The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 19, 1916, Page 4

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THE TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. B., as Second Class Matter. ISSUED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily, by carrier, per month. -$ 50} Daily, by mail, per year. 4.00 | Weekly, by mail, per yea: + 1.50} ‘Member Audit Bureau of Circulation THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) LOCAL WEATHER BULLETIN. For the 24 hours ending at 12:00, noon, Dec. 19, 1916: ‘Temperature at 7:00 a. m. .. ‘Temperature at 12:00, noon Highest yesterday . Precipitation .... Highest wind velocity Forecast. For North Dakota: Generally fair | and continued cold tonight and Wed- nesday. i Temperature | Calgary .. ie 2] ch 2] Galvi * 48 j Havre . ~— 6] Helena . 16 Kansas City 24| Miles City . 0 Moorhead —30} Pierre ... —16) Prince Alvert . . 28 St. Paul . 14 Williston . —20 ‘Winnipeg .. . —30 Swift Current . —12 ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Meteorologist. SPSS EEE EEE EOD + © the new book.—Austin Phelps. OFF HOFOFHOOO OH THEY COME HIGH. Every person that knows the Con-/ gress of the United States must have been rather jolted to read that its house of representatives is determin- ed to make congressmen cost the na- tion more. 7 You might think they cost it a-plen- ty now—$7,500 for salary, $1,500 al- lowance for private secretary, addi- tional items for mileage, stationary, supplies and sundries. To these pleasant features these gentlemen have now voted to add $500 to the allowance for private secretary, and $900 a year to each member for another clerk. Total, $10,400 on the salary list and a lot besides. ‘The nation has on its hands at pres:| ent a collection of 435 of this article, , and considering the” net results in ; anything but. gabble, it seems a mighty poor buy. For instance, the present Congress was in session nine months and four days, you might say, continuously, and then had to let much of the work jerman for Wear the old coat and buy |} more friendship. They lack nearly everything—scarcely a man has an overcoat, many of them have merely !a top-coat, an undershirt, a pair of | trousers and a pair of shoes—and |x, maybe the thermometer will go down to zero during the night! With the approach of the bitterest | period of the winter season, when men | will suffer most intensely on account jof the cold, the hearts and pocket- books of comfortable folk ‘should be j opened. But when your pocketboow -lis open, don’t forget to open your heart! Some of us are driving hard to change social and economical condi- tions so there will no longer be home- less men. But don’t let's wait until that time comes before giving a boost —no matter how he got there. Be a “good fellow!” ROBERT CLARKE. DES IN HOSPTA Robert Clarke, aged 54, former tow- the Soo Line, died at 9 o'clock this morning in a local hospi- tal from pneumonia, Mr, Clarge was compelled to resign this position with the Soo Line last fall on account of ill health. This was the second time within a few months he contracted pneumonia. The widow and five children sur-) vive: ie of the local West- | aul Jacobsen, | Ss A of Enderlin, | Anderson, LaVerne, Minn.; Mrs. Ammons of Ariz. Fu-! neral services will be in charge of the Independent Order of Odd Fel- lows, the time to be announced later. PETER D. HORTON CIES Peter D. Morton, aged 38, of Wil- lard, Mont., died in the home of his| brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Thompson, in Third street, at 3 o'clock a. m. today, after an illness; extending over two years, Mr. Mor- ton came to Bismarck over two months ago and for a time was a pa- tient in the Bismarck hospital. He was born in McConnelsburg, Pa., but came to North Dakota in 1885 with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam M. Morton, locating in Kidder county. Mr. Morton leaves a widow and three children, the youngest. being only four months old. With him at the, time of death were his parents, his wife and sister. Two brothers, | GeorgesO., of Steele, and Thomas F., of Rabi son, N. D., also survive, The bod Will be taken ‘to the home of his Parents in Steele, where funeral ser- vices and interment will be made. No arrangements for, the funeral have to the man who ig now down and out | To Arrive ... + 165% ‘ No, 1 Durum . 11%: Choice .. + 175%. To Arrive 170% Choice to arr . 175%: ;No, 2 Durum . 165% @170% | No. 3 Yellow Corn . 88 @ 88% To Arrive .... 88 Other Grades . 7 @.86 | No, 4-Yellow-Corn to-arr 86 AFTER LONG TLNESS Paunr wankers? DULUTH. December 171%) . 1 Northern on trk .. 2 Northern on trk .. . 3 Northern on trk .. . 1 Nor, to arr . 2 Mont. Hard on trk 166% . 2 Mont. Hard to arr 166% ¥. 16344@168% 143% @163% 171% | No. 1 Spot Durum . 173% @175% + No. 2 Spot Durum ..... 165% @170% | No, 1 Spot Durum to arr 173%@175% ;December . +e 178%) ;May . 175%) Oats on trk and to arr .. 46%@ 47 ; Rye on trk and to arr .. 131 | Barley on trk ...... Flax on trk and to arr. 70 @108 286% | Choice Flax on trk . 287% December . 285 | May .... 289% { ‘High May . 179% ‘Low .. 172. | Close 1:50 p. m. fee So i | MINNEAPOLIS. | |No. 1 Hard ..... ++ 178% @178% | No. 1 Northern . 170% @178% | [Choice .. « 176% i |Regular . + 189% @172% | |Choice to arr . 174%: | | No. 2 Northern . 165% @171% No, 3 Wheat ... No, 2 Mont. Hard . + 178% @168% wee 165% @168% No. 2 Mont, White 51 @ 88 No. 3 White Oats . AT%@ 48 To Arrive ....... 47h , No. 4 White Oats 46%@ 47 Barley .. » 78 @102 Choice + 102 @111 Rye ... + 130 @131 Rye to arr. . 130 @181 . 281% @286% | « 281% @285% | see 110% | « 173%) vee 167% ST. PAUL, HOGS—Receipts, 13,500. Market, steady to weak. ‘Range, $9.25 to $9.75; bulk, $9.55 to $9.60. CATTLE—Receipts, 3500. Killers, steady. Steers $4.25 to $10.25; cows and heifers, to $7.50; calves, 25¢ lower, at $4.25 to $11.99; stockers and feeders, quiet and lower to weak, at $3.50 to $7.75. SHEEP—Receipts, 5300. Market, weak. Lambs, $7.00 to $12.25; weth- ers, $6.00 to $9.00; ewes, $5.50 to $8.50. ~~ CHICAGO. HOGS—Reeceipts, 50,000. Steady. Bulk, $9.75 to $10.10; light, $9.20 to $10.00;' mixed, $9.55 to $10.20; heavy, $9.70 to $10.25; rough, 79.70 to $9.85; 2:30 P. M. FAMOUS ‘(PEACE AMERICA’ So Prices: AT THE In the MIDDLE WEST is urged by a First Page Editorial in “The Labor Review”, a mouthpiece of organized labor, to see. THOS. H. INCE’S MILLION DOLLAR Cinema Spectacle Read! Read! Read! “The greatest photoplay ever produced—The navel battles are so terrible they are fascin- ating and the audience is held spellbound during the terrific engagements between the hos- tile fleets, during which ships are torpedoed and so real is the picture that one can almost hear the dying screams of. the drowning sailors. It is a pic- ture every working man should see,’ THE MINNEAPOLIS LABOR REVIEW, August 18. Bismarck, 2 DAYS Starting NEW YEARS DAY North Dakota MATINEE MONDAY JANUARY 21st. TWICE DAILY————_8:15 P. M. SPECIAL AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA will interpret the music which has been composed ‘ for this great production. Matinee—25c, 50c and 75c, Night—50c, 75c and $1. mg and Other Specially Composed Numbers Sung by Gifted Soloists. Seats.on Sale at Finney’s Drug Store. ‘ MAIL ORDERS -NOW. 1 = City, Mont., called by the serious ill- ness of her sister, Mrs. W. C. Cole- man. i Can get privilege of bfeaking more CALLED BY ILLNESS, if desired. S: W. 4 Section 18,] Mrs. Charles Snyder of 321 Fourth Township 141; Raid 27¥ {Write for street Iéft this‘ afternoon for Miles ¢ ce; pigs, $7.40 to $9.15. CATTLE—Receipts, 8,000. Steady. Native beef steers, $7.00 to $11.65; been made. 7 & TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY WANTED—Small size bed, dresser it should have done ,to be jammed through ina hurry between now and March 4. RAPID IMPROVEMENT. 12-19-2¢ Most of the barren result of our in- vVestment in congressmen isn’t the Congressmen’s fault. The house - 1s : too large. No system on earth could get firat-class results out of: a legis- lature -of 435. members, ail: rattling! around in the show. ‘But in view of a treasury deficit of Rearly $300,000,000, to say nothing of any financial storm signals there may ‘be flying, this doesn’t seem to be the grand old time to be boosting this par- ticular expenge. At least, not untfl we have found out something about the privations and sufferings of mem- ‘bers on their present allowance of $9,000, and more. We know several families that get along on less. as ‘Now will the H. C. of I, kindly Make some’ peice ‘proposals? BE A GOOD FELLOW. Have you ever been hungry—really hungry—so hungry that you’ve been tempted to knock down another man who possessed that which would give you food? " Have you ever been so poor that You hadn’t a place to sleep, outside of *} a park ‘bench, or a doorway, or over @ warm grating? Most solutions of the social prob- Jems of the day are based upon the assumption that the average man is wellnigh ideal—all that he needs ,is * a “system” to bring in the glad new day—thdy“milleniat dawn.” Whatéver may be the aguments for or against this proposition, it’s safe to say that there will always be some men who will drop by the wayside, * beaten and discouraged, no matter what our economic system may be. Some of them were literally cursed into the world! Nobody really want- ed them, at any time in their lives. How could they ever have had a fair chance to make good? What are you going to do with these men—allow them to go straight to hell—every way? They're near enough to it now—physically and men- tally. Whatever else may be true of these men with regard to their blood and breed and burdens, there’s no doubt that their hearts beat like other men’s hearts, and that in the main, their needs are just the same. But how can one who hasn't travel- ed the rough road understand what .Rapid improvement is noted. in the condition of August E. Johnson, Wash- burn banker injured when struck by an automobile in that village last Thursday’evening and brought to the Bismarck hospital for treatment. YT ir pepsin aris remo The: showing of the “Common Law” at;.the Auditorium, tomorrow and Thursday nights, starts at 8:15 o'clock. UG ACID POISONING! (By M. C. Lucas, M. D.) The most eminent physicians recog- nize that uric acid stored up in the system is the cause of rheumatism, that this uric acid poison is present in the joints, muscles, or nerves. By ex- perimenting and analysis at the In- valids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute in Buffalo, N. Y., Dr. Pierce discovered a combination of native remedies that he called Anuric—which drives out the uric acid from the system, and in this way the pain, swelling and in- flammation subside. If you are a suf- ferer from rheumatism, backache, pains here or there, you can obtain Anuric at any drug store and get re- lief from the pains and ills brought about uric acid. Swollen hands, ankles, feet are due to a dropsical condition, often caused by disordered kidneys. Naturally when the kidneys are deranged the blood is filled with poisonous uric acid which settles in the tissues of the feet, ankles, wrists or back as uratic salts; or under the eyes in bag-like forma- tions. It is just as necessary to keep the kidneys acting properly as to keep the bowels active to rid the body of pois- ons. The very best possible way to take care of yourself is to take a glass of hot water before meals and an Anuric tablet, In this way it is readily dis- solved with food, picked up by the blood and finally reaches the kidneys, where it has a cleansing and tonic ef- fect. Step into the drug store and ask for a 50-cent package of Anuric, or send Dr. Pierce 10c for trial package. An- uric—many times more potent than lithja, eliminates uric acid as hot wat- er melts sugar. A short trial will con- vince you. | Ty _EATON'S ‘INGEILAND western steers, $7.00 to $10.00; stock- and rug. Phone 351X. ers and feeders, $5.00 to $8.10; cows and heifers, $3.85 to $10.00; calves, $8.00 to $11.50. $11.00 to 13.00. machine. It represents more than son, This new invention of the world’s great- est inventor is in no real sense a talking lars spent in research work by Mr. Edi-. FOR RENT—Warm, ‘cosy room ~in “modern home, for one or two. Phone SHEEP—Receipts, 18,000. Market,| _459W. ge lest weak. Wethers, $8.85 to $9.80; lambs,| FOR RENT—One quarter farm land; 20 acres broken and good hay land terms. M. J. George, Ashley, ‘NX. Dak. AR 8-6t FOR RENT—Nicely ‘furnished: ..front room in good location. Phone 687. 12-19-34, Will There be Real your Home at Christmas? There is not one so unmusical as to believe that a talking machine produces real music. At best, a talking machine, no matter how much it costs, no matter what artists make re- cords for it, no matter what claims are made for it by its manufacturers, gives only 2 hollow imitation of the original music. The NEW EDISON | Is Nota TALKING MACHINE of thousands of music lovers, it has been proved conclusively that when an artist sings—or plays—in comparison with the New Edison’s Re-Creation of that artist’s performance, it is impossible to disting- uish the original from the Re-Creation. a million dol-, It represents the achievement of his am. bition to produce a musical instrument which Recreates all forms of music so per-. fectly that the original cannot be disting- uished from the Re-Creation. By hundreds of tests, before hundreds Hear This New Invention Come in to our store and let us give youa concert of Re-Created music. Come ers. We shall the critics say. The music critics of more than 200 of America’s leading newspapers testify to this fact in the columns of their own pap- Music in be glad to show you what The Christmas and . New Year’s Greeting , that is most expressive of yourself, most characteristic of the holiday spirit, most quickly deliv- ered and most joy- fully received is a WESTERN Telegram Special holiday forms are 4 sided to add to the appreciation of your good wishes. THE WESTERN UNION TE fats LEGRAPH CO. ete Lees aa SEE NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS Runge & Co. these men are up against!—the. fierce temptations, the horrible pull of the, old life, standing again and again on| the brink of perdition, because they | at any time. You will always be welcome. There is no obligation to buy. We merely want you to hear what we consider the world’s greatest musical in- strument. Cafe and Bakery Formerly Atlantic Cafe have failed and failed and failed. | bese men need strong arms about ¥ LEN HART DRUG co. Expert Service Reasonable Prices Sean reas tit ahelter and owe rig STORE “4 CITY NATIONAL BANK BUILDING, BISMARCK .

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