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PAGE TWO ELECTRICITY MAY UNCOVER MILLIONS Anchorage, Alaska use of electricity, generated coals umit mines of t! is one the plans wi of from LOUS: er gold be gravels of the Fairbanks the around n and in other live ¢ whe s ready samp porate pumping ¢ tly in cost by © pump. empl ad Sp proximal lle miles banks and distributed ov 0 square miles. ras retarded the this region. It i cheapness of th © icity would remove this o)- stacle. I One mine op of the dis trict reported th last year he tcok out more than $100,000, but made a profit of only $2,000, owing to the overhead cost With seemingly coal fields supplying fuel for win- ter generation, and the released water power of sununer producing electricity guring the open mon it is predicted that the next dec will upplanting a and supply-} ing the medium through which the mining of precious metal, especial- ly gold, will become a consery tive commercial venture instead of “romance with attendant hazards Do Not Type Love Letters Feb. “Andre de. Fou- qu who is universally accepted in France as the ‘highest authority social etiquette, has. been asked his ruling whether a member of so- ciety, of the male sex, should use a typewriter for a letter to another member of society, of the female sex, if the letter is not strictly lim- ited to business matters. Decidedly not, says M. de Fou- quieres. “The most elementary proper feeling and the simplest courtesy exact that any such letter be written by hand,” he declares. “It is impossible even to imagine a! typed letter being addressed to a| woman, although ttp contedts might | mete commonplaces; how much inconceivable, then, would a be if it expressed ten Such a letter is bad | form in that it allows the supposi- tion that it may have been dictated ty a third pe ” Court Theater. Destroyed By Fire Neustrelitz, Mecklenburg, Feb. ~The former Neustrelitz court theatre, with a history dating back to | 1731, recently was destroyed by fire. Nothing hut the walls of the old building remain, but a movement has been started to erect a modern thea- tre. | The Neustrelitz court theatre was . founded by the dukes of Macklen burg who were known for their in- terest in artistic affairs. It was) opened with performances by a troop | of “ducal actors.” The last of the) Macklenburg dukes, who was de- throned as a result of the revolution, | took care of his theatre in a w that made it one of the best stand. ard stages in German; an i inexhaustible de | be more typed lettér der affectio Pioneer’s Cache. Is Found Ventura, Cal. Keb. 27.—-Fortune smiled faintly on F. W. Barron, an indigent ‘ex-Canadian soldier, when he was cutting down an old’ pepper tree near’ here recently. As the tree fell he noticed a knot hole in one of the upper branches with a/ piece of decayed wood nailed across/it. Pull- ing off the board, he caused a piece of old burlap. to: drop and, with itva roll of bills. Barron found $50, rsost- | ly. of $1 denomination: Rane uth of: sd | date. | HAVE COLOR IN CREEKS Be Better Looking- Looking—Take ~~ Olive Tablets gt is is Yellow_—complerion : By “I'd ninety bars of years where are ali; search for -| river, | pedition to | gold, same stream Trask clain |by Moses King, Sr., THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE. ‘| NINETY- YEAR-OLD INVE! TOR TO. GRAPPLE FOR CAPTAIN KIDD’S GOLD IN MAINE ae =< s IR HOF NEA Service. gold, us I I'd nine ts nin itd bars of gold, fold he sail'd.” uncontrol Letw Me., he song of no ston, Feb Kidd him Moses King ung, who of those buried and h own manufacture. Just as soon as the ice are gone from the King will start out grapple for which he $ iver bed. When King joined his father’s expe and for With ther an old friend of the fs ed his great-grandfat a buceaneer with th Csptain William Kidd, the Seotch- man who v executed in London in 1 for piracy rask told his at-grandfather fin dcidal te loot in the very s er, not far from The Bucaneer snow Sheeps: hi was 1 Jeremiah pos went Trask, had been the vill ‘Trask had willed to the fourth ¢ uition charts, and diagrams wing the ineloneanieol river ofthe buried Woot. The story goes on to dell how after repeated trips made up the from Wiscasset e sloop sienal diver named MacG young King, then a lad of party finally came across a chest which they believed to be that of the notorious Captain Kidd But let King finish the story: says » experien if yesterday had been the day it stream n Glory’ 1 prof, a he hap “One morning rise us we were of the sloop ‘Glory’ MacGregor, the div the flukes a box-like sembling an old chest. A chest it w lieved it to be € own. It was without ume one MacGregor had found in the mud a week before but which he had to the oi noticed of affair d we firml ptain Kid AND 1 aps | ! HE DEVIC EOF SURE, HIS OWN | individud | ago. INVENTION, WITH. WHICH’ HIE But the nchor d about that nt back on expedi- d even ¥ y never found Portland another expe- ver to look re chest. ork- ng device, borrowed to complete his in- h this dgvice he, da party of hi nd will start in April. this Sheepse dg or-ex-soldier, of childhood cor old find And lawyer his dream Tours Continent On Horseback Wash., (eon ‘Miss d of Ton Spokane, Helen H. Thinglesta recently completed a horseba cle tour of the continent that re- ‘quired between six and seven years of intermittent traveling. She made the entire journey alone. Her expenses for the trip met by working along the way, and stops of three months or more were made at various cities for the pur- pose, Down the Pacific Coast to Los An- geles and thence along the southern border to New Orleans, Miss Thing! stad and her four-footed companion made their way. Th ergssed the] American desert in July by traveling at night. Thence they traveled north to Virginia and turned homeward through Kansas, Colorado and Wyo- ng. Miss Thinglestad crossed the tinental divide six times during her travels, she said, and three times she were con- encountereq snow and three times 4t/ rained. She carried complete camp- ing equipment and often relieved her horse's burden by walking consider- able distances. “A woman traveling alone has nothing to fear, ” she said. “The peo- ple always were wonderfully kind to us. I usually camped near “some ,farm house, for I had to procure |foog for my horse.” LIMB OF THE LAW Down, in \Galveston. Texas, they're get- ting quite finicky about the length of women's bathing costumes, as you can judge from the accom. panying picture Miss La Rue Kemp ts being given the official once quer. by the measuring police min- ton. whose job'istt'so | “| commi: | EMPLOYES TO DIRECT BANK OF CALIFORNIA San Fracisco, Feb. of the Bank of Italy, largest bank in financial resource: and eighth ranking financial in- stitution in the United States, gradually is to be passed to jits cinployes, it v nnounced recent- ly by A. P. Giannini, the president. This step, he said, would be epoch !making in bank management. Giannini started the bank ~20 years ago as a small one-rgom | affai Today this San Francisco ) bank has 75 branches through Cal- ifornia, with deposits exceeding $300,000,000. The bank has 485,-/ 000 individual depositors. H The Bank of Italy has more than | 2,000 employes, most of whom now own stock, according to Giannini, but his plan will assist every em- ploye in obtaining additional stock holdings with the definite aim of eventual control passing to these | | work This is declared to be{ the fi time a large banking in- stitution has endeavored to. turn! over its affairs to employes. Giannini was the first man in America to develop state-wide | branch, banking to a great success. | j He will retire from the presidency of the bank October 17 gext, when he will become chairman of the ex- ecutive board. His resignation, he aid, was to mete him from bank- {ing detail, “give the younger ellows a enaneas and to allow him |time to work out the profit-shar- | ing ownership plan. |. “I am convinced,” he explained, | ‘that the day has come when those j who create ‘and upbuild an enter- prise should own it. My plan ‘is not for the benefit of big execu- | tives. It is all for our workers. My plan is for every — office boy and junior clerk entering this in! stitution to know it is possible for | 'him to share in all the profits of | the bank and for himself to reach the presid ency by his own efforts | _In the last year Giannini has | given seven of his employes places on the board of directors. have taken up the | quantities of food ‘court of Hanover | centur | Hes | court |Beet, two kinds of fish, vegetables | | from also stuffed and | Tablets. we GORMANDIZING. _ SHOWN BY OLD. Bi: NUSOF KINGS Menus of old" king ds robber tons. food and castle party guests which — sometim . have been ap- in the German marvel at. - when served vetheir feasts h Scientists, and Tettee ‘write ers to the newspapers in general, ubject of enor- mous repasts, and discuss at length the appetites of the nobility. former times. Thi agree that it able how the friends could and their consume the id drink whieh edited to some of the acters of gistory king: really has been a famous old char | indurope. An mple of a feast at the n the sixteenth when 13 different mek&t were served has been pub- din virtually all of the news- | pers of Germany recently, and | brought out much comment, ly bye writers . who make ons of the fat days of the | centuries and: the “lean” days Germany during they war, and old menu, compiled from records, follows: t gection—Two kinds of wine baked singing birds, meat nison, mutton breast, wild | vast. chicken, ‘boiled | soups, pork and wine, section—Lobster, trout, | s, lamb. chops, | young roast pig, ox | » fig cake, desert, | it is claimed, that homes of persons of | the dinner uspally ix courses, ach | baie of seven to nine d hes. The old habit of gormandi as practiced by the kings has pass- | » most of the writers | and the scientists aver that people of today, who do not | ves, are happier and Ith generally than uttonous forefathers ‘who fea sast$ of rich foods and nd some times died at the table before the all their guests who were trying to be Xv In those day even in the ng | the their Revell eyes of merry. , Prosperity For | Emerald Isle London, Feb. An era of pros- perity for Ireland is dawning, says Richard D, Trotter, head of the Pro- vineial Bark of Ireland, and further- more Irish bankers are ready to stand behind the Free State in its policy for the complete reconstruction of Ireland. In speaking. meeting before a of London bankers, Mr. Trotter said: “The gratifying re- sponse to the issue of the Irish Free State Loan has supplied a most en- recently Do Heavy Meals Begin to Fell? ; Follow Your Meals With Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. They Give Stomach the Aikaline Ef. fect That Prevent Gas- siness and Sour Risings. Those old-time husky eaters often fall down on a glass of milk or a doughnut, the stomach is heavy, fills with gas;-is sour and woefully dys- peptit. Truth is, it had just such at- tucks always, but they didn’t last. Now the stom needs help and the best thing you can do is to fortify y8ur meals with Stuart’s Dyspepsia They give the stomach the alkaline effect, they help it to digest food, they give - this with, they absorb the gas, stop | independence of the judi ‘climax in the formal transfer of the |Y. M. C. A. in Poland from Amer- jican to Polish administration. it materials to do! - WEDN spirit of confidence in the stability of the Free State and its govern- | ment, and that feeling will be car- ried further when due importance is a hed to the assurances of the dent and his responsible minis- eve of Whvie intention effectively ta regulate state expenditure and_in- come until the national budget is bal- _cinced.”” Mr. Trottor added that the govern- ment has shown itself strong, f:rm and sympathetic, with the result that the majority of the people were with it, and most citizens respected the law. a 1 5 og a Be f | Soeur evidence of a growing | * WOULD ABOLISH: WIGS AND GOWNS OF IRISH BAR Dublin, Feb. The bill which proposes to'abolish in the Free State the traditional legal system of cen- turies and set up in its place a more modern system, has passed through ithe Dial and now is in the Senate. In ‘the lattet body much of the prelim- scussion of the bill had to do with the question whether wigs and gowns shall continue to be worn. The {i bill’ provides that the decision as to whether the judges and members of the bar shall wear any special cos- | tume and what that costume shail be 11 rest with the minister for home affairs acting with a committee rep- resenting the legal interests. / The legal profession is strongly at- | tached to its wigs and gowns and-the | subject is likely to lead to heated | discussion because the government is in favor éf some dignified costume that will impress upon the popular mind the realization of the ghange British control of all law to the control of the Irish people. The power proposed to be given to the minister for home affairs is chalieng- ed as an undue interfere! expected that the Sanate will make several amendments to the bills. Poland Takes ° Over Red Cross Wi arsaw, P land, Fel and, Feb. One of the ‘romances of American welfare work abroad has just reached its 27. This \action means that only five years after its introduction into Poland as a welfare service for the Polish, army, Y. M. CG, A. work here has grown into the permanent form so familiar to the people of America. The formal transfer, which took place in the Warsaw Y. A. building, was the occasion for a cere- mony attended by the President tA Poland ang many other of its notab citizens. Paul Super, National Y. M. C. A. Secretary for Poland, say: “After the Great War the America Y. M. C. A. conducted work for the Polish Army at nearly 100 points, employing in this work 52 American secretaries and expending »$1,700,000. SDA'Y, FEBRUARY 27, 1924 CHILDREN CRY FOR “CASTORIA” A Harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups — No. Narcotics! Mother! relieve babies and children of Con- Wind? Colic rishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the stipation, Flatulency, and Diarrhea; allaying- Fi the Stomach and Bowels, aids AY this war work has, of course, becn discontinued and the enterprise now is on a civilian basis officered and directeg by Poles. It begins its new s with some 7,500 members in ind; thany thousands of government, university, 1 and_ military circles. © Seven Aietican Y. MiG) Av suopetaviel vd: main in Poland as technical advisors and instructors in the work of the association, loaned as an expression of the cooperation of the American Y. M, C. A. with the Pottsh move- ment.” Declares Dogs _ Need Knit Dresses London, Feb. Knitted jump- ers Tor dogs—“to keep them warm when motoring,” she said—were sold by Gertrude, Lady Decies, at the winter show, of the Pekingese club at Tattersall’s. The tiny jumpers, knitted by Lady Decies herself in wools and silks of various colors, were designed by her ends in Fletcher's Castoria Mas assim’ Deen in use for over 30 years tosleep w | Soldiers Want giving natural fhe “genuine on of .Food; hout opiates, bears signature of, old dog's a plain wrapped to take the place of the oat,” which was usually square piece of material around the animal's body. "he new- fashioned jumper is properly d with leg-holes, and draws up around the neck. Action in Stories London, Feb. The — oldtime British soldier who scorned reading is fast disappearing, and there is a growing demand for good books and magazines in army libraries. Recently the war office ordered the classics made available for enlist- @d men. Blood and thunder liter- ature, however, still Holds, first place with Tommy Atkins, Among recognized works those of Dickens held first place years ago; then Kipling became the vogue, with Shaw and Wells receiving sore attention. Poetry doespot seem to be popular with the soldier, although the song has had its place in armty literature. SAY “BAYER” when you buy- Gonuine Proved safe by millions and. prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache Pain Toothache Gopwine: Neuralgia Neuritis ccept Buty “Bayer” whiclr contains proven directions. Tandy “Bayer” boxes of Also bottles of 24 and 100- Lumbago Rheumatism package 12 tablets ug. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Mauufaclure of Mouoaceticacidester, of Salicylic Not like a Clam Clams live to themselves. You can’t. You link lives with your neighbor across the street, across the state, across the continent. You are influenced by what he Wants, buys, uses, enjoys. - When enough of your neighbors want, “The worker in a bank more | acidity, relievé-pressure, and no mat- often than not makes a better dir-@ter whether it is pork and cabbage, cctor than an outside business | pie and cheese, sausages and buck- man.” he added. “The worker wheats or steak and onions, your in constant touch, with the banking stemach works without distress, and jetaations: you have none of those troubles due Giannini is 51 years old. He tc indigestion or dyspepsia. Get a tarted as a poor boy in California, | 6. cént box of Stuart's Dyspepsia working his way up from laborer | pjets at any drug store to the ownership ofa small com- b pneu ion business hen he. was |°"d be merry. 131 he retired with a: fortune,,hav- ing built up the largest commis- | house handling produce on the ! ¢ Coast. He turned over the ‘ion business to the work- as who had been associated with him; they were permitted to buy “ the business through its profits. ‘4 “ But the young conimission broker S 1 Pa did, not remain idle for long, friends suggested that he start a bank, jannini said he always had in- d on having the stock holding: lof the Bank of Italy widely, di buted. The bank. now has. mo. than 14,000, stockholders, LEPERS. APPEAL _ | FOR. MUSIC Feb. MELE be Manila, 27.—Musical ments ate among the things asked: for as presents: by. many of ‘the’ lepers’ in the colony of 5,000 on Culion Island. The monotony of life in the colony and the depressing effect of the‘sur- roundings tend to decrease\the value of the medical tteatment, the lepers { and-‘for this reason: they want to. help.-infuse an pias it into their lives. In the shipment last Christmas: ot nearly 100° huge Woxes filled h presents collected. by clubs, schools and societies of; Manila, there were included several banjos and guitars, withdeep(” breatt hing mstru- ‘Then eat Nightly. Yell Practice “Well, Pat, dothe twins | much noise nights?” raise: be to hivin!:. Shure each "wan cries'so loud yez. can’t hear th ither wan.”-—Boston Transcript, make ' buy, use, enjoy the same thing, you begin to see advertisements about it— advertise- ‘ments. to arouse you to similar’ use’and en- joyment. They paint glowing, truthful pictures . .. . try to get you interested in what will really interest you.. ‘© Convenient, courteous information is yours at a minute’s glance. Style, variety, | price, where obtained. That minute’s glance may. mean the difference between buying un- worthy wares and the best. ‘ You don’t want to be like a peeks even in your judgments. Read the advertisements to be guided’ by others; choice. ' When they choose something again and again, it must be good. . - 1 EACH ADVERTISEMENT’IS WRITTEN TO YOU — TO HELP YOU CHOOSE—TO SAVE YOU MONEY. ‘ ‘