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” ¥ ASSEMBLING: HERE :53rd Annual Conference Will , Open at 7:30 P. M. and Continue Till Friday ee | pinpeene ,annual convention will open their Program at 7:30 p. m., in the First, ;Beptist.church. The annual sermon, . “Faith Amid the Ruins,” will be pres- ented at that time by Rev. D. Heit- meyer, Fargo. Principal business at the ministers’ . conference Wednesday morning will . be election of officers. Rev. abd ducted by Rev. W. H. Bayles of Huron, “8. D., Rev. Henry F. Widen of Minot, Rev. F. E. Logee of Bismarck and Dr. O, C. Brown of Philadelphia, Pa. “Forward on the King’s Highway” is the theme of # women’s session con- vening at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, with Mrs, N. J. Nelson of Fargo presiding. Mrs. Mary Martin Kinney of Chicago will be the out-of-state speaker. Election of officers will be held. Also addressing the women will be - Mrs. J. sH. Flaming, Kenmare; Mrs. F. H. Swanson; Mrs, C. A. Landgren, Jamestown; Mrs. J. E. MacLean, Grand Forks, and Mrs. E. Monnes. The sessions, at which about 125 visitors are expeeted, will-continue un- til Friday noon. The convention ban- quet will be served Wednesday at 6:30 p. m., in the Trinity Lutheran church, Holy Land Put Under British Martial Law London, Sept. .29.—(7)—Great Bri- tain Tuesday clamped down martial law on Palestine to end the terrorism which Arabs have waged in the Holy Land for months against Jewish im- migration, » Military rule actually will be put in force by a proclamation to be is- sued by the Palestine high: commis- sioner. The step was announced of- ficlally in the London Gazette. The commissioner’s proclamation will delegate virtual--dictatorial yow- er to Lieut. Gen. J. G. Dill, com- mander of. the recently augmented military forces in Palestine. The date of issuance of the pro- clamation as well as a second, sup- Plementary one: outlining the. exact powers which will be granted Gen- eral Dill will be decided upon later, ‘The move was determined upon to quell the long-continued disturbances between Arabs and Jews. .Local Office Enlists Four Naval Recruits) '2'Y Wallace told a farm belt audi- Four men, one from Mandan and sthree from Dickinson, were enlisted into the United States navy by the local recruiting office to fill the. s quota assigned tothe ‘office for the =month of October;H. Carson, local recruiting officer, has announced, The new enrollees will leave Min» “neapelis Got 20 to-go tothe: 8 “Navat tratning station at Great Lakes, © Til, where they will undergo a’ period of training which will last about * four months, ‘Following that they will be assigned either to a trade school at San Diego or to one of the ships . Of the United States navy. The enlisted men are L. W. Helms- worth, Mandan; and Adolph Remul- lang, R: M. Altman, and R. L. Con- lon, all of. Dickinson, | Fathom This! rweek in ee BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, Faithful Cleanse Wishing Cross SHIRLEY TEMPLE GETS A PONY (CUB PACK LEADERS 10 MEET TONIGHT Will Plan Local Program, Study Activities of Junior Scout a om master, or leader, for the first unit, } -W. H. Sanborn, chairman of the cubbing committee of this area, will preside at the meeting. “Cubbing” “is the junior Scout movement, an organization for boys 9, 10 and 11 years of age, the idea be- ing that they will graduate from cub ranks into Scoutdom. At the meeting fonight, Rev. A. R. Henry, Mandan, will tell about cub- bing activities while a depicting these activities is showh, and C. W. Leifur, Bismarck, will speak on the peg @ unit of the local organiza- ion. The first pack in Bismarck will be sponsored by the Presbyterian church, which has also sponsored a Boy Scout, troop for a number of years. 30 days in jail, when they appeared be- Shirley Temple, child film star, was at the station In Los Angeles te : - Winner, S. D., Farmer recelve her new pony, the gift of Joseph M, Schenck, film preducer, ieonag i @| | Found Shot to Death| $hetwitogsed ion eter ouay Sheet nana is xe her first ri The weathering of long years of rain and blistering sun was Spunky” ae she took ide. (Associated Prees Photo) scrubbed away when the devout of New Orleans gathered around the city’s famous Wishing Cross in the Campo of St. Roch, and administered a thorough refurbishing to the old shrine, as shown here. For 60 years the sick and crippled have made pilgrimages to the cross to pray for healing. And, here, too, girls have come to pray for good husbands, GOP Farm Plan Called Cutthroat Competition | $97 tor the first quarter of 1935 to $1,860 in the first quarter of 1936... “Only last Thursday night, the na-|, oe ee ton tion heard the governor of Kansas spoon salt, id make caustic references to these} The real trick in making popovers, ts. He pointed out that |no matter what kind of pan you use, <onaese) Inner ve .|iron or tin, is to be sure the pans imports of cheddar-cheese from Can: are piping hot before you put the bat- ence Tuesday that “free competitive) ada were nearly 4,000,000 pounds ir lter in. Bear this in mind, and your enterprise” advocated by Governor} the first six months of 1936 5 cOm-|ponovers will be all you could hope ‘Alf M, Landon was “cut-throat ARE pared with only 500,000 ponnds a ” for. petition” and “a system of agricul-| same period of 1935. Why e Not} “First. grease the pans thoroughly ture for the most part according to! tell you the total of cheese imports} and put them in @ hot oven until the the law of tooth and fang.” from countries other than Canada| tat begins to steam. His address to the Chicago Pure! was about 2,000,000 pounds less in the Milk association, a cooperative dairy producer's group, was the first of five Politic: es scheduled for this e corn belt. Wallace said the Republicans’ had proposed “a combination of the. Winner, 8. D., Sept. 29.—(#)—Tom Kutis, 50, farmer near here, was found | queeeesesee—eeeee cesses SS shot to death Monday night, the ap- parent victim of a chicken thief whom he surprised in his yard. State justice department agents said evidence indicated the farmer, investigating a noise late at night. had fired a shotgun toward a chicken coop and that a return charge had struck him in the chest. Three sacks stuffed with live chickens were found near the coop. Today’s Recipe Popovers This recipe makes 12 large popovers. formed is a sacred obliga- tion of every American. Wallace Says Kansan Has Set for Negative Philosophy on Agricultural Aurora, Ill, Sept. 29.—(4)—Secre- In the meantime, beat the eggs first seven months of 1936 than 1 about two minutes, add the milk and the same period in 1935? He did not) beat again. tell you that in 1927 we Imported! The more you beat them, the-more pounds of cheese from|air in the batter, making lighter, bet- ter popovers, ° Sift in the flour, mixed with the Smoot-Hawley tariff act and the fed- eral farm 6oard” as an agricultural program gnd that recent speeches by Landon Bad set forth “the governor's negative philosophy of farm policy.” Replies to Charges Expanding his speech to include administration relief measures Wal- lace said these had been “assailed on two grounds: that they employ un- deserving people on worthless -pro- fects, and that they result in an orgy of extravagant spending.” In reply,-he said “no one in the government would contend that the employment program has been per- féct,” but he added that “fifteen million people were jobless and many of them hungry; refusal to take ac- tion would have meant complete and devastating collapse of our economic system.” Farmers, he said, “have been made | @ special target for claims that the government is guilty of waste and extravagance which will burden fu- ture generations with debt.” Recalls War Cost “We have spent less than half our world war outlay for destruction of lives and property,” Wallace said of recovery program costs and added that the “net increase in our public debt” after allowing for “recoverable advances” was “ it seven billions.” ‘Yeu would ” Wallace said, “that the dairy farmers were being ruined by imports from Canada. One newspaper recently said: ‘importa- tions of cream have leaped upward by some 2,000 percent.’ But here is the awful truth: the increase was from Wallace said there was a campaign “to frighten people i scarcity” and he termed this “non- tell yo uthat in 1927 we imported sense.” Wallace said the 1936 soil conserva- throat competition between dairy, ing.” Lester Rock, a six-foot, 180-pound first baseman for the Bensonville, Ark,, club of the Arkansas-Missouri League, has been purchased by the Chicago White Sox.- The state department of agricul- | Mississippi farms this year. | 5. ©. Holton, Mississippt commis- state's 1936 crop value at 200 million dollars. tion program “tends to prevent cut-}grees) oven for 20 minutes, salt. into believing] Lastly add the melted butter. Now, pour the batter into the Place in @ moderately hot (350 de- ‘When the popovers are done they | f cattle and pork producer groups | will pop over the sides and top of the er to avert disastrous price slash-|tins to about 2 to 3 inches. They will be brown on top and look sbsolu- tely delicious, Use % cup butter, 3 tablespoons powdered sugar, 1 cup flour and 1 cup nut meats (broken). Cream butter, add powdered sugar ture says approximately 240,000 tons | and blend well. Add flour slowly and ot commercial fertilizer were used on | mix thoroughly. Fold in nut meats. Shape into small crescent shaped rolls about the size of a small finger. Place on greased baking sheet and , estimates his | bake in greased oven (350 degrees) for sioner of agriculture, estimat peste toca laine yo Powdered Roll in sugar while warm. WEDNESDAY AND Fresh Pork Hocks, per Ib. ... 9c ok ee Ox Tails, asd Hens, Ib. 1 7c Q Salmon Steaks, fresh red, per Ib. Fresh Halibut Steak, per Ib. .... ‘Beef Short Ribs, per Ib. ..... 12c Michigan Concord Grapes, 12 quart 79 c Corner Sh & Front 5‘ Food Market 119 Fifth St., near Broadwa: GET THE HABIT Bring in and Bones. Loading Carloads Daily. Will Pay Highest Market Prices Bismarck Hide & Fur Co. Charies Rigier, Mgr. Telephone 476 'HURSDAY SPECIALS OPEN TILL 9 o'CLOCK EVERY NIGHT Fresh Dressed Pickerel, per Wall-eyed Pike, Ib. ....28e Pure Lard, Ib. .....-+.15¢ Pota 10 Ibs, . 28c Pork and Beans, 22 oz. .10¢e Uncle Wiens Golden || 2.No. 2cans..... 25c || American Cheese, Ib. ..22c || St a ees ee Tt 8