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2 F hn eo MENDING WORK BUSTES WOMEN PAT PEN HERE Five Female Inmates of State : Prison Do Needlework and Patching For Men = Life at the state prison here is fever “just one sweet song” but curiously enough it has been made & trifle easier for the male prisoners by the fact that the number of women} prisoners now 18 larger than it nas Been for years. i The reason is that the women in- thates have taken over the work re- Quiring skill with a needle and are going the darning, patching and fhending for the men. For a long time the proper care of e clothers of the men inmates has Pisiesven a problem to the prison management. Few of the men did good work with the needle and the fhumber who wanted that sort of > job was even smaller. The lone} he couldn’t stem the rising tide of ending and patching which 350 men Folled up. : Now the number of women inmates Has risen to five and one of the Warden’s problems has been solved, temporarily ut least. In fact there isn't enough work to ‘keep them all usy and occasionally they resort to| fancy work. 2 Since the number of women at the state prison has always been small! ittle proviion has been made for hem and the women’s ward is_over- growded. Since there are cells for jonly four women the management has had to place two women in one gell until the number is reduced or fother provision can be made. _ Only once before in the history | f the prison has it inmates at one time and that number jhas never been exceeded. ‘Changes Cause Delay In White House Work = Washington — ) — Repairing the White House has turned out to be ‘pretty much like repairing almost any “house. Minor contingencies which could ‘not be forseen when the specifica- tions and antimates were made have Jayed completion of the revon- ateltiGon of the third floor and roof, begun last March, and have added “about $40,000 to the cost of ‘the work. Nevertheless, the heavy construc- tion is expected to be finished early ‘in August, with only the painters remaining on the job. They are ‘not being hurried, since indications ‘are that President Coolidge will not _return to Washington before Sep- tember. Original plans called for all work- men to be out of the White House ‘by July 16. The specifications worked, out by Army Engineess for athe. work, however, were necessari- “ly based to a large extent on as- sumptions. Details of the wooden -trussing which supported the third floor and of the roof construction could not be examined until much of the ancient material had been removed. This could not be started until the Executive family moved out. When it did become possible many surprises were encountered by the engineers and their plans had to be altered at many points. Furthermore, since the object of remodeling the third floor was to as pleasant and habitable as possible, many details of arrange- ment and construction could be deter- mined finally only on the basis of aesthetic considerations as the work proceeded, with frequent minor charges involving delay and addition- al expense. Bootleggers Given Liberties at Jail Benton, Md., Aug. 12—(#)—Because ¥ 18 convicted bootleggers lodged in jail here “aren’t like other crimin- - als,” Sheriff William H. Jackson says *- he permits them to fish in the Chop- tank river close by, loiter through < long afternoons on its bank, and play baseball in the jail yard, an» un- walled plot behind the lockup. The sheriff said he also has taken “sev- eral of the boys” for a ride at night so they could get some air. “I believe in treating the boys . fair, and in return they do not cause “ bit of trouble,” he said. “They locked in their cells at night, and . then I let them out in the jail yard. < Th boys can fish in thé river if they- * feel like it, or sometimes they play .» Pinochle or baseball, just as they feel like doing. None of them ever made an attempt to eseape.” & . They may not, however, sit on the * front porch of the building, which also is the sheriff's residence, for: ~ “Once the boys sat up on the front * porch of the jail, but they threw so x many cigarette stumps about that ‘ my wife m: them stay in the back yard. Then they went upon the porch of a neighbor, but I stopped that and told them they must stay around the jail yard.” hen informed of the situation, United States District . Attorney * Woodcock said he would investigate and prosecute those responsible if it-is found that the prisoners are eranted “ill Vibe : ‘ DRUNK, HE CARRIES . 3 AWAY ‘REFRIGERATOR New York.—(NEA)—From the tall corn country of Iowa came Buck Ashwood the other: bent on look- ne Married 72 Years, This HAPPINESS! ‘couple Tells Brides and Grooms How Its to be Found By NEA Service Knoxville, Tenn. Aug. 12.—Si years before the opening of the Civil | War a Tennessee girl named Mary; Adeline fell in love with a suitor named A. V. Deadrick. Deadrick, son of the chief justice | of Tennessce’s supreme court, was just 21. But Mary Adeline was only 14—too young for romance, her par- ents decided. So she was forbidden to go through with the marriage that she and Deadrick planned, But the young people of today didn’t invent the practice of defying parental wishes. According, parents forgave her afterward. “May you children have many years of happy married life,” they said. The wish has been fulfilled as few wishes are. For Mr. and Mrs. Dead- rick have just celebrated their 72d wedding anniversary celebrated it surrounded by six children and near- ly three-score ! grandchildren and great-erandchildren. Deadrick is 94; Mrs. Deadrick will be 87 this fall. The two are still ac- tive, spending much time conducting Narrative of Hunt by Well- Known Pioneer Priest Tells of Hunting Animals, Mak- ing Pemmican of Their ‘ Flesh; Describes Training of ‘Buffalo Horses’ Grand Forks, N. D., Aug. 12—@)— What the buffalo meant to early North Dakota fur traders is explained in the following article by O. G. Lib- by, head of the history department at North Dakota University. It is the tenth of a series written for the As- sociated Press and its North Dakota |member newspapers. By 0. G. Libby Among the Indians and early trap- pers and fur traders of the north- west the buffalo hunt wag the most mportant event of the year. From this hunt, especially in the fall when the animals were in good condition, were obtained hides and rohes for tents and clothing and the main food, supply of the village or trading post. The following description of a North Dakota buffalo hunt is taken from the narrative of a well-known | pioneer priest, Father Belcourt: “At | last the signal was given. We strike | spurs to our horses and these thick and heavy masses flee swiftly before us. Severa! are overthrown at the first onslaught. Others, feeling the: selves mortally wounded, stop, fu ously tearing up the ground or paw- ing it with their front hoofs, like a summer resort turesqueless Unaka mountains near here. Adeline crept out of the hous life. night and eloped with the young man, despite her 14 rs. And her There are the rules. a shine in the eyes of ‘these two old people that.hints that rules, after: all, WHO WILL BE re simply rules that the chief thing | is something that can hardly.be ex- pressed, that'springs from the heart and makes all the rest follow as a matter of course, You imagine that if they spoke ‘further they add: love.” LIBBY EXPLAINS WHAT BUFFALO TO EARLY NORTH DAKOTA FUR TRADERS or three rows, upon tripods of wood. After a few days this meat is they fold up and fasten’ i of 60 to 70 pounds in weight, tenderloin, the belly pieces. up to be beaten to powder, hides serving as a threshing’ floor. “This meat, having been previously exposed to a steady heat upon a dry- Mr .and Mrs. R. V. Deadrick, photographed on their 72d wedding had five women | anniversary. Here are their rules for a success- ful marriage: “The most important thing to be ‘ cénsidered after the honeymoon {s|tte,doot with its hoof, demands” ta to bear and forbear witheach other's | different opinions. “Never do troubles “Let each do his or her part in the! best way possible, “Practice self jenial,” the. hide, Capitol Theatre Friday & Saturday, Aug. 12th & 13th. . The Greatest Dog Actor of all, : TIN TI RI in the biggest gnd rams, Under a bristling tuft of hair their eyes sparkle with rage and warn the most intrepid hunters to keep at a respectful distance. | Gather Together When Attacked when they are attacked. which have the cows, gat! The bulls ctten separated from ier together first, then | flee before the horses until’ they | rejoin. the cows. ter gather | together in their turn and flee be- | fore the former, but much more rap- idly. To reach the cows one must get through the compact phalanx. of the bulls and it is in this that the chief danger. lies. “Here is an incident to illustrate | this statement, During last sum- mer’s hunt, one savage, thrown far from his horse which a bull had overturned, was for a quarter of an hour the toy of one of these furious animals. ee Il the time at tun, he tossed the unfortunate hunt: er again and again 15 or 20 feet in | the air,.always catching him on his horns, To give a feeble idea of the imi strength of these animals, it suffices to tell that one of them, | happening to pass through the lin of: carts, threw himself on one of Pyeel with one toss of his horns he ae face ras ek three times. Now this vel irawn b; horse, carried a load of more th H baffalo bent 4 Ansorthad ‘ described | hotel in the is anything which you would be ashamed to have the other know about. “When them with a smile. “Work both to the same uim of come up, face! But there is would “And the greatest of these is dry; bundles the the under- shoulder pieces, the large humps and The rest is piled some best picture of his entire career. ; Starring RIN-TIN ‘ng frame of green wood, become srittle and easy to reduce to pow- ler. The fat of the interior having deen cut up and melted ‘in large couldrons. of sheet iron, is poured yut on the powdered meat which is irred up with paddles until all the powder is well saturated; then this mixture is placed in skin ks from which they have not even taken the trouble to remove the hair. The sacks so filled are called taureaux or pimikehigan. “If the fat that has been used is that of the udder they are called caureaux fins. me add to fruits such as this mixture dried pears and cherries. fhen they are called taureaux a graines. Their epicures esteem the first kind good, the second better and the third very good. In order to give an idea of the shrinkage of these meats it is sufficient to observe that only half a sack and three quarters of a bundle of meat are gotten from one cow ,80 that the most economi- cal calculate that eight or ten cows are needed to form a load.” Posts Get Supplies The sacks of pemmican thus pre- pared, of 90 pounds each, were dis- tributed by the chief trader to every post in his district once a year and it constituted the food reserve for his men during that part of the win-| Burt Finney, ‘su; 3.50 ter when no game was to be had, | F. H. Carpenter, 13.80 The hunting horse or “buffalo q ios horse” tised in ee is oe tal. Cap! 30 ly trained an rize ie 4 "His master having sey-|Mine Safety 102.28 , left this one his favor- 8 6.15 ite, to let it rest, and on starting off Sait he directed his wife to tie it up; this 691 she did not do. “Noticing that they were startit off without him, the noble animal galloped after us, joined us at the moment of the charge, plunged into the midst of the confusion as if it had been lashed forward by its own- er; then following the cow in all her twists and turns, it seemed to be waiting for her to fall. The charge ended, the horse came back whinny- ing after its master whom it knew very well how to find, although the hunters had scattered here and there over an extent of several miles. “When the camps are changed the tepees are found in positions so dif- ferent that a man sometimes searches for a long time before finding his own lodge; but the horse although it,has been set free at some distance, comes back at a fixed hour. Without making any detours it goes straight to its master’s tepee and striking at periously the reward of the day dts measure of barley.” WED AFTER 50 YEARS Springfield, Mass.—Gilbert «! lor wooed Emma Buck 50 years ago, but their plans to marry wer dis- rupted by a lovers’ quarrel. Taylor, a sailor, departed in a huff. Both married but have been widowed several years. Meeting recently, they rekindled the old romance and wilt marry, NUMBER 183? 4h & wt 8m THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ~~ i "FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1927 , : el cuanrat, Brink & Reibole, ven.oo| Wachter, Pranstet Oxheoting | leap - 5 + See a cemiatas, | Riek gre paee. tee |Qreneeaase Young Hostess - +f itandar: y soline . ‘aterworks . Dept. Z | City Commission [) FUE Scie Levies sap: atermorks Depts eee ee eee ses oe | kg ee Radiator in ‘Toggery, su} jes a Bismarck Spring Service Sta- . ide Mayer, vapplies Sal conte el tion, Inbor .eeeeeeseeee sess 8 26GB Ith. Montgomety, teit.. «thee Biter Blue & White Cab Co, taxis. .25|P, A. Young, sidewalk refund. | 2490] Berger's Welding Wachter Transfer Co, labor.. 152.30{Barroagh’s ' Adding Machine » Modern Machine. Wor A & M-Tire Service, sepaire 5 5 airs ...... , 5.55 Bismarck Motor Co,.la 1205 | Nelson Grocery, groceries 10.00 Bismarck | Grocery a Montgomery Grocery, grocer- ian uc ie s (Truesdale, balance dac 13.94 0.'E. Hanger, room and 2 Ss ake wh: , 10.00 Frank G.\Grambs, fibor..i.i.) 7.75 62.50|N. W. Belt Telep. ‘Co, services | 86.78 Y 71.85| Bismarck Tribute, advertising 1.50 J. Dave Smith, gas book. 4.20 Capital Cafe, meat tick 10.15 Liepsner & Co. suppli 6 Yellow Cab Co., taxis. State Fire & Tornado premiums ; Waterworks pool Waterwo Standard Oil Co. N. W. Bell Tele; J. W. Stratton, engaged ployee from Dakota Business Col-. lege, Fargo—Mr. Presthus and Miss Brown. Many of the “182”? have advanced to executive positions. ig firms specialize on D. B. C. employees because of their AC- TUAL BUSINESS training (co) righted—unobtainable piri ks Remember this when selecting your school. It means quicker employ- ment, better salary, more rapid pro- motion. ‘‘Follow the Succe$$ful’’. Fall » Sept. 5-12. Write F. L. | Watkins, Pres. 806 Front St, Fargo. “TIN In quick succession recently, the : Fargo office of the Standard OilCa.,| - 181st and 182nd em- Every woman likes an ex. tra’ set of these conven!- ent mixing bowls, especial: ly when they can be bought at sucha low price. They are durable, sanitary, and easy to clean. Sizes ‘5, 6, 7, 8, and 9, These sheets. and pillow cases are of standard qual- ity and only ‘because of a tremendous purchase are price. The sheet is 81x90 (uches fa togel aed cases when bedding » demand and that’s the rea- a ed Sortupate td ig this ien Mar. vest-value.: 4 81x90” Seamiess Sheet: 2:42x36" Piitow Cases Bowl Sets we able to announce this Transfer Motor Vehicle De Auditorium, pay roll....... R. H. Thistlewaite, refund cen: od ir Harris & Woddmansee, stip- F. G. Grambe, or evening lies bere 780| Wachter Transfer Co., 54.50 in gleaming glasses, it instantly be- John Gustafson, \poor relief 15,00 | Jarrel Hdw. Co., supplies..... 13.85 speaks the thoughtful h Mrs. Mary Hayes, poor relic. 25.00) Quanrud,. Brink & | Reibold |, There are wix reasons why Orange. John Gordon, poot relief..... 1000 supplies 5 1.87 Crush is so sw deliciqua: County Au 1 assesy- Jarrell Hd 11.50; First, the sacs of I ntent ....... .84| Capital Laundry 12.07/-mext, the delicate flavor of their H. T.\Murphy Co. 78.06] Fechheimer Bro: | poet: next, the sestful tang of the Golder ‘West Laundry, laundry 17.05) plies ..... 14.06 it acid found in lemons jad send Ce ve drayage 4 Glosby. sea ; Mepelie m 1.60. end ne. an th wy pure ‘achter \Transfer .25 | Western nion ‘food color such used cakes B, K. Skeels, supplie: 14.70) Co. services . $e 4.50 @nd candies, healthful carbonated Wachter Transfer Co 10.00) Globe Gazette Pt > pl tase cael mega Nothing % rocety. grocei ++ 2. plies ...,.. 1.00 Washburn Lignite Coal Co., Cavata Paint Co. 12.00 ' 4, Orange-Crush may be by | nnat a8 5.20] Mi na’ Brych, laundry. 1.45 ‘ene case either from one’s Land | Bridgeman Russe PE Jarrell Hdw. Co. supplies 2.80 ar Thr eee eG 28,77| Blue & White Cab Co., taxi... 7.60 Bismarck‘ Tribune, legal pr Accessory Service Station, {ing af +++) 128.36 supplies ..... ae 17.00 H. H. Pilmoor, painting 7.00 | Hughes Eletcric nt... 726.80 Carpenter Lumber Co., gup~ Consolidated Vtilitics Co., gas plies... qesssessecleage 24.20] Hughes Electric Co., current. 12.73 A &M Tire Service, labor... 2.50] Standard. Oii Co.; gasoline. 25.00 oes oe tee A Wonderful Value We believe this 14-quart dish pan is going to delight many, because every wom: an prefers the smooth ton-porous; snow -. white surface, No corners, seams. or rivéts to, harbor dirt. Bleached With Colored ‘Borders Size 14x80 inches. An unusual value in medium quality Turkish towels.’ They are made of single-loop cotton yarns bleached a pure white. Soft, absorbent and durably Bveryone familiar with dairy pails that the “Cream City” pail is one of the beet Thess pails are exceptionally..well during the HarvestWeek j,at_ a very low ‘This value é ing keeping with The Surg ‘Company policy to offer. the best at the lowest: 14 Quart Size?*sible price, Hach— ci panes welcome this opportunity because they fealize the offering is un. usual. An extra set of dishes in the-home when they can be purchased at price. announced in the Harvest Sale will help you solve serving problems in an economical way. Each @et consists of— 6 Cun 6 saucers ‘sae Re 5 1 platter 1144 inches 1 ova), le dish