MAGISTRATE'S COURT.
(Before Mr. W. G. Riddell, S.M.) A varied policp list was called on at tho Magistrate's Court yesterday morning. For disobedience of maintenance orders, Francis Loughlin was fined £1, with solicitor's fee £1 Is., in default seven days' imprisonment; Stanley Sullivan was sentenced to one month's imprisonment i Arthur Harold Smith was fined ,£3 in default fourteen days' imprisonment. Walter Boyd was ordered to increase his payments towards his wife's maintenance from per week to £% per week. Eleanor Gwendoline Jones was granted separation, guardianship, and maintenance orders against her husband Arthur Leonard Jones. Jones was ordered to pay £1 15s. per week towards tho support of his wife and children. George Hunter was charged with being .£2l in arrears respecting an order made by tho Court that he should pay .£1 per week towards the support of his wife. Ho was sentenced to six weeks' imprisonment, tho warrant to be suspended if defendant pays c£2 down and pays off tho arrears by maintaining a contribution of £1 ss. per week. Patrick Mannix was charged with having been wrongfully on licensed premises on Good Friday. Mr. J. J. M'Grath appeared for the defendant, who gave as an explanation the statement that ho went to the hotel as the guest of tho licensed whom he had known for twenty years. The information was dismissed. A prohibition order was issued against William James. The application was made by James's wife. For having broken a prohibition order Thomas Reaves was fined Jj2, and for insobriety he was fined 10s. For insobriety Patrick John Coylo was fined -CI. Charles Hill £2, Richard Dunn 10s., William Balfo £1, and Kathleen Stanley £2. John Henry Ernest Woods was fined 10s. respecting a charge of having been found in a sly-grog shop. Samuel James Glover and Thomas Clentworth were each fined .£1 for having used threatening behaviour in Willis Street.
Strange lo sny, the old-fashioned method of external treatment of Rheumatism and its allied ill?, is still almost: a fetish wilh some people. They seem to belicvo that a liniment or plaster is the only way of obtaining relief from uric acid troublesami so they Ret worse and woreo untij their Rheumatism becomes chronic. Liniments and plasters ran give but temporary relief. No euro can be effected until the cause is removed. Tho troublo is due to excess uric acid in the blood nnd this must be eradicated. R3IEUJIO is the one real remedy. It goes io (he root of the trouble and expels the uric acid. Thousands have been cured by RHEUMO. Of nil chemists and storqs, 2a. 6d, arid is. Gd.-Advt. sa.
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Dominion, Volume 6, Issue 1748, 13 May 1913, Page 9
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438MAGISTRATE'S COURT. Dominion, Volume 6, Issue 1748, 13 May 1913, Page 9
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