tidbits of glenrock, wheatland and douglas, 03/11/10

8
Neatest TIDBITS® STUDIES EPONYMS by Patricia L. Cook A word derived from the name of a person, wheth- er real or fictional, is known as an eponym. This week, Tidbits examines many common terms that trace their origin to an individual’s name. A tragic accident turned into a blessing for the blind for generations to come. In 1812, at the age of three, Louis Braille stabbed himself in the eye with a tool from his father’s workshop. The injury resulted in complete blindness in both eyes. At age ten, he began his schooling at the world’s first school for blind children, located in Paris. Braille was only 15 when he developed a system of raised dots to help the blind to read. Because he was an accomplished organist and cellist, he adapted the system to the reading of music as well. At 19, he was given a teaching position at the school. The first book in Braille was published when Louis was just 20 years old. During the 19th century, Joel Roberts Poinsett acted as U.S. ambassador to Mex-ico. Around 1825, he brought home a beau-tiful crimson plant native to Mexico referred to as Cuetlaxochitl by the Aztecs. After he introduced the flower to botanists, it was given the name poinsettia. Poinsettias are now a $225 million business each holiday season. turn the page for more! Q: How does Einstein begin a story? A: Once upon a space-time... OVER 4 MILLION Readers Weekly Nationwide! FREE ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ©2006 Published and Distributed Weekly by Alimon Publishing, LLC • www.tidbitswyoming.com • 307-473-8661 Glenrock, Douglas & Wheatland The Neatest Little Paper Ever Read Issue #302 Check out our great selection of Wines! 1812 East Richards, Douglas Marlboro’s Camels Virginia Slims Old Gold’s Shields Malibu Flavored Rum 750 ml $13.99 Smirnoff Twist Flavered Vodka 750 ml $10.99 Jose Cuervo Especial Tequila Gold 759 ml $16.89 Segram’s 7 Crown 750 ml $9.89 Kahlua All Flavors 750 ml $14.89 Wine Tasting Friday’s 4 - 7 pm T.G.I F Friday’s On the Rocks Berry Mojito 750 ml $4.99 March SPECIALS March 11 - March 17, 2010 (307) 358-3636 247 Russell Ave., Douglas www.kktyonline.com 1450 Riverbend Drive, Douglas, WY 82633 Phone: 307/358-9790 Nasreen D. Keyl, PA-C will be starting at Register Cliff Rural Health Clinic in February 2010. Nasreen Keyl is a transplant from Montana but originally hails from Chicago. She is a recent graduate from the University of Washington – MEDEX Northwest. Nasreen is excited to be a part of the Register Cliff Rural Health Clinic and the Guernsey community for several reasons. Most of which is the quality of life and the one on one contact she will have with her patients. Before pursuing her Physician Assistant Certification, Nasreen was an EMT in Montana for six years. She also has experience caring for the elderly as a Certified Nurse’s Assistant. Nasreen really enjoys caring for the geriatric population, specifically those with type 2 diabetes. Please call 307-836-3009 to schedule an appoint- ment with her today! March 28 • 1 - 3 pm WEDDING & PROM!

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Weekly paper full of fun trivia, facts, puzzels, crosswords etc.

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Page 1: Tidbits of Glenrock, Wheatland and Douglas, 03/11/10

FREEThe Neatest Little Paper Ever Read

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ©2006

OVER 4 MILLION

Readers WeeklyNationwide!

1st Quarter 2010Week 12

March 14 - 20Page 1

TABLE OF CONTENTSISSUE 2010.12

Eponymspages 1-4

Music Legend:Buddy Holly

pages 5-6

You Need A Hobby!pages 7-8

Publish a Paper in Your AreaWANT TO RUN YOUR OWN BUSINESS?

We provide the opportunity for success!

Call 1.800.523.3096 (U.S.)

1.866.631.1567 (CAN)www.tidbitsweekly.com

TIDBITS® STUDIES

EPONYMSby Patricia L. Cook

A word derived from the name of a person, wheth-er real or fictional, is known as an eponym. This week, Tidbits examines many common terms that trace their origin to an individual’s name.• A tragic accident turned into a blessing for the

blind for generations to come. In 1812, at the age of three, Louis Braille stabbed himself in the eye with a tool from his father’s workshop. The injury resulted in complete blindness in both eyes. At age ten, he began his schooling at the world’s first school for blind children, located in Paris. Braille was only 15 when he developed a system of raised dots to help the blind to read. Because he was an accomplished organist and cellist, he adapted the system to the reading of music as well. At 19, he was given a teaching position at the school. The first book in Braille was published when Louis was just 20 years old.

• During the 19th century, Joel Roberts Poinsett acted as U.S. ambassador to Mex-ico. Around 1825, he brought home a beau-tiful crimson plant native to Mexico referred to as Cuetlaxochitl by the Aztecs. After he introduced the flower to botanists, it was given the name poinsettia. Poinsettias are now a $225 million business each holiday season.

turn the page for more!

Q: How does Einstein begin a story?

A: Once upon a space-time...

FREEThe Neatest Little Paper Ever Read

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ©2006

OVER 4 MILLION

Readers WeeklyNationwide!

FREEThe Neatest Little Paper Ever Read

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ©2006

OVER 4 MILLION

Readers WeeklyNationwide! FREE

The Neatest Little Paper Ever Read

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ©2006

OVER 4 MILLION

Readers WeeklyNationwide!

Published and Distributed Weekly by Alimon Publishing, LLC • www.tidbitswyoming.com • 307-473-8661

Glenrock, Douglas & WheatlandThe Neatest Little Paper Ever Read Issue #302

Check out our great

selection of Wines!

1 8 1 2 E a s t R i c h a r d s , D o u g l a s

Marlboro’sCamels

Virginia SlimsOld Gold’s

Shields

MalibuFlavored

Rum750 ml$13.99

Smirnoff Twist

Flavered Vodka750 ml$10.99

Jose CuervoEspecial

Tequila Gold759 ml$16.89

Segram’s7 Crown

750 ml$9.89

KahluaAll Flavors

750 ml$14.89

Wine TastingFriday’s4 - 7 pm

T.G.I FFriday’s On the

Rocks Berry Mojito750 ml$4.99

MarchSPECIALS

March 11 - March 17, 2010

4th Quarter 2006Week 41

Oct 8 - Oct 14

TABLE OF CONTENTS

National Boss Day pages 1-4

Debtors’ Rights pages 5-6

Fifty-Two Pick-Up pages 7-8

Front PageIf you leave work late, no one will notice. If you leave work early, you’ll bump

into the boss in the parking lot.

TIDBITS GETS FIRED UP ABOUT

NATIONAL BOSS DAYby Stanley Drummond

Bosses are people, too. (Really!) And every year on October 16, America pays tribute to them.• Actually, National Boss Day was created in

1958 by an Illinois secretary named Patricia Haroski. She chose October 16 because it was her father’s birthday. Her father also happened to be her boss at the time. Nevertheless, she felt that bosses in general were underappreciated, and registered the date with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce as an official observance.

• Interestingly enough, a 2005 survey done by an international human resources consulting firm revealed that the majority of employees would not trade places with their boss. The primary reason given was the change that would result between them and their co-workers. They could no longer ignore or laugh at any slackers in their department; they’d be responsible for any poor performers.

• Hallmark started selling Boss Day cards in 1979. While they don’t reveal actual sales figures, they do disclose that the “holiday” is poised to break into the list of top 10 card-send-ing events within the next few years.

turn the page for more!

laugh a bit with

(307) 358-3636 247 Russell Ave., Douglas

www.kktyonline.com

1450 Riverbend Drive,Douglas, WY 82633

Phone: 307/358-9790

Nasreen D.Keyl, PA-C

will be starting at

Register Cliff Rural

Health Clinic in

February 2010.

Nasreen Keyl is a transplant from Montana but originallyhails from Chicago. She is a recent graduate from theUniversity of Washington – MEDEX Northwest.Nasreen is excited to be a part of the Register CliffRural Health Clinic and the Guernsey community forseveral reasons. Most of which is the quality of life andthe one on one contact she will have with her patients.Before pursuing her Physician Assistant Certification,Nasreen was an EMT in Montana forsix years. She also hasexperience caring for theelderly as a Certified Nurse’sAssistant. Nasreen reallyenjoys caring for the geriatricpopulation, specifically thosewith type 2 diabetes.

Please call

307-836-3009 to

schedule an appoint-

ment with her today!

March 28 • 1 - 3 pm

WEDDING & PROM!

Page 2: Tidbits of Glenrock, Wheatland and Douglas, 03/11/10

Tidbits of Glenrock, Douglas & Wheatland Page 2 March 11 - March 17, 2010 March 11 - March 17, 2010 March 11 - March 17, 2010

1st Quarter 2010Week 12

March 14 - 20Page 2

EPONYMS (continued):

• Several botanists have lent their name to plants and flowers. The colorful zinnia takes its name from a German botanist born in 1727, Johann Zinn. The Cape Jessamine, commonly known as the gardenia, honors a Scottish-American botanist, Alexander Garden. Anders Dahl, born in 1751 in Sweden, is the source of the designation for the vibrant perennial dahlia.

• A Civil War general’s sense of style gave way to a term we use for facial hair. General Ambrose Burnside sported an unusual facial hair style, with his moustache joined to the hair in front of his ears. Originally called burnsides, they were later renamed sideburns.

• Although German chemist Robert Bunsen developed the best-known antidote against arsenic poisoning to date, and was a pioneer in using electrolysis to produce pure metals, he is remembered mostly for his design of a gas burner for use in the laboratory. His invention, which provided a very hot and clean flame, is known as the Bunsen burner.

• A young French acrobat was responsible for designing a skin-tight garment that made it easier to perform his stunts as well as show off his muscular physique. Jules Leotard called the item a maillot, but shortly after his death, people began to call it a leotard. Leotard was the first to perform a mid-air somersault and to jump from one trapeze bar to another. He was also the subject of the 1867 song, “The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze.” His death at the young age of 28 had nothing to do with his risky career, but rather was likely due to smallpox or cholera.

• An artillery shell filled with small bullets designed to scatter a shower of shot and fragments was the brainstorm of Henry Shrapnel, an English officer. He invented the shrapnel shell for cannons in 1784.

1st Quarter 2010Week 12

March 14 - 20Page 3

EPONYMS (continued):

• The French ambassador to Portugal in 1559 was a 29-year-old man named Jean Nicot. Sent to Portugal on a diplomatic trip, he returned with tobacco plants, and introduced them to the French court. As more and more of the upper crust of Paris used the plant, Nicot gained recognition, and the plant began to be referred to as Nicotina. As the years went by, the word nicotine became the term for just the active ingredient.

• When a group of people take the law into their own hands, it’s often referred to as a lynch mob. This term takes its name from Charles Lynch, an 18th-century American revolutionary who ran his own private court, punishing those loyal to England at the time of the American Revolution.

• Outstanding achievements in the theater are rewarded with Tony Awards, named in honor of Antoinette “Tony” Perry. At a young age, Tony determined she wanted to be an actress and made her acting debut in 1905. She thrived in her stage career until 1927, when she suffered a stroke and its resulting facial paralysis. She left the stage for the position of director, as well as working toward establishing a training school for those desiring to enter the profession. Upon her death, because of her many contributions to theater, an annual awards ceremony was launched in her honor. The first Tony Awards were bestowed in 1947.

• A Presbyterian minister who was an advocate of healthy living touted the use of coarse wheat flour because of its high fiber content. Sylvester Graham, an ardent vegetarian, is credited with the invention of graham crackers, named for the flour he regularly promoted as more nutritious and healthy.

1st Quarter 2010Week 12

March 14 - 20Page 3

EPONYMS (continued):

• The French ambassador to Portugal in 1559 was a 29-year-old man named Jean Nicot. Sent to Portugal on a diplomatic trip, he returned with tobacco plants, and introduced them to the French court. As more and more of the upper crust of Paris used the plant, Nicot gained recognition, and the plant began to be referred to as Nicotina. As the years went by, the word nicotine became the term for just the active ingredient.

• When a group of people take the law into their own hands, it’s often referred to as a lynch mob. This term takes its name from Charles Lynch, an 18th-century American revolutionary who ran his own private court, punishing those loyal to England at the time of the American Revolution.

• Outstanding achievements in the theater are rewarded with Tony Awards, named in honor of Antoinette “Tony” Perry. At a young age, Tony determined she wanted to be an actress and made her acting debut in 1905. She thrived in her stage career until 1927, when she suffered a stroke and its resulting facial paralysis. She left the stage for the position of director, as well as working toward establishing a training school for those desiring to enter the profession. Upon her death, because of her many contributions to theater, an annual awards ceremony was launched in her honor. The first Tony Awards were bestowed in 1947.

• A Presbyterian minister who was an advocate of healthy living touted the use of coarse wheat flour because of its high fiber content. Sylvester Graham, an ardent vegetarian, is credited with the invention of graham crackers, named for the flour he regularly promoted as more nutritious and healthy.

1st Quarter 2010Week 12

March 14 - 20Page 2

EPONYMS (continued):

• Several botanists have lent their name to plants and flowers. The colorful zinnia takes its name from a German botanist born in 1727, Johann Zinn. The Cape Jessamine, commonly known as the gardenia, honors a Scottish-American botanist, Alexander Garden. Anders Dahl, born in 1751 in Sweden, is the source of the designation for the vibrant perennial dahlia.

• A Civil War general’s sense of style gave way to a term we use for facial hair. General Ambrose Burnside sported an unusual facial hair style, with his moustache joined to the hair in front of his ears. Originally called burnsides, they were later renamed sideburns.

• Although German chemist Robert Bunsen developed the best-known antidote against arsenic poisoning to date, and was a pioneer in using electrolysis to produce pure metals, he is remembered mostly for his design of a gas burner for use in the laboratory. His invention, which provided a very hot and clean flame, is known as the Bunsen burner.

• A young French acrobat was responsible for designing a skin-tight garment that made it easier to perform his stunts as well as show off his muscular physique. Jules Leotard called the item a maillot, but shortly after his death, people began to call it a leotard. Leotard was the first to perform a mid-air somersault and to jump from one trapeze bar to another. He was also the subject of the 1867 song, “The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze.” His death at the young age of 28 had nothing to do with his risky career, but rather was likely due to smallpox or cholera.

• An artillery shell filled with small bullets designed to scatter a shower of shot and fragments was the brainstorm of Henry Shrapnel, an English officer. He invented the shrapnel shell for cannons in 1784.

Page 3: Tidbits of Glenrock, Wheatland and Douglas, 03/11/10

March 11 - March 17, 2010 Page 3Tidbits of Glenrock, Douglas & Wheatland March 11 - March 17, 2010

ANSWERS

Advertise in.....

1502 East 2nd Street307-473-8661

[email protected]

www.greinermotorco-douglas.com

MAGIC MAZE SPONSORED BY:

Q: How does Einstein begin a story?

A: Once upon a space-time...

1. John L. Mason invented the Ma-son jar in 1858.2. Gian Giacomo Girolamo Casanova

1. Hooligan, taken from an Irish thief named Patrick Hooligan.2. Jim Bowie3. Rudolf Diesel4. Christian Doppler5. John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich.

Billy Crystal...3/14/1947

Eva Longoria Parker...3/15/1975

Jerry Lewis...3/16/1926

Rob Lowe...3/17/1964

Queen Latifah...3/18/1970

Glenn Close...3/19/1947

Lady GaGa...3/20/1986

This word means: somebody or something with the same name as somebody else

Spring1st Quarter 2010

Week 12

Are you conserving water whenever you can? Turn off the water while brushing your teeth. If you’ve boiled vegetables for dinner, pour the remaining water in your fl owerpots. Put a bottle of water in your toilet tank to conserve water. Try capturing rain water in a barrel and use it to water your garden.

3/14 Daylight Savings Time Begins3/15 Ides of March3/16 St. Urho’s Day3/17 St. Patrick’s Day3/18 Absolutely Incredible Kid Day3/19 San Juan Capistrano Day3/20 Vernal Equinox

1. Who was the person who, in 1858, invented a jar with a threaded screw-top, lid, and rubber ring?

2. What 18th century Italian writer’s name has become synonymous with the word “woman-izer”?

1. Arthur Conan Doyle was one of the fi rst to use this word to mean a thug or hoodlum. What was it?

2. What American pioneer, killed at the Alamo, is famous for his large-bladed weapon?

3. Name the German mechanical engineer responsible for inventing an internal combustion engine whose fuel is ignited without a spark.

4. Which Austrian mathematician/physicist put forth a famous principle on his experimentatio with sound waves and frequencies?

5. What English nobleman took a great liking to meat tucked between two pieces of bread?

“Live without seeing,but be what you are.”

--Louis Braille

N A M E S A K E

M E S K A N A E

Where would jazz be without the invention of a young Belgian instrument maker named Adol-phe Sax? Sax fi rst exhibited his invention in Brussels in 1841. However, the new wind in-strument was slow to gain popularity, and Sax didn’t obtain a patent until 1846 and declared bankruptcy three times during his lifetime.

MARCH ISNATIONAL CRAFT MONTH

birthstone: aquamarine fl ower: daffodil

A small piece of sodium that lived in a test tube fell in love with a Bunsen burner.

“Oh, Bunsen! My fl ame! I melt whenever I see you !” exclaimed the sodium.

“It’s just a phase you’re going through,” replied the Bunsen burner.

If you want to cover your financial community like a blanket, each of your staff must attend a different organization or association event. When using The Clusters your staff will return to your office with enough information to Bomb your Business. If each of your staff follows The Clusters week after week, month after month and year after year, your competition will only see your contrail. No one can make a move in your community without your firm discovering this productive information first. When you are number one with productive information, you are number one with prosperity.

Sewing a community quilt

ORGANIZATIONS ARE DIFFERENT

France’s fi nance minister in 1759 infl icted very severe economic requirements on citizens, and the people began connecting his name, Etienne de Silhouette, with those things done cheaply. When an artistic likeness of a person was fi lled in with black rather than with the details of an expensive portrait, these portraits came to be known as silhouettes.

Q: How does Einstein begin a story?

A: Once upon a space-time...

1. John L. Mason invented the Ma-son jar in 1858.2. Gian Giacomo Girolamo Casanova

1. Hooligan, taken from an Irish thief named Patrick Hooligan.2. Jim Bowie3. Rudolf Diesel4. Christian Doppler5. John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich.

Billy Crystal...3/14/1947

Eva Longoria Parker...3/15/1975

Jerry Lewis...3/16/1926

Rob Lowe...3/17/1964

Queen Latifah...3/18/1970

Glenn Close...3/19/1947

Lady GaGa...3/20/1986

This word means: somebody or something with the same name as somebody else

Spring1st Quarter 2010

Week 12

Are you conserving water whenever you can? Turn off the water while brushing your teeth. If you’ve boiled vegetables for dinner, pour the remaining water in your fl owerpots. Put a bottle of water in your toilet tank to conserve water. Try capturing rain water in a barrel and use it to water your garden.

3/14 Daylight Savings Time Begins3/15 Ides of March3/16 St. Urho’s Day3/17 St. Patrick’s Day3/18 Absolutely Incredible Kid Day3/19 San Juan Capistrano Day3/20 Vernal Equinox

1. Who was the person who, in 1858, invented a jar with a threaded screw-top, lid, and rubber ring?

2. What 18th century Italian writer’s name has become synonymous with the word “woman-izer”?

1. Arthur Conan Doyle was one of the fi rst to use this word to mean a thug or hoodlum. What was it?

2. What American pioneer, killed at the Alamo, is famous for his large-bladed weapon?

3. Name the German mechanical engineer responsible for inventing an internal combustion engine whose fuel is ignited without a spark.

4. Which Austrian mathematician/physicist put forth a famous principle on his experimentatio with sound waves and frequencies?

5. What English nobleman took a great liking to meat tucked between two pieces of bread?

“Live without seeing,but be what you are.”

--Louis Braille

N A M E S A K E

M E S K A N A E

Where would jazz be without the invention of a young Belgian instrument maker named Adol-phe Sax? Sax fi rst exhibited his invention in Brussels in 1841. However, the new wind in-strument was slow to gain popularity, and Sax didn’t obtain a patent until 1846 and declared bankruptcy three times during his lifetime.

MARCH ISNATIONAL CRAFT MONTH

birthstone: aquamarine fl ower: daffodil

A small piece of sodium that lived in a test tube fell in love with a Bunsen burner.

“Oh, Bunsen! My fl ame! I melt whenever I see you !” exclaimed the sodium.

“It’s just a phase you’re going through,” replied the Bunsen burner.

If you want to cover your financial community like a blanket, each of your staff must attend a different organization or association event. When using The Clusters your staff will return to your office with enough information to Bomb your Business. If each of your staff follows The Clusters week after week, month after month and year after year, your competition will only see your contrail. No one can make a move in your community without your firm discovering this productive information first. When you are number one with productive information, you are number one with prosperity.

Sewing a community quilt

ORGANIZATIONS ARE DIFFERENT

France’s fi nance minister in 1759 infl icted very severe economic requirements on citizens, and the people began connecting his name, Etienne de Silhouette, with those things done cheaply. When an artistic likeness of a person was fi lled in with black rather than with the details of an expensive portrait, these portraits came to be known as silhouettes.

Advertise in.....

1502 East 2nd Street • 307-473-8661www.tidbitswyoming.com • [email protected]

Page 4: Tidbits of Glenrock, Wheatland and Douglas, 03/11/10

Tidbits of Glenrock, Douglas & Wheatland Page 4 March 11 - March 17, 2010 March 11 - March 17, 2010 March 11 - March 17, 2010

Q: How does Einstein begin a story?

A: Once upon a space-time...

1. John L. Mason invented the Ma-son jar in 1858.2. Gian Giacomo Girolamo Casanova

1. Hooligan, taken from an Irish thief named Patrick Hooligan.2. Jim Bowie3. Rudolf Diesel4. Christian Doppler5. John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich.

Billy Crystal...3/14/1947

Eva Longoria Parker...3/15/1975

Jerry Lewis...3/16/1926

Rob Lowe...3/17/1964

Queen Latifah...3/18/1970

Glenn Close...3/19/1947

Lady GaGa...3/20/1986

This word means: somebody or something with the same name as somebody else

Spring1st Quarter 2010

Week 12

Are you conserving water whenever you can? Turn off the water while brushing your teeth. If you’ve boiled vegetables for dinner, pour the remaining water in your fl owerpots. Put a bottle of water in your toilet tank to conserve water. Try capturing rain water in a barrel and use it to water your garden.

3/14 Daylight Savings Time Begins3/15 Ides of March3/16 St. Urho’s Day3/17 St. Patrick’s Day3/18 Absolutely Incredible Kid Day3/19 San Juan Capistrano Day3/20 Vernal Equinox

1. Who was the person who, in 1858, invented a jar with a threaded screw-top, lid, and rubber ring?

2. What 18th century Italian writer’s name has become synonymous with the word “woman-izer”?

1. Arthur Conan Doyle was one of the fi rst to use this word to mean a thug or hoodlum. What was it?

2. What American pioneer, killed at the Alamo, is famous for his large-bladed weapon?

3. Name the German mechanical engineer responsible for inventing an internal combustion engine whose fuel is ignited without a spark.

4. Which Austrian mathematician/physicist put forth a famous principle on his experimentatio with sound waves and frequencies?

5. What English nobleman took a great liking to meat tucked between two pieces of bread?

“Live without seeing,but be what you are.”

--Louis Braille

N A M E S A K E

M E S K A N A E

Where would jazz be without the invention of a young Belgian instrument maker named Adol-phe Sax? Sax fi rst exhibited his invention in Brussels in 1841. However, the new wind in-strument was slow to gain popularity, and Sax didn’t obtain a patent until 1846 and declared bankruptcy three times during his lifetime.

MARCH ISNATIONAL CRAFT MONTH

birthstone: aquamarine fl ower: daffodil

A small piece of sodium that lived in a test tube fell in love with a Bunsen burner.

“Oh, Bunsen! My fl ame! I melt whenever I see you !” exclaimed the sodium.

“It’s just a phase you’re going through,” replied the Bunsen burner.

If you want to cover your financial community like a blanket, each of your staff must attend a different organization or association event. When using The Clusters your staff will return to your office with enough information to Bomb your Business. If each of your staff follows The Clusters week after week, month after month and year after year, your competition will only see your contrail. No one can make a move in your community without your firm discovering this productive information first. When you are number one with productive information, you are number one with prosperity.

Sewing a community quilt

ORGANIZATIONS ARE DIFFERENT

France’s fi nance minister in 1759 infl icted very severe economic requirements on citizens, and the people began connecting his name, Etienne de Silhouette, with those things done cheaply. When an artistic likeness of a person was fi lled in with black rather than with the details of an expensive portrait, these portraits came to be known as silhouettes.

Advertise in.....

1502 East 2nd Street307-473-8661

[email protected]

1540 East 2nd Street 307-265-7296

Star-K Tack & Feed and Glenrock Motorsports

307-436-2409 ● www.glenrockmotorsports.com

Billy CookSaddles and Tack

Featuring:

Great selection of GIFTS, ATVs,and FArm TAcK

Tues-Fri9am-6pm

Saturday9am-4pm

FREE SHOW

Shoreliner203 West Birch • Glenrock WY

Page 5: Tidbits of Glenrock, Wheatland and Douglas, 03/11/10

March 11 - March 17, 2010 Page 5Tidbits of Glenrock, Douglas & Wheatland March 11 - March 17, 2010

The latitude of Glenrock is 42.861N. The longitude is -105.871W.It is in the Mountain Standard time zone. Elevation is 5,020 feet. The estimated population, in 2003, was 2,274. Ancestry & family history: 26% of Glenrock residents repor t German ancestry, and 13% repor t Irish. Weekly Newspaper - The Glenrock Independent available Thursdays Weekly Free Paper - Tidbits of Eastern WY available Wednesdays Two Real Estate office Attractions•Fire & Ice- Live/Silent Auction, Dinner 1st Wed of Feb Annually•Ar t In The Park - 3rd Saturday of June Annually•Pioneer Jubilee - 3rd Saturday of June Annually•Yak About Festival - last Saturday of July Annually•Deer Creek Days - 1st weekend of August Annually•Fall Festival/Hunters BBQ/Barn Dance - last Saturday of Sept Annually•Truck & Tractor pulls•Glenrock Paleontological Museum•Glenrock Deer Creek Museum•Glenrock Golf Course•Hunting & Fishisg paradise•Glenrock historic sites

•Mormon Mines •Emigrant Crossing •Hayden Pioneer Monument •Glenrock Buffalo Jump •Hotel Higgins Glenrock has a beautiful park located near the union of Deer Creek and the Nor th Platte River. On the community’s southern edge, visitor’s can enjoy a campground and the community’s recreational complex, which includes a baseball diamond and a rodeo arena. The facilities are located near the banks of scenic Deer Creek. For more information on visiting Glenrock call: RAMS (307) 436-2409 or go to www.ramsglenrock.org for calendar of events and local businessesFor more information on visiting Converse County go to: http://conversecountytourism.com

Glenrock is a town in Converse County, Wyoming

Call Brenda Stark for details at 259-5010

Top 10 Video Rentals

1. Couples Retreat (PG-13) Vince Vaughn2. Zombieland (NR) Woody Harrelson3. The Time Traveler’s Wife (PG-13) Eric

Bana4. Love Happens (PG-13) Jennifer Anis-ton5. Surrogates (PG-13) Bruce Willis6. The Stepfather (NR) Dylan Walsh7. The Hurt Locker (R) Jeremy Renner8. The Hangover (R) Bradley Cooper9. Gamer (R) Gerard Butler10. Amelia (PG) Hilary Swank

Top 10 DVD Sales

1. Couples Retreat (PG-13) (Universal)2. The Time Traveler’s Wife (PG-13) (New

Line)3. Zombieland (NR) (Sony)4. Michael Jackson’s This Is It (PG) (Sony)5. The Hangover (R) (Warner)6. Up (PG) (Buena Vista)7. The Stepfather (NR) (Sony)8. Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs (PG) (Sony)9. The Penguins of Madagascar: Opera-tion DVD Premiere (NR) (DreamWorks)10. The Hurt Locker (R) (Summit)(c) 2010 King Features Synd., Inc.

Page 6: Tidbits of Glenrock, Wheatland and Douglas, 03/11/10

Tidbits of Glenrock, Douglas & Wheatland Page 6 March 11 - March 17, 2010 March 11 - March 17, 2010 March 11 - March 17, 2010

1st Quarter 2010Week 12

March 14 - 20Page 7

YOU NEED A HOBBY!Everybody needs a hobby, a pastime they enjoy, something to collect. Tidbits looks at both the common and unusual choices that people make.• Those who collect comic books are called

pannapictagraphists. Until recently, actor Nicolas Cage was an avid collector, but he auctioned off his collection for over $1.6 million. His collection included the first copy of Superman’s appearance, which sold for $86,250, and the Detective Comic which introduced Batman’s sidekick Robin , which brought in $132,250. Other celebrity collectors include Samuel L. Jackson and Ben Affleck. Affleck, fond of Daredevil comics since childhood, landed the title role in the 2003 film Daredevil.

• Philatelists enjoy studying and collecting stamps. An avid philatelist might know that the first postage stamp was called a Penny Black, and was issued in Great Britain in 1840, featuring the image of Queen Victoria. Beatle John Lennon began collecting stamps as a young boy. Visitors to the National Postal Museum at the Smithsonian Institute can view his 145-page album containing more than 550 stamps, with his signature on the flyleaf.

• Brandophilists, those who collect cigar bands, are pretty much a dying breed. Although the hobby was very popular in the early 1900s, it began to die out by the 1930s. The quality of cigar bands declined after the 1920s, since they were produced by a less expensive printing process. Except for a very few exceptions, a cigar band collection isn’t worth very much.

• Brent Dixon of Valdosta, Georgia is an avid copoclephilist. He started collecting key chains in 2001 and has now amassed close to 41,500.

• From wooden to bisque, from Barbie to Madame Alexander, a plangonologist knows the score. This term refers to one who collects dolls.

Earn Extra Cash With Flea Markets

If you want to make some extra cash, investigate spring and summer flea markets. Whether it's a one-time thing (perhaps to de-clutter) or as a potential source of ongoing income, flea markets have one thing that yard sales don't: You're likely to have many more people wandering through.There's quite a variety of flea-market venues. Some are run every weekend, others once a month. The size of spaces vary. Tables are frequently provided (for as little as $10 a day), and you bring a canopy, should you want one. Indoor locked venues often let you leave your

merchandise there overnight.Here's what to do in advance:--If you have a choice of locations for your table, check the traffic patterns of people walking through. Where will you get the most passersby?--Ask about setup and takedown times, limits on items that can be sold, and any discounts for paying in advance for multiple weekends.--Note what the other vendors are selling and at what price. You'll need to be competitive. Your pricing depends on what your intentions are: Do you want to de-clutter and make fast cash? Or do you want to set up a regular business?--Decide whether you want to stick to one type of merchandise or put out a variety. You'll find anything and everything at a flea market.--Arrange for help. Have at least one other person at your booth or table to keep an eye on the cashbox, make transactions and relieve you when needed.--Gather your supplies:• Plastic bags, so your buyers can carry away their purchases.• Pricing stickers.

• Pen and paper.• Tape to hang any posters.• Scissors.• A table cover -- a plastic or paper picnic table cover will be perfect.• A canopy, if it's allowed at that venue (ask around and see if you can borrow one).• A chair.• Portable shelving -- for smaller items you don't want on the table.• Change and small bills.If you make enough money on a trial weekend, consider doing it on a regular basis. You'll learn over time what will sell. Scout yard sales and businesses that are closing for items you can sell at a profit, or decide on an unfilled niche.

David Uffington regrets that he cannot personally answer reader questions, but will incorporate them into his column whenever possible. Write to him in care of King Features Weekly Service, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475, or send e-mail to [email protected].

by David Uffington

100 Boxelder Road • Glenrock • 307-436-2742

Page 7: Tidbits of Glenrock, Wheatland and Douglas, 03/11/10

March 11 - March 17, 2010 Page 7Tidbits of Glenrock, Douglas & Wheatland March 11 - March 17, 2010 Page 4 Tidbits of Casper - For Advertising call 307-473-8661 • 161 South Fenway, Casper, WY March 11 - 17, 2010

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SPORTINGGOODS

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Page 8: Tidbits of Glenrock, Wheatland and Douglas, 03/11/10

Tidbits of Glenrock, Douglas & Wheatland Page 8 March 11 - March 17, 2010 March 11 - March 17, 2010

Q: How does Einstein begin a story?

A: Once upon a space-time...

1. John L. Mason invented the Ma-son jar in 1858.2. Gian Giacomo Girolamo Casanova

1. Hooligan, taken from an Irish thief named Patrick Hooligan.2. Jim Bowie3. Rudolf Diesel4. Christian Doppler5. John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich.

Billy Crystal...3/14/1947

Eva Longoria Parker...3/15/1975

Jerry Lewis...3/16/1926

Rob Lowe...3/17/1964

Queen Latifah...3/18/1970

Glenn Close...3/19/1947

Lady GaGa...3/20/1986

This word means: somebody or something with the same name as somebody else

Spring1st Quarter 2010

Week 12

Are you conserving water whenever you can? Turn off the water while brushing your teeth. If you’ve boiled vegetables for dinner, pour the remaining water in your fl owerpots. Put a bottle of water in your toilet tank to conserve water. Try capturing rain water in a barrel and use it to water your garden.

3/14 Daylight Savings Time Begins3/15 Ides of March3/16 St. Urho’s Day3/17 St. Patrick’s Day3/18 Absolutely Incredible Kid Day3/19 San Juan Capistrano Day3/20 Vernal Equinox

1. Who was the person who, in 1858, invented a jar with a threaded screw-top, lid, and rubber ring?

2. What 18th century Italian writer’s name has become synonymous with the word “woman-izer”?

1. Arthur Conan Doyle was one of the fi rst to use this word to mean a thug or hoodlum. What was it?

2. What American pioneer, killed at the Alamo, is famous for his large-bladed weapon?

3. Name the German mechanical engineer responsible for inventing an internal combustion engine whose fuel is ignited without a spark.

4. Which Austrian mathematician/physicist put forth a famous principle on his experimentatio with sound waves and frequencies?

5. What English nobleman took a great liking to meat tucked between two pieces of bread?

“Live without seeing,but be what you are.”

--Louis Braille

N A M E S A K E

M E S K A N A E

Where would jazz be without the invention of a young Belgian instrument maker named Adol-phe Sax? Sax fi rst exhibited his invention in Brussels in 1841. However, the new wind in-strument was slow to gain popularity, and Sax didn’t obtain a patent until 1846 and declared bankruptcy three times during his lifetime.

MARCH ISNATIONAL CRAFT MONTH

birthstone: aquamarine fl ower: daffodil

A small piece of sodium that lived in a test tube fell in love with a Bunsen burner.

“Oh, Bunsen! My fl ame! I melt whenever I see you !” exclaimed the sodium.

“It’s just a phase you’re going through,” replied the Bunsen burner.

If you want to cover your financial community like a blanket, each of your staff must attend a different organization or association event. When using The Clusters your staff will return to your office with enough information to Bomb your Business. If each of your staff follows The Clusters week after week, month after month and year after year, your competition will only see your contrail. No one can make a move in your community without your firm discovering this productive information first. When you are number one with productive information, you are number one with prosperity.

Sewing a community quilt

ORGANIZATIONS ARE DIFFERENT

France’s fi nance minister in 1759 infl icted very severe economic requirements on citizens, and the people began connecting his name, Etienne de Silhouette, with those things done cheaply. When an artistic likeness of a person was fi lled in with black rather than with the details of an expensive portrait, these portraits came to be known as silhouettes.

Q: How does Einstein begin a story?

A: Once upon a space-time...

1. John L. Mason invented the Ma-son jar in 1858.2. Gian Giacomo Girolamo Casanova

1. Hooligan, taken from an Irish thief named Patrick Hooligan.2. Jim Bowie3. Rudolf Diesel4. Christian Doppler5. John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich.

Billy Crystal...3/14/1947

Eva Longoria Parker...3/15/1975

Jerry Lewis...3/16/1926

Rob Lowe...3/17/1964

Queen Latifah...3/18/1970

Glenn Close...3/19/1947

Lady GaGa...3/20/1986

This word means: somebody or something with the same name as somebody else

Spring1st Quarter 2010

Week 12

Are you conserving water whenever you can? Turn off the water while brushing your teeth. If you’ve boiled vegetables for dinner, pour the remaining water in your fl owerpots. Put a bottle of water in your toilet tank to conserve water. Try capturing rain water in a barrel and use it to water your garden.

3/14 Daylight Savings Time Begins3/15 Ides of March3/16 St. Urho’s Day3/17 St. Patrick’s Day3/18 Absolutely Incredible Kid Day3/19 San Juan Capistrano Day3/20 Vernal Equinox

1. Who was the person who, in 1858, invented a jar with a threaded screw-top, lid, and rubber ring?

2. What 18th century Italian writer’s name has become synonymous with the word “woman-izer”?

1. Arthur Conan Doyle was one of the fi rst to use this word to mean a thug or hoodlum. What was it?

2. What American pioneer, killed at the Alamo, is famous for his large-bladed weapon?

3. Name the German mechanical engineer responsible for inventing an internal combustion engine whose fuel is ignited without a spark.

4. Which Austrian mathematician/physicist put forth a famous principle on his experimentatio with sound waves and frequencies?

5. What English nobleman took a great liking to meat tucked between two pieces of bread?

“Live without seeing,but be what you are.”

--Louis Braille

N A M E S A K E

M E S K A N A E

Where would jazz be without the invention of a young Belgian instrument maker named Adol-phe Sax? Sax fi rst exhibited his invention in Brussels in 1841. However, the new wind in-strument was slow to gain popularity, and Sax didn’t obtain a patent until 1846 and declared bankruptcy three times during his lifetime.

MARCH ISNATIONAL CRAFT MONTH

birthstone: aquamarine fl ower: daffodil

A small piece of sodium that lived in a test tube fell in love with a Bunsen burner.

“Oh, Bunsen! My fl ame! I melt whenever I see you !” exclaimed the sodium.

“It’s just a phase you’re going through,” replied the Bunsen burner.

If you want to cover your financial community like a blanket, each of your staff must attend a different organization or association event. When using The Clusters your staff will return to your office with enough information to Bomb your Business. If each of your staff follows The Clusters week after week, month after month and year after year, your competition will only see your contrail. No one can make a move in your community without your firm discovering this productive information first. When you are number one with productive information, you are number one with prosperity.

Sewing a community quilt

ORGANIZATIONS ARE DIFFERENT

France’s fi nance minister in 1759 infl icted very severe economic requirements on citizens, and the people began connecting his name, Etienne de Silhouette, with those things done cheaply. When an artistic likeness of a person was fi lled in with black rather than with the details of an expensive portrait, these portraits came to be known as silhouettes.

Call Brenda Stark for details at 259-5010

Q: How does Einstein begin a story?

A: Once upon a space-time...

1. John L. Mason invented the Ma-son jar in 1858.2. Gian Giacomo Girolamo Casanova

1. Hooligan, taken from an Irish thief named Patrick Hooligan.2. Jim Bowie3. Rudolf Diesel4. Christian Doppler5. John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich.

Billy Crystal...3/14/1947

Eva Longoria Parker...3/15/1975

Jerry Lewis...3/16/1926

Rob Lowe...3/17/1964

Queen Latifah...3/18/1970

Glenn Close...3/19/1947

Lady GaGa...3/20/1986

This word means: somebody or something with the same name as somebody else

Spring1st Quarter 2010

Week 12

Are you conserving water whenever you can? Turn off the water while brushing your teeth. If you’ve boiled vegetables for dinner, pour the remaining water in your fl owerpots. Put a bottle of water in your toilet tank to conserve water. Try capturing rain water in a barrel and use it to water your garden.

3/14 Daylight Savings Time Begins3/15 Ides of March3/16 St. Urho’s Day3/17 St. Patrick’s Day3/18 Absolutely Incredible Kid Day3/19 San Juan Capistrano Day3/20 Vernal Equinox

1. Who was the person who, in 1858, invented a jar with a threaded screw-top, lid, and rubber ring?

2. What 18th century Italian writer’s name has become synonymous with the word “woman-izer”?

1. Arthur Conan Doyle was one of the fi rst to use this word to mean a thug or hoodlum. What was it?

2. What American pioneer, killed at the Alamo, is famous for his large-bladed weapon?

3. Name the German mechanical engineer responsible for inventing an internal combustion engine whose fuel is ignited without a spark.

4. Which Austrian mathematician/physicist put forth a famous principle on his experimentatio with sound waves and frequencies?

5. What English nobleman took a great liking to meat tucked between two pieces of bread?

“Live without seeing,but be what you are.”

--Louis Braille

N A M E S A K E

M E S K A N A E

Where would jazz be without the invention of a young Belgian instrument maker named Adol-phe Sax? Sax fi rst exhibited his invention in Brussels in 1841. However, the new wind in-strument was slow to gain popularity, and Sax didn’t obtain a patent until 1846 and declared bankruptcy three times during his lifetime.

MARCH ISNATIONAL CRAFT MONTH

birthstone: aquamarine fl ower: daffodil

A small piece of sodium that lived in a test tube fell in love with a Bunsen burner.

“Oh, Bunsen! My fl ame! I melt whenever I see you !” exclaimed the sodium.

“It’s just a phase you’re going through,” replied the Bunsen burner.

If you want to cover your financial community like a blanket, each of your staff must attend a different organization or association event. When using The Clusters your staff will return to your office with enough information to Bomb your Business. If each of your staff follows The Clusters week after week, month after month and year after year, your competition will only see your contrail. No one can make a move in your community without your firm discovering this productive information first. When you are number one with productive information, you are number one with prosperity.

Sewing a community quilt

ORGANIZATIONS ARE DIFFERENT

France’s fi nance minister in 1759 infl icted very severe economic requirements on citizens, and the people began connecting his name, Etienne de Silhouette, with those things done cheaply. When an artistic likeness of a person was fi lled in with black rather than with the details of an expensive portrait, these portraits came to be known as silhouettes.