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Se vz The injunction of the city health | » matter in the water makes this nec- essary, according to the city chemist. |: TUESDAY, JULY 24, HOPE WATER \ WILLOLEAR UP ee : By Health Officer Because | of Condition —— “BIG MUDDY” MUDDIER ‘| Unusual turbidity in the city water was somewhat lessened today, giv- | ing hope~to officials of the water company that it would be greatly inproved in the next few days. The water began to clear up in the west- cr part of the city Saturday after- | )y noon, they say. . officer to continue boiling water b fore using is continued indefinitely, | however, ‘The presence of. volean The “Big Muddy” has carried an unusual amount of mud this year, |! according to water company officials, | After the spring rise came the June | rise, and the water remained high. | This rise was suce rains at various points in North Da- | kota and Montana, which caused the river to overflow in low places and | considerable voleanic matter washed into the river. The filling of coulees also is believed to be.the cause of | the excessive number of mosquitoes in towns along the river. According to city chemist E. M., Stanton the capacity of the third res- ervoir, from which watefenters the ins, was lessened because the res ervoir was not cleaned. The chemi- “IN FBW DAYS Warning to Boil it Continued | eded by heavy |: 1928 American Corn and Tractors \ “wet Saving Russia From Famine D Ses Dre. JOSEPH ROSEN ‘NDIAN corn, the maise upon which the early settlers in New England subsistedin the early days of our cal treatment requires time for set- tling in the water and this is not | given under present conditions, he said. The reservoir has not been cleaned since last year, he said. | Officials of the company changed the time of pumping water, so that all pumping now is done at night. | The water passes through three res- | ¢ ervoirs of 2,000,000 capacity, and the daily consumption is said to be 750,- 000 to 800,000 gallons. It is 48 hours from the time water is pumped into a reservoir until it flows in the mains, it is sa f is expr sed by. company of- als that within a day the turbidity will be remarkably lessened except “where water has not been taken out of pipes leading to the consumer's a few days, and allowing r it up. rs entire- | s been understood that be-t of the imminence of the city’s | taking over of the water plant, whith expected by this time, that the } y would not clean the reser- ee MARKET NEWS | SETBACK IN WHEAT PRICE Sharp Decline in - Liverpool Affects Chicago Market Chicago, July 24—Wheat under- went a material setback in price teday during the early dealings, bears making much of a sharp de- Sine in Liverpool quotations and of weakness in the New York stock market. Favorable weather for-the spring crop in the Northwest tend- | ed further to depress. values. Opening prices which ranged from to % cents lower with }Septem- ber 98 to 98% cents and December | 1.01 to $1.01% were followed by ditional downturns before the de- | cline was checked. * Subsequently the market /suffered an additional decline as a result of persistent commission house selling and of enlarged hedging sales. The close was unsettled, 13-4 to 2 cents net lower with Sept., 967-8c to 97c and Dec. $1.00 to $1.00 1-8, _ CHICAGO LIVESTOCK = Chicago, July 24.—Hog receipts 23,000. Féw good and choice light- weight hogs $8.00 to $810 early, Mostly 10 to 15 cents lower. Cattle receipts 11,000. Better grades beef steers, yearlings and desirable beef heifers steady to strong. Top matured steers $11.60. Vealerg 25 to 50 cents higher. To packers upward to $11.00. ‘Sheep receipts 16,000. Fat lambs most 25 cents lower. No westerns sold. Early native packers $13.00. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK So. St. Paul, July 24.—Cattle re- | ceipts 2,500. Slow, killing classes generally steady to weak. Sales: country, is playing a large part in the ‘reclamation of Russia. Several mitlion facres of Russian soil will probably bear pS next year produced out of Amer- lican pure seed corn from the Middle jWestern States, and cultivated by American tractors. |. Dr. Joseph A. Rosen, the well-known ‘American agriculturist already famous \for his “Rosen rye,” weitt to Russia two iyears ago to»represent the American ‘Jewish Joint Distribution Committee j{with the American Relief Administra- |tion. One of the best means found for fighting famine in the Volga region jwas his plan whereby 2,700,000 acres ‘were planted with American corn ‘which, besides needing less seed, can ‘better endure the rainless: months of {this dry region than the customary icrops of wheat and other small grains. {1It also is a crop that can be cultivated good $1.04 3-8 to $1.09 3-8; July $1.03; Sept. $1.033-8; Dec, $1.04 3-8, Corn No, 3 yellow, 82 to 83 cents; oats No, 3 white, 341-2 to 35T2; barley, 50 to 60 cents; rye No. 2, 591-2 to 5938-4; flax No. 1, $2.70 to $2.75. IT WAS SOME BULL! Sudburne, England, July 24.—A 9- month-old bull, owned by the late Lord Manton, has been sold.here for nearly $4600. OH, NOW WE KNOW London, July +24.—Preservatives in food are responsible for a lot of the appendicitis that’ around now. So testified at the hearing of a firm charged with it would retain i flavor longer. MAN: BADLY HURT ridge, N. D., July 24.—R. P. ‘aters, lineman of the C. M. & St. P. railroad, sustained injuries re- quiring amputation of his left foot and serious internal injuries when He jumped or slipped from a service motorcar south of here. He is in serious condition due to exposure for, unable to help himself, he lay bi ‘te ‘track all night until trains passed the point the follow- ing morning. Too Late To Classify FOR RENT—Two unfurnished rooms and kitchenette for light ‘house- keeping. Phone 862-R. ~ 7-24-3t MEN WANTED — On new water works. pipe line,.rApply on job, north of N. P. tracks near Jac man’s farm. 7-24-3t WANTED—Pastry cook, either man or woman, Sweet Shop, 7-23-3t FOR RENT—Furnished room in mo- dern home. Gentleman preferred. 318-8th St. 9-23-1w Dancing. every night. Pat- terson Farm ‘Pavilion. Mc- Kenzie Orchestra. TWIN HARMONY | oS . Fs featured by sale of choice grain-/ Mf fed steers averaging 1,589 pounds / At $10.65, a new top for this weight fed heifers $4.00: to $7.00. Cows 5 to $6.00. Canners.and cutters suld mostly at $2.25 to $3.00. Bolo- pecan for the year to date. Grass- , § floating a medical officer] * doctoring sausage so and therefore, in a ‘soit naturally tich, saves 50 percent through the possibility of destroying the weeds, As‘ part, of. the; rican Jewish program } uetion in the Ukraine year, Rosen has se- lected the heme species of American corn and introduced them for seed there, Over 6,000 Sushels of pure bred seed corn from Iowa, Nebraska, the Dakotas, Kansas, and Minnesota have been planted in’ 52 localities and next year will serve as seed for millions of acres of Ukrainian soil. About 200,000 acres will be worked this fall by American tractors sent over by the American Jewish Joint Dist- ribution Committee under the direction of American farm expert$. The Rus- sian government hopes during the next five years to imiport and build at least 50,000. tractors. “It is believed that Dr. Rosen has made’® contribution not only to emergency aid but also to the permanent reconstruction ef Russian agriculture, FARM LANDS WITHOUT PAY State School Fund Defrauded of Much Money, Ko- sitzky Finds “If conditions are the same all over dhe state as I have discovered in the northern part, fully 10,000 acres of hool lands are beg cultivated,” Land Comm R, Kositzky, who ig trip, wrote ary of State Thomas Hall. the law school lands may be ‘leased only for haying and grazing purposes, In some instances it was discovered tht school lands were cultivated without payment of any rental at all to the state, . Commissioner Kositzky is notifying persons found to he illegally occupy- ing school lands that they must pay rent and if it is not forthcoming the crops grown will be attached. The chief objection, to cultivating school lands, acco; i to Mr. Hall, is that the lands are not given ordi- nary care and the soil is depreciated, HEARST PAYS LADD’S EXPENSES _ Fargo, July 24.—Senator E. F. Ladd’s expense'y' an his trip ¢ Rassia are, being, paid, by William Randolph Hearst. '?7' That announcement was made by Hearst newspapers in New York on Sunday. — According to the! atnouncement, expenses of Senatop, hadd| pf North Dakota, as well as those of Senator King of Utah and Representative Frear of Wisconsin, are being-taken care of by Hearst. / The senators and Mr. Frear are expected to, report @heir findings of their study of the Bolshevik gov- ernment to the Hearst newspapers. The’ party sailed from New York several days ago. LABOR AGENTS ARE APPOINTED Agents in charge"of labor employ- ment offices to be maintained during the harvest season in the state by the stat4 department of agriculture and the U. S. Employment Buréau have gna bulls $4.50 to $5.00. Stockers end feeders nominally . steady. been named as follow! Bismarci Calves receipts 2,000. _ 25 to 50 + cents higher. Best lights $9.00. | Herman A. Brocopp, ‘special agent; Oakes, Ed, Stock and Hugh Willis; »¢ Hog receipts 6,500. 140 to 180 pound averages $7.50. to $7.60, or | mostly 10 to 20 cents higher. Mar- | i Ket generally steady to strong. Sows $5.57 to $6.00. Best pigs $6.35. Sheep receipts 500. Steady. Na~ eS lambs $12.25... Fat aged ewes 6. MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Minneapo! cents lower to unchanged. $6.00 to $6.20 a barrel. berrels. Bran unchanged at $20.50 to $21.00. MILL CITY GRAIN. Minneapolis, July 24.—Wheat re- ceipts 145 cars, compared with 198 cars a year ago. Cash No. 1 north- ern $1.03 3-8rto $1. }-8; No, 1 dark: m spring ‘choice to f $1198-8 to $1.29 8-8; good to.choice, | and . will $1103-8 fo $1.183-8 3; Ofdinary to’ » JUiy 24—Flour 10; Fi Shipments 42,310 |B ‘These Samar. twins, born. on the are joined. at the base of-the spin The: are taken up the saxap! probably’ become. pub'ic entertainers, ‘ y Agriculture Joseph A. Kitchen. ‘\bruised*the trio, smash Grand Forks, M. A. Gill and\Hans An- derson; Minot, W. A. Winfrey and Fargo, continued in Minnie B. Bowe; George A. Montgomery, Lee Murray apd Ed. McChane, according to ans nouncément of Commissigner /of * TRIO IN NARROW ESCAPE Harvey, N. D., July 24.—When a Great’ Northern fast// mail ., train truck a wagon load of hay jon lwhich three children of Mt. and Mrs, Joe Schuh, residing 11 miles north of thera were riding, it severely a ied ‘the wagon and killed the horses instant! boy, 11, ‘sustained brokén arm, Philippine Islani 14 years. ‘ago,|‘broken shoulder blade and a broken , ankle. Another, child received a. ‘tealp wound, while ‘the youngest | was found. peering out from under @ bunch of hay. ‘ \ 1 t! tor, Dr. Haas, who was knocked down ‘eventually succumbed. | ited Drakulich, young Serbia A| affiliated, although IN UPRISING _ IN GERMANY Public Prosecutor Is Killed | Before Order Is Restored in Leipzig. reports of communist disturbances in Frankfort. | He says it was the public, prosecu- in the. street and killed ‘today~and that the wife and father of the lat- ter were maltreated. Dr. Haas’ wife and father were in- jured while the prosecutor's resi- dence was being ransacked and Dr. Haas was so severely handled that he The police restored order. In view of the serious situ: Governor Nogte-of. Hanover province northwestern Germany, has_ prohib all open air meetings next Sun- day, the correspondent states. Thi date is the one originally fixed by the Communists | for» anti-Fasci t | demonstration: RECAPTURED One Is Killed in Escape From} Minois Prison Chester, Ill., July 24—Twenty- three of the 41 prisoners who es- | caped from the Illinois state hos- |pital for the criminal insane here Sunday night, have been recap- tured, 17 still being at large to- day. Joe Jackson, Chicago negro, serving a life term for murder, | | was stabbed to death in the strug- | gle at the asylum by one of the| guards. Posses consisting, of guards of | ;the Southern Illinois penitentiary nearby, deputy sheriffs and local authorities continued their search for the convicts who are believed to be hidiag in the vicinity. An investigation into the deliv- ee was in progress by state offi- |‘ cials. HALF MILLION (QUAKE Loss Inventory Taken of Damage | in Southern California San Bernardino, tory of the damage of Sunda; night’s earthquake, completed rm § night, showed that,three persohs were injured and about $2,000 dam- age in the city of San Bernardino, 2,500 in Radlands and extensive damage to the southern California state hospital for the insane at Put- ton and the general hospital’s cast and west wings were shattered to such an extent that 519 patients were ordered removed. Replacement value | of the wings declared unfit for occu- pancy was estimated at $500,000. At the General hospital damage ¢onsist- ed of demolished plaster on each of the three floors, cracked tiling and damage’ to ornamental work. ainage to San Bernardino con- sisted largely of cracked walls in various school buildings, court house July 24.—Inven- and business blocks. The Hall of Records, which lost an immense chimney, was the building most dam- aged. Interior walls: of the court house, the tallest building here, were crack- ed through in a half dozen pl Some of these walls were two f thick. ‘At (the Hall of Records adjoining the court house, barriers were erect- ed today to keep onlookers at a dis- tance, After an inspection of the junior high school, a three story structure erected in 1892, officials of the board of education announced that the third floor probably, wauld have to be re- moved. City officials announced only one business structure, an old two: story building would be condemned. * Persons who were camping in both the San Bernardino and San Jacinto mountains told of a roar which pre- ceded the earthquake, Rocks rolled from canyon sides, Marked jncrease in the flow of streams near here has occurred since the earthquake. COURT TERM | t Because the supreme court of North Dakota, will ‘adjourn about a month later than usual in the sum- mer the September term of the court will open one week later, or on tember 11, it was announced by C! J. H. Newton. Confronted by a cal- endar af many exceptionally import- | ant cas embers of the court have been working overtime to get all im- portant matters cleared up before the summer recess, and it ig expected} that most of the court’s business will , disposed of within a‘ week to ten’ jays. Serbian Given “Beach, ND, July, 24.—Georgp permitted to return to his \ land; to fight withkis. own nationals when called in the first ‘draft in the war \ returned: to this country, wag Siren ® military ft where by Bi me! lon: with: he ha oh alts ould not hold; membership. Drakolich was killed when, unfamiliae with a double bit on the bridle of the horse he given to. ride -at the ri ranch, he pulled sharply on the tei imal to gear and fall! le London, July 24.—Reuter’s Berlin | ; Correspondent confirms | Minneapolis, July 24.—Despond- OPENS LATER|| Military Rites] United States, and who following the "THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SLE i St 5 |COMMUNIS over backwards, crushing him be-|Wwas found dead. by his mother, Mis. neath the pommel! of the saddle. He|M. Unter, in-¢heir cotéage:at, Casco Standard Oil Service lived but a few minutes. ‘ The body was sent to Ottumwa, for burial. A mother and er of Ottumwa and a brother of | Sioux City, Iowa, survive. MILTON BANK __ TO RECOVER} John Vallely, receiver of the State Bank of Milton, may enforce collec- tion of notes against Thomas Da. vaney, Adelard Benoit and others under a decision of. the supreme’ reversing the district court of alier county, The notes amount- ed to $10,133.84, 2 The notes were given to the bank is a result of cattle’deals and at the request of the president to enable it to carry indebtedness in a form suf- ficient to the bank examiner, and de- fendants denied liability, according to the record in the case. DAKOTA YOUTH KILLS, , SELF AT MINNETONKA y following a nervous breakdown lieved to have prompted. the wicide of Archie: Unker,, 21, who eee CAPITOL TONIGHT and Tuesday SHIRLEY MASON =< “YOUTH MUST HAVE LOVE” Action, adventure, mys- tery and intrigue in a drama of. thrills and heart-throbs. —also— MUTT & JEFF. FOX NEWS ELTINGE TONIGHT TUESDAY WALTER HIERS AND) JACQUELINE LOGAN sin— “60 CENTS AN HOUR” PATHE NEWS AND “SOME PUNCHES AND JUDY” FIGHTING BLOOD PAGE THREE and his mother came to. Minnespolis recently from North Dakota. Unker Point, Lake Minnetonka. He shed his throat with a razor. X Te pany (Ind- , [| iana) is doing to solve a - problemi_of intense and. vital interest to you. A if reaching distri sys tem — operat ith. machine-like- et nee ing a direct in- luence on the labor farmer. That the farmer is coming to a real- bie emument ia sore, bx Oe ct ipment is that one tractor manufacturer ports the sale of 20,000 of his chines during the first three mon’ of 1923 as compared with 8,000 of the same machines sold during the- same period in 1922, - This increase in the use of mechan- ical power in general farm practice means a distinct saving in time, and, eventually, will mean greater crops and greater general prosperity. While the efficient harnessing of petroleum vig farming, and the ar ge pe 1 ee food, is an yay ment of si importance, it is one instance of ow Standard Oil Company (Indiana) service dovetails with every other business. It dovetails with industry by furnish- ing specialized lubricants for special machinery. It promotes health by taking from petroleum those ingredients which are used medicinally. It makes it possible for the doctor to cover a much greater territory in pursuing his practice, It dovetailswith the railroads through lubricating much of their intricate pe an and makes night travel safe by reason of a dependable signal system. It meets the housewife by furnishing her a wax which safeguards her preserves, jellies, and condiments against spoilage. ' It reaches directly or indirectly, every man in the Middle West at some point which is essential to his pros- panty or happiness with a service which is occupying the entire time and attention of 27,000 loyal, effic- .ient, hard-working men and’ women. Standard Oil Company (indiana) 910 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ilincis _ How Business Depres- sion Tests Good-Will Many a manufacture? during the past two years has had an opportunity to measure as never before the real worth of his advertising investment. s He has seen his trade - marked: line keep up in sales and his unadvertised goods shrink to a small fraction of théeit former volume. . be cited: Dealers can tell a similar stéry."Fhe ttumber of makes carried of each itetn have shrunken to a very few—the. best known and most frequentiy called for. have changed their point of view; they no longer stock lightly with many brands, but substantially with a few. Bei Tal Quick turtioveér is their only salvation in a depression Vessy and their real source of profit in a prosperous period. Innumerable instances could Dealers by. the Bisitinttk Daily Tribune in co-operation