The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 11, 1921, Page 3

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MONDAY, JULY 11, 1921 TWO NO. DAK. BOYS HELD AS — ARMY DODGERS Are Sent to Fort Cook, Ne- braska, For Final Ex- amination St. Paul, Minn., July 11.—Four men have been convicted as draft evaders out of a total of fifty cases handled by courts-martial at Fort Snelling since the round-up of “dodg- ers” began, it was announced by Cap- tain Fred S. Scobie, adjutant at the Fort. Thirty-tivé of the fifty voluntar- ily surrendered and none of these cases went farther than a preliminary examination, the adjutant said. Many of the men listed as slackers had actually served in the armed forces, several had been wounded, and others had been excused from service, it was found. Four Are Convicted \Names of the four men who have been sent on to Fort Crook for final examination before a board of officers of the Seventh Army | corps—yhich staff is directing the apprehension of slackers—and subsequently to Fort Leavenworth, government prison, for a term vf eee months ‘servitude are; ‘Eddie Hyland, “Thiet River Falls, | Minn., convicted and sentenced, February 17, 1920. John H. Pangrac of Choteau Coun- | ty, Mont., convicted and sentenced | December 10, 1920. Fred ‘B. Billingsly of Devils Lake, N. D., convicted and sentenced, Oc- tober 12, 1918, James (‘Herr of Emmons county North (Dakota, convicted and sen- tenced March, 1920. Approximately 200 men in Minne-! sota, North and South Dakota and Montana, have been listed so far as . Slackers, according to government records.. Most of these it has been found on investigation, left the ad- dresses at which they are listed be- fore or at the beginning wf the war, Descriptive matter concerning the alleged slackers has been sent out at intervals from the Seventh Army Corps headquarters, at Fort Cook, Neb., to sheriffs, chiefs of police, and department of justice officials. Re- wards of $50 are offered for each ar- rest. RAISING FUND FOR GUMMERSON Friends in Bismarck Contribute; To His Fight Friends of C. K. Gummerson, depos-| ed editor of the Fargo Courier-News, are raising‘a fund here to be used in defending him aginst the charge of criminal ‘libel preferred as a result of the difficulties on the league paper in Fargo last week. Personal friends, it is said. have signified their intention of raising an ample fund. Mr. Gummerson, who formerly rep- resented the Courier-News in Bis- marck, told friends while here that after the Fargo scrap was settled he intended to go to Chicago, National Tourist Bureau May Be New Department) ‘Chicago, July 11.—The creation of a (National Tov" Travel Bur- eau, to be under .i: jurisdiction of | the Secretary of the Interior, to exploit the scenic wonders and places of interest in the United States, en- courage travel in America through publicity in this country and Europe, and further the gcwd roads movement will be one of the proposals to be made at the convention of the Ameri- can Hotel Assciation, which opened | here today and will last’ until July 16. “The aim of the Tourist and Travel Bureau,” said J. K. Blatchford, secre- tary-treasurer of the American Hotel Association, “is to encourage travel in America and educate the~ people both here and abroad as to the scenic wonders and places of interest in the United States. Another phase of the work would be the establishment of good roads between the various Na- tional Parks—better automobile high- ways from coast to coast and from the Gulf to Canada. The creation of | such a bureau will be urged at the coming convention of hotel’ men. It will 6e proposed that Congress pass a bill creating such a bureau, making sufficient appropriation for its devel- opment and maintenance under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Interior. The United States Govern- ment is a big hotel keeper and the creation of such a bureau would be of @ great benefit to the country.” WHEN BOILING MILK. In boiling milk, it will not burn if! a little water is put into the sauce- pan first and allowed to come to a boil and the milk is then added. WEALTH AND ENERGY Built on Rioh, Red Blood Rich, red blood is the bint fountain source of all en jood coppuscle . 8.8.8. , a8 the general sys- der, and has been suc- constully used lor over 50 years in the treatment of Thecmasiaes and skin diseases arising from Smpoverished bi For Special Booklet or for indie vid gel ade e, without charge, wei Advisor, S.S.S. Co., Dep’t 434, Eley Ga. Get S.S.S. at your’ druggist. S.S.S. * ;cent. jers in 1920 constituted 95.3 per cent THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE [YOUNGEST MONARCH, WHO REIGNS | BUT DOES NOT RULE, COMING TO U.S. HE SERVED WITH TH! SOLDIERS OF BULGARIA HE ALWAYS STOPS S CAR. ‘To GIVE THE Urt iTS A BORIS, TSAR OF BULGARIA BY MILTON BRONNER London, July 9.—If Boris Third, tsar of Bulgaria, comes to America this fall as announced, Americans will see not ony the youngest monarch in Europe, but one who is at the head of the most democratic people in Europe. _ Boris reigns, but does not rule. As a matter of fact, the rulers of Bul- garia today are the peasants acting through the Agrarian ,party. Peasant farmers constitute 85 per cent of the population. Their wheat and pigs are the country’s chief source of wealth. Boris came to the throne when his country was all shot to pieces. It | had been in two wars in recent years and lost both. The first. was when Bulgaria battled with Serbia and Greece and was _ thoroughly trounced. Then in the recent war, Boris’ father, Tsar Ferdinand, was so pro-German that he took his country in on the side of the Cen- tral Powers and once more Bulgaria was licked, Son Makes Good Ferginand fled. His. oldest son, born Jan. 30, 1894, was called to the troubled country’s throne October 4, 1918. He has made good. His father had been a litle auto- crat who changed his title from prince to king and from king to tsar. Boris found a parliament in which the peasants dominated, and was con- tent to have it so. Ferdinand sent - M. Stambouliski, the leader of the peasants, to prison for warning him against taking Bul- garia into the war on the side of Germany. e Under Boris this Sme Stambou- liski is premier and he has the farm- ers_back of him. x Ferdinand was always. dreaming of territorial aggrandizement which meant war with Balkan neighbors. Boris dreams of peace with his neigh- bors and development of the resources of his country. \ Ferdinand was;a physical coward who shrank from mingling with his subjects for fear of assassination. Boris doesn’t know the word fear and mingles freely with his people. He lives almost a monastic’ life in the palace, part of which he has closed up. He is practicing the economy he feels is necessary for Bulgaria if it is to pull itself out of the hole into which it fell during the war. FOREIGN BORN FARMERS EXCEED THOSE OF NATIVE BIRTH FIGURES OF CENSUS BUREAU INDICATE ‘Washington, D. C., July 11.—The Bureau of the Census, of the Depart- ment of Commerce, announces, sub- ject to correction, the following pre- liminary figures from the 1920 census of agriculturé for the United States, with comparative figures for 1910: The total area of land in farms in the United States in 1920, according to the ‘Fourteenth Censts, was 955,676,545 acres, as compared with 878,798,325 acres in 1910, showing an increase of 76,878,220 acres, or 8.7 per cent. The average acreage per farm in 1920 was 148.2 acres, while the average in 1910 was 133.1 acres. ~ White and Cofored Farmers Of the total land in farms in 1926, 910,608,420 acres were operated by white farmers, as against 832,166,020 acres in 1910. This represents an increase of 78,442,400 acres, or 9.4 per Land operated by white farm- of all land in farms, as compared with 94.7 per cent in 1910. The aver- age size of the farms operated by white farmers was 165.6 acres in 1924 and 153 acres in 1910. Colored farmers operated 45,068,125 acres of land in 1920, as compared with 46,632,305 acres in 1910, repre- senting a decrease of 1,564,180 acres, or 3.4 per cent. Farms operated by colored farmers in 1920 averaged 47.4 acres, as against ‘00.6 acres in 1910. In the Southern states, where prac- tically all of the colored farmers are Negroes, the average acreage per farm for colored farmers is much less than that for white farmers, For ex- ample, in Georgia farms operated by white farmers averaged 101.7 acres in 1920, and farms operated by colored farmers 54.3’ acres. The averages in Mississippi were 112.2 acres for white farmers and 36.1 acres for colored farmers; in Texas, 305.5 acres for white farmers and 56.7 acres for col- ored farmers; and in South Canplina, 96.2 acres for white farmers and 40.5 acres for colored farmers. ‘Native and ‘Fgreienbern White The 799,431 $08 aeree of land which were operated by native white farm- ers in 1920 constituted 83.7 per cent of all the farm land in the United States, or about seven-eighths of that operated by white farmers. The farm land operated by foreign-born white farmers in 1920 amounted to 111,176 522 acres, which was 11.6 per cent of the total farm acreage, or about one- eighth of all farm land operated by white farmers. The average acreage per farm for native white farmers in 1920 was 162.6, while the average acreage for foreign-tiorn white farmers was 191.3. The higher average shown for the for- eign born for the United States as a whole is mainly due to the fact that the foreign-born farmers are numer- ous in many of the states where large farms prevail, as the native whites show a higher average than the for- eign born in most of the individual states. . The states which reported the larg- est acreage wperated by foreign-born PAGE THRES __ Experts in Cooking and Domestic Science will teach you FREE at our cooking school, how to prepare the most delicious foods EGINNING B m. Daily, and will give -a seri demonstrations sembly Room of ucts Refining ,C demonstrations best methods of right home and ful dressings. white farmets in 1929 were North Da- kota, with 16,634,354 acres, or 40.9 er cent of the total; Minnesota, with 10,839,191 acres, or 35.9 per cent of the total; Montana, with 8,458,731 acres, or 24.1 per cent of the total; South Dakota, with 8,411,861 acres, or 24.4 per cent of the total; Nebraska, with 6,69,697 acres, or 16.5 per cent @& the total; and California, with 6,725,341 acres, or 22.9 per cent of the total. MASSAGING THE’ HEART BY WOODS, HUTCHINSON, M. D. Many and effective are the methods of social and relief workers for touch- ing the human heart to gain relief for the poor or endowments for starving college professors. But none is as di- rect and simple as that practiced by modern surgeons in certain emergen- cies. . When a patient undergoing a ser ous abdominal operation suddenly col- lapses and his heart stops beating, the surgeon appeals to the heart for re- lief. He injects a stimulant or a salt 7 Give us a trial. For Rich, Red Blood Sa ae BISMARCK, NO. DAK. OPENING CITY CLEANERS and DYERS Our new-and modern cleaning plant constructed at a cost of over $7,500.00 awaits your patronage. This cleaning plant is one of the most modern between the Twin Cities and the Coast, and we do not, hesitate in saying that further improvements will be added as the public demands it. Our cleaning plant is located on the corner of Rosser and Eleventh street, but all work handled thru Klein’s Tailor Shop. An invitation extended to all to inspect our cleaning plant. CITY CLEANERS AND DYERS_ Office}; Klein’s Tailor Shop. llth, from 2 to 4 p. all week, Miss Ethel O’Leary can Legion Hall, auspices of the Corn Prod- There will be lectures and Don’t miss this wonderful chance to learn the very newest cooking methods today July continuing es of free in the As- the Ameri- under the Devils Icing, Peach ompany. Pie Crust. on making bread, pastry, cake and the frying andsauteing. Delicious salad dressings made right before your eyes, and explained so simply and clearly that you can go make these wonder- TUESDAY 2to4p.m Food — Mocha Thousand Island-Dress- ing—Head Lettuce, Pie — Mazola ( Everything said in adver- at these invited. tising Mazola will be proved demonstrations. Any questions about cook- ing fully answered. Bring pad and pencil and take notes during the lecture. Plan to take advantage of these helpful and inter- esting free lectures. miss a single one. You and your friends are cordially Womens’ Don’t clubs, teachers’ organizations, and high school domestic science classes espe- cially invited. Cook Book, (64 pages), beautifully illustrated in colors will be sent to those attending. .- cost if not satisfactory. (No orders solicited at this lecture.) ‘ ‘solution into the veins, slips his hand through the wound in the abdomen up under the diaphragm and, grasping the heart, gently massages it. If, at the same time, artificial respir- ation is carried out by pumping move- ments of the arms above the head 1 very few touches will often be suffic- ient to start the heart beating once more. The method must be begun within, three minutes cf the time the heart VELA HUNTED has stopped to have any reasonable chance for success. But in some cases patients have been literally brough: back to life after the heart has been still for five minutes, and in one case the heart actually stasted to beat again after it had stopped for more than 30 minutes. But this recovery, unfor- tunately, was not permanent. Of course the heart is not touched directly by the surgeon's fingers, hut massaged through the diaphragm or uasaraesvnceevncacnncngvenacveceguseennnraancccuscsucuancuavecensvcencncecggesnstiendgnsQQutqvvtusntnensenudutssseenenstogcuavsusocucncuennnanvuscovcccnscasogccevesnncansavssgnusucasdvuvcdquoquqoveevenetg Open to the public every evening for dining and dancing except when engaged for private parties The Dining Car Room which adorns the Roof, will be open every Wednesday and Saturday evenings, service A La Carte. A Special Sunday Evening Dinner will be served a-top the McKenzie every Sunday at the regular Sun- day Dinner price. Patrons of the Roof and guests of the Hotel and their friends are invited to attend the open Air Concert every Sun- day Evening. Come up and watch Bismarck and Mandan grow a-top the McKenzie Hotel. Edw. G. Patterson Owner and Proprietor. FunAGAUEGUOG a sucenDENQOUNANAUONORERADSNNADEOLOUSONSODONGOONUSUONUEGEUENONUONOOONDTOGNIOGUONOOCNIGONNNSCISNNNONISOCNDL0QDESOOLOsUuOONUENgS +1111 e vv eevoneNDte Buy a can of Mazola from Your grocer. He refunds partition between the abdomen and chest, which is very thin just under the heart. But consider the amazing simplicity and audacity of the feat. When you want a quick Picnic lunch and one that is a real treat, take along some of Dohn’s San- itary Meat Market’s Home Made Minced Ham. even enerecoeuusacannecuonasuannngnannntn eS

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