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] & e * <a Rweounan eoane THE BISMARCK _ TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1929 g INPOUNDING LAKE IS 1: SUGGESTED 10 TAKE UP STORM WATERS Thirty Acres, Banked Ten Feet High, Believed Cheaper Solu- tion of Eaage Problem ‘Front Aventic Drain Exponse Given as Probably $99,500; Commission Draws Jurors of ub > bot built-up p. twas referr ecr T. R © Atkinson, last we turned in a imate estimaics prob- * able cost of sev t clicn to y off the waters taat do the dam-+ The area to be drained stretches Will n Seventh to the Missou Drains Propose » West street with crete, Fourth 36-inch pi 60-inch cir In nd Fifth streets with h stveet with that the flow and the To handle the problem will require > cither-a ditch or s aid the en- ginesr. As nat it is decided , to build a sewer, it will have to deal + with 2 clear wate “feet. “One clement of to which the cngine tion is the height of | ! the problem called atten- river bank, of the bot- ould entail the building x feet of drain at a cost | foot, according to the en- | xcavated it would have to to control the " in the river, % less ¢ i if a ditch be: 6400 were linear at $3 a foot, $1 $1,009, gates, $1,000, | . $15,999, a total of ing in a rus, Eig! ing the hi First, je to obtain a stecp| ing to the estimates ‘The right of way w 9 fect of sewer would It at $15 a foot, or $99,- 000, a toi tal cost of $99,500. Lake or Pond as After the estimates had been read, | with their somewhet paralyzing cosis, the commissioners tried to find other Ways out of the difficulty. It was sug- gested that the city might wind ve GEN cipit Lighest STATIONS- y, Alt Mhicage, I., Denver Col ? DITCH ESTIMATE 1S $36,000 ‘" ve | ern growers. | Williams County Asks | and also the rerouting of this hi: ' Loser of Bet Crawls : ESTATE CASE ECHO | HEARD IN DICKINSON, Blake Ru Russell’ Writes! He Will Still Prove He Is Missing Heir whe: ken care of by evapo! id be drained off into it was added to this sugg if the volume of water so im became large and there wa ency to linger in the pond, the lated out of the t i jel i jal Service) . Dd. cer 29.—Echoes cus Daniel Russell estate | ave once more reverberated in| ckinson hi dead, a man known as Blake Russell has written} an, chief of police, from! . Mont., that he will still | : is the long missing heir to ell estate. | Blake Russell estate cted nationwide attention a ago. The Harlowton man e came forward with the and some evidence that he ing heir. Relatives of ¢ Russell. however, suc-{ yored to acquire t! row up banks of ab: nt him back to aster. Leslie Simp- son attorney, was the jowtown man's attorney im the Carrington Potatces Worth Over $25,000 Carrington, N. D., Oct. 29 25,000 bushels of field worth more than $25,000 tored in the bins of the € nouse company. Fifteen bushels are certified p Oe the case was tossed out of the Harlowton man ~as Jim Rusaw. t time, the Harlowton man e has been endeavoring to find | im Rusaw. The last clue/ n man had to the Ov an potatoes, e bee u sand ‘Seven Cities Want to iHeart Attack Claims Dickinson of a heart complaint. Dan Cuffe, Stanley, on @ charge of embezzlement. Cuffe, who was for- merly local agent of the Standard Oil company. is alleged to have mis- used funds belonging to the com- pany, according to State's Attorney C. N. Cottingham. Wyckoff, Stanley. case for Cufie. is handling the! | | | See University Group Present ‘The Boomer’ Grand Forks, N. D.. Oct. 29.—Devils Lake, Rugby, Minot. Kenmare, Willis- ton. Rolla, and Cando now are inj communication with Prof. E. D.| Schonberger, director of the Dakota | Playmakers at the University of North Dekota, and are endeavoring to have the first play of the year given by that group, “The Boomer,” staged in each of these places during @ proposed tour of the statc. The tour would follow the opening | of the play which will take place at; Crookston Nov. 23, Mr. Schonberger | stated. A preliminary showing will be made on the campus a few days before the play is taken on the road. Life of J. Kilwein Attorney F. Fr. | Freshman, Four Coeds Elected As Members of U’s Women League Board Grand Forks, wD. D., Oct. 29.—Elec- tion of one co-ed from cach of bi four classes at the University | North Dakota to a eget hg the | Women's League Tuesday afternoon at the F rene | league tea. The represeniatives chosen were: Betty Breaky. Devils Lake; sophomore, Laura Christian- son, Benson, Min: junior, Helen | been DeLa, Fargo; Courtney, Page. Edna Tetsuke, Great Falls, Mont., was chairman of ad elections committee. TRUCK OVERTURNS Hettinger. N. D., Oct. 29.—Driving | without lights is a poor practice, Matt and senior, Phyllis | days, City I Learns Sewering to Protect Bottom Lands Would Cost $128,000 about 30 aci it with 10- the storm w enclosure, be | Halvorson, loca! Cetera ecole dred more names are needed before| Traffic over the rivir at this point ; While driving his lind” truck the legal number are acquired. has been: suspended since the con- Ge TUL Lontinnts Wail tempore The petitions are to be continued | struction work was started, \arily blinded him. In at} to |in circulation and no until what is stop, he drove the truck into the ditch |deemed a sufficient number of sig-| HAZELTON HOME DAMAGED and it overturned. He escaped with- natures are obtained will they be Hagelton, N. D., Oct. 29.—Fire out injury. filed with the county board. which broke out in the Steiger resi- Z| dence damaged the kitchen and ar adjoining shed to the extent of sev- Brid Construction of a bridge over the | Petition Asks ige eral hundred dollars. Origin of the prea river near Oak park was started several weeks ago, but the To Span Mo Mouse River peed blaze is unknown. Furniture in the home was badly damaged. Minot, N. D., Oct. 29.—Insufficiency | Rio) suspended through an in- jot be flay eo to petitions which have * e Dyeing this jon granted by the district court. circulated in Minot for several Dresses Oak park, will delay the filing of the |documents with the board of county | | commissioners, now in session in this city. | Person who are circulating the j petitions reported that several hun- Dickinson, N. D., Oct. 29.—Joseph Kilwein, 56, resident of this county ‘for the past twenty-six years, died at | he home of Mrs. Joseph Froelich ot | ! a ee eee oe Jim Rusaw's whereabouts, he| He was a native of Russia and Fit | EC ce oe was following Rusaw's discharge|came to this country and district Albert alle Tepe nous United Stetes army and his'twenty-six years ago. engaging in aaa at te aes {employment by an/farming. He is survived by his sec- Have rub atout RIE tai fishing fleet. lond wife and ten children, they being the yields varying ‘from 50 to 90 {to thank all of the Dickin- | Mrs. Anton Heras, Martin, John, Mat for what they have done! bushels. The warehouse has of 90,000 bushel: Nearly $100 w been sold daily one bushel to 20, for the os ms Potatoes are fairly se Find Stray Guilty of warehouse has become a natural cen- cee . ter of supply for Carrington peopie| Possession of Liquor and for nearby towns, as far out as 30 or 40 miles. | ‘The grading of certified potatoes for shipment will begin about Jan. 1, a the crop will be shipped lots to Chicago in Februa March. The seed stock goes to south- | a capaci; me. that m! on man I will yet show the world] el im is right.” the Harlow- id in his letter. and the vy N, D,, Oct, Oct. 29.—A jury in district court here, after remaining out until 3 a returned a verdict of guilty against Osmund Stray, Sianley farmer, who was tried on a of liquor possession. The case to the jury late in the after- noon. It was the first to be tried at the ober term, which was opened here by Judge George H. Moeilring, of Williston. Beer Was Found The charge was brought against. ‘Stray following a raid made at his farm three and one-half miles north of here by Sheriff Square A. Warren and his deputies last May. A quan- ‘tity of beer was confitcated at that | time. Stray has not as yet received his sentence, but sentences have been passed on several defendants who entered pleas of guilty at the opening | of the court term. | Harold Larson, Parshall, who pleaded guilty to a charge of grand I y in connection with a theft of rain, was sentenced to six months Mountrail county jail, and was A drive to sign up a larger acreage for next year will be started shorti, after Jan. 1, according to Ted Work on Highway 85: Williston, N. D., Oct. 29.—The im- i mediate improvement of federal ; highway 85 in preference to further work on No. 2 in Williams county {has been asked of the state highway | commission by the Williston Com- mercial club, following a visit to ; Williston by J. A. Dinnie, member of the state highway commission, and A. D. McKinnon, project engineer. It was announced that the state engineer favored graveling federal highway No. 2 through the county as Way so as to run due west from Ep- Fea ed to pay the costs of the i without crossing the railroad ction, tracks and joining 85 about 10 miles! Cuffe Trial Begins north of Williston not only doing away | Edgar Davis, Sanish, taken in a made by the. sheriff, pleaded y to engaging in the liquor traf- id was given > fine of $200 and s in jail. Herman Mannisto and Mary Laine, of Belden, who pleaded guilty to il- legal cohabitation, were sehtenced to six months in jail, but the sentence with two railroad crossings but clim- nating a number of right-angle turns and saving several miles of mainten- ance on the stretch followed by the two highw: i Was suspended, providing they should On Main Thoroughfare nay the casts’ of sa, t arrest th Harvey, N. D.. Oct. 29.—Ciifford ns ihe Eig cole as ene Bailey of Harvey made the mistake of betting on the Chicago Cubs in that famous game where the Ath- letics scored 10 runs in one inning to defeat them. Now Bailey has paid off his James K. Smith. The loser was compciled to crawl on his hands and knees through one The forenoon was spent in the s ion of a jury for the trial of top suffering. One tion of Sos ting iv OIN bee ENT bet to of the principal streets Harvey. Smit h, with a broom in s hand, ! y to see that he crawled the entire specified distance. Pas, 3 at edo, 0., cloudy Willixton, Winnemucea Ne Winnipeg, Man. y tonight and h change in temperatu For North Dakota: Probably snow tonight and Wednesday, except gen- erally fair Wednesday northwest tion, Not much change in tempera- ure. WEATHER CONDITIONS The low-pressure urea centered over Colorado yesterday morning hax moved xoutheastward to Texas, and tation occurred from the ‘east- ocky mountain slope to the it Lakes region. It wax snowing at Fa.m. at almoxt all places from the m Rocky mountain slope to od ogge Mixntsnipp! valley. A high- re area, accompanied by 1 is centered Cooler wea ver Der siseissipe urd to the north 1 “Pi ina hemperet urex are below mths moreing. kotan-wnd-Canadian ‘and George Kilwein, Mrs. Wandler and Karl Kilwein of his first family and Elizabeth, Pauline and weather, even those who are used to Philip of his second family. Joseph's church. Joseph | Funeral services were held at St. is Cold Means to Race Enthusiast! Driving in the open, in all kinds of | it will contract colds. They needn't | asking for the construction of NEW a bridge across the Mouse river near IAMOND DYES are the — you can buy. 17 made to give you real service. 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