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About The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1920)
THE ALLIANCE HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1920 i ii Q Q Z 2 to o IS WILL DRILL FOR OIL IN SHERIDAN COUNTY , It Is Fuid by those who ouir.it (o i Know that Sheridan county Is In the ! oil b lt that conies down froln Wyo- ! i't.R mul stops are being taken to i tf st t tils on n largo scale. July th i i meet ins was called at the Pf later ;iiot.l for the purpose of organizing j tl: Ills Chief nevelopment Co. This t.u.? followed dv anotner cnvnusiasuc meet ins July 12 th, when the organl z:.liem was completed and t ie follow ing oftlcera elected: President, Win. G. Vahle; vice president, G. A. Obtranitr, treasurer, Herman Miller, secretary, II. S. Gillespie. The com pany have opened an oflice In Tht . 1 . m l . . 1 1 I I uraeoer diock ana siuck is ueuig iiu- erally subscribed for. Fifteen hundred acres of land north of Ilushville has been leased where the indications are good and based on geological surveys. Desldes hore 800 acres more are being con-n-.tel for but the deal for these? is not closed. The new company are iK-eiing with every eneourasonient by many of our home people, as well as others who formerly lived .iere. We have the names of some, two of which desire to take $3,000 between them. The amount of shares Issued calls for $ 25.000 when the machinery will be uut on the ground as soon as it can be shipped. There Is no secrecy about the Big Chief Uushvilie Standard. t I" you are alive. Nothing I weljrht more than eating a great de little exftclse and frerh air. The-- ate plenty of things to do around and find them. I cant t 1 1 Wife (In a fierce whl.ipoM: Al !Hi, for I do not know the place yen 'wnvt tnfclnc tlie little of out of MT puts unhook t.t '.w bl tears 01 tip. poor deal. ririf f.e. d- ar! re lhibly: Flesh froi.i (li t glycerin Hustle , bottle. I LAKKSIDK Mrs. George Lindly and children returned from Forest Grcve, Ore., Thursday after a few weeks visit with relatives at that place. Opr Iluiie lr, eijoyinc a visit witli her little sister this week. Mrs. Grubb and ciildren of Whit man, were Lakeside visitors Thurs day. Jo!a Specr is visiting at the Ray West over ranch at the present time. Ellsworth Ash Mas in town Frl--iay. Wilma and Beatrice Westover were in town Thursday and as they were returning home the team ran away but fortunately no one was in jured. Mrs. Myrtle Morris returned July 27th from a visit with relatives In Denver. Mrs. O. E. Black entertained the Ladies Kensington club at her home Thursday afternoon. Jesse Brice was shopping in Lako-r-ide Friday afternoon. Will Ityland went to Omaha last week. Roy Stoop drove in from tie Star ranch Thursday evening. Mrs. Anna Hunsaker and daugh ter Doris were west bound passen jyrs Friday. Mrs. Lenora Kennard of Fori Dodge, la., is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Hudson at tht first Lakeside hotel. Frank Bollenger was delivering potatoes in town Saturday. Frank Kickeu was in Friday from his ranch. He brought in some trn,n vegetables. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Llndley and children drove to Antloch Friday aft ernoon. Dr. Hand was down from Alliance on professional business Sunday. Clyde Fosdick and family spent the week-end at the lome of Mrs Fosdiek's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Whaley. Dr. Moore of Antioch, was In Lake side Sunday. Nelda Pollard returned Saturday from a two weeks visit with h-.r sis ter at llalsey. Lon TriBter and son, Ralph, drove in Sunday morning. Neil Ballinger and Jesse McCarty were Lakeside visitors Sunday. G rover Cameron was in from his ranch Friday. MIhs Brennen of Alliance, who ln-- been visiting her friend, Mary Her man, returned home Sunday on No. 2 b. Geo. Baney and family have noved to Newman Grove, Neb. Lee Taylor was in town. Monday ;oi l:ir:t;. Sieve S:')ilen!z left Md'-m-y ow No. 4i) for Chier.go for a fi.w 'lays '.it. Roy Kilter and family moved to h - MeKiiuy ph'.ce i"- n! ly. We were blessed with a nice rain Sun.I.'.y evening. A. V.. Tyler and son. Hi, were !:; from the ranch Monday. Article 28 Nome Summer NiiuRWitloiis I i tuese Let tumnier days It Is .ion necis.t.'ry (ban evei to guard jno's complexion against the sun, salt water and dust. Many young girls, who are fortun ate enough to be able to spend the sm -.tiiier at the beaches, give no care to the face, neck and anus during the period t.iat these parts are to ii-.'icilcR.ly exposed to the elements. They allow a coat of tan to' gather over a terrific sunburn, their arms fre-cklo and many become fat and overweight In the days of Idleness epeut in lounging around the Rands and hotel piazzas. This is not the way to spend a vacation so that it will do you good, as vacations are ntended to do. A rest Is all right. We all need vacations, but we want to see that they benefit us and not return much .ie worse for wear. When you start for tae seaside, tee that you are properly equipped villi the necessary toilet articles for some line of defense against Old Sol. A cream to put on as a foundation for powder and rouge, is the first thing to be considered. Any toilet irtlrie firm makes such a cream. If you ask in a reliable drug store for a foundation cream, you will doubt less be successful In getting the right article. c Then there Is a night, cream. This Is the most essential of all. Do not rrtjre without first having removed the traceB of tae day's toil. While you ideep the little pnrtiel s of dtit and dirt can play havoc with your tkln, as you will soon find out If you do not apply a little preventative-. ! A night cream is an easy thing to get and at the same time buy a lotion to put on the arms and neck and face after swimming. The face burns the quickest If the sun is al lowed to dry it while wet with salt water. A lotion made of honey, al monds and rose water is the best and may be purchased with ' the ot r articles. A very Important and unusually overlooked factor in the summer va cation kit Is a prevention for pres- piratlon. j It makes no difference how pret-, tily you are dressed, or how smart your appearance, a woman Is never beautiful with prespiratlon odors about her. There are many remedies for excessive prespiratlon. Some are liquids, others salves, etc., but I : know of something that Is by far I more effective and less expensive; plain Bicarbonate of Soda. Apply the Boda as you. would powder, night and morning and you will never be troubled with prespir atlon. It is used before and after bathing as well. If you spend your vacation at a hotel, don't hang around like a list less flower, gossiping and crocheting If you do you will be fat as sure ns may ''elect, but if ycu will take my adiice, you will go Into the heart of the voodri sid camp, fi:-i, swim and have a regular vacallon. Deliver me from hotels. As for clothes, dress loosely. Don't wear your clothes as tight as you do I in !ntor. Allow plenty of room to breathe. Tie dresses of the mode are designed to give plenty of room for action. Breathing; eating and dancing. You can be fashionable and comfortable. Don't ever eat and when you do eat salads, cold meats and drinks are the best for hot weather. You pre not o much In danger of heat and nervous prostration when you refrain I'rom overheating the body. Avoid steaks, chops, hot soups and heavy dining. Last but not least keep calm. Don't rush and tear around as If the next minute on earth was to be your last. We Americans aurry too much. Summer or winter they never, slack en their speed and very soon the machinery wears out. You cannot be beautiful and chase a street car or train. Take It easy and you will get out of the summer the thing for which It Is Intended, rest and relaxation. life, brute that Express. you .are' -Buffalo Two employing printers were re cently talking shoo at our table, One of them remarked: "I notice print ers are beginning to cut price.' Paid the other with t lat arcasm that pi Inters know so wct.l how to Uiie on occasion: "I didn't knew they had stopped." America i Printer, Oil CALL VOl TO MEM ' Farmer (to one of his laborers, recently demohii.ed) : Well Pat, which do you pre'er. being a farmer or a soldier? i Pat: In one way, sir, I'd rather be a soldier. I Farmer: And how is that Pat: Well, you see, you'd be a long lime workln for a farmer before tied tell you to stand at ease. Boston Transcript. AT THE MOWK Wife (dabbing her eyes): 50 50 The soldier had been severely wounded, and during tin1 convales cent stage was ordon d sherry and egg. One day the doe -.or attending h'm asked how he liked the diet. "Well", said the blue boy, "if the s.ierry was as old as the egg and the egg as fresh as the sherry, I believe I would enjoy it as much as any thing else I could think fo." Pitts burg Sun. It 1 WY OMINGOIL i '.' ' LEAD THE MYSTFHY It was bedtime, and the children wore calling eagerly for the usuial evening Kiory. Two books lay on the table, one stories from the Bible, the other Barnum's tabs of tie wild ani liit.ls captured for hia Great Show. 'Which shall it bo, little ones liible stories or Baruum's stories?" Quickly came the reply, ' Oh! Bible siorl.-s; they Me eo exciting. ou mvt-r know what God will do next." Ili.LPIXii Ol'T NATini: 111 th-.' search for increased produc tion it li as been discovered tliot phonographic music at milking tinn in winter makes cows slve tib vi-ii pt'r cent more milk, and that eWtric livht and steam 'aeat make hens lay b. Iter. So man's lmprovt iu.-iuh con tinue to beat nature. Nett to com are sanitariums for exhausted cows, and rest-cure factories lor tieating hens that have overdon- '''" Our neighboring state will solve the problem of the shortage of gasoline and oils by increased production from its new fields you should take advantage of the profits to be made m The eyes of the oil world are turning towards Wyoming. Cali fornia is experiencing an actual gasoline shortage at the present time; many of the mid-continent fields are showing rapid decreases in pro duction; the state of Wyoming is rapidly increasing its productinand during coming months the drilling in new fields will continue rapidly 2lillllltHIIIllllllilllilllllllIMllilltllllHMIIMIMIMlIIMIIIlltlllHllilIHilllllililtllilt'',3 '''''MlltlllllillllltllMIIMIIIIlllll(llIIMIIIIMillMMMIlIHltllIIIIIMfliMIMIIIIlllMl Oil proeluction in Wyoming is stcailily increasing. Tlieiv were market oil from Wyoming oil fields in the year 1916 a total of 6,234,137 barrels; in 1917, 8.978.6S0 barrels; in 1918,. 12,810,230 barrels; in 1919, 13,877,640 barrels, according to reliable reports furnished to us. No other business in the world offers such unlimited oppor tunities for the legitimate accumulation of wealth as the American oil industry. It is estimated on good authority that Wyoming's available oil, stored in the earth, is not less than 100,000, 000 barrels. And only about 9.5 per cent has been ex tracted, ns compared with 33.1 per cent in California, 61.4 per cent in Illinois, C!).l per cent in the Appalachian fields, and 36.2 per cent in the mid-continent fields of Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas. No other business i; the world has so continuously and so certainly returned enormous profits to investors, and no other business in the world has ever assembled for and widely distributed among its supporters so many great fortunes. Experts state that yields of 40 barrels per day to the I well is the average production of the Wyoming oil fields, I as compared to an average of only 4 barrels per day to the well for the entire United Slates. Wyoming had I 1.327 producing wells in 1918 and 1,630 producing wells in it! 19. The year win go Jar aneai ot tins. -o e ther business 'in the world exists, that having accom I pi;:;h-d s'.teh marvelous results, as the oil business, still 1 continues to offer the same wonderful opportunities for the eliscerning investor. Constant increases in the prices of crude oil 1 rr-'.:- t! unpvoedented activity in the Wyoming oil fields. " .,-i.tl . of wells are lxi'ig drilled in proven fields iv'' i hundreds of urosnpct wells are beinir drilled in new and u n proven fields. The present market price of crude oil in Wyoming is from 2.7' to $5.25 per barrel. Oil is the most profitable, legitimate and essential business in the world today.. 1 Authorities state that gasoline extractioa from Wyoming crude oil is the highest of any field in the United States, being from 32 to 53 per cent, as comparcel to 21 per cent in the mid-continent, 28 per cent in the Appalachian and 12 per cent in the California fields. The Wyoming wells not only give very large initial produc tion, but owing to the thickness of the sands and the favorable geological formations they maintain a high rate of production to a degree not surpassed by any other field. The Wyoming-Northeastern Oil Company is actively i ngajjeel bi the i-astei n Wyoming oil fields It has drilled' t a depth of over 1 ,4,t) feet in the .Mule Creek oil fi-ld r-"d a few weeks of active el rilling should bring in a suc- ui-ii 'M. :'s heiMine-s, proviiig i large amount of rctvayn reljncent to ami Mirrounding the. well. The operations of the company at the pisent th:!' are !p"it- 1 ;e ;s sitiuiteel in the Mule Crk ami Hidden !-ne fulls. The mony received from the sale of e ':n;.;i:;v i; l- h uv-d for the deve lrpim-nt eif thee he-ldiitps. '.ft'' i' thol-outdi and ri'id investigation l.v the -: ! i r : i of Securities, Department of Trnele ami Com. i m vee-, Slate of Nebraska, this company w;is on June- 2t, '';?. ir win tod permit No. 915, bv the Bureau, authorizing il.e sale of sfXl.OOO worth of the' stoek of the company, the 's therefrom to be used as directed in the orde r chiefly for development purposes. This is a speculative j'y and returns on the money investeil in the stock e ! i ii alien depend upon the discovery of oil in - i'-g e;u3'itities by drilling upon the company's prop- ! 'pr.eiy we lcomes a thorough investigation : ..- prospective investors. We are making frequent trips ' h! with inteiTsted parties. If you wish to go at v tine- or desire further particulars regarding our . :,, ms or 'olding, communicate with us by wire, I It- r or in person. i ovii'av tirin lai'ilrn pne-H EJiM, ,M,,,iMiMIMM"IMMMmMMUIMHlMll.nilIMMM"IIMIMII"IHMHIMM Wyoming-Northeastern Oil Company Authorized Capital Stock-S 1,000,000 Alliance, Nebraska Authorized by and issued by virtue of Permit No. 915, g anted by the Nebraska Bureau of Securities under date of. .June 21, 1920. The Bureau of Securities does not recommcu ! or lisi nra-je inve stment in any securities licensed by it. well with overalls and bungalow ' aprons. J