The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 7, 1923, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE INFORMATION IS QUASHED IN U.S. COURT Not Properly Verified, Judge ¢ Holds When It Is Questioned The information against Peter eile ing federal liquor of Mott, charged wtih viol vs, was quashed in federal court here today on the ground that the information signed hy United States District Attorney MALT th was not verified rot supported by accompanying fidavit, Because the matter affects many cases Federal Judge Miller dictated writte opinion in the matte The question was raised by Wil- liam Langer, attorney for — Siler, who rted that the information wa uity since it was not sworn was it . and he strict attorn onal know in the information. ul other this district the rul Alex Saborsky of McLean county dohn Schimek of Morton county ded guilty to violating the Vol od net and were fined $25 each. When the trial of C. R. Jones of accompanied by afi did not believe zhe would claim per- of the facts alleged Mr. Langer suid originating “in he affected by would es Bismarck would start appeared prob- ematical, because his attorneys are engaged in other matters. FARGO REPORTS FIVE CASES OF SLEEPING SICKNESS Fargo, Mar. 7—There were five cases of sleeping sickness reporte-t at the St. Luke's hospital in this city today, according to u survey made at noon. One case, which was re- ported at St, John’s hospital, is to- day ep ns rearly recovered. DEATH OF AGED COUPLE HAPPENS 36 HOURS APART Warba, Minn, Ma Mr. are Mis. Obedizh Blakesle. 63 and 60 ve , will be bu J in a twin grave here Thursday. The couple, re dents of this section for 13 years, died 36 hours ayart. Mr. Blakesley died after a long illness and his wife uccumbed from ehe shock. The couple formerly lived at Creston, Ta Six children survive OLD TRAIL WILL N 7.—The Old Spani il, a national highwa; from Jacksonville, Fla, to Los An- eles, Calif, along the Gulf Coas' nd through the territory immedi: ately north of the Mexican border, is destined to include several sec- tions of road the equal of which will not be found in thé United States, if plans of good roads enthusiasts ted in the project are retary of War Weeks recently ed the New Orleans Associa- tion of Commerce;that the War De- partment and the Department of Agriculture had reached an agree- ment whereby that section of tke highway from New Orleans through the Louisiana marshes to the Mis- sissippi coast had been placed on first priority as a federal aid pro- ject. The ¥ Var Department is deeply in- 1 MOTHER! MOVE CHILD'S BOWELS “California Fig Syrup” ic! Child’s Best Laxative “Even if cross, feverish, bilious, con- stipated or full of cold, children love the “fruity” taste of “California Fig Syrup. A teaspoonful never fails to clean the liver and bowels. In a few hours ‘yqu can see for yourself how thoroughly it works for all the souring food and nasty bile out of dhe stomach and bowels, and you have a-well, playful childs again, “Millions of mothers keep “Califor- nia Fig Syrup” handy. They know a | * teaspoonful today saves a sick tomorrow. Ask your druggist for genuine “California Fig Syrup’ has directions for babies, and chil- @ren-of all ages’ printed’ on’ bottle. Mother. You must ssy “fglifornia” may get be BE MODERN ROAD ied | i Wharves in Na “booze fleet” in the harbor. ners who scoff at the idea of captu terested in the highway from a mili tary viewpoint. it estimated that road through the marshes strong enough to withstand any gulf storm and to beur the weight of artillery would cost from $300,000 to *$400,000 mile, including the necessary! brid- ges. This would make the cost of the twenty miles to the Rigolets, one of the cutlets of Lake Ponchartrain, l approximately $8,000,000, It would! necessarily be of special construc i {tion and so he to require « minimum of r \ | Construction of the marsh would | provide New Orleans with a high-| |way to the north and east, The only | way of entering the now, if motorists do not drive west to B. ton Rouge and from there to } Orleans, is to ferry across Ponchartrain, a water journe: quiring ut least two hours by shortest route. Construction of the Florida {tion of the Spanish Trail junder w: d that state, with { eral, state and county funds, now 1s! building a broad, heavy concret# | jhighway from Jacksonville to Pen-| | sacola, a distance of more than ‘miles. The highway will parallel the is Seaboard Air Line rail from: j Jacksonville to, River Junction, and the Louisville & Nashville fron River Junction to Pensacola, FALLING MAR’ | CONVERTED INTO GOODS QUICKLY | Hamburg, March 7~Germ: ) slowly leurned that it is un |save marks while they are f: o rapidly in value, earning very small d the plan of converting their mo- into something ney immediately which hs real value, Such persons |seldom have enough to buy foreign {money, so they -acquire articles {which will in demand. Furthermore, they usually have these purchases made in some small town, where prices are lower than in the great centers which know more about international exchange opera- tions. H The cook in one American family | in Hamburg recently told her mi ress she was investing her earnings in furniture, which she had ordered | a cabinet-maker in her native village to manufacture. She had bought the wood at a bargain, and the man w: doing the work very cheaply in h | spare time. | While the cook was not betrothe and did not know that she would i marry, she explained to her mistress (that-her chances will be much | brighter when it become known that jshe could furnish a home attraetive- } ‘TEMPERATURE OF TMAREPORTED | Chicago, Mar. *—The American | Medical association as yet has re- eeived' no report of the abnormai | temperature of 114 degrees or high- jer declared: to have been registered in th cas of Miss Evelyn Lions of | Eseanaba, Michigan, who neverthe- ‘Yess retains her rationality a | petite. | At the offices of the A ‘soci, ‘was said today that the breaking ot | ithe physicians thermometer last | i ion it of feeling more feverish seemed ex- jeaused by body temperature, It was ‘explained that of course. bursting of | {the tube from expanding mercury! j would result from undue heat such} jas ‘immersing the bulb in. boiling, j water. i ‘grees or / | may or may:not have been’ authentie, jand that a temperature ‘of 114 ise | tremely. abnormal. : GIVEN TIME pa TO MAKE UP THEFT: | Diekinson, N. D5 March .2—Tehn | Grinstenner, farmer of the Hallid: community, ‘pleaded guilty to” ing to his landlord, when brought, which | before Judge Thomas H, Pugh at the | jeourt chambers here Jast Saturday | | by, Sheriff Brown and State's .Attor-) | ney Johnson of Dunn county: Judge Pugh deferred sentence for. n‘ period, of This photo gives | | STARTING THE FLOW OF BOOZE T 1 som» re by revenue Plenty of W. ents, et Native women on the whar of the Bahama Islands are sh hooze flee: about to start for 0 AMERICA’ . Goods for America ves sau in the “Bootleggers’ ow e carrying cases ‘of liquo’ thirsty Americ Stocking Up a Member of Rum-Fleet u, Bahama Islands, are piled high with ceses of liquor ready for transport to the dea of the amount of liquor ready for the booze run- Haven * r to the | Weighed down with a cargo of assorted wet goods, the shipa’ in the rum-fleet sail daily from Nas sau in the Bahama Islands for tasty + INCOME TAXES MANY WAYS 70 -GATCHYOUFOR Did You Receive Alimony During Year, Is Question Askéd by Collector The following statement is issued | by Gunder Olson, Collector of In- ternal Revenue, Fargo, District of ; North Dakota. \ Did you receive alimony during ithe year 1922? Were you successful | in a breach of promise suit entered ; ainst a former admiret? | | “Personal questions, very, but im: | | portant to those to whom they apply | jin the preparation of an income tax return, for 1922. Amolnts received as alimony are i not taxable income. Such payments jdo not have to be included, in the , | income tax return of the person re- | ceiving them, nor may they be de- | dueted from the gross income of the person paying them, In this respect, payment of alimony may be likened } to a personal -or living expense, , which is not deductible, However, a! |woman who has won a breach of | | promise case, or has accepted out of | court a settlement as heart balm, | must include the amount in her an come tax return, The Bureau of In- | | ternal Revenue has ruled in cases that the amount received “is | jnot to be regarded as a return of | capital, since the benefits: of which | the insureé party was deprived were | merely anticipatory.” | Members ‘of a labor union may | deduct as a business expense dues | ‘paid to such organizations during | jthe year 1922, Such dues are held | |by the Bureau to be necessary ex- | |penses incident to the earning of | | their wages. A member of a labor| union who, while on strike, receives yment from an organization aH ea! include it in his income for the i The taxpayer who in 1922 recover- } such items, | { jed damages for defamation of per- | | sonal character need not include in {his return such amount, imasmuch as | it has been held to, be non-taxabla! income. The revenue act specifical- Mw ly exempts amounts received through | j accident or health insurance, or un der workmens’ compensation acts as | jepmpensation for personal injuries | ! illness, plus any additional | ee] | amount rgceived by suit or agree- | That ij [ment in such eases, | To avoid penalty, returns should | be filed on or before midnight of | | March 16, Free ddvisory service in |the preparation of ‘the forms is of-! ‘fered at the office of the Collector | ‘of Internal Revenue, at ‘Fargo, and {branch offices at Grand Forks, De- |vils Lake, Minot, Williston, Valleys icity, Jamestown, Bismarck, Dickin- !son, Wapheton, and Grafton. 'THRESHERMEN JOIN FORCES argo, Mar. 7.—H. T. Monson, Fargo, was elected president at the ciosing session cf the North Dakota Brotherhood of Thresher- men yesterday. Other , officers elected -were: John A. Bergen, Lake Park,, Minn., vicepresident; R.-D. Merrill, Fargo, secretary-| treasurer; C. J. Roberge, Ender- lin, member of executive commit- tee, ong year; P. Q.’'Tulp, Chase- ley, N. D., member executive com- mittee, two years, D. C.. Degman of Enderlin, N. D., is a‘hcldover | member of the executive commit- | tee. Mr. Merrill is connected with | Nichols & Shepard Threshing Ma- ; chine company, Fargo, and will take active charge of organization work for the brotherhood for the ; coming year. The association! aims to build up its membership to | at least 500 by 1924. | CAPITALS BIT _ BY WILD CATS) The Wild Cats took the honors at the local ,bowling alley Tuesday night when they cracked the maples for a total of 2579 and took two out jof three games from the Capitals. They should have taken all three games but due to alittle tough luck | in the last game they were forced to lose it by a close margin. Pat. Dona- hue. of \the Capitals was high man of the evening for three games with a total of 562 while M. C. McGowan of the Wild Cats was high for a single game with 215. The schedule for | Wednesday night is as follow: ,Lions vs. Capitals, Nationals vs. Night Hawks. |night when the patient complained: neighbors, has always been a hard ;ceedingly doubtful as having been, reputation, consequently his arrest T! WILL BE REFUSED 1ia ‘cannot permit tl of, gent immigrants, sult of the concern cause recént unexpected. arrival ,Ship-load of Italians and the an- néancement that many of countrymen,} led . hete™ by. prospects, were likely. to become es. W the ‘ state. foteral government hi dd ¥ | power under the immigration law: . 4 *'to control the influx-of aliens and child | charge pf embezsling grain belong-’ this’ authority ix to be exercised as necessary to”prciect the Austia- n ‘public, it has been announced Although the New South Wale: government - refused to aid ee number of -aliens who just:arrived,-the grave-fe ENTRY ee + ! Sydney, N.S. W., March 7.—The While instances of 114 ar 115 de- federal government has decided tc igher have ‘been reported; communicate. with the Italian gov- lin the pagt, it was said that: these} ernment ‘and make it known that the re- by the 60 days to give Grinste: ‘thei: ears-as-t! " ys pelea Guinstonner, 30. their future have: proved unjusti- Best Relieved hy Chewing a. tn Your Pocket. entiy at any time, at any plage. diet right away, ‘This eff of a ‘Tablets. No matt the, aa hat 28 A gassy, seems ‘to bidat’en against the Heart, if. it ‘heartburn. makes: you‘ nliser: these tablets, the. stomach’. ‘they aeids, they give the kaline effect it tis eraving: thus, you ‘soon feel good, the is settled and the faults of tion, are this corrected. is the the have I store,-Ady, Dyspepsia Tablet—No Water * Needed—Carry Them Loose America. Here is a schoon2r in Nassau harbor stocked with {ts wet cargo and ready to sail for “somewhere in America.” Capitals i aoe ere Pat. Donahue ..199 191 172— 562 opportunity to raise and pay back | fied, as most of them. found em: |e oane 4 1 er ne the amount embezzled. At the ex-| ployment within_a day\or two af-! ci. ED i ap-| he 3 et elie i , Geo, Gmith ....151 145/ 145— 441 *P-| piration of thats‘time sentence wiil]ter landing. Each ‘state has ¢| a wit. tetas? tape abe be passed. In such cases the penalty | fairly largé talian population and} pa aica Settagy vag care att ranges from three to five years in| thoge, who weré in a position to dc | Handicap wey “Sree the pentitentiary! “Ts ave come to, the assistance of Totals 60 921 877-2658 Grinstenner, according to, his their coe acer ing f rie ti sna = E: J. Budge ....156° 150 159— 465 working man arid has borne # good So 5 h Faas so AEE 8 188 88 : i E. C. Wachter .155 155 |210— 520 bara 6S aa ur tomac J,, Sullivan” ..,.121 176 135— 432 INDIGENT IMMIGRA ees M:C.' McGowan 216 162 157+- 534 Stuart's What the average person needs in| this, day and. age is the balanced | | stomach sweetensr that hé, can take and: eA get fe- isehad with one dr two Studrt's’Dyspeps'u us eat or drink, if, thes ‘stomadh’cadurs, ‘gets id press tches::and le, try jatratize the teal. | PRE ir $y | 2 | a mage! ina : Totals .869 846 864-2579 NOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE | Q SALE Notice is hereby given that default hag been- made in the terms of that jcertain mortgage made by Elmer E. McCullough, of Baldwin, North Da- kotd, mortgagor to the Farmers State Bank of Baldwin, North Da- | kota, Mortgagee, dated the 7th da: of) January, 1921 to seepre the: foil- lowing indebtedn to wits One, for $2625—dated January 7th, and due December 1st, 1921 and one note fot $1000,00 dated the same da and due - December 1st, 1921 bot drawing interest at the rote of 10 ir cent per annum and which mort-( was duly filed in the «: the register. of. deeds in Burleigh ty, “North Dikota, on’ ‘the “lun January. 1921, at the hour of A.’ M. and which default of the failure of: th y, the eye! ry 4 seid’ m ere is a id: to be .due-on mortgage on the date of this 4 : i oun | Gay of 9 eel consis t te thi Harry’ Moll (above), ’ dangerously wounded’ by his own hand, lies in p Weodbury, N. J., hospital fighting for life after a tragedy in an illicit honeymoon cottage where Mrs Viola Staley (below) was found dead with a bullet wound in ner temple. notice the sum of 58 for prin- |cipal and. interest. be nal And that said mortgage will foreclosed by a sale of the pers property in such mortgage and he inafter described, at public auction, agreeable to the made and provided at the front door of the postoffice at Baldwin iu Burleigh County, North Dakota at the hour of 1 o'clock in the after: noon of the 16th 9 the person: will be. sold to satis! said mortgage is described as follows to wit: 1° buckskin gelding: ‘Named nk, Bick, 1brown gelding named 1 1 gray. gelding named ,Cap, 1g! mare named Cute, I red eow name Babe, I: red- steer, 1 set double work harness, 1 single seated buggy, i Ford 1917’ touring cur, 1 wagon ‘and hay raék. 1 set bob: sleds FARMERS STATE BANK, of. Baldwin, By|J..M. THOMPSON, Agent. . MeCURDY, Attorney for Mortgagee, Bismarck, N, D. F, 3+ NOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE SAL Notice is hereby given that default has been made in the! conditions of that certain mortgage made.by Phil- ip Edward Hatch and Cora Hatch and Princess Mary Hatch of Bald- win, Burleigh County, North Dakota, mortgagors to Farmers State Bank, of Baldwin, North Dako mortga- gee, dated August 19th, 1922, to se- cure the following indebtedness to witt one: note for $4000.00 and one note for the. sum ‘of both dated August 19th, 1922. and both due. December ist, 192% and which mortgage was duly filed in the of- ice of: the register of deeds of Bur- leigh County, North Dakota, on the ‘d day of August, 1922, and that the mortgagors have failed to pay the principal and ‘interest sectred by said mortgage and that there 1s due on. said mortgage on the date of this notice the sum of $7621.47 for principal and interest. And that said- mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the personal property in such mortgage and here- inafter described, at public auction, agreeable to the statutes in such ease made and provided at the home of mortgagors ‘on section 22 in township 141, north of range 80, west of the 5th P. M. in Burleigh County, North Dakota on the 16th day of March, 1923 at the hour of 2 o’clock P. My of that dav.”That the’ personal pro- perty which #Nl be sold to satisfy the said mortgage ig described as tatutes in such case | ¢ WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1923. . THAT CLEAN FEELING that comes only after a wash or a bath. taken: in one of our sanitary porce- lain basing or tubs, is a mighty desirable feeling to have. Let us show yon the many advantages of installing our up-to-date sanitary plumbing equip- ment in your bathroom. See these gouds at showrocm FRANK G. GRAMBS Heating, Plumbing, Ventilating. Bismarck, N. D. For Sanitary Plumbing and Modern Heating consult us. . our BROOKLYN YOUTH NEARLY FLOGGED TO DEATH IN FLORIDA CAMP, CHARGE Fargo, N. D., Mar. 7.—Abuse, brutal jfloggings, mistreatment and death |are common experiences in the Put- ;nam Lumber company’s prison stock- jade near Clara, Fla., according to an article in “The Golden Age, fort Inightly Brooklyn, N. Y., publication. i The artic “A Hebrew in Chri | | | i i} i | day and they exhbited their backs, red and swollen.” ‘ After discussing ‘things with the older prisoners Schwartz found that a negro who ‘,1d died a few da ys be- fore at the Tallahuasee jail, died as this a result of bad treatment camp, The narrative continue “At 6:30 a, m, the gong rang us to rise. My hend was n. bursting, but I managed to get into my clothes and form in line with the others. Two tubs of water in front of the eating shed furnished the * dajly toilet; but the time for eating was so short that even this luxury was to no avail. 1.0 towel, no soap; a dip of the hands in the tubs ion Florida,” is sy Isaae Herman Schwart It reads like a page out of the charges made against the system by i. Grimson, states attorney for Cava r county, North Dakota, who has ,been investigating the death in the same prison camp of Martin Tabert, r-old Munich,+N. D., lad, who uccumbed ta abuse received there, necording to charges, then to ‘breakfast.’ ” ate After telling how he was arrested] After describing the unfit. food for riding on a freight train inte} which he says they were given Tallahassee and given a sentence of | Schwartz tells about the work: fine or 99 days (the same sen- Worked In Water. tence that Tabert drew for the same| “It rained hard that first day, bu offense), Schwartz desreibes how the we were forced to work to our knecs + sheriff delivered him to the prison |in water and mud. After dinner Cap. * camp in tinues: “After supper the men were locked an automobile; and con- tain Higginbottom appeared and | whipned two of the prisoners. (This fis the sam 1 ipped Ta- in the wooden stockade which servea | bert uhortly ‘before Rants aceoni: for jail and sleeping quarters. They | ing to charges by Mr. Gimson.) He crowded about me telling me I hadj used a heayy strap four feet. long. come to a veritable hell — They | five inches wide and fully a half inch showed me their ds puffed and) in thickness. I never fully appre- blistered, ciated Tolstoy's description of the floggins in Russia until that mo- ment. Whippcd Men Show Bruises. been whipped “Several had thar follows to wit: 1 disc. 1 Columbia wagon with box complete, 1 old agon, 1 McCormick thay rake, ormick mower, 1 corn culti- Mouse River Oil and Co, Kramer, Bottineau Co.; stock, $200,000; incorporators, E ko 1 MeCo vator, 1 twenty-foot Case steel drag,| Kromery, A. Ruppert, Ed. Thiel, 1 Deering corn binder, 1 sixteen-inch | Adam Haas of Kramer; Carl Hahn, Case sulky plow with breaker at-| Wm, Zimmerman, Carl F. Hahn, J tachment, 1 sixteen-inch sulky plow, 1 set driving harness, 7 set double work harness, 1 Titan’ gas tractor, 1 three bottom engine _ plow h} breaker attachment. 1 Superior fan-| ning mill, 1 gelding colt, 1 bay geld- ing named George, 1 grey gelding named Ted, 1 bay’ gelding named Charley, 1 bay mare named ‘Lady, 12 years old, 1 bay mare named Lady, 14 years old. 1 bay mare named Mag- gie, 1 bay mare named Brownye, 1 Dunn mare named Susy, 1 bay mare named Daisy, 1 black mare, named Blackey, 1 bay. mare, named Rose. . FARMERS STATE BANK, of Baldwin. By J. M. THOMPSON, Agent. W. Schmidt, of Garden; to prospect for oil in North Dakota. Malm Machinery Co., Minot; tal stock $25,000; incorporator: C, Malm, 0. A. Malm, H. J. Lakota Realty Co., L: tal stock — $25,000; Geo. L, Barrett, James D. Gronna, C. W. Lewis, Joseph S. Barrett. Farmers Lumber Co., Streeter, Stutsman Co.; capital stock $15,000, incorporators, Mike Rembolt, Car! Arndt, Theo. Graf, all of Streeter. Wet Wash > a new service F. E, MeCURDY, Attorney for Mortgagee, ~ offer to our trade. For Bismarck, N. D. 3-7| prices\ Phone 684. Capital a Peres Steam Laundry Co. Incorporations aera - ny | Tribune Want Ads Bring Results Articles of incorporation filed | with the Secretary of State include: McCormick-Gorman Company of ASPIRIN Say “Bayer” and Insist! Pargo; capital stock $65,000; incor. porators, «J. L, McCormick, Steve Gorman, Gladys Gorman, all ot Fargo. , Armans Sweet Shop, Grand Forks; capital stock $25,000; directors, S. W. Arman, R. A. Jauss, Grand Forks; A. T. Bavik, East Grand Forks, i S { ‘ | ‘ ‘ Unless you set the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine-Zayer product prescribed by physicians over twen- ¥ ty-two years and proved safe by mil- * lions for 1 Colds Headache j Toothache Lumbago Earach: Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept “Bayer Pablets of Aspirin’ ' only, Each unbroken package’ con- tains proper directions. Handy bor- ‘es of twelve tablete cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of « {Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetica- cideater of Sslicyltcacid. R. 8. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chi

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