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country .in northern. Minnesota, foe reported living at Oak Daie near ere. TAXATION PROBLEMS Mrs, Nutt and her. four children have been living in this vicinity cev- ia i ie es ‘ eral months, soaring to Lee Finch any W: i ./of Tomah, brother of the woman. He ny Want to Discontinue Prop. jeaid he had heard from hers, few erty Taxes and Substi- | eee CR Nutt had re- s at uw coming to Oak tute Sales Levy Dale three weeks ago. Oak Dale is ae about seven miles east of Tomah. Salt Lake City, July 1—(#—Prob-| Northern Minnesota officia!s had lems of state taxation, which occupied | been checking the disappearance of @ large share of the opening day’s|Mrs. Nutt and her four children from Sessions of the national. governors’|the north. woods country following conference, held a prominent place |the arrest of Jay G. Heath, trapper, on today’s % charged with the murder of Norman Sentiment for the ultimate aiscon- |D. Fairbanks, Hibbing game warden. tinuance of property taxes for the} aia GL we Soviet. Cleaning Up entiae of state government and sub- stitution of sales or other excise taxes, eas Asiatic Plague Spot Bokhara, was developed from the round table | ancient city, whose. swamps, stagnant discussion that followed an address | by Gov. William G. Conley of West pools and polluted water supply made jit for centuries one of the plague Virginia. Governor Conley’s explanation of the operation of the gross sales tax | Spots of Asia, is being cleaned up by the soviet government. Enormous tanks, elevated on steel of his state was followed by a lively interchange among the governors present. skeletons, are replacing the old sur- | face reservoirs where, for a thousand years, the natives not only drew their That sales tax should be in lieu of @ property tax, and not in addition to \ drinking. water, but bathed and washed their clothes. an ad valorem levy, was the position of Gov. L. G. Hardman of Georgia, who said a proposed constitutional amendment in his state would with- draw the ad valorem tax from its| A new drainage system is being in- Present level of 5 mills to a minimum | stalled which, it is hoped, will make of 1 mill. the pernicious. disease known as Some skepticism among the gover-|“Bokhara Button” a thing of the past. Nors as to the probable attitude of| Street sprinkling js still done by legislatures toward the proposition of | carriers who squirt water from pig abolishing the ad valorem property| skins. Eventually. these relics of the tax for support of state government | past are also due to disappear. was voiced by Governor Theodore E. Christianson and was concurred in by other speakers. Woman and Children Found in Wisconsin Tomah, Wis, July 1—(\—Mrs. Maynard Nutt, who with her four of Central Asia. Housewives carry Pitchers and jugs to the nearest water station and buy it by the quart or gallon as if it were milk or wine. The budgets. =| WOMEN EXPATRIATES] Uzbekistan —(?)}— This | ‘Water is precious in this arid part , price is 10 kopecks a gallon, and while | hibition agent was arrested and §30,- this figures roughly as equivalent to| 000 worth of liquor which had been @ nickel, coins are none too plentiful | stolen from the government ware- and water is a top item in houschold | house was recovered when federal house in Evergreen Park, last night. The liquor was a part of the $200,- 000 worth of »~ Whiskey ant alcohol taken Sunday night by a score of armed men who overpowered watchman at a government ware- house on South Wabash avenue, James Fern, who was arrested in the Roma Inn raid, was a federal pro- hibition agent until.a month ago. He was in the roadhouse when the raid- ers arrived. The liquor—several hundred cases of whiskey—was found in garage at the rear. Swedish Lightning Bolt Amputates Cat’s Tail GIVEN CONCESSIONS [Americans Married to Aliens May Retain Their Citizenship With Less Trouble Now Washington, July 1—(—An or- ganized femininity, estimated as 500,- 000 strong, today fired off figurative | cannon crackers of jubilation for the independence of women. They celebrated the long-fought-for ; Passage of the Cable bill, relieving ; American-born women married to | aliens from the necessity: of involved naturalization proceedings to regain | their citizenship. The new Cable bill,.an amendment to the Cable act of 1922, strikes out |the presumption that a native-born woman loses her American citizenship | by residence abroad after her mar- | riage to an alien. It provides for re- | patriation by simple affirmation, in- j Stead of requiring residence in‘ the United States for a year, declaration Stanley Fields, 19, of intention to reside here permarient- Marries Woman, 32 ly, and posting of the name for 90 pas | days. \ Chicago, July 1—()—Joseph Field, | Under its provisions, native-born.| 19 vear-ol7 f P ty | fen would not be required to take | 107Year-old son of the socially promi nent Stanley Fields, was married in the same searching examination and natin process as is ‘required Philadelphia May 31 to Frances Batty, once @ newspaper reporter in Kansas of a foreign-born alien. It would per- | mit @ native-born woman who had) City and St. Louls and daughter of a We , Il, a | ost her eltizenship by marriage to an | "Stn" avid Rite eld whee eee | alien to return to the United States | i.¢ marriage yesterday, said they did | outelde the dammigration ‘quota. hot know oo it until their son re- Py aaa Geetaat gm, ‘urned last Friday to their country | Liquor Stolen from | Warehouse Recovered estate with his wife. | Chicago, July 1—()—A former pro- Stockholm. —(#)— How htning snipped off the tail of a cn told on a farm in Uppvidinge county, in the province of Smaland. The animal was scurrying across the farm-yard in a heavy thunder Storm when the bolt severed its tail with surgical precision. | ‘The farmer and his wife saw the strange occurrence and rushed out to help the frantic cat, but it fled into a forest and did not come back. The bridegroom's father, who 1s head of the Field museum, said the couple met while on a world cruise. Edward H. Batty, father of the bride, told the Tribune her age was 32, that she was a connoisseur of Paintings. Joseph Field is a grand nephew of the late Marshall Field, Pioneer Chicago merchant prince. | Talders visited Roma Inn, a Aor OOO MILES — of the hardest driving IT. Is EASY to remove the carbon formed by this new type oil. Moreover, the amount of carbon left by New Iso-Vis is only a fraction of that deposited by many oils; AFTER HUNDREDS of miles of driving, New Iso-Vis still bas its original lubricating value when the crankcase “dust and dirt is removed by this special laboratory filter: Peli seb petot hor sd ts exceeded enly by the New Tso Vis. The price is 25¢ a quart. STANDARD OIL and a dirty finger tells the story "Teinso ALONG at a fast clip, this engine had reeled off 9,000 miles at a dizzy pace. This torturing test of New Iso-Vis verified these facts that also had been brought out by hundreds of laboratory experiments. 1. The carbon formed by New Iso-Vis is actually less than half that of many oils and the carbon it forms is easily removed, This means a big saving to motorists in time, trouble and money. 2. New Iso-Vis is proof against crankcase dilu- tion trouble by virtue of its patented process of preparation—making it the only oil that will-not thin out in your crankcase. 3. New Iso-Vis lubricates effectively at the highest point gn your temperature guage, It has a greater lubricating range than most oils. 4. New Iso-Vis answers more closely than any other oil the exacting lubricating requirements of the modern high compression engine. No sacrifice has been made onany one requirement to give it a high rating elsewhere. Back of this improved motor oil is a new refining process. Engineers worked more than a year to produce this-wholly distilled oil. New Iso-Vis, in contrast with most other oils, contains no undis- tilled parts of the crude. Notice it is clear amber in color. There is no better oil for the fine motor car of today. Any Standard Oil dealer or service station attendant will drain and fill up-your crankcase with New Iso-Vis. - prt c OMPANY (Indiana) “Use the Air Mail” Bee Se tee THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1930 TEACHERS MEETING TO HEAR REPORTS National Education Association Is Holding Convention at Columbus, Ohio Columbus, O., July 1.—(7)—With Presentation of committee reports on tenure laws and retirement systems for school teachers the National Edu- cation association swung into the first business session of its 68th annual convention today. The reports of the committees on tenure and retirement allowances, through which the association hopes to build up a more efficient body of teachers for the public schools. were outstanding among the committee studies offered at the initial session of the representative assembly. Nominations for president to suc- ceed E. Ruth Pyrtle, of Lincoln, Neb.. were in order. Three outstanding educators mentioned for the presi- dency are Joseph Roster, Fairmount, W. Va., president of the West Vir- ginia State Normal school; Willis A. Sutton, superintendent of schools at Atlanta, Ga., and Dr. John W. Aber- crombie, Montgomery, Ala., assistant superintendent of education in Al- abama. Dr. Jesse A. Charters of Ohio State university told the national congress of parents and teachers, an affiliat-| ed body, that their organization is too greatly dominated by women and! that steps should be taken to interest | more men in the adult study classes! sponsored by the P, T. A. Sail later and pay less July, on fa sail the General Agent, Canadian Pacific 611 2nd urope Prenat Tr ravel i Gerry © * Canadian of low fares after mid- fast Empresses and Duchesses, from Montreal and Quebec by St. Lawrence Seaway. Ask local agents or H. M. TAIT Ave. So., Minncapolis, Minn. n Pacific Fireworks may be sold only ‘from July 1st to July 5th, inclu- sive. The sale or use at any other time is prohibited by ordinance and will result in fines for viola- tions. M. H. ATKINSON, ONE . City Auditor IS AS BAD AS THE OTHER.... REG.U.S. PAT. OFF. rghit illness. Puneral s eld Wednesday Born in Tremont, lll, BF to Dakota territory when § Illinois Wesleyan at Bl 4 homesteaded near. Devils ; later opened an estate office there.. In JAMES B, EATON, 75, SUCCUMBS IN FARGO Pioneer Came to North Dakota in 1882 and Homesteaded Near Devils Lake Fargo, N. D., July 1.—(?)—James B. Eaton, 75, senior member of the firm of Eaton and Eaton here, and a resi- dent of North Dakota since 1882, died Sunday at his home here after a i Gold nuggets worth $54 w. .in the gizzard of a hen nee |! Kas. $27,130 by saving $2.10 @ day—ene of many Investors Syndicate pro. grams. 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D, epray-gun shoot a stainless vapor into every crack and corner of your rooms . —leaving a fresh odor of cedar that’s pleasant to humans. Ask for P. D.--=. 4 sold by druggists, grocers, h 4 stores and Sinclair Service Stations. Mede by SINCLAIR REFINING CO., INC.