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2 SOURIS RIVER GAME | REFUGE PICTURED AS PARADISE FOR BIRDS Biological Survey Forecasts N. D. Project Will Be Larg- est Duck Producer Washington, Sept. 26.—()—Para- @ise for wildfowl soon may be the Souris river in North Dakota, if plans of the biological survey materialize, Recent executive orders established; two neighboring refuges in that state which, when complete, will total 80,- 000 acres. The biological survey pre-} dicts the aren may become the largest} duck-producing area in the United) States. The refuges are being im- proved by civilian conservation corps workers. The refuges lie along the Souris river, which the biological survey says is the heart of the great hereditary nesting area of the northwest. “Prior to the disastrous drainage activities of the early 1900s and the prosperity the locality enjoyed at that time came in part from catering to the wants of sportsmen,” a réport by; Douglas R. Yeater, five years commercial manager of the North Dakota Power and Light com- pany in Bismarck, leaves Oct. 1 for Portland, Ore., to become as- sociated with the sales force of the Portland General Electric company. the biological survey said. The upper Souris migratory water- fowl refuge is to comprise 30,000 acres. A large dam will furnish a uniform! water supply for both that refuge and the lower Souris refuge, a 50,000-acre tract. The dam also is designed to pro- vide uniform flow in adjacent streams, and prevent flood losses.| Benefits will accrue in nearby cities,| the report said, in the form of better of sharp-tail grouse that migrate from Canada. are included in the area. herd of buffalo, 60 to 80 animals, is at present on the upper Souris. Rabbits and beaver A private 9 Die, Scores Missing In North Sea Storm sewage disposal, In addition to ducks and geese, the Souris refuge will harbor thousands Amsterdam, Sept. 26,—(#)—Nine number of fishermen missing, and at least 15 injured as the result of Wed- “|nesday’s North Sea gale, It was feared the casualty list may be in- creased, since 10 fishing boats were were known dead, an undetermined| WHITE AS SNOW — JUST AS THE SALESMAN | unreported. TAKE ROBBINS BACK Sioux Fails, S. D., Sept. 26.—(P)— Howard Robbins, escaped Minnesota convict captured Wednesday by police, was started back to the prison at! Stillwater Thursday by three guards./ Byrne, Wednesdays at Roosevelt BRITISH DIPLOMAT DIES London, Sept. .26—(?)—Sir Ernest Amelius Rennie, 67, British diplomat, died Thursday. THE BISMA COURT MOVED UP ONE DAY Juvenile Band Concert to Open First Annual Program Next Thursday Date for the first annual Boy Scout Court of Honor has been changed from Wednesday, Oct. 2, to Thursday, Oct. 3,,Paul O. Netland, srea scout executive, announced Thursday. Dr. George M. Constans, chairman of the court of honor committee, will be in charge of the program in which all 10 of the Bismarck troops will participate. The program will open, at 7 p. m. at the World War Memo- rial building with a concert by the ; Juvenile band under the direction of Clarion ‘Larson. The board of review meets tonight and Monday to pass upon applica- tions for advancement, The advancement program, which launches the new scouting year in Bis- marck, is one of four conducted dur- ing the 12-month period. All 10 troops have been re-organ- ized and are again holding regular weekly meetings. Bismarck troops, the days and places of meeting fol- low: Kiwanis, No, 2, Scoutmaster Lioyd Lillestrand, Mondays at scout head- quarters, Rotary, No. 3, Scoutmaster Gideon Hample, Wednesdays at scout head- quarters, Fort Lincoln, No. Scoutmaster Andrew. Feury, Mondays at Fort Lin- coln gymnasium. Lutheran church, No. 5, Scoutmas- ter Otto Convert, Wednesdays at Lu- theran church. Presbyterian church, No. 6, Scout- master Torolf Johansen, Thursdays at Presbyterian church. Knights of Columbus, Nos. 7 and 8, Scoutmasters Charles Cawthers and Albert Hartl, Tuesdays and Wednes- | days at St. Mary's school gymnasium. American Legion, No. 9, Scoutmas- ter ‘John Karasiewicz, Thursdays at Wachter school. Lions, No. 10, Scoutmaster Al An- derson, Tuesdays at Richholt school. Elks, No. 11, Scoutmaster Robert | school. American hatters dump all obsolete hats in China, where they are highly popular. 32,000 washer experts recommend Rinso JOUSANDS of washing machine demonstrators know that Rinso gives tich, lasting suds—even in hardest water. And most of the leading manu- facturers of washers—actually 34 of them—recommend Rinso for safety and for whiter, brighter clothes. No wonder Rinso is used in more wash- ing machines than any other soap! Grand for TUB WASHING, too. Seaks clothes snowy. (TS THE BIGGEST- SELLING PACKAGE SOAP IN AMERICA Just Arrived—More New Fall Dresses A choice collection of clever new styles from the loveliest of fabrics, suitable for fall and winter, $5 SPORT COATS $9. and For Trimmed COATS 95° $16.95 MILLINERY—$1.88, $2.49 and $2.95 A small down payment will hold your selec- tion until wanted. Ohm Dress Shop 204 4th Street BISMARCK Bumiresys The Season's Hits” LARGE RIPPLE FAN and QUEEN ANNE COLLARS of expensive furs top these beautiful They're actually worth $39.50 FRISE MOUNTAIN BARK _ LEVBARK, and other 1935-36 Fabrics. strictly 100% Pure Lambs Wool Interlinings a Pure Silk Crepe Satin Lin- ings Topped with Canadian Wolf, Beaver, Fox, Caracurl Seal, end other selected Fine Furs. Bismarck, N. D. Just Unpacked TheseExquisite FURRED COATS! Many New Styles For Your Selection Thermometers Plunge, Heavy Frost Forecast Bismarck shivered Thursday in crisp, freezing temperatures with a killing frost forecast for tonight. Re- Uet was in stght, however, with a ris- ing thermometer indicated for Fri- day. ‘ The mercury @ropped rapidly dur- ing the night over the state, readings being below freesing at 20 of the 22] - corn and wheat region weather bu- seau stations, At Parshall, the temperature plung- ed to 20 degrees for the low mark. While the mercury reached 80 at Hankinson, most maximum tempera- tures Wednesday ranged from 50 to 60 degrees. At the local weather bu- reau, the low was 30 and the high Wednesday was 55. * Snow and ice flecked the landscape in Canada and other points in the Northwest. In Manitoba and: Alberta, between four and five inches of snow blanketed the ground as sinking tem- peratures drove ducks and geese southward. METHODIST CHURCH TO RETURN PASTOR Vater and Roe Again Endorsed at Quarterly Conference Closing Year Rev. Walter E. Vater was unani- mously elected pastor of the McCabe Methodist Episcopal church for the 12th consecutive year by the congre- gation’s official board, which held its fourth quarterly conference of the year Wednesday night with Rev. Al- fred Roe, district superintendent, pre- siding. The motion that Rev. Vater be re- tained was advanced by J. P. Jackson, chairman of the board of trustees. In the elections Mr. Jackson was renamed to his office and John A. Larson was returned as chairman of the board of stewards. The entire Personnel of both boards was return- ed to office. A new religious education commit- tee to cooperate with Mrs. Forrest M. Davis, religious education chairman, and the church school was named. inson and Oscar Forde and Miss Bea- trice Register. All other committees were reinstated. D. H, Houser was named lay dele- gate to the annual conference at Grand Forks Oct. 3-7 and C. G. Boise was chosen as reserve delegate. Bishop Ralph J, Magee, St. Paul, will Preside at the session. The local board will ask that Rev. Vater be al- lowed to remain as pastor and also that Rev. Roe be retained as south- western district superintendent, Reports presented at the mecting were as follows: church school by Roy H. Neff, Sunday school financial statement by Judge I. C. Davies, Women’s Foreign Missionary society by Mrs, F. H. Register, Women’s Home Missionary society by Mrs. Ray Robinson, “department. of - religious education by Mrs. Davis, church fi- nancial condition by A. A, Loehrke, treasurer's report by Roy H. Neff, Cradle Roll by Mrs, C. V. Holmquist, board of trustees by Mr. Jackson, General Ladies’ Aid by Mrs. George M. Register and music by the com- mittee, W. F. Bischof, George 8. Reg- ister and A. J. Arnot, Rev. Vater also presented his an- nual report in which he said that the church is growing and is “in a very happy condition.” AAA CONTRACT HAS MANDATORY CLAUSE Corn-Hog Producer Must Ful- fill Production Agreement, Putnam Says Seeking to clear up a frequent mis- understanding relative to the AAA’s corn-hog contracts, County Agent Henry Putnam said Thursday that a men cannot be a bona fide corn and hog producer unless he has produc- ed his 25 per cent of the base corn acreage and 25 per cent of the hog base, Putnam bases his reasoning on the administrative ruling No. 107, “Bona Dr. J. T. EL Dinwoodie, compliance supervisor, in further explaining this ruling stated recently that drouth could not be con- eidered as the sole reason for ‘any Producer not having produced 25 per cent of the base in corn and hogs. Another common misunderstanding hhas been caused by farmers who have ur false te are ul} [ee ee ae Tass a ea: to sprinkle on yor late, th firm Gives fine. feeling: r comfort, . OF. Lt 7 at any my, atore. .CK TRIBUNE. KEELER IS BLECTE SYNOD'S PRESIDENT Episcopalians Fargo Choose Omaha for 1936 Province Meeting Fargo, N. D., Sept. 26.—(#)—Rt. ‘Rev. Stephen E. Keeler was elected president of the Synod of the North- west of the Episcopal church at a “reamed session of the synod Thurs- lay. Very Rev. John Richardson, dean of Gethsemane, was elected secre- tary. ree 1936 synod will meet in Omaha, eb, Named to the provincial synod council were Bishop Herbert Fox of Montana and W. D. Swain of Sioux Falls for one year; Bishop G. A. Beecher of Hastings, Neb., Bishop El- mer Schmuck of Laramie, Wyo., Rev. E. F, Siegfriedt of Lead, 8. D., Rev. L. W. Hulett of Fergus Falls, Minn., and D. B. Holt of Fargo for three years. Trustees of Seaberry-Western Di- vinity school of Evanston, Ill, also’ named for three years are Bishop Blair Roberts of Sioux Falls, 8 D., Very Rev. B, D. Dagwell of Denver and B, W. Scardvert of Minneapolis. John Hedelund of Omaha was named synod treasurer. Provincial representative on the national council is Rev, A, E. Knick- erbocker of St. Paul’s church, Min- neapolis, ‘The flour in the wedding cake of gypsies is mixed with blood taken from the wrists of the bride and the bridegroom. The cup that cheers! Any fine tea cheers and stimulates, but Schilling Tea “cheers” right out loud —it’s so full of flavor. Tt has more flavor because it's toasted. Schilling COROBY Toasted 1€U 26, 1995. Settlement in Strike Before Night Is Seen Washington, Sept, 26.—(P)}—Philip Murray, vice president of the United Mine Workers, Thursday ‘The: Belfield structure, to be of steel and concrete, will cost approxi- ‘mately $45,000, engineers of the de- predicted |Partment estimate. The cost will in- “either a make or a break” before|clude expense of approaches. soft coal strike. in Session at)Dightfall in negotiations to end the} Fitteen of the 18 projects to be let + are WPA-State highway projects, and “The negotiations have reached jembrace a total of 52.3 miles of grad- such @ stage that I think there will be something definite before night- fall," Murray told reporters. OPEN BIDS ON GRADE CROSSINGS FRIDAY First Separation Project Is at Belfield; 18 Other Road Jobs Also Listed Bids for North Dakota's first WPA grade separation—a bridge over the Northern Pacific tracks at Belfield— will be opened Friday by the state highway department, pete g Iniles of gra’ and 59 of of] mix or pa 4 A‘ Tina tis bisswey - sapere jects will be let for in the lowing counties: Grand Forks, 4; 410 Bawy. Bismarck, N. D. In addition contracts will be let| I've spent almost half my life around here. and ] ought to know a winner 6¢ when I see one NEW PHILCO 116x — With Philco All-wave Aerial “Thee « total of 18 other roads projects 2, Golden Valley 2, Stark, 4; totaling approximately $500,000. 3 1, g three roads projects are not under the WPA program, ‘There are 701.3 persons to the square mile in England. DEPT. STORE ) U2 Fitth Phone 296 ROM nearby stations .. . and from overseas* ... the ment voice... new 1936 Philco 116X broadcastin brings you the finest entertain- watlonda. 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