The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 12, 1919, Page 8

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PAGE 8 FRAZER'S NEW WOGES PLKED AT STATE HOUSE Combs or Englert of Valley City; Gannons or Ashley and Totten of Bowman Named M’KENNA POPULAR CHOICE} Silver-Tongued Orator of Napol- eon Said to Be Favored by Voters of District That Governor Frazer's judgeship; appointments have been pract:cally | determined, under the terms of the} judicial redistric:ing act whici gives} him authority to name three new dis-! trict judges, increasing the total to 15, is the report current at tie capi- tol. The new judges, it is said, will be! either Lee Com2s or M. J. Englert, both of Valley Ci:y, in the First dis- trict; G. M. Gannons, a former law partner of John Wishek of Ashley, in the Third, and Judge Edward P. Totten of Bowman, at whose home was entertained Kate Richards O- Hare following her seditious speech at Bowman which resulted in her conviction, in the Sixth. The first district is to have three judges, who will be Charles M. Coo- ley of Grand Forks and A. T. Cole of Fargo, now serving, and _ either Combs or Englert of Valley City. Listrict No. % will have three judges, who will be C. W. Buttz of Devils Lake, W. J. Kneeshaw of Pembina and A. G. Burr of Rugby, all of whom are now serving. District No, 3 is left by the reap- Portionment with only one judge, Frank P. Allen of Lisbon, now on the Fourth district berfch. The new dis- trict is entitled to two, and it is un- derstood that Gannons of Ashley will ‘be the second. In district No. 3 two judges now on the bench—W. L. Nuessle of Bis marck, presiding over the present Sixth, and J. A. Coffey of Jamestown judge of the Fifth, will be the jurists. District No. 5 will have Judges K. E. Leighton of iMinot, now of the Highth and Frank H. Fisk of Williston, now judge of the 11th district, and dis- trict No. 6, which comprises the old Tenth and Twelfth districts, will have. Judge W. C. Crawford of the Tenth and Judge J. M. Hanley of the Twelfth, of Dickinson and Mandan, respectively, and Judge Totten of Bowman as the new member of the circuit. The Tottens have ranked very high in the league since its organization. The Rev. George Totten has been a member of the board of regents for the last two years and has otherwise ‘been looked after, while his son, George, Jr., has been a member of the league’s press bureau and was chief clerk of the last house of rep- resentatives. E. P. Totten, ‘brother of the elder George, formerly was county judge of Bowman and his wife, Lillian Totten, was postmis- tress at Bowman until after the O’- Hare incident. when she was re- placed.. Combs is a well known Barnes county barrister who has been identified with the league to some extent, and Mike Englert, for- merly said to have been rather active in opposition to the league, took the stump for the organization during the recent referendum campaign, whén he is given credit for assisting! to hold Barnes county in the league column, Gannons has practiced law at Ash- ley, in McIntosh county, for some time. During the last year, he has been aligned with the league, and recently he has been a frequent call- er at the governor's office. A popu- lar choice for the judgeship which current report awards to Gannons would, it is said by George J. Mc- Kenna of Napoleon, but it is not known that McKenna is an active candidate. _ x ‘ | | SOUTH DAKOTANS NAMED I ASSISTANT TO PALMER. > ______ ie Washington, July 12—John Bartion Payne of Chicago was nominated to be a member of the shipping board and Robert P. Stewart, Deadwood, S. D., was nominated to be assistant attorn- ey general. H. Percival Dodge of Massachusetts was nominated by President Wilson to be minis- ter to the kingdom of the Se-bs, Croats and Slovenes. : Other nominations were: To be consul in Class 8: Ray- mond C, ‘Mackey, Wisconsin; Jeith Merrill, Minnesota. William O'Leary, Minot, N. D., to be register of land office. United States Attorneys—J. M. “Clements, Hele ‘Mont, Divi- Bion 2; Alaskage«:: 8 L, Pet. Chicago 25.643 jNew York 24 625 Cleveland 30.565 Detroit . 32 «522 St. Louis . 34 495 Boston . 87445 Washingt 42.400 | Philadeiphia . 49.258 AMERIC.AN ASSOCIATION. St. Paul 40 27 (BASEBALL —————— NATIONAL LEAGUE, W. L. Pet. |New York vee 44 22667 Cincinnati . - 48° 24 667 Chicago . 40 32 556 ‘Pittsburgh 37 «3329 Brooklyn - 86 383 522 St. Louis +» 28° 42 400 Boston ... 24 43358 Philadelphia . 19 46 292 AMERICAN LEAGUE. Louisville 41 28 Indianapo 88a nansas Cily 36 31 Columbus 3332 Manneapolis 29° 35 ilwaukee 29 39 ‘Toledo 21 45 GAMES IN BRIEF, National League— Cincinna.i 4-6, Boston 2-2. Pittsburgh 5, Erooklyn St. Louis, 0, New York 2. Chicago 6, Philadelphia 3. American League— Philadelphia 1, Chicago 7. Boston at St. Louis—Postponed on account of rain. Washington 1, Detroit 3. New York 1, Cleveland 5. American Association— St. Paul 2, Milwaukee 12. Minneapolis 3, Kansas City 4. Louisville at Indianapolis—Post- poned on account of rain. Toledo 4, Columbus 5; 11 innings. AMERICAN LEAGUE, Score— RHE Washington . e110 1 Detroit 381 Batteries. Harper, Gill and -Ag- new, Gharrity; Love and Ainsmith. Score— RHE Philadelphia /-19 3 Chicago 712 0 Batteries: Perry and Perkins; Ci- cotte and Schalk. Score ... RHE New York ood 8o.0 Cleveland ... -5 71 Batteries—Short, Smallwogd, Nel- son and Hannah; Bagby and O'Neill. NATIONAL LEAGUE, Score— RHE Cincinnati 491 Boston 290 Batteries— Rariden; Nehf and Godwy. Second game—Score— RHE Cincinnati 612 1 Boston 5 2 oe 2 Batteries—Eller and Wingo; Keat- ing, Demaree and Gowdy. Score— RHE St. Louis oO 24 New York . oe 2 8 21 Batteries—May and Dilhoefer, Barnes and Gonzales. Score— RHE Pittsourgh 510 2 Brooklyn -28 90 Batteries—C: Schmidt; Pfeffer, Smith and Krueger. Score— RHE Chicago -6 9 0 Philadelphia .. ++ 310 2 Batteries—Carter and Kilifer; Hogg and Packard and Adams, AMERICAN ASSOCIATION, Score— RHE St. Paul .. + 2 6 2 Milwaukee «11218 2 Batteries: Niehaus, Browne and McMenemy; Northrop and Lees. Score— RHE Toledo 481 Columbus - 6 9 4 Batteries: Sanders and Murphy; Walker and Wagner, Score: RHE iinneapolis a aes Kansas City ., at ok Batteries: Robertson and Owens; Hall and Lalonge. ‘ TRANSCONTINENTAL TOURIST DROVE HIS FIRST CAR AT SIX) James H. Drake, Los» ngeles garage proprietor, who started westward with Col. King Stanley this morning, home- ward bound after touring more than 10,000 on an original capital of $10, got into the automobile game at the age of six, when his father entrusted to his care a 1903 type two-lunger Ford. He did his first repair job at th aga of cight, when something wi wrong with the car and Jimmy fixed it, rath- er than face a possible parental gscold- ing. It was a good job, Drake insists, as it ill holding. He has been in the garage business on his own hook since he was 16, He has done a little amateur racing, but this is hig first transcontinental tour, —______. Bismarck Visitors, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Conley and daugh- ter of McKenzie, were visitors in the | ficial be deposited promptly with the WORKERS” FUND PROTECTION [f ASKED OF STATE Attorney General Advised Money Is Now Privately Deposited and Not In Treasury ALLEGES A MISDEMEANOR Auditor Declares Action Ren- dered Board Liable to Crim- inal Prosecution Under Act In a letter to Attorney General Langer, State Auditor Kositzky re- quests that Chapter 247 of the ses- sion laws of 1915, requiring that any public funds received by a state of- state treasurer, be enforced in con- nection with the workmen’s compen- sation bureau, whose secretary, John Brown, formerly of the council of defense, has admitted, states| Mr. Kositzky, that the commission has on hand money paid in as premiums to the compensation fund which has, not been deposited with the state treasurer. This money, the amount of which is unknown outside of the compensa- tion bureau, is now on deposit, it is said, with a local bank. The state auditor asks that the attorney — gen- eral proceed under the act of 1915 to require the commission to turn this money into the state treasury: and also that prosecution be inaugurated under the clause of this act which SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1919. OPEN ALL NIGHT During the balance of the season, beginning tonight, our garage will be open all night ready to serve motorists with gasoline, supplies and storage. If you are not storing your car in our clean, fireproof building, this all-night service should interest you. If you are not taking advantage of our up-to-the-minute garage service, we’re both losing. A Good Place to ‘‘Blow In’? When You Have a ‘‘Blow Out’—We Have Your Size Tire in Stock makes the depositing by public offi- cials of public funds with any bank or banker or other private person or institution or department other than the state treasurer a misdemeanor. The state auditor asserts that he has called the attention of Secretary Brown to this statute without effect, and that the money which the com- pensation bureau has on hand still remains deposited with some bank or other agency unknown to the state auditor. The compensation act makes the state treasurer custodian of this fund, which may run ultimately into several hundred. thousand dollars, and the state treasurer has already provided through the state bonding department the $100,000 bond requir- ed of him as ‘such custodian. FATHER OF LATE DAN <BRENMAN IS and Its a Federal—None Better Lahr Motor Sales Co. Distributors ef Willys-Overland Cars, International Trucks, W. E. Power and Light Plants, Federal Tires, and Vesta Batteries. native of Pennsylvania, he was a grad-|tbe naval unit to escort him to Amer- uate of the Ann Arbor, Mich, high! ica. The destroyers conveying him school and the literary department of! home are down in the naval records of the University of Michigan. He was admited to the bar in 1880,-and has been engaged in the practice of law ever since, and for the past 33 years In Devils Lake, In a public capacity’ Mr,..Brennan bas served as a member of the board of education, member of the city coun- | eil and city attorney. He has also been identified largely in the various efforts for the public improvement of the city, In his profession he enjoyed a gen- eral and lucrative practice in the state and United States courts, and also in the United States land department. For years he has been recognized as a lead- ing member of the North Dakota bar, and he possessed a law and private li- brary of several thousand volumes, Judge Brennan’s son, Daniel V. Bren- nan, assistant attorney general, died a year and a half ago. CIVIL WAR VETERAN DIES AFTER THIRTY YEARS IN MORTON America as the 13th destroyer division. On the 13th of December, 1918, this flotilla of destroyers came into Brest harbor as escort to the George Wash- ington, bearing President Wilson on his first visit to France. On the 13th of February, 1919, this thirteenth destroy- er division sailed out of Brest, convoy- ing the Washington as, far as the Azores on the president's return to America for a short stay. In March the same flotilla received instructions to meet the Washington in the Azores. They were at the appointed meeting place on March 13, 1919. The Round Oak Pipe- less Furnace increases the value of any prop- erty more than the amount invested in its purchase TAKE BY DEATH Devils Lake, N, D.,, July 12.—M. H. Brennan, one of Devils Lake’s leading citizens, died at- his home yesterday Mr. Brennan, an" attorney at law by profession, was one of the best known and popular citizens of Devils Lake, A capital city on Friday. ‘ DANCE AT ARMORY romney so Cheapest Per Mile ° — ! Mandan, N.D, July 12—Phil Mc- Investigate! Cormick, 76, a resident of this coun- ty for the last thirty years and a former civil war veteran, died Friday morning at 4 o’clock at his farm five Valuable Heating Book Free miles west of town. General debility was the cause of his death, You should secure one of these free The deceased was well known Round Oak Pipeless Books, 9x 12, throughout this section of the state A, P.)—President Wilson was faithful to his prediction for No. 13 in selecting afternoon after a lingering illness. Al- profusely illustrated, which proves though his death has been expected ends come: from lowe: ea Pyeohia and this claim and describes other dis- fur some timé;"it comes as a said blow three daughters, James and John tinctive advantages fonts tail Pudeephost of viens Over areCormick who live on the farm; he entire state as well as in Devils} > : Jake where he ‘has; made his home for ao Hae oF the. Fissher ve —Sold By: many years. Dei ae iad ens di ? Ta. Mr. Brennan is-survived by his wife,| Mont, and Mrs. W. P. Andrews o} iy 7] : eI ‘| coma, Wash. FRANK G GRAMBS ie: sdauanter Mra: Charles Clap, his The funeral announcements will ° sons, s rald, and his grand- bi ade lat children, Daniel, Michael, Beth anda| 2@ ™#de later. Western North Dakota Agent Francis Clap, and Miss Mary Brennan, 18 STILL LUCKY all of whom were with him during hi: last. illness, Dar FOR PRESIDENT Bismarck, N. D. Brest, July 4, (Correspondence of the Keeps Your Motor Young No Oil Good Enough For Your Motor Except Good Motor Oil It is true, of course, that all auto oils con- tain more or less lubrication---but if the kind you are using in your motor does not contain enough lubrication, your motor pays for the shortage---pays a very high price forit. Good motor oil naturally prevents un- necessary friction-“just oil” naturally cannot. There’s as much difference between good oil and “just oil” as there is between cream and milk. Ask the Man Who Has Used French Auto Oil Marshall Oil Company

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