Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 30, 1922, Page 10

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PAGE TEN SHORTS COVER, PRICES CLIMB Stocks Score Addittonal Im-} provement on Growth of Public Demand. NEW YORK, Aug. 9—Pniaree- ment of public demand, coupled with ‘urgent short covering caused another|turned Gownward during the early) 4 ronson today’s |dealings. Some persistent selling by! 4+) proe-| commission houses developed shortly! Baldwir material rise ip stock market. prices in More hopeful strike and reports of mark- ed improvement ¢n the railroad situa- tion also were responsible for more cheerful sentiment. Broximated 1,000,009 shares. Marking up of the call money rate| tember $1.01 to $101% and Decembe: to 4% per cent and a rapid Grop im|$1.02% to $1.02%, was followed for @/Chino Copper Republic yielding |further sag all around and then by/Colorado Fuel and Iron indepen 3% ¢ the fou lent steels, ts, umeettied the list around an early settlement of the the = Gales ap-|check on the decline ‘The opening | Chandler Motors WHEAT PRICES Houses’ With Eastern Connec- tions on Buying Side in Late Trading. CHICAGO, Aug. 20.—Wheat lacked support at fhe start today ané values after the opening but the trade was not lrge, the market being easily tn- fluenced. Some short covering which | came ovt on the breaks, acted as a |which was ‘40 te ie lower, with Sep- |something of « rally. Houses with eastern connections | h hour, However, prices moved up again in response to a brisk| Who took to the buying side later demand for coalers, equipments and|were responsible for the rally in some of the olla, several of which were at mew high prices in the move- ment, The closing was stronz. NEW YORK, Aug wheat, but after the purchasing ceased sis market eased off quickly. lose was weak, values showing a net/ of %c to 1%, with September $1.01%, and December $1.01% to $1.0 te revall it the « : pea dere the, A houre with Omaha connections mere favorable over Jevelop-|*? habe enter pw gma 2 plage ci gtastion,|at the start and the market broke Nearly twenty tssues broke through Sharply. After starting % to thc off, to mew high records ta the first fit, With September 69 to 69% the corn teen minutes of trading, including|™*rket underwent a further general Norfolk and Western, Crucible Steel preferred, Continental Can, Associ: aed Dry Goods, Vanadium, Tobacco Products, burgh Coal, Union Tank, American Telephone, Detroit Edison, Allied Chemical and Ameriean Tobacco. Rail- road shares moved to higher ground in responses to reports of increased car loading, gains of substantial frac- tions being recorded by Northern Pa. cific, Reading, New York Central and Atlantic Coast Line. Oils were in good demand under the leadship of Mexican Petroleum, which was up 2% Western Maryland, Pitts | deciine. Local traders became good Buyers of corn latér and the market recov- ered part of its early loss. Covering \by shorts was largely responsible for the advance and when the buying; stopped, the market followed wheat. Tho close was unsettled, with values ranging from %e lower to a Itke ad- vance With Sept. 59% to 59%c Oats started unchanged to 4c lower with September 31% to 32c and held close to the ‘ritial range. Provisions were unsettled. Open. High. Lew. Close. SLUMP AGAIN: Th) General Motors | ani American American American American American American | American American | American American American American Anacoucea inary . Hide a Leather pea. international Corp . Lecomotive .. Smelting & Rete Guir Loccmotive Baltimcre and Ohio | Bethichern Stsel anadian Pacifie |Central Leather Chesapeake and Ohio . | Chicago, Mit and Bt. Paul | Chicago, R. I. and Pac. | week past: Live Stock Department of Agriculture.}—Cattle receipts 11,000; beef steers active; strong to 180 higher; good and grades showing most advance; top [matured steers 11; highest of year; bulk beef steers $.86@10.50; she stock Mow; about steady; bulls, stockers and Corn Products 119 feeders largely steady; veal calves Cra Sagi cones eee ioe = 3a |strong; bulk fat she stock largely Erle 17% er} i bulk heavy bologna bulls Famous General 1 eneral Electric Goodrich |Great Northern pfé. Ulinots Central Inspiration Copper . International Harvester Int. Mer Martne pfa. . International Paper [Invincible Of Kel Springfield Tire Kennecott Copper Louisville and Nas! Mexican Petroleum Miam! Copper ., Middle States Of | Midvale Bteel . Missouri Pacific & £4 celels gms tee -- 33% + 119% orthern Pacific |Oklahoma Prod and Ref. | Pacific Of Pure Ol ay Consol around 425; bulk destrable vealers Hog recelpts 18,000; market fairly j active on lighter weights, arou-4 | steady; others sicw: bulk 170 to zi0- pound hogs $9.50@9.65; few $9. 220 to 24¢-nound butchers mostly $3.10@ 9.40; pacing sows, genernity 6.2647; bulk pigs around $8; big packers hold- ing back; heavy $7.70@9.25; medium wae #1480 hcgs 6; light $9.40@9.75; light packing sows, j packing sows, rough, $606.05; killing pigs 87.25@ its 11,00; shout steady; early top nm lambs $12.75 to city butchers; bulk $12.25@12.59 to pack- three strings western lambs 5. 0. Indiana. (Cities ahee Com. . fat ewes mostly $4@@7; no wethers or yearlings here; feeding lambe firm; desirable 61-pound feed- jers bid $12.85; 58-pound feeders late Pinca % Fenslan: |New York “on Omaha OMAHA, Neb. ‘States Department Aus. f Agriculture).— 30.—(United points. Gains of a point or more also | yw an pce oe oie : | Fourth he ns oro oval Dutch, N. Y. a BS recetpts 12,500;"uneven 25 to 50c took place in North American, Bald-) con; _ 2.01 1.01% 1.00% 1.01 are Roebuck 4 Wistory sXe 4 lower; bull packing grades $6.90@7.20; eee res enone, eter al Axphaity S20 = 1.02% 1.01% 1.01% 1.01% | Sinclair Con On 2 33% bulk 200 to 800 pound butchers $7.15@ durpeserals ui ts ene “vente e: bandred > LGIae pee oh OE ZEN Roctharn nates toon partis. Pak on reports that France had rejected , - 59 59% 58% + 183%} Crude Market anaes pecaipe oy bib. conc teont Britain's moratorium plan, = [sss 154% 153% rn ama iat pound corn feds; choice heavy beeves Dealing broadened extenstvely as ait Doar + 10% Gg y _ BTM 157% 56% 48% 65 |10:30; she stock fairly active mostly the morning progressed and prices! Oars Texas and Pacific 34s | ele Creek) 5-115) t0 1g Righers bille and vealas gene der the leadership . Big Muddy a : continued to rise un: Sept. . - - 31% .82% .31% % |'Tobacco Products 85%! erally steady; packers and feeders of the public utilities for which there| an > > _ [83% 1384 33%! Transcontinental, Of z prey Breas dig was a strong and widespread demand./yiay _ _ _ 87% 36% = .87%| Union Pacific . ° Sheep, receipts 17,000; Iambs steady Active resumption of pubile buying| LARD— United Retail Stores x to $15 higher; bulk $12.60@12.75; best rejected pool operations and the! sept. _ __ 30.22 10.27 .10.20 10.20 |U. 8. Ind. Alcohol on not sold; fed slipped lambs $11.75; Sages cc iatact entacgets in wpecial] Oot. — 110.83 10.87) 30.80), 0.98) fumicen, eeetee puneee = . sheep dull 25c lower; early sales ewes stocks. Gains ‘o points | RTRS— Utah Co . $6.00 down; feeders at y. DAs - pper see . ' ; ‘a steady. an, pena) zas, > = al Tris "| Oct. oe —— —— -——_—s- 8.87 -|Witys Overland ... - 6% 70 Denver Prices. Loose-Wiles, United States Realty, AUAESE, American Zinc, Lead and 8m 1438 Hamilton “ DENVER, Colo., Aug. 30.—Cattle American Radiator, Ann Arbor, £ndl- Bute and Superior Cat Creek —-—_. 1-20 ‘receipts 1,500; market steady; beef cvtt-Johnson and Postum Cereal. ‘Vhe Cala Petroleum . &3 cere $7.50: . inquiry for rails also broadened, the POTATOES |Montana Power 15 Classified ads in the Tribune sre ar Pode toad Ky cite ehwes As 20 carly leaders extending their gains to|} Shattuck Arizona 844 B| winners and the keys we} stocke ves $6@9; bulls $2.50@3.25; 1 and 1% points. Chicago and Alton)” Great Northern Ore 4156 | gtve with every 50c paid at office OTs. preferred continued to br under heave | CHICAGO, Aug. 30.-—Potatoes weak|Chicago and Northwestern. 2 win yous big 3 8 Hog receipte | 500; “markst > open, prestiv-s, declining 2 points, Caj1|.0" whites; steady on early Ohfos; re-/Maxwell Motors B 19% ateady; close 25c lower; top $2.25; bulk money opened and renewed at 8% per cent. Buyers had apparently convinced themselves that.a turn for the better had really begun in general condi- tions and their insistent demand car ‘ried the investment shares to still higher levels jn the afternoon. Se eral stocks leaped upward in a spec- tacular fashion, with the list gener ally manifesting a stronz tone, al- though there was.rome profit taking in some of the speculative shares. Nationa] Cloak and Suit preferred ad-| vanced stx points, American Brake! Shoe and Foundry five, Detroit 4%, Otis Elevator and Lorillard four points and Pacific Gas Hlectric, Union ‘Tank Car, Mexican Petroleum, Kresge| and Computing Tabulating recording 2 to 8% points METALS rew YORK, Aug. acre firm; electrolytic, spot and futures 14.| Tin firm; 1 spot and futures 32.62. Iron steady and unchanged. Lead steady; spot 5.90@6. Zino eteady; East St. Louis spot-and/ nearby delivery 6.25. Antimony spot 5.25@5.50, MONEY NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—Call money Mirmer; high 4%; low 3%; ruling rate 3%; closing “bid 4%; offered at 4%; last loan 4%4 call loans against ac- ceptances 2%; time loans firm; mixed collateral: 60 to 90 days 4@4%; four to six months 4%@4%; prime com- mercial paper 4@4 SUGAR NEW YORK, Avg. 30.—Sugar fu- tures closed firm; approximate sales 48,400 tons. In refined sugar two refiners re. duced prices points while others advanced quotations from 10 to 35, making the range on fine granulated $6.60 to $7. | Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—Foreign ex- change frregular. Great Britain de- mand 4.46%; cables 4.46%; 60 day bills on banks 4.44. France demand 7.72%; cables 7.73. Italy demand 4 ios cables 4.41. Belgium demand 7.25; cables 7.35%. Germany demand .07 3-16; cables OTK Holland demand 38.91 Norway demand 16.5! Sweden demand 26.4 Denmark demand 2 Switzerland den Spain demand Greece demand 3.12. Poland demand .01 Czecho-Slovakia demand 3.34%. Argentina demhnd 36.12. Brazil demand 13.37. Montreal 100. ables 38.95. — the sign man. Phone 1980. 8-23:6¢ Wood, celpts 181 cars; total United States shipments 574;-New Jersey sacked cob- ‘blers $1.60@1.65 cwt.; sacked giants $1.20@ 1.30 cwt.; Nebraska sacked early Ohios $1.00@1.15; Minnesota sacked Barly Ohios $1.00@@1.20 cwt.; Wis- consin sacked cobblers $1.30@1.45 cyt; Idaho sacked rurals $1.25@1.35 owt Butter and Eggs Chicago, Aug. 380—Butter \changed; eggs higher; receipts 8,970 cases; firsts 25@25%; ordinary firsts ee ; miiscellancous 23% @24%4d; storage packed firsts 26@26%c. MMDCONTINENT CLOSING DOWN | Producers in Accor Accord With Re- cent Resolutions to Curtail Output. Tulsa reprots state that {t tis ap- jParent that the movement to shut |down operations in the Mid-Contin- jent field until a better price ts obtain- jable for crude ts beng seriously put | into effect and that coming weeks will see as complete a shutdown of | acmsspcopavationssas't sy neaersieae attain. Thus {t ts shown that producers are thoroughly ir accord with the | resolutions recently passed at a Tulsa | meeting of independents, insofar as a. |curtailment of drilling is concerned. | As for buying tankage, in which |to stare their ofl, most producers bagres that it {s a good idea and one jwhich they would lke to. put into effect, but the fact is. that buying Jand building of tanks Is falling far short of what men back of the re- cent meeting hoped for. SALT BEDS PIERGED IN TAH WILGCAT, REPORT The Salt iver Wyoming-Tdaho De- velopment ‘Trust, which is drilling a |test for ofl just over the Idaho line jin the Star Valley, reports that beds containing salt of the purest quality have been cut by the drill. Salt shipments were made from this area as far back as 1868 and opera- tions were suspended only when the Salt Lake salt beds furnished prohib!- tive competition. “Water from wells }in that district gave up salt water ‘from which pure table salt was readily | precipitated and in those days com- | manded a price of 63 cents .per“hun- dred. ae Raa, London Money. LONDON, Aug. 30.—Bar silver 85%4 per*ounce, money 2% per-cent. Discount rates: Short and three | months bills 2 6 per cent. Pay up for rour Tribune and get a ker for every 50c paid, 812-tf Subscribe for pod Tribune and oe a key for every 500 paid. MARKET GOcolF “MAMMOTH TESTS OVER 2,800 FEET Teapot are now getting into full swing and reports of com- thirty days. With twenty rigs drilling and four more to spu taking on the aspect of*a regul. one on section 21, the other on 29 are now Crilling below 2,300 feet and as the second Wall Creek is expected at from 2,600 to 2,800 the bits should be in the sand within the next few weeks. | the tank farm. The grading is prac- tically compleied and the bottom is laid for one of the huge steel contain- ers. Soda Helps Cement to Set. According to a story emanating from Billings a new use has been found for baking soda which should prove of interest to operators. In a test of the Devil's Basin field the Roundup Ol] and Gas company was unable to get eement to set owing to certain chemicals in the water. On the advice of a chemist. baking soda was liberally mixed with the cement which resulted fect of the chemical contained and the experiment was successful according to report. Ohio Rigging Up For New Test. The Ohio O!l company 1s rigging up for a second test of the field near Meeteetse where it now has one gas producer. Manderson District Active. Quite a little activity 1s being shown in the Manderson district since the drilling of the Murkam well to the Kimball sand. Drilling has been re- sumed in that operation with the in-| tention of carrying the hole to the Greybull sand. A star machine hag been moved in on the Quiner permit which adjoins the Markham tract on the southeast and St. Anthony, Idaho interests have taken over a large block of acreage on which a rig 1s to be placed immedi- ately. Gas Flow Cased Off. Vhe test well being dritied by the Fargo Oil company on the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of secticn 3-33-83 tn the Poison Spider district unexpectedly encountered a gas flow in the first san‘. estimated at 23,06,000 cubic feet capacity which was tapped at 1,120 feet. This flow has been cased off and drilling is now going forward at 1,275 feet which is cupposéd to be near the top-of the second sand. Finding gas tn the upper strata at this point proves considerable addi- tonal acreage ond this gas can be utilized if desired although the hole Drilling operations of the Mammoth Oil company in the pletions may be expected from: that source within the next our signs first because our] §7.50@8.95. Hered Last. ook: thet ancaman Sheep receipts 3,400; market steady; 8-29-6t|ewes $6@6.25; feeder lambs $11@12; spring lambs $11@12.50. pci iho Sct AND FIELD NEWs v res Aug. 30.—Foretgn bar Mexican Sees aollare 53%. OL CONTRACT NOT SETTLED President . Refers Disagree- ment to the Director of the Budget. completed, seven of which are d in this week that district is ar oil field. Two of the wells, will be carried to the lower sand to test that horizon with the belief that it will prove ofl beating. Good progress 1s betng made with Production Declines. The American Petroleum Institute estimates that the average gross crude oil production in: the United States for the week ended August 19 was 1,492,450 barrels as compared with 1,504,150 for the preceeding Week, a decrease of 11,700 barrels. Following is the estimate in barrels WASHINGTON, Aug: 30.—A three cornered fight between the United States Shipping Board, navy depart- ment and department of the interior arising over the renewal of a con- tract for the shipping board to be supplied with 250,000 barrels of oil monthly from nayal ofl reserves has been referred by President Harding to Director of the Budget H. M. Lord in offsetting the ef-| for arbitration. It was officially stat- ed that Mr. Lord's decision * the matter will be final. The controversy which is entirety of the daily average crude pro- | duction of the various fields for the two pertods, in which a decrease of 3,750 barrels is noted for Wyoming and Montana. an inter-departmenta! matter, was Aug. 19 Aug. 12]recently referred to President Hard- 400,500 40%,150|ing when Chairman Lasker of the { 86,800 -86,000/ shipping board and Secretary Fall of 49,850 69,400|the interfor department were unable =, 144,100 148,850} to agree on renewal terms of the La. and Ark .. 123,560 125,750| contract. Gulf Coast +=" 108,809 111,900] Chairman Lasker was asking for Eastern . 4° 121,500 121,000) renewal under the old terms while i 83,350 —_-86,100| Secretary Fall, in order to protect | 375,000 _375,000/the navy department, demanded that ————|Mld-Continent prices, less cost of -1,492,450 1,504,150] transportation, be the basis of a new ——— contract. The latter phan, ft was Montana Pipeline Runs. figured would make ths cost to the HELENA, Aug. 30.—The Montana| shipping board approximately 25 Pipelines company transmitted 1,913|cents per barrel more than the old barrels of off from the Cat Creek field to Winnett during July, accord- rs ing to its report recetved by the state Classified ads In the Tribune are |public service commission. winners: the ‘The total transmitted by the Mon- sive om every 50c paid at pres will win you a bic prize. 8-124f tana Pipelines company since Janu- . ary $s 392, 168 barrels, and the total transmitted from the Cat Creek field] “We cater to mall fobs and run by both pipeline compantes-is 1,097,-/ after big ones. Wood, the sign man. 393 barrels. 8-29-6¢ 1! | Lincoln County Permits. of 1,600 fect after having had con- It ts reported from Kemmerer that|siderable trouble with water and a the Cretaceous Oil company has re-|crooked hole. These difficulties ap- celved prospecting permits covering|pear to have been overcome and good the entire Dry Piney structure and is now obtaining. As this that arrangements for the develop-|location {s in about the same position ment of the fleld which have been| structurally at the Ohio, being on the held up during the past two yéars|axis of the dome, a good well is ex- waiting the issuance of the. permits/ pected in the producing sand, which will now proceed. It is doubtful, how-| the Ohio cut at 2,560 feet. ever, owing to the near approach of fall whether a great deal will be ac = = complished before next spring, but it/| Surveying and Locations is certain that a test to the deep-sands|I Geologists Oil Experts wil Se eee ee Oil Field Maps, Blue Prints WYOMING MAP AND BLUE PRINT CO. P. O. Box 325 Room 10, Daly Bldg. The Arsociate Oll company, drilling on section 26-17-104, about four miles northeast of the recent Ohio comple- tion in the Baxter Basin field, near Rock Springs, has reached depth Six new producers in Salt ‘Creek are reported by Midwest Refining company but only three of them have been gauged for production although it is supposed that they will all be|Ansie | average wells. Following is a list of completions during the CHICAGO, Aug. 30.—(Unitea States! pleted at 2,000 feet | No, 7-AS,- Salt Creek Consolidated, northwest quarter of section 3, com- pleted at 2,386 feet. No. 18:4, Wyoming Associated northwest quarter of section 27, com- pleted at 2,150 feet. No. 33-A, Wyoming Associated, southwest quarter of section 30, com- Initial produc: Sign, 1939 British, 6%8, 1937 x Bkiyn. Un. oe: ts, 1947. Canada 345 barrels. 31-A, Wyoming Associated, northwest quarter of section 34, com- pleted at 2,164 feet. No. 25-A, Midwest, ter of section 12, completed at 2,485 feet. Initial production 400 barre} Ne. 81-A, Midwest, northwest quar. ter of section 12, completed at 2,355 feet. Initial production 600 barrel: The Nieber Dome test well ts Grill-/ ing at 800 feet. Midway test No. 2 is standing cemented at 3,320 fret. Tools have been pulled from the Bax- ter Basin test so that 10-Inch casing| may be landed at the bottom of the hole. Crowe well No. 2 in the Notches| field is GFilling at 940 feet. pes sek th ion, orthwest quar- | Chil = ety \Gtev, Un. Ter. | Cuban Tel, Ate ‘ | Ceechositvak, 8s, 1952. | Czechoslovak, 8s, 1951 Dan Con Mu: Del. & Hud., 5 Den. bat 103) NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—Prices of Wyoming ofls at 2 p. m. today were Usted on the New York curb as fol- ae lows: 4 Boston-Wyoming 78; Glenrock 1%; 108 Merritt 1%; Mutual 16%; Omar 1%. Ms — ae a tip" given by Amert-)N- O. Legion men, the department af fastice has picked "up Arthur AL Ss seen Starnes, 27 years of age, who was|\." oO. ‘Tr. & Lt..6s, i947 decorated with “medals” purporting| N° ¥. yadieon 64g to represent the French Madaiile Mil-| Packard, 8s, 1931... itatre and Crotx de Guerre and the! Pac. Tel & rel, Sa, ta - Italian Iron Cross. Starnes, when 1930 spotted by the legion and arrested by government officials, was dressed in the untfarm of a colonel of the Untt- ed States army. Thought arrested in Washington, D. C., Starnes’ home is said to be in Dallas, Texas. x Balaton 98% 96% 110% a0 103 106% 10344 103% 4 120% 105 Use of the Amertean flag as a scare- crow in the corn field of a Hazelton, Pa., farmer brought down the wrath of the American Legion. The legion | V! protested and the scare-crow’s attire was changed. po ee Pay up for your Tribune and for your Triune and a_key_for Soc pald. BAhit la ey Yor ces Boe pall” wasat We have just received a complete line of Alemite. Just what you need for your truck or car. Let us take THE Yeoman wE STRIVE TO PLEAse~ ACCOUN -__ CUNTANIS LAWYERS GUARANTEE REGISTRY CORP. | ———_____________ peered and Acrountauts—Stock NICHOLS & STIRRETT trar Transfer Agents wyers sos tt On ge Bldg, Phone 660 3809-10-11 Oil Exchange Bldg. ‘OMING AUDIT COMPANY 414: 1 Paid Ref. Bldg. gual 289 JAMES P. KEM 408 Consolidated Royalty Bldg. dits, Financial Re} J ———— ses, Income Tax omens IRVING GOFF M’OANN General Accounting. Suite Mertetond ney at Law AUDITORS RECENe ie MURANE /BEIMERTH & VAN DENBERG 206-207 Of Exchange Building Accountants—Income Service ith Floor 0-5 Bldg. Phone 767 w SHAM 0. WILSON ARCHITECTS Suites 181516 Townsend Block DUBOIS & GOODRICH, Architects OSTEOPATHS casper, Wyo. Fhone 448) DB, CAROLINE 6. DAVIS GARBUTT, WEIDNER & SWEENEY | Sulte 6, Tribune Aj Ph. 388 gad DR. ©. A. 415 Oll Exchange Bldg.” Phone 116% a i SBNEORD ee Tad by a i S acs — RADIATOR REPAIRING : NATRONA RADIATOR > SHOP Tent and A\ Repairing, C! 147 "Routh Lincoln at." Phene 827M |523_E. Yellowstone * Phone iesw BAGGAGE and TRANSFER ROOF CONTRACTING es SEE Lal TRANSFER CO. MBEOES roving. Phone’ 743 SEARLES TRANSFER Gene e ee N ROOFING se : wet ‘Twefth 2 Cae Res. Phone 87W Offies Phone 701W STENOGRAPHERS CHIROPRACTORS TaeTeeaRETT J. H. JEFFREY Publis Stoners ee tn DR. ANNA GRAHAM JI Phone 45 eee ee, Suite 318 Midwest Bldg. Phone 706 pre BS; HABN TAS we WYOMING CLEANERS 6 7. Where Service and Quality o> or | We Call and Deliver. Ph 162 North Kimball enone 1437M 1457 DOCTORS SS DR. C. 1. ARNOLD DR. A. P. KIMBAI Sic and ue 112 ant BoM Berend, hysician Office Phone 120M Res. Phone 1715W 310 0-8 Building Phone 1754 Pamir DE. I. BE. BERQUIST ; ¢ Ballet Zattermeister Bidg. Phone 1757 Telephones 1650 and 1 CONTRACTORS DANCING paca So 8 ph B. ©. STOUT, General Contracto NORTH WAS! r HINGTON HALL ‘Tribune Bids, crimes 555—1781W DOCTORS MARSHALL C. KEITH, M. 2, Office Phone 30 Residence Private Hospital—612 South ‘Durbin Mac UNION ORCHESTICN Solicited—Phone 1/873 HOUSE MOVERS WILLIAM NEIDERO! 1107 South Melrose reall nih positions at points in Illinois. consin, 101% | wher the working ‘conditions — y,)Pieatant and desirable, ; 10% Machinists, boilermakers and 300 | blacksmiths, 70c per hour. ink Passenger car carpenters and 5% repairers, 70c per hour. 13% Young men who have fintshed thelr 874i should apply now for positions as oer der, Daily Tribune % per mt 3% cents each Insertion; boacea~ ~ Co CLOSING HOTR—wani (classified properly must be | Casper Daily Tribune office "betes 10:30. Want Ads received — 10:30 to 12:90 p.m. will be Insert, under the head “Too Late to be Frawon Cased a Sa) a All HEL? WANTED—MALE & wory cents, it Ads to by THE ing men of experience: for perma w . Iowa, Missouri, and Nebr er A few helpers for these crafts at 47c per hour. Freight car carpenters and re- pairers, 63c per hour. ‘0 replace men on strike agai: Saoniie of the United States Railroad farm or other work for the season helpers in the car and locomotive d= partments where meritorious work will soon enable them to quality for / positions paying higher wages. For further particulars and tr: portation, if accepted, call on or w MASTER MECHANIC C.B. & Q. R. R. CASPER, WYO. ae WANTED-—A-1 . Address Box 552, Lander, Wyo. 8-28-6t WANTED — Experienced oll cook. Call 635M in ini PO 8-29-21 a WANTED—Young men, handy with carpenter tools, to apply now for permanent employment; rate 47c to 68c per hour, depending upon ability and experience. Call on or write Ma» }ter Mechanic C. B, & Q. R. R. Ca» per, Wyo. . 8-30-18 camp HELP WANTED—FEMALS at 237 W. beg WANTED—Girl for gemeral hous work. 421 Devine. Phone TAN E WANTED—GiIr! to assist in general housework. Apply 801 S. Beech. Phone 734J. 8-29-5:¢ HELP WANTED—MALE AND FEMALE WANTED—GiIrl Fruit Stand. MAKE $20 weekly mailing circulars: 25c. Varga Pe to ten "young m ladies ition. canvassing: attractive, propos Kopi to Mr. Barton, Tribune office. 8-29-48 4 SALESMEN WANTED ~ SALESMAN for established nation: ally advertised line of merit; refer ences required. Box A:$3, Tribune 8-30-2t* POSITION WANTED RAS Seca tO POSITION WANTED—Reliable col- red man wants job; porter or 4a itor in barber shop, hotel or build- ing. Beno Eggleston. Phono 1367. $.29-2 Se WANTED—Place to work for board and room by bey attending hish school. Mrs. R. C. Kiever, Wolto 10) 8.30-8t* SERVICES OFFERED —————— SEE US for furniture repairing sn‘ upholstering, packing, rug clea” ing, vacuum for rent. Cormier and Mei ber. 107 S. Durbin. Ph 1682: 8-29 —————— WANTED—All makes of safety raz blades to sharpen; satisfaction guar fanteed. Ayres Jewelry Co., SD Center. 9 es CALL BROOKS for job work; win- dows and rugs. Phone seep pste at Set een eee, S37" OPEN FOR BUSINES —Casper mat- tress Why away your old toativeas? kaye ft rosie over. Call _us about our 30-day special. 326 W. Yellowstone, Phone 1617. | DRESSMAKING. All kinds of sewing for women ant children; all work guaranteed. 1035 S. Cedar. Phone 1911W. ahd piece ty aad Subscribe far {he Tribune and ‘e3 key for every 50c pall 2-8

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