Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 14, 1919, Page 4

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=k. esse mm AGE FOUR iba INANCIERS OF ALL AMERICA 10 DlSCUS5 MONEY Local’ Oil Stocks ie | | Amalgamated Royalty — American Buck Creek Black Tail -19 spieng Columbine 40 H-—~(Enited Consolidated 103 n-American fi- Cow Gulch 4 neial conference will meet in Wask.| Elkhorn 125 gion, January 12 to work out better Great Western Petroleum es 16 3 = APA ot 6 ; Hutton Lake _ 02% hd broader trade arrangements with Fyyitor _ 33 atin-America Kinney — 55 The first financial congress met in Lance Creek Roy: 37 but further meetings were post-) Lusk Royalty 126 ned because the war | Lusk Petroleum -30 This confer will not deal with} Mountain & Gult 74 Jans from one government to another! Mosher Oil 40 ut will try to establish a favorable| Northwest AT hsis for the coming together of fi.) Qutwest - 04 | Picardy lf uant to this aim the fi | Riverton Refining lf -quirements ef the Latin Ame Royalty & Prod. C 2 abl now and during the ne: af will constitute the chief subject) 7, . paiiicusicaa. ee" Gates: —- 1.3 Means of permitting closer comme:., Wind River 0 jal relations thru removal of adminis ative and fiscal obstacles and the roblem of better transportation and) Warm Springs — mmunication facilities will come up|Salt Creek — wr discussion |B Muddy -.. The immediate future ancial re-| Pilot Butte —_ uirements of the American repub.ics re very extensive. In view of the enor 10us demands now being facilities in the United turope and other qua is impossible for the to find and requ sritish governments selling in United states markets at a rate equivalent to 7% per cent yield to the investor, the 4 a . nd newer nations such as wilt Ate Taxable at Par if Taken in Ex- nted in the conference can-| change for Property, De- jot obtain more reasonable terms than} Me old , | partment Rules tin Americi tn governments | re seeking loans in the r ets of the}e Tee a Tnited States, while a great number nder a late ruling of the treasury Fe eneln utility canterpel and} department in Washington, si najor private undertakings are active-| 186 0! the Seeutine unger the in- y soliciting financial support, either| CMe tax law, which provided that stock the purpose of legitimate expension of corporation issued for the ane w for much needed rehabilitation after| § of orign exchange for “pepperty 5 SA aerate eae eer | hot taxable as income, has: he “| reversed, so that now all stocks so is- sued and taken in exchange for prop- are taxable at par- This ruling applies to ch transac tions since March 1, 1913, the date of e tax law; and makes neces- problem of improved banking acilities for the representatives of the Tnited States in Latin America also vill come up for detailed discussion. \t the present one bank has, either lirectly or thru affiliated institutions, | * saat radical changes in the procedure nore than twenty branches in Latin | f i oil and ether companies who have while another in control) PO“n or may hereafter he st six Jocal fin: institu. et it means Latin Ame . Other nanks ire opening branches of securing fF tancial interest in existing institutions | ¢ tablishing ag suitable for the| which they ry on. An ex! (ension of United States facilities thru 1 greater use of eptunces and other loss widely known means of expanding | credit, without upsetting the ib: rium of excl . Will naturally come tion must pay a huge in- x on the par value of the stock, ther it has 2 ayer ke t value or not. — in for discus The present exchange situation in Latin America which requi care ful examination, will be one of the topies of primary importance at the| = conference. Agreements, whether un- official banks, or ween governments in Ul ranty of internationa) Bates ation, will be studied ar lated or sanctioned by the before its adjournment is that the conclusion of the Company Has 800 Feet of Oil in Casing entert Mirming: reports first published in Tatecnntt 1 Gold conven-| wr ITS two weeks ago of the oil tion between the Unite and epetii 1 en Deusen ce mpany in number of the other . will { vil's Basin field, 18 rth of Roundup, Mont. atement from Tillin, = the oil was encountered et and with the sand pene- feet deep in the hole. The sand is es- lapee| ated only two feet is standing 800 ed to be 190 feet thick. ts of the oil show it to be high brought to an the close of the Exel conditions have 1 during the past thought that much t before they will be ) to normal, to the benfit of all con cerned 1 improving ta r, nd it as that in the Elk Basin field. NEW YORK OF S STOC The New York Oil company, operat-| jing int Salt Creek and other Wye ming tle has issued notice to its that it will offer them the ubscribe for new stock at $50 in the ratio of one share of of old stock stockh rigsht t : 56 , , fa sh Joint British and American Device} now each eight sh Nove : 5 held. This offer expires nbor Outwitted German Divers on Which date the rights become eff in North Sea . e * rnew stock must L F nude mber a cont per cent LONDON, Noy. 14.--One of the naval! #9 per seer of the war has just been di] vaca vulged in the announcement that a pipe BURKBURNETT line awas inst 1 Just yc in Seot of the Producers’ | Jand whieh carricd oi) a tion were ai iniidutasa tor statin that the company's No. plied the British fleet Jocuted in north with oil fuel Cc struction was Yuedert ension had b the piske Of sending ollearrsine craft] the pipe lines and forwarded to the | into the Nerth sea when the German] company’s refinery ut West Tulsa aio. the oe vatehine. there tor] Wells Nos. 3 ang 4 are being drilled | eerie on this Jease, which ultimately will hive | This pipe line ryns fram Old Wilpat- rick, Glasgow, to the Grangemouth —- iss: Tari}t ana Clyde canny Wark onl ‘NIGH T CLERK TO begun reb 9, 1918, Was Tinished Oc ca onraa"nene | THROW MAIL AT | ber 1. Piping was supplied and Jaid iriune making te wxeavon thst THE POSTOFFIC it a joint Britisho\nericun aff fuir. a [tract wn alt iv the few in whieh oil wag Mail distribytion in the Cagper post-|ceuses pra thus carried, will be greatly facilitated after the line dei Monday by the addition of a night |citis. stribuyting clerk, G. He Wilr With this addition ta thy fore ping na jt hus since been uve of vil Proposals have been | on the Burlin to ish ofl firms to tuke it over for yaaa day force begins tts ers BS 7 ot The new clerk w alse mercial use aud the admiralty is dis; 2 posed to surrender it. Oil firms ar He the mail bret in ly Nes, 603 and nsidering means of taking it over and S. Steed is in Capper from bis) oxperience in pustofiice work, and reperts reads in very bag baat ma. eanmaemael of the drift oo |. Bead. The Tribuye Want : Today’s Markets by Wire : Furnished Daily by Taylor & Cla: Ground Floor Oil Exchange ly by Taylor > E Building, Casper; W: Western JSxploration ~ Wyo-O-Tex - New York Curb Stocks Open Close -$165.00 $157.00 2.00 3.00 23.50 $1.25 03} 1.05 1 Refining - Milwest Common — Midwest Preferred --.--. onference Called at Washington rena? 2 for January 12 Will Work Out ||, ai Sea ad ss yoming 83 Better System to En- Big Indian °50 courage Trade. Burke ON a 1.07 Glenrock oi Okmulgee P. & R Sinclair Guilt -... 3alt Creek Prod. Assn... West. States O. & Li. Prod. & Ref., Com. fepare Loan Se. ; OIL MARKET Elk Basin -.. WYOMING CRUD) ~$1.00 and industrial stoc! part late Thursday and today from the Which struck the New York market on Tuesday of this week and continued long after the opening Whether the improvement is permanent is a mooted question and inclined to rally only which will pass "8 soon as the shorts start’ buy! ing | Numerous pools, it is said, are development which issues ; severe slump means IED VRE this morning e sclling property for stock | Which movec and Boston-Wyoming, | Site gained nine cents ‘to 83 cénts Merritt sold this morning at ‘The general tone of the orbitant rates, Was weaker on | board of trade as a result of :up:increase in deliveries there this m IOWA PARK HAS GREAT GUSHER Kemp-Munger-Allen Well Comes in} with 2,000 Barrels and \ Flow Increasing ax ‘| Montana Well of Van Deusen. stockholders wa in with a flow of first large well had given way. pOtiied | lows: » in the Burkbyrnett en completed and was! commercial uken net so mueca for the pur-| Sewing at the rate of 1,000 barrels a producing sand in io eliminate! 928: This oll is heing taken by one pds A LE uround TAILOR ans FIND * After spending $700 for medicine ‘ind doctors in four years without getting ‘ut Joust ten y wells all sure of ‘production. | tract and allay Hintesting! atl it w ut} ible to Haye gil mall brot tn by | on out of the way GEOLOGISTS OIL EXPERTS o Fie ae Blue Prints Ble Print Co, 6 on the North Western, when these sueeabinic it | tratus are late. 2d = Mr. Wilmering comes heee from Lin oo * cola, avka. He hus hud 20 yeurs’ ewe te 141 1 10.; New York Stock Exchange Stocks Mexican Petroleum --.-$212.00 $207.25 - 306.00 306. 00 Market Rally Results Results when Shorts | Run to Cover and Prices ks recovered in Refining moved up to $166 after its recession in sympathy with other issues, and gains were reflected in Salt Creek Producers, hovered around the §50 mark ‘s and Refiners, back to $10.50, ‘ket was York Chicago to scores of local, niained in word to- , 18 miles uthwest cf Wichita Falls, Texas, that np-Munger-Allen well had come 000 barrels, completed in the | a and definitely proving the struc-| As ah prolific produe being Numerous! ‘yoming people, terested, including the Kellygreen | the Povrols git Holdings | Oil com-| holdings in this field. Great excltement attended the discov, , of ofl and values of leases in the {f vicinity jumped to $5,000 an acre over short time after the well to flow, salt water was noticed: oil and it was found that the! casing rested ker was set. the well cleaned out gnd at last accounts and the oil > new field bids fair| to rival the other deep fields of Texas. | Kellygreen company in Denver ved a telegram from General) C. L. Wood thut oil had been j company's Stine ear Petrolia, in Clay coynty, Tex?) This lease hud been regarded gs} already twelve adjucent Icasey. thig field iy 1,800 fect. , Bros.) and was Induced by my druggist |to try Mayr's Wonderful Remedy and must'say that a $1 bottle hus done me |$000 worth of gvod.”” haymless prepuration that removes the mucys from the the inflammation wirtel) ly all stomach, Hyver and including /uppendi-| One due will conviivespr mugey! Tt is a simple, intestinal uvery where Adve 3 10.50 1,62 61.00 49.50 1.87 “Ito this nuisance which had yprung up jdone a tremendous amount ef work by Peddlers and B to Ne Tena oe one NEW YORK, Nov. 14,—All the back- ing that the war department can give it will be behind the New York city drive against peddlers in the uniform of the Army or Navy who are found selling things in public places. Hun- dreds of letters of protest have roached the city’s police department, and if is announced that men in uniform will no longer be allowed to peddle or beg. Secretary of War Baker, in a letter recently made public, called attention in many of the larger cities. Majo? General William G. Haan, now in charge of soldicr employment for the war de- partment, is determined to vse every means possible to uphold the sanctity of the Army and Navy uniforms through: out the country. There are practically no laws against such misuse, save in isolated communities, and Secretary Baker and General Haan ope ~fo achieve their end by calling on the general public to cease patronizing such offenders. In a statement issued from the office General Haan declares: sumption that the United States gov-) ernment has neglected its fighting men, | leaving them to shift for themsélVész | “In the minds of the people of the United States and in the minds of some of the discharged soldiers during the first few months. after demobilization | started there appeared to be ground for the belief that the government was neg- lecting its ex-soldiers. This was only apparent, however, The congress de-| sired that the soldiers be properly cared for, It created machinery to look after disabled men by authorizing the organi- zation of the federal board for voca- tional training and appropriating con-/ {siderable sums of mioney. It has taken! some little time for this board to get into operation. It is now, however.! beginning to do effective work: “The secretary of war on his own| account organized in his office a serv- foe which has looked after discharged enlisted men out of fobs, has put them| everywhere in touch with employers| and has enlistcd the service of the wel-| fare organizations, the American Le- gion and other bodies in assisting them | to get In touch with employers and oth- er activities anxious to look out fo their welfare and give them employ ment, This byreau, now known as the service and information branch, has its agencles all over the United States for the discharged soldiers and at the present time it may be said that it} should not be necessary for a single able-bodied service man in the United! States to be loafing or to be without a job. “A discharged soldier, who appears in public in uniform for the purpose jof advertising the uniforms or perhaps beuter for advertising himself in order to collect without adequate worl: funds for his own benefit, is prostituting the | good name of the service of which once} he formed a part, and in Which the the} American people feel a just pride.” Chief Magistrate McAdoo, in Taunch- | ing New York's campaign, has advised} the police to bring in all persons who} use military attire as a means of alms- ‘iting from a sympathetic public. He so denounces the persons who have mmerejalized the army alive drab and | the navy blue by sending out their gales- j|men in uniform to solicit trade. "T request the public to refuse to} since utronize any concern that puts a dollar mark on the soldier garb, exacting d| profit from patriot "he say: it Oil Lands, Leases and Royalties BRUNSVOLD '& FUNKHOUSER Oil Exchange Bldg. Casper, Wyo. Phones 203-204 NEW ERA Delaware and hast, WA York City." both of these One hour’ ial rn spay tel PP Ale posal te Buy, nel long ute saris First Presbyterian Church SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16, ie Conference for ae rl ee Weis at 3 p.m, at which i Generel Invitation i Extended TAYLOR & CLA LY; Inc. ct fray Maw York, Denver, and ite pete a our ‘cn at Local Os, New. York teak ssn same, ates Phone 993. Cosper, Wao. Serert Fleoy, OW Sten Et A SAN JUAN, P. i vices p thri its re! p cull affection may on the preaching of otet ten ee Notwithstanding: the fact thit the wages paid herein all lines of activity are greater than evér before in the his- the workers in a movement which, ob- servers assert, borders closely on soviet: ism. These observers, whose criticisms are made in the utmost good faith, point to recent publications in the organ Justicia of the workers’ federation of the is- land to show that the working classes among Port Ricans are particularly sus- ceptible at present to the doctrines of communism and other radical ideas. Jus- ticla is the official publication of the San Juan branch of the American Fed- eration of Labor, and is, the medjum of expression for announcements from the federation promulgated in Wash- of the assistant to the secretary of war,|/ngton. But, in addition to these state- ments, it publishes. from time to time “A man in uniform seeking alms or/@ccounts of other labor activities which ltrying to peddle worthless trinkets or | booklets is a living wliness to the as- =< STOCK RECEIVED lls eu | are disapproved by the conservative cle- ment of business and employing inter- ests. In one of the recent issues of this publication is a eulogy of Lenine and ‘Trotgzky in the form of an interview |with Col. Raymond Robins, late Amer- ican Red Cross commissioner to Rus- ia. Whether or not Colonel Robins xx knew to what uses his statements, as published in Justicia, would be put, the fact remains that they are regard- ed here as Bolshevist propaganda of the mos$ glaring type, and calculated to wean away the susceptible Latin- American workers from American ideas, which have borne so potent a part in assuring stability to Porto Rican insti- tutions. In its current issues, however, Jus- ticia also publishes many announce: thents of benefit to the working classes of the island. Santiago Oglesias, dele- gate for the island of the American Federation of Labor, also announces steps to form unions of the Porto Ri- etn police officials, similar in character to the union of police in Boston, which Jed to the strike and consequent dis- turbances there. Another announcement,. addressed to he working women of the island, iells e' |of the approaching International Con- gress of Women in Washington, and says: “Emancipation and economic |freedom is the motto of the working nen and women, all over the In connection with the confer- ence Justicia continues: “In accordance with the aims ‘and principles of this congress, a senenpt convention of the Porto Rican working women, the first of its kind in the his- tory of the island, shall be called by the exccutive officers of the Free Fed- eration of the Workers of Porto Rijco, to be held in November, 1919. Porto Rican working women should proclaim QUICK RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION Get Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets That is is the ng joyful cry of thousands ards produced Olive Tablets t the substitute for calomel. No griping results from these penieet little tablets.- They cause the liver and bowels to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. Dr. Rela Olive Tablets are 2 soothin; ing, vegetable compoun, ‘nixed with olive oil, If you have a bad taste, bad peat ‘eel ‘Gan, tired, are consti bilious, you'll find quick and sure : sults from Dr. Edwards’ le Olive Tablets at bedtime. 10c 25c a box. INSTITUTE Durbin Streets the work of the church. te a Bnd ¥. IdoEnyest in industrial joh enabled ad-| nore tory of Porto Rico, there js a well- defined drive on by radical sympathiz- ers to enlist at least the attention of nerete footings for the new vo- " pationay high school-on the south end of the athletic grounds hava practically rewittie Ney. 14. — Teen leted In ertte of the inclemgnt| Socialists of the fifth Wisconsin con- Wweathor Of the past month, and the con- gressional district in mass meeting Pee Re aie ike fe Deore em | the party candate at apecel sition uiiding before. ex:| the party cand: ite at a special election Tors ae ‘cold c her sets in. - December 18 to fil! the Yasany 2 caysed nag Peace ees geerrngae rene by the hoyse refusal to seat Berger on Tights to a living decent} his certificate of election obtained in fal, vettea an Intervent tht all social, | the election a year, ago. is ‘hoped (Sen era ATARRH that the influence of those regarded aa leaders. in local industrial circles sf ented the vapor treetinent— shall be used to help the legitimate progress of the island's workers, with- out alving an opportunity for radical- ism to gain a foothold. Two were shot in the first raid on a New York saloon uhder the Volstead act. The other patrons were half shot. “Barnetts of Course” This Store Is Headquarters for You never saw a time when fine tailoring was more important to you than right now. Be sure you ict the hest—anything Jess won’t satisfy you—Ask fcr (CHESTERF IELD QUALITY We have it in fine suits and overcoats for men and young men. : Knox, John B. Stetson and Young Bros. Hats, Craw- ford and Menz-Ease Shoes, Manhattan Shirts, Lewis and Wright’s Health Underwear; in wool or cotton, Men's Night Shirts and Pajamas. ‘We have a. yasi range of furnishings to select from. No trouble to show you our merchandise, it). D. Barnett Outfitting 1A) 121 East Second Street . . iH 52 wos ws wes eo eo ay? Bo G2 g2 a2 $3 NOTICE REFINERY WORKERS, LOCAL NO. 43 Regular meeting Saturday night, Nov. 15th, 7:30, at Odd Fellows’ Hall. Important. Et Pr CA. NOLLNIE, Pre ANS i R. T. KEMP CO, 3 (Incorporated) GENERAL INSURANCE 111 East Second Street Successors to BELL-KEMP COMPANY “Absolute Protection” “Service That Counts”

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