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{ } | Hak aes ERR AL ie = depth of 1.590 feet. Today’s Markets Wire # jie ere ate - 4 ; - iv . ducers bave a 900-barrel f : ee ! ae 34-A on section 13-40-79 de. reek field, while the 13-A ‘ ‘Exchange ‘Casper, Wyoming tion is making 800 barrela : ‘ ; Denial is made here by 2 5 of there being any test LOCAL OL. STOCKS VOTO ae neem OH 06) cand in the Salt Creek flel uction. NEW YORK CURB CLOSING New York Oil Revennes Grow. Open. Close.) Production from 160 acres of land on 3 Midwest Refining -.-..$146.00 $148.00| section 27, northwest quarter, amount- ‘Common 1.25 2.00 |od to $956,000 since 1917 in November, 3.00 jnicording to the Tatest report made 12.00}on this company holding by the New 226 | vork Oi! company. This is beginning 6.50 javith sales of oil- at $1.50 per barrel, -50 whereas it now sells for $2.75 a bar- $£2ivel. The New York reports that ‘it 29.00} has 3,300 acres in. the Salt Cree field which are superior to the northevest Charles B. Stafford, | | Chamber of Commerce will leave either Friday or Saturday for Madison, Wis., where he will attend the annual Amer- ican City Bureau summer school for Chamber of Commerce secretaries. This school brings together the man- “gers of Chambers ‘of Commerce in the TAFFORD.10 ATTEND GIT BUREAY SCH of the quarter of section 27, The New York Salt Creek interests are weattered over! 4,240 acres. All impounded net royalties from the .p Salt Creek lands purchased from H. ®. Stock and family which have ac- crued since December 2, 1919, belong to the New York Oil company. They soon will be released thru leases. Gas production of the New York at Iron Creek, Poison Spider and Boone Dome Is estimated to be worth ten million dollars and it is stated that by the company officials that “Ht avill bring $5,000 daily, Oil Struck Drilling for Water. Hope of oil production in the Green River valley, Lincoln g¢ounty, Wyo., has revived as the result of good oil show- ings which developed in*a well being drilled for water,on the William Woods ranch, five mites east of Daniel. T! location is about 30 miles north of, the Big Piney field and the majorit; prospective oil land in the vicinity has already been leased. Sanset =~. Tom Bell Royalty. Drilling at Carter Resumod. The Wyoming-Bihiois company, which recently _ purchased the Nell ‘Hood holdings at Carter, Lincoln coun ty, Wyo., has completed the work of cleaning out the 1,740-foot hole previ- ously sunk and is’ making progress at 1,775 feet after resuming work. The oil sand is expected at-about 2,000 feet. piaciababt at oh. ca —_ Road Bulletin = | ets ee State Highway Department, Office of District Engineer. Salt Creek Road—Reported fair to Salt Creek; good to Sheridan. 8.10/Pilot Butte —---.____.. Lance Creek -.—-----..-----__--- 3.05 ‘Dome L7hMule Creek -.-.---------.------~ 2.05 WMAKET BUSSIP AND FELD NEWS FO aie WeLiS IW SILT CREEK 4 : fair to ler. are reported in Denver. to be making 13,000 barrels daily: One re-|' aria inla tat eng Weak i MRR port states that two wells on the east half of section 25-40-79 have| portea generally’ good to Cheyenne. been making nearly 7.800 barrels a day for the last nme months. The well on southeast quarter of section 25-40-79, which came in| | mon aniere GAY RY PERT with a flush production of 13,000 bar-| Months ago. Another well by the same GEOLOGISTS OfL EXPERTS rels, is known to be making between|C°™Panies on the same section, which Oil Field Maps Blue Prints 2.96, CONTRAGT NEGOTIATED FOR 1921 CHAUTAUQUA *| ‘Ata, meeting of the directors of ‘the Chamber of Commerce held yestérday. a contract with the Ellison-White com. pany for a six day Chautauqua in Cas. per next year was sign Sag CNSR a Fab tig ae fund: com- pay the income is of which the elder weeks, of all Chambers which the American phrased “esau cay Petroleum Engineer Inspects Gas Well at Pine Mountain H. A. Fisher, president of the H. A. | Fisher Company, consulting petroleum engineers of Pittsburgh, Pa.,.is in Cas- per making a survey of Western oil. Hie went to Pine Mountain Tuesday tn company with W. A. Bergstrom, who has just returned from the East, to in- spect the big gas Well on the property of the Wyoming Exploration Company. Mr. Fisher is a national authority on gasoline from. natural he is entire couptry and tetween $00 and 400 men are expected to enroll. An intensive course of study along lines of special benefit to Chamber of ‘Commerce men is given covering two ‘Tuition is free to the managers ee a le offtaken East for testing in fils Iab tortes. | Taylor & Clay (incorporated ) Local (Os New York Stocks and Bonds Fone 203 and 204 —— ee You're old when you cease doing new Yellowstone Highway on canara | came in Jniy last year, is reported to; . " 2,200 and 10,000 bartels daily. ‘This is| to making 2,500 barrele at a dopth of’ Explorations Report the Midwest ,and’ Salt Creck Producers] 1,780 feet. , | Wyoming Map & Blue Print Co. This well got the second Wall Creek| good producer on thé same __ section ut_a depth of’ 1,49% feet about eight barrels ate my well. The same companies have another] |p! Q Boy 325, Rm. 10, Lyric ‘ aR cE TER ER Ae SEES Foreign Bonds: foreign’ countries presents an ‘unusual opportunity fo: investment in foreign bonds that combines attractive yield with heretofore unheard- For example: ea Before the War, the normal exchange on Austrian Kronen was about 20 cents in American money. War conditions have forced the ' Kronen down to about one cent. City of Vienna 5%. Treasury Notes, which before the war would have had a normal value of $2,000 per’ 10,000 kronen note, can be purchased now for $120. With industrial and financial conditions improving in Austria, the exchange rate is bound to advance, thus increasing the yield and enhancing the value of the investment. When the Kronen gets to one-third its normal value, a 500% profit will have been realized on the investment at today’s Prices. LGAs e ‘Another example: The normal exchange on German Marks before the war was about 24 cents in American money. Today the German Mark is quoted at about 24% cents, or 1-10th its pre-war value. German Municipal Bonds, such as Hamburg 4's with a pre-war value per 1,000 Mark Bond of ; $240, can today be purchased for-$30. German Exchange saw its low water mark durjng the stabilizing of its government. Five years should see. the Mark back to normal. With the mark 50% of normal, a profit Other examples might be cited in the bonds of Gveat Britain, | France, Belgium and Italy. The foundation of the greatest fortune in the word rests onthe purchase of European Governinent bonds. aft- er the Battle’ of Waterloo. Attractive speculation in‘ Government bonds will be a thing of the past as the exchange goes up. The time Se foreign bonds is when the exchange is low, and now is ‘that . We have prepared circulars on the Government issues of Great ¢ Britain, Franée, Italy, Belgium, Greece and Japan, as well as circulars on the Municipal Bonds of Paris and Vienna and such German cities was Berlin, Bremen, Coblentz, Dresden, Frankfort, Hamburg, Leipzig, Mannheim and Munich. Full information can be obtained on request. Ly us explain our partial:‘payment plan of purchasing foreign securi- ies. i Work & Company relate Set Pc | of speculative possibilities, j 1 of 400% would be realizeed on today’s investment. ) Whats anything else to fill up e movie houses — T Select your tires ac- cording to the roads they have to travel: In sandy or hilly coun- try, wherever the going is aptto be heavy~The U.S. Nobby. For ordinary country roads—The U, S. Chaia ‘or Uses, For front wheels— The U. &. Plain. For best resulta— everywhere —U. S. Cords, Royal { done as much as OOK at the crowds that step out of their cars in front of the movics every summer evening. The movie managers would be renting half of their theatres for store space, if it weren’t for the automobile. i itis typical of Americans that they took to the auto- mobile as a matter of course — just as they have to the movies and to every other great invention of the last half century. And the same thing has happenede¢verytime. Taking things as they comeis a fine way to foster waste and ex- travagance. As regards tires; the come- back is about dut, People ~ ing for something that isn’t there when they look for it. Wi ‘What a man pays for ina tire is quality—not a limited number of miles or the privi- lege of getting a rebate in case the miles don’t come up to the limit. U.S. Tires are guaranteed as to quality—with no limi- tation of mileage. And that holds just as good for the small car tire as.for the biggest U.S. Tire we’ve got. There’s only one stand- ard of quality with U.S.—and the size of the car has noth- ing whatever to do with it, Iv We represent U.S. Tires in this town, You'll find it worth while to talk tous be- are pretty near throngh pay- » fore you buy any more tires, United States Tires otor Truck Co. Casper ‘Wyoming ee | a