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Wausau Daily Herald from Wausau, Wisconsin • 1

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Wausau 'Daily 'Iegord-Hemib' 14 PAGES 14 PAGES VOLUME XVI NUMBER 15 1 WAUSAU, WISCONSIN, MONDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 18, -922 THREE CENTS ''AND UNKISSED! SENTIMENT GOOD GRANTED DIVORCE FROM DANISH DIPLOMAT BANDITS MAKE A RICH HAUL HELP BUY DINNER FIVE TON TRUCK FOB HUNGRY ONES MEN ARE NEEDED ONE OF BOATS STipiSSIN FOR ENFORCEMENT oughbred while 'the children' grandfather was not." "What we need today Is a return of the good old fashioned qualities In boyhood and girlhood, and that la only possible through the help of fathers and mothers." Hcout Ideulti, Tie told of the distinctive char acteristlcs of scouting; of it being different from the Y. M. C. A. and other welfare associations.

In that Ha executive came to a city, not to do all for it, but to awake the peo- Portland, Dec. 18. Mm. Madeline Masters Gron of this city, formerly of Chicago and New York, waa granted a divorce from Nella Gron, Danish diplomat and Nev York club man, by Justice Sanborn of superior court today. Mra.

Gron also waa given the custody of their nine-year-old on. All Passengers and the Crev H. W. Hurt, Oak Parle, Tells Rotarians of Great Responsibilities Left Reliance When It Wa? Dashed to Pieces Many Children and Widows Need Kindly Help During Cold Weather "You'll find some worthy people "Wherever you may o. "Whom Hnnta doeim't visit "I'lM-haiMi he donn't know.

i A TALE OF SUFFERING People Are Coming to Realize That Prohibition Laws Are a Good Thing ASSIST THr OFFICERS Predict Strict Enforcement in Few Years Many Fines Are Assessed Since February 1. 1921. there have THEIR DUTY TO THE BOYS! themselves, and only In that way, he said, can scouting be made auc- Lpcturer and Author I rCTPc i ressfnl and flulflll Its great objec-ueciurer ana numor urges, Mve of hnimng trader and d- Mfn tn Hive CnmnaniVm- tlzcnshlp for the saving of Was Told By Those Blown; Seized $200,000 in Five Dollar Bills At Entrance to Fed-, eral Mint and Escaped 'FATALLY INJURE GUARD One of the Bandits is Believed to Have Been Shot While Making Escape Denver, Dev. 18. Leaping from an automobile which had drawn up alongside the federal reserve delivery wagon at the main entrance of the Denver mint, and shooting toward four federal reserve guards emerging from the building carrying $200,000 In five dollar bills, two bandits at 10:40 this morning shot and fatally Injured Charles Linton, America.

EX-GOVERNOR OF 1SC0J1 DEAD James 0. Davidson, Twenty-First Governor of the State, Died Saturday ship to Youth "Hut you rn make thi-m happy "And nil their hearts with cheer. "If you'll be Santa's helpers "Kach one a volunteer. "A little money greeting "Will help to make them smile. "Ami All the haeketa to the brim "Which Is really worth the while "It help to make life happy "When ChrlHtinaa time la near "8o won't you be a helper "Each one a volunteer?" Rotary Ideals.

ITa told nf Tiarnnnal fnMente Ashore in Ship on Mainland Near Sault Ste. Marie KtXLKTIV By Associated Presa The greatest service you can which Indicated the breadth and give to God and to your commun been 163 successful prosecutions for violations of the state prohibition width of Rotary and of the increasing good will between men of dif Saulte Ste. Marie, Dec. 18. lty, la by helping the boys of your city helping and directing thorn laws in Marathon county.

The total of the fines assessed was $32,280 ferent creeds. He told of Father White of New York, whose life was mm in Twenty-three of the twenty-sevenf Christmas Is near and fathers I tilers Most beautiful belle at the Unt- i11.itj and mothers everywhere are busv tlL1'tBU'P. i devotfirl to th nnntilo of hla nnrlali $14,035 in 1921 and $18,245 in 1922. persons who have been missing since the tug Reliance atrack on iur xneir raiiuren uuj uuuu is ana wno 101a mm or. nis prayers Madison, Dec.

18. The funeral of Eighty-four of the convictions were'-rj, the recora ot "Micky," buying gifts J. A. Davidson, twenty-first governor secured under the administration of the reason is "she's" a he Ichildrenwho of Wisconsin, from 1906 to 1911, Oorge J. Leicht as district attorney, uonel Ames, who appeared in the I comfortable -1 anil ilAhtn and rock off Lizard Island last WedncsJ are always warm ana wu njurai ana religious with plenty of food Ideals America will go down in for Mr.

Hurt's daughter during her illness, aifd later, how he heard his day, have been saved, according toj one or tne guards, seized me enure, mi h. in 'and sevntv-nin have hmn kpimifpH 1 1 L.1,1 jM A and aaveniv.ninA Katu Kaon laaiitiAl clothing, and these same the cataclasm which Is threaten- University Union C-nera, fathers and mothers extend their UnK Europe; far more dangerous reports from the tug Grey, which consignment of money, sprang Into ternoon at th(. Masonic empie. QutWe A. W.

Prehn took the office their motor car and escaped. th. Jun 1. 1922. The finp ll-tpH dnr- than is the financial difficulties." Christmas spirit and give so that reached the lake today.

orphans and the widows, the sick mc BWHf, urn cailllUf DUIlUlnir Will aunmimn awmji children pray for Father White when he was 111, thus showing how close together had come a Catholic priest and Methodist children, a token of that universality of truth and of religion: of that breadth of good will which Rotary attempts to emphasize in the world. and the impoverished, may also be closed lurinj? the services. Chicago, Dec. 18, (By The Asso Honorary pallbearers at tbe fun have at least a good dinner on the day that all the Christian said H. W.

Hurt of Oak Park, National Boy Scout commissioner and member of the charter Ro-tarian club of Chicago, as well as a noted lecturer and author, in a sterling appeal to Wausau's manhood to give help to Wausau boys: eral of the former governor will ciatea rress.j Battling toot oy foot through towering seas and freezing air, the men who go to sea world celebrates. MARTIAL LAW IN WARSAW TODAY To give now Is to give well, for in ships are fighting a battle across amounted to $18,100 and under the Prehn administration they totaled $14,180. In addition to the cash fines two offenders were given county jail sentences, only one was placed on probation, one was paroled to the state board of control and one was sent to the industrial home for women at Taycheedah. The arrests in most of the cases every dollar will be carefully and be: Governor John J. Blaine, Chief Justice A.

J. Vinje of the Wisconsin supreme court, W. It. Bagley, V. C.

Bennett, J. C. Harper, former governor Francis K. third member of the bandit group remained at the wheel of the automobile. One of the bandits Is believed to have been shot while making his escape.

Worked Oul kly So quickly did the bandits work that persons In the immediate vicinity were unaware of what had happened until a guard from within the mint rushed out of the main entrance, Bring at the escaping highway men. Linton, who was assisting In guarding of the currency, fell at judiciously expended by a com the icy waves of Lake Superior to keep navigation open far beyond! the usual time and bring down the mittee under the direction of Mrs. STATE SHIVERED E. F. Stockum, secretary of the lakes the last cargo of the season.

McGovern, E. B. Steensland and Already the fight has claimed a Magnus Swenson. Federated Charities, who from long experience knows what each family needs at this time. prosecuted were made by state pro-j toll of life.

Before the last ship ial Fought losing Itattle James O. Davidson, twenty-first Crazed Artist Who Assassinated President of Poland Is Being Held For Trial accounted for or given up fori lost the toll may be greater. Near-I Cash subscriptions to tbe Rec IP COLD hibition enforcement onicers, assisted by the local officers. During" the early part of the period covered there was only half hearted co-op i governor of Wisconsin, died in the Madison General hospital at 3:15 the greatest products that Wausau produces. President Karl Mathie presided at the noon-day luncheon at Cyrus Yawkey hall, and he announced two prospective members who will be admitted to full membership after two weeks.

Guests of Rotarians were given Rotarian honors. Dependability Mr. Hurt said that what this country and the world need today is not more brains or more ability, but more dependability, and that tbe danger from the financial ly a dozen died a few days ago when a Canadian, steamer wa p. m. Saturday.

He was gover- the shot and died at 1:40 this afternoon. The bandits described by ord-Herald fund should be sent to this office and all contributions of candies and nuts or canned goods and clothing should be reported to phone 1119 and sent to the dashed to pieces within a stonel nor from 1906 to 1911. eration on the part of the citizens, Warsaw, Dec. 18. Martial law the officers state, btft gradually tbe was effective In Warsaw today by Another Cold Wave Swept the guards at the mint who saw throw of safety at the mouth of sentiment has changed until the de-, proclamation of the cabinet.

Cap- Portage Lake ship canal. them were apparently about twen-, battie for three weoks agafngt ty-elght years old. Linton had been i pilRuraonia 8nd heart compllcSl. Federated Charities rooms at 902 mand for strict law enforcement has tain Mewadomski, the crazed ar- nignt twenty-seven mor Wisconsin With Below Zero Weather in Most Towns employed by the federal reserve tiom and (ne en(1 came Saturday become very pronounced. The dis- tist, who assassinated President Second street early this week, as were added to the probable death bank many years as guard after he bad been slowly sinking toll when survivors of the tug, Re- Willi Itlot Gun Every policeman in Denver has for more than a week.

He would have been sixty-nine next Febru- liance, wrecked last Wednesday on Lizard Island, reached Sault Ste. Marie Saturday night, after almost crisis in Europe, bad as that is, is not nearly as serious as is the been armed with riot guns and anjary trict attorney states that scarcely a last Saturday, has lu mail comes in now that does not, been held for trial by court mar-Mrday bv auto-trucks if enough of contain information of illicit dealing tial. these are offered, in or manufacture of liquor, and' In his preliminary examination! Donations have been received those are investigated as soon aa he declared he acted on his own trom former residents, some far possible. Juries in circuit court are initiative in shooting the presl- away- Saturday five dollars was also supporting the officers and the dent and had no accomplice. received from George Worden, now co-operation is such that the officers Declaration of martial law has Lawndale, California, who lived insurmountable hardships.

danger of a complete moral bankruptcy, the crime waves of the past years indicating a letting Navigation on the upper lakeaf Milwaukee, Dec. 18. Milwaukee and practically the entire state ot Wisconsin shivered today when another cold wave swept the state with the thermometer registering below zero. The mercury went down to eight below here. Cold in Janesville.

ordinarily closes on December 15 down of those ideals which alone' can preserve civilization. This year it was decided to keep it extensive searcn or nospnais in Was Toor Immigrant Denver and suburbs is now under Romance a-plenty there was In way In an effort to locate the bandit Iife of Jamfia 0 i)avl(jaon an(j believed to have bein shot as Htnrv ot uis career shatters was entering the waiting automobile tne theory that opportunity to make his escape. All roads out.jjnocifg but once, of Denver are being guarded and Arriving tn" Madison from word of the holdup has been sent I N0rway jn i872, penniless, he to all outside counties. The car walked throueh the streets of the tireHiVt. thnt if thA vigorous nrospcu-' aaaea to tne sense or security ieit "wv forgotten Wausau The speaker told of the forma open until January lo because the coal and rail strike had cut down tion is continued the traffic should by the people, who with General be almost entirely wiped out in the Pilsudskl established as chief of tion of Rotary, seventeen years ago, when Paul Harris and four other men met in Chicago and staff of the army, and General Si- county within a short time.

the coal shipped to the northwest and delayed movement of grain' east. bore a Colorado license number. capital, never dreaming that in organized an association which now has nearly 2,000 clubs, and said that each week in many cities of the country there are 275,000 The story of the fate of the turf Reliance, owned by the Superioi Paper Co. ot Sault Ste. Marie, wai MRS raw LI.

Bl All can help in this timely move to bring some joy and contentment into homes where the cold Is felt very severely and where food, which will warm the body, is urgently needed. Receipts to Date Previously Reported $218.31 Cutler Post G. A. 3.00 George Worden, Lawndale, Cal 5.00 Mrs. J.

W. Bishop 1.00 Miles A. Nelson 1.00 S. N. P.

Club 5.00 told yesterday when twenty-seven picked men of the communities meeting at luncheons to discuss so survivors reached the Soo. Tug Dashed to Pieces Five days ago the tug with thermometers registering from fourteen to twenty below zero, Janesville and vicinity had the coldest night and early morning of the year. While there Is a shortage of hard coal here, the supply ot soft coal has been sufficient to meet all demands, and there is no fuel hardship feared. Coldest Morning. Green Bay, Dec.

1 8 Green Bay experienced its coldest morning of this winter today when the thermometer registered twelve degrees I TODAY El korskl as premier, await convening of parliament Wednesday for election of the new premier. One of the first acts of Slkorski in taking the premiership was to order the arrest of several former soldiers of General Haller, whose Influence In the army has been capitalized by nationalists in opposition to General Pilsudskl. Many other persons are also In custody, pending complete investigation of the assassination. Among those detained is Colonel Madelski, once adjutant to General Haller. BE REMEMBERED cial and civic questions and to increase good will and good fellowship between man and man, scores crew of fourteen and twenty-twd passengers was dashed to pieces on Just twenty years he would be sitting as an assemblyman In the state-house he gazed at with wondering eyes; that he was to be repeatedly elected a member of the legislature; that he would twice be chosen state treasurer and lieutenant governor and that in thirty-four years from the day of hts appearance in Madison as an immigrant, with no assets but determination and hope, he would be the chief executive of Wisconsin.

Popular With Farmer Boscobel was where he made of organizations having loiiowea the rocks oft lonely Lizard Island! in Rotary's footsteps. Death Caused By Pneumonia seventy-five miles north of Poinl aux Pins, the west entrance to St! Ijeaders of Nation "The men in these various organizations are the leaders of the Total 233.31 December 28 Will Be Observed By Friends of Former President Wilson Marys river, twelve miles from ths below zero thla morning, aecord-! main land nation: they are the men who Deceased Was Life Long Resident of This City Mrs. Lillian Kiefer Ploss. wife of SECOND WEEK OE done," he said. "It is up to them I weather bureau here.

men took one boat and Mr. and THE HERRIN TRIAL New York, Dec. 18. December MADISON ATTORNEY Mrs. John Harter, cooks, and' sevuif Lowest at Oshkosh, 28 will be observed throughout Entering the mer- Donald F.

Ploss. a Third strfiet drne- his real start. otners took the other. The cap4 Marion, Dec. 18.

With the open xne unuea niaies as wooarow cantile business he prospered, in gist, passed away at 2:30 o'clock DROWNED YESTERDAY tain Doat Had not been accounted to stand for true manhood, to put service above self, and to close up the chasm in which the cruel, needless. Godless war has left the world engulfed." ing of the second week of the trial this morning following an illness for, but the other, after drifting several hours in the storm, flnalN of the five defendants charged with murder in connection with the Her-rin mine riot, the state todav pre was mown ashore on Ontario main He urged Wausau Rotarians to 'Wilson Day by friends of Mr. Wil- is77 he picked Soldiers' Grove as son and contributors to the Wood-j a profitable place to establish a row Wilson Foundation. Mr. Wil- general store.

His judgment was son will be sixty-six years old that correct and the farmers fenr miles day. were soon trading at Public meetings, dinners and "Yim's," as they affectionately luncheons have been planned n(m Madison, Dec. 18. Ellis Potter, twenty-five, local attorney, was drowned in Lake Mendota yesterday afternoon when he attempted ianaf eignty-nve miles north of need or a pared to present evidence regarding' sense the common sault Ste. Marie.

with pneumonia. Arrangements for the funeral will be announced later. The deceased was born in Wausau on November 2, 1878, and had always lived here. She attended the public schools and graduated from the High school in this city. On June 3, 1903, she was united in changing world which is seething the slaying of C.

K. McDowell, fore Oshkosh, Dec. 18. Lowest temperature of the season thus far was experienced here last, night and this morning the Normal school thermometer, from which the government readings are obtained, registered fourteen degrees below zero at the coldest point in the night. Previous record was ten below on December 15.

From Madison. Madison, Dec. 18. The government thermometer in the Madison weather bureau hit a new low to recover two ducks caught in the Mr. and Mrs.

Harter and fourf man of the strip mine, around which members of the party were forced the riot centered, every state in me union ny siaie Always with a pleasant smile, a ice of Lake Mendota, about 500 feet from shore. Lester Hatfield. and local committees ot the Foun to remain thirty-six hours at an in dian hut before starting to the rail good listener and a rattling good story-teller, it was natural that marriage with Donald "loss, and aid fe)l through the ice but man- SPRAYING PRODUCES BETTER APPLES aged to get to safety road a long distance away. WhenJ the railroad wag reached Mr. and Harter were suffering so much dation.

Up until election this year the Foundation had raised about 700,000 toward Its million dollar endowment. The day after with distrust and discontent pending readjustment, causing a condition of moral decrepitude which is seriously dangerous. Crime Wave He told ot the 5,000 boys from sixteen to twenty-three years of age in Chicago who were brought into juvenile courts each year, charged with crime, and of the multitude of other under-privileged boys in the big city who he was elected president of the village board. Then his fellow citizens decided that he was the best man to handle their money and so he became treasurer, being Potter with a party of friends had gone duck hunting in the they have resided at 410 Franklin street. She was a daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. John Kiefer, pioneer residents of this city. Besides her widower from the cold that they were lett afl W. Madison, Dec. 18.

E. election work was started to ob- tne station for medical treatment morning and soon noticed two'Matnews of th ieaching 0j birds, annarpntlv frnzpn in th while the other seven went on td tain the final 1300,000. One hun- elected again and again until bis Sault Ste. Marie. They held oufl neighbors concluded it was time and parents she is survived by two iCe.

He started out to recover -gn Is sisters, Mrs. Burr Jones and hem and when far out from "ft spraying circles in dis-Fred G. Wiechmann. and three TZ fell through into the Flct 'or farmers who have started dred thousand dollars of that sum has been contributed. The Foun little hope for the captain and hisJ companions.

rno nrnniipmnrt i aa uitrnr I the production of apples. Eight friends farraers made up the first year's The scene of the wreck Is one of! the most disastrous spots on tha never had a chance. He said that base ball became so corrupt that Judge Landis had to be called from the bench to Harry A. Kiefer all of this city. was drowned while his mark for the season today when it registered eleven below at 7 a.

m. Coldest in State. Rhinelander, Dec. 18. The thermometer in Rhinelander registered twenty-three degrees below zero, according to reports from the weather man here today.

TEOiDOlRS group organized last season, and it The deceased was a member of went for aid The body was re- upper lake from Batchewana Bavi the Presbyterian church and Mara-1 covered late yesterday by the1 is eXDected. thuat a number of other to Michitocoten harbor, a distance thon unapter, 123, order otjDane county sheriff and assist- .1 Eastern Star. ants. tne spraying circle now being organ- I lized. of fifty miles.

There are no setf ie-1 ments, the only inhabitants beind lonely woodsmen, trappers and ln4 dians. SIC 'EM! A Lonely Island to send him over to Madison to obtain legislation that they needed. Here he entered a state-wide sphere. His good-natured qualities made him friends throughout Wisconsin and he now entered definitely upon his successful career in state politics. Defeats La Follette Man Always a La Follette man, he was lieutenant-governor when La Follette resigned during his third term as governor to become United States senator, and thus became governor Jan.

1. 1906. When he came up for re-election. La Follette opposed him with Irvine L. Lenroot as his candidate, but Jim swept the state after a bitter fight.

When he retired from the governorship in 1911 his political star was still in the as Chicago. Dec. 18. Lizard Island, dation hopes to raise the balance this year. The Foundation will complete Its incorporation this year and the permanent board of trustees will take charge soon after the first ot the year.

HAYS SPEAKS OF MOVIE MORALS Los Angeles, Dec. 18. Will H. Hays today said he would not assume control of the narcotic situation in Hollywood, but would cooperate with state and federal authorities in the event they call on him. "I am not the arbitrator of Hollywood's morals.

My mission i3 not to mete out punishment or to act in i is ott the mam steamer route and is UNREASONABLE i seldom visited except bv woodsmen fishermen or in summer by an oc casional mtei-isjana Doat, jx xne LlSCriminatlOn On rati Ol; launch carrying the captain and hi to o. i i y-vi twenty-six companions failed reach the island, yet survived the clean it up; that Will Hays had to be taken from the cabinet to clean up the movie pictures, the greatest source of danger in America today, he thought, and of the need in many other directions for moral and religious awakening, It boyhood and girlhood in America are to be saved from destruction. "We need in America to have God's laws in our human relations; we need the real introduction of the Golden Rule in civic and business and social life," Mr. Hurt declared. "Rotary has sensed the need and has the ideal, but it must act personally as money cannot buy character, and to gain and save the youth Rotarians must give personal service, give companionship to some boy, for only by personal attention can boys and girls be reached.

"Boys cannot be fooled by platitudes; they know when there is a real interest in their welfare, and in their leisure hours, which are the greatest hazard ot their lives, they must have the comradeship and companionship of their elders, otanaara uii company, Says Judge Fritz Milwaukee, Dec. 18. Terming orders of Edward Nordman, corn- gale and drifting ice, it may have been blown ashore on the mainland without human If such is the case it is improbable that the cendancy, for in 1914 Gov. Philipp made him a member of the state board ot control. He served in seamen, weakened by the long ex- a judiciary capacity.

My work is missioner of markets, as "unrea-! posure to the intense cold, could to construct or remodel the motion picture industry and it too is sound this canacitv from 1915 to 1919 to the core, serving the public to its sonable and unlawful," Judge Os- have suffered long, except those who car M. Fritz in a decision given 'reached Sault Ste. Marie and found Saturday in the suit of the Stand- jsome Indian cabin in which to re- In 1883 Mr. Davidson married Miss Helen M. Bliss, a Madison utmost in its artistic and educational ard Oil Co.

against Mr. Nordman jcuperate. nnrl thfl Wisfrmsin flenartmfint nf To Continue Search capacity. As for Wallace Reid, my sympathy and the sympathy of all school teacher, who died several years ago. They had two daugh markets rules that decrees of the I Cleveland, Dec.

18. The wreclc- ters. Grace and Mabel. Grace mea deDartment forbidding the com-llPS tu? Favorite left White Fish Bay early today for Lizard Island to about ten years ago. Mabel is now the wife of District Attorney Theodore Lewis.

Madison. She continue search Tor the twenty-seven passengers missing from the tug Reliance since last Wednesday, accord was formerly Mrs. Frederick Inbusch, Milwaukee. COST OF THE pany from continuing payment of rebates to retailers of gasoline must be vacated and set aside. Judge Fritz, who heard the case in the circuit court at Madison, holds that there has been no discrimination on the part of the Standard Oil Co.

or any other ing to wireless received today by H. E. Gilpin, president of the Great goou wisners are wixn mm. iwia is recovering at a Hollywood sanitarium from a breakdown, according to Dorothy Davenport, his film etar wife and her mother." NOMINATION. ORDERED REPORTED Washington, Dec.

18. The nomination of Pierce Butler, Minnesota, to be an associate justice of the supreme court, was ordered reported to the senate today by a unanimous vote of the Judiciary iakes lowing owners of the Favorite. The tug was forced to seek shelter in White Fish Bay yes LEGISLATURE terday. Madison, Dec. 18.

The Wiscon sin legislature, although no in reg ular session during 1922 cost the people of the state $46,421.44 ex R7 DAYS" Till 1111 1 km clusive of expenses of the special session In March, report today of CliPICTAAC IC Henry Johnson, state treasurer, shows TWO BROTHERS WERE INSTANTLY KILLED The largest cost was for printing and supplies, amounting to $30,260. Milwaukee, Dec. 18. Two broth- Th "I 8howa that 3'035 was era were instantly killed when they Paid'n the chier department were crushed by the wheels of a Pr the anl $8,365 in the or they will accept the companionship and leadership of those who will surely lead them down and out." Europe Bankrupt. Mr.

Hurt said be had just returned from a conference at Washington, where conditions in Europe were discussed, European and Asiatic representatives telling of the situation, and he declared that not only financial bankruptcy loomed desperately near for foreign nations, but there Is an appalling danger of a complete failure of all moral obligations and religious Ideals. He said that congress has appropriated $6,000,000 to improve the quality of pigs, but that only half a million had been obtained for the help of boys and girls, and that with great difficulty. Xot Thoroughbred. He told of a farm he visited In the west, where during a windstorm, the old grandfather hastened to the pig pen to care for the pigs, leaving his grandchildren exposed to the storm, and of the answer given the child's question as to the reason, that the "pigs' grandfather was probably a thor- wholesale dealers in the matter of rebates. Hints Department Illegal.

While not being called upon to pass upon the constitutionality of the act creating the department of markets, Judge Fritz says: "There is certainly occasion for grave doubt as to the validity of that section." Referring to the payment of rebates, the decision says, in part: "In February, 1922, the plaintiff was supplying gasoline under such arrangements to about 286 factors in that portion of Wisconsin which is south of the city of Green Bay and east of the cities of Richland Center and Reedsburg. On the other hand at that time it was also selling gasoline directly to about 771 dealers in gasoline in the same territory under the ordinary conditions applicable to vender and vendee. "There la no proof that similar tank and pumping apparatus was not procurable by any other wholesale or retail gasoline dealer." Worth Shore train while crossine a 6a1B ueyarmieuc oi me assenioiy, while $1,750 was spent In the ser geant at arms department ot the state and $1,513 in the assembly. The special session called by Gov. J.

J. Blaine in March of this year, cost $6,818.79 the report states. Travelling expenses made up most of this amount. The 1921 session of the legislature for its six months' session cost the state a total of $219,279. Salaries of the thirty-three senators totalled $16,600 and of the tre3sel near here last night.

The victims are Walter and Louis Cruchill, twenty-five and thirty-one respectively. Their home was in Conover, Wisconsin. BLliLE TiiXX Therefore be ye also ready; for in such an hour as ye think not the son of man St. Mat. 24-4 4.

"DAD MAS CUTOUT WDiCMCj CXJZ ME PI6URE? TW T4E Av assemblymen $50,500..

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About Wausau Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1907-2024