The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 11, 1921, Page 1

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;, i] is ’ i a .) iM i H q ¥ , eg ; { i \ \ 4 e} 7 & v @ “€ ) 4 ‘ = ae ye , and spent, considerable time prepagin ,a preliminary draft of a constitutiénel “ble. : , at the June primary and then having “The Weather Generally Fair FORTIETH YEAR CHANGES ASKED IN TWO BILLS ON GOOD ROADS North Dakota Good Roads Asso- ‘ciation Sees Harm to State in U. S. Measures WRIFE TO CONGRESSMEN Legislative Committee Plans to Ask for Non-Political Highway Body Oppostion to features of the Dowell | bill and the Townsend bill, now pend- nig in Congress, which would deprive North Dakota and a number of other states of federal ald in highway con- struction at this time is expressed hy the legislative committee of the North Dakota. Good Roads association. The committee, ina two-day session here, examined the meagures closely bond issue’ amendment for good roads to be submitted to the people of the state. Both the Townsend and Dowell bills provided that federal aid shall not be given to states which divided the cost of state highways with counties, but require that state highways shall be built solely out of state funds. Under present highway laws the federal aid money in North Dakota is matched by the counties, with the state doing the engineering work and bearing expense of preparation of plans. Ultimately, under the good roads association plan, state highway will be built with state funds, but the association opposes 4 change in the federal law at this time. Drafting Amendment, Opposition algo is expressed to th4 feature of the Townsend bill which would remove the federal burean of good roads from the agricultural de- partment. The legislative committee believes that agricultural states will fare better in the participation in fed- eral aid if the bureau is left in the department of agriculture. The committee, which is composed of F. W. Mees, chairman; F. W. Turn- er and A. T. Kraabel, is not ready to announce a draft of the proposed con- stitutional amendment. \It was stated, however, that the amendment, when completed, will provide for a highway commission appointed in a manner that will make the highway commission as Rearly a nowpeélitical body as possi Letter to Senators. The following is a draft of a com- munication prepared by the commit- tee to be sent North Dakota senators and congressmen: “The legislative committee of the North Dakota State Goods Roads as- sociation heartily approves the prin- cipal elements of both the Dowel: bill and the Townsend bill. -“rne only objection that we find t. either is that the Townsend bill would undoubtedly and the Dowell bill would probably cause North, Dakota to lose the opportunity of using Federal Aic of the new appropriation until after January Ist, of 1924. ‘ “The provisions to which reference is made are those directing that no Project be approved for federal aid until after the state has provided a tate fund at least equal to the Federal Aid, and a State Fund-for Maintenance. North Dakota at present hag such state funds, could only set up such funds through constitutional aménd- ment requiring action at the polls and in the legislative assembly. “We have given some thought to the matter of the constitutional amend ment, had intended to sponsor legis- lation, such as would now be necea sary, even though the pending Federai Acts. had ‘not forced the issue. Our plans, however, had been for circulat- ing petitions early in the spring of 1922, voting om the initiated measure the measure placed before the legis- lative assembly in January of 1923. The constitutional amendment and the attendant legislation to give it force would then become effective on Jan- uary 1st, 1924, the proposed changes necessitating a change, an increase, in the automobile licensing. “We feel asured that whatever ac- tion may be taken by Congress we, in North Dakota, cannot provide “State Funds” to meet Federal Aid until 1924, and to care for “maintenance.” Urge Careful Drafting. “We hope, therefore, and urge, that the senators and congressmen repre- senting North Dakota in Congress-will use all of their influence to have what- ever Federal Aid bill may pass drawn so as not to be harmful to the Toad} building program in North Dakota. We; have a federal and state aid plan of construction well unde? way and need the additional Federal Aid of the pro- posed new Dill to carry it on but would urge the representatives and friends of the state to oppose new measure providing Federal Aid under such con- ditions that we could not, at least for two years, avail ourselves of its bene- fit. F. W. Mees, Chairman. F. W? Turner, A. T. Kraabel, Legislative Committee. | ROADS ARE IN GOOD CONDITION “Roads are in good condition gen-| erally,” says the report of the weather bureau today. The bulletin continues: “On the Red Trail, cross N. P. tracks! at depot at Buffalo, to avoid bad spots( on north side. The Sunshine Trail is) reported poor from Edgeley to Mo-' nango and north from Jamestown, and inquiries should be made for detours: THE BIS FROM $3 A. WEEK JOHN A. By Newspaper Enterprise. Chicago, June 11.—At 16 a messen- Ber at $3 a week. At 39, president of the Chicago and Cook County Bankers’ Association, controlling $400,000,000. This is the jump of John A. Nylia, whose salary is $100,000 a year. Nylin’s formula for success is sim- ply, “hard work, application, grit and ability to dream practically.” The “boy banker” is the, ydungest man ever chosen to fill the office he ow holds. In additon he is also vice president and cashier of the Fidelity Trust and Savings bank here.° “Too many young men just now are holding ‘blind alley’ jobs,” he says. “They are not content beginning trom the bottom and working their way up. “Jobs that pay good salaries to start with seldom hold out much chance “tor opportunity. $ “Give me the man witli determina- tion to succeed—one who looks upon every scrimmage with life as a les- son. That is the type that will come ut ahead of the game! “Fate probably was kind to me in letting me be born poor. INTERNATIONAL CUTS ON TRUCKS Chicago, June 11.Marked cut in prices of heavy duty motor trucks were announced today by the Interna tional Harvester company. tions tange from $268 to $900. WOMAN DENIES MURDER CHARGE Cleveland, O., June 11.—Mrs. Eva: Katherine Kaber, widow of Daniel F. Kaber, of Lakewood, O., raigned before Judge Morris Bernon this morning. The court set their hearing for June 18 and remanded both women to jail without bail. Priest Drops Dead Dickinson, June 11.—Fr. Francis| Wendish, pastor of St. Wenceslaus; Catholic church and rector at St. Jo-} seph’s hospital, dropped dead in his! apartments at the hospitaN shortly; after rising at 5 A. M. Tuesday. Med- ical aid was“hurriedly summoned ae soon as his inert body had been dis- covered but life was found to be ex-} tinct. { Funeral services were held from St. Wenceslaus’ church Thursday morning | at 10 o’clock. The church was crowd-| ed with former parishioners and friends who came to pay their last respects. Solemn requiem mass wa3 celebrated by Rev.’ Fr. Bubic of New| Hradec; assisted by Rev. Fr. George| Aberle of St. Joseph’s church at dea-| con, and Rev. Fr. Felix Hummer of; Gladstone as sub-deacon. Fr. Doer-! ing of Belfield acted as master of cer-| emonies. The Panegyric was given by! Fr. Bubic. Other clergymen present} were Rev. Fr. Vincent of Richardton | and Rev. Fr. John Dignam. Burial; was made in the church cemetery. Fr. Wendish was born in Bohemia‘ 62 years ago. He received his early! education at the Louvain university in Belgium and upon coming to America| entered a seminary in St. Paul, where| he was ordained as a priest. Three months ago he came to the} pastorate of St. Wenscelaus church, succeeding Fr. Hehn. As far as‘can be learned he had no relatives living in this country. RECEIVE MORE BODIES Dickinson, N. D., June 11.—The names of Norman Lebo, father of Paul Lebo of ‘Medora, and Civil War vet- eran, and Mike (McAndrews, veteran of the World war, have been added to the honor roll of soldier dead who are buried in- Dickinson cemeteries, at these points.” this week. Reduc-| and her’ ion of; Bismarck. daughter, Miss Marion McArdle plead-; Ex-service men gathered at the flaz ed not guilty to the charge of first} pole in Northern Pacific park at 1 degree murder of Kaber when ar. i In Apartments; : 2 C be *\ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1921 TO $10,000 A YEAR NYLIN. : “Poverty to an ambitious person is a blessing. It'acts as a lash. | “When I started out as a messenger in the stockyard district I spent my nights in school instead of hanging about street corners. “But always I dreamed of success. To make something of himself a man Must be a dreamer. ahead and visualize himself in the goal of success. “But a dream is worth nothing una less it is capitalized. Don’t just dream and then let it'go at that. Action alone can make dreams come true.” He was graduated from a'night high school and later took up law—always studying after work. “I found,” he says, “that getting ahead means putting something in the other fellows pocket so that he'll put something in yours.” Nylin says he hag only started out in. life. : “When ‘a man thinks he has reached the. top of the ladder he’s done for. Let each: success be gn urge to climo one notch higher. But don’t trample in greed the other fellow who’s am- bitious, too. And remember this: “Every man is a potential” success the moment he’s born.” PAY TRIBUTE 10 "COL. GALBRAITH | American Legion of Bismarck In Silent Tribute } | Tribute to the memory of Col. Fred- \erick W. Galbraith, commander of the : American Legion, who was killed in an automobile accident in. Indianapolis {Tuesday morning, was paid this after- noon by members of the American Le- M., the flag hanging at half-mast. The veterans faced the west for thir-; ty seconds in silent tribute and taps | were sounded, after which the flag was | raised to the top of the staff. . The funeral of Col. Galbraith was} held in Cincinnati, Ohio, this after- noon. THOUSANDS AT FUNERAL Cincinnati, June 11.—Thousands of} persons attended today the funeral! services at Music hall for Col. Frede- rick W. Galbraith, killed in an automo bile accident in Indianapolis. TALK ONE BIG METAL UNION Denver, June 11.—Delegates'to the convention of the metal trades de- partment of the American Federation of Labor defeated a proposal designed to bring about the organization of one big metal trades union in the United States. FORMER RESIDENT KILLED Dickinson, N. ‘D., June 11.—R. H.) Neil, for many years a resident of this} city where he spent his youth, was! instantly killed at Estherville, Ia., last) week when the Ford car which he was, driving turned turtle on the open high-} He must see| i | ithe janitor-at the Great Northern de- |thorities that 2n arrest was expected |returned from a visit. | FOUND IN A_ STATION ‘AUTHORITIES _ STILL AT SEA 1 One Theory is Exploded After Tracing Ownership of Suitcase Girl Unable to Pay Hotel Bill! Had Taken Suitcase There, is Claim ete a ( Fargo, June 11. Authorities ap- parently were no nearer a solution of the murder of: Miss Marie Wick today than they had: been at any previous time. Officers, were still trying to estab- ish whether the “whisp of hair’, clutched in the hand of Marie Wick, who was murdered in a hotel here, is human hair or not. The Univer sity of North Dakota has failed to determine this point and the Univer- sity of Minnegota has been asked to examine the substance, Authorities are working on no. defi. nite theory’ in running down the mur- derer, William Green, states attorney, said today, but are following all clues that can be found. The suit case mystery, which for a time was thought by the authorities to offer a clue which might lead to the arrest and identification of the murderer, yesterday turned out to be a false lead. ‘States Attorney W. C. Green issued a statement last night that the suit case found in the Great Northern de- pot Tuesday morning had been left there by a young woman who had stolen it in a local hotel. Green Issues Statement The solution of the suitcase mys- tery was definitely accomplished when the sheriff’s office obtained a confession from the girl at a local in- stitution yesterday. Before she had seen the suitcase in possession of the sheriff’s office she described it in de- tail, States’ Attorney Green’s own dictated statement on this matter follows: “On the forenoon of June Ist, a) girl who ‘had been. staying at the Prescott hotel and occupying Room 31 left thete because she could not pay her hotel ‘bill, leaving her baggage there and taking with her the key to Ktoom 81. That night, she spent a part of the time in one depot and a part in the other, During the night howéver, in wandering around, she came to the Central House, a hotel on Second Avenue North and Third ‘reet, and :finding no one in the of- ice walked upstairs, Stole Suit Case “At the head of the stairs is a sort of store room, and. looking in this she found the suit case in question and took it with her. The next night, she took this with her as baggage and registered at the Viking hotel where she ‘stayed two nights. “In the meantime she got enough money from a friend to pay her hotel bill at the Viking and upon leaving there, left the suit case at the Great Northern station on Saturday night, where it undoubtedly remained undis- covered until Tuesday. Girl Identifies Contents “The girl who had never seen the suit case or contents in the sheriff's office, and who has ever since Sun- day been an inmate of an institution in Fargo, described perfectly the suit case and contents, and also described the hotel and place where she took the grip before taking the officers there. The key was placed in the suit case by her, and the condition of the towel is accounted for. “This suit case was discovered by pot Tuesday morning and fell open} yesterday noon. Upon discovery of the contents he took it to officials, and a great deal of time and effort) was expended in invesigation which matter.” -TO TAKE FINGER PRINTS thorities today expected to take fing-! er prints of neighbors of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Dubois, whose daughter Katie was found unconscious in their farm home near Angus yesterday. An ar- rest was expected today. Announcement was made by au- IN FARGO CASE | today affirmed the | desirable alien” and denying him re- admittance to any American port was! KANSAS INDUSTRIAL Topeka, Kan, June 11.—In the most sweeping decision yet handed down affecting validity of the Kansas Indus- trial court law the state supreme court decision of the Crawford county district court sen- tencing Alexander Howatt to one year in jail for contempt. The law was held valid on each of the eight issues raised. Referring to the Industrial court the decision sets forth: “Phe act creating the court of In- dustrial Relations is a reasonable and valid exercise Of the police power of WOULD BANISH ADMIRAL SIMS Washington, June 11.—A resolution declaring ‘Rear Admiral Sims an “un- introduced in the house by Kep,. Gat- livan} Democrat, Massachusetts. BOYCOTT TOOL, OF REPRISAL FOR GERMANY Campaign on Among People. To! HELD CONSTITUTIONAL BY SUPREME COURT IN AFFIRMING HOWATT CASE: COURT LAWS the state over the business of produe- ing coal and does noi impair liberty of contract or permit involuntary serv- itude contrary to the constitution of the United States.” g The opinion, which wag written by Justice R. W. Burch and concurred in by alk of the supreme court judges emphatically states that production of coal is affected with a public interest. Howatt is president of the Kansas coal miners union. It was announced a few days ago that Kansas employers intended to test the validity of the Industrial court law. PUEBLO SEEKS ~ PREVENTION OF ANOTHER FLOOD . Federal Government’s Aid Is Asked in Work to be Carried Out CALL FOR FUNDS MADE Colorado Executive Asks People of State to Help Flood Promote Only Sale of Goods Made in Fatherland i BY MILTON BRONNER Leipsic, June. 11.—‘Kauft keine! feindbundwaren” — “buy no enemy! goods!’ ij That sign I saw for the first time; in a big Hamburg shop. 1 thought at first it was probably a leftover from the early days of the war. i “fFeindbund” literally _ translated! means “alliance of enemies.” Hence; it might. be translated “allied.” | 1 soon learied that the placard was: not a relic of the old war, it was the) sign of the new war. German business men are appealing! to German people to stand by them inj a trade war which they say has been; forced upon them by the allies’ action in’ putting up customs barriers on the Rhine and fixing a big tax on all Ger-} man exports. H ‘Hamburg. at once started a counter- war. Figures showed that Germans! were buying large quantities of French| wines, perfumes and toilet articles! clally cigarets. Patriotic Boycott Put Into Effect ‘So Hamburg conceived the idea of a patriotic boycott. The Chamber of! Commerce, the hotel men’s association | and other organizations took up the! and various English products, espe-| military and an army. of. laborers. Sufferers Pueblo, Colo., June 11.—Flood pre- vention is Pueblo’s big problem today as the work of emergenncy relief is| well under way. Announcement by Mayor, Lovern last night that a committee would go! to Washington to ask the federal gov-| ernment’s aid in preventing a repeti- tion of the flood was followed by a telegram from Secretary Fall, of the Interior Department, that two engi-| neers would be sent at once to make} a survey. A proclamation of Governor Shoup calling upon the state to raise funds for relief work had a heartening ef- fect on the populace. The Red Cross and affiliated organizations have the situation well organized, providing food and shelter ‘and medical: care for all need. 49 Known Dead Work of cleaning up the city is progressing under direction of,:the Army trucks and mule wagons are helping remove the mud nad debris and little danger of an epidemic is expected with precautions that have been taken by health authorities. The death list is growing but} matter. They advertised the idea in the newspapers. They scattered hand-} bills, They got up little stickers.; They put placards on all drays and) delivery wagons. They stuck cards in the show windows. i ‘The result, | I went to a number of restaurants; and hotels and asked for French wines. | The waiter pointed to the wine list on: which in red ink there was printed: | “We sell no enemy goods,” The women took up the fight. One of them wrote a newspaper that in 1920 Germans; consumed 88 million; marks’ worth of imported preserves,| 40 millions of perfumes and soaps and 390 millions of liquors and wines. She appealed to the German women, asking who would buy French and} English goods when she must say to) herself that through this deed a Ger- man workman was without bread; | through this she is helping the father-| land to further downfall? She wound up with an appeal which has‘ been | echoed in many quarters: i “German work and German industry must be helped by German buyers. | Therefore German men, German; women, buy only German wares!” | Hamburg business men declare the’ finally led to the solution of the entire; movement has already had a big effect’ and Theo. G. Nelson, executive secre- in France and England. They say! that leading French and British deal-; ers have been urging their respective: Crookston, Minn., June 11.—Au-) governments to ‘be more lenient with! istration has “frozen” nearly $7,000,- Germany. | Leipsic Follows Hamburg’s Example; In this city I attended a meeting at the hotel Sachsenhof, where the) leading business men, newspaper pro-/ prietor and editors and the prominent; members of all the political parties; in the case. The girl was found un-| yesterday by her parents when they, The girl had| butcher knife and had several cuts on| her arms and hands. She had been; bound and gagged and would have| strangled to death had not her par-| ents returned when they did. | Katie told the sheriff she would be! able to identify her assailant althourh | he was masked when he entered. He pointed a revolver at her and threat-| tened to shoot if she made an outcry.) When she resisted his advances, she said, the man used a butcher knife. | way and pinned him under the running} i board, He was alone at the time and| the details of the accident will never, be known. i ———_— | BUILDING NEW CHURCH | Washburn, '‘N. '‘D., June 11.—The; hope to have completed by fall, home: of Aug. Johnson. ging the cellar. do the wor’ s “Blind Lawyer men and teams have been busy dig-; The report was submitted in respons Thomas Grothe will/to a resolution. REPORT ISSUED . ON HIGH PRICE OF WAR SHOES Washington, June 11.—High prices members of the Lutheran church of|f footwear which obtained during Washburn began breaking ground for| 1918 and were increased in 1919 result’; dred delegates and as many more vis- a new church ‘building which they|ed from “abnormal conditions ef sup- The} ply and demand, both economical and| church bought lots from Joseph Mann,’ psychological arising from the war,”| convention which concluded yesterday. situated across the street from the} the federal trade commission today re-| n This week! ported to the house of representatives. tion and Mandan already has her bid “Incident to these conditions,” the | Teport added, “were large margins ot! Profit taken by tanners, shoe manu-} .._ Siver Serumgard, of Devils Lake,} facturers, wholesalers, jobbers and re-| L. Reade, Bismarck, secretary; George North Dakota's only blind lawyer, was} tafiers, whose large earnings were de-| Williams, Lakota, L. S. Stevens, Tow- in the city yesterday afternoon argu-|clared to be out of all proportion toler City and Peter Stanton, Souris. ing a case before the supreme court. | the increase in their cost per unit. | conscious on the kitchen floor late} \itorg from every town in the state discussed whether Leipsic should i tiate Hamburg’s boycott movement. It was unanimously decided to do so. One million stickers were ordered! printed. They are to be pasted on all) been beate® over the head with aj letters and envelopes sent out by Leip tion of the bonds now Offered does not Cards are to be hung in! sic firms. shop windows and street cars. A resolution was unanimously adopt- ed. It said England and ‘France were; waging against German business the: long-threatened economic boycott. The; German government could not help! business men, because it was chained; by the Versailles treaty. Self-help: was the only thing left. ‘ ' Self-help meant that for all citizens! | of the directors of the Independent re- ‘ funds” but “for the purpose of raising slowly. Today the known dead in the morgue stood at 49. GODDARD WILL BE DIRECTOR - OF CAMPAIGN Bismarck Man Occupies Import- ant Post as Vice Chairman G. O. P. Committee Announcement is made at Inde- pendent headquarters in Fargo that H. P. Goddard, of Bismarck, as vice- chairman of the anti-Townley Repub-| lican Central committee, will be one call campaign. ' A joint statement issued by. Mr. God- dard, 8. Johnson, chairman’ of the Democratic State Central committee, tary of the Independent Voters, dis- cusses the bond sales of the state. It declares that the Nonpartisan. admin- 000 in various projects and in sinking funds in the Bank of North Dakota and that the purpose for which orig- inally intended an is tied up for indefi- nite periods.” Declaring that bonds are not being offered for sale to release “frozen more money with which to further ex- periment with the same program,” the committee statements says: “The law providing for the redemp- require the establishment of a sinking fund until the last five years before their maturity, nor under the law is the sinking fund required to be kept; intact, but up to the very day of ma- turing of the bonds now being sold the} tax money accumulated for the pur- pose of redeeming them, may, by the| Industrial Commission, he tied up in other state enterprises, such as mills, TRIBUNE [===] —<———— PRICE FIVE CENTS TEXAS ATTACKS RAILROAD LAWS IN HIGH COURT {Interstate Commerce Commis- sion and Rail Board Held | Unconstitutional * | LEAVE TO FILE AGAIN Supreme Court Gives State Attorney-general Right to Go Ahead with Suit Austin, Texas, June 11.—The Texas attorney general’s' department an- nounced today that the supreme court of the United States had Sranted its request to file a suit attacking the con- stitutionality of the Interstate Com- merce Commission and the United States Railroad Labor Board. The su- breme court informed the department that a subpoena had been issued .to the two organizations’ requiring them to appear before the court and defend - their positions which the Texas ayit attacks. The suit was filed June ‘6 the-announcement said. ae In the action the state of Texas sets up the plea that the labor board atid Interstate Commerce Commission are without constitutional and statutory authorities and pray that the two hodies be judged illegal, It pleads that all laws or parts’ of laws direct= ing, empowering. or wegulating the creation, appointment and other quali- fications of the members of the de- fendant organizations be declared un- constitutional, invalid and void. Attacks 1920 Law, Texas, in the suit, prays also that all acts and orders of the labor board and interstate commerce commission be declared invalid and without force of law and that if any section of the | transportation act of 1920 be held con- stitutional the remaining thereof be declared invalid. An order is asked restraining mem- bers Of the two bodies from enforcing rules and regulations that conflict with internal affairs of the state of Texas, its constitution or the constitutional rights of its citizens. WHEAT GROWERS DISCUSS POOL PLAN ON WHEAT Meeting Called at Courthouse By Organizers of Grain Movement sections A meeting} called by officers of the Wheat Growers association was being held in Bismarck today at the court house. Among the representatives of the North Dakota association here for the meeting are N. K. Wicks, of Eddy county, and J, M. Wilson, of Burleigh county. A Slaughter, of Wakita, Okix- homa, prominent in the national o-- ganization, addressed the assembled farmers. The meeting was called to explain the compulsory pooling plan of the as- sociation. Under the plan, Mr, Slaugh- ter said, a farmer will contract to sell his wheat through the association for Nothing ex- cept wheat’ is handled.” “The wheat will'be sold to the mills, to the export trade and otherwise,” he said. “Bills of lading will be sent to local banks as credit for the asgecia- uon. Wheat may also be put in bond- ed warehouses and loans made on it. Our organization decided to use the most advantageous system of financ- ing, and we have found this is the ‘local banking system.” He sald that it was simply a com- modity sales proposition and he ex- pected the co-operation ‘of’ mills, ele- vators and bankers. The plan, he said, was furnished by Aaron Sapiro. attorney for the California co-oper:- tive organizations. MRS. O'HARE IN BISMARCK TODAY Registered at Mandan Hotel Last Night Mre. Kate Richards O’Hare and daughter registered at a ‘Mandan hotel last night, according to information ‘from there, and took the North Soo train from Bismarck early today. Mrs. O'Hare came into Mandan from the east last midnight, it is said, and of every class and of every degree of; elevators and packing plants, thus ren-| apparently did not care to stop in Bis- wealth, it was a patriotic duty to give; dering the final redemption of these marck, in which city she was tried up the use of enemy goods and con-, bonds at maturity exceedinly uncer | in federal court and convicted of a sume only things made in Germany. | READE HONORED . | BY N. D. FIREMEN, Williston, N. D., June 10.—Five hun- were attending the annual firemen’s Casselton secured the 1922 conven- in for the 1923 gathering. Officers elected were: William Halli, Jamestown, president; Henry Bernard, rafton, vice president; A. H. Haut, Gackle, second vice president; Henry trustees. | tain,” AMERICANIS . TENNIS VICTOR Beckenham, Kent, England, June 11.| —(By the Associated Press.)—Miss Elizabeth Ryan, of California, today{ defeated Mrs. Beamish, of England,! in the final match of the ladies singies\ in the tennis tournament here, 9-7, 6-4. | disloyalty charge during the war. She | did not visit in Bismarck, so far as is known, except to motor here to catch a train. OBJECT TO SPEECH Williston, N. D, June 11—Kate Richards O'Hare is billed to lecture at -Dahl’s grove, three miles each of Wil- liston, on June 16. The local post of the American Legion by resolutions passed unanimously hut put itself on record as being opposed to her speak- MELLON CONFERS WITH J. P. MORGAN Washington, June 11.—Secretary Mellon conferred with J. P. ‘Morgan,! of New York, and others regarding; the financing of the cattle industry through private channels. | ing in this community and a neve al of representatives of various frater' and religious organizations have put themselves on record as being oppos- ed to her appearance here. MAKES EIGHTEENTH New York, June 11.— Ruth made his eighteenth homer against De- : |troit in the seventh with two on.

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