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ALLS WOMAN, * ans, who, as a result of wounds suf- ; his hou PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE EMPLOYERS | ASKED TO HELP VETERANS Frank Hines Makes Appeal! For 2,712 Service Men Com- | pleting Vocational Training Washington, July 28, (A. P.)—With | a view to aiding the 2,712 former ser- | vice men who will complete their vocational training this month and the 15,882 additional to be rehabi- | litated from now until the first of | the new year, Frank T. Hines, Dir tor of the Veterans’ Bureau, today appealed to employers throughout the country to give the veterans an opportunity to start life anew by pro- | viding them with positions for which | they have been trained. | “These men and women served | their country at a time of great need | und they now ask only a fair chance | to find employment along the lines in which they have received their training,” said the director's appeal. Director Hines expressed his ap- preciation of the assistance already rendered by the nation’s employers in finding places for the disabled men and called attention to the fact that only 689 of the 67,000 men and wo-/ men instructed by the bureau in its 14 districts were unemployed on} June 1, One month later there re-| mained to be completely rehabilited along new lines 52,000 disabled veter- fered in battle or sickness ana in-| juries received during service in the| world war, were rendered incapable | of continuing their pre-war occupa- tions following the armistice. “The Veterans’ Bureau can go only | so far in the rehabilitation of these former service men,” General Hines | said. “It can take them and train| them up to the point of employability and then it must call upon the ve ous employing agencies of the ccun- try to carry on from that point.” Less than five per cent of the veterans being rehabilitated have visible disabilities, he said, while 90} able men. The appar- ies, however, consist- ing only of handicaps insofar as their pre-war occupations were concerned. Of the veterans in training on July 1, professional instruction was being given 7,700; along commercial lines, 11,000; in the trades and industries, 26,000, and in agriculture, 7,300. The, majority of these have been in train- | ing two years, some three years, and others as long as four years, being} taught in the country’s best universi- ties, colleges, trade and commercial | schools and in factories and work- shops. A recapitulation by districts of prospective rehabilitations from July 1 to January 1, 1925, follows: District 1, comprising Maine, Mas-| sachusetts, New Hampshire, ‘Rhode | Island, and Vermont, with headquar- ters at Boston: July, 368; August, 276; September, 330; October, 3 Novembe 188, and December, 403 total 1,8 District 2, Connecticut, New York and w Jersey, headquarters New York City; July, 467; August, 446; September, 435; October, 279; Novem- ber, 266, and December, 374; total 2,- 258. District 3, Delaware and Pennsyl- vania, headquarters Philadelphia: July, 318; August, 296; September, 310; October, 216; November, 125, and December, 357; total 1,622. District 4, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia and District of Columbia, headquarters District of Columbia: July, 118; August, 141; September, 120; October, 192; November, 66, and December, 125; total 757. District 5, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennes- | see, headquarters Atlanta: July, 149; August, 191; September, 305; October, 189; November, 142, and December, 207; total 1,183. District 6, Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi, headquarters New Or- leans; July, 136; August, 158; Sep- tember, 191; October, 163; November, 106, and December, 182; total 936. District 7, Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio, headquarters Cincinnati: July, 146; August, 200; September, 157; October, 244; November, 102, and De- cember, 126; total 975. District 8, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin, headquarters Chicago: July, 235; August, 244; September, 283; October, 175; November, 124, and December, 238; total 1,294, District 9, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska, Headquarters St. Louis: July, 172; August, 214; Sep- tember, 169; October, 136; November, 64, and December, 219; total 974. District 10, Minnesota, Monta! North and South Dakota, headquar. ters Denver: July, 121; August, 173; September, 142; October, 122; No- vember, 73, and December, 114; total 745, District 12, Arizona, California and Nevada, ‘headquarters San Francisco: July, 190; August, 204; September, 236; October, 165; November, 128, and Décember, 254; total 1,177. District 13, Idaho, Oregon and Washington, headquarters Seattle: July, 63; August, 67; September, 118; October 49; November, 40, and De- cember, 57; total 394. District 14, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas, headquarters Dallas: July, 115; August, 166; September, 186; October, 140; November, 116, and December, ; 2385 ; total, 964. . SLAYS SELF Jealousy Said. To Be Motive For Motorman’s Action is Jal; 28-—~Andrew 5 y, Pia Pope a oto ‘shot: and’ killed ret. Prighe, 25 years, old, eeper, afd then Fig re ae at his home here. early ‘toda Pal said fhe shooting was Bead jester. over. the attentions | stanaen a The shooting grew out of an ar- {guitar that developed when Ander- AS DEATH CAME UP OUT OF THE FOG TO STRIKE ONISTS ON THE “S. S,; BOSTON” HAPPY EXCURS The picture in the upper right giv tanker, “Swift Arrow,” lurched through the fog and port side of the Boston-New York excursion boi pillows. Behind them one victim was wedged cut away the battered structure to free him. To the left is Tommy Barbous, one of the youngest of th rescued. Below are (left to right) Agnes Keown, Frances McLaughli ‘sas Mementoes of their thrilling adventure. kept the live - presery Here is State’: pold Jr. and Richard Loeb, confes y Chief Justice John R. Caverly in Criminal Court, Chicago. Leopold to ibe little moved by the pr cutor’s plea. Clarence, F. Dar is seen, with pencil in hand, listening intently to Crowe’s every word. sisting Darrow, is sitting next to Crowe. E. Crowe (No. 5) demandi slayers of Robert Fran! son returned to his home thjs mern-[ ing, police said, Enraged, Anderson, with a pistol, shot Mrs. Priebe as she sat in a chair and then through! the back as she fled from the house for help. {s THREE - KARAT Anderson then went into the bed- room and fired two shots into his own body. a clear idea of the damage done to the “S. S. Boston” rkness off Point Judith, R. L, 7 rough the stateroom can be seen two blood-stained so tightly that acetylene and Gertrude McKeown, of Boston. As Crowe Demanded Death Penalty on . 2 the death penalty for Nathan E, Leo- at the opening of their nearing before (No. pw (No. 1), Mrs. Priebe had a two and a half|_ year old daughter. Anderson had two ‘on the. witness stand. | HEARING IS when the and collided with ca torches had to be employed to They 2) and Loeb (No. 3) appear chief counsel for the defense, Benjamin Bachrach (No. 4), aa- Robert’s Father *Jacob Franks, Chicago million- aire, was the first witness called ‘hy the state in the hearing-of-Na- than Leopold Jr. and Richard Loeb, who have pleaded guilty to the murder of his son, Robert Franks. This picture shows him POSTPONED Chicago, July 28,—The United States Railroad Labor Board, post- poned until September 8, further hearings on the controversy between engine operatives and the western carriers, ~ +The postponement’-'came on the initiative of the board in order to| allow the carriers additional Yime to prepare statistical and’ historical data involved in the controversy on j street; \ figures outside of the official birth | | ities and are presented by the Am- - WOMAN BADLY. INJURED WHEN HIT BY AUTO Mrs. George Coleman Seri- ously Injured on Down- town Street Today Mrs. George Coleman, aged 52, 221 South Fifth street, formerly a resi- dent of Steele, was badly injured this morning when she was struck by an automobile driven by Miss Violet Jones of Drake, North Dakota, at the corner of Main and Fifth streets. The accident happened about 11 a. m. Mrs. Coleman was taken to the Bis- marck hospital and soon thereafter to the operating room. Her daugh- ter said that one side of her face was badly lacerated, that it is fear- ed she will lose the sight of one eye and that she suffered bruises about the head. i Sheriff Hedstrom, Chief of Police Martineson and States Attorney Al- len investigated the incident, inter- viewed witnesses and tock photo- graphs and measurements. One: af- fidavit signed by three persons, Wm. Johnson, James Quick and Mack Jen- kins, said they saw “a car going east qn Main street, that a truck going north on Fifth street, that dy was walking north on the east | side of Fifth street, that the truck stopped before it reached Main that the car with two ladies | in it crossed Fifth street on Main street going east; that they did not hear the horn blow on any car; that the lady walking went off the curb on Fifth street, going north; then she went back, and did this several times nd then left the curb again and the struck her and knocked her down, The driver of the car seemed to try to dodge the lady walking.”. Another affidavit was signed by John Olson and read somewhat simi- Jar. 1 Mrs, Coleman was on her way to work at the time, she having worked at various places. Mr, Coleman is in Florida and of the nine children in the Coleman family, seven are at home here. Five children are. boys and four are girls. Miss Jones was said to be much af- fected by the accident. Her mother, Mrs, W. H. Jones, was with her at the time. INFANT DEATH RATE IN BiG CITIES SHOWN Figures For Fargo, North! Dakota, Also Given, Being Below General Average New York, N. Y., July 28.—In the city of Fargo, North Dakota, 52! cl ren out of every one thousand born during 1923 died within their first year. These are figures from an infant mortality report recently published by the American CHILD HEALTH Association, New York City, of which Herbert, Hoover is president, Statistics for Fargo appear with the data for cities within the Death Registration Area of the country outside of the Birth Registration Area. The state of North . Dakota] as a whole has not yet been added to the Birth Registration Area of the United States, which comprises only 30. states and the District of Columbia nor to the Death Re; tration Area. It is only within the Birth Registration Area that the collection of birth records is of sufficient accuracy as to be recog- nized officially by the United States, Bureau of the Census. The record area has been gathered dir- ectly from state and local author- erfean ‘CHILD HEALTH Association for. comparative purposes. The average infant mortality rate for the eighty-one cities within the Death Registration Area included in| this report is 90.4 as compared with 78, the average for all the cities with more than 10,000 population within the Birth Registration Area. St. Louis, Missouri, with a rate of 70 ranks first among cities of more than. 250,000 population within the Death Area outside the Birth Regis- tration Area, while Seattle, Wash- ington ,with a record of 49 holds a similar position among Birth! Registration Cities. Carthage, Mis- souri, with a record of 27 has th: Towest infant death rate for cities within the entire Death Registration Area outside the Birth Registration| Area. Santa Cruz, Calfornia, Winchester, Massachusetts, in th tration territory ri this record with a rate of 26. he. statistics issued by the Am- CHILD HEALTH Association ed tovinterest the entire country in| the - reduction. of infant mertality, and the necessity for birth regis-'l; tration. The association is anxtou: to see other states enter the Birth! Registration Area for it. feels that a complete record: of. pirths and’ deaths is an essential part of ai child ‘hebigh ‘progeam.’ "77 j CAN’T DRIVE HIS’ CAR TILL 1925 60," N. July 2£28.—Emest nae Ae Valley. city 1 is probibited from. driving a motor vehicle until Jan. 1,, 1925, under a sentence: by. Judge A. T. Cole in district. come. |} A: 90: day jail sentence was sus- rules. (Notice the diamond in the lady’s nose. It weighs three'karats. She board: sl is the wife of the Mataraja Rajenda Bahadur of Jind and-andowbtedly is one of the most colorfil ers to Jand in New York in months. Photograph showa her as she arrived, . Some Chinese cities have streets that are only three feet wide, pended when Barr paid. a $26 fine. He. was. charged with driving The _ HOUR MAN - of Modern Business on ' Let us look at.a thrée-ring cireus and mar- vel. Here are literally hundreds of people, hundreds of animals, and more paraphernalia than you find in a small-sized factory—all on the move. See as te hat Here is a complete city, set up every day in 2 strange place—giving a parade and two performances — taken ‘down, packed away, loaded on a train, moved to another city and set up again. Any business can learn something about efficiency from a circus. a Take the “24-hour man” as one example. The “24-hour man” goes one day ahead of the circus. He contracts for all the food for this army of performers. He arranges to have a local bakery deliver bread; he buys vegetables and meat; he buys tons of hay for the horses and elephants. 1 The “24-hour man” sees the city officials. He arranges for a license; he arranges for water, piped to “the lot;” sometimes’ he ar- ranges for electricity, he sees that “the lot” itself is clear and ready for occupancy the next day. Then comes the circus. All it has to do is go to “the lot,” set up, give its parade and its two performances. ‘If it were not for the “24-hour man” the circus itself would stand a fair chance of wast- ing its time and spending its energy running down and taking care of the details which one man handled so efficiently the day before. oe ee s tamale | Ce? * Does Your Business Need a 24- Hour Man? The “24-hour man” of business is printing. Printing takes care of a thousand details which would otherwise fall upon a salesman. Printing thus helps your salesmen—wheth- er they are in a retail store or traveling “on the road.” It enables your salesmen to pér- form as they are intended to perform—by bringing in sales. ‘Without printing, any salesman must waste timein explaining your policy—building con- fidence — explaining the merits of merchan- dise—removing obstacles to buying, from the purchaser’ s mind.. With printing, you ean do these things for your salesman. That’s just one advantage of printing. Let us tell you more of them. . - Bismarck Tribune to hop ei | Company PHONE 32 t lead of Valley City, er- rested ith Barr and ‘held as 4 material itness, was released etter Barr pleaded guilty.