Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 4, 1923, Page 25

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DNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, I9Z3 E sShe VONDERG OF THEYELLOWSTONE AS DESCRIBED BY PIONEER VISITOR TO PRESENT PLAYCROUND avan Struggled Through Untraveled Region | 22% tne EE, 24% PAGE THIRTEEN. ed an interest in Dan’s specialty |in scouting among the middle west- rather into the background, O'Leary |ern’ states. One conference will be was a familiar figure at baseball held for the laymen and another parks and fair grounds this sum- for the executives, while there will mer, and claims he can walk for six|be several joint sessions. The con- hours at a rate of six miles an hour, | ferences will last from Tuesday unt without being distressed. Friday Inclusive. ———>—_—_ Governor Carey will deliver an ad- dress on “Scouting and the Boy in ROBERT I GAREY AND = Small City and Rural Commun: . ity.” Mr. Bartle will discuss the |service which scouting may render & community. John 4H. Piper, i. |regional director for Region Bight U.S. S. West Virginia To Be Most Powerful Fighting Ship Afloat ; ° peculiar character equally interest-| WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.—({United| poses is enough to supp'y power to To View Wonders Since Made Famous by tag he some distance above it sg Press}—The U. S. S. West Virginia,|® sity of 100,000 population. and one of Casper’s friends, will be Ley: 7. ver breaks into frightful rapids.|iest of the battleships to be built by ually 1 SCOUT CONFERENCE master of ceremonies. SS _ Accessibility to Modern Tourist. Peeniee ties, arreneedl Detwosd isd. Trsitat eksan|woversionse ae Fialt of the world is sala to be engaged in agriculture, . That's how and bounds with impatient struggies|the Washington Arms Conference for release, leaping through the|limitation and elxth to be equipped] by: —Littla Rock, BY N. P. LANGFORD, stony Jaws, in a sheet of snow white| with the electric drive, thereby com : : Robert D. Carey, former governor| Cresta Ut ves: (From 's Magazine, May 1871 s foam, over a precipice nearly per-|pleting the “Electric Fleet,” will be| fort and convenience ‘of the crew, |of Wyoming and honorary member —— Pendicular, 115 feet high. Midway|commissioned at the Newport News| A completely equipped hospital wil! ‘ : of the Casper Boy Scouts, and H. ‘ CHAPTER IV. in its descent the entire volume of| Shipbuilding Yards about Dec. 1.|be maintained on board, with navy : Roe Bartle, chief executive of the} Cal Coolidge is not as garrufous journey the next day still continued through a | water ts carried, by the’ stoping sur-| She will be a sister ship to the U, 8. aireses to ar Ree of ——, ad tas: 8 leaving ki rth gr Dagens wo have “4 Our journ 4 Ul Gand Or in inter eentes Fis Ore. Bere rf . . Colo- ‘crew, and a to look-after . ay for Des Moines, Ia., to attend! but when he gives utterance to his untry until then untraveled. Owing to the high lateral | *°e of Nene tee prvi «ge othe Sees ee tuateain's thath, : : two conferences there for scout thoughts he {s worth listening to. ountain spurs, the numerous ravines, and the intermin-| ine precipice, gaining therefrom a rhs Wankel a ee le merous rsa lee timber, we made very slow progress; novel and interesting feature. The| respect tho latest achievement of D OLe = = — ——— when the hour for camping arrived we were greatly | churning of the water upon the! 4 mo, val architects. — Carry- prised to find ourselves descending the mountain along | Focks reduces tt to a mass of foam| (nr eicnr ream gure che intweat avec [oO Oe ary at 82 THE NATIONAL CASH REGISTER CO. a , through which all thi Charles Zetina, coe, banks of a beautiful stream tn) ematier tt would have bern less im:| Soles oe the nolae apecteund are ren mounted on 8 BAttiedhio, she sill be Years of A ge PT irs |" -ceey sot ts ete Branch Office, Henning Hotel executives and for laymen interested -—-Omaha Bee. immediate vicinity of the Great| pressive. The river, from a depth | produced in astonishing profusion. ° for president. Like Ford he is an PHONE 45 y CASPER, WYO. 1s of the Yellowstone. This| of 200 fect above the fall, is com-| What this cataract lacks in subli-|\rqvoning cient tone of steel mea Walking Challenge} =a seatus. | New. Registers Priced as Low as $75.40 which we catled Cascade) Pressed by converging rocks to 150/ mity ‘s more than compensated by] explosives upon the deck of any £& g& Also Rebuilt Registers—Terms Without Interest Carl Rhodine, with J. E. Braden, Salrss Dept. 999909090 You may get equally as good dental work at a much higher price, but no better than you can and will secure at this of- fice. You will find here the most approved dental methods and appliances, plus skill, that has never been questioned. If you have been unfor- tunate in the fitting, com- fort or appearance of your plates don’t be dis- couraged. I can supply . you with plates devoid of these embarrassments. All other dental work on the same basis, “unex- celled anywhere.” Painless Extraction Examination Free TWENTY YEARS ACTIVE SERVICE DR. FRANK CARLL Fourth Floor O-S Bldg. Tel. 564-J POOOCOSOOOOOO OOOO: ; hi 35 le - with onatinuots sasses .ct.olet-} 1s & few inshes, mure than 250 feet. hills, the grand feature of @ land-/ io itn tampedo thbse for fe | tha’ yourienters. Schmihel, another veteran heel-and- commences the upper fall, half of a hundred feet or more, could be i . tt of the gorge the creek hreaks we'ghs 32,000 tons. She is expected | lense _to his famous contemporary — Although modern sport has crowd- Dentistry ‘as amber, nestled beneath one can look down into the bol‘ing,| front of, and within reaching d@s-| capacity being about 1,400 gallons. It received the name/)one upon the rock, let down a|the unpleasant conviction that the Electrical Throughout eanic rocks 50 miles long, and] ree foam, constrasts strange!: . ", a8 ee tees ee ane | Teer v¥| Man Who Ignored to develop 12,600 .ki'owatts mt e oes because he is a member of the Finance Committee and here the passage has been worn] One-was the most unsocial, and the say No; because he has developed a character that des, appeared no wider than 4] of the falls but we cou’d not thus| fume King,” who made a fortune] Trocquer. The latter thought he rth under our feet, and venture no] of great variety and beauty. he has not the same reverence for| your program as brilliantly as the see the river attenuated to a] rapids until near the verge of the to the Ministry of Public Works, he that I have at my command.” dismal shadow. Even the the voice ftary courve, deeper and deeper into Eabipswaie of tis rocky, omen. Ovp DEPENDABILITY ‘ Comfortable and attractive beyond harrowing in the extreme. You feel “depth beneath you, if a bird would gloom of the scene, you crawl from COLISEUM MOTOR CO. mountaineers that there were cata- AH}11\) = = ~ f yacts, in this vicinity ‘a thousand INDEPENDENT CANDIDATE FOR failed to see. We regreted, when too late, that we had not made a fuller exploration—for by no other . theory than that there was a stupen- ous fall below us, or that the river 1 was breken by a continued succes- sion of cascades vou'd we account — for a difference of nearly 3,000 feet = | ywWas marked by frequent falls 15 i . - z and 20 feet in height, sufficient, if ‘ : | FIRST WARD (Sreat difficulty by Messrs. Hauser = feet, ‘where it takes the plunge. The| picturesqueness. The rocks which in very rapid. Just before its| feet, u ° enemy ship twenty miles away. : with the river «it passed | shelf over which it falls is as level | overshadow it do not vell it from the| "An SP | oe ot} NEW Yor, , g—conitea | Pedestrian. Edward Payson Westos, mt, which on either side fs till-| helght, by actual line measurement] foliage which crowns the adjacent | fourteen finch guns. four TO RIERS Gabe ine cauatewene | tcc: cw hic Waste: ray | have Al It fs a sheer, compact, so'id, per-| scape unrivaled for. beauties or that huve been worn by the t th 1 ing the largest and longest range} Dan offers to bet $1,000 or $5,000] toe artist, -as partner. O'Leary : into: many fantastic shepes| Pendicnler sheet, faultiees in all the | vegetation as. weil ‘asrot Fou, and} oe Ae he can beat any man in the world | offers to walk 100 miles while Wes- If You Are Looking for Better ae ” que beauties. The canyon which] overhanging the verge at the height : ined “The Devils Dea” Near the feet wide at the water line and| O'Leary also has issued a chal-| each. mile above this cataract, is here a| readily united by a bridge, from m coat eee ees cones thousand feet in depth. Its vertical] which some of the grandest views|to make 21 knots per hour and has|— aime SS cr of f'fteen, Into a pool as fall to shelving summit, from which | could be obtained—while just in| miles, She will burn ofl, her fuel spray-filled chasm, enlivened with| tance of the arrowy water, from a| The West Virginia will ‘be ‘com: hing rocks. Here ee agers rainbows, and glittering like a| table one-third the way below the|manded by Captain Thomas J. Senn it half reluctant MA eg ‘ea| Shower of diamonds. From a shelf| brink of the fall, all its nearest | and will rep'aco the U. 8. 8. North and then graceful iter tha protruding over the stream 500 feet| beauties and terrors may be caught | Dakota, of which he was Ifst com- e the grutto, and, veiling below the top of the canyon and 180| at a glance. A mander, When commissioned she e feet, passes rapidly on to the). ember of onr company, lying| canyon two days, and left them with| crew of the North Dakota. F “Crystal.” cord with a stone attached into the| greatest wonder of-our journey had OR ALDERMAN The West Virgini Great Falls are at the head) cuir, and measured its profoundest| been seen. throughout. ar ome panko sin the world—a gorge through | catarct, with its sparkling spray and steam . turbine | generators,. designed the sombre stillness of the canyon qpeed oF 3.250; rexetineee Because Jones has had two years of city experience; 2, per. min- 3 tin depth. In its rescent through|@ mile below. There all was Jirk- ute to drive the sh'p 21 knots. The Se tach amen Sey emai ah Ks e next administration with muc Im t. At one int, r t a o " ry ost 3,000 fee’ o po! was vivacity, gayety and delight. built are es in diameter, weigh benefit to the city; because Jones has developed ef- rough a mountain range, OUT! other the most socisl scenic in By JOHN O'BRIEN thhs tirelchte. ascebeeeits bunters assured it was more than a| nature, We could talk, and sing,| (United Press Staff- Correspondent.) as he has ed te i i ii earn say when he thinks it wise to to rapids and cas- irth and laughter in presence | Press.)—Francois Coty, the ‘“Per-| presented them to ° Minister Le er broken into rap our mi an s' P can stand by itself and does not lean on another; and {bbon. The brain reels as we gaze] profane the silence of the canyon.| in New York, returned to France, | would please: them by an eulogy of because he thinks straight and because he puts him- nto this profound and solemn soll-| Seen through the canyon below the| bought the newspaper Le Figaro, | Napoleon Bonaparte. As he finished rgo appalled, giad to feel the solid] is broken by rapids and cascades| litical thought, {s a Corsican, but] “I hope you may be'able to realize | 208N G. Jones for re-election. more, except with forms extended,| Between the lower and upper falls| “the little Corporal" who became | great Emperor did his,” Paid for by supporte.s .G. 4 tncea barely protruding - over| the canyon is 200 to nearly 400 feet| Emporor of the French.as the reat y supporte.s of J. G. Jones, eps is horrib'e, Down, down, down,| bed of rock, and is undistrubed by! Leading a delegation of Corsicans poleon didn’t have the resources thread, tossing {ts miniature waves, nd dashing, with puny strength, the massive walls which imprison itp —_--- 9 —_—cccmeme— land the dark gray rocks hold it in of its waters in thelr convulsive ae aa ny cannot be heard. Uncheered D points, it rushed madly on tts soll VOTE FOR The solemn grandeur of the scene surpasses description. It must be ger with which it impresses you is the absence of sound, the oppression your expectati 8, it is a jof absolute silence. If you could nently gratifying to know that you could see a living tree in the fly past, if the wind would move retain their fundamental identity jany object in the awful chasm, to : = . \Dreak for a moment the solemn —a chassis and engine matured ailence that reigns there, it would . : relieve that tension of the nerves and perfected through nine years : which the scene has excited, and <117 ¢ ‘ you would rise from your prostrate : of brilliant mechanical evolution. condition and thank God that he had permitted you to gaze, unharm- : q ed, upon this majestic display of natural architecture. As it is, sym. pathizing in spirit with the deep pi Mipocige gah east erndied : 181 E. Fifth St. Phone 724 ‘We had been told by trappers and feet high; but, if so, they must be Jower down the canyon, in that por- ‘across the bend in the river, we in altitude between the,head and the tmouth of the canyon. ‘we saw, the inclination of the river ‘continuous through it, to accom- Dish entire descent. \rific canyon was accomplished with es Y Z S e ie 2 ‘and Stickney, at a point about two } = - : > ty coment a on —- EN He is not the candidate of any class, faction or metrical measurement the und = fj 4 7 1 7 cs organization. He has made a success of his feet deep. Their ascent from it was fpertlous, and it was only by mak- 4 * aL keeping the nerves braced to the. ut- us M : ng the nerves raced to the, ut — tg eu to the business of the City of Casper. to clamber up the precipitous rocks ‘ ha gloomy gorse, of abrupt/ and even as a work of art. The/ open light. It is up amid the pine] 100 ‘G.inch guns, four sinch |Press)—At 81, Dan O'Leass, sereren | to & Walking contest of 100. miles, | hs its of grand: d pict jen. The tw frontis ks, cavernovs recess* This we} clement Li central apt gems ss ef coe iphas, cmap: yon Wibos This vessel is 624 feet long, 97| {1 @ walk of 500 miles. ton and Schmihel walk 45 miles fs im’ dinta.y succeeded by sides rise gray and dark above the}of natural scenery in the world|a cruising radius of about 10,000 s down an abrupt descent of) ¢.0+ above the verge of the cataract,| We rambled around the falls and| will take over practically the entire Oe Oe tae cet eee oeah | ee The life, and sound of the machinery consists of two Curtis SECOND WARD wonderful chasm the river fa'ls! ness, gloom, and shadow; here all N apoleon Found Totors;; ' ages 8S cae ARES eines: ficiency under his experience in city work; because tical mile in depth, and the and whoop, waking the echoes with PARIS.—(By Mail to United self in the c de. We shrink from the dizzy| falls, the river for a mile or more| and is trying to reform French po. | he turned toward M. Coty-and said: in the place of those he represents, we endorse edge of the precipice. The still-| deep. The river runs over a level} of his compatriots. with a gesture of surprise, All access to its margin is dented, by plant or shrub, obstructed with i B N C ssive boulders and by jutting New BeaAuty-New ComMFort seen to bo felt, The sense of dan ; Ww jonly hear that gurgling river, if | | Dodge Brothers New Closed Cars eipitate you into the horrid gulf. ‘tlon of it which, by our journey In that part cf the canyon which + The fearful descent tnto thts ter- the chasm at that point to be 1,190 A f ees) ole, [perflous, ‘and it was onty t own business and pledges his time and ability ine st use is an feet, and . ‘to a safe landing-place.. The effort {Fhis Advertisement Paid for by Friends. & first view of the canyon ;We followed the river to the falls. ‘A grander scene than the lower ‘cataract of the Yellowstone was ever witnessed by human eyes. The Volume seemed to be adapted to a'l the harmonies of the surrounding = scenery. Had it been greater or. NASH LEADS THE WORLD IN MOTOR CAR VALUE

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