The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 6, 1923, Page 2

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) Druggiste sell milgjons of prekazes. { baby. Bef i ’ PAGE TWO RECREATION HELD FOE OF DELINQUENCY Social Worker for County and City Details Work Done in The Past Year \GROUNDS AY Well supervised reereatio i! ities are urged by Miss Elsie H. Lawrence, social worker for the Red and the city of reducing In report year's period, city social Cross, Burleigh count, of Bismarck, as juvenile delinquen covering more than Miss Lawrence detailed to the commission the work of the worker during the time and conclu- sions drawn from experien a Describing the work of the Red Cross in connection with soldier aid “During the year of 1922 and 928, from Feb, 15 to March 1, taere re 318 social ¢ passed through ¢ Red Cross office, 118 of which are the still active. This work included problems of the widow, de i husband and sniftless me as the work with transients =-pendent, neglected and delinquent children, The soldier cases were ed from the box folders to filing system and in this as found that over 700 cases n cared for by the Burleigh merican Red Cross. At the » 98 cases are active. discontinued its soldier nd is paying the marek fter ing Since the Vet- s that there are istance in filing their claims, in Morton county, we ‘rope to increase the number ‘of ac- | tice claims, as the compensation will 10 per month for loo 60 men needing be commensurate with the amount) of work done.” “Although it is a general opinion i | | | Leet amy BILL HART TO SEEK DIVORCE ‘N Domestic rtouble movie hero, and h Winifred Westover, in divorce latter. She s of Bill Hatt, s wife, formerly on wil be told ourt, according to the y matters have gone too far for amicable settlement or reconciliation, S Riders thereby heading the leaguc. | Merril’s team mates are as follows: Merril Enge, Captain; Crorie, Jno. McNary, Leo Benser, Martin Lochrke, Substitutes—Erlen- meyer and Paul Scroggins. League standing: Louis Mc- that the war work is done, the claims | ~~ ~~~~-~~~.~~-~~~~ | Tieenine ants MM L Tie this office show that We} oy as the children are not out o GH Nil Lisi r disabled men,” the report con-| vocting their eneredes ne. rigne | Demons Fi aie : eeu IO RE EO BGG aay ta 0-2 3 : 4 channels. only one playg' F : < 2 ‘The claims adjusted during the n be maintained, I would recom- Bull Dogs C1) 3 02 year showed 10 compensation claims. } nent that it be placed south of the | averaging from $100 to $500 track.” uetive T. B| cases obtained h AL swagisthabion AbUeeeUsMEe ization and back compensati | planned by a committee of the As-| sisted in uring vocational | soiation of Commerce, will save time ane (eceiving treat | gad anoncy, iti ed, There are 61] mpensation for dis-/ separate organizations in Bismarck, abilities which they received in serv- | i, ried cured dental | ice; eight men ha ial Worker has found the treatment through tae local office. A | people of Bismarck and Burleigh | lice magistrate, granted a permit to See oe oe eet | county most ready to co-operate,” | Jack Gagner to run a dance hall in Work continues on 98 claim the report says. “Recently a friend-! the east end of the city over the : Quoting from a letter from a sol-| ty visiting club has been organized| Farmers Union store, and allowed dier the report says “I wish here to} ang the women are planning to as-| bill gain commend the splendid work of the social worker in follow-up | The report of J. D, Wakeman, city Mrs. F. L. Conklin, who has donated | visits so that the best constructive | weigher, showed collections of pt entixe time to tac/noldier work.’ | Work can be done.” | 40 during February, 2,934 loads Whexs are 40 widows in Burleigh piecieiaa tere es being weighed. hat county receiving Mothers’ Pensions, |__| Bilis allowed include the average of which is $35 per Bismarck Boys |, Rollin welch, saerit . month. y{J. R. Bryan....... Pt tHesia like to. recommend a ( QO Och nd WEIN close supervision of the expendi-| qh. Lincoln Pioneers of the Wach-| tures of these pensions to ascertain - ter school paid a visit to the Capitol; N. if the mothers are buying sufficient |). ot” wook. pressions of the trip! Ha Food ynd the children getting proper Gill be ete vy inights| Wachter (iranstersGo, nourishment, Miss Lawrence. | Wi ..c, © | Street and Sewer De “Standard budgets should be worked | ™QUNE of the club. deities | ROW Ee ee out peas ells cal as te ihe SMAtEn: GBKGIEE league this; Washburn Lignite Coal in their homes so that they may t Teams d captains will pe) Geo. Gussner . ‘ come efficient housekeepers. 5 iB City relief is given to 19 families, | *¢lected and all ready to go Friday} the report continues, most of whom jaearnoen icnowles “Shiniabennt | ire me en who are too old aes ubeapia arse hous ; i lief for the year Sept. 1, 1921 to | These games were interrupted by | Geo. Gussner ee 1 veaeaat 5.4y | the district games which were play-| ¥ monthly, while from Sept. 1, 1922 to | ©d_ he eee cit Setarday: 7 Jan, 1, 1923, the average was $394.45, |#Mes which were scheduled see fhis included the greater part of | March rd wijl be played at t lit F. O'Hare che period when the most relief is | Conclusion of the schedule. ha! Tl 2 O'Hare ceded, since coal is supplied after | Bames for March 10th — will Des lpannen Hau Satiater 1. | Freshmen vs, ‘Wm. Moore, Richholt| porn” pareipere 6 During the past year the social | VS: St. Mary's. Phe second team | "4" Browne” orker interviewed and advised 103 | Mes will be between St. MArsis iy, lependent delinquents, or defecti nd the Freshmen, | F thidren, which the report lists as| The Comrades” will meet on) FA, Brown | sollows: Unmarried mothers, 13; | Thursday night and the speaker willl ya’ Brown... delinquent girls, 30; dependent eajl-| be Judge Christiansony his fovic | Fourth Street Laundry will be “How to Prep: Speech and the “Value of Public Speaking. The Young Comers brought their ketball leagues to a dren, 42; girls’ returned home, 8; | cripple@ children, 6; feeble-mindea, | ¥ (only one admitted to Grafton in- | stitution, mutes 4, blind 1. Three | bi close Jesse French and Sons Pi é iano of the unmarried mothers were sent | Saturday morning. — Merril Enge’s} ¢ 4 corporation, _ plaintiff to the Florence Crittendon home, two | Lightning Five won from theRough | and respondent, ve Geo. We Getts, | CASE IS PUZZLE were married and two are receiving support for their bubi “I believe that tne only way that | We can prevent delinquency is to | hope to have adequate recreational facilities for young people and hope | that during the coming summer play- grounds will be maintained with ade- quate supervision,” says Miss Law- rence. “Jane Addam ground without supe is workshop of the: devil, so we would | not recommend playgrounds unless | they could be under the supervision of recreational director. The’ sum- | CHEW A FEW!) NO INDIGESTION . BAD STOMACH te Too Much! Stomach Upset? Here’s Instant Relief: cae The right of an unborn child ead against provisions of the legal code jo pleasant and harmless! The! ig the question puzzling Minnesota nt ““Pape’s Diapepsin” reaches | authorities. —dulig Churehill, above stomach all distress goes. Lumpy was given freedom after arrest, on indigestion, gase: heartburn, | condition ‘she teave the state. Now irness, bioating, flatulence, pal-{she has returned asking permission jon, vanis) to marry Melvin O'Loughlin, serv- atorapeh now! Correct} ing ‘sentence for burglary. She snd acid y for Wie cents. pleads the- rights of her expected | i | | made by the defendant j the trial court did not abuse. its di COMMISSION IN MEETIN' Th city. commission, at a short mecting last night, received the re- port of social work done in the city, reports of tie city weigher and po- DECISION OF SUPREME COURT From Grand Forks County metimes doing business under the name and style of Geo. E. Getts Pi. Where a motion is vacate a default judgment upon the ground of excusable neglect, and where at the Syllabus: (1). time the judgment was entered, an’{ 4 answer, verified by the fattorney for the defendant on information belief, wasonefile, and the same ‘as at issue, and such answer dis- closed a defense on the merits, it j held-that’ no. affidavit. of merits # necessary,-following Harris vs, Hes- sin, 32 N, D. 25; 165 .N.-M..41; and Peterson v. Finnegan, 46 N. D. 101; 176 N. 734. (2) ‘The action of the trial court in refusing to'grant”.a motion to vacate a judgment ander Section 7483 C. L, 1913 will not be reversed by this court except for manifest abuse of diseretion. For reasons stated in the opinion, it is held that cretion in refusing to grant the mo- tion of the defendant to vacate the judgment entered against him. Eng- lert, J, Affirmed. Opinion of the Court by Johnson, J. H. A. Libby, Grand Forks, North Dakota, Attorney for. the Defendant and Appellant, ~ Dakota, Attorney for. the Plaintiff and Respondent. _-+ COLDS ARE CONTAGIOUS. . Coughs and Golds. are contagious and require prompt. treatment’ as they spread or develop into Flu and Grippe. . Take no ehances when you can get Foley’s Honey and Tar for a few cents.and quickly check coughs and colds, The ‘constantly increa: ing demand for Poley’s Honey and Tar, for three generations, has made it the largest selling cough medicine in the Werld. Contains no opiates— i its are printed on the -wrap- efuse substitutes. Insist upon iwhich the new rates [able to | Specific, in the case of the City of | 5 |pany showed large earnings and in \sion, would be considered by | TRIPLE 0 Company, Defendant and Ap- | Pellant. | | Geo. A. Bangs, Grand Forks, North | ‘MASTER WILL. | -DECIDEWATER | COMPANY RATE | Decision in Case Received | H in Bismarck i The next step in the case of the} | Bismarck Water Supply Company against Railroad Commission in-| volving rates of the company is ex- pected to be the appointment of master by the federal court to take testimony on the matter of .whc- | ther or not the rates laid down by the railroad commission are confis- | eatory. This was the rule filed jin a | Minot utility case in which similar | action was taken. The case of the first went before the federal court’, in August, 19 on application by the water company for an injunc- tion to restrain the railroad com- mission from enforeing the ten-ex- isting rates. The court, compose lof three judges granted an inter- |locutory injunction upon conditions, one of which was that “pending the ifinal hearing plaintiff should not charge rates higher than 35 percent in excess of then-existing rates. An- other condition was that the injunc- tion should not interfere with the investigation then being carried on by the railroad commission with a iview of establishing just and rea- | sonable rates.” Since “that time, the memorany dum of Judge Wilbur Booth of fed- eral court, St. Paul, says, the rail- road commission has prescribed a 16 2-3 percent increase instead of the 35 percent increase? Based upon a supplemental bill and affidavits, the plaintiff asked for a restraining order against the enforcement of the new rates. Doubts Premise Judge Booth’s memorandum con- tinues: “The presumption is that the new rates prescribed are just and rea- sonable, and I should be loath to interfere by restraining order with the rates thus prescribed until after a final hearing of the cause, if the showing made on this application consisted simply in comparing con- flicting evidence as to values and drawing conclusions therefrom. “But a somewhat careful prerusal of the record that has been introduc- ed at this hearing has raised in my |mind grave doubts whether the con- clusions of the Commission, on were based, were not reached either by assum- ing wrong premises, or by erroneous reasoning, or both; and also whe- ther a materially different result would not have been reached if these errors has been avoided. “Of course it is not,possible from | this preliminary hearing to state positively these conclusions, but they\ appear more than probable from the consideration I have been! ive the matter, To be more} local company j Minneapolis vs. Rand, Receiver, de- cided by the Cireuit Court of Ap- peals of this circuit. in January 1923, a number of the same ques-{ tions involved in the case at bar were discussed and determined, One was that the matter of ‘going value’ could not properly be disregarded in making up a rate-base for a pub-| jlie utility, even though the past fi- nancial history of the utility com- excess of what, under state supervi- the Commission, apparently on the ground disapproved by the Court in the case just cited. Must Consfder Prices , “Again, in the same case, the @ourt decided that the present-day prices, though caused by the war, not only should be considered in making the valuation of a utility comany’s property, but tha, to TRAGEDY b: resort.” Her mother ‘bandaged the boy's wound and. then “killed her- self. some extent at least, the utility com- ROHRER GARAGE : pany was entitled to have the bene- fit of such increased prices caused the prevailing prices. It would ap- pear from the language of the deci- sion of the commission in the case at bar that it did not follow the above view in making its*valuation of the utility company’s property.” the railroad said: “This court is of course bound {by the decision of the. Circuit Court of ‘Appeals of this circuit, and must be down in.those decisions, in passing upon’ such matters as valuation of a utiMty company’s. plant, Going Va- lue, jets, As stated above, it.is a mattar of grave doubt. in-my mind whether the Railroad Commission has h ples. in ‘the ‘present controversy.” ~ Tribuke Want Ads .Bring Requite For Constipated * e on Pe sa: . " . \. Crazed:by the belief that she was | | ~ Sour: Stomach, Bilious Liver collars. going to’ lose her Palm Beg:h % 7 4 fs " Caboreoe Eecurly BT ‘Brsdeehore’| sti beapeeatisartiesavatide'V4 ie | Ga -einpt bowels completely | ES ° : : (above), formerly of Bridge’ 5. e ni cathartic-laxative in tife| will empty your bowels com, Conn., stabbed ‘her seven-year-ald | worlg to physic your liver and bow-|by morning, and you will feel splen- Capltal Steam Laundry son, Paul (above), and ‘then els ‘whe you -haye Dizzy Headache, did. “They work while you sleep.”!, v . and killed herself ‘at the Flo: is when shay F en*+1 Cascarets never stir you up or gripe ‘ Phone 684 ve Sa Colds, Biliousness, Indigestion, Upset, Acid Stomach is candy-like| they cost only ten cents a box. Chil- “Casvargts.” One or two tonight] dren love Cascarcts too. “ 9 TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1923 oR RD We sy f ane \ The music you want en you most want it | | That is the service performed by the Victrola and Victor Records. Such a abe o quality of service is obtainable through no other medium. ' Play the following selections which we especially recommend on the model shown herewith—the Victrola No. 260: Tosca—Love and Music Catalog Nos. 88075, 88192, 88487, 74400, 66111 Robin Hood—Oh, Promise Me i Catalog Nos. 87255, 16196, 17189, 17806 Crucifix Catalog Nos. 89102, 89054, 64712, 35012 Humoresque (Violin Solo) Catalog Nos. 74163, 74180, 74494, 35306 William Tell Overture Catalog Nos. 17815, 16380, 35120, 16381, 35121, #f 16012 Victrola No. 260 $150 Mahogany orwalnut Other styles $25-t0 $1500 | ‘ Get this music today—at the store of any dealer in Victor products, ~ Victrola|. seared Look for th ea ks. Under the lid. On th label . : ant: ese ‘marks. Un: ie . Victor Talking Machine mpany, Camden.NE AT Small but important IS ‘OPENED The Rohrer Garage and Taxi Com- pany is now operating a large, mod- ern garage, with facilities for stor- age, washing cars, and repair work. The garage building, in the rear of the present office ,of the Rohrer Taxi company on Fifth street, is a large brick building, with cement floor, built by E. G. Patterson. It houses all the cars used by the company in taxi work und the Bie- marck-Mandan bus line, and a force of mechanics is maintained to han- dle general garage business, A No. 1 Hay for sale. $6.00 per ton by the stack, two} miles out. Phone 529. Krist Kjelstrup, 4/2 if y the war, if they continued to be Judge Booth, after quoting from commission decisi jided .by the principles laid Your shoes, hat, suit, or overcoat may pass unob- served, but people invari- ably notice the collar you wear—it ig the one article of dress that stahds out. . That is why it takes a freshly starched collar to make a man look and feel really spruced’ up. The collars we launder give you that confidence which comes from good groobming—they have just the .proper body and flex _ bility, and are shaped right for tie space. Send us your t disregarded those princi- OT GU LEB Bowels, Sick Headache, a Send it Or like Sajts, Pills, Calomel, or Oil and , f 1 ‘ { |

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