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MANDAN NEWS > ANOMAISFATALT0 SINGER WOMAN, 33 D0 Mrs. Arthur F. Brown Will Be Buried in Napoleon, Her Former Home Mrs. Arthur F. Brown, 33, Sanger, | | died of anemia in the Mandan Dea- coness hospital Thursday. a Mrs. Brown early Tuesday gave : birth to twins, who preceded her in | death, and this weakened her con- dition. : The body was taken to Napoleon, {| her former home, Friday morning. » Funeral rites will be conducted at the , Logan county city Sunday. Mrs, Brown was the eldest child 2 and only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. .,, ©. L. Mennes, Napoleon. She was © | born Aug. 7,°1898, in Wisconsin and ;- | came to Napoleon with her parents when she was a child. She was a graduate of Napoleon high school and taught school there for four years. She was married to Mr. Brown in { 1930 and they moved to Sanger four {| years ago. She leaves her husband, ++ | who was in Mandan at the tirS of ‘her death, and three children, Alvera, ' three; Virgil, five; and Roland, two. ' She leaves one brother, Claude Men- nes, Napoleon, and her parents. Program for Sunday Concert Is Announced) |to applaud “The Front Page,” that | low that this authority which is ‘Twelve numbers are on the pro- gram of the concert which will be given in Riverside park at 7:30 o'clock | Sunday evening in Mandan by the Mandan municipal band, it is an- nounced by Ralp Law, director. The program follows:: 1—March—“Tenth Regiment,” 2—Overture— “Lutspiel,.” Bela. 3—Popular waltz—“Down the River 4 of Golden Dreams,” Klemmer and Shilkret. 4—Idyl—“Glow Worm,” Linke. | 5—Novelty march—“Them Basses.” ' Huffine. 6—Waltz—“Jolly Fellows,” Vollstedt. 1—Foxtrot—"If I Hold a Girl Like You,” McDermott. 8—Patriotic potpourri—“Coiumbia” Barnard. 9—Travesty from Tl “Misery Rag,” Colby. 10—Ballet music from “William Tell,” Rossini. 11—March—“Ipdiana State Band,” Keler- Trovatore— Farrar. 12—“Star Spangled Banner.” Indian Shriners Set * Members of the Mandan Indian Shriners will be hosts this evening at a benefit dance at the Dome pavilion, midway between Bismarck and Man- dan. Money realized from the dance will be used tofinance a trip of 21 Indian guard for Imperial Potentate Esten A. Pletcher during the annual three-day national convention. The Indian Shriners will give away an automobile at midnight (Bismarck time). FURNESS FISHING A. W. Purness, Mandan, former sec- retary of the Mandan Chamber of Commerce, is spending the week fish- ing and boating at Ole Olson’s Resort, on Toad Lake, near Ponsford, Minn. He left the early part of this week and expects to return the first part of July. MRS. VETTER RETURNS Mrs. Elizabeth M. Vetter has re- =" turned to her home in Mandan from \. Seattle, where she spent 10 days on a = vacation. She was in Seattle during the annual gathering of veterans of the Northern Pacific Railway com- Pany. SPECIAL GOES THROUGH : A special train bearing Knights - Templars from Ohio passed through %y Mandan shortly before 10 o'clock Thursday morning on its way tc Yel- Had Auful Bearing Down Pains OUP REESeRTeY Cres! Hali | HOLDS CITIES HAVERIGHT TO REQUIRE FEES OF AUTO LINES lowstone National park, men will enjoy an outing. GOES TO LEMMON C. E. Arnold, secretary of the Man- dan Chamber of Commerce, Thurs- day went to Lemmon, 8. D. on a business trip. | pe ns j ordinance requiring @ reasonable li- ——_———_ >? | cense fee from auto transportation | At the Movies || companies as compensation for use ¢ | of the streets, according to an opin- jon by Attorney General James PARAMOUNT THEATRE | Morris, Actors appear in roles far different; Such a license fee, however, must from the characterlzations in which | ot fe excessive, Mr. Morus said tn people know them best in “The Secret | city attorney of Garrison. Six,” Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's sensa-! Mr, Cull inquired as to the author- tional drama of municipal politics ity of the state board of railroad and the underworld, which will come! commissioners over auto transporta- to the Paramount Theatre tonight. tion companies insofar as cities are For instance, who would imagine | concerned. Wallace Beery, best known in gatb; “Authority is almoct evenly divided such as he wore in “The Big House”! upon the question of whether or not ‘Min and Bill,” appearing in) a city has power to regulate, license faultless evening clothes as the most! or prohibit an auto transpoftation fastidious of fastidious dressers? But| company from operating upon the he does—and wears them as to the| streets of the city after the company manner born! has been granted a certificate of pub- Then again, the usually debonair | lic convenience and necessity,” Mr. Lewis Stone forsakes the tailored | Morris said. “The conflict of author- garments that have made him one of | the best dressed men on the screen, and appears as a broken-down law- yer, with a three days’ growth of beard, ragged and unkempt, and ap- parently on the verge of acute alco- holism—a clever piece of acting, con- sidering that he is a teetotaler. CAPITOL THEATRE During the long run of the piece as a Broadway stage hit, it was discov- ered that women are among tne first where the] j Attorney General Says Author- ity Is Almost Evenly Di- vided on Question A city has authority to enact an ity results largely from a difference In statutory authority vested by the laws of the various states in cities and in public utility commissions.” After reciting the statutes bearing on the subject, Mr. Morris stated “The evident intent of the legislature to extend the authority of the rall- road commission over auto transpor- tation companies to include that por- tion of the operation of these com- panies carried on upon the streets of a city, but it does not necessarily fol- fast-moving newspaper thriller which | vested in the railroad commission comes to the Capitol Theatre Mon-/ prohibits the city from making rea- day, Tuesday and Wednesday. | sonable regulations or even exacting “The Front Page,” originally writ-| a reasonable license fee from the ten for the stage by those “‘baa-boys” | transportation company as compen- ot Chicago newspaperdom, Ben Hecht| sation for the use of its streets. and Charles MacArthur, has been| “Chapter 90, Session Laws of 1927, brought to the screen by those icono-| curtails but does not abolish entirely clastic movie - makers, Howard'the right of a city to regulate the Hughes, of “Hell's Angels” fame, and| operations of an auto transportation Lewis Milestone, director of “A!l| company within the city limits, The Quiet on the Western Front.” It is, jurisdiction of the railroad commis- realistic to a degree, and reveals the sion is exclusive as to all matters di- fascinating human interest side of} rectly affecting the relationship be- newspaper life, and the dramatic ex- | tween auto transportation companies ploits of reporters, who stop at noth-| and the shipping public, but this au- ing in their loyalties to their papers. | thority does not destroy the right of Naturally, it has been stripped of| the city to regulate the traffic upon all convention and hokum, and un- | its streets in a reasonable manner.” reels on the screen in ail its boister-| “It is my opinion that a city would ous and blustering splendor. | not have authority to enact an ordi- For Benefit Dance most know... — that if they specify the name Kellogg’s whe buying corn flakes, they are sure of getting the moet popular ready-to-eat cereal in the world... —one of the most economical and convenient foods the market affords ... — delicious with milk or cream for breakfasts extra welcome for lunch with fruits or honey; fine for the children’s supper or for a wholesome bedtime snack for grown-ups . .. —easy to digest. Always ready to serve. No trouble. No work... — with a wonder flavor and crispness that no other corn flakes have ever been able to equal. Kellogg’s Corn Flakes have been imitated time and again — but no other corn flakes are ever “just like Kellogg’s.” That’s why wise buyers specify Kellogg’s — in the red-and-green pack- age. -. with the inner-seal waxtite wrapper that keeps the flakes fresh and crisp even after open- ing. Still another exclusive Kellogg feature, BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1931 nahce requiring auto transportation companies to maintain a depot at which all freight would be received and distributed and forbidding them from delivering or receiving freight elsewhere within the city limits. The city would have authority to enact an ordinance, if it does not already have one, applying to all persons, including auto gransportation companies, pro- hibiting the blocking of its streets or interference with traffic for any pur- pose even including the unloading of freight upon the main thoroughfares,” iene commer Se it Mandan Shorts | Babies ht MA) The wedding of Miss Dora Hanson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Han- son, Mandan, and LeRoy Mittendorf, Hebron, was solemnized Thursday morning at the home of the bride's parents. Rev. O. O. Andvik, pastor of the Lutheran church, officiated. Attendants were Miss Florence Dohr- mann and Waldo G. Bolke, Hebron. A breakfast was served following the service and later Mr. and Mrs. Mit- tendorf left for’a trip through the Yellowstone park. They will make their home in Hebron. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Emil Stoltz are back from a two-weeks’ trip to Weyburn and other points in Saskatchewan. **e & Mr. and Mrs. William Fristad have as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Warner Coliman and three children, St. Paul. eH i City-County News d Miss Barbara Register, 406 Second St., who underwent an operation for appendicitis Tuesday morning at the Bismarck hospital, is making a satis- factory recovery. Mr. and Mrs. August Wenzek, Eld- ridge, are parents of a son born Fri- day at the St. Alexius hospital. A daughter was born Friday at the! Bismarck hospital to Mr. and Mrs. ‘Warner Clisbie, McKenzie. | The fourth division of the Methodist Aid Society will hold a bake sale at the A. W. Lucas store next Saturday, June 27, starting at 11 a. m. ©1991, LioceTr& MyzasTosaccoCo.;* * SCHOOL DISTRICT NOT LIABLE FOR STUDENT BUS ACCIDENTS Assistant Attorney General Writes Opinion at Request of W. E. Parsons A school district is not liable for ac- cidents which occur while ing children in a school bus, accord- ing to an opinion by Harold D. Shaft, assistant state attorney general. The opinion was. given to W. EB. Parsons, deputy superintendent of Public instruction, who placed sever- al questions before the attorney's general office regarding liability of school districts for accidents. In reply to a query as to whether a school board should carry lability insurance on the children who are transported in a school bus, Mr. Shaft: replied that school districts have no authority to pay for such insurance out of school funds and that “no good purpose would be accomplished by taking out such insurance if they had such authority.” “All such Habllity policies permit the insurance company to defend any action upon all the grounds upon which the school district itself might defend,” the opinion says. “A school district is not liable for injuries oc- curring to children while riding a tl the school bus. In_ furnishing school buses, the school district and its board is engaged in the perform- ance of a governmental function and it is not Hable for injuries arising out of the performance of such a govern- mental function.” While the school district is not la- ble for accidents, the question of whether the driver is liable is purely a question of fact, Mr. Shaft said. If the driver was negligent and his negligence was the proximate cause of the injury and the injured person did not by any act contribute to the in- jury, the driver would be liable, the pinion states. Other questions answered by Mr. Shaft are: Should the school board require the driver to take out Mability insurance? “This is a question which can best 3 Cte ta by each local school ard. It is my opinion that the | board has the power to require the Griver to take out such insurance but that it is not compelled to do so.” What responsibility does the work- men’s compensation bureau assume in the case of a school bus driver? “If the school bus driver is an em- Ployee of the school district the work- men’s compensation bureau would Pay compensation for any injuries Teceived by the bus driver in the course of his employment. If he is an independent contractor no lia- bility. would exist on the part of the bureau. Just what the relationship between the school district and the bus driver is has never been deter- mined but there are many features of the new schoo! bus law which lead me .to believe that the courts would construe a school bus driver operat- ing under the new law to be an em- fend bond of $500. ‘Could the school ier require any further surety from ‘The bond referred to is a bond to guarantee the ithful performance of the bus driv tract and I be- eve that the amount of $500 fixed by law is the limit which may be required by the board.” RECOVER FROM HURTS Valley City, N. D., June 26.—(>)— Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Pickering, Hamp- ton, Ia., and their granddaughter, El- vita, 16, are recovering here today from injuries received when the car in which they were riding overturned east of here Thursday. Richard Olsta, ‘12-year-old Chicago boy, has constructed a replica of Saturday Specials — Spring and Summer Dresses reduced to $7.75, to $39.50. Coats, | $10.75 to $49.50. Hats, $1.00 to $3.95. All sales final, no ployee. dl approvals or returns. Our new law requires the driver tol The Shop. a Keep the Children Off the Street DIG OUT THE FACTS! Autos Kill 32,500 Yearly Ver is and pig beveea pedo Nicks to © Play ta the tat Centered om the proretcloa of your child know this danger carefully warned and EVERY DAY . > C> Newspaper 150,39 AN THE U.S.A] Fort Dearborn with 1,260 matches, paper and glue. i" What do you do when a alu tem shows the bowels need Try This Tonight. ip? The discovered for this is best still cise ley Cascaret. Take one tonight if liver and bowels aren't functioning as they ought. See how quickly bad breath, coated tongue or headachy condition is or discomfort Castarets. e quick, pleasant bilious, relief they always bring constipation sufferers, made from cascara which lasting. For Cascarets are Glasses Prescribed The eye is an organ you can’t afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist J Offices Opposite the G. P. Hotel since 1914 Phone 533 Bismarck, N. Dak. gather and print the news of the world! : peace-it! all the same fo the news- Peper s an. The paper must come outl The story must be “in” on time. Find a faster worker any: where!:Or a smarter one! Regu-. lar fellows, these citizens The facts about Made of RIPER, MILDER tobaccos stand proved again and again. and PURE cigarette paper. A MILDER cigarette: smoke as Every CHESTERFIELD is well- many as you like, filled and BURNS EVENLY. A BETTER-TASTING cigarette: you know that the minute you light up. ing to CHESTERFIELD. « BREMEN vs. BISMARCK SUNDAY, JUNE 28th at 3 P.M. Chesterfield THEY'RE MILDER... and THEY TASTE BETTER ; AT THE Bismarck Municipal Ball Park , ‘Sponsored by B. P.O. E. 1199, Bismarcis Add the FACT that more men and women evéry day are chang- ~