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WEATHES: FORECAS' Fair tonight and Friday; colder tonight. | » HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1878 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURS DAY, MAY 3, 1923 FINAL EDITION |. i PRICE FIVE CENTS, NON-STOP FLIERS REACH COAST ON OOO FORMER BANK | WHERE HAMMER SLAYER SUSPECT WAS SEIZED | CASHIER HELD IN $0. DAKOTA QO. KR. Billington Charged With Embezzlement While in Driscoll State Bank | ! i | \ i $8000 SAID INVOLVED} | ‘Took Proceeds of Sale of Wheat} and Cattle Under Fore- closures, Is Charge | ©, BR. Billington, former cashier: of the Driscoll State Bank, is under | i arrest in Huron, South Dakota, ac-i cording to information received here | hy authorities, val park scene in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, where a woman said to be Clara Phillips (inset), convicted slayer of Mrs. Alberta Meadows, was seized by local autho: 3 after a spectacular from prison at Los Angeles. Thy arrest wa Orahie on wera issued here by the states attorney charging Billington with — defalea- tions while he was in the Driscoll hank for many months. The total # amount involved) may reach $8,000, ! Stites Attorney Allen said toda FOREIGN SHIPS: I$ DECIDED ON cd For June 10 By Govern COMPLICATIONS Discussion With Foreign Gov- ernments Is Held Washington, May 3. cision has been istration officials charged with pro hibition enforcement to put the ship effect on June and Secretary Hughes has been re- quested to notify maritime nations | that foreign ships entering American | i territorial waters on and after that date would be hetd to strict compli- | ance with the law as interpreted a the supreme ¢ The situation growing out 6f Mon- : i " ie ead 22° HAL WHEAT IN "SWS ISOLATED ne actual charges made in the complaint, he said, are embezzle- | | BY HEAVY STORM rent of wheat and cattle, it being! i — charged that he would take cattle! BY | svAY Pierre, S. D., May 3.—Blunt, a Land grain on foreclosures for the} 4 ‘small town 28 miles east of here bank nd convert the proceeds tg wn ow ae) was completely isolated yesterday own use, j : $ al y yhich struck there Dakota to the Driseoll bank, is suid éMonday night, prostrating — tele 1 telephone lines and! to be about 30 years old. Several} graph and te ‘ ths ase the Lae es causing considerable destruction because of financial difficul-! Rain at Beginning of Week °! Property. ee ‘ ‘ 4 i First reports of the storm indi Stockholders from South Da-} 4 + ‘ x Pees et a her Hinders Opera- cated that no one had been injured. CEM ech TNO ASA 0) dit Ei SEL Las , but that the town had been turned nd refinanced the bank, it: tions in North Dakota — | topsy turvy by a heavy wind which being reopened in goo condition, ! aGcocbaWledln: several rail One lumber yard was wrecked according to the state examiner's prominent Seuth "Dakota family. | ismaller buildings were on MOUNT PROBE q ‘Greatest Progress in Wheat storm are reported to have suiferel SEES LEAGUE | Seeding Is bu in South = "ty eyes Full Ahyotitae tion fon a North-; versity Student's i Fargo, N. e Less” eg half! of the wheat ‘cropihad been LACK OF OF NEWS. Meats deckae coralae CARROT iSPUDENTS ALSO ACT! week, according to, reports ireceived at the ; from 28 court, $rand jury inves- Propaganda Necessary to Keep le reduction of the wheat dere- Mount, Northwestern university stu- ge of the state by 15 to 20 per- dent, who disappeared after a class ane nt. The general rain dast_Mon-| Records of Referee Show Not, rush in 1921, was requested of Rob- Frazier j day night further hindered ope ert Crowe, state's attorney, in a for | ations with the result that on Sat- More Than 1 to 1,000 mal statement issued jointly by Wal- up Forces, Declares R. W. Lack of consistent propaganda} Urday, May 6, when wheat’ seeding Raa ter Dill Scott, president of the um- sueh Trnished through the| should normally be finished in Population iversity, and the board of trustees. Fargo Courier-News is a heavy} North Dakota, probably abgut one- The statement was made public has Go Gro Wameadven lean half of the crop will be in. | Reports in some quarters of bank- | after a coroner's inquest ‘had been of Crosby, in a cireu-| Greatest progress has been made: ruptcies among farmers appear to! started over tH® bleached bones s Teague week-|in the southern part of the state, ibe grossly exaggerated and exhor-! found underneath a pier on the lake ike Jn “chip in” to .pay John! Where the seeding of wheat has been | tations of some individuals to farm-} front in Evanston, the university ; ‘ditorial | Practically finished, according to re- Andrews ).to: iprovide).an’ editorial ey eT oneNGite iid * Dickey | h e had little effect, from records! ing anda silver belt buckle, as the geen ener: counties and seeding of other small! of Benton Baker, referee in bank-; skeleton of Mount. sa Frazier's Plan {grains is well underway. Several | ruptcy for southwestern North Da-| Coincident with the unive ‘The circular letter to the league! of the Slope counties - report that| Kota, embracing 20 of the 53 coun-| formal statement came an announce- R. W, Frazier, lar letter. He propos leaders sent out by Mr, Frazier is; about half of the wheat crop was in, ties in the state. — 5 ment from the school student coun- in part as follow jat the last of the week, altho oper-| Bankruptcy petitions in the last | ci] that it had passed a resolution “There are some 26 or.30 farm and| ations throughtoat the slope andj Year since Mr. Baker hus been in! that any student found guilty by it labor papers scattered over the| the northern part of the state r ffice total 180 for the district, or, of orga ng or participating In any and if each of them would be|ccived a severe yetback carly last! nine to a county, a little more than} form of class rush, supervised or un- 4 to sign an agreement to pay| week by « snowfall ranging from six {one to cach 1,000 inhabitants of the | supervised, would be recommended to say $10 per menth towafds a salary|to ten inches. jdistrict, which has a population in' the faculty for expulsion, The! uni- fund for Joh Abdyews, 1 believe! Continued wet weather has kept| the 1920 census of 174,136. It is| versity statement sald it is “deter- he could be induced to write the/the farmers out of the figlds about! estimated that 90 percent of the|mined to ascertain the cause of page, (which would of|hulf of the time for the’ past ten| bankruptcies are farmers and others | Leighton Mount's death and fix the 5 would be the same in all! days in the Red River Valley, where! include merchants elevators » and | responsibilty therefor.” papers, but inasmuch as only a few] less than one-third of the seeding other business enterprises, = people take more than one such! was finished last week. The gen-! The greater number of cases paper, that wouldn't matter) for:eral rain of last Monday night was’ Velve over-exertions of credit, Mr. i 3 i i , citing some cases where them during 1923 and 1924 and/ lightest in the v:stey section, how-| Baker maybe by that time some other ar-{ever, and with a weather prediction | individuals, in one case a railroad rangement could be made. of “Fair Wednesday night and] Wage earner, showed ties of | T0 BE TRIED, * *“Of course, this plan has another| Thursday,” field operations should) $5000 and no assets 4 econ} objectionable feature which ts this: {be general again in this section the| extent, he suid, the decline in the} value of livestock und farm chattels | say some county has no favorable} last few days of the week. paper, then the leaguers in that | Less in North county would be out, but would soon take one of the neigh-; state, the amount of wheat seeded cases, the referee added, it ap-| patriarch of the Rus like the boys here for they are be-| from nothing to 30 percent, with an| the real situation and failure et ces pond! for, the Minnesota was heavy lust Monday in this sec-| of the bankrupts showing liabitit. | of opposing the Soviet regime. me tion, 1.15 inches’ at ‘Bottineau and| ies of small amounts over assets. | ee Wilt “Quit. Cold” j G4 at Devils Lake, further delaying] “There is no great wave of bank MANDAN BONDS “If this plan could be adopted the| operations there, ruptey and on the whol Sopesereet Lg league could possibly survive, but! Shortages of seed corn and wilt-] mount is involved in the failures, unless it or something similar can] Fesistant flax seed are _ reported| Mr. Baker suid. | be worked out wherein the average league member can keep posted wi t uit, and quit cold. _ prasad willing to pledge the Divide|Ularly of flax, are anticipated. totals on ea¢h renewal. tated at the land office, They | 8 Labor is sgill scarce, and many eas | were: $50,000 to the city school! ST ee Napier et sea waa yee farmers are "reducing their acrease | $10,000 GIVEN {Gourd of Mandan, completing a $100-| eel nt citendly scanenebie oul of wheat rather than pay hig! HaNe a) Cree coeees Ueeaald eee aeintee eke wea e| MOR QS DENT and let me hear from you at an ear-| Planting wheat at a late date. Fall a iecdate, plowing was far below normal, and| Needy students of the Universit; “Herewith please find enclosed aj much plowing™is yet to be done.| of North Dakota will be aided from ‘set of petitions on the election laws} The late seuson combined with the| a $10,000 fund provided in a gift b: being referred which I hope you! cheap seed ‘is helping to counteract Mrs, Elizabeth H. Merrifield of Pas- can find time to have completely| the low market price for potatoes! adena, California, widow of Web-; filled out and returned to me by| last fall and “a substantial acreage} ster Merrifield, who enjoyed ay May 12. It seems necessary now} is Planned, altho it will be mater-| country-wide reputation for his suc-) Price of No. 1 cream was raised that we protect the Repyblican par-|ially‘less ‘than that of last year. | cess: in the president’s chair of th cents all over the state, as one ty since the apparent downfall of; Corn sgpotts from some individ-| state university for many years. A/of the first results of the institute the league. ual counties “for the period ending] check for $10,000,.was received by|tion of cream grading in North Da- “Thank you in advance for your| Saturday, April 28, follow: the board of administration here| kota, W. F. Reynolds, state dairy assistance in these matters, I am, >» Williams ¢ | late yester jcommissioner said today, The mark- “Yours very truly, “Seeding is not yet general in the| The do: directs that the fundjet, he said, did not rise, adding (Signed) “R, W.. Frazier.” county“etio a few farmers have| shall be, known as “The Webster) that the increase was due solely to pa - “|from 80 tp 100 acres planted. A| Merrifield Student Loan Fund,” and/the cream grading system putting a LOSE SIGHT OF EYE heavy snow fall Monday delayed] shall be administered by the student | premium on quality. ‘argo, May 3.—Gust Lalum of| operations. Most of the land was|loan fund commission of the univer-} Supervisers of the system of pur- Maddock, will lose the sight of one, t0o. wet to plow or disc most of the| sity. The terms of the trust state|chasing and selling cream by grades eye which was pierced by a staple.| week- Clover, alfalfa, brome snapped into it by a stretched wire and wheat grass are coming up hice-| needy students not exceeding $250) throughout the state today, the courthouse bends to Golden Valley, ounty. NO. 1 CREAM PRICE RA while he was building a fence atj ly.” E. G. Schollander, Williston. |in any one year to one student, and dairy commissioner said. \ Maddock recently. Morton” notes bearing 6 Percent interest } Part_of the staple ‘embedded it-] “Smew-Monday left the ground too| shall be taken for all loans. {Lincolnshire is the flattest fand|the bride stands on a large plate in the optic nerve, according} wet for seeding until the end of the| Mr. Merrifield was third president | Westmorland the most hilly, of En-| filled with milk, and rose to the physician. of ‘the University. H iglish counties, re # (Continued on Page 3.) “g court decision which s that American and foreign | | ships must be “bone dry three-mile limit was discussed terday at a conference of treasury of- i Afterward announcement was made that June 10 has been fixed as the date for clamping down the lid; that the secretary of s asked to advis ate had been foreign governments of this intention and that the treas- was determined to; enforce the law in its new application impartially and vigorously. It'is admitted in administrative cir- icles that some governments are like j ly to protest against the court's in- nection in m fringement on’ their diplomats it is regarded as certain that lengthy negotiations will ensue between some of the governments af- | fected and the United States on « tain phases of the qu he flight of | rum fleet during the night | tion of the coast guard cutter Seneca | Aguicultuxaly Collene ‘in sending a four-inch shel] across extension “Xgents, EXAGGERATED Chicago, May : jury inves _ bows of a smuggling craft to} und their esting tes showed a prob- tigation into the death of Leighton A The Seneca opened fire yesterday | afternoon, it was announced today at | Coast Guard headquarters, after two small runners coasting along between | the fleet and shore, had denied a sig- | The Seneca had joined ; e patrel on orders from Wash- to join in the rum hunt and ‘NORTH DAKOTA AUTOISTS TO BOOST ROADS New Organization Is Formed at Fargo—Purposes Are president of the the three Krupp directors. ceedings are to take place tomor- | row. to “take the cure” appear to! home, and identified by bits of cloth- | pay marks. The directors whose names are Jacger and Zellner are charged among other things with having caused the siren of their plant to sound when occupation troops and officials appeared on their property, thus ,rallying an assembly of work- men which endangered the lives of the visiting authoriti ‘'MANY LAND PATENTS GIVEN Records of land patents granted to purchasers of school have completed their payment for the land on long-time terms in the last eight months show the desire jof many to obtain their own homes s their faith in the C. R. Kositzky, land commis- Vaiaace rete (sires ‘The North Dakota Automobile As- Fargo following the meeting of com- retaries of the state | will accomplis! good in pro- moting good tourists and #o) state, A. K./ secretary of the Associa- and readjustment ineident to the| Moscow, May 3—The church trial|tion of Commerce, said on his re. they} In the northers fwunties of the| War are shown as causes. In some] of the most Rev. Dr. Tikhon, former / jan church, be- | ‘ i |, E. Danielson of Minot was elect- 3 hi fF 7 pears to be lack of comprehension of | tan this afternoon, Dr. Tikhon was | ed president, P. 0. Thorson of Grand boring papers if they are anything: 4t the end of last week ranged to|not present, being in prison where | Forks, vice president ‘average of 12 percent. The rainfall; take advantage to recuperate, some he is awaiting civil trial on charges fF B. Black of Fargo, secretary-treas- !urer. The board of dircctors elected! s iat the above three officers | and Norman/ Ss "Klaus not Fea 0. m of Bismarck, , of Mandan,F, W. Turner of! from a number‘of points, and heavy In some cases, where it appeared Warrants toy $107,000 in purchases ; aeiinese A. A. Bradley of Willis-i nereases, ‘particularly of flax seed rent Amounts were a iiglned: he pel four bond’ issues by the state; ieee, Charles Euseell: fi Devils Lake| oe! ‘ Be said, it was discovere: at renew-|board of university and school lands | and ‘orton Page of Fargo. out additional expense he is going Bee eee ese Ace pe ae Pal notes) Hediheani listearinieeparate eecee Uw. ite AAie today, it was! ARE PURCHASED | Duna and emphasjz state, A committee s F. Crabbe, Morton Page and Nor- man Black was appointed to draw up constitution and by laws to, be! $32,000 to McClusky! Presented for approval at a meeting t No. 1 and $25,000| of the board of directors which will be held the latter part of May. The} annual dues were placed at $2.50 a} year and an effort within the next few weeks to ex- tend an invitation to every automo-! bile owner in North Dakota to be-| St numbe 29, when 37 Among the actions taken by the; ‘commerce club secretaries new organization called the North Dakota Commercial Secretaries a is to decide no shall be given for The next meeting will be in Minot at the same time as the Press association late this summer. — 852 | merchant During 1922 ships of 2,467,084 ton: S| that amounts may be loaned tojare actively engaged: in their work | /aunched from ti- shipyards of ee At’ marriuge ceremony in India BOOZE BAN ON ‘SEVEN DIE IN MOUNTAIN TRAIN WRECK WHEN HUGE ROCK SLIDE Say Only 5 Killed Salt Lake City, Utah, May 3— Vive killed one missing and 26 injured in the wreck of the Denver and Rio Grande West- ern passenger train No. 2 cast bound at Woodside, Utah, at 11:00 o'clock last night, accord- ing to official advices received at the offices of the road here. The dead: Arthur Hokey, at- tached naval training station Great Lakes, HL, Mrs. EC, White, Soldiers’ Summit, Utah; KE, C. Patridge, professor at Brigham Young Uniyer! ! Utah; PL RS Rader, lo motive engineer, Grand Ju to Colo.; Alfred Anderson, locomotive fireman, Grand Junc- ton Colo. we Salt Lake City, Utah, May 3.—Sev- en persons, five passengers and two trainmen, were killed last night when UTILITY CASE ARGUED TODAY District Judges TOWN TO TRY KRUPP’S HEAD | President of Great German Works and Directors Accused By Occupation Chiefs OTHERS. ARE ARRESTED Werden, May Only bearers of special permits i | sued by the French military author- ities will be permitted to enter or Heave Werden while the trial progress. ‘ORS HELD. Essen, fines amounting im G, Burr and (5 M. Cooley are sitting on the supreme! court bench in the | Hughes Electric Compa marek contests tae laws conferring on the state railroad commission power over public. util- ‘ities in the stave. They replace | Justices Nuessle and Johnson, di qualified, by reason of previous con- ters of the company FRENCH CLOSE case in which the of Bis- of the + Verdict Held to M —This little town on the Ruhr river, only a few miles from Essen, will be completely cut j off from the outside world and en- tirely surrounded by a cordon of troops during the trial of Dr. tav Krupp von Bohlen bun Halbach, | Krupp works and The pro- | us ' nounced, giving Ruthenberg and his is in| This is Intended to pre- vent demonstration by workers and unemployed of Essen, nounced their intention of proceed. | ing here to await result of the trial. who had an-{ Two directors call the Heinrichs mine and machine works a Hattingen have been sen- tenced by a French court martial to serve five years in prison and to to 260,000,000 | Saunders Tauches in a Stock- Denver and Rio Grande western pas senger train No, 2 was derailed near Woodside, Utah, according to a re port at the dispatcher’s office of the railroad here tod The train which engines and 11 cars, including ci:zht Pullmans, was traveling through an isolated mountain region cast of Woodside when the wreck occurred. Meuger reports received here s the wreck was caused by"a rock sli¢ which overturned the two engines ang resulted in the baggage car, smoking car and one Pullman crash- ing into the wreckage. gineer Fred Rader of Grand Junction, who piloted the second en gine. and fireman A, Anderson of the first engine were instantly killed, according to reports. The bodies of the ngers have not yet been identified. Late reports to the dispateher’s of- fice here said nearly a score of per- sons were injuced. id ‘COMMUNIST IS HELD GUILTY sted of two | The T- her destins continental non-stop flight passe over Wickenberg, Arizona, miles northwest of here at 1 a. m. mountain time, accordin to a Sante Fe railroad dispatel er’s message received here. wknowledged Leader of Radi- cals in Country Violated Syndicalism: Law APHECIS Woz. POSTER Retrial For Kirst Leader To Be Tried lover St. Louis St. Joseph, Mich., May 3.—Charles E, Ruthenberg of Cleveland, O., is the first pe guilty of violating Michigan's syndi- calism law. He was convicted by 5 jury last night after 4 hours and 360 ‘minutes and on the third ballot. Ruthenberg was the second of the 36 | alleged Communists to face trial as a result of the raid on the Commun ist party convention at Bridgeman, | Mich., Jast August. { William Z. Foster of Chicago, the first of the defendants brought to trial, was not convicted, the jury be ing dismissed after more than 35 hours of deliberation. Ruthenberg faces a sentence of 10 years in prison, a fine of $5,000 or | both. Sentence will be pronounced on June 4, Judge Charles White an- attorneys time in the interim to pre- pare an appeal. Ruthenberg’ conviction, attorneys said, virtually assures a re-trial for | | Foster. PIGGLY HELP IS SOUGHT a BIBS WILL Selling Campaign Memphis, y 2,—Clarence Saun- ders, Memphis — groceryman and Stores Inc, fluctuation of which! stock cently caused a sensation on! the New York stock exchange re-| sulting in short — sellers being | ht short of thousands of shares! | Welfare Week will be the ct called onjdren’s parade which takes. pli Memphis people tw aid in his stock! Thursday afternoon, May 10, at of class A stock, in an ment published today, advertise- selling combinatien the failure of From September 1922 to May 1923, 431 titles for land passed from the board of university and school lands to individuals a pared with 168 for the sume period a year previous, and about 165 for 1920-21, The highest number in any one month was January, pateyt$ were grauted und the larg- n one day was January were granted. NOT AGAINST THE BOND ISSUE Filing of a protest against pay- ing the major cost of a water works system from special assess- ments on real estate should not be} confused with opposition to the bond issue to be voted May 14, Alfred Zuger, said today. Mr. were | Zugar filed a protest with the city f the| commission under section 3704 of the Code, he said, protesting against te special assessment method of financing, but said he did not Oppose the bond issue, un- colored|der which, he said, all taxpayers bear a part of the cost. lands who com- 1923, when 94 out of his private fortune. As a result of the Wall street flurry in Piggly Wiggly the stock exchange board of Governors grant-| ed @ five day extension of time for delivery of the stock by shorts for} which action Mr. Saunders vigorous. ly denounced the board and assert-! ed his intention of entering suit against the ages. The from the exchange board and Mr. it direct to the public. TO HELP SAUNDERS. Memphis, Tenn., May 3.—Organized care of her own” business men of this gan an intensive campaign of per- sonal solicitation for the sule of stock of the Piggly Wiggly Stores, Inc., to whose president, , Clarence Saunders, center of the recent Piggly Wiggly sensation on the New York exchange, they enthusiastically pledged their support at a dinner tended by “friends of Saunders” last night. The rally of citizens to the aid of Piggly Wiggly and its pre: dent followed publication in news. paper advertisements yesterday of Mr, Saunders’ declaration that “un- less I sell the Piggly Wiggly Class A stock I wilt go broke.” The English language contains about 20,000 words . of . French origin. , | | { | | | Hempstead. son who has been found | { | | | | president of. the Piggly Wiggly! which would Fesult in the wiping} jcertain classic groups in histo board to collect dam-} stock was withdrawn i. ‘Temple Tuesday after Saunders announced he would offer; under the slogan “Memphis will take | scores of leading ' ity today be- } NEW YORK 10 - CRASHES INTO Two Locomotives SAN DIEGO, IS NEW RECORD United States Army Aviator * Cross Continent Without Stopping MAKE RAPID PROGRES} 200 Miles Yet ‘To Go Remaine During Day When Plane Is Seen San Diego, Calif., May 3.- ed over San Die tion. Phoenix, Ariz., M 3.-—Th ‘’-2 monoplane en route to Sa Diego on an attempted trans The monoplane, manned b Mey and Joh cReady was less than 30 niles from its Pacific Coast ob jective when it passed ove Wickenberg. Py 100 MILES AN HOUR. St. Louis, Mo, May 3.—Maintain- ing a speed of approximately 100 miles an hour, the T-2, a giant army | monoplane, last night was speeding ftoward the snow capped Sierra 'vadas, on a nonstop flight from an Certain, ew York to San Diego. Taking off from Roosevelt field at Y., ut 1:30 o'clock yes- day afternoon, the plane passed 9:15 p.m. last night. Almost a thousand miles of the ap proximately 2,400 mile journey had been left behind when the ship wa swallowed up by the mists hanginy low over St. Louis TOOK OFF AT 1:36 P.M. Hempstead, N. Y., Lieute ants John A. MacReady and. Qakir G. Kelley took off from Rooseve field at esterday in th 2 in their secon ¢ a non-stop trant continental flight. They hoped t reach San Diego from which the st attempt was made, in hour and attend a dinner of the Americ: Legion there tonight. PASSES EL CENTRO. 1 Centro, Calif., May 3.—The mo ne T-2 passed over El] Centro . m., Pacific time. ng at about 2,0 | to 5,000 fect elevation. An army av j ator who watched her progress sa the engine was working perfectly a the aviators ought to’ complete tlic trans-contintal non-stock flight to S Diego in 2 hours. After passing Centro the plane veered s south, indicating a course close the Mexican border would be f: lowed. GO ON PARAD: Hold) Clinics During Infa Welfare Week Beginning May 6 An important part of Info o'clock. Children of all ages from fants in baby carriages to boys bicycles and girls with dolls wi take part. The children will pe grouped and dressed to repres: various features being kept sec as a surprise for this last big ev of the week's work which will be {devoted to instruction to mothers for the developing of better babies Clinics will be held at the Mason- noon, May 8. all day Wednesday, May 9, and during the morning of May 10, with 'Dr. Louisa Boutelle of the United States Public Health Departmen? in charge. NEW FLY SWATTER Edgeley, May 3.—C. D. Younger of Edgeley has invented a new typa of fly swatter, according to the Scientific American, a well known ; povular scientific journal. “An object of the invention,” says the journal “is to provide a simple means for detachably mounting the | flexible striker sheet on the handi to permit the substitution of a new sheet when an old one is worn. while retaining the handle and other parts. Another object ig tc sncompore ite haaat the of lighter ele: an a expensive le preferably : Olas ot ee Sng al acl se 4 The origin of a case of) s¢uriat fever has been traced to “Pook: which was read by a patient 20 years 960.