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PAGE EIGHT 7 ; THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE _— YEAR’S WORK SURVEYED AT | THREE BABES IN A BUGGY | RC. MEETING Scldicr Work and Social Serv ice Program Summarized By Executive Secretary OFFICERS | ; RE-EI JECTEI Red Cross Scientific Methods to Re- lief, J. P. Hardy The year's activities in work and in social service, city poor relief, county we venile court, and general service, were surveyed yest ternoon at the annual meeting the Burleigh County American ned Cross bh in the A sociation of Commerce rooms Mrs. Fred L. Conklin — presiding, presented tt s report, em- phasizing the pol to be an agency for give and receiver together, r: a bureau for the funds. J. L. Bell, secretary-treasur- er, followed with a financial report for the year ending March 31, 1925. DUluimauaing the activities of the Chapter under two heads, soldier work and the social service program, iss Mary Cashel, Executive - , reported on the variety of cases} handica by, the local office, “Soldier work,” sme ‘stated, “con- tinues to be the paramount oblig: tion of the Red Cross. While it is gradually adjusting itself through the operation of new legislation and loser contact with the Veterans Bureau, there still remain many pro-| blems too complex for the untrained! to work out. taving the only avail- able office for this service in the past year handled casi (en counties im this section. Many problems incident to claims for compensation, reinstatement of insurance, hospitalization, meuical treatment, and adjusted,com- pensation are involved in Red Cross soldier work. Speaking of the social service as- pect of city poor relief, county wei- ture, juvenile court, and general com- munity service work, stated: n all our problems we have been ably assisted by both city and coun- ty uificiais, by clergy, by school offi- cials, and by every group, philanthro- pic, social, or fraternal, whose as- sistance has been sought, and have given generously money in all efforts to help the less lortunate among us.” The Social Registration she declared, organized with irom Miss the thougnt ot giving # common diree- tion to all community effort in the; tield of charity, already has demon- strated its value in eliminating waste in service and in money, by ing about the cooperation of ail 3s aoing charity work. s Caner spoke also of the mother's pensions, of the State Chil- Y Ww dren’s Bureau and Bousa, ana of the special service giv- en in disaster relief at Dickinson at the time of the tornado last June. The report and work of the exe- cuuve-secelary was commended and |} the program and policies of the Ked Cross discussed by various members. J. P. Hardy, of Fargo, State Red Cross Roll Call Director, who was present, spoke on the general func- ton ot the Red Cross, of applying scientific methods to relief, which cannot be done by any other agency. “The province of the Red’ Cross, he ueclared, “1s to create agencies and then send them to the counties and the cities. not go any further than that can help Chapter funds would be quickly exhausted if they are us- The De- ed purely for relief work, partment at Washington expects the local chapters to sell ideas to the community, leaving funds for aster relief.” An election of officers was held, Mrs. Fred L. Conklin, chairman, Dr. L. A. Schipfer, vice chairman, and J. L-Bell, secretary-treasurer, being re- elected. The Advisory Council as at present constituted includes: Dr. F, K. Smyth, Geo. D, Mann, Hon. W. Nuessle, G. H. Russ, Jr. fang, and H. C. Edgerton. Chapman Case Completed Today Funciion to Apply | } | soldier | including | pter of the] = TWO MEN HELD disbursement of bonus, Cashel *ij ELKS TO GIVE im time and The Red Cross should; §. Johnson, 56 of Medina, if it) Trinity Hospital here at three o'clock dis- H, E. Wild- i ? | Mr. and Mr all at once wi Christian Christia | Railrcad Employes Arrested | By Postoffice Agents (By The Buffalo, Associated Press) Y., April 1.—August Lehman, a car cleaner, and Herman | Reis, alias Rice, al Tuck Con- nors, are in custody in connection wieh the loss from the mails in Buf- falo of $120,000 in currency on Feb- | Postal inspectors kept nets stretched today for o had helped Lehman and Rei spose of $5,000 in ten dollar, ¢, bills, which have not been recovered. Lehman said he found a pouch con- taining $120,000 in ten dollar bills consigned to the Federal Reserve Bank of Detroit from Washington under a pile of empty mail sacks in the corner of a car which was sent to be cleaned in the yards here, where he worked. Postal inspectors said the pouch apparently had been lost in the transfer of the car from the Penn- sylvania to the Michigan Central Railroad at the Buffalo terminal. PROGRAM IN Bureas,| PATTERSON HALL! ub q attend the observance of Past Ex- alted Rulers’ Night of the Bismarck Elks lodge on April 3, will be given in terson hall. The program will -lcarnival and parade at 5 p.m, to be; followed by a band concert in front! Home. ,Three ten-round boxing matches will be held, the first “to start at 7:30 p. m., and these will be followed'by the instal- ion of new, officers and the ini! ation of a of andidates. MEDINA MAN, HURT IN AUTO CRASH, DIES of the El -—Nicoli died at as the result of injuries received on the morning of March 22 when he was struck by a car driven by Raymond Tompkins of Eldridge. Johnson suffered fractures to both legs and internal injuri i survived by a wife and sex dren. FORMER MINOT EDITOR DIES IN DONNYBROOK (By The ted Press) Minot, N. D., April 1—Olaf Ribb, 49, formerly of Minot and now re- siding at Donnybrook, former editor of the Farmers Press in Minot and the North Dakota Leader in Fargo, a ~~ TRIGHTOVER INCOME TAX Early in Fall to Make Reduction BY CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Service Writer CUT IS SEEN Extra Session of Congress to meet'with opposition from con- gressmen who realize that a poor ™man’s vote counts as much as a tich man’s, besides being far more numerous. Politicians differ as to the means by which the administration is man- aging'to bring income taxation down. Chairman William R. Green of. the House Ways and Means Commit- tee gives the credit to economical governmental management. Representative Joseph Byrns of the House Appropriations Committee, who takes the Democratic view, maintains that current governmental expenses are increasing rather than being reduced. He points out that war obligations have been wiped out to an appre- jable extent and that certain war activities which continued on into ‘ WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1925: a surplus of, about $100,000,000 in- Stead, On: June 80, 1925, he estimates it will have $300,000,000. The treasury itself estimates, more hopefully, that it will have $373,000,- 000. _ Sinee the fiscal year 1926 hasnt. even begun, however, this is a long time to look ahead. sen of Ft. Washington, N. on these triplets were born. shown by this photo of the 20-month-old kiddies. Left to right they are Pauline, Julia and Kristina. | widely known use of the lack of room in}! arters ,to accommodate || the large crowd that is expected to|| the program || open with al| And husky youngsters they leader in Nonparti- san League circles and a forceful writer in this cause, died yesterday at noon at his home in Donnybrook of tuberculos Funeral services will be in charge of the Masons at Donnybrook tomor- row afternoon at one o'clock, to be followed by burial in the cemetery at Kenmare. BIG WHISKY COMBINE London, April 1,—The three great- est whisky firms in the world—since the United States went dry— have formed a merger. These are John Walker & Co., the Distillers’ Co., and the Buchanan-Dewar Co. WANTS SHIP COMBINE Tokyo, April 1A ‘huge combina- tion of all the marine interests of Japan as a means of remedying the prevailing depression in the ship- ping industry is suggested by Ryoko Asano, managing director of Toyo Kisen Kaisha, a large steamship SPRING MODELS The new Lanphers get to you. ‘They're right. Style, quality and distinction are built into them. Price—less than you expect to pay. Y., found themselves with a nice-sized family have turned out to be, as is clearly BANKER GIVEN _ TERM IN PRISON (By The Associated Press) Duluth, Minn., April 1.—Frank H. Brown, former vice president of the ,National Bank of Warroad, Minn., was sentenced by Judge W. A. Cant this morning to five years in thegLeavenworth Federal Peniten- tiary for falsifying a report to the United States comptroller of curren- cy. SAVE TIME USE GAS. Washington, April 1.—When told there was to be an extra session of Congre beginning early in the fall, the country probably would have groaned, ‘but for one thing—it is to make another 25 per cent cut in the income tax rate. . Members of the Senate got the tip from the White House, just as they ad- call will be issued, that it will be for some time in September and that tax reduction will be the program. Of course the president may be unable to prevent the lawmakers from taking up other matters also, but there need be no worry lest they fail to lower the income tax. They know too well which side their political bread is buttered on, to try to defy him on any such pro- position. That there will be a decided dis-; agreement on the nature of the cut is extremely likely, however. Secretary of the Treasury Mellon! 1 wants surtaxes reduced. This,! if he gets his way, will mean more relief for big taxpayers and corre- spondingly less for the smaller fry Twenty-five per cent represents si ply a total. How it's divided up is a different thing. ; Secretary Melion’s idea of the right method of dividing it is sure| liver. any of them. Distributors Cars Figure the Cost Against the Gain Just what would it be worth to you to have the use of a fine.car for a year? Figure it up and you'll find that you are losing money when you go without the automotive. trans- portation any of our good used cars will de- And there’s lots more than a year in Lahr Motor Sales Co. Willys-Overland Fine Motor Enduring Quality Assured Thepopularity of thenewgood Maxwell, the ready acceptance of this finer four wherever automobiles are used, is not of performance, nor yet of price. To win such wide approval, there must also be the certainty of en- alone a question during quality. “"st| Ag Well As New Superiorities Thenew good Maxwell buyer knows that in addition to 58 miles an hour, 5 to. 25 miles in 8 seconds, 25 miles to the gallon of gasoline and a riding ease such as no other four has ever posses: count on soundness and the highest de- sed, he can gree of precision, accuracy and long-life. expenses are increasing now, Repre- sentative Martin B. House, if anything, henceforward for some time,, are and some of them will have to have! additional allowances before long, or their efficiency will decline. Green, the treasury, which it was es- timated would have a $68,000,000 June 30, 1925, will have [__ peace times are béing generally; wound up,.and insists that these are! the only ‘savings which made. have been Without coneeding that current den, who is ‘man gf the ions Committee of the jays that’s what they'll do, because all the departments lown to the very bone already Anyway, says Representative surplus of DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N. D. OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO SALES CO. 107 Sth St. Phone 428 For First Class Shoe Repairing Go to the Bismarck Shoe Hospital. Henry Burman, Proprietor. Qnty the Ground , Gripper Shoe gives you all three ofthese No.rest for the weary feet, that are tortured by cruel, unnatural shoes The throe features of this shoe remove “the causes of foot trouble "ALKING, standing or sitting, if your poor, pain-wracked feet are encased in ordinary shoes, the muscles of your feet are not allowed the opportunity to retain their proper strength and resiliency. Your feet must have this -aance —yet they can get it in no shoe that does not contain these three important features: 4, The Straight Inner Line—The Ground Gripper bisa) haa'av eerdtgh tarie edge lend a ill s5e)i heel give the foot muscles and toes the necessary freedom to function as nature intended, 2. The Flexible Arch—Every Ground Gripper Shoe has a flexible arch which, because it flexes with the foot and allows perfect freedom to the arch muscles, encourages the foot arch to build upits normal strength. Thus, so-called ‘‘fallen arches" or ‘‘ weak arches’’ cure themselves in Ground Gripper Shoes. 3._The Patented Rotor Heel—The Rotor Heel of the Ground Gripper Shoe is scientifically designed to discourage the harmful habit of ‘‘toeing out’ when walking. It is a feature found in no other shoe. Come in and see the Ground Gripper. Put your feet into a pair and notice the difference right from the sts~t. MEN’S CLOTHES SHOP McKenzie Hotel Block ALEX ROSEN & BRO. From Nothing to Millions FINANCIAL STATEMENT ASSETS Real Estate. (book value) Home Of- fice Building, $97,422.78; Other, Real Estate, $75,886.01 .* $ 173,308.79 Mortgage loans on real est wie 1,124,462.7; liens) 3 Bonds and Wai ook value). 1,173,096.58 Cash in Grand Lodge Depository . 91,700.60 Certificate ans to Members. .... 1,224,168.12 Taxes paid and other claims (mort- : wage loans) . +: oe 11,123.34 Interest due, Mortgage Loans, $67, 964.40, and accrued, $32,537.08 100,501.48 Interest due and ued Bot 39,120.56 64,631.64 1,614.00 12,641.21 and ‘arrants . aoe Interest accrued Loans to Members Rents, due and accrued s+ Market value of Real Estate over R book yaige en i fen eaves agensmpnte actualy collected by Byben inate iges not yet turn- ed over ¢1 id Lodge Gra 5,465.54 100,912.28 27,053.49 Total Assets .. + -$4,150,600.36 LIABILITIES Date sien proofs not present. Sick and Acc! pleted (16) Salaries, rents. sions accrued . f Taxes due and accrued (not delin- MOREY hos dee kee e eect 2 +e Assessments paid in advance . . Interest on Mortgage Loans paid in advance ...... Rents paid in advance . Reserves er calc 9,000.00 1,209.50 9,144.66 1,931.35 10,873.04 Sree 147.48 17.50 FROM NOTHING TO MILLIONS 1904 85,747.00 1008 $800,123.00 1910 $501,296.00 1911 $605,887.00 191% $788,950.00 1913 $888,818.00 1014 $1,056,901.00 1015 $1,235,209.00 1916 $1,421,790.00 1917 $1,634,416.00 1918 $1,864,658.00 : 1910 $2,089,323.00 1920 $2,446,615.00 $2,799.069.78 $3,221,739.73 (By The Associated Press)’ Hartford, Conn., April 1.—The state’s case against Gerald Chapman, mail looter and jail breaker, now on trial for murder of a policeman, ‘was completed today. Eleven witnesses testified yester-) day, but interest centered about; Walter E. Shean, of Springfield,! Mass., who spent about four hours! under cross examination. After two pistol experts had posi- tively declared that the bullet. which | killed patrolman James Skelly in New Britain last October 12h: been fired from Gerald Chapman's '} gun, the state’s murder case against | the notorious bandit was completed’ shortly before noon today. Cook by Wire Ps Instead of by Fire. “eh ing'20, Noceseury to happy. TOMORROW ALRIGHT And Happy —and you have Nature's lature’e Tablets) a vegetable laxative, tones he organs and relieves tion, Biliousness, that vit oe cere Say ‘‘Bayer Aspirin’ INSIST! “Unless you see th “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuin Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by phy- Hote! sicians for 24 years. ‘Accept ont: ' Bayer packa ly Hl alit te SHerntd ALBIN ae Ee Chips off the Old Block | WR JUNIORS==Little Me ’ ‘The same MR—in one-third doses, candy-coatsd. For'children and adults. Sold By Your Druggi e e|f The Pantages Cafe “Opposite the McKenzie SANITARY. AND CLEA a ef Quick Setvice: Reasonable Prices. Home Baking, and Cook- ing. None Better. — The public recognizes that the new good Maxwell gives ample pest of the highest quality. It knows that this Maxwell- Chrysler creation istrulyaman —that it is actually made in the plants where it was conceived. . Touring Car . . $ 895 Club 995, Club Sedan . 1045 We ave pleased to extend the conveni That is why the new good Maxwell is so highly regarded as an investment in ‘finer motori: We are eager to give you all the facts concerning the car’s design'and manufacture, and to demon- strate Maxwell’s superior performance. Standard Four-Door Sedan - $1095 Special Four-Door Sedan - -. 1245 All prices f. 0. b. Detroit, tax extra lence of time-payments. Ask about Max- everywhere. well’s attractive plan. Maxwell dealers and superior Maxwell service Corwin Motor Co. Actuar: Surplus abov Total Liabllitie including Reserves and s, Surplus ....$4,160,600.: CERTIFICATE OF VALUATION 3 : + 3,676,019.00 8 442,26" New York, N. Y., February 23, 1925. The Grand ige of the Ancient Order of United forkmen of North Dakota, Fargo, N. D. Gontrernens This will certify that we have completed our reserves on the outstandin; Grand Lodge-of the A. O. U. W. ta_in for schedule the Amei interest, Dako- f of North on December 3ist, 1924, as per f the same provided us, would jcan Experience Table and 4 perce: being the aggregate of the usual i dividual tabular reserves on that standard ac- cording to the Select and Ultimate method, regards life ineutance, and by sickness tabl based the the Workinei ith interest at ¢ percent per annu gards hy puted $3,676,011 8 your putation of what the aggregate of the certificates of the ye by: nt in- upet experience o! a th Benefit Fund of New York City, mm a8 re- 3 npaten insurance and. disability benefits, and cae we find the aggregate reserve s0 com- other HMabilities on December Silat, of $3,675,332.39 924 $4,150,600.36— $3,708,342.51, as against assets of $4:150,600.36, leaving a surplus of $442,257.85, and giving a percentage of solvency of 111.926 percent. Fraternally pubmitted, MILES M. DAWSON & SON, Consulting Actuaries, \ The Grand Lodge, A. 0. U. W. changed to a Reserve Plan ihaMay, 1904, the new rates going into effect on#October 1, 1904. The $5,747.00 of reserve shown Mt the top of the pyramid js the accumulation of the first three months of adequate rat ‘The pyramid illus- trates the steps, from “* othing to Millions" of assets, as shown by the books of the Grand Lodge on. December 31 of each year. With more than $31,000,000 of:{naurance in force, this shows that the Order hai i reserve more than ONE DOLLAR OF ASSET! HH DOLLARS OF INSURANCE .in force. speaks SOLVENCY: in NO UNCERTAIN MAN- ‘orth Dakota, A 1924, Were $32,323.51, this makes a: total - ELEVEN FACTS OF 1924 | “Insurance in force .. . Insurance in force - Membership. Death pal Beats claims paid Disability claims paid . ANCIENT North Dakot: Organised July, 1895 OFPICHRS . Grand Master Workman Montana, Idahe,, Wyoming, «January 1, : -January 1, 19: -January 1, -January 1, yl, Embracing the Stat of ¢t HOME: OFFICE, FARGO Grand Recorder id ‘Tre: Bu TON,’ District Mashger, Bismarck, . Why not A. Leo J. Palda, Leiby rman » G. A. Cerpenter, + -Grand $10,267,642.80 + 31,060,656.80 6,275.00 211,406.00 22/429.00 ORDER OF UNITED WORKMEN tak, Nevada and California Incorporated 1907 ADVISORY BOARD OF DIRECTORS Pi it Grand Master Workman Grand iter Workman ;Grand Foreman Grand Overseer +..Grand Recorder ,-Grand Treasurer rman Rommntivee on Lived nce Committee Medical Examiner Grand General Counsel