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PAGE EIGHT MARKET GOsalP GRAIN MARKET HIGHER AGAIN Eariy Loss Offset by Lively Demand Caused by Bull- ish Factors. CHICAGO, June 23.—Wheat scored a quick advance in price today soon after a setback at the start. The earlier declines were ascribed to spec- ulative selling based on depression of foreign exhange, especially a low low record for German marks. The market ascended quickly, however, as goon as selling pressure c ad. The opening which varied from %c decline to %c gain with July $1.13% to $1.14 and September $1.15% to $1.15% was foNowe4 by a moderate drop all around and then by a raise to well above yesterday's finish. Strength in the wheat market was associated more or less with news of the spread of black rust and with as- sertions that crop reports to be is sued tomorrow would show a decided reduction in the estimated yield of winter wheat. The prospective rail strike counted also as a bullish fac- tor. Prices closed unsettled, %c to 1%ec net higher, with July $1.14% to $1.14% and September $1.15% to $1.15%. Corn and oats were finctuated in Une with the changes in wheat. After opening “%c off to %c up, July 62% to 62%, the corn market sagged a lit- tle and then made a general upturn. Announcement of liberal export males of corn helped strengthen the market in tho later realings. The close was firm, %c to %c net higher, July 62%%c to 62% O%e. Oats started a shade, lower to a shade advance, July 36% to 36%c and after a slight fall rallied with other grains. Higher quotations on hogs gave firmness to the provision market. Closing Quotations. | Salt Creek _.. - 56,400 52,500 Grass Creek — 5,250 5,250} Elk Basin —_ 2,460 2,250 AND FELD NES PIPELINE RUNS SHOW AN INGREASE Wyoming and Montana crude oil runs for the week ended} June 17 show a marked increase over runs for the preceding | week, according to figures on gross daily average production | announced by the American Petroleum institute. runs averaged 56,400 barrels daily for the week, an increase of 3,500 barrels and a new records for the local lines. Un- Salt Creek usually warm weather aided in crowd- ing the capacity of the carriers, it is believed. Following is a comparison of average daily runs for the two weeks: Myoming— Junel7 June 10 . Big Muddy Laramie Distrist All others ___ Total Wyoming. 72,750! Montana— Cat Creek ‘ Total Wyo.-Mont___ | Big Storage Contract Let. Standard Off company of Indiana! and Sinclair Consoldated Oil corpo} ration, which own jointly the Sinclair/ Pipeline company and the Sinclair Crude Oil Purchasing company, have placed through the latter organiza- tion an order for the immediate con- struction of fifty 80,000-barrel steel tanks. This additional storage for 4, 000,000 barrelo will be placed on its Oklahoma tank farms at Cushing,| Bristow and Noming. The company| purchases all the oil run by the Sin-| clair Pipeline company. ‘That com-| pany’s oil runs in May were 2,945,000) barrels and deliveries were 1,127,000) barrels, leaving a surplus for storage} og 1818,000 barrels. Stocks of crude oil on hand June 1 were 21,787,000} barrels. The construction of addi-| tional storage indicates a disposition! to continue heavy purchases of sur- plus Mid-Continent erude at the pre- vailing prices. ~ ' | ' Crnde Tests Well. | An analysis of crude from Iova-| Wyoming second sand well in Boiton| Creek shows a gravity of 32.4, with! @ gasoline content of 27 pe reent and} kerosene content of 13 per cent. Syndicate Rigging Up. Casper-Bolton Creek syndicate is rigging up for well No. 3 on the north- east quarter of the northeast quarter of section 10-29-31, Bolton Creek, on land leased from the Iowa-Wyoming. This location is about five hundred feet northeast of the well recently completed to the second sand which | is estimated at 900 barrels, and will be spudded in in about two weeks. Open High Low Close Wheat— July 1.13%..1.15%4 1.13% 1.14% Sept ..---- 1.15% 116% 114% 115% Dec. ------ 1.17% 1.18% 1.17% 1.18% 62% 82% 61% 62% 66% 66% 65% 66% 05% 66% 65% 66% 36% 36% 36% 36% 39% = .39% «38% =.39 \ A2% 42% 41% 42 fuly ~---..1135 1.40 11.32 Sept. ——-..11.65 11.67 11.62 11.62 Ribe— duty ..-.-. 12.05 12.98 12.05 Sept. --.--- 11.75 11.62 11.67 Potatoes. CHICAGO, June 29.—Potatoes weak receipts 60 cars; total United States shipments 738. Alabama, Louistana, Oklahoma and Arkansas sacked Bliss ‘Triumps No. 1 $2.50@2.75 cwt.; Texas sacked Irish cobblers mostly $2.25 cwt.; Alabama sacked Spaulding Rose No. 1, $1.90@2.00 cwt; Louisiana sacked long whites $1.50@1.75 cwt.; North Carolina Norfolk section Irish cobblers stave barrels $3.85@4.25. east- ern shore Viriginia Irish cobblers stave barrels $4.75@4.85; old stock steady; Idaho sacked round whites $1.75 cwt Butter, Eggs, Poultry. CHICAGO, June 29.-—Butter lower; creamery extras 35% @36c; firsts 32@ 35c; seconds 30@3ic; standards 36@ 36%4c. Eges, higher. recetpts 13,029 cases; firsts 21% @22c; ordimary first 20@ 204%c; miscellanedus 21@21%c; stor- age packed extras 23@23%4c; storage packed firsts 22% @22%c. Poultry alive lower; fowts broilers 28@36c; roosters 14%c. 21%. | With the Oil Men Minal E. Young, secretary and gen- eral manager, and Ernest Marquardt, chief geologist of the New York Oil company, are in Denver attending to corporation business. Wade Fowler and family were Cas- per visitors from Douglas yesterday afternoon. Jerry Mahoney is in from thé ranch for a few days attending to local mat- ters requiring his attention. H. Leslie Parker, interested in Big Muddy and other fields, arrived this morning from the Colorado metropolis on a business trip. Ray Phebus, of Ray Phebus Oils, Inc., with headquarters at Thermopo- lis, is a guest at the Henning accom- panied by Mrs. Phebus Dick Miller, representing the Cotum- bian Steel Tank company of Kansas City, has returned here afte ra visit to headquarters. W. A. Bergstrom of the Evans Ofl corporation, is attending to land office matters at Douglas today. Epes Tt is estimated that there are 7 600,000 tons of freight annualy mov: ing into and out of the port of New York by rail and 40,006,000 tons by} steamship. Lives tock Mart | Chicago Prices. CHICAGO, June 29.—(United States) Bureau of Markets).—Cattle, receipts 10,000; beef steers and butchers, she stock strong; spots on desirable yearl- ings and heavy steers shade higher; early top beef steers $10.00; bulk beef steers $8.35@9.60; canners and cutters and stockers slow, steady. bulls 10 to 18e higher; carly sales veal calves steady, undertone strong; beet cows and heifers mostly $5.00@7.35; canners and cutters largely $3.00@4.00; best heavy bologra bulls $4.75; bulk around $4.50@4.60. vidding $8.25@8.75 on-veal valves; few sales of handweights to outsiders $9.00@9.75. Hogs, receipta 31,000; market fairly active; mostly 10 to 20c higher; bulk good light and: butchers $10.60@10.95; top $11.00. bulk $9.80@10.95; pigs about steady; mostly $10.00@10.25; packing sows mostly $9.25@9.75; heavyweight $10.55@10.80; medium $10.70@11.00; light $20.90@11.00. light light $10.40@10.90; packing sows, smooth $9.40@9.95; packing sows, rough $9.00@9.50; killing pigs $9.60@ 10.50. Sheep, receipts 14,000; fat lambs 25c/ lower. sheep, feeders and breeders! steady to strong; packers top notive| lambs $13.00; few to city butchers $13.25; culls $6.50@7.50; five loads g00d Idahos $13.25 with 281 out; good] 83 pound dry fed yearlings $11.26. fat ewes mostly $5.00@6.50; good handy| fat natiyes up to «$7.00: few native] yearling breeding ewes $9.25@10.00. Omaha Quotations. OMAHA, Neb., June 29—(Untted States Bureau of Markets.}—Hogs, re- celpts 12,500; mostly 10 to 15¢ higher; 200 to 300 pound butchers $9.60@10.25; top $10.40; mixed and packing grades $9.40@9.60. extreme heavies $8.50@ 8.75. Cattle, receipts 6,000; better grades! of medium weight steers firm to 10c higher; others generally steady; top $9.65; good cows and heifers steady to strong; medium and common grades and other classes of stock m.ostly/ steady. | Sheep recetpts 5,000. native Iambs and yearlings 25 to 50c lower; western steady; top native lambs $13.00; Ida- hos $12.75; yearlings $11.75; sheep and feeders steady. light ewes $6.00; feed-/ ing lambs $11.50. | Denver Prices. DENVER, Colo., June 29.—Cattle.| receipts 1,600; market steady lower;| beef steers $7.00@9.25. cows and heif-| ers $4.00@7.75; calves $6.00@9.50;| bulls $2.50@4.50; stockers and feeders $5.25@6.25. Hogs, recetpts 3,300 jmarket 10c higher; top $10.20. bulk 39.80@10.00.| Sheep, receipts none; market un- changed ewes $4.50@5.00; spring) lambs $11.50@12.75. | | See ee K, of C. OFFICIAL RESIGNS. NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 29.-- Joseph C. Pelletier, former district at- torney in Boston, has resigned as su- preme adyocate of the Knights of Columbus, it was announced at the K. of C, headquarters today. ees Pewter making, which for centuries! was one of England's important in-! dustries, has been almost abandoned within recent yearm New York Stocks Allied Chemical & Dye Afliis Chalmers c American Beet Sugar American Can American Car & Foundry . American Hide & Leather pfa. American Internaticnal Corp American Locomotive .. American Smelting & Ref, American Sugar American American American American Anaconda Atchison Ath, Guilt an Baldwin Locomotive Baltimore and Ohio Bethelehem Steel “ Canadian Pacific Ceneral Leather Chandler Mototrs Chesapeake and Ohio ... Chicago, Mil, and St. Paul Chicago, R. I. and Pac. Chino Copper Colorado Fuel and Irone Corn Products Crucible Steel Miri. 0.5.00 z ‘ Famous Player Lasky ~ General Asphalt General Electrie . General Motors Goodrich Co. Great Northern pfd. Tilinois Central Inspiration Copper . International Hervester Int Mer. Marine pfd. International Paper Invincible Of1 ....... Kelly Springfidd Tire . Kennecot Copper . Louisville and Nashville Mexican Petroleum Sumatra T. & T. Tobacco Woolen Copper . | 9932) 72% | 45% 15 | Miami Copper .. 27% | Middle States Of 13% Midvale Steel 3244) Missouri Pacific 20% | New York Centrai ‘| N. . ¥., N. H. and Ha 28% Norfoik and Western 106 Northern Pacific ........... 753% | kiahoma Prod. and Ref. 3%! Pacific Oil ...... Pan American Petroleum | Pennsylvania .. People’s Gas ... 83 | Pure) OMe oiss site ten 30% Ray Consolidated Copper . 16 Reading eeesees 73%) Rep. Iron and Steel . 69% Royal Dutch, N, Sears Roebuck Sinclair Con. Oil Southern Pacific Southern ailwa: Ye 58 4%4B 31% ) 88%) 23° | Standard Oil Jes 181% Studebaker Cprpzration 126% ‘Tennessee Copper . 10% Texas (0. ....: 46% Texas and Pacific . 27 Tobacco Products 80%4 Transcontinental Oil 13% | Union Pacific ....... + 139%) United Retail Stores . | J. 8. Ind Alcohol ... 63% United States Rubber 62% United Staes Steel 97% |Utah Copper ..... 6234 | Westinghouse Blectric 59% | Willys Overland .. 8% American Zinc, Lead 162B Butte and Superior 27B Cala Petroleum 60B Montana Power |Mike Henry Big Indian SS , 25 Boston Wyoming 86 Bessemer .. 21 Buck Creek . Burk Chappell ... AT Columbine . 1S Consolidated Royalty . 1.35 Capitol Pete ..,--.--- 00% Cow Guich 204 Domino 03 Elkhorn 0 £. T. Willams 66 Compass 02 Frantz . 5.00 Gates . 14 Jupiter 02 Cpastal ......-- 49 Kinney Coestal . 40 Lance Creek Royalty . 03 Lusk Royalty . 03 Preston Mountain ana Gulf. Nortwest anche ee 35 | Outwest .... sone 01 Red Bank 21 Five Tribes Fet. Co . 55 Picardy -04 Riverton Refs. . 00% o1 Royalty and Producers .10 11 Sunset 05, 06 Tom Bell Royalty ot 03 Western Exploration . 2.75 2.85 Wind River Refg! ... .01 02 United Pete . x 4 | Wyo-Kans 1.00 Wyo-Tex 01 Western OF 65 Western States Y ‘ Ou 2 A : NEW YOrnr CURD CLOSING. -$ 14.75 $ 15.00 10.00 10.50 25 Prod. and Refrs. 1.50 Marind Cosden oF 46.00 Mutual . 9.75 10.00 3. O. Undiana . 103.50 103.75 Cities Service Com a 223.00 York Oi 31.00 17.00 3%e .... . $100.08 eet 49. - 100.04 Second 4s . First 44s . ° Second 4\%s - . Third 4%5 . Fourth 4%s « Victory 4%s . Crude Market G Creek . Elk Basin Lance Creek Hamilton Dome Rock River Salt Creek Big Muddy .... Mule Ci Among the peasantry of Spanish Galicia, the women work hard ail their lives, and are usually much stronger and better developed than their hus- 69 B bands, over whom they rule. MIDWEST DRILLS ’ WELLS, CARTER ONE IN WEEK IN FOUR NEW MMwest Refining reports four com- pletions during the week in Salt Creek, with a total new production of 3,608 barrels daily. Following is the loca- tion, name, date of completion and in- itial production. No. 7-A NE% section 27-40-7 west-Frisco, 6-18-22, 2,175 feet; rels initial. < No, 36-A SE% section 14-40-79. Wyo. Assoc. Control; 6-18-22; 1,643 feet: 1,- 950 barrels, initial; 2,206 barrels after shot. No. 1-A SW% section 12-40-79; Mid- west-Snow 6-22-22; 2,420 feet; 1,002 barrels initial. No. 31-A SE% secttion 34-40-7: completion during the week in Salt Creek, Duncan No. 1 in section 5-39- 78, which developed an initial flow of 278 barrels in the second Wall Creek at 2,407 feet. Casing is being pufted in North Park Abbott on section 27-978, near Wal- den, Colo., which was abandoned in November of last-year and the rig will be dismantled, Following 1s status of wells now drilling in this state: Kocherhans No. 2, section 4-55-97, Big Horn county, running 10-inch at 1,365 feet. Poyelton, on section 3-65-97, clean- ing out at 1,160 feet. Howard No. 1 section 18-39-78, Salt Cc. C. Bradley; 6-24-22; 2,310 feet; barrels initial. The Carter Oil company reperts one Creek, cleaning out and baling at 2,355 feet. Howard No. 3, section 18-39-79, drill- ing at 50 feet. . NEW PRICE‘LIST ON MICHELIN TIRES 30x3l4 Regular Cord 30x34 Oversize Cord 32x3!4 Fabric _____ 32x4 Fabric ______ 33x4 Fabric _ 34x4 Fabric ________ ----~~---$14.20 oe Se SIG. 90 —--~~~-$13.80 -----~-$18.60 poe 519.00 Lien SSRN z —-$19.90 The Same High Standard Is Maintained. THE $1,0 00 PRIZE Has Been Awarded to L. J. KELLER Kendallville, Ind. Michelin Invented the First Pneumatic Automobile Tire in 1895. R. M. MOSHER ’ 316 W. Yellowstone THE MICHELIN MAN Phone 309 *| Tobacco Products and Anaconda were 4| Pacific and Houston Oils. Che Casper Daily Cribune DOMESTIC OILS STRIKE SLUMP Market Situation Still Erratic; Rails Steady Despite Strike Call. NEW YORK, June 29.—The strength of rails and heaviness of oils were the conflicting features of today’s stock market. Other issues showed no definite trend. Sales ap proximated 750,000 shares. Rails made-further improvement lat- er and motors and equipments hard- ened but oils lagged under renewed pressure. The closing was irregular. NEW YORK, June 29.—Oils were the features of speculative interest at the very mixed opening of today’s stock market, the foreign group mov- ing upward, while domestic issues, es- pecially the Catifornia division, showed distinct heaviness, Mexican Petroleum rose 3 points to 186 in_the first few transactions, but profit-taking soon cancelled this gain. Pan-American Petroteums were higher by 1% to 2 points and General Asphalt reflected short coverings, Standard Oil of Cal-| ifornia lost 2 points and California Petroleum Pacific Ofls, Atlantic Gulf, lower. Steels and motors moved con fusingly, Crucible showing a 2 point gain with removal of yesterday's heav iness in Stuaebaker. Leading foreign exchanges were lower, the German marks establishing a new minimum at a fraction under .27. ‘The increased activity of the morn ing was entirely at the expense of quoted values. Mexican Petroleum's extreme advance of 4 points was suc- ceeded by 6 points reaction. Standard Oils of California and New Jersey were 3 to almost 5 points lower. Losses of 1 to 4 points were sus- tained by California Petroleum, Pro- ducers and Refiners and Associated High grade steels, equipments and motors were only moderately affected but food specialties -became heavy. Dealings in rails were light at trifling changes. Call money opened at 4% per cent, but soon dropped to 4% per cent. The relative steadinees of railroad shares during the morning, despite the acute weakness of many industrials, encouraged the bull faction to make a demonstration in that quarter in the early afternoon. C. C. C. and St. Louis was marked up three points, New York Central 2% and Reading, Louis- ville and Nashville, New Haven, Rock Island, St. Paul, Pere Marquette preferred, Balttmore and -Ohio and Peoria and Eastern 1 to 1%. Inquiry for Dupont carried it 2% above yes- terday’s final figures while Brooklyn Transit, Studebaker, Bethlehem Steel, Marine preferred and New York Dock caused the entire market to recede again. Fereign Exchange, Irregular. NEW YORK, June 29.—Great Brit- ain demand 4.40%; cables 4.40%; 60 day bills on banks 4.38%. Holland demand 38.35; cables 38.40. Norway demand 16.20. Sweden demand 25.60. Spain demand 15.53. Greece demand 3.15. Poland demand .02 14. Cuecho-Slovakia demand 1.90. Argentine demand 36.00 Brazil demand 13.75. Montreal 97 15-16 Money. j NEW YORK, June 29.—Call money easy; high 4%. low 4; ruling rate 4%: closing bid 4; offered at 4%; last loan 4. Call loans against acceptances 4; time loans steady; 60 days 4. 90 days| Czechosiov: 4; six months 4%. Prime mercantile, paper 4@4%. Silver. 7 NEW YORK, June 29.—Foreign bar silver 70%c; Mexican dollars 53%c. Metals. NEW YORK, June 29.—Copper steady; electrolytic spot and later 13% @13%c. ‘Tin steady; spot and futures 30.75. Iron steady and unchanged. Lead steady. spot 5.75@5 85. Zinc steady East St. Louis spot and nearby delivery 5.30@5.35. | Antimony spot 5.00@5.26. ! London Money. LONDON, June 29.—Bar | silver 36% per ovhce. Money 1% per cent. Discount rates, short bills 2% per cent; three months bills 2% per cent. DERBY DOME OIL MEN EN ROUTE TO FIELD IN LANDER DISTRICT Campbell Hunter, mining and oil engineer of London arrived in the city this morning. Mr. Hunter is geol- ogist for the Derby Dome Wyoming Of company operating in the Lander dis- trict and was accompanied from Den- ver by Archibald Campbell, vice presi- dent and general manager of the con- cern. ‘This corporation recently purchased all of the Dallas field together with the pipeline-to Wyopo on the North- western from the Anglo-United Oil Fields company and in addition owns the Derby Dome five miles south on which there are several wells and to which the pipeline has been extend- ed from the Dallas field. Wells in; this field produce from the Embar gained a point each. Oils and other of the earlier weak issues recovered somewhat, but another drop in Mexi- can Petroleum to 178, the lowest. point on the reaction since it touched 204% sand at 1,100 feet and averago about: 75 barrels of black ofl each per day. | The above named gentlemen, to- gether with Judge C. E. Winter, coun- sel for the company, and R. 8. El | | Public utilities cannot tained in the money mark: must pay. Consequently, regulation of the financing It is beyond the power shall be paid for money. attract new capital to pub! NATRONA Financing of Public Utilities The contention that capital devoted to a public use by investment in ptblic utilities is not entitled to as high a return as capital in private investments, is unsound. The investor who represents a considerable part of the public, may do what he pleases with his money, and it if he who fixes the price which the public utility the recognition of these two fundamental propositions: The public requirements must-be met. The public must pay for what it receives. fact; and all that any legislature, commission, or city can do is to determine this question of fact. reaches an erroneous decision, new money will not be forthcoming; and all that the regulatory body can then do is te revise its own conclusion. iE ls F-3\\ Quotations Furnished Securities Bia Asked nglo Am. 9, 1925 103% 103% A oi, ty or =? 100% 101 Ga, 1924 . 101% hes 1929. cr Copper Expt. = " “ 8s, 1931 105% 105% Guba Re Re iage, 1936). 101 103 1941 Del. & Hud., 5%: Denmark, 65, 1042 . Denmarit, 88, DuPont, 74s, Framericau, 7 French Gov., French Gov., 7%, 1941 .. 100% Great Nor.. 5%8, 1952 .. 100% 101% Great Nor., 7s, 1936....-. 109% 109% Hock. Valley, 6s, 1924 .. 100% 100% LeBelle Iron, 6s, 1940 99 100 lap. Gov., 46, 1931 ...... 77 «77% Jap. Gov., Ist, 4%4s, 1925 91% 91% Pap. Gov., 2nd, 4%s, 1 90% 91 Miss Pac., 6s, 1949 . N. O., Tr. & Lt. 6s, 1947 .. 2 1936 .. 6s, 1958 94 1 Seiry, 7s, 1942 Sin. Crude Oil, 5 Sol. % Cie, 8s, 1927 ..... South, Ry., 6%s, 1956 S. W. Bell Tel. Swiss a porn Uruguay, 8s, : Virginian Ry., 58, 1962 Whit-Gless., 6s. 1941. P. Tel. & Tel., 5s, 1952 2 S son of Midwest Refining, are in con- Securities Corporation, Cheyenne, W; 1 v0. Ne) THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1927 Ale by the John U. Fish : a OWK-WYOMINE ELECTS NEW OFFICERS HER At the meeting of the bo. rectors of the Iowa-Wyomin, pany held at its local office Noah Williams was elected Mark U. Weber, vice presi ward Meents, treasurer. Johnston, secretary. “Additional 4i tors are: M. J. » B.S. Qui and R. B. McGregor. Only rout matters were attended to but at meeting scheduled for later in, Week matters of more importance be taken care of. ———__ OIL ROYALTIES ARE PILING U WASHINGTON, June 29.0», Sam's money bags have been bu to the extent of more than five ma, lion dollars as the result of royaitfe’ received up to June 1 from oll and operations on leased government lanh in certain western states, the bur of mines reported today. Total royalties reported by he bureau to #f] general land offices up to the first June amounted to $5,201,308.69, the month of May royalties amoun: to $551,021.88 were reported. Of amount $252,022 was credited to c} fornia; $273,654 to Wyoming, and 340 to Montana. ard of ¢ is Ol yesterda, Presiden; ident; and A BUY PIGEON’S CELEBRATED ference today regarding the future of the black oil field and in the state in general. ‘The Derby is planning a rapid devel- opment of the field which will proba- bly be brought to a high point of pro- duction during the present summer. ICE TEA Pigeon Tea & Coffee Co. Phone 623. CANDIDATE 3006000-966600600¢4[Political Advertisement] Announcement I take this means to announce myself as a candi date for the Republican nomination for Sheriff of Na trona County. Subject to the will of the voters at the primary election to be held August 22. E. W. “BUCK” ELDER. FOR SHERIFF stand still. It is essential both to public welfare and to success of the utility itself, that it meet promptly the constantly growing demand for the community it serves. To do so re- quires a constant supply of new capital, which cannot be provided out of surplus earnings, but must be ob- et at the price it is worth. any attempt at a sound of a public utility involves of regulation to say what What rate of return will lic utilities is a question of If it POWER CO > Assures you that. the cem the casing where«needed, Or Phone Snook’s THE PERKINS PROCESS FOR CEMENTING OIL WELLS with any other fluid or substance already in the well. WYOMING OIL WELL CEMENTING CO. Exclusive Licensees for Wyoming. 234 Midwest Bldg., Casper—Phone 1173 ent will be placed behind and cannot become mixed ACCOUNTANTS GUARANTEE REGISTRY CORP. * Auditors and Accountants—Stock Registrar and Transfer 208-11 Oil Exchange Bldg. Phone 666 WYOMING AUDIT COMPANY 414-15 Midwest Ref. Bidg. Phone Audits, Financial Analyses, Income Tax Service and General Accounting. AUDITORS DUBOIS & GOODRICH, Architects Rooms 11-12 Townsend Block Wyo. Phone 440 GARBUTT, WEIDNER & SWEENEY i RAYBURN 8S. WEBB, Architect Suite 12, Daly Bidg. Phone 1351 AWNINGS 747 Bouth Lincola st.” Phone 327M BAGGAGE and TRANSFER SEE BEN TRANSFER C0. Baggage, Heavy Hauling and Piano ‘Moving. Phone 74d RAPID Sees Mi ir It's Movable tove : Phone We Move It 1427 DR. B. G. HAHN DR. EDNA HAHN Suite 2, Townsend Block Phones. Office 423, Res. 1235 M. E. HARNED, Chi 162 North Phone 1457 DR. C. L. ARNOLDUS ic and vs! Phone 1754 DR. I. E. BERQ' Zattermeister Bldg. 42 1757 CHIROPODISTS Camp, Salt Creek | Floor Surfacing nis Business and Professional Directo JEFFREY Osteopathi Bldg. Phone 706/ Room 5-7 Wood Bldg. 0 J. BECK Phone 807M —— bss CONTRACTORS J. A. HANSON, Plas pu DOCTORS 7 MARSHALL ITH, Office Phone So Reet ‘ Private Hospital—612 South DAME DR. A. P. KIMBALL fi 112 East Second Street. : Office Phone 120M Res. Phone im J. C. KAMP, M. D. “ Office—Midwest Building Telephones 1650 and 1631 Mba. HOUSE MOVERS 1107 South Melrose Phot —2 E LAWYERS a NICHOLS & STIRRETT ff 7c wyers 309-10-11 Oil Exchange Bldg... JAMES P. KEM mad __ 408 Consolidated Royalty Bi i IRVING GOFF M’CAN? Al at Law pe 406-407 Oil Exchange Bu zs HAGENS & MURANE r Lawyers res 206-207 Oil Exchange Build °” WILLIAM o. f ttorney-at-La 3 Suites 14-15-15, Townsend OSTEOPATHS #~ DR, CAROLINE ©. DAVEE’. Suite 6, Tribune Apartments. #1 | DR. L. 1. WADE | lente 19; 7" phon Fev! DR. ©. A. SANFORD Os! —Py Midwest Bldg. Pho (> x RADIATOR REPAIR = NATRONA RADIATOR Siete); C R pne 522 E. Yellowstone — ROOF CONTRACTI® aes WYOMING ROOFING G and Recoating pecay 1 527 Hast Twefth * Phor ee h = TAILORS Cha 116 B. Moet ACRERMAN, Boone Casper’s Leading Tailor anf ids ice te We Specialize on All Kinds of Work. We Call for and 0g — VULCANIZING | con reli Expert Vuleanizing—Low @— R. W. HOUGHTON Ford 522 E. Yellowstone Phorm 225 cz 0., 23 —Try a classified ad in the