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a ot ef » WANTED—Girl THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1917. BISMARCK DAILY. TRIBUNE USE THIS WANT AD PAGE AND BUSINESS MEN’S DIRECTORY LIKE YOU USE THE DICTIONARY OR THE TELEPHONE BOOK F.E. Young Real Estate Company | The Outbursts of Everett True FOR SALE—Six-room house with, FOR SALE—Seven-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. 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—Fiveroom 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 six per cent. BUILDIN GLOTS, lots for investment, farming lots and plots and gravel ‘beds for sale on small payments down and easy payments at six per cent. Price $3,200.00. _‘Terms,. $1,200.00] Be Sure and See Us Before Buying cash, balance’reasonable. F.E. Young Real \ Tel. No. 78 Offices and We Will Save You Money. Estate Company in First National Bank Buliding HELP WANTED MALE SALESMEN WANTED WANTED—Boy at Wonder Store; none under 16 years need apply. rir 7-2-3t WANTED—An_ experienced grocery clerk. Apply at Gussner’s. 7-5-3t WANTED—Young man ‘for delivery north of. town. Gugsner’s, Main _Street. 7-5-3t BARBER WANTED at City National Barber shop. Sixty. per cent paid; guarantee of per week. 7-2-4t __HELP WANTED FEMALE WANTED—Chambermaid.. Apply at Grand Pacific hotel. 7-5-t£ WANTED—One. waitress and one chambermaid, at Atlantic, Cafe. + T-5-3t for my ‘farm, ones half mile from town, to help house- keeper. Geo. Gussner. 7-3-3t WANTED—Two waitresses at Atlan- tic cafe. 7-3-2t WANTED—Two waitresses. ape at bt Star restaurant. J. H. HOLIHAN. “ “REAL ESTATE BARGAINS FOR SALE—House of six rooms, mod- ern, bungalow style; nice, »% shade*trees; fine lawn; east front; + telose'in' and one of the nicest homes inthe city. © $2;800; $800 cash. "FOR SALE=Hotse of eight rooms and bath and thoroughly modern; full basement; close in. Built two years ago. This fine home. would 0 to duplicate today, but sale’ will, sell for $5,000, $500 cash and Kalance $50 monthly. House now rents for $50. Big bar- . gain--hurry. J. H. HOLIHAN » Rooms 2 and 4, Lucas Bleck i sf tone 745 = APARTMENTS FOR RENT FOR RENT —Strictly modern apart- ment, in the Rose Apartments. Ap- ply F. W. Murphy, 204 Main St. 7-8-12t HOUSES FOR RENT FOR F RENT—Six-r “room, modern house. Inquire J. H. Doran. 7-2-3t FOR RENT—Modern, six-room house. furnished, until September 1; 314 Ave. A. Inquire Mrs. A. M. Leslie, 422 Fourth, street. 7-3-3¢ | FOR RENT—Cottage on East Broad- way. Rent, $19.00. Phone 250. on farm. F. 0. ND. Oy 7-3-3t WANTED—Position as bookkeeper by young lady. Address: Miss Jeanat Hardy, city. 6-30-6t FLATS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Nicely furnished fat. including gas range, in modern house. No children; 807 Fourth St. Phone 404R. 6-29-2t ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Modern furnished room. 822 Sixth St. FOR RENT—Modern furnished room. large}; { ‘Philips, Mandan, SALESMAN with ‘limited capital; one with auto preferred, to sell an auto- mobile necessity to the garages and dealers in this state; article is of extreme merit and has established reputation; our sales policy creates a repeating order business; compen- sation $25 to $100 per week, depend- ing on applicant; -references re- quired. Write for preposition at once. Quick Response Sales Co. Marshalltown, lowa. ROOMS WANTED WANTED—Roomers and boarders, at Dunraven, 212 Third St> Under new management. 7-5-Imo . BOARDERS WANTED WANTED—Roomers and boarders at 208 Thayer. Phone 389K. Reason- able prices. 6-23-1mo. HOUSES FOR SALE FOR SALE—Rooming house at Wil- ton, IN. D. Eleven room rooming house, doing good business year round. Must sell owing to poor health. Reasonable terms. Write 198, care Tribune. 7-3-3t, FOR SALE—Nice lot, one-room house garden, water, on lot Riverview ad- dition, Anderson street. Price $325 , Phone 303. Te2dt " wows, LANDS FOR,,.SALE-——Cheap, excellent stocl- farm. Owner subject to draft. Woulc accept small house in Bismarck as first’ payment. Balance easy. J K. Doran. 7 F-5-3t INTED—To hear from owner 0} good farm for-sale. State cash price, full particulars. D.F. Bush, Minne- apolis, ‘Minn. 7-5-1. __.., LOST AND FOUND Lo: ‘Watch: fob with Masonic em- ‘blem.; Reward if returned to Rich- dmtond and. Whitney. LOST—Child’s blue coat with crepe “de: chine collar, between Van Horn hotel and ball park. Finder return to or notify ‘W. A. Beardsley, wi ton, N.'D. COST OR STOLEN from my barn i Bismarck Monday night, team of horses; one a bay with chain hook]: brand on right shoulder, the other] a light dappled gray—each seven years old. If taken up, please notify ‘Matt Clooten, Bismarck. 7-5-2t MISCELLANEOUS FOR RENT—One-half of large of- fice, well located. Write No. 199, care of Tribune. 7-5-2t FOR SALE—Completo new furnish: ings for small flat, Leaving town and must sell quickly. Exception- ally low price. Phone 633 bt FoR SALE—Billiard parlor aid lunch counter, cigars and soft drinks. Address, J. E. Hibbard, Glen Ullin, N. D. T-24t FOR SALE—Ford roadster. 309 (0th Street. Phone 518. T-26t FOR SALE—Lumiber that’s been used; different dimensions, suitable for sheeting and studding. Bsr. B57X. & FOR SALE—Peninsula Steel Range. Electric Dome and few pieces of Furniture, within the next week. 514 Sixth street. a WILL EXCHANGE house of six 7oms| and two lots in Mandan for Jand. L. N. Cary, Mandan, N. D. iS FOR SALE—Single seated, glass en: closed auto, Ford. In good condi- tion. Cost a year ago new with electrical starter, $715. Will accept 7-2-3, 816 Thayer St. 4-3-4 $350. L. N. Cary, Mandan. FOR RENT—Light housekeeping | FOR SALE—A Cadillac seven-passen- rooms. Coll 340. 7-3-6t. ger, two-speed axle. A powerful car FOR ‘RENT—Housekeeping rooms, furnished and unfurnished. Phone 773, Varney flats. 7-3-3t FOR RENT—Furnished room at -200 Mandan Ave. 7-2-8t FOR RENT—Large rooms, cool in summer, warm in winter, for light housekeeping. 622 Third street. *Phone 132-R. 7-2-6t FOR RENT—Three modern rooms, newly furnished. 212 Second street. J. A. McConkey. 7-2-3t ern rooms for housekeeping. Phone 624Z, 422 Twelfth street. 6-30-6t. SFOR RENT—Furnished room, gentle- men preferred. Call at 204% Main St., Apt. A. 7-5-3t, FOR RENT—Large, strictly modern room; 38 Ave. A. - -6-28-1mo FOR RENT—Rooms. Phone 377K. 6-7-1mo in excellent condition; looks like new. Will accept $1,000. L. N. Cary, Mandan. 7-2-3t FOR SALE—Majestic rango gasoline stove, rug, washing machine. *’Phone 622 or call 104 Ave. A morn- ings. 7-24t FOR SALE—Irish Setter pupples five months and eleven weeks old, reg- istered and papers with each. Bar- gain prices. Write me. Dr, C. O. Smith, Linton, N. D. 6-27-7t WANTED — Bismarck rug cleaning works now open. R. J. Anderson. Phone ‘7: 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 recoive cash by re- turn mail. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, 621 Sixth street. 6-13-26t FOR RENT—Rooms. 300 9th St. 6-7-1mo 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 Gave Thimble to England. The man who introduced thimbles to England was John Lofting, a mechanic]; and metal worker of Holland, who set- tled in England in the latter part of the seventeenth century, and, practiced | their. manufacture in various metals, with great success, ere.’ 7-3-3t] + 6-20-1mo | | .By Condo: LooK -AT. THE WAR. PRICES! WELL, .A_ MAN bane De BRING ENGLISH MOTTON CHOR SOME ITALIAN SPAGHETTI AND. GERMAN FRIED PoTaTOSS Rey, WAITS MARKS THAT FRENCH FRIED, R— (JOHN BORTELL| OHN BORTELL Sheet’ Metal and Radiator Works BISMARCK, N. D. Round Oak Moist Aid Heating Sys- tems. Health. jest and cheapest method known for Heating a Home. CALL AND SEE pres Kadiators Ke- paired and re- built. Prompt service. Rea- sonable prices. Best known methods used |_todo the work "| do the work TAXI TX AOS Phone \Freightand Baggage DRAYING Clootens Livery Temporary Office Basement Cowan’s Drug Store Fourth and Broadway TAX! Phone TAXI Phone 57 S. eee "Office H. J; ‘WAGNER “Telephone Number Rooms | and 2 Hughes Building Optical ottice ‘outs Opposi Specialist 9 to 12 and Grand Pacific” yea Tested and Glasses Fitted, also Hotel Glance Changed and Renewed a BISMARC! ee Machine Hemstitch= ing and Picoting. MRS. M. C. HUNT 314 2nd St. PHONE 849 ‘it FREDERICK W. KEITH ARCHITECT | Webb Block Phone 449 Elephant In Biblical Hebrew. It is said by scholars that no word in Biblical Hebrew denotes an ele- phant, yet the. Hebrews were familiar with ivory, and the skilled workmen of Hiram, king of Tyre, fashioned the great ivory throne of Solomon and overlaid it with pure nelle ad ertaking-Embalming Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 50 Night Phone 687 WEBB BROTHERS WOMEN IN HOMES CAN AID NATION Not Necessary for Them to Aban- | don Domestic Duties, Says U. S. Official. eee aeoaey Secretary of Agriculture Houston Declares Housewifé Should See That Nothing Nutritious Is Thrown Away. ~ How every woman, without leaving her home, can aid the nation in the direction of producing and conserving agricultural products, is told from the viewpomt of Uncle Sam in a statement of Secretary of Agriculture Houston. Secretary Houston says: “Every woman can render important ; service to the nation in its present emergency. She need not leave her home or abandon her home duties to help the armed forces. She can help to feed and clothe our armies and help to supply food to those~beyond the seas by practicing effective thrift in her own household. _, “Every ounce of food the housewife Saves fren), being wasted in her home “all fogd which she or’her children produce.ff the garden and can or Pre- serve—every garment’ which care ‘and skillful: repair make it unnecessary to replace—all , Tessen~ that household's draft on the already insufficient world supplies. “To save food the housewife must learn to plan economical and properly balanced meals which, while nourishy Ang each member of the family prop- rly, do. not encourage ‘overeating or offer excessive and wasteful variety. It is her duty to use all effective meth- | ods to protect food from spoilage by heat, dirt, mice, or insects. She must acquire the culinary ability to utilize | every bit of edible food that comes into | her home.’ She mast learn to use such foods as vegetables, beans, peas, and milk products as partial substitutes for meat. She must make it her business to see that nothing nutritious is thrown away or allowed to be wasted. No Waste Insignificant. “Waste in any individual household may seem to be insignificant, but if only a single ounce of edible food, on the average, is allowed to spoil or be thrown away in each of our 20,000,000 homes, over 1,300,000 pounds of mate- rial would be wasted each day. It takes the fruit of many acres and the work of many people to raise, prepare, and distribute 464,000,000 pounds of food a,year. Every ounce of food ‘thrown away, therefore, tends also to waste the labor of an army of busy citizens, } “Clothing is largely an agricultural product and represents the results of labor of the sheep ranges, in. cotton fields, and in mills and factories. Whenever a useful garment is’ need- lessly discarded material needed te keep some one warm or dry may be consumed merely to grat a passing fancy. Women weuid do well to look ‘upon clothing = this t inore par- ticularly from the utilitarian point of view. “Employed women, especially those jengaged in the manufacture of food or clothing, also directly serve their Feotntry and should put into their tasks URGES THRIFT AS WATCHWORD : portance of their product warrants, Housewife’s Apron a Uniform. “While all honor is due to the ‘women whé-leave their homes to nurse and care for’those wounded in battle, no wom@y: should feel that, because she doesot wear a nurse's uniform, ‘she is ‘absolved from patriotic service. ‘The home women of the country, if they will give their minds fully to this |vital subject .of! food conservation and iteain themselyes in household thrift, can make of,-the housewife’s apron a ‘uniform of Mitignal significance. “Demonstrate thrift in your homes ‘and encourage thrift among your neighbors. “Make saving rather*than’ spending your social standard. a | “Make economy fashionable lest iv ‘become obligatory.” : RAILROADS USING: MORE oll Gain of 5,477,951 Barrels in 1916 Over Previous Year—Interesting Sta- tistics Given. A decided increase in the use of petroleum as locomotive fuel by the railroads of the United States in 1916 is shown by statistics compiled under the supervision of John D, Northrop and just published’ by the United States geological survey, department of the interior. Reports submitted by 53 railroad companies, comprising all that operate oil-burning locomotives in the United States, show that the quantity of oll fuel so consumed last year was 42,126,417 barrels, a gain of 5,477,951 barrels, or 15 per cent, over the con- sumption in 1915. This increase shows the steady ex- pansion in the United States of the market for low-grade petroleum from Mexico rather than any appreciable increase in the use as fuel of low- gravity crude olls from domestic sources, whose value for refining is just beginning to be recognized. The total distance covered by oil- burning engines in 1916 was 140,484,- 566 miles, and the average distance covered per barrel of fuel consumed was 3.83 miles. Otl-burning locomo- tives were operated in 1916 over 31,- 980 miles of track in 21 states. . VAST EARNINGS OF COUNTRY Railroads Contribute $3,622,057,141 in 1916—Increase Is Seen for Cur- rent Year. The magnitude of this country's ac- tivities and industries is impressively {indicated in varfous annual reports and statements which have just been published for 1916. Here are the fig- ures that briefly tell the story: Total operating revenue of railroads, | $3,622,057,141. | Volume of business of the United; States Steel corporation, $1,231, 473, | Total operating revenues of the Bell system, telephones, $264,600,000. Gross earnings of national banks, ‘When it is remembered, observes the Manufacturers’ Record, that the rail-| road data included only railroads hav- ing annual revenues of $1,000,000 or | more (although their gross earnings | constitute 97 per cent of all in the United States), and that the bank statement does not include either banks with siate charters or trust companies, the great totals loom up) even more wonderfully. And every one of these will proba- bly show even larger totals at the end of the current. een a ee nen a, doa V4 MN ts Nill Tle) Y iy senna dee (OUR delivery service can be made 75 per cent more efficient and the cost AND U ; NEW gut fo one-third with the Op: Ferd: Dearborn One-Ton Truck. You_get Ford Ef. giency, Ford Simptiity Ford Economy and Dearborn Dirength, ‘RBOR Ba ARB 30R Corwin Motor Go. Bismarck, N. D. WARNER’ Camping Trailer 1917 Model Now on Display Corwin Motor Co. Bismarck, N. D. REBORING Has’ your motor lostske power? Let us rebore the cylinders and fit with oversize pistons; on a new machine built’ especially for that purpose, CORWIN MOTOR COMPANY Bismarck, N. D. pony RACINE COUNTRY ROAD TIRE Wrapped tread is epige sae 5000 IN MOTOR CO. _ BISMARCK, N. D. -- Jobbers .C, W. HENZLER TIRE VULCANIZING Phone 725 812 Rosser Street The Electric Shop 3B, K. SKEELS Everything Electricai Wiring Fixtures and Supplies Delco Farm Light Piants Phone 370 408 Broadway H. WAH---Laundry The Best Laundry Work at Most Reasonable Prices, 518 BROADWAY PHONE 378 Undertaking Parlors A. W. Lucas Company Day Phone 465 Night Phone 100 A. W. CRAIG Licensed Embalmer in Charge iain AES, Barbie’s DRY CLEANING AND DYE WORKS PHONE 394 409 Front Street We Call for and Deliver eae SL For first class shoe repairing iron, rags, rubbers, house. | PHONE = Corner 9th and Sweet St. PHONE 783 REMEMBER that we pay top market prices for scrap metals, paper, bottles and barrels. 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. Wholesale and Retail Dealers PHONE 733 Phone 783 Transfer & storage | We have unequaled facilities for moving, storing and shipping | household goods. Careful, expert. | enced men; also retail ice and | wood. ! Wachter Transfer comp: jo. 202 Fifth St. go to Bismarck Shoe Hospital H. BURMAN, Prop. 411 Broadway Shoes Repaired Best Equipped _ in the Northwost L. E. Larson | 400. Bain Strort i PIANO TUNING A. 8. HOFFMAN Work Guaranteed Residence. 623 Sixth. St. CITY LOTS Bismarck Realty Company Bismarck Bank Building RENTS FARM LANDS Battery Service| Loden’s Battery y= 408 BROADWAY BISMARCK, N. D, || 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 ail 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 Cleaned & Re-Blocked AT REASONABLE PRICES Especially Ladies Straws and Panama's Work guaranteed and done prompily EAGLE HAT- WORKS Phone 682 Opp. Post Office. BISMARCK