereg enuine Keeley Remedig, ve their preliminary hearing in ‘ju DENVER Ce COL 7e oS court probably this afte: re DRUG uring their recent stay in” tie? It is a pleasure to sell The Bostwick Line suhigt: Jat Leather Vests SATISFACTION THROUGHOUT 164 SOUTH CENTER The Home of Society Brand Clothes Refinery and Oil Field Workers All members of International Association i Oil Fiéld, Gas Well and Refinery Workers of America, doce No, 43, are requested to be pres- ent at Regular Meeting Monday evening, Nov. 3, 1919, at 8 o'clock p. m., at Odd Fellows’ Hall, as the following speakers will be present: W. W. Slack, of Typographical Union; J. B. (Griffith, Trades Assembly; Lou Hanna, Boiler- makers; Edna Hoffman, Laundry Workers; J. C. Vogler, Teamsters; John D. Salmond, Clerks. By CHARLES VOLMER, President. “ABSOLUTE PROTECTION” BELL-KEMP CO. “The Insurance Men” 111 East Second Phone 370 Dutton, Staley & Company “Casper’s Pioneer Brokers” accurate quotations from New York, Denver over presses telegraph wires. All Jocal oil stocks bought, sold ‘and quoted. Instant service, List your stocks with us, we will get you Bie mea possible price. ‘or our TAYLOR & CLAY, Inc. STOCKS AND BONDS Daily ‘telegraphic quotations from New York, Denver, and other markets over out private wires. Place the conyeujent facilities of our office at your dis- possl'to buy, sel Jor obtain the best markets and up to the miz- ute quotations. ‘formation’ and qnotations furnished upon request on toed Olls Ne Olls, New York Stocks, Liberty Bonds th other issues. Phone 203. Casper, Wyo. Ground Floor, Oil Exchange Bldg. ik le. ' Pe NAO

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