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Local Oil Stocks. Bid. Ask. ‘Amalgamated Royalty ~---- $ 21 $ .23 03 04 American —...-..._-__.--. Boston Wyoming - 06 Buck Creek ‘37 Burke -. 23 Black Tail __ 06 Casper Ranger ‘02 Capitol Pete — Columbine --. Consolidated Royalty -06 .08 36 38% 1.32 al f 1.15 Great Western Perto.. 07 09 Gates - 1.03 1.09 Hutton Ol) 08 Jupiter 02.04 Kinney =) ARP) ee Lance Creek Royalty Seat oesil Lusk Royalty. = 1S) de Lusk Petroleum - 08 Mountain & Gulf. - 1.08 Mike Henry = is lat Outwest — 02% °. Picardy - 06 = -.08} G. W. Pete 07 = 08 Riverton Ref, 06 = 09 Royalty & Producers ~ 18 6.17} Sunset 12 a3} Tom Bell Ro 03.05 Wind River Refg. — 03 .04/ E. T. Williams -. 1.29 1.32{ Western Exploration - 2.29 2.60} Wyo-Kans -- 2.00 2.10/ Wy-0-Tex 07! WYOMING CRUD! Grass Creek Torchlight Elk Basin Greybull — Lance Creek Lander - -: Today’s Markets by Wire : ———— Furnished Daily by Taylor & Clay, Ground Floor, Oi! Exchange Building, Caspe,, Wyoming 04) 1.09 | Sterling 1.i¢Mule Creek -..._ Northwest — New York Curb Stocks. : Open. Close. 1.00 2.00 Midwest Common -----.. 1.25 2.00 |Midwest Preferred .--. 1.25 2.25 Merritt —---.. 15.00 | Glettrock oil .. |Cosden -. j Okmulgee | Elk Basin - jSalt Creek — | Western States -. |Prod. & Refrs.. jAllen —._..... i | Cities Service Com.._-_ 322.00 Pan American. Pete_.. 94.75 New York Stock Exchange Stocks. | Open. Close. ‘Mexican Petroleum -$178.50 $178.12 Sinclair Oil — 27.25 26.75 | Texas Oil .. 44.25 44.25 U. S. Steel-. 88.37 87.62 Union Pacific R. R. — 118.25 114.25 FOREIGN EXCHANGE. Francs Marks Lire ... - -1840 Call Money. per cent 34's .. -$91.04 Ist 4's - 85.60 2nd 4's - 84.52 Ist 4's - 85.80 2nd 4%'s 84.18 8rd 4%4's -... - 88.80 4th 44's - 85.08 Victory 4%'s _. 95.72 E OIL MARKET. WMRKET GOSSIP AND FIELD NE BOLTON GREEK WELL IN GIL SAND The No. 3 well of the Jowa-Wyoming Oil Company, formerly |‘, known as the Poison Spider-Bolton Syndicate, is reported by officials | vite! on Kenia shah Will Insure of the company here to have struck the oil sand early this week and| oil to have started flowing. This well is on section 4-29-81 of the Bolton Creek field. feet. The new well is several hun-} dred feet west of the first well been drilled by this company. Although reports from the field in- dicate that the well has not been com-} pleted, favorable production is expect- ed by the company, which believes this} No. 3 well will be better than the No.}xan 1/well brought in last winter and/ April, according to the monthly bulte- which practically showed that the/tin of the Bureau of*Mines. The oils Bolton Creek field would be a real|purchased and re-run amounted to oil district. 467,835 barrels. From this crude was | produced 22,081,626 gallons of gasoline;|‘ Big Indian Lease Pending | 8,254,420 gallons of kerosene; 15,744,- in line with the report from Wash-|288 gallons of gas and guel ington early in the month that a ulement had been effected on the Indian Oil & Gas Co. lease in NW% of section 11-39. field, Commissioner Tal'man, of; the general land offi given for mal notice that the mat sponding: and fixing August 20 as the final date ceived. to the a lease. This is considered clear-listing of the ground original lease in this tra jam Hanle-: ciate: nally located the ground. royalty has since been acquired by Salt Cre Consolidated Oil Co., the Big Indian Co. and the Salt Creek Consolidated have contracted for the! joint operation of the property. A vig. orous campaign for the development of| the ground to a maximum is »4 and the material already sembled for the first series of wel This development is expected to bring the gross production from the lease up 00 to 3,000 barrels a day at the earliest possible date. has been as Frost Holdings ure Sold The holdings of the Frost Oil Co., and part of the W. H. Rowe holdings in the Honrer field. in Louisiana have been sold to Joseph A. Chown, of Lon- don, England. The consideration wa: 00,000, part of which is cash upon| transfer of properties and balance in | de d payments. The Frost hota-| ings were valued at $1,400,000 in the} deal. i 8: A in Dividends j Standard Oil Cos. paid $ i cash dividends jn the se P| of 1920, compared with 1 the first quart and the second quart PC LAL LS 2 N r last N) N) N) N N) N) N) N) N) N N N N ; laf fenced sheep tight; 3,100 sheds. This advertisement wi terested address: W. P. JACK, R flulions of lubric Big! pounds of wax; 5: the} 21,011,578 the Crazy on which protests, if any, will Le re-| Montana, anned ‘not be overcome. This is 120-acre ranch near Riverton with good crop of hay and grain coming; modern house; plenty of water; all four years old, medium fine, heavy shearers; 1,100 fine lambs; a number of good bucks; $1,500 lambing About 2,000 acres of range land in Natrona county goes with the outfit for five years. Would also sell horses, wagons and machinery on ranch, or dispose of articles enumerated to suit purchaser. The oil sand is reported to have been found at a depth of 1,106) ril the and| made is the second successful well to have|amounted to $30,406,000, and new preferred stock disburs stock second 1916 largest since quarter payment} when dividend is due ments and dividend distributions. Output of Refineries Colorado and Wyoming refineries 1,269,654 barrels of crude during ting oil tons of c gallons of miscellaneous. » Salt Creek) The losses amounted to 103,334 barrels. Montana Hopes Revived A well drilled on section 15-8-20, in Woman's Pocket field, in 60 miles north of Billings, equivalent! last year by the Tri-City Oil Co., was for) generally classed as a failure fe |two good showings of oil at The Big Indian people acquired their|and at 1,900 feet. Large quantities of et from Wil-| water which it was impossible to case who origi-|off caused the hole to be abandoned. The Hanley/This company and the Van Duzen Oil the| Co, ition 29- <| black oil another test on sec strong showing of puntered at 1 ued to 2,340 feet when it abandon the hole on ac trouble, which coula Recently the casing was pulled and it was discovered that at 1,500 feet the casing had split al owing the water to flow into the well Another test is now being drilled the Van Duzen company on section 26 1. It was started with a 20-inch hole so the water can be cased off and it is drilling below 800 feet. \ Midtand Carbon Co. ¢ Midland Carbon Co., which op- then started and Drilling cont was decided to count of wat SPOT CASH FOR YOUR LIBERTY BONDS Money to Loan on_ Diamonds, Jewelry, Guns, Clothing Casper Loan and Clothing Store—229 South Center _d \ RANCH AND SHEEP FOR SALE § breeding ewes, from one to DIAALLLLLLLLLLL dd If in- IVERTON, WYO. ll appear but once. 2/of crude in |parison with the figures of:a y: ‘hand had dropped to 32,418,400 = ‘erates a carbon. plant at Cowley, says! it has invested nearly $1,000,000. in its CTRIG PLANT fi IEF enterprise, erected more than 100 4 buildings where formerly there were| NEAR DEATH FROM cunRK asoline to atlow every automobile ‘owner in Wyoming 29 gallons. This — atom of carbon black. The company)! E. Morgan, superintendent of the has expended more than $150,000 in| Met Springs Light & Power company try in that district. Less than 7 per, ®#me in contact with a wire cai cent of the open flow capacity of the] * heavy voltage. Morgan was le year, including the company’s own|"@ had been removed to the hospital plant. ERENT? ‘Rawlins Sinking no human habitations, and in 1919 pro-| gasoline was produced before any of|. THENMMOPOLIS, Wyo., July 28—Ar- ing a dehydrating plant which has| "ere, when his foot slipped while stand- jnatural gas wells within 10 miles of|C0PScious and all evidence of breath- Wyoming Production Grows | Well for Supply ie duced sufficient of the highest grade| the natural gas used for making an| ficial respiration saved the life of ncouraged the potato indus-|'m& at the switchboard and his } Cowley was used by all consumers last|'"® ceased until several hours a Wyoming produc 000 Larrel compare a day, 316 «“ ob) £00 b: els in April, and 1,316,000 1 jreis in March, according to the U. of Soft Water) Bureau of Mines summary for ES jmonth. Colorado produced 11,000 bar-| RAWLINS, Wyo., July 28.—In rels, an average of 355 barrels ffort to develop a supply of “soft” in May as compared with 8,000 water for the Rawlins waterwor in April and 9,000 barrels in ystem, the Rawlins Oil & Utilities | Montana credited with 8,000 bar-|company has spudded in on lrels for each of the three months, The output of the Roc 28-22-88. The company’s contract w y Mountain district|the city calls for the sinking oft thr jfor May was 1 000 barrels, an aver-| wells. The chief drawback to re: lage of 44,742 barrels a From}dence ‘here is the “hardness” January to May, inclusive, the district] municipal water supply and the town produced 6,401,600 b » a daily a government has determined to elimi. lerage of s compared|nate this drawback if it can he done. with 5,641,000 barrels for the sam: The site selected for drilling is suffi- jriod in 1919, or a daily average of 37,-|ciently elevated for water to be |357 barrels {brought to town by grav: gee | Road Bullefn | La Prele Test Down 1,700 The test being drilled on the La Prele dome west of Douglas, in Converse |county, by the Wyoming Chief Oil of the} OLIVES POISON Mi di M ) pu } I | mer D. Clark, who now is a member of the int section| has disposed h/ Angeles and has purchased the J. V?.| | Barn Mrs enti | con’ hen: |Ref. Co., in corfjunction with the Big State Higl are | Ref. Co., © Bis State Highway Department, Office of jIndian Oil & Gas Co., is drilling below District Engiieer 1,700 feet and making rapid progress.| Sait Creek road—Reported generally} ¢t's At this depth there is considerable ga5}fair, except new construction | showing and traces of oil are coming : Yellowstone Highway, The drill is working] pass . le vest—After up in the bailer. west er in a soft shale which is extremely ly good to. near. Moifeta: then greasy and gives favorable indications |rough stretch of about five mila | of heing near the pay. The first Wall) air to Shoshoni, good to Riverton, Creek sand is expected around 2,200 to \fair to Lander. 2,300 feet, but in view of the favorable} indieatione it is considered likely that|y Yellowstone Highway, east—General- good. a producti sand may be en- “ countered « time. The b The pe hical nom this loc: enclatur rkable. No river has the same name throughout its course, and for centuries it was the -jcutsom to rename towns with every new ynas the opening of a new fie panies have more than der led ull of which i nd therefore not subject to any x = ee ernment restrictions. In addition to|the end of April it was 600 per cent its holdings in this field Wyoming|&reater than at the close of last Sep- Chief has 800 acres in the Poison Spi-| tember. der field which is classed as proven ground and upon which it expects to develop a large gas and oil produc s.| Thru arrangements recently completed! ready market for all gas produced) its holdings has already becn pro- stantial The refineries in Colorado and Wyo- ming had on hand at the end of Ap-! of this yes 46,289 | oline, an iner Three Old lons_ as .compared with the stocks on! fine Hl) Egyptian hand at the end of March. On April] ; ), 1919, the stocks of gasoline amount-| Py a m4 ds appear on every hd to 39,426,477 gallons. While a com-| ‘0 A abel. They mark ray do not indicate any lar in accumulations, a com: jon with the| the best of honie- sintervegng nfonths does indicate a | folks’ drink just steady gaip..‘For example, at the end} try ut on your table. of June, 1919, the stocks of gasoline on| while at the close of July the down to 19,365,165 gallon: On 30, 1919, the stocks of gasoline the amounted Yo" only Taisu7s" eaten] @ WYOMING GROCERY CO. Thereafter, the amount on hand has Distributor, Casper, Wyo. continued to in rease monthly until at Casper “Dairy ce Cream Rich | Pure as the as the Purest Mountain Gold Dew Ask for It by Name PHONE 47] | ing ten miles of new grading, gen-] 7, f | |boarders that’s comin’ next week. If] then| Some of us don’t talk an’ act that way, al Taylor & Clay | (Incorporated) | Local Oils = New York Stocks and Bonds Fone 203 and 204 | CASPER, WYO. DENVER, COLO. Agnet der Realty company, died here late yesterday result of having eaten ripe olives. lieved that these caused his death, \Ex-Senator Clark whether he contemplates an active ie-| |suggested in, 8 ates senate in 1916, is expected ty} » a candid |zosh! so much and go round with a straw in your mouth?” {they'll think-we ain't country folks all.”"—B A schoolboy was the discoverer of|to cover rubber tennis balls. He made the present method of cutting flannei/a fortune. BUSINESS MAN OF LUSK, WYO. LUSK, Wyo. duly 28—Martin treasurer of the H. C, Sny- afternoon probably as a ir. Agmew ate some ripe olives at inner yesterday noon and it is be- ir. Agnew was ublic secretary of pol board of this city. jects Nk the to Make Home in This State Again EVANSTON, Unitea Wyo, July 28.—For States Senator Clarence national waterways commijssion, | of his residence in Los| residence Clark anston to ablishment of the senator's home| is causing’ speculation regarding | here. i~m ry into Wyoming® politi connection with some} lative reasoning that he may template a “come back" two years ce, when Jéhn B. Kendrick, Demo-| t, who defeated him for the United| It ts} te for re-election. | ——_~»—____- laying U wife, diram, id the farm- “what makes you say ‘By- | | I'm getting ready for them summer | “The Whole Secret of MEN ONLY! DENVER MEDICAL INSTITUTE SPECIALISTS pon ae FREE—Consultation, Examination—FREE . ees gti te SOE pelle be oth abrir paler es ere race: P*7 Consultation free Hourm, @ a ma to 8 m4 Sundays, 19 & om Os Lester Brokerage House NEW YORK OIL Q | New Number, 114 S. Wolcott Phone 1142 A Better Tire Simply a Matter ofthe Maker’s Policies — _ This you will realize—once you try a Brunswick—that a super-tire is possible only when the name certifies that the maker is follow- ing the highest standards. For tire making is chiefly a mat- ter of standards and policies—cost plus care. Any maker can build a good tire if he cares to pay per- fection’s price. All men*know Brunswick stand- ards, for Brunswick products have been famous for 74 years. Formulas, fabrics and standards vary vastly in cost. Reinforce- ments, plies and thickness are a matter of expense. And these vari- ations affect endurance. It rests with the maker how far he wishes to go—how much he can afford to give. For there are no secrets nor pat- ents to hold one back. To ascertain what each maker offers one must analyze and. test some 200 tires—as our laboratories have done. Then it is a matter of combining the best features and building ac- cording to the highest standards. Once you try a Brunswick you will understand how we have built model tires, regardless _of factory, expense. Yet Brunswick Tires cost you the Same as other like-type tires. Our saving is on selling cost, through our nation-wide organization. We realize that you expect more from Brunswicks, and we assure you that you get it. ONE Bruns-; wick will tell you the story. And then you'll want ALL Brunswicks. No other tire, you'll agree, gives so much for your money. ‘ THE BRUNSWICK-BALKE-COLLENDER CO, Denver Headquarters: 1552-54 Blake Street Sold On An Unlimited Mileage Guarantee Basis Marae eas Ee A LULU pA ANANANNA TM CL VW j LL HY \\\ MEE, HUN i PATNA aA cine NANA ananen ng tees EAI AAA UNUM HH Bale . rim ii ny) MN\\ i mint Cord Tires’ with “Driving” and “Swastika” Skid-Not Treads Fabric Tires in “Plain,” ‘“‘Ribbed” and “BBC” Skid-Not Treads Center Street Filling Station Cor Center and Linden. Phone 402M