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BURLEIGH FARMERS 10 GET PRIZES FOR BIST FALLOW FELIS Bismarck Chamber of Com- therce Will Give $50 to Con- testants in Project Prizes totaling $50 will be given to Burleigh county farmers having the best summer-fallow fields in 1934, the board of directors of the Bismarck as- soication of commerce decided at a nieeting Friday afternoon. The board adopted the project at the suggestion of the agricultural committee of the association. Mem- bers of the committee are J. P. French, chairman, and George Duemeland, Carl Nelson, George F. Bird, H. O. Putnam and B. O. Ward. ‘The board hopes to induce Burleigh farmers to improve the land that will be taken out of production because of taeir wheat allotment contracts. The farmer with the best field will get $15; and other gratuities will be $12.50, $10, $7.50 and $5. H. P. Goddard, secretary, of the as- sociation, stated that those contending for the premiums must comply with the following: The land must be plowed before June 20 or July 1, (the date to be Gefinitely determined later); and fields must be plowed to a depth of not less than five inches. The fields are to be graded according to freedom from weeds and other im- portant factors, the secretary said. ‘The board feels that attention given the land this year will repay the farmers in more profitable output when it is returned to cultivation. The association of commerce is continuing its baby-chick project. For the last two years the association. has offered members of Burleigh county 4-H clubs 75 chicks, for which @ $3 down payment is made. In the fall the club members return seven chickens, which are sold by the associ- ation. If a profit over the original purchasing price, minus the down vayment, is realized, the surplus is returned to the boys or girls who reised the fowl. Any losses are taken by the community organization. The purpose of this project is to encourage the raising of purebred birds, Goddard said. The board also authorized the con- tribution of $10 for the 4-H club achievement sale held each year at the agricultural college at Fargo. A committee including W. R. Koch, chairman, and Clarence Gunness, A. ©. Johnson, 8. A. Floren and M. B. Gilman, was appointed to conduct a courtesy-and-safety automobile driv- ing campaign. Federated Clubs Will Sponsor Art Programs Mrs. John Knauf, Jamestown, pres- ident of the North Dakota Federa- tion of Women's clubs, called atten- tion to the series of art appreciation programs to be broadcast under aus- Pices of the general federation, when she visited Bismarck this week-end. The first program will be given Saturday evening at 7 p. m. over the NBC network. Mrs. Paul Adams, La- Moure, state chairman of the art di- vision, will give detailed information on the series to clubwomen who are| interested. Count Rene d’Harncncourt, assist-, ant to the president of the American | To Speak Monday REV. ELMER H. DAHLE Rev. Dahle, Eskimo missionary for nine years, will speak at Trinity Luth- eran church at 8 o'clock Monday even- ing under auspices of the Lutheran Daughters of the Reformation. Eskimo Missionary to Show Pictures Monday Rev. Emer H. Dahle, who speaks at Trinity Lutheran church Monday evening at 8 o'clock under auspices of the Lutheran Daughters of the Re- formation, has spent nine years in northern Alaska, working among the Eskimos. The program is open to the public. Rev. Dahle will show moving pic- tures taken by himself in Alaska. The pictures show how the Eskimos live, play and worship. Some inter- esting scenes depict a reindeer round- up, Eskimo « blanket-tossing, dog teams in action, and the Arctic ice pack on the move toward the North Pole. During his years in Alaska, Rev. Dahle has traveled thousands of (miles by dog team. $$$ ________»4 i Threaten CWA Boss | With Violent Death Peddie libitedcdob acini Walker, Minn., Feb. 3—(?)—A group of 19 men armed with a rope threatened violence to Ed- ward Braddock, of Brainerd, a CWA supervisor, when he refused Friday to put them to work on the Gull Lake airport project near Brainerd. The men had been assigned to the job by the Cass County NRA office and told to report, but when they arrived Braddock said he had all the men he needed. District NRA headquarters at Bemidji ordered the men to show up Saturday and to draw CWA wages regardless of whether Brad- dock gave them work. Three French Cabinet Members Quit Posts | Paris, Feb. 3.—(P)—Three members of the cabinet resigned Saturday after a disagreement with Premier Edouard |Daladier over his ousting of Prefect |of Police Chiappe from his post. | The resigning ministers are: Lieut. Col. Jean Fabry, minister of | war. Francois Pietri, minister of finance and the budget. Gustave Doussain, minister of tech- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1934_. {YOUTH WILL HOLD H. W. Graunke will address his group! determination to retain possession of on “The Aggressive Challenge for the, his post, despite Governor Frank H. Surrender of Life to Christ”; Rev. Cooney’s efforts to oust him, was pried | Ira E. Herzberg has chosen for his! off Friday night. ickening of Personal Stafford friends said it was an at- |talk “The Qui | Spiritual Life”; “The Responsibility tempt to gain possession of the of- for Social Application of Christianity” tice. Rey. W. R. Harshaw, Minneap- olis, Named Principal Speak- er at Conference Rev. W. R. Harshaw, D. D., Min- neapolis, will lead the service Sun- day afternoon at the Presbyterian) ‘an Endeavor union. churel, when young people of Wilton, Bismarck and Mandan observe Chris- tian Endeavor Sunday by a spiritual advance conference. Youth from the Evangelical and ij 0 churches and the ‘Sal- Presbyterian church. Rev. Bell als vation Army have arranged a full Program for the occasion and have’ poy extended invitations to the young people of the Presbyterian churches of Mandan and Wilton. According to Rev. F. E. Logee, pas- tor of the local Presbyterian church,| the conference is similar to others being held throughout the country. The conference will be divided into lock which Commissioner of Agricul-| Military Lod four groups, which will be under the ture A. H. Stafford placed on the door! pines. is the subject of Rev. Logee’s sermon;' Sheriff Arthur C. Parsons, who was and Adjutant Herbert Smith will called to the scene, said Governor ‘speak to the fourth group on “The Cooney told him over the telephone Demand for Loyalty to the Church he had ordered a custodian to remove and Her Whole Program.” ‘the lock. After the discussions reports willl ‘These developments came after be given in a general conference by Governor Cooney had appeared in the separate groups, Rev. Logee said. statford’s office with A. P. Bruce of This conference will be under charge kKalispell, the man he named to re- of Clell G. Gannon, former state place Stafford. The governor in- president of the North Dakota Chris- troduced Bruce to Stafford as the new commissioner and made formal The dedication service with which the conference closes will be con- ‘mand for the office. ducted by Rev. W. J, Bell, Minne- apolis, field representative of the Addresses Scheduled Board of ian Education af thi ry * remgletion shuren, On | For Masonic Meeting Two addresses will be on the pro- gram for the meeting of Bismarck Lodge No. 5, A. F. & A. M., to be held Monday evening at the Masonic Montana Officials temple, starting at 7:30 o'clock. Judge A. G, Burr will speak on “The Free- In Heated Contest | com of the Press” and Major Frank | Helena, Mont., Feb. 3.—(#)—A pad- L. Anders will give an account of speaks at the evening assembly at 7:30, to which the public is invited,! Logee announced. ] All members of the lodge, are charge of the individual pastors. Rev. of his office in the statehouse in his! requested to attend. Federation of the Arts, has assisted nical instruction. in preparing the art appreciation) Doussain announced - the triple series. He gave the background for |Tesignation following a conference at the program at the mid-winter coun- the ministry of finance. Daladier cd meeting in| Washington, D. C.,/ Was said to be still hopeful that they which Mrs. Knauf attended. Predicts Big Boost In Cost of Living New York, Feb. 3.—(#)—Prof. Edwin Walter Kemmerer, writing New York Sun, predicted that the cost ' of living will b’ more than.double that | of last Novensber when the depression | is over and the results of the Roose- velt administration's dollar devalua- | tion have completely worked them- selves out. Kemmerer, a monetary expert who is professor of international finance at | Princeton university, foresaw a general | price level 118 per cent higher than last November's and a cost of living 126 per cent higher. He emphasized that these results would take time. SEIBERLING couten TIRES Never Wear Smooth HY waste your money buying emooth miles when this patented tire with two anti-skid treads that NEVER WEAR SMOOTH — that offer DOUBLE RESISTANCE to puncture and Blowout — can be bought so easily at today’s » low prices? * » * Come in today. See — Compare. Buy now while the prices are still low and protect OLIVER P. VOLD, Prop. eral allowance for your old tire in trade. VOLD’S TIRE SERVICE You Will Like Our Tire and Battery Service BISMARCK, N. D. 1 yourself on the expected price raise. We will give a lib- | 1 might patch up the differences. \ GOTHAM WITOUT TAXIS New York, Feb 3.—(?)—Some of the city’s best people stood at some of the city’s best curbs early today at the end ef an evening's merriment, and called out into the icy air: “Taxi!” Nothing happened. There were no taxis. The rivers still were on strike. Consumption of tin has increased enormously with the popularity of silk and artificial silk. Burglars broke into the Boston auto show and stole the whole state police exhibit. A check-up is being made to see if any police are missing, also. Fresh Eggs, per dozen 20c. —Scott's Grocery. MORE SAFE ANTI-SKID MILES FOR YoUR TIRE DOLLA SEIBERLING TERES PHONE 355 iSuspect Pretty Boy Floyd in Big Holdup Pennsgrove, N. J., Feb. 3—()—Police | forces of the federal government and , Several states, hunting for four rob- {bers who stole $130,000 from bank messengers, Saturday had for their guidance the description of one of the west’s most notorious outlaws, Charles A. (Pretty Boy) Floyd. Descriptions of the good-looking leader fit the Oklahoma desperado, | police said, recalling that Floyd had been reported in the state on Jan. 22. \Pastoral Conference Will Convene Monday ference will hold its February mect- |ing Monday afternoon at Trinity | Lutheran church, starting | o'clock (C. 8. T.). Notices which have | been sent out erroneously announced that the meeting would be held at the First Lutheran church. preside. Rev. C. J. Fylling, also of ; Mandan, is scheduled to give the ser-| ge No, 1 of the Philip-| mon outline and discussion. Rev.| Volstead, former Minnesota congress- J. H. Lunde, Bismarck, will introduce the theme of the meeting, “Anti- . EXTR sad MINNEAPOLIS SUNDAY TR no words could, by two! The Bismarck Area Pastoral con-! at lithe first leg of a route which will Rev. O. O. Andvik, Mandan, will) i AT LAST the true story of the World War can be told. Told as Christian Influences to Church Life.” Wives of the visiting pastors will |be entertained during the afternoon | at the home of Rev. and Mrs. Opie 8. Rindahl, 70¢ Seventh 8t. Fort Lincoln Cagers Lose Contest to Lehr | In a game at Fort Lincoln Friday jMteht the Lehr high school basket- ‘ball team won 19-17 from the army Post quint. Saturday afternoon the Lehr boys were matched against a |five from the state training school jat Mandan. | START NEW MAIL SERVICE | Stuttgart, Germany, Feb. 3.—(7)— A regular bi-weekly South American airmail service from Germany started| Saturday. A mail plane with an average speed of 200 miles an hour roared away southward at 8 a. m. on reduce the mail carrying time from Germany to Brazil and Argentina by , two-thirds, compared with the previ- | ous steamer service. BLAME VOLSTEAD AGAIN Minneapolis, Feb. 3.—(?)—Andrew man and co-author of the prohibition enforcement act, has had another, “drying up” laid at his door. Swenson, state game missioner, in a talk man’s club here, asserted Volstead’ activities as a member of congress connection with dr lakes and swamp land be take the water away from ducks.” APPROVE RELIEF BILL Nebr i Feb. 3.—(#)—The ad- ministration bill to appropriate 000,000 for unemployment relief the civil works lon during the remainder of the current fiscal year was approved Saturday by the senate appropriations committes, MASONS ATTENTION Regular meeting A. F. & A. M. Number 5, Monday at 7:30 o’clock. 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