Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 24, 1921, Page 9

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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1921, % JMRKET GOSSIP AND FIELD NEWS\[ pede Maske Gp war TEST 1§ PROJECTED ies attendant upon hly peepee the oil possibilities of a new structure of m Spider anticlinal series have been completed and arrangements have been made by the Chappell, lowa-Wyo- ming and San Juan oil companies to spud in the test well BODIE DOME thorou: the P GRAINS oTEADY ONEARLY SALES Market Firm at Opening De- spite Lack of Outside Demand in Chicago. CHICAGO, Sept. 24.—Wheat open. ed about steady with prices the sam to a fraction higher than yesterday's finish. Trade was not large and early trading was mainly of a local char- acter. The undertone in wheat was rather firm with sentiment bullish but there was very little,eurly outside buylfig, . There was a small advance shortly after the opening but a major- ity of the pit élement appeared to be waiting developments. After open- ing at $1.27 for December and $1.31% to $1.82 for May the market made a slight rally but had reverted to around opening figures at the end of the first hour. ‘There was a break right at the fin- ish arid the close was unsettled with December 1 to 1%(c off, opening fig- ures at $1.25% to $1.26 and May 1% to 2c off the opening at $1.29% to $1.30. Corn showed some strength early but the market held within narrow Umits, Corn started unchanged from 's close with December at S52%c and May at 57c but the market rajlied and gained a shade but, like wheat, dropped and at the end of the first hour:was a shade off the open- ing. Corn also was slightly weaker at the finish, being %o to %c off with December at 52%c to 62%c and May at 56%o to 56%o, Oats were steady, December opening from last night's close at a Quotations. CHICAGO, Sept. 24.—Close: Wheat—Dec., $1.25%; May, $1.29%. Corn—Dec., 52%c; May, 56¥sc. Oats—Dec., 37%c; May, 42c. Pork—Sept., $18.50. Lard—Oct.,, $10.30; Jan., $9.20. Ribs—Oct., $7.52; Jan., $8.05. Potatoes. CHICAGO, Sept. 24,—Potatoes— Dull, receipts 50 care; total United States shipments. 1,236;.. Wisconsin whites $2.25@2.50; Minnesota Red River Ohios $2.40@2.50; Idahos $2.40 2.50,” Provisions. Chicago Gept.. 24—Butter—Lower; creamer extras, 43c; standards, 370; firsts, 38% @41c; seconds, 30@31%4c. —Uni 3 receipts 6,071 cases. * CHICAGO, Sept, 24.—{U. 8. Bureau ‘of Markets).—Cattle—Receipts 1,000; compared to a week ago: Beef steers steady to)25c lower; natives and south- ‘western grassers and heavy stoers be- low choice off most mostly $1 lower; heavy calves dull: and unevenly lower. Hogs—Receipts 4,000; opened steady he starting of a test well to Monday. The new structure which has been named the Bodie dome is located about six miles east of the Bolton. field which has developed considerable pto- duction under the supervision of the lowa-Wyoming Oil company. The three concerns named are joint- ly interested in the prospect well and own a majortiy of the structure acre age in the new field. Formations of the Bodie dome are similar to the structural conditions of the Bolton field. The drill wifl start in the Mowry shale about 200 feet low- er on the structure than wells are started in the Bolton ficl If the hidden formations are located in place, the Sundance formation, which has proven a lucrative produc- er in the Bu..sn field should be tap- ped at the 800° foot horizon. ‘This ‘would in@icate that the Embar sands would be penetrated above the 1,800 foot level. ‘The well location is on section 33-31- $0 about eight milgs in a direct line from the center of operations in the Bolton structure, A new National No. 3 outfit with deep drilling equip- ment has been set up for the test well. ‘Tho joint interests plan to com- plete the well to the Sundance forma- tion within two weeks and to drill to the Embar sand if necessary within & month. With the start. of operations in the Bodie dome, every structure in the southern end of the Poison Spider anticlinal series is now known as a Producer or active prospect. .The structure in the same series to the north furnish Casper with gas for commercial and domestic uses. The, importance of the oil development on the south'{s seen in the fact that the Midwest Refining company. has con- tracted with the Iowa-Wyoming Oil company to construct pipelines from the Bolton field and other structures in the vicinity. Glenrock Re-Elects Officers. Glenrock Oil company's annual stockholders’ meeting was peld on Wednesday at Richmond Va. Ofti- cers and directors wero re-elected. Plans for a greatly enlarged drill- ing campaign in the Salt Creek field, in connection with Royalt} and Pro- ducers corporation, were ratified at the meeting. Thres wells will be Grilled at once, two on zeetion 17 and ‘one on section 16, and it is: expected to have-them completed in the. next three months. One well on section 17 will be Iol cated a weillsite north of No. 1 well, which recéntly came in for 1,000 bar- rels’ dail; production Both wells on Section 17 are to be offsets to produc. ing wells on section 16. The well on section 16 will be located farthest south of six wells’ now producing on the west line of that section, and may be spotted near the Teapot gov- ernment withdrawal line. — DAYLIGHT faviNG ENDS. NEW YORK, Sep\. 24:—New York was saving its last daylight of the season today. Clocts <hroughout the city will be set back sn hour to east ern standard time at 2 o'clock Sunday morning. iS CHICAGO, Sept. 24.—The Chicago stock exchange will return to standard time Monday, opening and closing an hour later, Daylight saving does not end here until October 30. = CAFETERIA LUNCHEONS TO BE SERVED BY Y, W. te 10c lower; later market steady with |- y average; top $8.20; Ughts and light butchers $7.75@38.15; bulk ;packing sows $6.35@6.75; hold over liberal; pigs steady; bulk desir- able $7.25@7.50. Sheep—Receipts 9,000; receipts to- feeders 25 to 50c lower. Denver Quotations. DENVER, Sept. .24.—Cattle—Re, ceipts 300; closing 25 to 35c lower; @5.75; cows and heif- calves. $6,00@9.00; bulls ; stockers and feders $400 Receipts none; height $7.50@ 8.00; bulk mixed and heavy. $6.00@ 7.25. 5 Sheep—Receipts 1,800; steady; lambs 37.00@8.00; ewes $3,00@3.75; feeder Son-in-Law Given Job of Father And War Is Declared CHEYENNE, Sept. 24.—Somo times when one member of a family sets the job of another member of the family~there is internecine warfare. Such a situation exists at Otto, Wyo., ® Union Pacific pumping station 14 miles west of Cheyenne, where James McFeeley, veteran pumpman> recent- ly. was superseded by his son-inlaw as railroad pumpman. Thursday the son-in-law had the old man put un- der-.$100 bond to’ keep*the peace, al- jJeging that McFeeley had threatened him.with physical violence, charging that. he had caused McFeeley to be “fired” ‘from the pumpman’s job in order to secure that employment for himself. NOBODY Cafeteria luncheons will be served atthe. ¥. W..C. A, clubh on East Second street from 11 o'clock. until 2 o'clock starting Tuesday, September 27, under the direction of Mrs. Anna Clearwater, recently of Omaha, Neb., where she has had many years ex- perience in the work. ‘The dining: hall of the Y. W. house will be transformed into a cafeteria, and the counter will be arranged-at the north wall. Tables with a seat- ing capacity of from 30 to 40 guests will be’ arranged and business men and women are invited. The menu will be of variety each day and will consist of soup during the winter months, one hot. dish. sulid, sandwiches, milk, tea or coffee and desert of pies or cakes. All-of the fodd will be home cooked and pas- try will be made a specialty. prices will be as before the war, noth- ng more than. 15 cents. . ‘The lunch room which was operated atthe Y. W. C. A. last year was most successful and the cafeteria style of serving the noon meal is thought to be more efficient than the former manner. It is also possible that Sur- day dinners will be served by Mrs. Clearwater. NOBODY Amalgamated Roy. .. American The | Thi FURNISHED BY TAYLOR & CLAY Ground Floor Oil Exchange Bidg. Phones 203-204 LOCAL OIL STOCKS Big Indian Boston-Wyoming .. Buck Creek . Burke Black ‘Tail . 08 Siackstone-Salt Creek .25 Columbine +. 20 Consolidated Roy. 1.03 06 106 Elkhorn: . 06 E. T. Williams 3 Frantz Gates . +. Great Western Pete Hutton Lake Lance Creek Royalty 04 Lusk Royalty . - 02 03 Lusk Petroleum . ? 03 Mike Henry 06 Mountain and Gulf .. 75 Northwest . Outwest Picardy Roy. and Pro. Riverton Refs. Sunset ... ‘Tom Bell Royalty P Western Exploration 1. Wind River Refs. .... Wyo-Kan. 01 .02 WYOMING CRUDE OIL. MARKET. ANIL FEATURE UPWARD TREND Short Session of New York Stock Market Opens Stronger Today. NEW YORK, Sept. 2{.--Reils con- tinued to feature the upward send of stocks at the opening of today’s short session, low grade as well as dividend paying issues extended their recent gains. go & St. Louis opened at.a 2 point advance, soon increasing its tage by another point, Missouri. Pa- cific preferred rose 1 point and frac- tional advances marked tho farther buying of Southern Pacifte, Union, Pa~ cific, Northern Pacitiofnd St, Paul. Olls and coppers also were irregularly higher with shippings and tobaccos. Royal Dutch was the only prominent exception to the general movement, reacting 2 points. Popular stocks, especially rails, were inclined to make further upward Progress today, but the usual] closing together with heav- of weekly accoun' {ness of foreign olls exerted a restrain- ing influence. Royal Dutch declined almost 5 points; Mexican Petroleum 8% and General Asphalt- 144. Su- Matra Tobacco continued to weaken on its unfavorable financial showing. Rails were 1 to 3 points higher at their best, but yielded practically all their gains in tho final dealings. The cheaper domestic oils and obscure spe- cialties made irregular gains. The closing was heavy. Sales approxi.’ mated 250,000 shares. . Money and Exchange. . NEW YORK, Sept. 24.—Prime mer- cantile paper, 54@5% per cent. Exchange—Irregular, sterling, mand, $3.73; cables 3.78%. Francs—Demand 7.18%; cables 7.14. Belgian francs—Demand 7.07; cables 7.07%. Guilders—Demand 31.86. » Iire—Demand 4.141%; cables 4.15. Marks—Demand 0.91%; cables 0.92%. Greece—Demand 4.95, de- 31.80; cables Argentine—Demand 31 Brazilian—Tjemand 13.1: Montreal—9 31-82 per cent discount. Cotton. NEW. YORK, Sept. closed firm; October $19. 24,—Cotton December WIRELESS » "vse With a Receiving Outfit costing less than $50 you can hear signals from large sta- tions of U, S. and Europe. ¢ human voice is hi in conversations hundreds of miles away. Musical concerts are sent by Wireless every evening from Denver and all large cities, and may be picked up by anyone having one of our simple A ie ee Government Market Reports and Weather Prediétions will soon go by regularWireless Service. Willyou be ready to receive them? Briet ot FREE Sateen ttn We alse sell Book ‘*Lezsons in Wireless**--35c REYNOLDS RADIO CO. Tuc. Largest Wireless Supply Store tn Middle West 13 19th Street DENVER, COL. quest. : s Royalty & Producers Corporation The physical condition of this company should re- flect a betterment of prices in the stock. Trading interest in the stock is indicative of higher prices and market distribution. - ¢ Information on this.issue granted freely upon re- TAYLOR & CLAY Phones 203 and 204 é Big Muddy . ‘ 50 Pilot Butte 65 Hamilton co f ee .Mule Creek .. Ab Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chica~ advan- oe Casper Dally Crivune | RAINY WEATHER HERE Western Of Fields .. .54 AT EM ied peasy + 39 Al NEW YORK CURB CLOSING. Cities Service Com. S. O. Indiana .. NEW YORK STOCKS. | Mexican Petroleum | Sinclair Ott ; Sterling | Francs Marks \Lire .. |Cait mon: j3%4s .... $88.20 First 4s - 89.10 Second 4s « 89.10 Firat 44s + 89.42 Second 44s + 89.50 Third 4s . + 93.20 Fourth 44s . + 89,70 Victory. 4%5 soos 99.146 Grass Creek . or Salt Creek . 50 $19.98; January $19.98; March $19.81; May $19.55. Silver. NEW YORK, Sept. 24.—Foreign bar silver; 68%c; Mexican dollars, 52%c. BRANCH OF PRODUCERS’ LENGUE FORMED HERE, OFFICIALS ARE CHOSEN The Producers League of the United IN 26-T0-1 SHOT FOR BASEBALL INSURANCE Insurance amount to a 26-to-1 shot has been taken out by the Cas. per baseball club as a guarantee against rain in the four-game series scheduled to start here Sunday be- tween the Refiners and the Denver Brones. Each game was insured for $750, or a total of $3,000 for the series. The premium paid by the club amounts t¢ $112.50 fer the days, being based on weather condi. tions here covering a period of ten years. ‘The insurance for each day covers a period of six hours, beginning five hours before the games start and ! continuing for an hour while they are in progress. If .16 of an inch of rain falls between the hours of 10:30 in the morning and 4:30 in the afternoon, the Casper club will be entitled to $750, regardless of wheth- er the sun comes out and permits the game to continue as scheduled. The receipts percentage is not taken into consideration. G. F. Bell of the Van Gorden In. Yestment company of Casper wrote the insurance In the Eagle Star and British Dominions company. ownership or control of mercantile, tn- dustrial and banking institutions and banking institutions through a system of development based on a local bank owned by its members | It fs an entirely new scheme and Its suc- cess is yet to be demonstrated. Tho league has quite a number of mem- bers in Casper 51 YEARS AGO Fifty-one years ago Dr. ierce of Buffalo, N. Y., gave to the world his famous Favorite Prescription, an herbal temperance medicine ‘for the distress- i ailments of women, and at that time he also placed with ; States, has organized &@ branch in Cas. Per, withthe following. officers: D. P. McCormick, president, Franz Blockhahn, vice president, I. E, Clark, financial secretary. R. L~ Wheeler, recording secretary. Joseph Smith, treasurer, R, E. Burton, J.B, Wells, W. J. Clark, Donaldson. The league has for ‘its object the DANCE Winter Garden EVERY NIGHT Introducing the Moonlight Syncopators The board of directors consists of Georgo Cunningham and Thomas H. the druggists a tonic and altera- tive which he had successfully prescribed for many years, in his early practice of medicine, for the stomach, liver and blood. This he called his Golden Medi- cal Discovery. Both these medi- cines of Dr. Pierce's manufacture met. with. instant success, and during the past half century have sold°in greater quantities than any other proprietary medicines. Neither of these compounds con- ‘tains alcohol and both are herbal extracts of native medicinal lants. For the past fifty years orty-eight million bottles ha been used by the American publ And they are toda: as liquid form, and sold by every druggist in the land. NOBODY | Why please you in every detail. Misfits WHEN . Tim The Tailor IS IN TOWN? - We Alter and Remodel Ladies’ and Gents’ Clothes to Perfection. THAT IS NOT ALL We dress you up in a new Suit or Overcoat cut, fitted and made right in my shop and guaranteed to Garments made-here express character because they are expertly fitted and hand-tailored in this establishment in a thoroughly competent rnanner in- terpreting the very latest fashions. Come in and let us show you the lat- est patterns and novelty fabrics in Suitings and Overcoatings. Tim The Tailor ‘AND CLEANER 143 S. Center—Upstairs Wear the standard tonics for men and women. The: are now put up in tablet as well = = Phone 467R The Chiropractic Idea The New System of Asceriaining the Symptoms and Adjusting the Physical Cause of Dis-ease. Not Medicine, Not Surgery, Not Osteopathy “From a lecture by G. H. Patchen, M. D.. New York, delivered before the ‘Health Culture Club,’ of New York.” FUNDAMENTAL FACTS The two fundamental facts of Chiropractic: (1) that the physical cause is, with very few exceptions due to some form of vertebral sub- luxation, and (2), that this cause can be expelled by one or more ad- justments made by the trained and educated hands of a Chiropractor, each adjustment requiring less than half a minute for its execution are, in my opinion, the greatest discoveries of this or any previous age. But the principles above mentioned important as they are, by no means, represent all that Chiropractic has accomplished. By the aid of the light these principles have shed upon the forces which are active in the living body, it has made, and will continue to make, important dis- coveries in departntents of natural studies other than those which per- tain to therapeutics. Among the most noteworthy ofthese discoveries so far made is a system of “Nerve Tracing” on the living subject, by means of which the impringed nerve can be accurately traced from its termination in the dis-eased part or organ to its exit from the spinal column or vice versa, thus unmistakably determining the exact location of the sublux- ated vertebra. Some of the branches B. J. Palmer, D. C., Ph. C., has developed which have shed light upon man, as he is, are “Meric System, Bastions: Anti-Reflex Action, Anti-Sympathetic System, The Law of Intellectual Adaptation, The Cellular Expansion and Depletion, Cycles, Innate In- telligence, Chiropractic Analysis, and Chiropractic Orthopody,” in fact these viewpoints have modified every other study. For instance, the Anti-Sympathetic Nervous System introduces “Chiropractic Anatomy” and so every other subject has been so modified at The Palmer School ei Seip het that none of them are taught as would be in any other school. ACTUAL ACCOMPLISHMENT But perhaps some of my readers of a practical turn of mind, may be mentally asking for something besides mere statements and princi- ples; may be more interested in learning what Chiropractic has actually accomplished by restoring inco-ordination to co-ordination, examples of which are everywhere so prevalent. The most satisfactory reply to such an inquiry is found in statistics by Dr. Palmer, giving the results of Chiropractic adjustments. ACUTE AND CHRONIC CONDITIONS As you have, undoubtedly, already inferred, Chiropractic adjust- ments are as relgvant and effective in acute as in chronic subluxations. In fact, in the former conditions they are more so for the reason that the subluxations have not existed so long are less fixed in their abnormal position, and consequently are more readily adjusted. x The first Chiropractic adjustment was given in 1895 at The Palmer School of Chiropractic, and although as yet, there are no public hospi- tals where Chiropractic modes are exclusively used, there are thousands of Chiropractors who find both renown, and lucrative and benevolent employment in adjusting the physical representative of the cause of dis-ease by the practice of their unique, scientific and effective system much to the good of the ill and afflicted. = a The clinical records from this source seem to show that there is hardly a recognized form of dis-ease which has not been completely and permanently eliminated by Chiropractic adjustments. A list of those conditions, called by physicians dis-ease, could be inserted here but after all is said and done authorities dispute each other, It is hard to tell where hot leaves off and cold begins; where spring leaves and summer arrives; when the baby ceases so to be; where the boy becomes the man or where chicken-pox becomes smallpox. To introduce a list here would be but to juggle with superstition and further mystify man without him gaining. You who are not normal have been to physicians one after another. They have named and renamed, ques- tioned and disputed, looked up and relied upon so-called “authorities (both dead and alive) and what have you to show for it? Your purse is some smaller, you probably carry scars in your abdomen, your stomach is probably raw from noxious poisons you paid to take and you still have the original complaint you have tried to forget. If that is the end of the system, it is time you advanced. The Chiropractor can have no quarrel] with*the physician for they are both trying to accomplish the same result. If the physician’s work had been a success, Chiropractic could not have come into existence. Believing as we do—that names count for little: (‘what's in a’ hs at they are effects, and we as Chiropractors search for cause mae en hen you can see why we do not mention names of dis- eases. That’s all the physician ever sees or “treats.” Cause is all the Chiropractor knows and adjusts. As fast as we educate people from the theories of symptoms to the knowledge of cause—education is a matter of growth and takes time—we drop out of sight the things you think important, but which our experience proves 1s not. To those ene have grown, the names of dis-eases will pass unnoticed for they Rie mean nothing. Ina few years at most, names of dis-eases will be atl ung of the past; you will call the Chiropractor for the acute or chronic sub- luxations, he will adjust them. You will nate elt He t s a subluxation, not because there was a pes rcpaces Which Roxie physicians gave some doubtful name to. very cours as It of prop opracti¢ ad- ty with which recovery often occurs as a resu D opractié ad Mera} Speeds to those without experience, almost incredible. T aut tio pan fo Aesny ‘cinon of severe, painful and obstinate forms of disease that have per- fnanently Aisappeared after adjustments. ‘ Dr. Palmer is quoted as saying ‘that the data representing these results are mado fom reports of Chiropractors in various fields of work and is further based UP odes taken from The Palmer Schoo! Clinic, which is by far the largest in the world. There is another feature of Chiropractic fully ax interesting as any that has been mentioned. This is its hygienic or prophylactic influence. ‘The real mission of the Chi- v4 je occurrence of disease 5 t of the earnest physician is to prevent th or urrence of! Tue being an also, tcioference that if one's vertebrae Were always kept in proper re 1 Frent by Chiropractic adjustments, all d'sease would be prevented, is both logical As by paying regular visits to one's dentist. one's teeth are kept in ‘008 ‘by having ail decay promptly treated, so by availing one's self o rv good condition. yD chiopractor, at stated intervals and especially after many jars, falls or injuries which might affect the spine, not only much suffering, but much loss both of time and money will be saved. Drs. J. H. and A. G. Jeffrey F CHIROPRACTORS Midwest Building, Suite 318 to 323 Office Phone 706, Res. 93 Drs. B. G. and E. E. Hahn CHIROPRACTORS Townsend Bldg. Phones: Office 423, Res. 1235 ee 2 = = = = 2 = L = 2 = = s

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