Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 31, 1923, Page 10

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)

er a a ) r c I ] i ] "| q PAGE TEN JUST 48 WORKING HOURS LEFT © TO WIN PRIZES ON BIC VOTES (Ce 1e4 from Page One.) your sleep—it won't hurt you and it will make you carry on. You must have it in your head to win ff you are to win. You've got to go and get what you want THEN GET ANOTHER. think you have every n you can get, go out and her and another. That “no more” may be tho deciding factor in your favor. Realize that later on the vote schedule is a third of what it is Know that what you do now After yor today counts really about double what it will later Can you be satisfied? Can you sit} idly by while someone else gets out and takes away from you the prize of your choice—the prize you know can be yours if you will it so? You You can win. You kmow you can. have it in you. You have the ability. You have friends, You have every- thing that counts. You, by your ef: fort, can t richer by 2,400. You can “cinch” your election now. What are you gol to do? BLUFFING NOT PERMITTED. Bluffing or the spreading of false rumors by contestants in an effort to discourage or bluff other contestants wlll not be tolerated, and any found this practice will be dis the discretion of the man. agement jately. The Tribune and the campaign ; Mrs. R. M. Taylor, Arminto, Wyo. | management is going to see that such | yy tactics are not used. ee > NEW CANDIDATES CAN WEN. janes Rane one An absolutely new candidate can, | “TS. Sylvia Nor by going to it in a big way right/F. R. Morris, west of town | now, establish himself or herself in| Fred Gibson, Basin, Wyo. . | the vote score to an extent that con-| Miss Myrtle Kirby, Gebo . sistent effort will win. Joseph Chaplin, Elk ..... Lprprenpienon ate — of-| Otto Bennard, Leo . AE fer of this short ion comes to * close at 10 o'clock Monday night, | irs. Jesse Wight, Crosby, Wyo. April 2, Just a few more cicuits of the big hand and the opportunity of | the big votes will be gone forever. In fact the vote schedule, after Mon- | day will be reduced—and three more material reductions will occur. THIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCE. | Wendover, Torrington, Guernsey, Monday is the blg day—10 o'clock} Wheatland, is the final hour of the big pe Aca cars and as many c: schedule. It's going to be a mighty| oo yded in this i important time for the candidates) sverded in this district. who expect to be the big prize win-| And the way to get the prize | votes ¢ ners. 2 . you have set your mind on is to se-| Nat Baker, Lusk, Wyo. cure the largest number of votes.| Rose Johnstone, Dougla Now is the easlest time to get votes; Miss Myrtle Froman, Salt Creck, —subscriptions you obtain during the| Hana Henry, I first perfod count the greatest num-| 4 tte the velzzese subscriptions =| 21 ys Johnson, Salt Creek, are the biggest in vote value.| Mrs. H. B. Sherwood, R. F. D. But don't pass up any oneyear sub-| Miss Ruth Shaw, Labonte, Wyo. scriptions either. They all count and| Miss Marjorie Smith, Glenroc count big these closing hours of the! Mrs. Polly T¢ big votes. R. Riley, R. F. D. ... rkerton, Wyo. v Charlotte Pfeiffer, R- F. D. . | Miss Mildred Gabus, Shoshoni, Wyo. ........- Bo vevccses District No. 5 District No. 5 includes all the territory outside of the city of Casper lying east of the city of Casper, including the following: alt Creek and all towns in vicinity. One or two of the sh prizes as there are active contestants will be Following is a list of those entered in this | testants will be awarded in this district. t for publication up until 1 y, Salt Creek, Wyo. . aylor, Sheridan, Wyo. . Che Casper Daily Cribune 486,050 605,400 316,000 500 544,000 5109700 Cheyenne, Gillette, Sheridan, Following is a list of all} st night. 605,400 | 625,800 | 601,400 ‘y 101,000 | 297,000 615,400 345,000 Some of the stories put out to date| | Make » Beebe tetera the ee Mrs. Gf Dunbar, Glendo, Wyo. .. 101,300 | are 80 culous and unbelievable friends and iMrs. De 1D ad * that they should be nailed immedi- first period finish—a winning finish. | 78 Pade ae Renae bene elas | Mrs, Fred Beleau, Salt Creek, Wyo. 599,775 | District No. 1 Mrs. Bob Davis, Buffalo .......... A 5,000 | A: itary : Mrs. Georgia Hungeford, Gillette 5,000 District No. 1 includes all the territory in that part of the city gia Hungeford, | 5,000 | of Casper south of Second street and east of Durbin street. One or) Mrs. L. M. O’Brien, Salt Creek Route . 431,0: two of the cars and as many cash prizes as there are active con-| Mrs. 2. B. Lamb, Wheatland, Wyo. ... 250,450 testants will be rded in this district. Following is a list of all|Mrs. Lulu © Koenig, Torrington, Wyo. 246,8) ion up unt Cc. Bass lice Barnett I’, Dumars Kear oe iche Davis Drazick A, W. Hobbs O, H. Meyer M, M. Meyer Bob Peebles Peach BR. Pearce eos Mollie A. Sullivan Miss Florence Ufheil Mrs. Ann Wilson Miss ellie McCash Mrs. ©. E, Marsh Mrs. J. G. Meginity Miss Mabry Zumwalt 5 Miss Mary Linden Utter . James 1). Morrison Earl ¢ Auna Ilageman .........> District No. 2 inc of Casper south of Second street and west of Durbin street. y cash prizes as there are active con- or two of the cars and as ma testants will be awarded in this district. votes cast for publication up until ‘ast night. Margaret All Britain Miss Maude Brink .. John Bush ....... Mrs. Harry L. Mrs. C. F. Castleman Mrs. Jennie ©: Miss Agnes Elliott YP. V. Hendricks Mrs. Helen How Tommy Kirkmeyer Mrs. J. B. Lintz Joseph Littlejohn Mrs. Har R. Manbeck Roland Moore ae Mrs, Nellie Rupp .....-+ Miss Virginia Satter .... Miss Betty Tolhurst Mrs. Florence Caffee L. H. Rate W. A. Jack of Casper north of Second street One or two of the ca testants will be awarded in this votes cast for publication up to Mrs. A. Bunnell Birdsall Broadway M. Bracey Caley ..... Helen Gardner ......+ Josephine Hyllestead . Hannah Harp O. F- Jacquot ac H. L. Kidder Claude Pyle Mrs. H. L. Pierson Mrs. Beula Sample Merle Sword ..... Mrs. Affa Maie Stodi Miss Reinie Vospette Worth G. Witt M. Harnan McBride (, Maxon District No. 4 incl of Casper lying north following: Powder River Franr er and all t Armint ull towns in vicinity. District No. 2 s all the territory in that part of the city District No. 3 District No. 3 includes all the territory in that part of the city rs and as many cash prizes as there are con District No. 4 nd west of the city of Casper, inci e, Cody, Lander, Riverton, Shoshone, Rock Springs, Kemmer- One or two of the cars and as many Mrs. Ruth Treland, Chugwater, Wyo. .. | homesites for people desirious of {m- | proving a small property where they | the same time make a neat profit IRRIGATED LAND TO BE OFFERED | FOR HOMESITES One-Acre Tracts to Be! Placed on Market by Harry Free. Forty acres of irrigated land repre- senting part of the old Carey ranch southwest of the city of Casper will be placed on sale in one-ecre tracts about the middle of next week, ac- cording to announcement by Harry Free, Realtor, who has taken over the marketing of these homesites. The tract lies near the Platte river in the neighborhood of the ranch pumping plant, Th small tracts will make {deal can indulge their gardening and ag- ricultural fancies to the limit and at from the products of such an enter- prise. All the land {s under ditch with ample water assured. It is within a few rrinutes ride cf the city and ts reache. over one of the main arteries of travel ou! of Casper. The offering is expected to prove one of the most popular yet presented to Casper homeseekers sit eS Sts ESSEN—Striking raliroad men will have to retur nto work or be expelled from occupied Germany, according to an order issued by Gen- eral De Goutte. il last night. | - . . . . 200 | 00 | 224,000 58,00¢ One Following is a list of all 300,500 } 936,000 | BY ALEXANDER HERMAN | Thirty-flve hundred years from now posterity, digging back into our en lightened civilization of today {s going to be disappointed. For the people of 1923 will leave a sad impression on the future gencrations. 5423 ts in A. D. who ng into our affairs, as we | are doing into those of King Tutank hamen, who ‘lived some 3500 years ago, will judge us not by our sky: radio, modern appliances, all a progressive age, but— what they find in the ceme 990,400 | Start, pr 980,400 is the opinion of Ambrose nsing. acting curator of the Egyp » Department of the Metropolits Museum of Art at New York, a man who has spent most of his life digging up the past of old Egypt. and west of Yellowstone highw district. Following is a list of all) “".6., putidings, models of architec: last night. | ture, expressions of art, will long 4 AMES F 409,000 | », passed into the limbo,” he says. “Instead of the sptendors of a Tut ankhamen, Mehenkwetre, or a Per. neb, we'll be rated by our cemeteries.’ Imagine it! How wo will suffer in comparison with our ancients, whose secrets, re- vealed by men like Lansing and How ard Carter, who spent 33 years exca vating for ont Pharaéh’s tomb, show t there was nothing slow about our cgyptian ancestors. They had breweries, where they mado real beer, without the interfer ence of a Volstead. They had boats, all kinds, for short spins, long tours or special excursions. They had dancing girls and a lot of convent ences. No Chickens—No Flivvers 480,000 207,000 97; 236,000} Ducks and geese were plentiful 162,000} But there weren't any chickens in those days. They didn’t miss them so 120,000 much though, for there weren’t any motorists, either. In such times as these Perneb was born down in Memphis (Egypt) 4650 years ago, He was one of the big men of his day, a politician who held Crowds of tourists photographing treasures being removed from the tomb of King Tutankhamen. Right: One of the ruins dug up in earlier excavations, in the Valley of the Kings. Left: Mehenkwetre, who lived long before Tut, seated In the cabin of. his pleasure boat with a blind harp. he territory outside the city limits ding the 0, Thermopolis, Worland, Greybull, h prize there as active contestants will be awarded in this| pt;his pieasne trict Follow is a list of all votes cast for publication up a high Office under the king. As until last night soon as he was old enough to work Mrs. £. G. Babbitt, Worland, Wyo. he started building his tomb. That Mrs. Doro’ Clarke, Powder River, W was the chief aim in life those days Mrs. Adelaide Elliott, Mills, Wyo. 4p have a Boag virial Piss: ; C. Wustad ; . Dt course, he ¢ et it interfere “ ay ile, “Ws with his social obligations. But ever = © Foster, Lander, Wyo. ‘ nie ‘ spare moment that. he could steal Miss 1 Logan, Greybull, Wyo : 610,100} trom his work, he went YQ Riverton, Wyc 5,000] graveyard and directed i Mart Nostrom, Thermopolis, Wyo 360,000! tions, When it WHAT WILL DIGGERS LEARN FOR US 3,000 YEARS HENCE? NOT MUCH masterpiece. Perneb hired priests and others to bring food and drink to his grave—to keep him going after death, according to the common bellef then. For a long time they stayed on the job, passing their duties to their de- scendants when they died. But event ually this care ceased and the tomb fell into neglect. It was discovered in 1918 and resurrected by Lansing. Now it stands in the Metropolitan Museum in New York with even the paint on ‘ts wa'ls intact. Nearby hang chunks of beef and other offer: ings which Perneb hadn't consumed, But Perneb didn’t hold a candle to Mehenkwetre, who was born some 650 years later. He, too, was a politician but he served King Mentuhotep IIL ay chancellor an\1 steward of the royal palace. Models Buried With Him When he died he wanted to carry on just as he Mved, Sp he had little wooden models made‘of his house, farm, garden, boats, brewery, gran: ary, fayorite girls and¥eervants and had them al buried with him. If his anticipation is being realized, he probably goes sailing up the rivers in the other world ‘most every day in @ different boat. “He even had a special kitchen boat for hia longer cruises, eo he wouldn't be bothered with the strong smells of cooking,” says Mrs. Russell Jones, assistant to Curator Lansing, who discovered the remarkable collection wht'e digging in Egypt in 1920, “And his cows, according to a well- known packer, would be rated on the exchange today_as ‘prime beef!" The accidental shifting of a rock led to the discovery of this remark able collection, After Frenchmen had prospected andsgiven up the search, Lansing and other Americans carried it on. Just as they were about to give it up, a worker noticed an end- less trickling of sand through a cra! betwoen two rocks. He moved them and there below lay the vast tomb of old Mehenkw “But none of these discovertes,”’ says Lansing, ‘approximate the vast treasure house now being dug up at Luxor. “Tutankhamen’s is tne first royal tomb to be found intact. Marauders got to most of the others before arch. aeologists, for the craft of the ghoul seerns to be as ancient as burial itself. “Digging there will soon have to be stopped for the warm weather is set- ting in. It "cannot be taken up again until fall. “But when the discoveries in the Valley of the Kings 1s completed, a new wealth of riches and information will be revealed.” But if we want the archaeologists of 3500 years hence to say nice things about us, we i better start trim. ming up our graveyards. ENGINEER DEAD IN TRAIN CRASH PORTLAND, Ore., March 31. — Engineer George Koontz was killed and the fireman and baggageman were injured when passenger train |No. 2 of the Spokane, Portland and | Seattle raflroad, which left here last night was derailed one and one half miles east of South Cheney, 17 miles west of Spokane, according to reports to railroad headquarters here today. All the cars were deratfled except two sleepers and the observation car. ——_— DENVER—Gold tn a vein ‘our feet wide was discovered in a mine at Cripple Creek, Colo. CHICHESTER S PILLS Biagio SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1923. Exceptions Prove the Rule- —So the old proverb goes. If this is true, and we think it is, we want to prove a rule to you. —Any motorist will tell you that as a rule tires are his greatest grief. Our proof of this rule is that our tires MASON TIRES ‘Are without grief. Wyoming Compression Tube and Tire Co. 426 East Second St. Phone 1125-M Counter Height Files That Increase Efficien a : B* building~your counters from Allstee/ filing units you gain not only the maximum storage capacity, but the exact division of space to suit the needs of your business,’ It is easy to rearrange your, counters at any time.’ ffice Furniture From the various Al/steel units you can select just the combination that meets your requirements. All the units stack snugly’ into a perfect counter, with linoleum top: We'll be glad to show you the complete line of Allsteel office furniture—desks, safes files, shelving, etc. Take a few minutes and look at ,the_ equipment -that belongs _with success. NEW STATIONERY DEPT. The Commercial Printing Co. 426 East Second St. Phone 2224

Other pages from this issue: