Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 1, 1923, Page 15

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SUNDAY, APRIL 1, 1923. FOR SALE—HOUSES YOR SALE—By owner, six-room mod- ern house, $4,800; terms, two-room house, $1,300; terms; close in. Phone 318M. FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR SALE OR TRADE— Stock in | the Wyoming Building and Apart- |ment House company. Address P. O, | Box 12, Casper, A SNAP—Splendid built three-ro house. y painted; built-in fec tures; and garage; pric $1,850; will take sood car as first p: ment, balance like rent, Burns, Midwest Bldg. Phone 1870, FOR SALE house; like rent. 1280 W. Eleventh, FOR SALE—REAL ESTATE FOR SALE— Corner lot and inside two-room house and. one-roum on the rear of the lot; price is good terms, Harry N. Free & 103 Becklinger Bldg. Phone 238. Home Phone 12571. Four-room modern m | $100 first payment, balance / | FOR TRADE FOR TRADE—Good business lot in| Teapot, Wyo. for Dodge or Ford car. Phone 2016W2. FOR TRADE —640 acres of land, }_ near Belfouche, 8. D, What have | you? Phone 2195W. |FOR TRADE—Black mare, sired by | Baron Direct; shas been ‘a half in |dne tenth, with tittle training; would exchange for youngster. What havi {you. F. EB. Crater, 725 EB. Second. | TO TRADE—$500 diamond good used car. See Ki Kimball. ing for a 150 8. LOR SALE—The prettiest building lots in Sheridan Fights, $550: gas. water sewer, Martin-Lamar Realty So. Phono 2214. Mountain Realty & Title | Corporation REALTORS Good four-room house and garage; quick sale. ‘al good lots for roaming house also some trackage property. Fine home on oms and fuil basement, S. Wolcott, $12,000. Several good business lots. Now is the time to get these at reasonable prices. Mountain Realty & Title’ Corporation 306 0-9 Bldg. Phone 564W KOR SALE—Level lots in the south part of the city, chcice lots in a oice location; price $850, $100 dows $25 "a month for balance, Harry N. Free & Co. 103 Becklinger Phone 288, Home Phone 1257W. FOR SALE—Close in on A street, n good busin: location lot 45x160 feet; ideal location for garage; priced for quick’ sale at $6,800, only $1,500 cash, balance 8 per cent interest paid semi-annually. A, P. Nesbitt Realty Co., Realtors. Phone 101M. FREE BUILDING MATERIAL, Owner must sell one lot in Ken- wood; one block to the bus line. Phone 1684W. pees Cs a a HERE YOU ARE— LOW PRICED LOTS On City water, gas, telephone and ligat lines. Between ighth and ‘Tenth streets, Only $450, with $15 down and $15 per month. DOBBIN REALTY Co., 229 Midwest Building. FOR_SALE- and All residential lots. BUILD BETTER HOMES. Holtzman and Holtzman will build your home or apartment of any size. We will, sel! you a lot in Kenwoot: and build a home on it for $306 cash and the balance in monthly payments. FOR RENT. Four-room house on Railroad and Poplar, Property listings wanted. See us in the Public Market; Holtzman Holtzman, Phone 2114. business W. First, kinds of FOR SALE—Good leve! lot, just off Thirteenth on Cottonwood, near schaol and bus lino; $700 terms. Math- ers Realty Co., 255 S. Center. Phone 1088V FOR SALE—300x104 trackage, cen- trally located; will sell a'l or pa will consicer trade. Phone 1400, Peds ih sates he a FOR SALE—Lot on McKinley. house; watks in and paid for, jot ‘near Elic Kenwood, $800, $1.- school, $650; lot on $100 cash; good cor- ner lot on E. Yellowstone, $1,000. Mathers Realty Co., 255 S. Center. Office Phone 1088W. Res. 2057V PRETTY VALLEY ACRES # ace you have been looking for, valley land and rich soil. Where you can build a little home near town and raise garden and poul- try that will bring you a steady in- come. We are selling this land in J0-acre tracts at $500 a tract. $150 down, balance $28 per month. J. J. HART, Realtor, Successor Marshall & Brown 145 North Center St. Phone 1212-W. FOR SALE—By owner, corner lot, 50x140 feet, east and south expos- ure, southeast part cf town, $400 ash or $500 terms. Phone 2073. CASPER LOTS—We sen lots in Fair View addition for $1 down and $1 @ week; city water, light and phone wires across the street and gas but block away. The Dobbin Mealty Ce 229 Midwest Bldg. ENGLEWOOD Buy a 5-acre lot in Engiewood, the Salt Creek pavement, 5 miles north of the Midwest refinery, $500; only & ow nd $10.00 per month. Buy now and be ready to live In the great outdoors when spring comes. ‘Think what this land will be worth fn 1925 whon Casper has 50,000 popula. tion. 5 acres will make 30 large city lots. Act quick. Call 1129. JOHN M. ENGLAND COMPANY, 202 O-S Bldg. __ FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR SALE OR TRADE—One Ford touring car about one year old, A-1 shape. Phone 15543. FOR SALE OR TRADE—We have one good ranch well improved lo- ckted in western Nebraska. to trade fo a good Casver home that has with some additiinal room for income, ‘A. P. Nesbitt Realty Co., 312 Sec: ond. Phone Sunday 1599J. FOR SALE OR TRADE—160 acres of irrigated land miles from Ra- yo. on Yellowstone highway: ditch; plenty of water; 120 cultivation; fair buildings; in acres 1 will soll on easy terms or trade for Casper property. Phone 2195W. FOR SALE OR TRADE—By owner, for Casper property, 380 acres of 8 river ond lowstone included call at {road and Yel- some horses 118TR or to close highw th 4a We al r Midwest. seven | Dakota land one halt mile from the | 2 Se FOR TRADE—Would like to trade 320 acre homestead with good house | with half basement. good soft water well; 26 miles north of Casper; would apply as first payment on at least | five or six-room house in Casper. Phone 817R. For Trade—I have a full sized cab- inet Victrola to trade for a piano. Phone 1618-J. FOR TRADE—Three-room new house in North Casper, $ ; wil take car as part payment; balance easy | j terms. Phone 982R, BUSINESS CHANCES CAPITAL SEBKERS for quick ac- tion put your project before 560 Mve wire brokers; cost trifling. under | my plan; details free. Amster Leon- ard, 1411 First National Bank Bldg., | Chicago. | FOR SALE—Hotel in Mills, Wyo., 28 rooms, all modern, ideally located; will sell right; for full particulars ca!! or address Mills Construction Co. Casper, Wyo., America Theater Bldg. | FOR RENT—Small grocery store, in good location; nice trade; wil! sell | stuck and fixtures. 733 8. Beech. FOR SALE—Rooming house at Glen- rock, 1% raoms, $6,500; terms; a bar- | gan; must sell at once, Roy M. Locke- nour, owner,, Glenrock, Wyo. VERAGE monthly income} paid monthly, which has actualy been done for the past three years on every $100 invested or $24/ to $65 yearly appeals to you, write! M. BI. WOLFF, Wall St. New York City, FOR SALE—Modern apartment build. ing, gross income $7,500 a year: 00d location; Well built $10.000 cash: will handle, balance monthly pay. ments, Address P. O. Box 319. PERSONAL WILL some gentlemen of means fi- nance a good money making prop- osition on. a 50-50 basis, for two widow ladies; quick returns. Address Box A-21, Tribune. | MADAM Wonder, wonderful life reader, the lady with the wonderfu' power; tells past, present and futu’ Cal! and consult her on any affairs, 52 West B. Hours 9 a. m. to 10 p. street, Heamoor, Cornwall, 8Nould communicate with me at once. Richard Shipp, Room 21, Townsend Bldg. Casper, Wyo. MADAM PELKY—Make no mistake when you undertake anything of importance; get my advice; no charge | unless you obtain perfect satisfaction. 443 W. Yellowstone. NOTICE OF INCORPORATION. The Peete Laundry Company was incorporated in the office of the Secretary of State, at Chey- enne, Wyoming,.on the 28th day of March, 1923, at nine o’clock A. M. The object of said corporation is to conduct a general laundry busi- ness in all its branches in the State of Wyoming and in such other states, territories or possessions af the United States of America as may be determined upon by the stockholders or the board of direc- tors of said company; in the prose- cution and development of said general laundry business, said com- pany may acquire, by original loca. tion, purchase, lease or otherwise, such real and persanal property of every kind’ and character whatso- ever as may bt necessary for the proper management of said busi- ness and may do all such lawful things as are necessary, incidental or advantageous to the successful prosecution of the main purpose of said company under the laws of the State of Wyoming. The term of the existence of said corporation shall be fifty years. The affairs of the corporation shall) be managed by three (3) directors, and the names of the directors for the first year are, J. L, Peete, Effie C .Peete, and J. M. Burling- ton. Th capital stock of said corpora- tion shall be Twenty-five Thousand ($25.000.00) Dollars, divided into twenty-five hundred (2500) shares of the par value of Ten . ($10.00) Dollars each and when issued fully- paid and non-assessable. , The principal place of busienss) of the company shall be conducted in the Gity of Casper, Natrona: County, Wyoming, and the princi- al office of the company shall be oom 7, Zuttermesiter Building, Casper, Wyoming, and the agent in charge thereof shall be L. H. Sen- nett. Dated this 28th day of March, 1923. J, L, PEETE, Secretary. Pub. March 30, 31, ‘April 1, 1923. STATE PARDON BOARD 10 HEAR COADILLO APPEAL CHEYE Wyoming state bo go to the Rawtins penitentin Tuesday, Apr’l 3, to hear an appeal for pardons for John and Pete Cor- dillo and Walter Newell. serving t!me for the murder of Frank Jennings of Laramie. | Eel par os 3 A plant has besun operations at! | Leesburg, Fin. for the manufacture ef paper from the giant sawsrass of the Florida marshes. | ve |middle of |canyons and chasms. fl in the even'ng enjoying your pipe {you are undisturbed with the thoughts of commercialism or social contests. A mountain fire need be | your only’fear, PLEASURES AND BEAUTIES OF Casper Sundap Morning Cribune HERE are in Natrona county nu-| merous mountain ranges, whose} scenery and delicious atmosphere jwith the rushing mountain streams, | beautiful lakes and lovely parks, ap-| Peal to those who are recking rest, re- creation and re-creation of nerves! and bedy, and every summer many/ visitors fing their way to the timber-| clad hills “and snow-capped peaks, | where they forget their business cares | and enjoy fishing and hunting during) the day, a hearty supper and a tran-| quilizing pipe in the evening, a sound| sleep during the night, and a sunny| disposition and contented mood in the Morning. These are the great out-| door playgrounds whero nature has heen undisturbed by the hand of man and people come to visit them from| every state in the union, and many come here from Europe to remain dur- ing the summer months. The snow-| storms of the late spring and early fall are somewhat of a handicap, but the snows of winter must melt and} the flowers of summer must wither, in| the mountains as well as in the val leys, and the people who amp in the mountains must prepare a shelter for bad weather if they go in the lsarly spring or expect to remain un- til late in the fall. In the summer the splendor of the climate is beyond adequate description; the mornings and evenings are always cool and the the da is pltasant; ex- treme heat is seldom known, and the coo!, refreshing temperature is en- joyed; the sky {s of a'deep blue color and in the evenings the sunsets are magnificent. During your travels you find many They are deep nd dark and dangerous to descend and there are a'so monstrous rocks that rise like walls of the skyscrapers of the large cities. When you return to your camp after the day's explorations and have fin- ished your plainly-cooked but whole- somo supper and sit around the camp These fires are caused only by the careless or inexperienced camper, but when once started they cause more damage and are more dangerous than a prairie fire. The ishing blasts which roar and howl through the narrow glens and find their way to the deep gorges, the crash of the fallen trees, tumbling rom crags and precipices, the lick? ing flames and clouds of dense smoke and the rushing blasts is a sight that Frequent but AUDITORS brief rainstorms come hurrying past and rage with great fury for a short time and then pass off, leaving every: thing calm and serene, Casper mountain, the summit only about ten miles south from the city of Casper, has all the advantages and affords all the pleasures of the other mountains in this region. From an elevated point on this mountain one can View the Big Horn mountains, a hundred miles to the west and north, stretching along the very verge of the horizon, and seeming, from the snow with which they are mantled, to be a chain of smal! white clouds, connect- ing sky and earth. The scenery in the valley is varied and beautiful; the orth Platte river glides rapidly but smoothly throuzh the picturesque low- lands; the mountain ranches at the sheltering foothills with the crystal streams and beautiful patches of green grasses; the two lines of railroad, with thelr glimmering tracks of stecl; the Yellowstone Highway and the Salt Creek cement road stretching Into the q stance e ribbons; the vast valley in the distance which is almost desti- {tute of herbage and scantily clothed with greasewood and sagebrush; then urn your eyes toward the setting sun land view the beetling cliffs, bearing tthe semblance of towers, castles Fhurches and fortified cities, which in the language of Washington Irving. “It 1s scaresly possible to persuade one’s Exe that the works of art were not mingled with these Ne freaks of nature.” cartasts It is truly delightful, rapturous to hear the birds, to behold the valley and the gro clouds, and the glowing rays of the sunset, all of which g’addens the heart and brings contentment to the mind restful and ong of the verdure of the the beautiful per mountain, and the other mountains in Natrona county, belong to and are a part of the great Rocky Mountain range, a part of which form the Continental Divide, a descrip. tion of which, together with a pen picture of the Rocky Mountains, is thus produced from the works of General Hiram M. Chittende “Were it possible for an observer to be poised far above the surface of theearth, near that locality where the Teton mountains lift heir mates Uc summits above the clouds, and were he endowed with a power of vision that could pierce to the uttermost verge of the horizon, he would see be. neath and around him a panorama which it is here desired to fix clearly in the mind of the reader. It is a anorama of mountains and_ plain: DOCTORS c. H. REIMERTH Certified Public Accountant Income Tax Service 01 O-S Bld; Phone 767 HARRY F. COMFORT Auditing and Accounting Phone 1008 Suite 18, Daly Bldg. 0. F. STEFFEN Auditor—Accountant Income Tax Service 312 Con. Roy. Bldg. Phone 1459 R. C. VAN DENBERG Certified Public Accountant Income ‘Tax Service Over Campbell Hardware Phone 148 —— GUARANTEE REGISTRY CORP. Auditors and Accountants—Stock Registrar and Transfer Agents 208-11 Ol] Exchange Bldg. Phone 669 Ft ARCHITECTS | BOIS & GOODRICH, Architects eens iii? Townsend Block | Casper, Wyo. Phone 449 WM. J. WESTFALL, Architect Suite 5, Daly Building Ca ary eY | i. M. MILLER, Architect | 208 os Bldg. Phone 1906 ae ‘BURN S. WEBB, Architect suite 12, Daly Bldg. Phone 1351 | ©. A. RAINWATER, Architect | Basement Consolidated Royalty Bldg. | Telephone 1078. BAGGAGE and TRANSFER THE CASPER PRIVATE 1OSPITAL 938 South Durb! Phone 273 Women’s and Children’s Hospital 542 South Durbin—Phone 406 Ji STAFF SURGERY, GYNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS. Hon¢r R. Lathrop, M. D., F. A. Cc. 8. Victor R. Dacken, B, Sc. M. D. EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT Harmon _L. Stanton, M. 8., M. D. SKIN’ AND X-RAY TREATMENT G nO URINARY DISEASES IARMACIS Lothian, Ph, G. DENTIST C. E. Duncan, D. D. 8, Offices in Rohrbaugh Building 113 East Second Street Telephone 54 and 55 Phone 2121 Suite 304 0-S Bld, DR. P. E. SHORTT i Specialist Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat WR E. Second. Casper, Wyo. MARSHALL ©, KEITIx, M. D. HERBERT L. SIARVEY, M.D. Office 108 E. ‘Second—Phone 40 Private Hospital, 612 South Durbin General Practico’ Surgery Obstretrica) DRS. MYERS AND BRYANT Physician and Surgeon 200 0-8 Building Office Phone 699 Residence 749 SEARLES TRANSFER | Res, Phone 87W Office Phone 313 BATTERIES CASPER BATTERY Co. 508 EB, Yellowstone Phone 907 BEAUTY SHOPS eile Nie oe) Se ae THE RADIANT BEAUTY SHOP Henning Hotel, Mezzanine Floor. Ex- pert marcel waving. For ap. Ph. 682-R CHIROPRACTORS M. GABRIELLE SINCLAIR Palmer Chiropractor West Hotel, Room 72 Phone 15403 DR, J. H. JEFFREY DR. ANNA GRAHAM JEFFREY Suite 318 Midwest Bidg. Phone 706} DR. B. G. HAHN, Chiropractor Townsend Bldg. Phone 423 LAWYERS AMBROSE HEMINGWAY Lawyer Room 221 Midwest Building NICHOLS & STIRRET Lawyers 8309-10-11 Oli Exchange Bldg. JAMES ?. KE) 408 Consolidated Royalty Bldg. HAGENS & MURANE Lawyers 206-207 Oil Excianes Building _— WILLIAM 0. WILSON Attorney-at-Law Suite 14-15-16 Townsend Bldg. VINCENT MULVANEY Attorney-ui-Law 427 Midwest Building OGILBEE & ADAMS 210 0-$ Building Phone 2217 M. B. HARNED, Chirobractor 162 North Kimball St. Phone 1457 DR. 1. E. BERQUIST MJ j OSTEOPATHS DR. CAROLINE ©. DAVIS Osteopathic Physician Zuttermeister Bldz. Phone 1751|Suite 6, Tribune Apartinents: Ph, 388 DR. ©, I. ARNOLDUS DR. ©. A. SANFORD Osteopathic and, Chiropractic |, Uetgonaibie Physician 8100-8 Building Phone 1754 CHIROPODISTS SCALP SPECIALISTS CORINNE ©, OBRYANT | DR. DE ORGLER Chiropodist and Orthopedic | Foot Specialist | 212 8. Center 5t. Phone 124-3 LIA RUSSELL Scientific Chiropodist Suite No. 1. Zuttermelster Bldg. Phone 1742 COAL | | fASPER COAL AND COKE CO. | Ben Suyematsu Hair and Scalp Specialist Smith Turner Drug Co.. SHOE REPAIRING NORTH CASPER SHOE SHOP Ail Work Guaranteed. 235 East TYPEWRITERS Genuine Gebo Coal 358 N. Durbin Phone 677) DOCTORS DE. T. J. RLACIT Phyastelan and Surgeon Phone 1219, Residence 2118. | REMINGTON TYPEWRITERS Grow 309 0-8 Bldg. | Phone 2278 TA!LORS TROY TAILORS AND cL "between Montana and Idaho. 148 EB, Midwest Phone 968 . BY ALFRED of lakes and rivers, of forest-crowned hills and treeless deserts, that stretch away to the distant alluvial plains of the Mississippi on the east and to the broad expanse of the Pacific on the| west. of the landscape, thus spread out Mie a map before the eyo, is its vast ag- gregation of mountains. pt far to the castward, peaks innumerable| arise on every hand. Some extend in| well-defined ranges like broken ridges on the surface of the earth; others stand detached and alone like solita protuberances from jts crust. The va-| riety of form and &spect is infinite. | Here a pointed spire of primeval rock stands motionless amoung the shift- Ing clouds; there a fiat mesa or tal crowned with grassy sward, term! ates In bold escarpments overlooking the valleys and plains below. Lofty | fields of perennial snow, grey patches of rock where vegetation never thrives, broad areas of dark evergreen forest. ; reading slopes of native pas: ull combine to produce an effect is different in every detall tinct uni- Ww ich yet displays as a whole a ¢ formity “Amid a mountain: of character. the seemingly purposcless eldentai distribution of these t e may t an ir regu'ar lihe 8 untry from north ‘> south, along which the land is higher than in the immediate vicinity on either side. It is the line whch separates the waters that flow into the Atlantic from those which flow into the Pacific—the helght of fand between the two oceans, or, as it is commonly called, the Continental vide. It {s everywhere a line of deep nental interest, for it is not easy from points so close hould flow to des: tinations so widely separated, Little as the country may vary in its aspect on one side from that on the-other, the a together, streams imagination sees a difference, and the early traveler always considered li!m- sett ‘oss the Rocky Mountains’ when he had passed this dividing line. ‘Here, Hail Oregon! reads an old itin erary of the Oregon Tra'l, when South Pass {s reached. It mattered little that the greater part of his journey still lay before him, with mov ns to cross more diff'cult than any en countered; to him it seemed that his abors were nearly over when he saw the first flowing to the very country w was hound the Divide is an extremely sinuous line, whose position may best be un ferstood by consulting the map. Its general direction in passing from the n to the Mexican border, is a st of south sing the north- ndary in northwestern r of M na and the southern southwestern corner of 2 total length 000 alte r ng through a lttle less 16 degrees of 1 On the € the M system ir out 1.450 miles of th's dis t he Rio Grande the remain on the western slope the drains about miles and the Colorado system 1.270 mi'es. “It might qu’te naturally be sup. that the geo’og'cal evolution of ntinent would have left this height of land upon the summits of the more prominent ranges; and this is the case along a portion of the Bit- ter Root range between Montana and Idaho, the Wind River mountains in Wyoming, and several of the lofty ranges in the state of Colorado. Gen erally, however, it les on lower ground. In the vic'njty of Yellow. stone Lake, for example, it Is but @ little higher than the lake surface and in central Wyoming. !t extends for many mi'es over a desert plateau o comparatively low alt'tude where the streams sink into the ground nd never reach the true drainage of either ocean. “As the Divide is not generally on the-crests of high mountains, over it are rarely difficult. characteris £08 Union and Twogwostee nt the head of Wind river, a fow over the range between Montana and Idaho, and severa! w'th jn the limits of the state of Co'orado, In other places they are generally low and practicable, while in some sec- tions, as in central Wyoming and northern New Mexico the Divide can be crossed almost anywhere without djscovering its actual location. The most celebrated crossing, the well- known South Pass, which holds so prominent a place in the early history of the west, scarcely deserves the name of a mountain pass. It js bare ly 7,500 feet high, and ‘s situated in an open valey of gent'e slopes in elther direction, with little to mark {t as a crossing of the main chain of the Rocky Mountains. But as a gate way between the Atlante slope and the Pacific, it became the most noted pass in the mountains, “It is a noteworthy fact that a natural geographical line of so great interest as the Continental Divide should have been so little utilized in establishing the boundaries of mod ern political divisons. It forms a state boundary in only one place and that is for about one hundre! miles During the period of the fur trade, however, it was the eastern boundary of the disputed territory of Oregon all the way from the Spanish to the Russian possessions. “It was the Continental Divide and the ranges in the immediate vicinity which were known to the traders and trappers as the Rocky Mountains. That name has now, however, no par. ticular habitat, and can scarcely be found upon any modern large scale map, where every separate range has its own local name. The term has come to mean, in the popular mind the ountains between the Mississipp! and the Pacific, just as “the Alle. ghenies” applies in a general way to the mountains between that stream and the Atlantic. The name itself is not a happy choice, for it might apply with equal propriety to any range-of mountains in the world. It came Into general use only in the present cen tury. Early writers refer to these mountains as the Mi'ssourj, Mexican, Shining, Snowy, and Stony mountains. until finaly from the French Mon- tagnes Rocheuses came the modern name. Tho general system was also at ono t'me refered to by géographers great Chippewyan ayatem and 14 have been well it this vived me Appal passes ame ay the in. en “The first and most obvious feature iret slopes.with the verdure-clad hill- and picturesque detalls, and observes | eye had r f t | their varying moods with the changes | table life, may now be se ast of each day and of the seasons of the|crimson and gold, if 1 i ar. This more intimate acquaint-)scattered here and there rich bouquets | dream! ure fit PAGE SEVEN. _WYOMING J. MOKLER ‘The physical aspect of the Rocky | quaking aspen, wh was sim-[ miles upon miles of aie Mountains is altogether charac tic. | ply a mass of on the moun to the The traveler who passes hurriedly | sic orth with ten 1d mile ‘through them on the modern rajlroad, | fold grea Its_ rich len only jis liable to contrast unfavorably their| autumnal foliage. owth « f. Here grey color, severe outlines and bar-| underbrus a attract din the the > at 8¢ s ona s the smoke {des of the eastern states, Not so he,| livelier hue, transforming me loaded train, who, like the ancient trapper, fre-| tain sides into of steel across quents their unaccustomed haunts, | ors. Even up sound of man comes In close contact with their wild | apparent of flowers and bunches of fruit. tk “It is not upon the surface of the ance @'scloses a wealth of beauty which, the uniform green of the east- find it you lest n fr out in rolling stretches with gentle de pressions between them look like beautiful carpets of green or brown, according to the season, softened by of sublime magnificence, rides among the mountain as splendor favored climes. t peaks wit in unin! them names, and the mor clature of the west js me growth of a Iate less, he loved this rugged c unconsclously yielded influences ful relief either from the gloomy view of extensive forests or the uniform prospect of grass-covered slopes. ‘Taken together, these varied arrange ments of nature present an artistic appearance that reminds one of the T AN ECZEMA SKIN cu'tivated sections in the mountain re-| to analyze, but nd him to g’ons of Europe where man has con-{ Wild nature wi that he was | ; tributed so much to enhance the beau-| unable to resist The hardship of his|Costs Little and Overcomes ty of nature. ife, the ever-present perils which en-| Trouble Almost Over period ntry to those “The scenery of these mountains | vironed him, the ties of kindred and Nicht. moreover, is subject to continual and| home, none of these cou'd extinguish bere interesting change. Scarely have the|the passion for mounta'n life when out of the sk bleak storms of winter subsided, and| once he had tasted its pleasur Imagine ow the while yet deep fields of snow lie upon the upper slopes the soft blossoms of yourself, you who do not wonder of the w Men k doubt If any other season could rival| more than. one hundred miles aw It seldom fails to relieve the springtime in beauty. But in truth | rises groupa of snow-capped peaks. in| ment without de Su the somber season of autumn ifs the}the Big Horns through air #6 clear| skin trouble should obt. most attractive of all. The early frosts | you see the shadows on them. Be-|‘jar of Rowles Me er the mountain sides with the|tween you and these snowcapped| any good druggist and use most varied and gorgeous co'ors. The peaks, and to the far west there are | cold cream.—Advertleement One easy turn of the Lorain Red Wheel gives you a choice of 44 measured and controlled oven heats for any kind of oven cooking or baking. OVEN HEAT REGULATOR STA fea Hundreds of Casper women will enjoy this Easter day at their churches with- out the worry of preparing the Easter dinner as their whole meal will be de- liciously cooked in their Lorain oven. This assurance of a perfectly cooked meal has been proved by past results. If your new home does not make provi- sion for The Clark Jewel Gas range with oven heat regulator, you cannot feel that itis modern. Was your star ham cooked the better way this morning? JEWEL GAS RANGES Casper Gas Appliance Co.'« Phone 1500 115-119 East First Street In sp irse'f holding sh quite away. ot in , can be quick ho clalist. the 8 tho-Sulphur from it ern mounts does not possess, and | earth alor hat are to be seen the |i @ land of col js said by reputable painters of | crandeur and beauty of these region To tt or st, among the Big natural scenery, that no mountains in| Even the wild mountain storms which | Horns, tt s are breaking the world, not even the Alps, aford] are frequent at certain sea ha into pu blue-black for- scenes so satisfactory to the art as|an attraction peculiarly their own and | ‘ these i thenimelynd those of the Rocky Mountains. all the more remarkable by the very | °* passes of “The general appearance of the | contrasts which th pr@dluce Tf 8 mountains is of greyish color where | in passing, they display on a terrible rr of color vegetation is scarce. This results not} scale the power of the elemen' an show only from the exposed areas of rock|the other hand, they leave ’ rifted with in situ but from the disintegrated rock | them, in the su led clo Iden 2 dried w: which covers the mountains in many | mountain tops the most places with a sterile soil. The reddish | pleasing pictures w 2 color of fron oxide js widely present. | Where affords particularly in the smaller hills of the] “Again, in the long rainles Bad Lands, while yellow and other|son, the atmospher the paint colors ar e of frequent occutrence. brush t he hills everv “The greater number of the north- | intensity the purple and blue of ern mountains have extensive grassy | distance, this Js pre-eminent! slopes, whose broad areas, inclined up-|land of cloudless skies. The ris ward as on a mighty easel, and spread | and settings of the sun are or 1 that from the the melow haze of distance and bur “It was among scenes |! t nished by the crimson rays of the|that the mountaineer of early day morning and evening sun. At the|‘mbibed that s' g love of wilderne M1 is worn higher elevations, from 5,000 to 10,000 | life which made him restive ever after t: somé of feet, forests under the rest of civill: he crannies of trees abound extensively {That he looked re with have the mountains with a mantle of dark | tist’s eye, that he was ofte: clous thelr een or black. of the beauty of his surrounding It, not At frequent intervals throughout | that he ever pald much attenti a hoes these forests are open spaces filled | these things, 1s scarcely probabl Rieke eenlons with luxuriant grass, forming parks of} bis’ practical, hard«working life bhiesnsnas bah nee faultless beauty amid the somber soli- | doubtless often wished that the== we: ist eee conan tudes of the surrounding woods. Every |" mountains, for they cau Fifa | ane eees neven bing Humibless tt where in these wild and sublime sit-|™ma ide detour and many a|°"e" Pia 5 See: uations occur the always pleasing | Weary climb. So little use did he find waria = groves of the quaking aspen, a grate-|for them that he gave very few of RY cH PH i ! Un ON even spring shoot eagerly from the scanty |!ng upon the spur of some granite roying prop- soil and oppose the gentle warmth of | range that rises several thousand feet sulphur preparation in- their blooms to the chill snow which | above the plains; back of you and ngs ease fro cin frrite- is slowly receding before them. So|above you are the mountains; before soothes and heals eczema profuse and beautiful are the flowers | you and below you lies the world. In 1 leaves the skin clear and in these lofty regions that one would|the distance to the north and west} smooth tor- from smallt like

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