The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 27, 1917, Page 7

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FOR RENT—Unfurnished rooms; FOR RENT—Large, strictly modern F. E. ‘Young Real FOR SALE—Six-room * house with’ bath, basement, furnace, screened porches and range, with barn, three blocks from down town for $3,000.00. Terms, $800.00 cash, balance month- ly payments on easy terms. FOR SALE~Seven-room house with furnace, bath and other modern im- provements, nice yard with, trees. Can be rented for two families; near the schools of city. Price $3,100.00. Terms, $1,200.00 cash, bal- ance reasonable. FOR SALE—Six-room house, modern, with hot air furnace, full basement, bath, nice yard and trees, between north ward school and high. school. Price $3,200.00. Terms, cash, balance reasonable. F.E. Young Real Tel. No. 78 - « Offices HELP WANTED MALE $1,200.00! Be Sure and Estate Gonipary FOR: SALE—Seven-room! house with gas, sewer, water, lights, sidewalks, walled up cellar, on Eighth street. Nice yard and trees. Price $2,900.00. Terms, $1,700.00 cash, balance $600.00 per year at six per cent. FOR SALE—Five-room house’ with bath, modern, hardwood finish, gas, hot air furnace, full basement in east part of city on lot 50x100. Price $2,700.00. Terms, $1,200.00 cash, balance one to three years at er cent. Bi iN GLOTS, lots for investment, farming lots and plots and gravel ‘beds for sale on small payments down and easy payments at six per cent Us Before Buying and We Will Save You Money. Estate Company in First National’ Bank Buliding BOARDERS WANTED WANTED—German-speaking stenog- rapher~-and ‘bookkeeper, male with law’ experience preferred. ‘No alien need apply. V. H. Crane, Mott, IN. D. 6-27-2t WANTED—Boy 15 or 16 years old. Call.109 Third St. 6-25-3t WANTEDO—Man to. make toast and hot cakes; also vegetable cook. Ap- ply chef, Grand Pacific hotel. 6-27-3t C —T501 Call 109 First St, HELP WANTED FEMALE WANTED— Nurse” at 924 Sixth intrest.» G-27-3t WANTED—Waitress at ‘Atlantic cate. es ? 6-26-8t WANTED—Gini, for . gendral house work. Good wages. Call 423 Third 2 Sty aie oa 6-27-6t WANTED=Kitchen girl. at: Henny cafe. Bt WANTED—Woman cook ané an “room girl. ‘Small hotel. Address «, Zap hotel, Zap, IN. D, 6-26-3t WANTED—Girl, for my farm, one- half mile from town, to help, house- keeper., Geo. Gussner. 6-26-3t WANTED—Chambermaid. Call at the Grand Pacific. Hotel. 6-26-3t WANTED—Housekeeper. Must be good cook, neat and-tidy. Apply at »Gussner’s, Mai St. 6-19-6t J. H. HOLIHAN. REAL ESTATE BARGAINS FOR-SALE—House of six rooms, mod- ern, bungalow styl nice, large shade trees; fine ia ; east front; close in ine of bee nicest homes __in the city. 8 FOR SALE—3,000 Acres of good graz- ing land, one-fourth tillable, $6.50 per acre. Remember there is big money in stock raising. J. H. HOLIHAN Rooms 2 and 4, Lucas Block Phone 745 \ SITUATIONS WANTED WANTE oung man desires posi- tion as bookkeeper or stenographer. Address 189, Tribune. 6-25-7t APARTMENTS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Furnished | apartment. Rose apartments. Phone 555R. 6-19-5t ____ HOUSES FOR RENT FOR RENT—Mcdern, six-roont house, furnished. Until September 1; 313 Inquire Mrs A. M. Leslie, §-21-3t, elec- per 6-26-3t Ave. A. 422 Fourth St. ENT—Four-room tric light and water; month. Apply 320 13th St. ROOMS FOR RENT FOR: RENT—Rooms; 309 Eighth St. 6-27-3t FOR RENT—Twol large and two small rooms in modern house, suitable for light housekeeping. No children or dogs allowed. Mrs. E. S. Pierce, 404 Fifth street. 6-27-6t FOR RENT—Furnished housekeeping rooms, first floor; also secondhand kerosene stove for sale. Varney flats. Phone 773. 6 it FOR RENT—Large, nicely furnished front room; also use of kitchen. Phone 329R. 6-25-3t house; $15 for | men. Bismarck Realty Co. * Bis-| marck Bank Bldg. 6-16-tf _Toom, 38 Ave. A. 6-16-6t FOR RENT—Rooms. Phone 377K. = 6-7-Imo FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, 621 Sixth street. 6-13-26t FOR RENT—Rooms. 300 9th St. 6-7-1m@ FOR RENT—AIl newly furnished front room in a new bungalow, strictly modern in every way. Phone 698R or call at 611 First street. 5: 23-tf ____ HOUSES WANTED WANTED TO RENT—Five or six- room modern house, by the year. A. H. Welsh, P. O. Box 73, City. 6-20 4t HOUSES FOR SALE FOR SALE—New, six-room, modern bungalow; good location. -One-third cash, $30.00 monthly; also choice residence lot. Address No. 187, ¢: Tribune. 6- For SALE—My Sixteenth St. house or ’phone 739, ao residence, at 423 For terms, call at e216) * FOR SALE—N; WANTED—Roomers and boarders at 208 Thayer. Phone 389K. \Reason- able pric 6-23-1mo. LOTS FOR SALE oe FOR SALE—Corner- lot 125x150 feet on Seventh street and Ave. BE. Phone 548R. 6-19-12t DRESSMAKING pprentice_ girls: who are anxious’ to learn to: sew, Call on Miss Sandbank, Room 4, Waggart building. 6-27-6t WORK WANTED D—Work by the hour; satis- faction.guaranteed. Phone 655L. 6-27-2t MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE—Sundry household turni- ture and rugs; one complete dining ‘room set; one mahogany bédroom set, five pieces. Phone 650, or call 400 Sixth St, between 2:00 and 00 p.m, 6-27-6t months and eleven weeks old, reg- istered and papers with each. Bar- gain prices. Write me. Dr. C. O. Smith, Linton, Dd. 6-27-7t FOR SALE—Ailliard parlor and lunch counter, cigars and soft drinks. Ad- dress, J. i Hibbard, Glen Ullin, N. D. 6-27-5t ‘ational cash register, multiple drawer, good condition, style number 92. Price $260.00, For particulars. write Holtan Mere. Co., ‘Washburn, N. D. 6-23-4t NOTICE—The party who took Dicy- cle. from 223 Fourth ‘St. June 20, kindly return same and avoid ther trouble. 6-25-3t FOR SALE—Two beds, dresser and two child’s beds; 219 Second St. ‘ 6-25-31 FOR SALE OR TRADE—Tive passen- ger Reo, 1917 model. Has been run 1,500 miles. - ‘Will take smaller auto in trade. Address Box 176, Bis- marck. 6-26-3t WANTED — Bismarck rug cleaning works now open. R. J. Anderson. Phone 7 6-20-1mo FOR SALE—Fine iron grille office railing, 5 ft. high, 17 ft. long, with gate. P. E. Byrne. 6-27-7t FALSE TEETH—We pay as high as $22.50 per set for old false teeth, no matter if broken. Also gold crowns, bridgework.: Mail to Berner’s. False Teeth Specialty, 22 Third St, m, Troy N. Y., and receive cash by re- turn mail. IS DETERMINED TO FIGHT Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Makes Vain Attempt to Enlist in Six Widely Separated Cities. Longfellow’s “Evangeline” still wan- ders, From coast to coast, lingering here and there to grasp of the forbidden fruit, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow also wanders, it is presumed, in a vain! attempt to enlist in Uncle Sam's ma- ; (Basis for All Work in Schools, tine corps and be “first to fight.” Longfellow was rejected for enlist- ment on account of physical disability in six widely separated cities during one month. The marine corps finally issued a bulletin to all its recruiting: stations to be on the lookout for the modern “Gabriel” and not accept him for enlistment. Strontium Ore Produced. For the first time in many years strontium ore has been marketed from deposits in the United States, accord- ing to J. M. Hill of the United States geological survey, department of the interior. Most of the-ore marketed in 1916 was produced in Arizona and California. The ore mined in the state of Washington was not marketed. The domestic output was equal to about 10 per cent of the ordinary demand, which amounts to 2,000 tons, The British embargo on strontium salts need cause little disquiet among Amer ican users, it is declared, for abundant ore is no doubt available in this coun- try, and American chemists have shown that they can profitably make ithe salts needed here. References to Snow in Bible. The historical books of the Bible con- tain only two notices of snow actually falling: II Samuel 23:20 and I Mac- cahees 13 but the allusions to snow are numerous in the pcetical books, At Jerusalem snow often falls to the depth of a foot or more in Janu- ary and February, but it seldom lies. At Nazareth it falls more frequently ! others were without adequate class- and deeper, The Outbursts IT _YNDERSTAND [=] ‘You SVEN TRIED [=] To DODGE THE WAR DRAFT, TOO, MR, SLACKER, of Everett T1 True By Condo 5 ZI Didn't TRY TO DODGE IT, I TOLD THEM MY ATTITUDE TOWARD ENLISTMENT WAS EP THAT OF A “CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTOR’ THAT WOULD (IMPLY THAT YOU HAVE 4 CONSCIENCE ! HEALTH IS IMPORTANT Declare Experts. Uncle Sam’s Agencies Are Working to Extend Sanitary Regulations of Cities of Rural Communities. The most {mportant element in the education of children is the establish- ing of good health and right living habits, according to those experts of Uncle Sam’s bureau of education who make this their life problem, Half a century ago the attention of those re- sponsible for the care of children in city schools was drawn to*these im- portant features of school and life and work, and much has been done, say the experts, in the last two decades for the improvement of the sanitary fea- tures of school houses and grounds and for school regimen in cities, Only recently, however, it is pointed out, has much attention been given to health conditions in country schools, but rural school sanitation is now re- | ceiving the attention of several govern- mental and state agencies. An inter- esting study of rural school sanitation has recently been completed by the ; United States public health service in a certain part of the state of Indtana. \ It is thought that the conditions found in that locality are, at least in the main, those that exist to a more or less degree in many of the rural schools | in the country. For one thing it was found that there is an undue number of one-room rural schools. Among other things it was thought by the of- ficials making the survey that an un-// due number of old buildings are being:| utilized which have largely passed the limits of usefulness for educational purposes. Many of these, it is saill, were without the proper sanitary fa-; cilities and some were even without, any water supply. Many had faulty il- lumination of the elassrooms and still room equipment; some were improper- ly heated and poorly ventilated and still others presented evidences of in- efticient janitor’s s The large number of children pre- senting physical defects of su¢h gravity as to demand specialized medical and. surgical attention, say the experts, is an evidence of the need of medical supervision of the school children of the counties in the interests of the j, child's educational advancement and fot the protection of the community | health. The undue number of mentally de- fective and retarded school children | revealed by the study made emphasizes the necessity, say the experts, of the mental classification of the children for the purpose of revealing those who are in need of institutional or individuul- ized treatment. CUBA IS BEST SHOE MARKET Offers Greatest Possibilities of Any Country in World for American Manufacturers, It Is Said. Cuba is at present the best market in the world for American footwear, says a report on the subject just pub- lished by Unele S:in’s | eign and domestic commerce, Al- though the climate. is tropical, few even of the poorest natives go without footwear of some kind, and the per capita consumption of shoes is therefore very heavy. Over 80 per froin local manufacturers arid Hot any of great importance om Europe. In spite of Ame strong position in the market, however, the author of the report, Spe Agent iJerman G. Brock, asserts.*that there are ‘A ways in which our hold on the 1m: can be strengthen: number of features in the ( not well understood by the American manufacturer. SAVE YOUR BOTTLES IS CRY Uncle Sam’s Home-Canning Specialists Say They Can Be Used in Plate of Regular Jars. Home-canning, specialists. of Uncle Sam’s department of agriculture urge every housekeeper to save bottles— especially wide-necked ones—for put- ting up fruits, preserves, jellies, Jams, and fruit juices. Saving of bottles is highly important, they say, as'there threatens to be a serious shortage of regular Jars and Breserine, cans this season.” The fruit products named, if sealed with corks and paraffin, can be kept perfectly in these makeshift contain- ers, Jellies, jains, and preserves can Se kept even in ordinary drinking | Blasses, by the use of paper and par- affin, Fruit juices should be packed in | ordinary small-necked bottles. The specialists are also urging all | members of canning clubs and others | not only to can products, but to dry and evaporate all such products as apples, pumpkins and squash, They advise strongly that if containers are scarce locally, those in stock should be used to preserve perishable products which have the highest nutritive value. Nothing should be packed in jars or eans which can be conserved effective- ly in other w: Candy col ners or other glass jars with screw tops or glass stoppers, and in fact any receptacle of glass, crock- ery or porcelain, can be sealed with cork or paper paraffin, Large tin canisters or tin cans with removable covers, provided the body of the container is air and water- tight, will be found useful in can- ning certain fruit products. Such con- tainers can be sterilized and their cov- ers hermetically sealed in place with solder or wax. oe seuanees No Bullet Holes There. The state of South Carolina bears the figur un erect palm tree, the repulse of a commen. : i Pt, Moultrie on June lect fre: by a ferce of about $0 mn) They were behind a primitive fortiti- cation made of palmetto logs, The re- sistance of this wood is much like that of cork. The \ood does not split and the perforation mude by a bullet closes again, Dida't ‘Appeal to Hira. Thomas h: i a hole in 1 tain what te cent store brought tive clerk at the 1 out some gey tey watches for his in- spection. 1 don’t want a watch that just goes on T do.” sal the amusement of his fellow custom- ers. 4 ertaking-Embalming | Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 50 Night Phone 687 cent of the business is done by Amer- ican firms, as there is no competition | WEBB BROTHERS| JOHN BORTELL Sheet Metal and Radiator Works BISMARCK, N. D. Round Oak Moist Aid Heating Sys- tems. Health- iest and cheapest method known for Heating a Home. CALL AND SEE SAMPLE Radiators Ke- paired and re-" built, Prompt Service. Rea- sonable prices. Best known methods used @ to do the work *~ TAXI We Phone Freightand Baggage DRAYING Clootens Livery Temporary Office Basement Cowan’s Drug Store Fourth and Broadway “TAXI Phone EC ‘{, BE. SMITH | TAX! | Phone Fy Ss. eof HL i WAGNER Telephone Nuriber Office Rooms tand 2 Hughes Building Optical ottice Hours Opposite 9 to 12 and Grand Pacific Specialist 1to5 Hotel Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted, aleo Glasses Changed and BISMARCK, Renewe LE Machine Hemstitch- ing and Picoting. MRS. M. C. HUNT 314 2nd St. PHONE 849 ARCHITECT | FREDERICK W. KEITH { | Phone 449 “AGENTS Peck's Old Music Store COMPLETE LINE ON DISPLAY WANTED For the celebrated Kimball Pianos, snd Player Pianot, G. W. COCHRANE, Wholesales and Retail Distribeter. Grand Pacific Building TERMS TO SUIT 1% of load carried on PX YouR delivery service can ANDA more cifi "tie Cost NEW cut to one fe fps FOR oto | ores : ss BAR FORD- ea OneTon Truck Corwin Motor Go. Bismarck, N. D. aie Trailer 1917 Model Now on Display Corwin Motor Co. Rismarek, N. D. REBORING Has your motor lost its power? Let us rebore the cylinders and fit with oversize pistons, on a new machine built especially for that purpo: CORWIN MOTOR COMPANY Bismarck, N. D. CORWIN KOTOR CO. BISMARCK, N. D. Jobbers Phone 725 The Electric Shop B. K. SKEELS 812 Rosser Street Everything Electrical Wiring Fixtures and Supplies Delco Farm Light Plants Phone 370 408 Broadway H, WAH---Laundry The Best Laundry Work at Most Reasonable Prices, 518 BROADWAY PHONE 378 Cc. W. HENZLER TIRE VULCANIZING Undertaking Parlors A. W. Lucas Company Day Phone 465 Night Phone 100 A. W. CRAIG Licensed Embalmer in Charge ae | Barbie’s DRY CLEANING AND DYE WORKS PHONE 394 409 Front Street We Call for and Deliver iron, rags, rubbers, metals, house. PHONE 783 Wholesale and Corner 9th and Sweet St. PHONE 783 REMEMBER that we pay top market prices for scrap CIRCUMVENT and CONQUER ‘the High Cost of Liv- ing by selling us the odds and ends of junk around the Call us up and we will come for goods with our wagon DAKOTA IRON AND METAL CO. paper, bottles and barrels. PHONE 733 Retail Dealers Phone 783 Transfer & storage! We have unequaled facilities for moving, storing and shipping | household goods, Careful, expert. ; enced men; siso retail! Ice and | wood, : Wachter Transfer Comp. Phone 62 No, 202 Fifth St. a nnerneeermneeomeen For first class shoe repairing go to Bismarck Shoe Hospital H. BURMAN, Prop. 411 Broadway | Shoes Repaired Best Equipped Shop in the Northwost Lk E Larson PIANO TUNING | A. 8. HOFFMAN : Work Guaranteed { j Residence ide2, _ Ave. o CITY LOTS Bismarck Realty Company Bismarck Bank Building RENTS Battery Service| Loden’s Battery te FARM LANDS COLEMAN’S New and Second Hand Store Second Hand Clothes Bought and sold, Clothes Clean and pressed Hats Blocked and Cleaned. We Carry a Line of New Goods, We Buy all Kinds of Junk, PHONE 358, HOUSE PHONE 437k OPPOSITE McKENZIE HOTEL Houses & Lots For Sale We have a number of hous- es and lots in different parts of the city which can be bought under very desir- able terms. Those who might be interested can obtain full information by calling at The Hedden Ag’cy Webb Block Phone 0 HATS Cleaned & Re-Biocked AT REASONABLE PRICES Especially Ladies Straws and 408 BROADWAY BISMARCK, N. D. Panama's W ork guaranteed and done promptly EAGLE HAT WORKS Phone 682 Opp. Post Office. BISMARCK Ea ASN EEE a AA DSL TET,

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