Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 8, 1921, Page 10

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Beerersor at i Ladin PAGE TEN WYOMING OIL. PRICES DEPRESS MARKET FOR SECURITIES, GLAIM Wall Street Jourmal Article Sets Forth That Eastern | Stockholders Protest Situation Favoring the Refining Companies. (FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAI te Action is threatened by eastern stockholders of oil produc-|' price for Wyoming tion being made that the situation will properties in Wyoming to force a fz It is claimed that the present price of 90 cents a barrel for crude oil in the Salt Creek and I elds in Wyoming WHEAT PBIGES OPEN HIGHER Weather in wlich recen he Midwest ce e far out of 1 er parts of r own espe: Dry The outsta: ofl situation t ss of the M Refi any, which {ts based entire on from the Wyoming J the success of Standard Oi! of Indiana which is due in Wyoming assets. Mid ng has succeeded becaus ction from the Salt Creel addy, Rock River and othe ing, but the prod panies have not succeeded rela ely, and thelr stockholders are o = ing bt offerings. from the southwe: ish factor. Opening quotations, which varied from unchanged figures to %4c, ©O! higher, December $1.03 to $1.03% and May $1.08% to $1.08%4, were fol opinion that it ts due entirély t lowed by material gains all around. | the fact that they are not getting « Gossip that Holland and Sweden | fair price for ofl. In other words, the were buying United 8: uffs| refining company ts making most ¢ and the Italian gov 2 out of the production o: ditional advance lated. The market! First Move to Correct Situation. closed unsettled, 1%0 to 1%¢ net nigh-| first action taken toward © with December, $1.04% to $1.04% | fairer price for Wyomi May $1.09% to $1.09% ‘ 1 was by George BE. Brimn Corn and oats were firmer with] general couns wheat. Seaboard exporters were bid-| company, ding for cash corn here. After open-| the Prairi c to %@%c higher, May 52%c| the corn market hardened - of the Kasoming Oil known as.a subsidiary of Oil & Gas company, the ‘4 Oll producing and pur shasing company in the mid-continent fleld, who filed a complaint with Gov ernor Carey of Wyoming on existing prices of oll in that state. At 90 cents a barrel, Salt Creek pro. duction is the cheapest crude oil in the country. In quality it ranks with Pennsylvania crude, but the compars son stops there, as Pennsylvania crude is quoted at $4. Mid-cont crude, to which Salt Creek product is superior, is quoted at $1.50 a bar and slackened later. The close was easy at %c to 4%4@%Keo net gain, with May 52%c. Oats started unchanged to %c high- er, May 37%c to 374g, and then mado additional gains. ‘ Lower quotations on hogs wea’ ened provisions. Closing Quotations. CHICAGO, Nov. 8.— rel. Wheat— Open. High. Low. Close.| A price for Wyoming crude similar 03 $1.05% $1.03 $1.0414| to mid-continent would be regarded as 1.08% 1.10% 1.08% 1.09% | fair by stockholders of the producing ‘operties. There is more gasoline in 45% 46% pst of the Wyoming crude oll out- put than in midcontinent crude its lubricating qu Briefly the s the refining com the advantage to shareholders of Salt Creek Pro: ducers, Sinclair, Basin and M! and litles are higher the di such comp: riment of nies as . Mountain Pro. Merritt, Elk 7.40 Mrs. Ju Winsor Smith of Bos 7.70 | ton, for fifty years a member of the 2 a 1 Wor club Potatoes. and now an ho y vice president CHICAGO, Nov. 8.—P. of the organizntion, is claimed to be ket steady; receipts, the oldest active club woman in| United es shipmen’ America. Mrs, Smith is nearing her 100th birthday and the club is pre. paring for an appropriate observance of the anniversary. sacked, $1.70@1.85 bulk, $1 sacked Red Ohio's, $1.50@1.65 cwt.; sacked russets, $2.50@2.60 cwt. |pany ts being organized to take over Provisions. | the proposition and definite announce- CHICAGO, ov. 8.—Butter—Mar. ments are ‘expected soon. reamery extras, 43c; firsts, seconds, 32@24c; standards, Eggs—Market unsettled; receipts, * 7,446 cases; firsts, 53@55c; ordinary ity Fue 5 firsts, 43@47c; miscellaneous, 50@52c; refrigerator extras, 84c; refrigerator firsts, 33c. | _—__—_ —_—__ ik FAVORABLE REPORT MADE East Yellowstone Avenue Near Stockyards Phone 3283 Egg Nut Coal, delivered, TOWN OF THERMOPOLIS Jagle dome, les. A gas com- <be Casper Daily Cribune || Today’s Markets by Wire FURNISHED BY TAYLOR & CLAY Ground Floor Oi! Exchange Bldg. Phones 203-204 LOCAL OTL STOCKS Western Oil Fields .. .96 98 ne. 44 ¥ on s 39 3 ai Western States ee) 46 NEW ORK CURB CLOSING. Bia Ask ‘ Merritt $11.00 § 11.25 : Glenrock, Ott 143 1.50 Salt, Creek 13.75. 14.00 Prod. and Refrs. 4.12 4.37 Cosden .,. 5.23 6.25 Elk Basin 7.00 Taz ke Cities Service Com. .. 198.00 200.00 8. O. Indiana ........ $4.75 83.00 EI NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ji Mexican Petroleum ..$106.00 $107.75 Sinclair OU . 22.75 + 22.00 y Texas Oil 4287 43.00 z Pan-American 46.50 © 46.37 03 U. 8. Steel ...... --80,50 60.27 usk Royalty Dek: AS Union Pacific R. + 121.00 121.37 Petroleum ... FOREIGN EXCHANGE. Sterling Franc: Mark; Lire Call Henry fountain and Money LIBERTY BONDS. ond 48 First 4X5 . Second 4\s . d River Refg. Third 448 . Wyo-Kans. f t Fourth 44s . Wyo-Tex. o1 02 \Victory 4%s WYOMING CRUD& OLL MARKET. -$1.90| Rock River ~ 1.90) Salt Creek oa 90 | Big Mudd) ~ 1.40! Mule Creek TARKET GOSSIP AND FIELD NEWS milton Dome FARGO OFFICERS ARE RE-ELECTED A vote of confidence was given the.management of the Fargo Oil company at the annual meeting here yesterday when the stockholders of the company voted unanimously to return the old board of directors to office for another year. Fllowing the stockholders meeting the directors met and per- fected the organization of the company by restoring all offi- SAU oan meetin re-|fecting the development programs of = ad Das Ethene ‘Oaten, the company will be forthcoming in Utah, vice president: H. I. Robinson, |®220uncement which will be made to the stockholders relative to the annual Dickinson, 8. D., second vice president meeting. Detatls of the new- develop- Q. K. Deaver, treasurer; Marion Run- den, secretary and Patrick Sullivan] ment campaigns contemplated and au- thorized are being temporarily with director. held ITALY’S UNKNOWN LAID AT REST IN MONUMENT OF VICTOR EMMANUEL ROME, Nov. 8.—Italy’s unknown Angeli In formal procession. oldier found final sepulchre in| Via Naztonale was a masa of he Victor Emmanuel monument,| surging humanity but the solemn he Altar of tho Country"| character of the occasion Was al- xactly under the allegorical} ways maintained. figure representing Rome. King Elght noncommissioned officers Victor Emmanuel.and the royal | Ifted the coffin from the gun car- family were the chief mourners in the solemn ceremony which was rendered deeply impressive by the presence of large numbers of wid- ows, orphans, mothers and blind and mutilated men of the war, ‘The body was transported from the church of Santa Maria Degli riage and carried it up the two short flights of steps to the place of burial in the manumont. The asket wag thén introduced into the Place alloted for it and then by a hydraulle contrivance the door of heavy stone Was closed. At that moment tho bells of the Yarious { $8,045,292 IN WASHINGTOX, Nov. §%.—Recetpts from oll wells in tho Texas Red River district which have been impounded by the supreme court pending decision of the boundary guit between Okla- homa and Texas, now amounts to $8,045,292, Federal Recelver Frederic A. De The report covers the period from April 1, 1920, to September 30, 1921. Eleven wells have been drilled in that period. the report said, bringing to 31. . the total CHICAGO, Nov. 8—(U. 8. Bureau of Markets}—Cattle—Receipts 14,000; few early sales good dnd choice light and medium weight steers and yenr- lings, steady; others killing “e's », dull, unevenly lower; top yer 11.50 ers and feeders steady. Hogs—Reeeipts, 47,000; 250 to 40c lower than yesterday's average; prac- tical top, early. later $7.25; bulk, $6.85@7.25; pigs, mostly °25e lower: bulk desirable, $7.75@8; mostly, $8; few at $3.10. — Receipts, 15,000; killing classes, slow, generally steady; native lambs to packers, $8.50@ many held higher; feeders active; several loads choice at $8. steady to weak; steers, $6@7; cows and heifers, $: @3; calves, $5.50@9; bulls, $2@3; stockers and feeders, $4.50@6. Hogs—Rece‘pts, 1,200; 15@25c low- er; top, $8; bulk, $7@8. Sheep—Receipts, 13,000; -steady to strong: lambs, $7.50@8.25; ewes, $2.40 @4.25; feeder lambs $7@8. ——$—$———————— church edifices throughout the capital began pealing. The artillerr from the various stations in and about Rome then fired salutes. Taking part in the ceremony at the monument were 10 widows and 10 mothers chosen from améng relatives of fallen soldiers who ¢s- corted the body With the wearers of the gold medal for valor from the church to the monument, Waternity Bill Before House ceipts, 3 WASHINGTON, Nov. 8.—The Sheppard-Towner bill for protection maternity and infancy, already passed by the senate, was favorably reported by the house interstate com- «|| merce committee. Your Roof Leak If so, see us for an esti- mate and advice on your roofing problem. 4 W.S. Holtzman & ' ~ Sons Contractors and Builders Phone 1099-J Does &; W,Tackson, night ticket clerk. who had walked to the window on donment with a stranger crowd began to gather, so Jackson hastily crammed the piglet and , Bursing bottle into a wastepaper re- ceptacle and assumed a nonchalant air. The pig for the time was si- lent and remained so until Jackson, after the crowd had drifted away, removed {t from the basket. Then it began a chorus that continued intermittently throughout the night despite Jackson's earnest efforts to solace it wih the nursing bottle. It is said that the ticket clerk even essayed to grunt in matronly swin- ish tones in his anxiety to get milk into the orphan, but tho effort was & dismal failure. At 3 o'clock in the morning he called 0. B. Staple- ton, passenger agent in charge of the Cheyenne office, and requested instructions. Stapleton, suspecting that his assistant must have suf- fered a faire of the mind, declined to become ‘interested in any wild pig and hung up. When he errived at the office at 8 a. m., however, he was forced to consider the pig dilemma, the diminutive porker be- ing still. a charge of Jackson afd still squealing for mutriment. As Stapleton opened the ticket office door the pig hopped from a waste- paper basket in which Jackson had bedded it down, skippéd between Stapleton’s legs and escaped into the women's waiting room. Ten minutes later a perspiring crew of volunteer pursuers recaptured. it ae bore it triumphantly back to oy COKE | Delivered: one in ‘ $8.00 Per Ton HOLLAND BROS. * Phone 1333 “Burlesque” Comedy Enacted . appeal in behalf of an abandoned Ucket office. The efforts of Fe - _ TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1921. Refusal to Admit British Comedian Brings Protest SARNIA, Ontario, test ha Phone 27 HAY, GRAIN Industrial Ave. AND FEED Best Quality, Lowest Price 8.—A pro- immigra- Cabinet. For Ladies and Gentlemen. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT CALL 875-J For Disposal i of Garbage, Refuse and Night Soil Sanitation Co. Chamber of Commerce The City Bldg. 128 East Second Street Basement, O-S Building The H. E. Grude Corporation Is Now Issuing Stock to New Purchasers. We still have some stock left to offer which can be bought in amounts from $50 up, at $1.00 per share. . This Stock Pays 12 Per Cent Dividend 3 Per Cent Payable Quarterly, 1, 1922, to wd December 15, 1: This company does a general investment business, owns’ and operates apartment buildings and is des- tined to be one of Wyoming’s strongest investment able January institutions. H. E. Grude Corporation Casper Realty Office, 108 S, Center Phone 381 Next Dividend Pay- ders on Rec- - , Get all the style in Overcoats that is WE ARE OFFERING FOR SALE Wonderful Bargains in Second- Hané Building Material The Webel building is being demolished to make way for the new Lyric Theater. Apply Charles Shoblom AT WEBEL BUILDING The Nicolaysen Lieber Co. Everything in Building Material BIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Phone 62. Office and Yard: First and Center 4 4 coming to you; all the quality; all the long wear; all the value; where your money will do the most. ADLER ROCHESTER QVERCOATS At Least a Third More Value Than Last Year. = Campbell-Johnson Co. HEAD-TO-FOOT CLOTHIERS 4 ce YOUR MONEY GET ALL YOU CAN FORIT . That’s Not Selfish; Its Sensible SUNN Phone 69 ’ NOW IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY CASH OR EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS Natrona Power Co. Electric Fixtures at Your Own Price =: See What You Buy - We almost daily refurnish some home whose owner has been imposed upon by mail order house solicitors. BRING IN ANY CATALOGUE AND. WE WiLL SHOW. YOU WHERE WE CAN SAVE YOU FROM TEN TO FIFTY PER CENT Also No Freight or Express to Pay. ‘ We Are Closing Out Many Lines At Less Than Cost — cl wii i TRAST Te Ic

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