Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 8, 1925, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

’ i PAGE TWELVE NVTAATE DEPOSITS TO YIELD U AUOPERITY WITH DEVELOPMENT Fuel Gas Supply Also Destined to Proye Im-' portant Factor in Growth of Town Wit!: Many Other Resources. | 1887 as a coal mining town at the ter- | ago & Northwestern railroad, Glenrock so much to its coal as to its unexplored ni- to grant it speedy growth, and that the | much to do with the future progress of ally assured. | Former President. projects Home dD. Ciiptis. Company Director | 1 s a brother 0} founder o and i Now a Director agriculture; r of entertain- governor of Leonard Smith, provement; 90d roads, of ad Betzer, : id Thompsen, ber, M. H. R. Cronk McDonald, H. Ryerson, N D. J. Smyth, utphin, Tulloss abor, J. L. Wall Saxton, State t instit ming and Who succeeded | | sident of the fs etill ar the board of Setter, has two refineries whict Oil Pumping Plant at Salt Creek That Drives Crude Through New York Company’s Pipe Line to wetawes is tank farm s of Glenrock eld which field f » plants of its con rist cams bank is or fons of it Caspei fews of ihe plant talt Cree New Yort Ntral Pipeline company, y ac ries get their | and has | t| f 2 h Che Casper Sunday Cribune Ar Bullaings ins the tom which js just being started, Chro-|ming's non-metallic mineral re “Another fing structure ts the Lin.}™um was shipped for atime but| sources that has yet come to:light. HEARTIEST CO building which cost $140,000 to|!t 1s not min-d at the present time.| “The nonmetallic mineral re- aiveate posits between Glenrock and Doug-| importan:, 1f not more wo, than the to the 4 cHatieboictey Borel “Hes always | #8 Which, ft 48 belleved, will be| metallte minerals. ‘This ts the fleld have heen antble. ''Theibest lnewd | a the near future, that Wyoming must develop. Other and vn also has trany ae ocnettswal ih possessed of both a] \w grade The latter is a two-story brick build- ing with a spacious gymnasium and an athletic field. a cost of. $150 A the city limits and near the highway adds to the advantages of the town. Deer creek runs through: it and it is naturally wooded, Pi beca Little and ucture built at a cost of $85.000. sition as belng the most eper ing indication of interest in Wyo- bullding $e a two-story brick The hills to the south are shot with minerals, the development of ot the splendid business It iy at Yellowstone and Firth | There aro also lead and copper do-| sources of this etat> mre fully as t © longest established | The development of the huge M-at, Valldwetenendeiete sricti, | altri tavOeposlte, aoe whish i Gieasies three stories in height. 2 Mee tnear oti eas o! alt a ony ars, ohn . sides its business structures {8 baweoti, :prosidant<of tesctentock © mmunity club and attorney for . D, Turner of Kanacs City and his assoctutes, recently filed an ap- plication for a lense on five section= of land fourteen miles south of It was erected at |G}. rock on Little Deer creek. The application-{s the frst on record for sodium nitrate deposits in this state and !s looked upon’ as ‘significant. The project will include the erec- tion of a $50,000 dam, 65 feet high and 210 feet in length to form a reservoir for power purposes on Little Deer creek, and the construc- tion of a $350,000 flo’ ‘nn process milling aystem. «It also includes rhe building of elx miles of road to con: Brothers mine are a fourth of|nect with the county highway lead- ile from the town, There is an} ing into Glenrock. tible st ply of coal] A. B. Bartlett, state geologist, ra cently spoke favorably of the propo states havé resources of thig char- acter, but if Wyoming can arouse interest In this that will bring about development here first, {t will plac Wyoming, definitely in the lead, Mr. Bartlett said. Mineral deposit on the land {6 two miles long “and a half mile wide, The bed ts covered with silt from two to twenty feet in depth. Little Deer creek runs +*rough the jJand. Plans and specificatione for the dam have been approved by Frank C. Emerson, state. eneineer. Requirements for fuel are easily met. The natural gas now avail- able to Glenrock through the New York Oil company’s line has solved that problem simply, not to men- tion the coal beds which are at hand. One of the rock samples sub- mitted to a Michigan laboratory con- tained 81.21 per cent of potassium nitrate, This t* said to be an extra Jarre -nereentars. school and a high school, and Operation of thirty-acre park just THE NEW GAS LID east of ishing is convenient to Glenrock use of the nearness of both Bir Deer creeks and of jer creek, Vulcan coal mine and the 119 East Fifth St. The completion of New York Oil Company’s gas pipeline from the Sand Draw field assures our patrons of an ample supply of gas for all fuel pur- poses for many years, and a continuation of the. same quality of service we have given in the past. MINAL E. YOUNG, Vice-President CASPER EVANSVILLE GLENROCK TEAPOT. BOONE DOME POISON SPIDER SAND. DRAW. NGRATULATIONS New York Oil Company Upon the Successful Completion CASPER BATTERY CO. Vesta Batteries—Pur-o-Lator—North-East Equipment NEW YORK OIL COMPANY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1925. 8, 1925 GLENROCK FACES NEW ERA OF PROGRESS FOR FUTURE” Phone 907 SE COTE SE IE NEI Te ae m, yt ® , | | | | \. i $ - i i SS

Other pages from this issue: