Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
adit panera ee . erly Stadler. WINNERS IN SWIM MERT ARE LISTED Men and Women Were Divided Into Three Classes Accord- ing to Age for Events Complete results of the swimming and diving meet conducted in the Bismarck swimming pool Thursday evening, with the entrants listed in the order of their finish, follow: GIRLS Children 40-yard dash—Kathleen Kohler, Sue Olson, Elizabeth Rose, and Bev- Dolan, Kathleen Diving — Anne and Beverly Kohler, Jean Harris, Stadler. Intermediate 40-yard dash—Betty Barnes, Lois Ulsrud, Laura Ellsworth, and Wilma Wenzel. 80-yard dash—Betty Barnes, Lois Ulsrud, Claire DeRochford, and Wil- ma Wenzel. Diving—Betty Barnes, Wilma Wen- zel, Laura Ellsworth, and Claire De- Rochford. Plunge for distance—Helen Erlen- meyer, Betty Barnes, Flossy Dohn, and Lois Ulsrud. Under water swim—Betty Barnes, | Flossy Dohn, Beverly Barnes, and! Lois Ulsrud. 80-yard dash—Mrs. Woodworth and Frances Slattery Diving—Mrs. Woodworth and Fran- ces Slattery. Adults 40-yard dash, 80-yard dash, diving, plunge for distance—Mrs. Sarah Cleveland Woodworth and Frances Slattery. Under water swim—Mrs. Wood- worth and Frances Slattery tied for first. BOYS Children 40-yard dash—Nick Barbie, Eugene Schmidt, Raymond Sherwood, and James Griffin. Diving—Charles Martin, Raymond Sherwood, Eugene Schmidt, David Schwantes. Intermediate 40-yard dash—Richard Griffin, David Vogel, William Tillotson, and Tommy Dohn. 80-yard dash—Griffin, Murphy, Vogel, and George Dohn. Diving—Robert Edick, James Sny- der, Pred Stadler, and George Dohn. Under water swim—Griffin, Mur- phy, James Burckhardt, and Lea Svaren. Plunge for distance—Murphy, Tom- my Dohn, Fred Stadler, and Burck- hardt. Adult 40-yard dash—Charles Kirk Batzer, Art Beyers. 160-yard dash—Lester Dohn, Bat- zer, Beyers, and John Ulsrud. Diving—Dohn, Cayou, Harvey Er- lenmeyer, and Beyers. Under water swim—Dohn, Good- win, Beyers, and Erlenmeyer. Plunge for distance—Goodwin, Bat- eer, Dohn, and Beyers. Goodwin, Cayou and Don Peter Keierleber Buried at Carson Carson, N. D., July 7.—()—Funeral services for Peter Kelerleber, member | of the North Dakota house of Tep-; resentatives from the 47th legislative} district, were held here Thursday afternoon. Services were conducted at the Carson auditorium, Rev. H. Pfenning, Elgin, speaking in German. Services in the English language were read by Rev. H. J. Deitrich. Representative Keierleber, who had | been a member of the Grant county school board 14 years and a member j of the township board 12 years, dur- | ng the last session of the legislature, was taken ill with erysipelas. He took his own life Monday. Burial was made in the German Congregational church cemetery here. Swimming Classes To Be Held at Pool Swimming classes for beginners | and tests for Boy Scouts seeking | merit badges will be conducted four mornings each week in the Bismarck | Pool, it is announced by A. C. Van | ‘Wyk, manager. The classes, under the direction of Bud Munger, Eagle Scout, will be held at 9o'clock Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday of each week. Classes will begin Saturday. Depositors at Velva_ | Receiving Dividends} A first dividend of 10 per cent is being paid creditors of the closed | First State Bank of Velva, N. D., it was announced Friday by L. R. Baird, | receiver of closed banks. Payment is being made through the office of G. R. VanSickle, Minot, district manager. Glen Echo. Playing. Elks of Mandan and} Dance Saturday night | RUSSIAN GRADATES IN U.S. ARE MEN ‘WITHOUT COUNTRY’ Are Subject to Undesirable De- portation to Soviet When Degree Is Won Stanford University, Cal. July 17. —(?)—The elation that comes to the college graduate as he is ‘anded his diploma is not for Paul M. Narbutov- skih and perhaps a hundred -.ore Russian students in the United States. For them the hard-worked-for de- gree means not that the “world is now my oyster” but that “I am now 2 man without a country.” Graduation terminates their stu- dent status under the immigration law, and makes them subject to de- portation. What deportation would signify is largely a matter for the individual imagination but for Narbutovskth, son of an anti-Bolshevist merchant, jit would he says most likely mean something he doesn’t care to con- template. Members of the faculty at Stanford, believing Narbutovskih’s case is typi- cal, have “investigated every possible official channel with a view to clear- ing up the ambiguity of the pesitions (of these students) but to no result.” | The students, Narbutovskih de- 'clares, cannot become citizens. ° “any lof them dare not go back to “ussia’ {and most of them do not want to. Nearly all of them are anti-Bolshevik. | Although they feel that a benevo- ilent administration of the immigra- |tion law may save them from im- |mediate deportation, there is no as-/ surance they will not eventually be {required to leave the country. This jindefinite status makes it difficult to obtain employment. A representative of Stanford who has been endeavoring unsucce::“ul- ly to obtain some official action which would clarify the status of these Russian refugees and s> make their futures more secure declared that these youths are “good mate- rial for American citizens” and ex- pressed the hope that when their Situation becomes generally known ; some way will be found to remedy it. Scientist to study Work of Army Worm Ravages of the Bertha Army worm jin the flax fields of western Grand |Forks and in Benson county have |prompted North Dakota agricultural college officials to appoint Lawrence A. Carruth, Worcester, Mass. to in- jVestigate methods of control of this | pest. | The appointment, which is of two |months’ duration, was made at the suggestion of Dr. J. H. Shepperd, president of the college, Dr. P. F. Trowbridge, director of the experi- ment station and Prof. J. A. Munro, head of the department of ento- mology at the agricultural college. ;Carruth will make his study under jthe direct supevision of Professor {Munro in the experiment station. | While doing his research on the Ber- jtha Army worm, Carruth wil! visit fields in the northern counties where the infestation is the heaviest. She Couldn't EAT or SLEEP ra ws H feel like « new Woman” “ABOUT six months ago I was run-down and a friend of mine told me about your medicine. ba | a bottle and started taking it. I was so weak and nervous, my appetite wasn’t good at all, F couldn’t eat of course I lost my strength, In fact I have never been healthy. “After I started taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound my nerves were lots better. I can sleep well and I have a real good appetite . I feel like a new woman.” =I Oliver, Antler, Okla. VECETABLE COMPOUND Hope That History Will Repeat Itself Washington, July 17. If history repeats itself the busmess +--—__________—__-¢ ‘ 9 Without Country | \ pagan ie it had found, in tracing similar- ities in past business depressions, that the fluctuations in the per- jods 1878-1895 and 1914-1931 were analogous. Thus, it added, a re- vival of business in the near fu- ture is suggested. | America and, Britain Square Tennis Games| Roland Garros Stadium, Paris, July 17.—()—America pulled even with England Friday in the first two matches of the Davis Cup Interzone tennis series when Frank Shields hammered out a victory over Fred Perry, 10-8, 6-4, 6-2, after Henry W; Austin, the British ace, had van- er Sidney Wood, Jr., 2-6, 6-0, 18-6, 7-5. Bandit Slays Man, | Wounds Girl Friend Cedar Rapids, Towa, July 17.—(P)— J. H. Peck, 46, Iowa City, was shot and killed Miss Rose olles, PAUL M. NARBUTOVSKIH Bob , Ray Boelter, Want State Man to Davi vero ted,” Doma Get Architect Post Melvin Ruder, Charles Shearn, Walter | Ward, and the Wright brothers, Joe Grand Forks, N. D., July nu—e)— and John. 2 A request that Waa acne a select srenitect ous the new North) twelve Nebraska farmers now Be- Dakota capitol has been submitted to/|jong to the state 100-bushel an acre the capitol building commission bY|corn producing club. They qualified the Associated Contractors of North! in the past seven years. ; Dakota, W. T. Borden, Grand Forks,/ —— secretary, announced Thursday. | | 7he Craven, N. C., farthers’ mutual ‘The request was in the form of 4 o.change did a business amounting resolution adopted at the semi-annual exchange aise last year, earning & man of the capitol commission. “good-bye” earl; Dr a flies — all dirty ed by the McCabe ‘Methodist “Ipis- - it scoutmaster of Troop No. Donald meetii trs’ directors in meeting of the contttas addressed to| Profit of $1,680.76 ek Seouts fj Bismarck Scouts on_ e sts 3 Way to Black Hills first leg of 1B Pieaiped rao tel iy ‘Black Hills, All venpediiiio was led by Glen, insects a> Killthem George A. Bangs, Grand Forks, chairs | e urck Boy Scouts said |_,Twelve Bismarck Boy Seni and MOSQUITOES ‘are members of Troop No. 2, sponsor- Wallace, former Bismarck scout and quick! 0, ‘New York City. He was assisted in planning the trip by W. L. Sher- win, Albert Cordner, Lloyd Lillestra, Merle Gilroy, and Supreme Court Justice A. M. Christianson. Local concerns and organizations have assisted in offering prizes for meritorious conduct on the trip. Cedar Rapids, was seriously wounded early today by a bandit who accosted Wheat and soybeans grown on four them in a city park. and one-half acres of land netted H. Police were told the shooting was precipitated when Peck resisted’ the XH, Atkins of Wake county, N.C. 8! holdup, striking tHe bandit with a profit of $246.50. bottle. “For a birthday celebration,” said Mrs. Mary Hartman, 103, “I think I'd like to go up in an airplane—one of these new windmill things.” So they hired an autogiro and took the Philadelphia centenarian for a joy-ride, and here you see her with her pilot, J. Miller. Mrs. Hartman had to get back to her housework, or she'd have liked to have flown to New York to see the globe-circlers, Gatty and Post. ‘They include Finney's Drug store, Hoskins-Meyer, Ack’s Radiator Shop, Armour's Creamery, and Company A, local National Guard unit. ‘The boys are making the trip in a truck driven by Mr. Morris, Wilton. Scouts who left Friday morning are ~ GOOD .. theyve ~ got to be good! , HEAT NOR GL POST LE SAM'S OFFICE y EMPLOYEES NOR RAIN OF THESE COURIERS eee COMPLETION OINT fED ROUNDS, Registered “first class”! x “No comebacks”—when you smoke Chester- fields. The tobaccos are right! Chesterfield uses only mild, ripe, sweet-tasting tobaccos—the best and purest money can buy. The blend is right! \t's an art to put tobaccos together the Chesterfield way—in the exact pro- portions which bring out the finer qualities of tests for mildness, for Chesterfield cigarettes! The taste is right. It A science too! For each —and yet They Satisfy. aroma, for taste. No raw inferior tobaccos ever find their way into The manufacture is right. Every Chesterfield is well-filled, well-formed and burns evenly, The. paper is right—in texture, weight and purity. Money can’t buy better. - is not by accident that _ Chesterfield holds its smokers. They’re milder True Malt and Choicest Hops. It’s Dependable. [AT LEADING STORES! Chesterfield