The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 4, 1926, Page 3

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~ METHODISTS ¢ MONDAY: OEFOBER 4; 1926: WILLMERTAT: |<. JAMESTOWN Bishop McConnell of,, Pitts- burg Will Preside at An- nual- Conference ay Ot eat | ‘ inday night rains te oxy pecigl to io delays wuber of pastors’ attending thes ual | h Dakota Methodist Ep'sco- | pal conference which opens here | Geese. whose a unsaeeca. plans were to come hy auto. Pgs fi tions arc complete for the enter- tainment on the Harvard plan of 128 preachers and their wives and families at the homes of local church members. In addition a good attendance by laymen is ex- pected. caaitcitows. B Jamestown, N. D. Oct. 4—)— Bishop Francis J. McConnell of Pitts-; burgh, Pa., will preside at the annual | session of the North Dakota confer- enee of the Methodist Episcopal church to be held here October 5 to 10, according to announcement made here today. At the opening session Tuesday | morning conierence examinations fof | undergraduates will be held. At a! mass meeting Tuesday night ad-| 7 dresses of welcome will be given by} Mavor Buckley for the city, Rev. C. L. Wallace for the district and R. R. wotfer tor the local church. Rev. J. 8. Wilds, Valley City, will make the | response. Brief addresses on “North Dakota Methodism—What of the Fu- ture” will be given by Rev. F. S. Hol- Jett, Grand Forks; Rev. Benjamin Babcock, Mina; Rev. John Morange, | Bismarck, and Rev. C. L. Wallace,' Fargo. Secrament Wednesday Wednesday m ornitig Bishop. MeCon- nell will administe: e Sacrament of. the Lord’s Supper, after which there glar climbed through the window o: | him escape by way of the kitchen, may (eile aiid’ of Riches alti- | tude and cooler climate there. ence. At 2:30, at the university o! Bi ee A the Women’s Home Missionary So - shousing experts, sensing ciety, Mrs. J. C. Moore, Mrs. ‘T. A. danger in indiscriminate building and Olsen and’ Earl Rodman will be the{ the enlargement of towns, suggest principal speakers, At the evening! that new towns be built and that ad- service Bishop McConnell will speak.| ditions to the centers of population Thursday morning Bishop McCon-| should cease. ott il pelle oe Sova a GIVES YANKS and will sp anniversary of the Women’s Foreign Missionary Society. At 3 o'cloc! there will be an address by Earl ea man and at 4 o’clock Rev. E. Leigh Mudge, ass School Publications, Cincinna’ will sneak. In the evening Dr. ennock held the Cardinals ence True Wilson, Washington, D. C. ito thre; eties, two in the first and} corresponding secretar; Board of, one in the ni er Cleveland | erance, Prohibition and Public! Alexander — y lowed the! i speak on “The Trail of Yanks four hits. | Three hits were made off the 39-| shop McConnell year-old star in the second inaing ns and preside at and one to start the third. From the conference and Friday afternoon that point the $ Vv ya, of the Council of as the Yankees w: New York, will speak,’ ander retired the | 88‘ batsmen in orde from page one.) i 21 New York} gout the) His ateilsy b | of Foreign Missions, wi evening Dr. Clarence Tru Wilson will discuss the present statu of the cighteenth amendment and Dr. timan’s box. OW, At r, World Serv-} Alexander put the ball just over ice ‘Commission, Chicago, will also, the corners, insidée i outside, high speak. The heavy hitting American | Bishop McConnell will conduct de-'.Jcague champions had few good balls, ees Satargh morning win ihe! offered th at the coference session. In the a Yanks Use Three Pitchers ernoon Earl Rodman and Dr. Fulker-| shoeker, who started for the Yan-| son will speak, Bishop McC onnell | icbes stereos, in-and-out portonanh| wih ite an Yep lel the syening. Shawkey went to his rescuc sin the| eee merhine at ie CTelock, Rev.| eighth and Jones finished when | This is a cold, calloused age, but it has its kind edie: at that. St. Louis one night, waking her up. she listened to his story of being down and cut, gave him $14 and let breakfast. He thankeil her very | kindly. | business sessions, a number of A bur- f Mrs. Nettie Jablonow’'s house in Instead of yelling for the co where he fixed himseif a a, m. Founders’ Day Ceremony Is Part of Club Program Wahpeton; Ni bi Mrs. A. M. Powell, bce: Grant go Oct. 4—)- evils Lake, and of Women’s Clubs y to be next Thursday in connect with the annual convention. deceased presidents are Mrs. Jennie Wier Fargo, and Mrs. Frank White of Vailey City and Washing: ton, D.C. Although much of the time of the convention will be given over to at The been the y eve- ing the endowment .con- cert; the president’s pro mand reception evening; a drive und visits nee and Indian teresting social events h scheduled. Among them are federation dinner on Wednesd ning en and an operetta of the Red Corn,” by Indian school; a brea ‘Unique System of Auto Manufacture hiterests interest among | pinch hitter caused the retirement ai B. A. Burns, Sheldon, and W. R. Mor-| Bree. Stocker, who has a decep- rison will conduct the conference ser tive spithall, went through the fourth, mon and at 2p. m., 0 dnd elders and consecrate denconesses,, fifth and sixth innings without per- Rev. Il. P. Cooper, Enderlin, is in charge of the Memorial Service at 3), ing «hit, then was bombarded. | ; Bill Southworth, who once played | in a world series in the uniform of| F y State’ the New York Giants, crashed 2 home| President Rev. J. ® Smith, Rev. E. Tun into the right field bleachers | R. Fulkerson will speak in the even-| With two bases occupied in the! ing and Bishop McConnell will fead) seventh, sending the Cards out in the ~anpointments of ministers. | front. Another run came in the nifith ‘Eminent clerygmen and officials when Ruth could nut find a ball driv- from the General Boards will dise sa, en the program of the World Service’ Thevenow. Commission as it affects the work of run. the Board of Foreign Missions and the| Alcx started a ‘bit wobbly, for he Board of Home Missions, and other, passed Combs, the first man up. mission ry and benevolent programs| Koenig, however, hit into a double) of the cha ae und the veteran hurler then | gave a hint of what was to come when ~—_——__ —___—____—_—*4 TODAY ! ————————_—_—_ {he struck out Ruth, throwing a fast (Continued from eee.) ee Tee tne farm The shortstop got a home| ball by the big slugger for the third strike. The Cardinals threatened in the first and second. Hornsby got ae hae hit ee the Pig i to right, in the ‘ present fuel cost. silts atnall iollad ti oie should run out of “gas” he could stop Tell’s single was followed by Theve- at a woodpile, put @ little wood in hi ingws Dit for a beep in the seem retort, way. j without a run. Fone thing is certain in this |’ New York Score: some other way, human beings, wi iN} New York scored its two Suns in make themselves independent of the| the second. Meusel opened with gasoline supply as they mati le hee single and took second on Gehrig’s selves inde; lent of wi i, by} out. Lazzeri drove Meusel home with ing kerosene, and’ independent by a sone smash to’ left. Dugan also canteen by using electric light. got a hit. Alexander's ertor when he _— participated in a rundown.of Laz- Mr. Heberlein discovers in Java “a' zeri, trap} between the bases on complete skull of the missing sink | a attempted double steal, permitted called pithecanthropus erectus, which| the Second run; Th Alexander means “monkey-shaped man standing forced Shocker to miss the third up.” That interests Jntensely the’ ge as Severeid had done before scientis is of the eas unsu ble steal. tion and yoy. ‘Pitheca! le 8, Ae- The ards lost little time in knot- cording to science, iy your, first mame. ting the count. Douthit and South- worth hit and Hornsby moved them It is a pity that the skull of ‘whet 2 up with a bunt. “Sunny Jim” Bottom. ‘ancient ancestor cgnnot tell us what! jey drove his fellows home with . Alife was like in those Javanese jung-! et to right. Bottomley later. set Institu-| ¢1 Jes, when monkey-shaped men hunted! another nite that didn’t meat big animals and the animals hunted| thing but drove Shocker from tl ‘them yyhen evolution had. practically, mound. The cheerful first baseman ended in the P shysical body and ig ot two-thirds of his team’s hits in continuing inside the brain. e first game of the series. _ “- ‘Tol ec je seve! e We praise the liventor of the xew-| on Estar to the Satennh Ses ing machine, steam engine, wireless score rans for they ty ec Sad: airplane. Aho invented nb ee i Player on first bese. The seventh harp flint at the wh, ‘of a club, Av brought a different story. O'Farrell, p blag, stronger’ shane reat ‘eatcher who is being promi Pav Who ‘irst\Ently mentiofied. in’ connection with blow a log aging €! the most valuable player award, i geuiue first made a! ened ithe inning arith a band drive fF 7 two_ bases. venow 8 a je air, mania fire ean fy \oft. . Mousel ficlded: the ball slit { fast “ti ime, Aloxander’s best vax a ‘high fly to Mouse, hee a, eee werful ll at third. South. f¢ worth aces ‘the ball over Ruth's} Fi head and into the Ope Horns- its rounded out’ but the f fan ply cheered his out almost ey “had applauded Southworties | homer. arte the bag. over telis farmers that! will. nee, Hi it to the price ‘that i mer ttt for grain. é ir. Hoover, is st and ho; aR ‘ahd wa the. saflroads wouldn' 1 Nid be- portation seco! ‘middle | men! ‘A fr: tof wood from the true n't Tet rennet set the 4 of] 4 A fenrment of wood from the trae || Crucifixion and the crown al thorns sa ade atte a arth Shee maa ¥ middle relics in the treasury of Cathedral. aiong the right field foul line by| " | EXPER They knew the game was Fo! the onnouncement bt | decidely new applic: fundanienial principles of engineer- ing and unique methods of manu- ized in two words— to many requests for d information seeeraing stand, beyond peradventure, wracking serice to which they could iy be subjected. I rigid adherence to the hi of precision and ordinary mechan- a result accomplishments of Chrysler Chrysler cars which being characteriz and “phertomenal” inevitable consequence of Standardized # Quality." |Methodist, Pastors Serve Church: Longer Chicago, Oct. 4 — ) — Moving Days in the Methodist Episcopal ministry from the annual shake-up of pastors are growing fewer and the length of service for pastors at the same church is increasing, the new Methodist Year Book shows. Now, there are 123 pastors who have servéd the same church continuously for 10 to 30 years. Rev. E. J. Helms, Morgan M morial Church, Boston, has the re- cord in the Methodist ‘church for continuous service, 31 years. Ministers in the eastern confe: ences lead in longevity. of. pastorate: the New York East area having fif- teen'with service records of more ——— . Too Late To Classify WANTED—A man nan to, work by the month. R. W. Belyes, Wile ton, N. DD. FOR RENT—A three room house with closet and basement complete. id lights, Phone 5M. nth St. North. ED CLERK. wants: pgsi- n furnish references. Phone tian hree warm rooms at, man Ode. Phone 1191, A-1 | MECHANIC—Wanted at once. or communicate ith Wm. Kicin, ‘Shop Foreman, Capital Chev- ‘Three rooms for ligh Inquire J. P. Jaek- housekeeping. on Harris & Co. pried) South: 5 Many!: than ten years, Philadetphis . cons] ference has ten, New York six, C! be seven, Washington five New England four. Next in length of service to Helms are two with thirty years a the same church—ihe Reve G. Hi Lorah, Green Street, Philadelphia ie the ens e .. Allais, Frenel hureh, GORGAS PAID < TRIBUTE BY: DR. MARTIN Gorgas Memorial Institute | Will Be Living Monument | to Canal Builder © Chicago, Oct. 4. the late General W Gorgas as est benefactor,” liam Cray of America’s great “the world’s greatest’ wa ‘paid here yesterday | " on the occasion of his birthday-en: niversary by Dr, Franklin Martin of Chicago, pres: of the... Gorgas Institute. manner in which a man’s es after his death is the asure of success,” Dr, Martin ‘then there js founda! the ‘universal aceeptane Gorgas as the world’s factor, and one of America’s greatest The physical monument to yhis nivs is the Panama canal, which, it is conceded could not have heen built without the loss of 80,000 li had it not been for the preventat science of General Gorgas. He abol- ished yellow fever and sformed this pest hole of Panama ‘into one of the most healthful spots in the civilized world. “But 2 greater monument than the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ca building. It is a living monu- ment, the Gorgas Memorial Institute, i ying out, in every state, of preventative med heir birth and inspi stitute is teaching that n health is just as ood health and long sense in busines: and length from fift i enty within the next forty Dr. Martin recall- Mobile, Alabama, y General Gorgas, boi in PREFERRED BY CAREFUL MOTHERS A mother soon learns to choose those simple, ly remedies that she know afely and ) the children. Foley's ar Compound has ever her: It chloroform, no o| contains no f 5 and it chilly feverish colds, stops oup (spasmodic), bronchial whooping cough, and annoy- coughs, orite cough medicine of: i ‘Government Issues” 24 Hog Cholera lera Warning Frequent reports Serta ot hog cholera outbreaks just received by the ‘Uni- ted States Department of Agricul- ture are the occasion for official warnings urging swine owners to be on the alert against this disease. The reports are from scattered areas, { but thus far vhe disease has appeur- ed chiefly in the central west. As previously pointed out in gov- ernment publications and addresses by veterinary off:cials, the fall months are the time of the year when hog cholera is most prevalent. Septem- ber, October, and November have for many years marked the appearance ot this rapidly-spreading, infectious diseuse. this year the control of hog, chol- era is ampered somewhat by a temporary shortage of serum for 1m- tunizing susceptible animals. The uation is made more serious ‘by ct that a large proportion of in the United States have not been immunized owing to the low ebb of cholera in recent years. More than that, hogs at this-season of the year ate of good ‘site and a great ny are being fattened for market. ogs require more serum for Proper immunization than small pigs, the dosage being governed by the ight of the animal, Serum com- s i ing their pro- duction, but as the process of serum manufacture requires several weeks, owners are urged to take precautions in the meantime. When serum for be obtained, self-imposed quaranti usures are highly desirable. These lude the eclusion, from hog lo:s + mow pastures, of stock buyers, neighbors, bie! dogs, and other pos- > nog-enolera infec- speci, Sanitation of hog lots and houses hould receive attention also with a view of destroying possible lurking places for the virus. The use of. disinfectants and also direct sunlight are effective ugainst hog-cholera_in- fection. Outbreaks of hog cholera should be reported immediately by the most direct means to federal and state sanitary of jals who will make investigations, diagnoses, and render such further aid as their field forces | can handle. Rabbi Ernest M. Trattner, of Tem- ple Emanuel, Los Angeles, has be- come confjdential assistant to the executive manager of First National Screen Productions. It identifies a religious leader with the movie in- dustry. METROPOLITAN PICTURES CORPORATION YOU ‘CAN HAVE YouR FILMS DEVELOPED BUT ONCE An epical picture story of the west packed with :drama and heart appeal —A vital film ‘theme superbly screened. . VOHN C.FLINN Pagsenve Performances—7:15 &9P.M. Adults 35c, Children 15c eA” i, “ect Mothers, uceept! and Tar, the safe c adv. MAKING GOOD TEA ; To make good tea the water must freshly boiled, and the tea pot} must have been ‘heated by having! hot water poured in it. ing night coughs. The government has appropriated $500,000 to repair Turkey’s archaeo- logical treasures. A large part of this sum_ will be devoted to the sque of St. Sophia, built nearly ,000 years ago. _Our children’s line of ccats is mcst complete. All sizes, new assorted colors, at Sarah Gold Shop. 312. Main street. Florsheim Shoes always offer A new leather— a new style— a new feature of some kind. If ; you like to be in stride with style, wear FLorsHeims at all times, surprisingly low _ prices.— alpina give pleasure —luxuries that take you away ; Snebrame cr ei arg ee To give it the beauty that soothes the spirit; the comfort that brings sett aed body and pact to a weary mind. should come only: the sofa, $00.00; the wing chair, $00.00; thearmchais, $00.00. z -slipe esp aac of beautiful, comfort- assuring, ec odoming face my be hess Aceh ealeeel prices. Dollars spent t during this week are not truly spent Next to food and air, there is oe & your home. Make it one you will be en Ease Mc beautify it at the most P the season. Don't Gl eseome inna he Soe sal Th cl eee me withdrawn after next Saturday, Octobet lath, .

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