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PAGE 2 BiG PROPERTY OWNERS FAVOR NEW PAVEMENT General Demand Apparent for Concrete in Third Improve- ment District A general sentiment in favor of concrete is apparent among property- owners, large and small, who will be affected by the paving of street im- provement district No. 3, for which contracts will be awarded by the city commission this evening. “I want to see the west end im- proved, and I would Uke to see con- crete given a trial,” said Walter P. Lomas, Main ‘street hardware man, and one of the property-owners con- cerned. “I have seen concrete pave- ment in service on the country roads in my old home county in Illinois, where they have miles of it. The country roads are paved eighteen feet wide, and the concrete has stood up in good shape.” Others who have expressed them- selves as favorable to concrete, es- pecially in view of the ten per cent saving in cost which it will affect. are C, B. Little, Dr. F. B. Strauss, Capt. I. P. Baker. Senator E. A. Hughes, Alfred Zuger and A. J. Mil- ler, all of whom own large frontage on the district to be improved. The price on concrete is $338,519 for the job complete. This bid contem- plates a seven-inch pavement, rein- forced with three pounds of steel to the square yard, and using crushed trap rock, the most durable mineral material known, instead of gravel, as as wkas used in the ¢vhcrete base for the paving laid in the first two dis- tricts. The cost per square ward would be $3.20, as compared with a price of $2.19 to $3.21 in Des Doines, which is much nearer the sources of raw ma- terjals. The best sheet asphalt would cost $3.50 per square yard, which price would be increased five per cent if the contractor were required to ac- cept warrants, which he insists must bear seven per cent. The concrete ‘bid is predicted upon the acceptance of six per cent warrants without ad- ditional penalty. The average annual paymenf on- each fifty-foot lot of the concrete pavement would be $23.60. $250,000 COMPANY TO HANDLE CATTLE Prosperous farmers and cattle men of C lier county have organized a quarter-million dollar cattle company which is expected to mean much toward the future development of that region. The incorporators are M. T. Sultivan of Langdon, Joseph D, Beauchamp, Adelard Benoit and Thomas Cregan of Olga and othérs, including the Devaney interests, The company is formed to Géal in blooded livestock, to buy, raise and sell cattle and to do a general live- stock and brokerage business. Its cap- HER AWAY, SHE SAYS BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE ital is $250,000, making it one, of the biggest. organizations of the ‘kind in Nerth Dakota. DREDGE TO MAKE REAL OCEAN PORT FROM GALVESTON Texas Town to Have 35-Foot Low-Tide Channel to the Gulf of Mexico. Galveston, Texas, July 7.—Work of dredging the channel from the Gulf of Mexico to Galveston harbor to the au- thorized depth of thirty-five feet, méan low tide, will start soon, acording to Colonel Spencer Crosby, United States army engineer in charge of the Galves- ton district. The channel, six miles long, at intervals varies one to two feet from the authorized depth. The deep sea dredge Galveston, one of the larg- est ever constructed, with a hopper ca- pacity of 2,850 cubic yards, will be used. ‘ Vessels of thirty-five feet draft wiv be able to enter the harbor at high tide when the dredging is finished and vessels of thirty-two and thirty-three feet draft will be able to enter in safety at all times, The harbor of Galveston has begun to resume the busy aspect of pre-awar times, As many as twenty-five ocean going vessels may be seen loading and discharging cargoes . Before the war, however, sixty-two sea-going steamers have been in the harbor at the same time, although port facilities offer berths for but sixty. During the war practically all shipping business was suspended. While the chief export is cotton, it is said more than a million bushels of wheat, chiefly for England, will have 1 moved through this port in the month off June. A number of ships have load- ed with cargoes for Mexican and South American ports this month, and will re- turn with cargoes of sisal or sugar. Imports in June included a ship load of yellow corn from the Argentine, which it is said was marketed at several cents less per bushel than similar qual- ity American corn is bringing on the home market. A Japanese steamship company soon will inaugurate direct service to Gal- veston, it was announced. Another company Will run ships regularly from here to the west coast of South Ameri- ca via the Panama canal. DEER SKINS COME Busy Docks and Shining Store Fronts Remind U. S. Sol- diers of Home City jc i Home, Too, and Everywhere |! Are Goods of U. S. Make t (By Corporal De U. 8. Army, Rotterdam, Holla Rotterdam, Holland supply depot for the Ameri occupation in G ny, Yerk of the A. E. F.” At Masshaven, the left mouth of the}! Rhine, on the outskirts of Rotterdam, | ¥ mer’ soldiers erected their b; t sand at a wharf near by America soldiers and sailors unload the supplies i the New| in Germany. Squat tug-boats, with!» their little Dutch household aboard, HIGH. IN MEXICO aa ee reff up and down the Rhine, towing Ponies a aia oe the long, narrow barges built for the/+ these’ -eouvenits at she Lat ovat canals of this little country, with their! that was What an American man. loads of supplpies for the Yanks who claimed to. have paid for two he has are keeping the watch at the Rhine. cae ve. i 1 down the Rhine come some of the! in his Rossenelon. ee was captured doughboys whose time has by Francisco Villa’s men and raQ-)isre4 arid who are starting for “God’ somed for $21,000 in currency and) ountry.” merchandise. When he was liberated Tn ever dinention a ii near the border Villa. presented him|,,J, Set direction in Rotterdam are with the two deer hides he had skin-| 0 Huge derricks an port. ‘uge Ti and ned from deer killed by himself the) cranes, big grain él same morning, saying these were in| of concrete and ¢: return for the ransom money paid. wharves, netwoi rr and there a ship “LOMBARDI LTD.” {ics of meet The shops are a wonde; d de- AT GRAND FORKS light. They are waarvels of cleanline $ and trim, neat, attractive tidiness. -T! grocery stores are as scrupulous! i docks and of trac t “Lombardi Ltd.,” with Leo’ Carrillo, . ike| that fairly glisten Cafes and Restaurants Are Like) 1%! glass; clothing Broadway. of American toba American phonographs, Ame: n,; ene stops in front of a big music store Ar f and sees displayed in the windows all le and “jazz’ and for the American army of occupation | ¥ i Gier sees Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pi ford, or any one of a mabiles on the pretty drive dier orders the s and!ite—ham and eggs— from a waiter and here! “ho speaks good ard resounding with | Probably tell of the c' chinery and the “rat-; Where he has worked, and the s” will be rung up on an Ame: ister and in half the places an ‘an typewriter will be found ne “NEW YORK OF THE A.B. F.” ISROTTERDAM: <= - SUPPLY DEPOT FOR YANKS ALONG Yanks Aboard a Dutch Canal Barge. eee street, but High street) it is the Broad-|bank teller: way of the New York of the A. E. F, }On it are tobacco and cig: Would put to shame the jstores of many America: fectionery stores that are a little bit of fairyland; bakeries and groceries ith nickle, brass stores that look s of 42nd and King along past popular brands cigarets ; rican sew- n chewing gum; ike one of the ¢ And w hose stores one se co and ing machines, Ame he more or les: e American songs sic and if he voks closely he will notice that many of the electric light fixtures that throw he light on music bear the initials G, E.” that mean the were made in} Across th | t, and cr Hudson or ( reet a “4 ng over, dillac, the dozen othe! ised-for the) ide he will find | American favorites iy. And if he go | ‘an auto-} and Amer-| with ican motorcycles “pui-put” by |their muffler cut out just as they do! Thursday. One load $: ip Americ HAM AND EGGS AS ORDERED. In a little cafe or restaurant the sol- t American favor- ps ‘lish and who will| s in America| Rotterdam hi: ce be register. - | the: MONDAY, JULY 7, 1919. Yearling wethers, $10.50 to $14.00. “Ewes, medium, foo. to $9. n+ Minneapolis, Min., July 8.—Flour un- keanged shipments 74,653 barrels. Barley, $1.07 to $1.16, Rye, No. 2, $1.40 3-4 to $1.41 1-4, Bran, $35, Wheat receipts, 316 cars compared cars one year ago. No, 1, 0 to $2.56, Corn, No. 3, $1.79 to $1.80, Oats, No, 3, 66 5-8 to 67 1-7. Flax, $ . GIVEN TEN YEARS. Pleading guilty to a statutary charge involving. his two motherless daughters, aged 13 and 15, Martin Mc- Gragh, a lavorer living in the Reade ‘building on Seventh, was sentended to ten years at hard labor in the state penitentiary today. RHINE Sathers Home. Walter Sather, formerly of the Bis- marck pstofiice staff,,and L. M. aSther, of the Boston store, are both home from France. wheré they spent a year in the service of Uncle Sam. This family was represented by three sons in the service. the youngeSt hav- ing returned to, Bismarck a, few weeks. ago. ¥ i Tribune Want Ads bring results. Loans and discounts ............ Overdrafts, secured and unsecured Liberty Loan Bonds .. Banking house, furnitur The larger saloons in Rotterdam are restaurants, cafes, sa- lone, billiard rooms and club. rooms combined. To it come the men with wives and children, ‘The ittle| Oue,erom other banks .. at the tasty pastry and sip sirup, | Cash ‘ the wives drink beer or tea and eat cake and gossip and the men play billiards or cards, write lettérs or gather round the huge tiled stoves to talk politics. f I cannot imagine American soldiers getting up on tables and singing “Mad- elon” or “Over There” while the pat- ren and his as: listen, as wa: Capital stock paid in . Undivided profits, less expenses ai Individual deposits subject to check. Time certificates of deposit . nts suspend work to Savings. deppelts f e case in France, Cashier’s checks outstanding .. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK; “TOTAL St. Paul, July 7W—HOGS—Receipts | STATE OF Ni 6,700 head; market steady; range, --20.60 to $21; bulk of sales, $20.90 to $20.95. : _CATTLE — Receipts, 4,200 head; killers strong to 25 cents higher; steers, $10 to $16.75; cows and heifers, $5 to $12; veal calves steady, $8.25 to $16.75; stockers and feeders strong, 5.50 to $12.50. i SHEEP—Receipts, 350 head;' lambs, belief. + Oh Subscribed and sworn to before me My Correct—Attest: REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE CAPITAL SECURITY BANK | at Bismarck, in the State of North “Dakota, “at ‘the. close’.of business June 20th, 1919, MAT By RESOURCES, ; EF R ‘A, County of Burleigh, ss: I, Krist Kjelstrup, President of the above named bank, do ‘solemnly swear that the above statement is. true, to the, best of my knowledge and |. NEW INSPECTOR HERE , dd afid chofce, $7" F. C. Tousley Pays Capitol First _ Official Visit. F. C. Tousléy of Fargo, recently named inspector in the state elevator accounting department, is here. on his first visit to the railway Sprumtasion offices. He is accompanied by J. 1. Brady, chief elevator accountant. FORMER KAISER TO SPEND THE SUMMER IN HOLLAND “Ammeronge, Thursday, July 3.— William Hohenzollern, former emper- or of Germany, has decided to stay here until at least the end of the sum- mer. No visitors are now at. the cas- tle except Dr. Kriege, the former em- peror’s one time official doctor, who is occupied in liquidation of Count Hohenzollern’s property in Germany. _ TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FURNISHED ROOMS at the Beards- ley place. Suitable for gentlemen. 217 8th street. Phone, 298U. WANTED—Ticket seller at Bismarck Theatre. Phone 320. 77 3t A $262,567.76 : 312.52 27 4,250.00 750.01 '$ 54,867.08 098.11 vs 1045658 66,921.72 + “+ «$831,802.08 $. 50,000.00 219.57 $115,311.52, 58,082.37 as 3,804.07 1,899.00 93,854.40 281,582.44 «++ «$331,802.01: +. KRIST KJELSTRUP,..”. Cashier, this 7th day of July, 1919. « L. W. KJELSTRUP, Notary Public, Burleigh Co. commission expires March 18th, 1922. $7 to $16.75; wethers, $6 to $8.50; ewes, $3. : g C. W. McGRAY, 3H Sep eateee 100 J. A. HYLAND, sexes OHI, P. R. FIELDS, ee Ose we | Chicago, IIL, July : Directors, 3,000; mostly 10 to CHARTER NO. 2481 RESERVE DIST. NO. 9 record, Bul $20.20 to $22.00. at Bismarék-in the State ‘of North Dakota,: at the REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE First National of business on packing sows, smooth, $20.90 June 30th, 1919. Meee BDO es RESOUR vas oae nt unite gs Rough, $20.20 to SO a, ,| Loans and discounts, including rediscounts’%.:.. .$1,571,495.70 $1,571,495.70 Gaile an ae il Overdrafts, unsecured 1,265.10 eee hee ip ate Py ine U.S, bonds (other than Liberty. Bonds, but : Le: eles a Br rs, $12 Medium and goood, $13.25 to. $15.50, including U.S. certificates of indebtedness) : ‘ Grace Valentine and the original New |e craeriy as a hig operating rooom in{ Zu the cabarets are mighty cl Common, $11.25 to $13.25, Ur 8. Donde. denoetted ta decure Girvulatin: (Bat evening. So far as can be learned |" American hospiptal and one has to|just_as well as some of the girls back| Light weight, good and choice, $14] y 3: ee ds c's (76,000.00 this. great laughing success, which |!00k twice to discover whether a gro-/home. i |to $15.65, 1 ged t U. S. deposi par Value}: ran a full year in New York, has not |€2*Y store is indeed a grocery or a The Dutch wax merry in a much) Common and medium) $10.25 to $14.1 y she an 0 secure U.S. deposits (par value).. 16,000.00 been booked for the Auditorium, It is |fi"st-class drug store. more repressed and dignified way thar Butcher cattel, heifers, $7.75 to $14.] "¢ onda aiid portitleats of Indebtedness pledg: & Motosco show, with aif. tat that tai EVERYTHING AMERICAN FOR [40 the French and in a Rotterdam cafe! Cows to’ $12.75, | ; Pay Secure postal, savings. deposits (par 1000 00 2 sci : e LE. one does not have to run a gauntlet of | 5 CRE Bi aL dae oS REA BE OL My SRE na ts plies. But the thing above all that makes {alluring a ee eights U. §S. bonds and certificates of ‘indebtedness ‘ ATTENDS FISK FUNERAL|YS ‘2! Rotterdam the New York of/A Rotterdam s : "| Qwned and unpledged .. +++ 115,000,000 206,000.00 the A. EF. F. is the fact that wherever | orderly neat and trim room| stecrs, $9.50 to $17. ., Liberty, Loan Bonds: —— one walks in the uptown districts one | that quiet. Back of the| Stocker steers, $8.25 to $12.00, Liberty Loan Bonds, 31-2, 4, and 41-2 per cent, { Secretary of State Hall Drives to|sese American articles for sale and jbar the ros, ed frau or fraulein| Sheep, receipts 40,000; weak. unpledged and Victory Note payments...... _ 96,855.00 96,855.00 % American apparatus and machinery in|Works and paying no heed to the men] Lambs, 84 pounds down, $15.25 to Bonds, securities, etc. (other than U. S.):.., Minot use. For instance, walk down Hoog-|who come in. And the men who serve § . 9 br) {other then us ee Bonds) Dledgedl.to seeure 5,000.00 eee straat (which, by the way, is not Hogithe customers look like church-going| Culls a ed atone tr a heads ache? pecs oy : Secretary of State Hali drove to ! tp eee baa pier ae pl & ay oe ee Minot on Sunday to attend the funeral Polal hinge sotuutione ¢ 52,627.85 ot Mrs. C. J. Fisk, victim of Minot’s| IT’S A LONG, LONG TRAIL FROM THE Soar est es 6 (50 per cent 57,527.35 Fourth of July airplane accident. Ser- E ARLIEST. B ATH 7 iti Merwe t Mee tie dion. : ING ! SUBSETIVHON) 2 ke ++ a0 4 <p oP hejens oan hs 6 : 9,000.00 x ie om Staae at the Magic city Mon = SUIT TO THE LATEST! Value of banking house, owned and unincumbered —_75,000.00 76,000.00 ; is ‘ a> F eis Farniturs ond Ses RRR peas 2,317.30 Bes ao id= z i : teal estate owned other than ing house 19,282.15 Package Goods Expensive. Lawful.reserve with Federal Reserve Bank 5 128,387.92 That package gouds are more expen- Cash in vault and net amounts due from national wo Hod elve than goods bought in bulk is banks . 78 826,991.90 shown in a chart cf comparative food Net amounts due from banks, bankers, and trust values zecently published. The chart companies other than included in Items 13, Bs 2 shows that canned peaches cost three 14 OF IB eae tase cs Aa . 117,814.42 times as much as drted peaches, and Exchanges for clearing house ... - 9,324.97 the food value in calorfes is three Totals ‘of Items 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18. 5 453,631.29 ifikéa greater inthe avied' teat the Checks on banks located outside of city or town toe greater in the dried than or teporting bank and other cash items..... 24,179.07 canned variety, . Canned@pork end Redemption fund with U. S, Treasurer and due Mrs. Waterman charges John E.! beans cost about twice as much: per from’U. S. Treasurer 6.0.0... ccc. ee eee ee ee 8,750.00 Carey, Manhattan manufacturer of| unit of food value ns dried-beans, The War Savings Certificates and Thrift Stamps ac- \ surgical instruments, with having| canned goods are ready for immediate tually owned wo. ..eteeeeeeseeeeeeeee eee es 7 452.20 erate into her ores ae use and the dried require preparation, A i ‘axicab.| but to persons interested in reducing ee + $2,649,098.08 Cac, ye oe but ae Beit NoW | the cout of living these facts are wot ital tdi LIABILITIES ne peaees taking into consideration, \ genic Gea! pald in $200,000.00 Surplus fund . 000.00 Undivided profits , $ 10,915.31 « 10,925.81 Amount reserved for taxes accrued 000.00 Circulating notes outstanding ..... "71,900.00 : Net amounts due to National banks é 94,326.49 AUTOISTS MUST DISPL AY Net amounts due to banks, bankers, and trust on . Companies (other than included in Items ce : z 31 OF 52) wees 424,984.85 y AGS Certified checks outstanding . 3,081.71 Total, of Items, 32, 33, 34’ an 522,348.05 ¢ : . Demand deposits (other, than bank deposits) i, é } gubject ky Reserve (deposits, payable within 442 | A . rary . i ede 2 : " : : City and county police officials have been advised Individual deposits subject to clieck”........ aS 1,827,877.54 | that under penalty of removal for failure to do their duty Certificates of deposit due in less than $0 days ai alt) ’ ‘ u (other than for money. borrowed) 90,191.44 } ey must strictly enforce the automobile registration Dividends unpaid = 8,868.00 laws of the state. | Total of demand deposits (other than bank aeey deposits) subject to Reserve, Items 36, 87, asd mie MO aN A ence ++. 1,426,936.98 eae | ‘ 5 (Sa ‘ime deposits subject to Reserv e ; Mi 7 ai by statute that an automobile license atte 30 days, or subject to 30 dee ie cn vasa * ag he displayed by ae _,notice, and postal savings): pee a ‘ played by every car and truck of every deserip Certificates ‘of deposit (other than for money ion, fore and rear. Bismarck police will insist upon the borrowed) ..... 7 283,943.87 observance of this law to the letter, and they have been e Postal savings. deposits ay 3,067.39 A F: ye cr ordered to arrest and arraign any automobilist whose car Puotos Br “gy items 42, 43, 44 and 45 ........, serve 287,011.26 $ is not properly tagged or who cannot show, in the absence Stine bee ra Seoeette Cothet, than: wostal *” of such tags, that license has been applied for. Other United States deposits, including deposits of U. S. disbursing officers ............ ay i : aay 4 if Bae ees eS ete on NPL: Mia SeteMayger ese Oren eco west, sath ele.aiereeraibg 19,986.48 19,986.48 : a ; : ; Hore’s a-study in advance—or is it decline?—of bathing suits fashions posed by Mack Sen- TOTAL Aitomobilists will save themselves considerable ex- nett’s bathing beauty, Virginia Eastman. Right—simall-town stuff, left, middling-modest period—|sTaTE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County acieigh +++ + $2,649,083.08 pense and the embarrassment of arraignment in police center—the latest and last (we hope) model. ‘ 1, Frank E. Shepard, Cashier of the above name ‘bank, do solemnly swear r court by immediately conforming with the provisions of __ There has been an awful falling off) long time to get into. and showed the ‘bloomers and fitted (QEALD Sbove statement is,true to the best ¥ rah knowled and belief. : the law. in bathing suit fashions! Nobody can say that about the lat-| the waistline, but we hung on to the RANK E, SHEPARD, 5 Ag ‘Member the modest old mohairs|est swim suits! Speed! That’s it all] silk hose and bathing shoes! Cashier, respectable and unbecoming. They| In the second stage we dropped off| are too expensive to wear in the wa- J BELL, i $ a “y were thick and scratchy—and took a!the sleeves and shortened the skirt | ter! ee Directors, baa ain ' deel i i ys ns care BH ieee rere ORR! SE ad BOONE. SEB) "OOO juror sansensenRit oan ose anes ma - are cE UNCUT LIRR RRC TCT sn ae : i Now it’s. the “One-Piece Suit” and Subscribed and sworn to before me this 7th day. of July, 1919, H 3 tu wed to make ourselves for that |over, Mabel! LOBACH, A rip to the summer cottage or beach?! Then there was the middle period] there’ nothing much to say about it. i ubli C. J. Martineson, Dear, dear! They had petticoats|in bathing suit fashions—though| In fact,.the less said the better. |Correct—Attest: Notary Publie. AND bloomers underneath, andjone could hardly call the style me-| It consists of a little bit of woc! H. P. GODDARD, i Chief of Police. sleeves, and fullness—and everything SR EECRERRURRTRY 7 tiveness diaeval, and a lot of stripes—and silk, hese C. .B. LITTLE,