Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE TWO Gold in Mission Altan ‘* Proves Mines Existed Perhaps the most concrete dence today, pointing to the reality of the legends of early civilization | in the Southwest is the altar of San ! mission, conducted at the present time by Catholic sisters for the relief of the sick and needy among the Indians, For several hundred years the mission was a cathedral and it is situated a few miles outsi Pucson Ariz. Th with vir gin gold, : (was beaten Into the masonry and decorations the chancel when it constructed early in the Seventeenth century. The records of the mission, which have been care kept for gen erations, show gold was brought | by TANS. f the Can ada del ¢ where it was mined under the direction of Spanish priests. In the old trail by which the pr Was trans ported on 1 still exists and leads directly from the cathe dra) into Canada del Ore and then loses itself in desert wastes. he Apaches attacked the mis: sion about hundred years age and drove ay the priests. For SEVE ears the Indian tribes used the building a stable, but they did not touch the a old. Tt is believed that they had ne inter est in gold intrin for their medicine men are thought to have had, ev tt that date date, com plete information about rich de posits of desert gold.—-New York ‘Tribune, Sreevell Greeted in AiMany: Ways in Various Places #A vos souhalts!” (God bless you!) Now is the season when you hear the expression very frequent With these words we apostre ‘one who sneezes We understand, a polite ited by the sneeze of one’s companion: “Who calls me When an I ys to himself: * popular} has it sneeze indicates an escape or flight ofthe soul. In the British t indies it is also believed that part of the soul files forth at each sneer nd when the ives hi a friend stigeze, they say: “God protect you!” to which the sneezer's re. pense should be: wike!" ‘The Siamese bel person sneezes because God, turn- ing the pages of the Doomsday Sook, has paused at his name, In Portu jwhen anyone sneezes, you 1 r hat. The a tie s, Ike the R “Pelicita ! ‘rhe It r h, they s for the don't | all, but they hn: | precautions against a atold in the 1 of which the ze {8 supposed to be a warn- we Petit Parisien. “Now d markad Mrs. Sub- bi) to her husband, as he was get- ting ready to go to the city, want you to do a little job for me while you are in town today. Will you yo to Goose's and get me a house rob “Very well, dear,” he replied, and the “store some time later, Mr. Subbub gave his order, 2 are some very y ones,” said the lesgirl. = “What e@lor do you prefer? “Doesn't make any was the answer, “Doesn't make any echoed the girl, “But difference !' differen don't you | think your wife would like a certain color?” No, ence what color or si it doesn't make any Mr. Subbub, sadly to-come back tomorrow and have it changed. Hunting Cheeta For short distances the cheeta is supposed to be the swiftest quadru- ped. How , it is not possible to ascribe the honor definitely to any particular animal, ‘The which is found in Asia and Afriea, is large tropical cat, slender of body and limb. It fs from three to four feet long and of a pale, tawny a@pior, marked with numerous dark spots on its sides and back and al- most white beneath. It resemble: the leopard, d is often called the hunting leopard. The animal re- sembles the dog in docility, Its fur | is not s 1 eats. | It has a long tail, which is some- what bushy at the end. Expensively Good .A matter-of-fact futher of an em- b¥ro poet handed some of the lad’s efforts to a distinguished author of vérse, and asked for his opinion, Well, what’s the answer?” ed the successful stockman. ‘Alas!” sighed the real poet, “those things are so good, I’m afraid you'll have to support Henry the rest of his life.”—Writer's Monthly. An Editor’s View ie “The woman who doesn’t like this | r beeause it is no good and er gets anything right tuck up her underskirt. It hangs m and looks sloppy. The ed- of the Economy may not know to run a newspaper right, but , he: knows how to put his clothes on sq. his underwear won't show.— Solon {Ia.) Economy. Seraped It Off 1p—Aren't you. losing flesh ly? What's the trouble? “simp—I bought a safety razor week.—Boys’ Magazine. = Great Compassion E compassion is greater than of # kind-hearted man toward boy who ought to have better Fs ‘sheet of ice nearly three times size of California covers Green- oe ‘Zébland has 35,000 passenger automobiles. protect | have | cheeta, | should | “And you like | ve that ay { ik THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE’ | ~~ Million Americans Men, Women and Children Crowding to Join New Kind of Army Waging War on Drowning Accidents Everywhere OLICEMAN JACK BYRNES of Utica, seven persons by forcing illuminating gas out of their Byrnes the night before sat itation and watched the American Red Cross lecturer demonstrate how to use the hand: apparatus to start breathing that has been stopped by suffo- One lecture plus an intelligent officer in this case an ambulance surgeon put Policeman Rogers to work on a woman gas vic- tim, and he had her breathing normally when she was carried lungs and pumping i at a lecture on resus cation. preserved a whole family. A into a hospital. H. P. Midgley, freshman in Furman University, Green- brought his classmate, H. H. Lott, from the bot- tom of an eight-foot deep swimming pool. ville, S. C., fresh air. t Allston, Mass., The university coach and another student started pumping operations, and Lott came through the expe ence safely and a life friend Midgley, his preserver. or t= of AMERICAN RED CROSS AND BOY SCOUTS LIFE-SAVING Zz CAMPAIGN POSTER | EXPERT RED CROSS LIF E-SAVER DEMONSTRATING THE BREAKING OF.THE “DEATH :CLUTCH” Four boys, totally blind, students at an institution in Watertown, Mass., after seven lessons in the school swimming pool, passed the Red Cross life-savers’ tests with an average of 92 per cent, amazing spectators with their stunts in d ing and retrieving objects and their deftness in demonstrating the prone-pressure method of re- suscitation. In Gage County, in the extreme southwestern part of Nebraska, where the Big Blue River ap- proaches its diminishing source, 232 adults and youths qualified as water-safety experts, organizing themselves into four corps of life savers. Million Taking to Water. The Boy Scouts of Ame 600,000 EO _ Ee summer a nation-wide campaign for water safety, with “Every Scout a Swimmer” as their slogan. There are besides 200,000 “lone £couts” not attached to troops and about 140,000 men leaders, so that this movement will reach close to a million, with instruction that is not only based on self preserva- tion, but on the rescue of others who may be in danger in the water and on the land. Throughout the country there are today approximately 15,000 men 9,800 women and 20,500 boys and girls who have qualified by passing the severe examination re. | quired to attain the right of proud ly wearing the Red Cross emblem of a preserver of life. The foregoing facts and inci: dents could be multiplied a thou sand times and still the marvelous wf N. Y., saved as pumping se growth and application of life-sav- ing practice and procedure in the United States during the last ten years be merely told in outline. 120,000 Expert Life Savers. Ten years ago, February 1, the, American Red Cross started this work with a single member, and the first life-saving corps was chartered in Baltimore, Md., that year after a swimming tournament between Boy Scouts and the Y. M. Cc. A., won by the latter. With more than 45,000 members enrolled today and a grand total of 126,000 who have qualified as life savers, the record and progress of the Red Corps are little short of In the last twenty years, greatly facilitated by the expansion of automobile touring, the pools, Go to. rivers, lakes and ocean beaches @gnother in danger of drowning, for ability to forget himself in his con- ‘spread RED C ROSS LIFE-SAVING CORPS PROVE THE PRONE PRESSURE METHOD OF RESUSCITATION. have become the favorite play-|t grounds of the people. This grow- ing popularity increased the danger hazards in water sports, giving im- petus to the organized activity of the Red Cross to fight to minimize the greater perils of drownings. Proof of Man’s Heroism. No more heroic figure exists than the gallant individual who risks life in a brave attempt to save it is the supreme proof of man’s cern for the fate of another. The aim of the Red Cross Life- | i Saving Corps is to eliminate the preventable loss of life by drown- ing. Its program embraces wide- circulation of information os water safety; devising of sys- tems of protection, prevention, res- cue and resuscitation; organizing of local life-saving corps charged opposite granted with definite patrol and instruction service; giving leadership to co-op- erating organizations that possess facilities for carrying on instruc- This program has been developed sound- ly and:steadily. Principles of acci- dent prevention have been devised, systems of protection for bathers standardized, and a complete man- ual on water safety published. Heavy Toll of Drownings. The development of a distinct- ively preventive service, the very all-too-common method of waiting until disaster comes and then attempting to set up bars against repetition, practical example of a Red Cross ion in water-safety methods. of the deal expressed in its chart its members to render h year an appalling list usually of victims in th youth. The disiress ASKS FOREIGN 6 BOTTLES OF TANLAG MATCH FOR TROUBLES TRADESTUDY BY COLLEGES Proposes New Manner to} Bring Forces Together in | Study of Problems NTHUSIASM IS NEEDED) \ if es together in solving the prob-! lem of how to stabilize the for ign | trade career for young Americans. Mr. Howard said that it seemed to him that if such a change were es students ex- blished by the Edu- cational Committee of the National| Foreign Trade Council, in New York, this would solve in some measure present difficulties. Mr. Howard's proposal the end of the session presided over by Dean W. R. of the Amos istration and College. Mr. Howard’s subject was: “What Busin Men Think About the For- eign Trade Career,” and. hig pro- posal was the conclusion of a lengthy address in which he submit- ted the opinions of a wide range of business men. He said that to date many business men had taken a rather patronizing point of view to- ward the foreign trade student, whereas many distinct ddvantages could be derived from the “use of such men in American foreign trade, Need. Enthusiasm He said, for one thing, that the enthusiasm of youth. was,needed to prevent hardening of the arteries in certain offices.’ He said that cor- porations and firms should look on such men in, the same light that they have come “to look on engineering men. and other technical students whom they-take after graduation. Mr, Howard continued: “It seems to me that in general the - proper ‘training for the manufacturer . to give to q student graduate from a foreign trade course is, first to. put chool of Admin- nance, Dartmouth | Over patie aa Conductor Says It Ended Ten Years Suffer- ing. “Six bottles of Tanlac ended my ten years of indigestion and left me feeling like a man made over,” ri cently declared C. H, Hurlbert, Franklin Av oux Falls, S. .D., popular freight conductor on the C. Boston, June 4.—-The creation of | St. P. M. & O. Railroad. a foreign trade students exchange} stomach troubled me contin- ‘ f and got so bad I came near was the proposal toc of Hen ng an operation. _ Practically Howard, of the Cleveland Chamber ything I ate—which was little | of Commerce. before the National] enough—just added that much more | Trade Convention as the most prac-| te the bloated condition my | tical manner of bringing the uni-| s lways in, and to keep I versity foreign trade student and] 1 t constant pain the business man of the United} and feeling as run-down and miser- able as I felt was no ¢: task. “But since taking Tanlac, I cat everything, my stomach is’ sound, | healthy and normal my food digests 106 per cent and I feel fine There's no two ways about it, ‘icici Gye aIbhG tucienene teas tomach trouble.” anlac is for sale by druggists. Accept. no substitute. 40 Million bottles sold. Tanlac- Vegetable Pills, for con- stipation made and recommended by the manufacturers of TANLAC. nd fit. is all good —————————— SSS articles which are manufactured and which he will have to sell. Second, put him into the domestic sales de- partment to\give him training in salesmanship. Third, transfer him into the foreign trade department and let him go as far as he can.” 1 | © . Must Train Men Mr. Howard said, however, that the colleges must train the'men. “I do not believe graduates can be used to any advantage by many of our industries unless men are grounded in. technical ‘fundamentals.” . Mr. "Howard expressed the opinion that. it might take several gener- ations before American youth came to.give the same serious consider- ation to such careers as British youth, but that since-the year 1914 there had been astonishing progress in the United States in’ thinking along international lines. aa ae PLAN BIG TIME: Beulah, N. D., Sune 4,—Beulah is planning. a. regular .old .. fashioned him into ‘the works in order to give him a »practical knowledge of the celebration for the Fourth of July- The ‘committees are. already busy Aberin the program and big time is assured. There will he races and a ball game in the afternoon with concert, fire-works and dance at night. .Every comfort will be a forded those who attend the celebra- tion. REFUSES T0 BE MILLIONAIRE Divides Dividend With Em-; foyes to Escape Being a | ‘ Millionaire By NEA Serv | Cincinnati, June 4—“Golden Rule” ash is happ: He has 1 becoming a million- © $600,000 stock dividend which| i would have made him one has not} passed through ‘his hands. He has divided it among. the employes in his So Arthur Nash—that i “Golden Rule” signs his checks not the only one in the plant whoj is going around with a broad smile ‘these days, “You have made this money for me,” he told his employes, “So it is yours. “I would be a robber—aye, a trait- or worse than Judas Iscariot were I to accept-a penny of it.” Nash’s conscience had been troub- led for weeks.. The “golden rule” he} had been following in his business was making him rich, He had started out in a small way, Now, after a few years, it was nec- essary for him to seek larger quar- ters. “ His business already had out- grown two factory buildings. “Golden Rule” was worried. At the yate the money was coming in, he soon would be a millionaire. And a million dollars, he argued, was too much for any man to have. The owner of the million, he rea- soned, had not: created it all him- self. Therefore it morally did not belong to him. 35-Hour Week « But what was he going to do with it?. To whom would he give tt? - He inaugurated a 35-hour week in his plant--five days of #éven hours 4000 Hing to accept many of them widows—a chance be with their children on Saturdays. He readjusted there would be no loss by reason of the shorter week, to wages, so But still the money came in, The , folks in the plant worked better than ever. Nash, in desperation of how to escape this great wealth, _ finally wrote an open letter to the Christian people of America, He had it print- ed in 80 religious publications, Answers began rolling in at the rate 100 a day. Most writers, of wanted something for themselyes, or} for finance’ ng pet hobbies, “They wanted me to steal this money from those to whom it be- longed and give it to them,” says Nash. Then he hit upon the answer him- self. . He called his. emplo together, addressing them us iends and Fellow Workers.” 100 Per Cent Dividend He announced the 100 per dividend. All *the employes own stock in the company. Each would share in the, dividend. But what. of cent propriate the ‘tion that ae- part of our joint pr i cumulated in- profits,” he “I am stealing from you. As far as the law’ is concerned, of course, 1 am doing it legitimately. “But if I must be a thief, 1 tare to be one of the gunman type. I shall not even consider taking this dividend. ¥ “T have taken in the past only what was apportioned to me because those in whom I had great faith ad- vised me it ed to be the only logical working out of the problem. + “This time, however, I am not go- a cent of it. It is yours, “And I hope that within a year or two you will own the business joint- ly with me,” . From X to O A colored mammy came into the office of the estate for which, she worked to receive her .monthly wages. As she could not write, she always made her mark on the re- celpt—the usual cross. But on this occasion she. made a circle, - “What's the matter, Linda?” the man asked, “Why don't you make a.cross as usual?” “Why,” Linda explained earnest- y; hh done got-murried yesterday an’ changed mah name.”—Dry foods Economist, ' The highest aavaeate elevation: of land in New York City—430 feet—is each, That gave his employes— on top of Todt Hill, Staten Island, told them,| 1923 income ta being paid in quarte » where such ta have been paid on or 15th.” Nothing is said as to what procedure will be fo ed in duction in 1923 income who haye paid in full, to t but this time. be paid on September 15 and cember 15 will be inailed to taxpayer on the first of each those month BOBBED HAIR Hammond, Ind, Jui June heir on his wife led Stanley cide. When he returned home hé sdid to her “You’ve gone tco.” He retired into another and shot ‘himself, according t is the by Congress authorizing the society in time of peace to train manitarian service in emergencies. Every drownings marks the heavy toll of lost live: prime of WHAT NEW TAX BILL MEANS TO U.S, TAXPAYERS| Gunder Olson, Collector, Re- ceives Telegram From Bu- rly installments. before June in the telegram refunding the 25 percent re no doubt be provided for in a short Notices of the proper amounts to SUICIDE CAUSE 4—Bobbed kowski, East Chicago, to commit sui- work and saw his wife’s hair bobbed wife’s testimony at the inquest, A suffering brought into thousands of homes by the annual drownings is awakening the American people out of indifference toward these poignant losses, with the result that in afl walks of life very in- fluential support is being accorded the life-saving program. Recognized by Government. Recognition after the years’ ex- periences which proved the sound: ness of the Red Cross purpose to carry out its work of prevention and preservation encourages the belief that in another ten years it will have grown tenfold. The Gov- ernment has put its seal of approv- al upon life saving by using the course at the West Point Military Academy and the Annapolis Naval Academy, also by affording instruc- ing under Red Cross experts at camps of the regular army, the re- serve officers and the military training centers for civilians. Men's and women’s colleges and State universities, equipped with swimming pools, the summer camps of private schools, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Campfire Girls, Y. M. C. A., Y. W. C. A., boys’ clubs, high schools in large cities, athletic clubs and local organizations inter- ested in general community safety measures, are actively supporting this service of training in water safety and life saving under Red Cross auspices in every State. “i Army of Women Swimmers. Women’s aroused interest in water safety has mobilized an army of swimmers in girls’ camps, play- ground swimming pools, women's colleges and various institutions moving forward to attain a practic- al accident-proof standard. It is a fact that in this day of co-educa- tion the young women’s all-around training is considered incomplete if swimming is not a part of their physical education. he Kansas City, Mo., offers an out- in istana lie: example. The 300 women JAPAN PLANS BOND. ISSU er ra of Issued to Provide For Reconstruction Work Tokio, June 4.—New domestic bo! s totalling 155,000,000 yen wi x is In addition it is hoped to pla ithe market other issues totalling 7 How: h y De- each of a Cza, from crazy room ‘0 his SAVING GROUP. TRENTON. N. New Domestic Bor Bonds Will Be| MOTHER:- Fletcher’s Castotin. is To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven directions on each package. Physicians every TYPICAL RED CROSS LIFE~ experts organized into the Kansas City Corps volunteered to perform life guard and instruction duty so the city could maintain a public bathing resort where all the chil- dren might enjoy themselves in safety. It is the natural impulse of women to,protect the children, which inspires the belief among life-saving authorities that the day is not far distant when America’s children will learn, to swim «43 naturally as they learn to walk. Backed by Whole Country. The future of life saving is bright with promise and the Red Cross looks hopefully to the time when every unprotected waterfront will have its corps of members expert- ly trained in rescue and resuscita- tion. The hearty aid of Red Cross Chapters in this aim is a great in- fluence in carrying this service to the American people. H. F. Enlows, National Director of Life Saving, says: “The maintenance and develop- ment of the Red Cross Life-Saving Corps is a distinctly preventive service. It has justified itself through, its accomplishments over the period of ten years. It is grows ing out of a lusty infancy into a stalwart manhood that cannot be denied because it is the expression of common sense actions leading to the fullness of life. Nowhere has it been opposed; everywhere it has been enthusiastically accepted and endorsed. Its future is secure be- cause life saving along water courses has been built upon a sound foundation, and its increas- ing structure is firmly laid in pro- cedure and method tested in the crucible of practical experience, Every individual who. will may freely take of this instruction—and that there are thousands upoa thousands who do so will to learn is recorded in the history of the Red Cross Life-Saving Servica | covering the past decade.” 2 euch series -{ Department officials state that 10,000 yen of the loans recently floated in New York and London will be used at home E reconstruction work. | Roads Built ; 2,000 Years The Roman. empire inter sected by roads, constr cipally between the Fourth centuries after Chri These highways varied in width from eight to fifteen feet, and were almost unive built in straight | for was cond and ntl ill i E lines without regard to grade, prob- reau on the Subject be floated by the Japanese govi lu TaOUE Heeart t prob: Q ee ably because the use of beasts of ore Motpeaduniiis tier tigen! editions are | Utden as the chief means of trans- Gunder Olson, Collector of Inter- | providing loan mee conditions are] port made_the preservation of the al Revenue for the Distrie syaraple, .accomlings ta ans san ~ |Hevel an affair of minor importance. nal Revenue for ,the ‘District’ of| ont by the Department’ of Finance: |W Meuaca ‘ataves and clatter toe rth Dakota, has received a tele-|" The government must algo float ; Bese ; : iene g Boy employed in the construction of gram from the Commissioner of Tn-| conversion issues totalling “419,000,- | tose “highw: the durABliity’ of ternal Revenue, Washington, D, C.,| gg’ yen to take care of old. issues | Mese highways, t irability ¢ Shich eriben hows, Inconel tae: leetenine auntie fecal wear, | Which is shown by the fact that, in . Meg foe | maturing within the new year+ | some cases, they have sustained the D pay balances owing for| from April 1, 1924 to March 31, 1925. | Some cases, they z iffic of 2,000 years without mate- rial inju The Roman forum is said to have on 79,- The telegram as follows: 190,000 yen which were scheduled) yon the point of c Sete ates Federal income tax return you paid) unfavorable market conditions. ott tength of 52,001 Roman mnles, three fourths (%) of the amount of | These bring the total of projected | {ofl length of 52.004 Roman miles, Ug tae Rel H es Moat UFSnSE PAY. tic loans for the year to 653 hieurned the art of road building gent wilt Be aye: ; 000,000 yen. from the Curthaginians—Adven- “If at the time you filed your re-| Reconstruction work made neces-| ture Magazine turn you’ paid one half (12) of the| sary by the earthquake disaster will Gcuscas i amount of the tax reported, no pay- | absorb nearly all the proceeds of the] More than 75 per cent of the for- ment will be due until September cign-born white population of the 15th. + maturing within the | United States in urban. ¥ “If at the time you filed your at ceIght sexes: oe return you paid only one fourth (% ) ent treasury bonds. 1 10,000 regis- of the amount of the tax reported, swill bé) floated for {tered clubs in London. you must pay on or before June 15 one half (1%) of the amount paid by | you when you filed your return. “Phe main point to be borne in mind is that one half (1%) of the tax due from you this year must pleasant, harmless Substitute» for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teeth ing Drops and Soothin ~ Syrups, Prepared for, Tata’ cted prin- \ | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 1924 ~ ff