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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1929 BAPTIST PASTORS DISPERSE TO COME BACK YEAR HENGE Committee Appointed to Plan Program; Have Decided to Establish Libraries The conference of North Dakota Baptist ministers, meeting three days in the First church here, con- cluded sessions Thursday evening, and today only the local pastors were left on the scene. The conference is coming back. however. It decided to meet as usual in Bismarck and it appointed a com- mittee to make the arrangements between now and this time next year. This committee consists of Dr. F. E. Stockton, Fargo; C. A. Ste- pines pastor of the First church ere; W. H. Buenning, Ashley; G. Eichler, Linton; and C. W. Finwall, Fargo. One of the few business matters of the session was a decision to or- ganize a number of revolving librar- ies through the state, giving the ministers a ater access to the best sellers in history, biography, poetry, philosophy and science. The Rev. E. L. Jackson, of Page, resided at the supper at 6 o'clock. ‘his was served by the ladies of the German Baptist congregation, Eighth and Rosser, at the First church. The dinners and suppers of Tuesday and Wednesday were served by the First church women. The supper was made the occasion of farewell talks. Also talks by the Rev. W. H. Bayles, of Huron, S. D., Dakota educational director, on the topic, “I have a friend—Jesus,” and by Dr. J. H. Giffin, the China mis- sionary executive, on “The Value of Being Kept Through the Experiences of Life by Chirst.” The Thursday afternoon session ‘was marked by three main talks. Dr. Giffin spoke on the topic, “Hard ‘Nuts to Crack”—in the mission field, and Dr. M. McDonald reviewed the pastor in his relations to his denomi- nation, Dr. William Kuhn, Chica- g0, expounded another portion of the y book of Acts, taking as his topic, “The Sin Against the Holy Spirit.” Dr. J. H. Giffin and A. M. Mc- Donald left last night on their re- turn to Minneapolis and Dr. William Kuhn will continue on from there to his home in Chicago. The conference was conducted in a vigorous and alert spirit and the Rev. C. Stephens said it had giv- en all a feeling of success by its earnest atmosphere. SOLONS ARE WARNED 10 INCREASE SPEED With only 17 working days left be- > fore the close of the present session, chairmen of legislative committees in both houses have warned their com- mittee members that it is time to seriously get down to work and dispose of bills now in their hands. ES Because of the relatively small number of bills introduced as com- pared with previous sessions, the amount of work to be done is not as imposing as it might be but com- mittee chairmen are anxious to finish their work well within the constitu- of the session. The senate judiciary committce has 35 senate bills to dispose of, state affairs committee has 16 Wind Proves Winter Will Remain a While will be unsettled to- Dakota night and Saturday, with probably scattered local snows. It will be 16 above; and Williston, 26 above. DEVILS LAKE PLO MAN DIES IN CITY Taken Off Soo Line Train in , Coma Monday, 0. W. Ohn- stad Dies in That State Ole W. Ohnstad, 55, of Devils Lake, died in a local hospital, Thursday aft- ernoon. Death was due to a diabetic condition, which had brought on un- consciousness Monday, which con- tinued until his death. Ohnstad, a traveling salesman of the Moline Plow company, was found in a state of coma on a Soo Line train, Monday and was brought to the hospital here in that condition. Ohnstad was a native of Norway, where he was born January 12, 1874. He had been in this country 34 years. He leaves a widow, Mrs. Ada B. Ohn- stad, and two daughters, both mar- ried, one in Michigan and the other in Minnesota; also a sister in Still- water, Minn. He was a member of the Elks. ‘The body was sent to Devils Lake Thursday night, and funeral arrange- ments will be made there. HUMAN RELATION TO BE STUDIED AT YALE Institute Will Correlate Knowl- edge of Mind, Body, Individ- ual and Group Conduct New Haven, Conn., Feb. 15.—(?)— With an endowment of $7,500,000 an institute of human relations where- by man himself will be the center university. Designed primarily to correlate knowledge of the mind and body and of an individual and group conduct, the institute will enable further study of the interrelations of the factors which influence human actions. The fund is made available by gifts from the Rockefeller foundation and the Laura Spelman Rockefeller memorial which total about $4,500,000 and the income from $3,000,000 of other Rockefeller donations and the commonwealth fund established by Mrs. Stephen V. Harkness. Sociologists, biologists, phycholo- gists and economists will combine with their colleagues in such applied fields as law, medicine, and psy- chiatry. New Mott Farmers Hailed by Neighbors Mott, N. Dak., Feb. 15.—Mott has two new farmers. They are W. G. Husman, who has moved from Scot- land, 8. Dak., and Jacob M. Magstad, both sons-in-law of John Mehrer, veteran farmer here. Husman has purchased the Husby farm, three miles southeast of Mott. Neighbors formed an old-time bee to bere haul Husman’s equipment to the farm. Mrs. Magstad and her children are residing with the Mehrer family un- til the Magstad household goods can be installed in their new home. The farming success of John Meh- rer in recent years has encouraged his ay sons-in-law 4o move here, it is said, Give Your Child Enough Vitamins For Good Health SCOTT’S EMULSION Cod-liver Oil Vitamins Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, W.J. 30-21 of study has been formed at Yale |" LOGAL VETS RECALL BOATING ADVENTURE Capt. J. M. Belk and T. J. Mc- Laughlin Worked on Big Muddy Steamers Two Bismarck veterans of the days 60 years ago, before the Northern Pacific built its bridge here across the Missouri river, recall many of the hazardous boat adventures on the Big Muddy. They are T. J. McLaughlin, 822 Avenue B, and Captain J. M. Belk, who is now police magistrate. McLaughlin, in a letter to the Tribune, regarding the fiftieth anni- versary of the railroad bridge, tells how the boat on which he was kitch- en flunky had to be hoisted from the river one spring to save it from destruction because of ice, The boat had reposed in a dock in the bank all winter. The bank af- forded protection, however, for only 20 minutes after the ice began to move. The boat was then hoisted from the river and left on the bank until the river had subsided. One of the wheels was damaged in the hoist- ing. Mark White was cook on that par- ticular boat and Captain Woofolk was in charge. A short time later, McLaughlin was @ passenger on the “Eclipse,” a boat in charge of Captain Belk. The steamboat landed at a point which is now between Third street and the city athletic field. It took passengers to Mandan point and re- turned. Kiwanis Directors Plan Clearing of Playground Park Kiwanis club directors have taken up playground plans for the coming summer, They held a meeting Thurs- day and approved plans for clearing undergrowth from the 12-acre park site acquired last year, south of the baseball grounds. Bids now are be- ing asked for the work. When the site has been put in good shape for the children, further play and athletic equipment will be added to that placed last season. and a negro chauffeur whose automo- bile they had commandeered were Lerch gat held up a south side grocery Two Robbers, Negro Chauffeur Are Shot Chicago, Feb. 15.—(#)—Two robbers Tess, store, The policeman, William Katticrut, commandeered another car and gave chase as the robbers fled from the store. He opened fire and after wounding the trio they gave up. The robbers gave their names as Robert Manning, 22, and Harry Meyer, 23. LINDY’S SWEETHEART RIDES LOVERS LANES Bridle Paths Near Chapultepec Castle Favorite Haunt of Anne Morrow Beck, paths. after Mexico City, Feb. 15—(AP)— Hours-long horseback rides about the shaded bridle paths of Bosque de Chapultepec (Chapultepec Woods) afford Miss Anne Morrow plenty of time these days for introspective pondering about the life which will soon be hers. It is a romantic setting—one which charmed her_husband-to-be, Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh, who flew over it often while in Mexico City. Three hundred feet: above the WH _——— Rk +f =F HARD WATER PLUS MELO MAKES SOFT WATER Deg. U. 8. Pat. Of. Bathing and Melo just go together Te man, woman or child who bathes and doesn’t use Melo to soften the watet doesn’t know what they are missing. Melo softens hard water. It makes a delightfully sudsy bath. It doesn't let the water form a. dirty ring around the tub. That's ce news to women who scrub off the dirty ring! Water softened with Melo is a won- derful cleaner, with or without soap. Melo saves soap, too, from 5 to % the amount ordinarily used. It make soap much more effective. Use it wherever you need soft water. Get it at your grocer’s. WEL ‘WATER SOFTENED WITH MELO IS A REMARKABLE CLEANER 10 cents THE HYGIENIC PRODUCTS CO. Canton, Ohio Manufacturers of Sani-Flush . : 3 Room with private bath from For two ... from $5 per day This sketch was made from an actual photograph A windstorm that killed ten people The “blow” that tore this brick building apart killed beauty. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE " bridle paths is the castle of Chapul- tepee, traditional home of Mexico’s rulers since Carlotta and Maximilian reconstructed it. The hill on which the castle is located is cloaked with flowers and was once an Aztec fort- Lovers make it a trysting place, and from its higher spots the valley of Mexico may be scen in. all its z Mexicans and Americans alike frequent it. Miss Anne is not always alone in her riding, however. Yesterday she chose as her companion Miss Su- zanne Beck, daughter of Eman L. usiness man here, They are close friends and may oft- en be seen together on the bridle American Yesterday afternoon, Miss Anne played golf with her mother, also a poet. Ordinary social affairs bore her and she is not going to have an more of them than is necessary wit! life at the embassy. She wishes for nothing more than quiet and the op- portunity to live her own life until her marriage. There is continued indcfiniteness as to plans of Colonel Lindbergh to visit Miss Anne here sometime be- fore there wedding. And little more is known as to when that will take place, beyond the first information that it probably will occur in May or June, and either in Mexico City or Englewood. EEE The Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Com- pany of California Under Its Provisions Covers Disability from Pays Monthly Income as long as policyholder lives and is totally disabled Pays for Partial Disability under new and liberal provi- sion Pays Monthly Income as long as:policyholder lives in case of Loss of Two Limbs or Sight of Both Eyes. Pays Monthly Pension case of Loss of One Limb or Sight of One Eye Does Not Require House Confinement Cannot Be Canceled by Cannot Be Restricted After Issue by Rider or Endorse- ment Is Issued to Men Between the Ages of Twenty and Fifty-five Is Renewable to Its Anniversary Date Nearest Policy- holder’s Sixtieth Birthday Is Issued on a Medical Examination Is Designed for Business Executives and Professional Men Is Issued With or Without an Accidental Death Benefit OSCAR M. OLSON Special. Representative Prince Hotel Interested in an Agency ........ccscesceceeseeee sia Inter€sted in a Policy My occupation is .... My name is .. My address is........ Date of birth is Us New‘Non-Cancellable Inconie Policy FED BY THOUSANDS | Antelope, Elk, Game Birds Come Down From Rockies to Ap- " pease Their Hunger school _ch Denver, Feb. 15.—(™—Thousands of starving wild animals from the snow covered: ranges and mountains ‘ cf the Rocky Mountain region, today were being cared for by state game departments. Along the Union Pacific railroad ounces tracks in Sweetwater county, Wyo. a full-size herd of five or six thousand antelope biscuits consume carloads of hay dumped there by. the state. Preparations to feed 100 elk at Millville, Utah, were being made by the Utah game department. The an- imals entered the town yesterday. Millions of game birds also were being fed by various wild life organ- izations in the region. A flock of ducks too weak from hunger {o fly, was reported at Lyons, Colo. To conserve food for game birds, an attempt will be made Sunday at a rookery. near Boise, to kill a million crows by dynamite. The same full size biscuits, The same full-measure packafe, LOTS OF FUN FOR THE CHILDREN CAprro! THEATRE . TONIGHT and SATURDAY Issued by Every Cause as long as policyholder lives in the Company Bismarck, No. Dak. Nite Clubs! with the Greatest—Most a TO RESPONSIBLE PEOPLE ae ed Car Sale OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS---Are You at Home? If you intend to ride this year it will pay you to devote the next few minutes to a careful reading of every word of this message. We are conducting the most sensational sale ever attempted by any company anywhere, in which we are offering our entire stock of used motor cars at prices and at bedrock Terms Never Before Heard of in This City There is no longer any excuse for any person not to own a reliable car, for we are offering the pick of our entire stock on this sensational credit plan. We mean just what we say—if you cannot pay cash or part cash—come in any- way and we will explain how a car may be yours on easy monthly payments. This offer is not permanent. It lasts only as long as the present stock of cars are avail- able. $5 PRICES. 0 to $775 “A Car for Every Pocketbook” . CHEVROLETS NASHS | Dgoks Sa, she settee rene ax Weather May Change -But Not <=, The same healthful nourishment, A Race That Was Won in the See this amasing drama of Hoot Beats and Heart Beats! 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