The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 24, 1920, Page 3

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1920 1 the ns to attend the conve Ne tion Mr, D’Olier declares that “noth- a” , | ing could at this time so much stir ‘and warm the hearts of our people” toward the French and British nations | ag a visit and direct: message from the | two great leaders to the organization Composed of those who served in the; World War, PALMER ORDERS J. 8, ATTORNEYS TO PROBE COAL Prosecutions; to’ Be Made of Conspiracies to Boost | Prices, He Says AT THE TH. ELTINGE Daily at 2:30—7:30—9:00 TODAY , _ WARREN. ‘RERRIGAN : BANKERS SEEN IN STATEMENT’ Bank of North Dakota, Review- \ ing Year, Charges Activi- ties Against Bank 7:30—9:00 pabeeeteak tomers ; TODAY, : ;, . i Tom Mix “FIGHTIN G FOR ha TOTAL PROFITS GI Threats of retaliation against the alleged efforts of private banks against the Bank of North Dakota are contained in a statement by F. W. Ca- thro, director-general, reviewing the first year of the bank. Asserting that the bankers are 2n- gaged in what appears to be “delibe ately organized propaganda to defeat the purposes for which ‘the people created the Bank of North Dakota” the statement says that “it is appar- ent that unless there should be an im- SHORTAGE STORIES DENIED , Attorhey d Unit- Washington, Aug. 24 General Patmer has instru ed States attorneys to inves! mediate reversal of this attitude on] leged combinations and « eS fhe apart of local bankers, the Bank] among dealers _ to in North Dakota will be compelled to a obtaine: ed- OLED, pr . Information pbtained by fed: with any effort or movement to pro: mao ty its holiey’ 80 ar wht can per-} eral agents Ww said to show that! PULL F FREI vide and maintain adequate aa roe: | ‘orm the services for which it was throue repeated er ‘traisportation facilities for the} dealers created without. the he ad 0 local banks.” The statement also says the Nort) Dakota Bankers’ association has ta- co-operation of though state of North Dakota, but that it do | also and hereby does protect? against | the %ranting ‘of any increase whic! h | does not put into effect the intent and} NRW YORK-—-This is Hoolac and ‘his Aast name is “ Gibbon’ Hoolac Gibbon is 8 feet tall,’ counting his arms by the foot. He came from the di- reveal’: Wild jungles of. India to, make his home at the’ Zoological Park here. He ie cations investigation were RAISE: OPPOSED | GALLED 10, BAN ghould ken the position “that until the bank giamone, desler hi ) d Hoolac Gibbon is his official k t a $2 g dealers. j hasn’t been given a zoo name yet and oolac Gibbon is his officia ‘lirpose pf th aid hk ing interests of the state are repre- ney general ordcred the title in the books of the monkey ex perts. * ech ada sat aatiek and cote His sented in its control, they will re frain from conferring or co-operating with the management of the Bank ot North Dakota,” _ which polity is ton demned in the statement. The bank has profited materially during the year, according to thi statement. The total profits, it Stated, amount to $241,838. * The source of profits is not specified. Re deposits in Jocal banks amount to more than $10,600,000 at. the present time, according to the statement. Re. deposits are understood to be the great source of profit by the bank, and those opposed to the manage- ment of the bank assert that the pro it thus accruing to the state bank profit taken away from school, ¢: county and -township units whic formerly were réceived be direct de-!% posits in local banks. The farm loans according to the statement, approximate nearly $3,/ 000,000. The resources of the bank | on August 14, totalled $20,420,700.85, it is stated. GENERAL #06 LEGION GUEST, OFFICER HOPES i \ | | t Admiral Beatty, of England, Al- i? so Invited to Attend Le- gion Session Indianapolis, Aug. 24.—National of- ficers of the American Legion: are hopeful that Marshal Foch and Ad- miral Beatty will accept‘ the invita- tions of the United States government | and the Legion to visit: Amer next month and attend the second annual ntion of. the Legion to be held in Cleveland, September 27, 28 and 29. Lemuel Bolles, National Adjutant of the organization, who has recently returned from Washington where he conferred with Secretary of War Ba- eet and officials of the British and French embassies, said the Legion's formal invitations to the supreme al-| lied :military and,naval commanders had gone forward through the em- bassies and that the state department had also officially transmitted them | at the request of Franklin O’Olier, na- tional commander of the Legion. Cooperation in the effort to have the two war chiefs come to this coun- try for the convention has heen prom- ised by American officials and by the French and British embassies. In his letters urging acceptance of Apacs. finely flavored drink that really satisfies. A glass of “Glix’ with meals, be- tween meals or: servec with that “late lunch” is ideal. It pleases the eye,- has snap and sparkle and it’s pure, that’s sure. Made in béth a light and dark brew. Keep a case on hand. Order it now. Made by THE GLUEK CO. Minneapolis. Dealers supplied by CAPITOL ittorneys to pay attention also to trade ctices and “defective or wasteful devices through which the dealers might be able ta raise the price of the consumer.” | STATEMENT al ‘Aug. 24.—M. A. . es district for the ¢ t of North Da pomnced thet reports had co office of the price of coal being swell- ed by re-sales-as indicated in ¢ Washington dispatch and that the matter would be given a thorough in- when the next fed x y is in session at the Oc-} tober term of the United States. dis-! trict court. Lf N OPEN LETTER iis TO THE GAME WARDENS Dear Si Do you know that prairie ch Fl tered “tho state? These birds are accorded the projection of the law at this fim + that in many parts of the It is our duty to enforce i Jaw. AML real sportsmen for | proper conservation ef game. And they want the law eyforced now. | There are’ m who think the section of prohibiting the hunting of birds with docs is a toolish provision, Bat what is the use of on iY there is, no enforcement.’ It is at well known to anyone who the ue nis 6 any. 0 pick “them now, There s about Ma too danger sf beeause of the shooting. ing the law, but th as heen no ac certaini? no results. —A_ Sportsman, U.S, NEEDS 26,000 TEACHERS Country , High “Schools Face Serious | Shortage in Autumn. Twenty-six thousand high school; teachers are needed in the United} States to fill vacancies ia the schools, opening’ in September, according to the! federal bureau of education. The total number of teachers need- éd in this country is 98,775, according | to the bureau. These can be obtained in just, two ways, by recalling former teachers, or by placing teachers «with less than a college education in charge | of high school classes. jat the offi WILL CHOOSE A | POSTMASTER POR DRISCOLL POST he civil service commission has avonunced that examinations will be held for the position of postmaster riscoll, on Sept. 15. Any person residing in the delivery of the Driscoll office, and not less than 21 nor more than 65 years of age may make the examination. Complete information may be. ob- tained from the postoffice in Bis- imartck, as well as application blanks BISMARCK HEN WINS FIRST AT ILLINOIS FAIR First place was awarded a single comb White Leghorn hen owned by John Pelkey, of Bismarck, at the In- terstate Fair at Kankakee, Illinois. “This is an ‘unusual honor and worthy of special distinction,” says G. W. Gustafson, ‘county agent, in com- imenting on the victory. This particular bird has-thus far won fou nesota fair last year; one at Fargo last, winter; and also one at the Mis- souri Slope Poultry show in Bis- marck last winter. Mr, Pelkey ‘state leghorn hen started laying ate a of five months and cighteen Qa Since then the hen has produced eggs regularly. that this white © irst prizes: one at the Min-| Average Person's Lungs Are Szidom Filled Among thg first things that tre Jearn from a good singing teacher Is that we have been using abcut one-half or perhaps only. one-third of our avail- able Imng capacity, leaving the bal- ance untouched, The average person does not know anything about the bot- tony half of his lungs—he might as well) not’ have any bottom half. It you tel him to take a deep breath, he starts, as usual, to fill his lungs from the top, and his deep, breath is ne deeper than his shalfow one; it mere- ly involves a lot of effort for substan- tially the same result. ‘The trained singer ‘or athlete, on the other hand, when about to indulge in a deep breath, “builds ‘up the mass of air in his lungs more or less like a pyramid ' He starts at the bottom and wot up; the-central and upper ons of his lungs ure not inflated until the bottom Is blown up to the limit. ‘A New York singing teacher has invented a little device for recording lung cupacity which) emphasizes - the difference between the right and the wrong ways of obtaining thi: Instead of interesting himst effects of expansion upon ject’s chest measure, he turn: his at- tention to the waist, and measures the extent to which a filling of the lungs dilates this. More strictly, of course, the sub- Mr. Pelkey is now training a male leghorn to be sent to the. Minnesota state fair next week. It is expected that this bird will do as well as the hen did-at the Mlinois fair. RATE INCREASE FOR HARVEY ASKED The application of the Harvey Elec- tric Light and Power gomipaity, for ncrease in rates in Harvey, N._ D. fill be heard by the state railroad commiss on September 15. The comp ks that the rate for the first owatt hours be increased from 15 to 17 cents for Jighting pur- poses, and similar increages~ for greater consumption. 'WOMAN’S HEAD SEEN FLOATING New York, Aug. 24.—Police of the » division today continued thei nt fora woman's head, seen floating ast night in the East river near Hel Cate. They, believe that “if found it will e the mystery of the woman's torso discovered in the Hudson rive: at Jersey City last Tues: The head was sighted by a man in the motor boat but the tide was running so fast that he could’not get to it.’ TOWNLEY SUED BY JIM WATERS, BRINTONTO BE | ARRESTED FOR LIBEL s (Continued from kage One) ton think you can revenge by at- tacking men who. haye thrown the light. of day on your disgraceful, dou- ble-dealing tactics. Both you and he, hate Wm. Lemke and myself” so bitterly for having broken. your deals that you would both stgop tg’the lo®est depths to in- jyre or bjacken our character. We have wondered’for a long time why you have’ not tried» befpre this to frame-up on us and Cause our arrest. Nothing is. too’ despicable for you. Why delay? Don‘t wait. Pull you frame-up now. The League enjoys fighting fourflushers. Congratulat- ing you and the Independent Voters’ ation on your new recruit, J. . Brinton, I remain, Signed) A. C. TOWNLEY. | GOES 3,000 MILES | | TO SAVE HONOR, | e Toronto, Att. 24.—After youn: tarily coming 3,000 miles prove that he was not the adn who held up and robbed the jewel- ry store of Abraham Rosenthal of $50,000 worth’ of diamonds, De- witt Cook Ellwood, a weal real estate broker of Miami, Fla, to- day was a free man and the- charge against him withdrawn. JAP IS COMING. Tokio, Aug. 24.—Captain Kinji Hita- the United States and Europe to re- port on after-war conditions gener- ally. His trip will take him to Ger- many, England, France, Turkey and then New York, ka, of the navy, has been ordered to, this little instrument, dogs. not meas- / ure lung capacity itself but rather the extent to which the full potential lung capacity is being utilized, Try it out yourself; if you did not know It be- fore, you wil be surprised to see how greatly you can distend your sub- diaphragm by drawing in all the ait you can hold. % “OPEN HOTEL, FT. YATES, Aug. 24.—Clarence Drake has leased the Standing Rock hotel from Louis Endres and has opened the hote} for business. Furniture for sale at 112 Thayer St. Call after 5 p.m. “King George of England recei im average of 25,000 letters a year from his subjects. Daily Fashion Hint EFFECTIVE FOR MID-SEASON WEAR, =< 5 Voile, whether silk or cotton, would make up the’ first frock’ ef- fectively, and so that the waist may boast a detail as novel ‘as the shir- ring on the skirt, thé lace which trims it should be dyed in self-color. The sleeyes are kimono and neck cut, in round outline. Medium size requires 5 yards 36-inch material with 7 yards lace. Lace satin and figured foulard en- teXinto/the composition-of the sec- ond frock. The color ‘brown. The lace is ecru color with ; the designs outlined in brown silk. Medjum size requires 3% yards 26- inch plain and 214 yards figured ma- terial, with 134 yards lace. First Model: Pictorial Review Dress No. 8930. Sizes, 34 to 46 in- ches bust. . Price, 35 cents. Second Model: Blouse No. 8938, ‘Sizes, 34 to 48 inches bust. Price, 30 cents: Skirt No. 8914. Sizes, 24 to 40 inches waist. Price, 25 cents, scheme is |, A. W. LUCAS CO. BY EMPLOYERS Resolutions Signed by President and Secretary Are For- , warded | eee Resolutions opposing a full 85 per cent ‘increase in ‘state freight rates, is'asked by the railroads of the state wilroad commission, haye been dis- patched to the commission. by. the Employers’ association of North De- kota. Following is the text of the resolution “Whereas, there was passed atthe 1919 session of the legislature of North Dakota, and subsequently ap- proved by the governor, on the 18th day of February, 1919, a law entitled “‘An act relating to freight rates in North Dakota; the transportation of freight Within the state; the clas- sification ot treight for the purpose of sich transportation and the ap- plication of rates thereto; tixing the maximum rates and charges for the wansportation of freight intra-state: providing penalities and punishments tor the violation of the provisions thereof and defining certain duties and powers of the board of railroad -ommissioner and “Whereas, it is the opinion of this issociation that it was the intent and purpose of the said 4egislature, in passing said law, to adjust and cor- vect the disparities‘ in rates thereto- ore existing, as compared with the vates of adjoining states; and “Whereas, the said law was there- ‘ore held in abeyance by reason of the fact ‘that the railroads. of the state Were under the control of the federal government, ‘under and by virtue, of certain congressional legislation; and “Whereas, by reason thereof, the said discriminatory rates continued io oe and remain in operation; aiid “Whereas by reason of the removal of the said federal control, the said law, being Chapter 194 of the Laws of 1919, has now. become effective, but that the rates, therein and there- by established wilf not become opera- tiye until on and after the 1st day of September, 1920; and “Whereas, the railroads operating ithin the state of North Dakota, sub- sequent to the time when said law went into opération but prior to thé time when said rates could become ef- fective, have made application to the hoard of railroad commissioners ‘ot the state of North Dakota for an in- creasé of rates, and’ have requested the general level of increase es- .tablished hy the interstate commerce commission be granted upon, “and super-added to, the discriminatory and prejudicidt rates now in exist- ence; and “Whereas, the said chapter 194 of s of North Dakota) for 1919 des that the rates established shall be ‘deemed to be reasonable for the j state of North Dakota, and that no order or rule, permitting the, charg- ing of higher rate,shall be entered until and Unless the said railroad com- panies present and produce the cer- tain and definite evidence and proof detailed and particularly set forth ia said law; and \. “Whereas, it is the belief and opi: ion of this association thatthe 4 railroads and proper showing as Te- quired by section 10 of said chapter 194 of the Laws of 1919; and “Whereas, it is also the belief and opinion of this association that an emergency exists, but that it is neither desirable nor expedient broadly to in- terpret the direct, detailed and specit- ic provisions of the said law, nor to disregard the same, and that such emergency can be met, and that the transportation facilities of the state can be brought to the standard of efficiency required by the needs of the state by adhering to the plain and simple mandate of sai@ chapter “It Is Therefore Resolved; That this Employers’ Association of North Da- kota, do and it hereby does, express itself as being in hearty co-operation IT’S UNWISE. to put off to-day’s duty until to- | penis tte i ees stomach is “KEMOIDS the new ald to digestion comfort fe A pleasant relief from the discomfort of acid-dyspepsia. * MADE BY SCOTT @ BOWNB MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION a | Dakota, by *R. F. CITE LAW OF THE STATE; prejudicial discrimination and dispar- ities how existing in said rates, or which will cause the shippers of Nort) Dakota to bear a heavier bur- den “of rates than that placed upon them by said chapter 194, /' “Dated Aug. 18, 1920. f: ‘Employers Assvuciation of Nort! Bridgeman, Presi- dent. “Attest: R. G, 0, P. FINANCE PLAN OUTLINED BY WILL, HAYS In Joint Statement With Pen- rose He Explains “Decen- tralized” Scheme F PHILADELPHIA, Aug. | 20,—Sena- tor Boies Penrose and, Will Hayes, chairman of the republican national committee, in a joint interview issued | war''materials, not a single” here outlined the financial plans of the campaign managers and charted the course of the republican battle from now until November, It was the first meetifg of the national chairman and’ ‘Senator Penrose since the Chicago convention. As set forth by Mr. Hayes | and Setiator Penrése the “decentratized” financial program agreed on is a de- cided departure from any previous methods of collecting campaign funds. Mr. Hayes said it had been received everywhere with enthusiasm. “The plan,” said Mr. Hayes, “is an innovation, \ It has been inaugurated ‘in all states and is moving. successfully. Its advantages are obvious. ‘Its décen- tralization and the fact that contribu- tions are limited” to a imum of $1,000 is creating interest among thousands of peoplé who were never before interested.” Senator Penrose emphasized the importance of the financial plan and said he heartily ap- proved it. “L am glad of the opportunity to say a word in favor of Mr. Hays’ plan of raising campaign funds,” said the senator. ‘It contains élements of novelty and initiative and should be productive of results. ‘If the people of the United States fully comprehend the gravity ‘of ‘the situation and the consequences dependent upon the ap- proaching elections, there would be no! trouble raising all the money needed:” , . { JACOB NORRBY’S ADDRESS WANTED | Does anyone know Ww Jacol Norrby? The Tribune has received a request from C. Lemaire, Helena, ‘Mont., for aid in locating Norrby and his family, who are believed to live some place in North Dakota OT , is nearly twice the size of nal thirteen states. Ala: the o co S LUUUUONONOEEUEAUANAREEOUAEEQQQNEELEUAGUOQOUAULAEGANALUULE UHC EA UAH yours now. I i Mir More Than One Car'a Day is our sales record during the past week. We are in position right now to make prompt deliveries on all models. . HUDSON and ESSEX ; cars. This for a limited time only.’ Mod-_ els on display in our show rooms. Get R. B. Foubek Motor Co. Distributors, :216/Main St. a ' = WAR IN FUTURE International Council’ Makes Public Appeal Signed by European Labor Heads ‘Wenzel, Secretary. ” STRIKE AS FINAL WEAPON LONDON, Aug. 24.—Organization ft all workers in the world to fight against future wars is urged in’ an a ppeal to “the proletariat of the, uni. verse,” issued by the internationat league of trade unions at Rotterdam und signed by a number, of European. labor ‘leaders. j| “One of the best methods of pre: venting future wars,” says the ment,- which is published in’ Times,” is to refuse to’ transport, , oops or material. Organized lal should cease to he the ee imperialism and militarism and_o} the decided action of the people wi tt saye mankind.” a Other, recommendations made by the appeal to world workers Hae demands that no ammunition trains should run, no steamers loaded with ‘soldier transported, all food supplies'' be withheld and the manufacture of all war materials stopped’ ‘immediately upon the declaration of war. A general world strike would be called if all other methods fail. “Comrades,” the statement included “in 1914 our organized strength was too weak fo resist war. It’is now itate- Ate @trong having 27,000 members, but its strength rather ‘lies in’ the spirit which animates it. This organization; in its own Hands, has the power: to save the world from a repitition of cruelty which has Bese behind all wars.” STATE OFFICES WILI, BE MOVED The, offices’ of the H Home Builders’ association will .be moved to ‘the fourth floor of the Bank ‘of “North Dakota building. The building, rented by the ‘state since the creation of many new burédus and’ ‘branches’ of the state government, houses the bank, the office of the'secretary ofthe sont industrial commission, the railroad commission and the state‘ motot vehicle’ licensing department. A pas- senger: elevator ig to,-be ‘nglaliet Ju the building. HANDSOME BUNGALOW For' sale! ‘one of the most! hand- some and best built bungalows. the city. Hot water heat; all mod: ern and built-in features; garage; corner lot. This ‘ig certainly ja thing of beauty. Seeing is believ- ing. Let us show you!’ Price, $5,- 250.00/ $1,250.00 cash | 4... J..H. HOLIHAN,.... .. Ist door east:of post-offies, RU ||

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