Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 28, 1925, Page 3

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SUNDAY, JUNE 28, 1925 1 G0 INTO GAME SUNDAY, JULY? Registration Now Open With Mrs. Reynolds For the Girls. On Friday, J. S. Pettingil, chair nan, and several members of the camping committee from the Kiwanis -lub visited Camp Carey (Boy Scout mp) for the purpose of making ar- angements for this year’s camp for the girls which has been an- nually sponsored by the club. The Girl, Scouts camp will be conducted two one-week periods beginning nday, July 12. he registration is now open at the office of Mrs. Christine Reynolds, scout, executive of the Girl Scouts, 20, Townsend Bank building, and the first seventy girls regis- tered will be entitled to their choice of which period they prefer to go, nd, providing there is capacity, any zirl Scout chosing can attend for the two periods. The camp fee will e $4 per week, payable at the time ¢ registration. The camp will be supervised by scout executive and her com- n ee and under the immediate irection of Mrs. Ruth MacIntyre as camp director and Mrs, C. N. Frenchville, a registered nurse. Also there will be an experienced adult leader for each seven girls in amp. Don’t forget to give a Girl Scout e chance to ears her camp fee them employment at house work, caring for For fu er infor: Reyr phone The camp beginuing July 26 for one week will. be for the Girl Re- serves and the unorganized girls of ‘asper. Both of these groups must ter at the ¥, W. C. A. head arters, First and Wolcott streets, promptly, and the camp fee will be $4 for the week, payable at the time of’ registration, For further infor mation call headquarters, or phone 1406 See CLEVELAND BUILDS IT3 CARS COMPLETE; REAR AXLES AND GEARS CUT veland motor cars ye building as muc vioter car as possible in ity own lant was adopted. ‘To this duy. this ethod of manufacture has been ad- reréd to with the result that prac- y the entire is now built in nd Six plants. sfully hus this plan work- d out with -the building of the Special Six series, that the same pro- cedure is being followed out in tl construction of the new Clevelund Standard Six, the companion of the rial Six Cleveland. ose vital units such as the mile- and Standard Six motors, redr transmissions and open car of the age rxles, vodies from which a great dea) of ervice is naturally expected, are ullt entirely in Cleveland shops. leveland even goes so far as to cut ts own rear axle and transmission gears; does all the nickeling work, nd the big electric enameling ovens enamel! finish all sheet metal parts ithout the ald of a human hand fter being placed on the big con- eyor system. Cleveland officials state that in idhering to the practice of bufldin; much of both the Special and Standard Cleveland Sixes as it is posible to do, a uniform standard of 1ality can be maintained because 1e parts are alWays under the atchful eyes of experienced Cleve- nd Six. inspectors. NO MORE ANNUAL: NEW MODELS, 15 SLOGAN Of STUDEBAKER COMPANY noungement by Studebaker of it y of no more annual “new mo s" has brought commendation from the public which buys the s and from the dealers who sel! has ended a great econ and has given full value Jebaker construction;” thie ren e, taken from the comment of communication. seems to the general attitude conc ken from the various comm these specific benefits mmonly ‘mentioned Artificial depreciation of ext: ‘ yan announcement of ‘is now made a t the { The car can now en to the full mit of the use st it, with no owner ¢ arament, caused by ant anges.” Owner ill-will, engendered h announcements a short t fter one had bought the latest + lel tn guod falth, will be suppla y friendliness growing out of the manufacturer's conservation of itr omers’ investments.” ‘An end to the suspicton on tli part of many owners that so-called “new models" do not always con tain sufficient new developments of | an importance warranting a conr bvlete change in the car.” “Beenuse the depreciat nm my Wante of the ised transport ation in Studebaker cars will be end ed,"' By Central Press. DELEH:, /India, June, 27, — En- couraging reports are being receiv. ed regarding the progress toward the ‘roof of the world” of the Ameri- can scientific expeditinon led) by Theodore and Kermit Roosevelt and George K. Cherrie, naturalist. The party, composed of the three white men and less than 100 native carriers and guides, appears to by surmounting all of the innumerable difficulties in its path. There seems to be little possibility of trouble with natives of independent and semi- wild states. The expedition is traveling as ight as possible. The principal equip- ment is army »Springfields, .403 cal- iber, with special stocks, warm clohting and food, cameras and scientific equipment, News of the party must come by native messenger by way of Jun- mu, its “jumping off" place on the railway. No.one-here has more than a.gen- eral idea of the route being follew- ed, for plnas must needs be shifted to meet new circumstances. Weather. native help and food aup- plies, must be considered at every march, once civilization is left be- hind, and so the Roosevelt itinerary is a pliable one, Dangerous Trail. The general route, however, lies through the Leh pass to the high Pamirs tableland, thence to Turk- estan. The Leh route is a dangerous and difficult trail through barren moun- tains, It would be possible to go through the Hunza pass,*but this route cannot be used this year be- cause all available native carriers are engaged in a hunting expedition led by Swedish sportsmen, A_ third route to the Pamirs leads through Afghanistan, and while {t would ot- fer the easiest traveling of the three possible routes, it is unsafe. becaure it is infested with murderous tribes- men, against whom no protection could be guaranteed. The Leh route fs little used in mid- summer, and then only by expedi- tions carrying mail into Thibet. It stretches along the foothills border- ing the forbidden country and in some places {s only 50 miles from the frontier. The most difficult part of the trip, however, is the crossing of two passes at a height of 15,000 feet, Both generally are snow cov- ered throughout the year, unmarked for long distances and there Is great danger of avalanches. Why Time is Important. But there are other matters than avalanche and siippery glacis to trouble. the voyager. There {s the altitude. The road lies\generally at a height of 17,000 feet: It rises to 20,000 in parts and side trips for game lead ever up to atill higher reach Air at such heights {s thin and frigid. It fails to fill the lungs. It deadens the ears and irritates the herves. Men wake gasping after two hours sleep, convulsively seek- ing air. It tries the temper. It hinders cooking, Beans cooked for three days, one traveler reports, are still raw and underdone. Water boils at-.such a low temperature {about 178 degrees Fahrenheit) that food is still but half cooked when taken from it. And there fs time—an element of highest importance in considering such a mountain-trek. ‘Fime ts: reck- oned by marches and marches may vary from 12 to 15 miles a day, de- pending on road conditions. Time plays {ts part, too, for the traveler in limiting the period when he can journey in the country at’ all. The passes close definitely in Sep- tember. The expedition has no time to waste. However, by Yar“the miost importe ant and difficult matter the expedi- tion has to cope with is. the matter of food. Gilgit and the region around {t {s a chronic famine coun- Roosevelts Che Casper Sunday Cribune Meeting Dangers on “Roof of World” on s SarcwanisTan of ey pee) y yy 3 SR SRINAGAR RAWAL 2 (alata & = 1—Map of the territory the party is traversing; 2—A rare specimen of tiger they his brother; 5—George Theodore Roosevelt; has to cope with. 4—Kermit, try. The lack of vegetation, the im-) searching. A g them may be list possibility of finding fodder save|ed the markhor,’vartous species of See taser eer ald: not in the sparest quantities, make the | ibex, the goa, the scharpoo, the goi- nge his mode of existence country impossible for’even its few|tered gazelle, the Tibetan gazelle, PIVeGs ISIE? dekh warrante natives to live in without importing | the Tibetan antelope, other antelope : mabe : 1 ‘ were issued by. authorities for all food: the Yarkkand ‘stag and, most partl-| 1 uzzled dogs due to a mad dog Marco Polo Sheep Sought. |cularly, the snow leopard and: the) U0M=2 Te ee ees hounds were As soon as the passes open,|long haired tiger. All these, {1 110 Victims of deputies’ shot shaggy pony trains set out like re- | found will go to Fiela Museum, Chie} wi 2 curse on his lps, the Met expeditions into.the hills. The|cago, which. through the generosity} ra ™ cumee Of NA pe, & coolle route {s clogged with pack|0f James Simpson, {s financing the} | 1 ’ animals, bearing food. The British | @dventure. | a government required the Roosevelt | ° * party to sign waivers proinising: not 1 Wise Smithy! to replenish its stores from any . | md supplies in Gilgit, I d Ww th (ay. Cent Hunters who know ‘the region are naan ort || parts, gune Roeland speculating whether the. Roosevelts muniolpal councillor, fs the French Will, succeed in one of the most 11 Mi lli Li > Elihu ‘Burritt, portant objects of the expedition U ton wes I from a scientific standpoint—the ef i | fort that will be r specimens of the ra fabulous Ovis Poll. ude to bring b Like a Hermit ae eee PE fe Weck hope to bring back; K. .Cherrie; 6—The king of mountains the party —Marco Polo's Sheep, his treat Sheep,” as the thirteenth century; PAWHUSKA (United Venetian wanderer atimeeif de Press)}—Loss of his ¢ his only scribes it. “It inhabits the mountain | friends, made a hermit’ ot John nges between Kashmir, on the| Stink, wealthy Osage Indian, Fo north of India, and the Pamir pla-| ten years he has lived in a tepee teau beyond. It is found, sometimes, in the Hindu Kysh and sometimes in | white people or I the Himalayas, and it lives ever in byt. two farther north in the Thian Shan|{ oods and fifty ranges beyond Yarkland, where Polo | found it. It weighs 250 pounds, and more, and the length of each of its he sickly, undersized widespread, splaying horns runs] of jibes and taunts of his stronger | the vil," which expounded his| higher than 60 inches, which makes | brothers, His only friends were | )hilos it the granddaddy of all the sheep] several mongre! dogs. Constant N land 1s also a learned (except, perhaps, his cousir the] companions day and night, he de- | blacksmitl He represents the dis Ovis Ammon.) veloped a pec affection f [trict of Ecluses St. Martin, Paris Ovis Poli is inured to.dwelling-on| the dogs and they tn turn seemed |{n the municipal council, and hold crags and-glaciers so high and un-| to understand him. {court in his smithy. comfortable thaf no human being,| Ho-tah-moie lived about in boxes He can be seen morning except;- perhaps, -a~ venturesome | -back-of stores; on the side-waiks | working at his fc g no hunter, would possibly go near him.| or any place he could gain a t and then in the midst of his sledge There {s no dearth of interest in| of protection from the cold wint |swinging to nplaints of the ‘unimaginable names of other beasts for which the expedition Sunday Membex The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Bo or the blistering summers. he came into an estate refusing to fraternize with either ndians, indulgin luxuries—expensive cent cigars. During his youth Ho-tah-moic is known to the Indians, and the object wa wi worth. ne 3 nstitue und ¢ wisdon er of nd New n as American acquired a nun amith in| England. | became] “The te BY IW J.GR. OF BOSTON, MASS. NDI Vi LA of the Board of Lectureship of the UNDER THE AUSPICES OF FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIS?. s CASPER, WYOMING HIGH SCHOOL, AUDIVOL.. iw Afternoon, fh: STLAN Mother (¢ i Ma chus¢ ( + 3:30 HID ~ \ gE, (} o' Clock TIS! 7 PAGE THREE "GARDEN CREEK PARK OW: ; ‘MOUNTAIN: TAKING mK : 2 ot pation: -¢ aetes: tat ° With the advance of the summer} The wate een receonsia sae aS season Garden Cree park, situated er i 1 et Wa \ Qr ° £ Its in @ beautiful canon just off the | its Casper mountain h under the summit the mo is enjoying well deserved popul. Numerous families already spent some time in cottag during vacation periods and others are making reservations weeks to come by C. By Lititefield. ar a wonderful view of t plains from its canon walls afte negotiated on Tt has somet territory In the regi at the foot of the m | CHAUTAUQUA | 13 SPARKLING PROGRAMS STARTS JULY 15 LOOK AT THIS LIST ¢ —to havea — Appertit / F ) ) ATTRACTIONS “The Gorilla” Arthur D. Carpenter Zapata’s Novelty Troubadours G. Whitfield Ray The Harp Ensemble Company “Yes! anaes you.” GOOD appetite means a cheer | ful disposition. | You may have a good appetite | Madame Mabelle Wagner Shank } if the blood that goes constantly | ; . | to your vital organs fs pure. 8.8. and Company | purifies the blood—a good appetito | follows and you will have a clear | complexion will be strong, cheerful and healthy. | Don’t go on feeling up one day | Raymond B. Tolbert Dr. W. H. Nation nd | and down the noxt—hardly. sick Margarethe Johnson but never well—losing “pep, | ~ T | punch nbition, Hearty eaters J. Emerson Nye are t red-blooded men and, ae Women. Enjoy your food! 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