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SATURDAY, JULY 7, 1917, BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE SEVEN USE THIS WANT. AD PAGE AND BUSINESS MEN’S DIRECTORY LIKE YOU USE THE DICTIONARY OR THE ‘TELEPHONE BOOK F.E. Young Real FOR SALE—The largest and best line of houses of any dealer in ‘the city. FOR SALE—The largest list of farm lands of any dealer in the county. FOR SALE—We have the exclusive handling of Lincoln Addition |and - Riverview Addition, besides hun- dreds and hundreds of lots from F.E. Young Real Tel. No. 78 Offices Estate Company: ' the Penitentiary to the river, and from the bottoms to the Capitol; most of them on monthly payments. ‘rhere are always splendid bargains on our lists, in either farm: lands or city property and you will save money by dealing through us. We al- ways protect our clients. Estate Company In First National Bank Bullding HELP WANTED MALE SALESMEN WANTED WANTED—Experienced meat cutter 5-3t horseshoer and blacksmith wanted immediately. Steady work for com- petent man. Wachter Transfer Co. Ot SALESMEN WANTED — Specialty men to sell enamelware, aluminum- ware, cutlery and lamps to retail trade. Average commission 25 per cent. Drawing account to produc- ers. National Importing Co., St. Louis, Mo. / 7-7-1t CIVIL SERVICE .EXAMINATIONS— Bismarck, soon. Men and women desiring government clerkships, de- partmental, postoffice, railway mail, customs. Write for free particu- lars to J. C. Leonard (former : ernment examiner), Kenois 3 Washington. HELP WANTED FEMALE WANTED—Vive bright, capable ladies to travel, demonstrate and sell deai- ers. $25.00 to $50.00 per week. Rail- road fare paid. Goodrich Drug éom pany, Dept. 631, Omaha, Neb. WANTED—Woman cook and dining room girl for small hotel. State wages required. Zap hotel, Zap, N. D. 7-7-3t WANTED—Dining room girl and dish- washer at once. Mandan hotel, Man- 7-6-3, ‘Man- D—Dining room girls. darin cafe? 215 Fifth St. TTA WANTED—Chambermaid.. Apply at Grand Pacific hotel. 7-5-tf WANTED—Ono waitress and one chambermaid, at Atlantic Cafe. J. H. HOLIHAN. . REAL ESTATE BARGAINS FOR SALE—House of six rooms, mod- ern; bungalow style; nice, shade trees; fine lawn; east front; close in and one of the nicest homes a in the city. $2,800; $800 cash. FOR SALE—House of eight rooms and bath ‘and thoroughly modern; full basement; close in. Built two years ago. This fine home would cost $6,500 to duplicate today, ‘but for quick sale will sell for $5,000 $500 cash and balance $50 monthly. House now rents for $30. Big bar- gain-—burry. : J. H. HOLIHAN uRooms 2 and 4, Lucas Block Phone 745 ___FLATS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Flat. Phone 132R._J- K. Doran. 7 AGENTS T-7-1t}” large} SALESMEN WANTED—To sell tem- perance drinks; large demand, large commission. For producers $40.00 weekly drawing account. Our bev- erages guaranteed non-alcoholic. Herthal Mfg. Co., St. Louis, Mo. TT-lt SALESMAN wanted to take state rights for newest and best soft drink. Big ‘seller, allowing dealer 500 per cent profit. Absdlutely re- liable and subject to thorough in- vestigation. The bigger the man the greater the opportunity. Will give contract for. entire state on straight commission basis. Must be man of reputation, sobriety and character, with car to make towns and means to pay own expenses ant appoint sub-salesmen. Now is tine to make fortune on soft drink ppup- osition such as this. For fuil intov- mation address 'P. O. Box 1104, & Antonio, Texas. 7-7 i 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 $100 per week, depend- ing on applicant; references re- quired. Write for proposition at once. ‘Quick Response Sale: Marshalltown, Iowa. BOARDERS WANTED WANTED—Roomers and boarders, at Dunraven, 212. Third St. Under new management. 7-5-lmo WANTED—Roomers and boarders at 208 Thayer. Phone 389K. Reason- able prices. —_$—_— HOUSES FOR SALE FOR SALE OR RENT—New, modern bungalow at 614 Hannafin-St. Phone 7-6-6 ton, 'N. Eleven room rooming house, doing good business year round. Must sell owing to poor ealth. Reasonable terms. Wri 8; care Tribune. “*. WORK WANTED WANTED—Day work; 29 cents per hour. Tribune, 201. 7-6-1t LOST AND FOUND Cost—setween Will's Seed store and 712 Fourth St., child's silver mesh purse. Return to Geo. Will, Will Seed store. Tilt Lost—Watch fob with Masonic em- AGENTS—Our Simplex” (kerosene) gas burners do away with wood and coal. Hundreds of pleased custom- ers. Agents coining money. Write today for exclusive territory. Sim- plex Gas Plants Co., 9 S. Clinton, Chicago. Tilt LANDS FOR SALE OR TRADE—271 acres. Owner subject to draft. Will ac- cept half actual value. J. K. Doran. T-T-At blem. Reward if returned to Rich- mond and Whitney. 7-3-3t MISCELLANEOUS_ FQR SALE—Salvage of a burned tudebaker Six automobile. H. Murphy. Phone, 577. 7-720 WANTED TO BUY—If you have a bargain in a small, new property for a home, address 202, Tribune. FOR SALE—EFoxes pxesss for for shipping shield glass, 15c each. See Faunce, Fourth St. T-7-1t APARTMENTS FOR RENT FOR f RENT—Strictly modern apart- ment, in the Rose Apartments. Ap- ply F. W. Murphy, 204 Main St. T-3-12t HOUSES FOR RENT FOR RENT—Modern 7-room inouse; 112 Thayer St. Inquire 313 3 nd St. TTA FOR RENT—Seven-room house, sth street & Ave. A. Call at 216 Ninth St., or phone 377L. 7-6-3t FOR SALE—Complete new furnish- ings for small flat. Leaving town and must sell quickly. Exception- ally low price. Phone 633U. — 7-2-6t FOR SALE—Furniture for four-room apartment for sale. Phone 632. FOR SALE—Peninsula Steel f Electric Dome and few pieces of Furniture, within the next week. 514 Sixth street. 1-2: i FOR SALE—Majestic range gasoline! stove, rug, washing machine | *Phone 622 or call 104 Ave. A morn. ings. 7-2-6 ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Furnished room in inod- ern house; electric range; Rudd gas water heater. Phone 404K. call 801 Fourth St. FOR SALE—Brown and Jones have a few choice fresh milch cows for sale. Any one wishing to bay a good cow can do well by calling on us, and we will gladly show them. 16+ FOR RENT—Modern furnish 822 Sixth St. FOR RENT—Modern furnished room. 816 Thayer St. ' UBM FOR RENT—Light housekeeping Tooms. Coll 340. 7-3-6t FOR RENT—Large rooms, cool in summer, warm in winter, for light housekeeping. 622 Third street. *Phone 132-R. 7-2-6t FOR RENT—Modern, furnished room. 514 Fifth street. 7-5-6t FOR RENT—Modern furnished room. 309 Eighth St. FOR RENT—Four unfurnished, mod- ern rooms for housekeeping. Phone 422 Twelfth street. 6-30-6t FOR RENT—Furnished room; room; gentle- men preferred. Call at 20414 Main St., Apt. A. t FOR RENT—Large, strictly modern room; 38 Ave. A. - -6-28-1mo FOR RENT—Rooms. Phone 377K: 6-7-1ma FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, 621 Sixth strget. 6-18-26 FOR RENT—AN newly furnished . front room in a new bungalow, strictly modern in every way. Phone 698R or call at 611 First street. 5:23+tf, .| WANTED — Bismarck rug cleaning works now open. R. J. Anderson. Phone 75 6-20-1mo 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. A ‘Common Nuisance. We cannot all own everything neces- sary for our work, but we need not become a common nuisance by being a common borrower. An Industrious People. The Japanese people, both male and female, are remarkably industrious. They like sports. They seek enjoy- ment and recreation. They are ar- tistic. They are religious. They study and learn. But they work hard and long hours. They are persistent, de- termined, and successful as individuals and- collectively. They are wonderful T.| explain the temporary sidetracking , ‘| but as the story relates to somebody copyists and assimilators.. By nature, the men generally are-gentlemen and the women ladies, ——— ne The Outbursts of Everett True By Condo SAY, NEIGHBOR, THERE ARE Severac oF My CHICKENS MISSING SINCE YESTERDAY, I WONDER WHAT HAS BECOME OF THEM — Ee Dip You SEE THEM PERHAPS 7, I D® NOT SEE THEM "PERHAPS" r SAW THEM POSITIVELY! THEY WERE ovale HERE DOING OS IG Bit in my WAR GARDEN $ PRETTY NEAR GVESS WHAT [at HAS BECcOomMe OF THEM tt You cay fee Cc Sy “HOW OLD ARE YOU?’ Question of Vital Interest in This Country Now. Uncle Sam’s Census Experts Point Out How War Has Emphasized Im- portance of Birth Registration. How old are you? Never in the history of this coun- try has this question been of such vi- tal interest to so many people as it is today. Never before has the United States; government been so deeply interested | in knowing the exact ages of the young men of the land. Officials of Uncle Sam’s census bu- reau believe that in view of these facts, the public mind has never be- fore been so ready to grasp the great importance of complete birth registra- tion. Officials of the bureau in a ges len on this subject say: | “In ordinary times, as the years £0, by and problem after problem is tak- en up and settled, our civilization grows; and the more rapidly these problems are taken up and settled the more rapidly this civilization grows. “In ordinary times the continual de- mands upon our attention, first by one problem and then by another, easily in so, many states of the problem of | complete birth registration. It is not; because the people believe birth regis- tration unimportant, but the prob- lem has simply, been crowded to one! side until a more favorable day. “When the story is told of the Amer- i ican arrested in London as a German spy, unable to obtain a birth certifi- | cate because his birth had never been recorded and because the doctor had died, the people grasp the pofnt and agree that births should be registered; far away, somebody unknown, and probably never heard of before, the point is soon forgotten and no wave of strong public opinion is ever really started. So, too, the statements that birth records are needed to prove men of voting age, to establish old-age pen- sions and pensions for children of sol- diers, to establish rights of inheri- tance, to determine how efficiently the states are protecting the health of the children, and to determine, who is en- titled to the protection of our flag, these statements are too apt to be treated as old axioms which call for no immediate reform. “The need for complete birth regis- tration is recognized, but the inertia of the people still prevails, “Thus, in ordinary times, the prob- lems of civilization are settled slow- ly, but not so in time of war or after great catastrophies. “The city devastated by fire is so |- rebuilt as to guard against a second conflagration. “The terrible loss of life which fol- lows overloading an excursion Steamer soon results in more stringent liws and in greater safety for future trav- elers. “And today the war call for the reg- istration of our young men brings home the need of birth records to ev- ery community imost every family in the Uni “Can you prove thet are under { twenty-one or over thirty-one, or rust. you forever be suspected of having falsified your age? “Perhaps a fond mother, to save her son from the horrors of the trenches, may swear that he is below the age limit; perhaps years later proof_will ound that this man << ed; Imagine his having done his part shotild have Chagrin at not in the War. “Perhaps there are slackers who, in the absence of birth records, may be able to shirk registration, “Surely, the need of complete birth registration is evident to all. “May we not hope that the call for the registration of all men between the ages of twenty-one and thirty-one will awaken the people from their leth- argy and lead ai once to this forward step in our civilization—the registra- tion of every bir Treating of Poles. According to information compiled recently by the government forest service, 102 treating plants, operating throughout the United States, report a total of 125.639 poles treated in 1915, This is estimuted to be about one-half the act number subjected to treat- ment, since a jurge number given brush treatment are not reported. ‘The prin- cipal preservative used was creosote oil, and the average absorption was about 11 pounds per cubic foot. About 85 per cent of the poles treated were yellow pine, while western red cedar and Douglas fir largely made up the remainder. JACK BINNS TO FLY Jack Binns, wireless hero of the steamer Republic may gather f he. roic laurels in the air. He h enrolled for the British flying corps in the new British recruiting office opened | under the direction of} A, White. be remembered as the cue at sea ugh persistent calls for help. Binns the wireless man aboard the | iblic when she rammed by Florida off Nantuc! ‘1. He stuck to his post while the s Sinking and sent out the famous &. VU. S. until the Baltic re- sponded and rescued all of the 800 persons a the rammed ship. Since then us resided in America, | Try a Tribune want ad for results. January * TAXI JOHN 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 SAMPLE Radiators Ke- paired and re- built, Prompt Service. Rea- sonable prices. Best known | Methods used c& to do the work rine LOS Freightand Baggage DRAYING Clootens Livery Temporary Office Basement Cowan’s Drug Store Fourth and Broadway Licensed Embalmer in Charge lee = TAXI Phone &. E, SMITH ‘TAXI Phone 57 S. LAMBERT Office H. J. WAGNER “Telephon Number Rooms 1 and 2 5 533 Hughes Building Optical: Office Hours Opposite iali: 9to 12 and Grand Pacific Specialist 1to5 totel Glasses Changed Bi Eyee Tested and Glasses Fitted, also MARCK, N. and Renewed D. l Machine Hemstitch- ing and Picoting. MRS. M. C. HUNT It FREDERICK W. KEITH ARCHITECT 314 2nd St. PHONE 849 ||| Wt Bock Paes 09 Undertaking Parlors Undertaking- Embalmin A. W. Lucas Company Day Phone 465 ‘Night Phone 100 A. W. CRAIG Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 50 Night Phone 687 WEBB BROTHERS 20% of load carried on HubberTires oa 350 5, i service can bo made 75 per cent more efficient 2nd the cost FORD*: (‘EW parame co the ‘ord: Dearborn OLD Prucic. “You get Ford MAKES ciency: Foro Se cy, Ford Simplicity, For Economy and Dearborn Strength, ARBO ARBO} Corwin Motor Go. Bismarck, N. D. WARNER’ Camping Trailer 1917 Model Now on Display Corwin Motor Co. Bismarek, N.D. ‘REBORING Tias your motor lost ‘it Lot us rebore the fit with oversize pi , On a new machine built especially for that purpose, CORWIN MOTOR COMPANY Bismarck, N. D, “< gETTER CARS Ape Bil go ep sCORWIN MOTOR CO. BISMARCK, N. D. CORWIN MOTOR CO. Bismarcn.N Jobbers ~~ ~ Se RACINE COUNTRY ROAD TIRE Wrapped tread is uaranteed 5000 C. W. HENZLER TIRE VULCANIZING Phone 725 812 Rosser Street The Electric Shop 8, K. S9EEELS Everything Electrical Wiring Fixtures and Supplies Delco Farm Light Plants Phone 870 408 Broadway ae ) Barbie’s DRY CLEANING AND DYE WORKS PHONE 394 409 Front Street We Call for and Deliver i The Class of Voice, You cannot ¢ ify a voice by the degree of height or depth the singer may be able to reach. The class to which a voice belongs is determined by its quality, or timbre, as the French say. Some baritones can sing the tenor parts, just as sopranos can sing the alto parts, but that Goes not affect the principle at all. Tt fs the timbre of the voice that decides Its class. uble, DE id Unele Eben, “it | mostly foolishness dat comes so close to home you can't | hat it.” iron, rags, rubbers, metals, house, PHONE ee Corner 9th and Sweet St. 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 783 REMEMBER that we pay top market prices for scrap paper, bottles and barrels. 3 z Ba & ° i Ae Phone 783 Transfer & storage | We have unequaled facilities for moving, storing and shipping household goods. Careful, experi. enced men; eleo retail ice and wood, Wachter Transfer Comp Phone 62 No. 202 Fifth 8t. | For first class shoe repairing go to Bismarck Shoe Hospital H. BURMAN, Prop, 411 Broadway Shoes Repaired Best Equipped Shop in the Northwest ee E. Larson 408 Wain. Stents PIANO TUN NG] | A. 8, HOFFMAN Work Guaranteed Residence, 623 Sixth. St. CITY LOT3 Bismarck Realty Company Bismarck Bank Building RENTS attery Service| Loden’s Battery y- FARM LANDS COLEMAN’S New and Second Hand Store Second Hand Ciothes Bought and sold, Clothes Clean and pressed Hats Blocked and Cleaned, We Carry a Line of New Goods, We Buy al! 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 Tha HeddenAg’cy Webb Block Phone 0 HATS Cleaned & Re-Blocked AT REASONABLE PRICES y Ladies Straws and Panama's Especic Work guaranteed and done promplly 408 BROADWAY BISMARCK, N. D. | EAGLE HAT WORKS Phone 682 Opp. Post Office. BISMARCK ee)