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Benth at a Oe, ill ot ce eee * Signi ‘WEDNESDAY, DEC. 27, 1916. PRISON OF LUYE (5 OCCURED (United Preés.) Granville, Wis.,. Dec. 27.—Milwau- kee county criminals Monday wil oc- cupy new quarters in. the luxurious establishment built here at a cost of $700,000, and said by officials to be one of the largest, finest, most com- fortable county workhotses “in the country. The buildings, of which there are 12, have been under course of con- struction for the last two years. They have a-capacity..for 650 prisoners. Each inmate has a separate cell, while those who sleep in the dormi- tories will have plenty of room and a number of cubic feet of air to breathe. The inmates will have’ lux- uries denied many persons even in ‘WERLOADNG THE STOMACH Causes Incomplete Digestion, Weak- ens the System, and Breeds Dyspepsia. Trial Package of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets Free. Gluttony is as vile a sin as drunk- enness and its evil results are more terrible and far more rapid. The hu- man system -turns into the stomach and alimentary canal from 7 to 35 pounds of .digestive fluid every twen- ty-four hours. Cram your stomach with food and you exhaust these juices. If your stomach cannot digest the food because it lacks juices to do it with you, should either eat less or make more gastric fluids. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets contain ingrediegts one grain of which will digest $/000.grains ‘of food. ‘With Stuart's: Dyspepsia Tablets in your stonggenthe ilMffetts of over-eating aneffemoved; for‘these little tablets when dissolved stick to the food and digest all the good from it. They won’t avandon the stomach and leave a mass, of decaying, undigested food to putrify and irritate the mucous membrane lining. They give greater quantities of gastric fluid, help the intestines enrich the blood, prevent constipation and gluttony, while sin- ful, may yet be made less harmful by the use of these tablets. Every druggist carrie: them in stock; price 50 cents per box, or send us your name and address and we will send you a trial package free by mai]., Address,. F. ‘A. Stuart.Co,, 243 Stuart Bldg., Marshall, Mich, Monarch Coal Could Talk and speak for itself it would tell you that it is the best coal mined. It. will ‘‘keep fire’ longer than the ordinary grades besides sup- plying: you steadily with an) er the papers would be delivered in | abundance of heat. It is the che: ore can buy be- cause dt lasts so much longer, be- cause-it is*clean ‘and contains positively no waste matter. Shall we:.deliverxyou a load to-day? C. A. FINCH Lumber Co. ' PHONE 17 Monarch Bear Creek Owl Creek Nut Anthracite Nut cvcssasaczcssoooocroerees. eonerererees: We have in transit-a car of. strict] fresh frozen Canadian Fish which are of the same quality as those we _had a year ago This is the finest and lowest priced food on the market. orders and watch Frozen Fish of car’s arrival GUSSNER’ Telephone 60_ moderate circymstances. Each: ‘cell will contain a toilet and wash basin, while shower ‘baths will be installed along the cell corridors. So as not to fatigue prisoners, the chair factory has been located in such a manner that they will-not have to walk a great distance. : The factory will turn out thousands of chairs of | all kinds each year. It was built at a-cost of $100,000. FATE OF MARYLAND STL A MYSTERY New York City, Dec. 27—The fate of | [ne steamer Maryland, reported last | night to be. sinking off Sandy Hook | still remained a mystery today. Noth- ing has been heard of her or of the, cutters rushing to her assistance for | more than 24 hours: m It was thought -here today: that a} report may soon be had’from the gov- ernment cutter, Grégham, thought to- day to be in the ‘vicinity where ‘the | Maryland last reported being in dis- tress, SNOW-PLOWS TUNNEL , THRU DRIFTS (Continued trom ‘One to a sled and was piloted-across drifts of snow to. the capitol building. Other state officials resorted to the use of sleds. 3 Men Watch ‘for Rail Dangers, Superintendent Lantry of the North. ern Pacific held night watch in the headquarters at Mandan and in a writ- ten statement given out during last night stated that no snowplows were at that time operating on the Yellow- stone division put “undoubtedly wil! | be before morning.” He was quoted as saying that the storm was the worst in the history of the Northern Pacific railroading since 1896 and that it extended west at Ter- ry, Mont., and as far east as Valley City. Towns and branch lines inthe Red river valley did not suffer to a great extent. Men were stationed along the line of the Yellowstone division from Man- dan west, watching for possible breaks in the rails or other dangers that might arise during the night. Snowbound Train Arrives, Train No. 260 of the Soo line, re-} ported snowbound at Washburn since | early Tuesday afternoon, was dug out by two snowplows which went to its assistance yesterday afternoon and was brought into Bismarck just 24 hours late in covering a distance of 191 miles from Minot to Bismarck. The passengers aboard made a raid on the town of Washburn and almost gobbled up the town’s supplies: Storm Over Winnipeg Today. The storm, which for nearly 54 hours raged with fury, has. moved to- ward the northeast and was this after. noon’ reported central over Winnipeg. It has caused heavy snow and high winds in the northwest; heavy rains in the middle Mississippi and the Ohio | valleys. High pressure and Jow tem- jperatures prevailed this afternoon ov- er the Rocky mountain region and the; Canadian northwest. _ Snow Tonight’s Prediction. Another disturbance of no little mean is reported to have appeared on the north Pacific coast. The indica- tions are for snow tonight followed by. partly cloudy Thursday; continued} cold: and with fresh to strong north- west winds. Edmonton was the coldest point on the weather map, reporting 32 degrees \below at the lowest for last night; Cal- | gary reported -26; Helena,.120; Havre, }-28; Prince Albert, -10; Swift Current, -12, and Williston, -6. CARRIER BOYS HAVE WON THEIR MEDALS Of all the heroes in Bismarck yes- terday none is more deserving of jall praise than The Tribune's carrier jforce. It was left to the boys wheth- ithe teeth of North Dakota’s worst | storm last-evéening, and the boys’ said, | “We'll go to it.” Amd they'did. Ev- eryone, even on the very outskirts of | the city, received their Tribune inj good season. “There's a lot of good stuff in the boys who bucked fast night’s storm rather than disappoint a single cus- tomer,” said the manager of the cir- | culation department today. “Boys | who will do that are going to make | men whom the city will be proud to} own.” meee. | CITY USES BIG GRADER IN ATTACKS ON DRIFTS| Street Commissioner R. L. Best an- j tounced this morning that the city vould make every effort, immediately | 000000000000 22 80000 2LOLED '~ Hold your for announcement | began, watching developments. »; Most impossible for horses to br to restore some semblance of passa- bility to Bismarck’s . storm-choked streets. The street department’s big] itis expected that it will be largely at- grader was rolled out at daybreak this “moriiing ‘and with’ four torses hitched to it, has been employed all day in opening up paths down the middle of the streets. These will en- able the people to get about: until there is time for the small plows to clear the sidewalks. A number of the most prominent thoroughfares ‘will be open by nightfall. . This ‘morning there was nothing to do but to struggle through the drifts. With snow piled four and six fect high, no effort was ‘made by the av- erage householder to clear his side-} walk, and-even if he had, the oasis would have proven short-lived. BOY IN STORM ALL NIGHT FREEZES HANDS AND FEET) Devils Lake, N. D., Dec.” 27—Anton | Lauritzer, a fourteen-year-old boy, | lost in the storm last night, feet and’ hands were badly frozen. NO GREAT CATTLE LOSS. | EXPECTED FROM STORM Local stockman do not anticipate that the loss of live stock as a ‘re- sult of the storm will be as great as generally believed. They point to the fact that the strong wind swept large areas clean of snow, and that these bare spots, for the time at least, will supply sufficient forage for the cattle and horses. The cold was not in- tense, and where there was any shel- ter at all the suffering from this was not great. There is at least four times as much hay and forage feed in the cattle country as there was at the time of last winter's heavy snows, when so many thousands of cattle perished, and unless there is more snowfall, followed by very severe cold, no great loss is feared. NORTHERN PACIFIC HOPES TO. CLEAR BY NIGHTFALL Mandan, N. .D, Dec, 27—“If the storm does not berak again, we will have traffice restored on the main line by 5 or 6 o'clock this evening, announced — Suverintendent. P. H. Lantry of the Mandan division of the Northern’ Pacific this morning, who has been in the city since the storm Supt. Lantry assiting him in the campaign against the storm,’ Trainmaster Wynn of Dickin- son. Last night big snowplows were dispatched over the main line in both directions from Mandan, and __ this morning the drifts on the Mott line were attacked. Later in the day the drifts on the Killdeer branch were at- tacked. It is expected that freight will be moving freely over the main line by night, but no effort will be made to operate freight trains on the branch lines until conditions are more set- ted. | CHRISTMAS STOCKS OF EATABLES FORTUNATE. If Bismarck was down on the cards for a blizzard, it was very fortunate | that it should come around Christmas time, when every larder in the city was well-stocked, for many grocery and meat houses yesterday made no attempt to deliver, while the one or two that did offer service had more has here business than could be handled. One|: grocery started out two different wag- ons and both broke down within a few blocks of the store. It was al- st the cutting north wind, and the aver- age housewife when hubby came home to dinner last evening thanked her lucky stars for remnants of the Christmas turkey. 5 A majority of Bismarck homes. are. also well stocked with coal, the fuel in‘the bins being ‘sufficient for sev- eral days’ consumption. By tomorrow morning the delivery of coal can be resumed, so far as the streets are con- cerned, but there will be some diffi- cay in getting into the average back yard. DICKINSON FIREMEN TO | HVE A JAL BALL JAN. 1) Deg,:27--Firemen la¥ cunning thetr F : was | Plater, of the American steamer s found in a’ haystack after 24 hours’ ramento, who arrived here trom Beu- | exposure to the wind and cold. Both | nos Aifes,-with a cargo of wheat, re- | of ‘the Series of private parties the! club has arranged for the winter and tended. A special program of dance numbers has ben arranged by the en tertainmient committee and O'Connor's orchestra .will furnish the music, CERMANS ALLOW AMERICAN BOKT -SAFE CONDUCT (Associated Press) Havre, France, Dec. 27—-Capt aay | ny 2 | ports. that-he was-stopped in the Eng-! \lish channel-by a German submarnic. | The commander of the submarine or- | dered hini“on"board with his papers j and after examining them are carrying wheat, which we con- sider ‘contraband of ‘war, to France. Mt is lucky for you that your ship is| American,: otherwise we should have! torpedoed you with great _ pleasure. You can proceed. Good luck to you.” The only steamed by the name of Sacramento listed in available mari- time records is reported by the New York Maritime Register to have been recently transferred from American ip. She was black- h Admiralty in Ap- ril, 1916, on cha of aiding Ger- man ships in the Pacific, but was re- moved from the black list last Octot- ber. COLLEGE ORYS IN SESSION ‘Lexington, trains from St. 1 ago and special cars from all pal of the country will start for this place to- | night, with several thousand members of the Students National Intercolleg- iate Prohibition association’s national convention here tomorrow, W. J. Bryan is to be the big feature j of the meeting, and it is planned to | give the Commoner the organization s assurance that he h complete support. in his nationa prohibition fight. Mr. Bryan is expected to out- line some of his plans for national prohibition. The convention will end December 31. 3 hours 90 miles Daily d Through Lv. Sleeping An Car { IUANIVORUHNONNOUNAQQUUUUOSEONROAEROEOUANERAOUUANSOUNUEQOGERUGAEOGRGSHSEUNEEOOELUUOESUOOGEELAL 7 € Omaha. . . « 1) Salt Lake City 5 Ar, Los Angeles dr, Pasadena NAA QUICK TIME SHORT LINE From MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL LESS THAN ANY OTHER THROUGH CAR ROUTE TO LOS ANGELES 5:00pm See 30pm Thi 5:10pm Thi . Open Sections, Compartments, Drawing Room—Via the NORTH WESTERN LINE Special pamphlet showing first class and tourist E, A. WHITAKER, Traveling Pass. N 396 Robert Street, St. Paul, G JacRAE, Gen. Pass. Agent, S' 1) Omaha \ Limited ond Dav | Los Angeles rd Day \ Limited rd Day - ete. to California Traveling Pass. Agent ficollet Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. "PAUL, MINN, STUNNER LOBBY SOUND LIE TOWER OF BEL he lobby of the Chicago, Dee. 27.—' Dearborn hotel here sounded like a! WANTED—10 men reunion of the Amalgamted Workers of the Tower of Babel all talking at once today. It is headquarters for the delegates to the three-day meet- ing of the ‘Modern Language Associ ation of America, opening here today. Hl Teachers of English, German, French. | taken to the detention hospital with Spanish, Danish, Norwegian and Swedish were present, greeting new- comers in their respective languages. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY LOST—Gold signet ring; initial Return to Tribune. 1 Apply Wach- 1227-3 20 men to work on ter Transfer Co, ba FARGO MAC > 1 HOSPITAL Fargo, N. D., -Judge Rob- ert, city magistrate, was this week attack of erysipelas. His s been failing rapidly of recommended by the a se condi late. on h Rest wa: attending physician. WHEN YOU ASK FOR s,BUTTER , ¢ NORTAERN lines of expectation'to Elks’ Hall for their annual ball, which will be held} the evening of January 1. The fire- | men’s ball is always one of the big | annual events of the season here. | Additional Society News | | oo Miss Isabelle McGillis Married at High Noon’ At high -noon today Miss Mary Isa-! belle McGillis, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Duncan J. McGillis, be-| came the bride of Dr. Harold Tyner Perry of Litchville, N..D, Their mar- riage was solemnized in the home of} the bride’s brother-in-law and_ sister, | ;Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Wallace, of Ave-| nue B, with Rev..H. C. Postlethwaite | of the Presbyterian church officiating. The bride wore a gown of white satin | draped with tulle and lace and carried | a shower bouquet of bridal roses and valley lilies. She was attended by Mrs. H. F. O’Hare of this city and Dr. Per- | Ty's best man was Attorney H. E.| |O'Hare. The Wallace home was beau- tifully appointed in a‘ color scheme of pink and green, ctusters of pink roses | being used in profusion. A wedding | luncheon supplemented the ceremony | and covers were laid for 12 at the bride’s table. Dr, Perry and his bride | departed on’ No. 4, for an extended | eastern trip. At home cards announce! February 1 in Litchville. Out-of-town ; /guests included the bride's brother-in- | {law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph! ‘Clemens, of Valley City. The bride is jone of the best known of the younger | }society people of the city and is well {known in educational circles. “Dr. | Perry enjoys a large dental practice in| | Litchville. | | se # | St..Elmo Dance Postponed. | The third of the series of dancing | iparties given by members of St. Elmo; eee and scheduled to be held this |* evening in the Knights of Pythias hall, | 'has been indefinitely postponed be- cause of the weather conditions. oe 8 Dancing Party Tonight. _ Large bob-sleds will be utilized to convey the guests to the dancing party this evening in Patterson hall, given by the Capital Dance club, This is one Prices: Matinee---25c, 50c and 75c. Seats on Sale at Finney’s Orug Store Mail orders now when accompanied by check or money 2 Twice Daily 2:30 & 8:15 p. m. Days STARTING NEW YEARS DAY Matinee Monday, January |, at ‘Auditorium Bismarck, North Dakota order to cover seats required Night---50c, 75c and $!