The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 28, 1922, Page 2

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/ a PAGE TWO __ HE est THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PROF. ROVLANCE LETTERS UNFOLD INNER WORKINGS OF BANK, LEAGUE. | poe nee bcd tr Pub. Ne Should like to have you take it Correspondence of Former Pub-) out of the express office, unpack, take tatty Dire, > Talig Actiy-| oe and return to us by freight the lieity Director Tells of Activ pamphicts, entitled the North Dakota ity of Publicity Department) Industrial Program, Financial Report {of the North Dakota Indystrial Pro- gram and Constitution, Laws and Aihendnents /Thereto. We request that you dispose of the remaining material as most convenient to you, taking care that it does not become publicly known that the literature is NaN RESO aD | being destroyed, We are arranging shite Sate ae! see eee to have the shipment released to you, plicity Imanage ie Bank we paying the expressuhere. a ' North Dakota and also formerly con-| "5 Leauge caianaty y cueia ney: nected with national headquarters of | oonect.” ‘ at 2 the: National League, left his post in| “On tne same day, Roylance wrote in Spreading Propaganda in Behalf of Bank and League BOUGHT A PRESS SERVICE the bank recently he consigned a lot!) C. Dorman, National Nonpartisan of correspondence to the ash-heap. It} Poague, Minneapolis, Minn., on the failed to he destroyed and the letters) eo Gating isd ad euar- | ean iave dic become public. on, Bublect, stating the bank had guar Gries saat con-\anteed the express on the consign- | tain many inter s Te honk ' garding the workings of the league | ” “Literature Shipped Out. preanizadon and league leade! S. | Another letter showing the use It is disclésed in one batch of let-) made of the bank's department in ters that the Bank of North: Dakota though not publishing a newspaper,! } for the daily service of a! The letters show ribed for the Fed-' news service used by) ulistic, radical and labor The explanation of the preading league propaganda is from | L. Packard, office manager, Na- , tional Nonpartisan League of Wash- ington, Spokane, Wash. Packard wrote to Roylance as follows: ' “We have your letter of the 24th inst. advising that you are sending | 100 copies of the booklet on North H Dakota. a i ociation. rated Pr many 0 Dr. and Mrs. '\H, 0. Altnow, Dr. and 's. W. ©. Aylen, Mrs. W. H. Stabler A ‘| “We have not yet received these, service was for the use Of/ nut as soon as they arrive we will Noylance. The Federated Pr for- see that they are properly distributed 4 © Letter on Subject. |will do the most good and will or- | On Augest 4,°1920, Prof. Roylance) ger more if needed.” | wrote E. J. Costello, managing editor! Royjance also as a contributor to , of the Federated Press, Chicago. He| the Minnesota Daily Star, league or- said: gan, for which, although he was em- Dakota ordered at my request the | he received compensation. In a let- | daily mail service of the Federated! to» written on Jan. 11, 1921, Roylance | Press which has recently been reach- | acknowledged receipt of a check. | ing this department promptly. I am} ae Hl ‘unable to find words strong enough) : | i You will understand the importance | ‘MANDAN NEWS I attach to this service when I say| . i that a few yéars ago while teaching; history and political service in the|yfandan Men to Open state university (of Utah), T made anj E ; Repair and Service Shop | industry and had to give up the pro-! fect on account of a practically com- | if : z plete lack of any reliable record. he, one Bae rere are Wederated Shr Services, bs continued, ening a general automobile repair and will furnish exactly the record of in- vice station in the building at the future historian to write a true avel N. W., which has been used as count and interpretation of the in-|4 warehouse by the Farm Motor Sales dustrial development of our time. In) company. fact the record you are writing is in-! Messrs. Bunting and Copenhaver dustrial history, It is more than that. | have been in charge of the repair shop workers—the great masses of the peo-j several years. In addition to conduct- ple—in every country to find a true|ing a repair Shop and general garage basis off social organization and a/ Where 24 hour service will be given, correct method according to which to/| they will’also have a complete battery adjust all the relations of life.” ; charging and repair plant. ¥ On Jan. 15, 1921, Prof. Roylance|#bout February 1, wrote Carroll D. Binder, acting news} editor, the Federated Press, saying:| Mrs. Fred Domeyer was chosen “{ am enclosing herewith tw® short{ President of the Episcopal Guild at for tse in the Federatett I ;{ the annual election of officers which ello | A é | meeting at the home of Mrs. W. C. y, with regard to the discontin- |Ragger. Other officers elected uance of the service by the Bank Of] were: Mrs. John Bowers, vice pres- North Dakota, and requesting that the | ident; . Fred McKendry, secre- service sheets be sent to me as a coN-} tary; Mrs, E. B. Wilkinson, treas- that we sincerely regret nfot being | buying committee. The next meeting able to continue our subscription.” | of the guild will be held on Thurs- Letter to Liederbach, | day! February 9th, at the home of Other activities of the publicity de-! Mrs. E. B, Wilkinson. kota as it was connected to the gen-| CT ett aia spcontuned |and daughter, Helen, Miss Beulah : + Roylance wrote to! Sawtell, Mrs. B, Finnegan, Mr. and Chairman Liederbach, of the league Ge <n’ Hereler Mice Mtarearet By ? alah (Mrs. T. Heisler, Miss Margaret Ban- state committee, on April 31, 1921.) nister of Mandan were in Bismarck “Owing to the necessity for cutting; Down East” at the Capitol theater. down expenses we have temporarily | ‘Yestrcted our mailing list during the L. J. Bartram, son of Mr, and Mrs. t two months. It may be that onj J. S. Bartram of Mandan, returned to account some of the League or-j his home at. Casper, Wyo., to resume bank bulletins as they need.’ We have | hotel of that city. While here he was mailed the usual number of bulle-| in charge of Phe andan Steam Laun- tins to precinct captains, Ir there! ty during the aBsence of Mrs. Logan, are any others to whom we could send | WHO visited relatives in the east. bulletins, please let us know and we} | Washington, D. C., wh _it has been charged by Secretary | weenineton = pi ais ota pen Crawford, of the Industrial Commis-} pusiness matters in connection with sion, that the Bank of North Dakota;the Railroad ‘Commissioners. depart- mailing lists, kept in the “big green| ment. merly was used by the Courier-News. over the state where we believe they | “Sometime ‘ago the Bank, of North ployed by the Bank of North Dakota, to expréss my approval of your work. attempt to write a current history of dustrial history which will enable the |*o0) Of the Equity bank on Second It is the record of the struggle of the|of the Connolly Motor company for Bank Discontinues, | They expect to open for business iam swhitlng ‘Mr, Coa j took place Thursday afternoon at a tributor. I have explained to. him) urer and Mesdames Crum and Parson partment of the Bank of North Da-| He said: last night to attend the. picture “Way ganizations have not received as many | his position as chef of the Salt Creek aii bee aus they are eupplicd’? |. (WL H. Stutsman has returned from | box” in the Bank of North Dakota had} been prepared by jeague precinct | captains. | E, W. Bennett of St. Paul, head of the Dairy department of the Northern $ Literature Destroyéd. Pacific railroad is a visitor in Mandan Prof. Royliince shipped a consign- | t attend the Kow Carnival. ment of ‘literature to be used by i ' Claude Townley, brother. of A. C.! jules Blanche Tizee of St. Paul ar: Townley, to Portland, Oregon, which | visit her sister, Mrs. C we Coit Pie failed to reach Mr. Townley. On Oct.|ig iat her home. 22, 1921, Roylance wrote to him, cau- | i tioning him to destroy the literature but not to let the opposition get hold! evening for Minneapolis where he was of ahe fact. He wrote Mr. Townley: | called by the sudden death of a rela- “With regard to the shipment of | tive. literature made to you sometime ago, | a which arrived too late for your use,|__W. F. Reko left last eve | Fargo on a business trip. RHEUMATIC :ACHES. | Of the American casualties due to | 4 QUICKLY; RELIEVED J ‘ | §as in'the last war, only 1 1-2 per cent | were fatal. . PTCHE racking, agonizing rheumatic ache is quickly Telieved by an ape Plication of Sloan’s Liniment, ~ { For forty years, folks all over the world have found Sloan’s to be the | patural enemy of pains and aches, It penetrates without rubbing. % ‘You can just tell by its healthy, stiiaulating odor that it is going to do you good. Cae Keep Slocn's handy for neuralgia, sciatica, lame back, stiff joints, sore muscles, strains and sprains. SY At all druggists—35c, 70c, $1.40, | Makes Sick Skins Well one ot pr zobson's FamilyRemedies. Foraclear, bealthy complexion use freely . bs Sbson's Charles F, Pierce left Thursday Women now possess full ‘suttrage ‘rights in 21® countries. \Christmas and New Year dinners. q fast die later. ands. man building—one of the oldest brok- erage office buildings in the city. * SPARED, BUT DOOMED Se These two. birds are what remain of President Harding’s Thanksgiving, | ene ' They were among the many ,regeived ‘during the halidays and by grace of the order of their arrival, were spared SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, ’22 \ | HELEN MANLEY AND HER DOLL IN HER “BACK YARD” ATOP A NEW YORK 19-STORY BUILDING, AND (BELOW) HENRY OVER- BAGH AND HIS WIFE IN THEIR CHICKEN YARD ON AN OFFICE BUILDING ROOF. BY ALEXADER HERMAN, ' New York, Jan. 28—Atop of New York—Grows \another city, It is in the ‘heart of the financial district— Yes it is one of the quietest spots on earth! It is like a graveyard at night.” Mrs. M. B. Manley shuddered. She has been living on the roof ofa 19- ‘ Dr story building at 32 Broadway for iG more than two years. “My husband is the superintendent. | I We have to live here in the home the : owners provide. But I hate it.” “s. “So do I, ma,” chimed in five-year- hi old Helen. “Only my dolls to play ee with—and everybody ’way down he- low Her mother smiled. “We are comfortable, of. course. | Our apartment is one of the finest in the city—good sized rooms, all con- veniences. i “When I get up in the morning I find the milk, rolls and newspapers outside the door, It is no different from living uptown, except— “That it is so lonesome. Flyers Only Neighbors. “Our only neighbors are the: air- planes.” 4 Mr. Manley came in. He had been looking over his domain of 8,000 pop- ulation. “I ‘don't’ mind it,” he said. | “At night when the moon is high and the lights are twinkling on the, river and in the air I love to sit out and smoke my pipe. It’s like a fairy- land here.” “We moved in 11 years ago. My wife and, I liked it trom the begin- ning. ) “Our boys grew up--and_ they Across the canyon—lower Broad- way—lives another family. ¥ “Sure, I like living here,’ said George L. Tanner, superintendent of the Columbia building, “byt my wife isn’t keen for the idea,’ “I should say not,” Mrs, Tanner broke in. |“‘It.may be all right for millionaires who build their palaces in the air just for a fad. But I don’t care for it.” The Tanner home is beautiful. The rooms are much larger than those i} found in the average apartment. i Too Close to Sun. i “But it is so hot here in the sum-}\ mer,” Tanner explained, “that» we move off to the country. “It is all right beihg above the noise of the city, but it is umcom- fortable getting so close to the sun.” On Williams street, just off Wall. lives Henry Overbagh and family. They don’t have to go to the coun- try— U They have their own farm on their | roof! “T guess this is the highest farm in the world,” Overbagh rubbed his | “It sure is the life. | “Bight eggs yesterday; nine today and more coming. The hens are laying, fine. The air up, heré seems | to agree with them.” a) Overbagh has charge of the Selig- 28th, are:— vertis | ber. ‘Tis a " Mark of The Literary Digest | no reason to show good will.” a step toward peace,” but the Japanese people. wish for such slavish peace, after Japan has America? We are firmly resolved to reject such a slavish peace.” : But not all Japan is so disgruntled with the Washington Conference, as. we may judge from ‘the which says: “We should congratulate ourselves on the suc- It will be too much to call this success a great undertaking to yided sense of congratulation and at the same time road for their efforts to bring about the success.” widely circulated and infuential Tokyo Jiji, cess of the Washington Conference. save the, world. We therefore express our undi thank the government authorities at home and ab: j For more news of Japanese opinions regarding the Washington Conference, Hateful, Haughty America,” in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week. : : Other vivid, accurate, timely. reflections in text and picture of what the world is thinking and doing, as mirrored by the press of all countries, and given in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, January | Under the Leadership Must Pay to the Last Penny, Distinction to h Be a Reader of ; : | LONESOME ATOP NEW YORK ’SCRAPER FAMILIES SAY i 100 MILES OF © be ARCTIC CIRCLE Terribly Inflamed. Could | Not Sleep ltched'So Badly. i “7 had a rash on my/forehead and t nose. It was terribly inflamed and developed into sore eruptions. Somme nights i couldn’t sleep it itched so 4 vadly, and my face was quite dis- learned ,to enjoy jit, too. It's never lonesome. _ ¥ “We are at the heart of things. Our View is better than that on Riverside ‘drive. We see two rivers and the bay. “My children have never had to play on the streets— “And we are’ never ¢ bothered by nobsy neighbors.” FOLEY'’S HAS NEVER FAILED January is a bad month for. influ- ‘exza, la grippe and bronchial troubles. It is unwise to neglect the slightest | cough or cold. Foley’s Honey and’ Tar gives prompt relief, gets right jat the trouble, covers raw inflamed sur- faces with a healing coating, clears the air passages, eases stuffy breath- ing and permits | sound, refreshing, health-building sleep. Mrs. F, A. Gib- son, 1547 College Ave., Racine, Wis., writes: “Foley's has never failed in ‘giving iramediate relief and I'am nev- er without it.” ~ Adv. N COLLEGE WITHIN : j CUTICURA HEALS. RASH ON FACE { | Seattle, Wash., Jan, 28— ; believed will be the |north” university—The Alaska Agr jcultural College and fat Fairbanks, within ‘of the Arctic Circle | doors next Septemt: ;Bunnell, former federal judge and. now ‘president of ‘the ins {ced -here-recently. | .The college campus is: situated on | if | of the ‘territory. |the immediate vicini of 1,920 acres. hay, 1,270 bushels of 3,516 bushels of whe of pdtatoes. be. multiplied many land is ;brought un through the farming methods.” side” for several ing, faculty membe companies. day _ nights. floor in state. h, Hateful, Haug merical’ Professing to,work for the peace of the World, America invited the nations to the Washingtén Conference, where she has “tricked them one and all.” This scathing -gives the intensive form of a feeling of gome sections of the Japanese press., “Hateful and haughty,” indeed, is America, the Tokyo Yorodzu says, picturing Uncle Sam as “an international boor” toward whom “we entertain a grudge” and “have Going further, this newspaper adds, “limitation of armaments may be disillusion about the Washingt “4 peace thus brought about is a peace without liberty, been kicked and trampled down by Throwing a i \“There was under last year,” he pointed out, “a total This land produced 100 tons of vegetables, 1,006 tons of ¢ The wheat represents the yield of 183 acres. application of proper President Bunnell will remain “out- weeks equipment for thé schoo] and employ- Germany has 150 movie producing\ Dance at Baker’s Tuesday, Thursday and Satur- Best -music and 10c a dance. world’s ne: School of Mine a hundred miles will open its ber, -Charfes !E, | figured. titution, announ- avail. cultivation in | India. ity of Fairbanks 500,000 a year. oats and barley, at and 392 tons This yield can times as more nder cultivation and aes clothing. all securing Phone 58 CAPSULES _MIDY no Hall every |" reproach of the Tokyo Yorodzu ‘dn Conference that is revealed in a slavish peace. Do read the article, “Oh, France’s New Leader Germany’s Implacable Foe of Raymond Poincaire, Who Has Always Insisted That Germany France Is Going to be Heard and Listened to : Instead of Being Told What She Must Do,” Declares a Paris Paper French Chagrin at Washington Henry Ford’s Bid for Muscle Shoals What Hays Can Do for the Movies Senator Newberry’s Innocence The Missing Link Still Missing China and the Pacific Pact Our War With the Insects Scare inte France The Slaughters in-Asia Minor - The Difficulties Along the Congo Art and the New Silver Dollar Reviews of New Books - Topics of the Day Investments and Finance “Many Interesting Illustrations and Humorous Cartoons’ nishes, window s lighting fixtures J anuary 28th Number on Sale Today. Throughout t vertising pages | are given the wi Read This Issue—GOING TO BUILD?_Read This Issue ; THE LITERARY DIGEST is recognized as a national information bureau for those who need building equipment and those who seek ! : knowledge of building materials and communi- cation with engineers, architects, etc. There is a wealth of information to be gath- ) ered by reading the advertisements in this num- yee will find several kinds of roofing ad- industrial. piping, paints. and var- creens, steel products, a substi- tute for plaster for walls, ‘ceiling and partitions, , terra cotta, brick and stucco, heating and plumbing equipment, etc. he year those who read the ad- of THE LITERARY DIGEST idest choice and the most com- plete knowledge of the important materials that . enter into building construction. 10 Cen ts—At All News-dealers “*T tried several remedies but to no A friend told me of Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and after using them about three months I was corn- London’s fire department costs $2,- - EAGLE _Talloring and. Hat Works Reduction in prices in pressing ladies’ , Dry Cleaning. for and Deliver. Bismarck, N. D. Each Capsule beats ame £2” }@ tract of land four miles £rom Fair- 5 0 (Si te: banks on the matn line of the new sieaecerirs, eter caeses § | Sovernment railroad, set aside by con- | Illinois. \gress in 1915, The college itself was | ticura Soap, Oi.atment and Tal- Pe iy Hormally established in 1917 by an cum promote and maintain skin | , ‘act of the territorial legislature and purity, skin comfort and skin health. | $60,000 set, aside for buildings and! ‘The Soap to cleanse and purify, the equipment. The sum proved inade-' | Ointment to ‘soothe and heal, thy iquate and in 1921 an additional ap-} ‘Talcum to powder and perfume. ‘| ‘propriation of $41,000 was made. Mest | tutloure Lab. * |of the operating expense will be met poldevery iby the territory of Alaska, but $50,000 | { jwill be available‘ from federal funds, according to President Bunnell. SS Dra d The first year's curriculum will of- | TH jfer four courses—agriculture, general | WATCH RECOVERED ; ‘ +! science, home economics and mining—! Turtle Lake, N. D., Jan, 28.—Mrs. iunder present plans. Special short | Fred Kinger, of Turtle Lake, was jcourses in imining will be’ given to jheld up and robbed on Christmas eve, : |meet the requirements of prospectors ;A watch was taken. Mr, Klinger re- ‘and others unable to attend during the | ported the matter. The robber was H !full college year. {found at Devils Lake, Sheriff Stef- j | "The work of the college, President |frud went after him. The man was |Bunnell predicted, is destined, to play |fined $50 and 30 days in jail. | an important part in the development There are 12,000 railway’ workers int i |

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