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«thew management. }}WANTED—Roomers and boarders alk TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1917. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE Deka USE THIS WANT AD PAGE AND BUSINESS MEN’S DIRECTORY LIKE YOU USE F.E. Young Real Estate Company, The Outbursts of Everett True By Condo FOR SALE=The largest and best line of houses of any dealer in the city. the Penitentiary to the river, and from the bottoms to the Capitol; most of them on monthly payments. 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 ‘fhere 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 Building HELP WANTED MALB WANTED—Man and wife, without children, to go on farm by the year. G, A. Rust, Underwood, \N. Dak. T-10-5t WANTED—Blacksmith. First class horseshoer and blacksmith wanted immediately. Steady work for com- petent man. Wachter Transfer Co. 7-6-10t ———————_—— HELP WANTED FEMALE _ WANTED—Woman cook and dining room girl for small hotel. State wages required. Zap hotel, Zap, N. D. TTSt WANTED—Dining room girls. Man- darin cafe, 215 Fifth St. TT J. H. HOLIHAN, REALS ESTATE BARGAINS FOR SALE-—House of: six rooms and bath ‘anid oodshéed.” Nice large shade trees, fine lawn, east front. One-of the nicest homes in the city. Lot 50x150 feet. $2,800; $750 cash. FOR SALE—Dodge automobile in good running order. Cost new about $900. Party is leaving the city and must sell at once. Price $350 cash. Phone or telegraph at once. J. H. HOLIHAN Rooms 2 and 4, Lucas Block Phone 745 SITUATIONS WANTED SITUATION WANTED as cook in ho- tel or cook car. Addres 200, Trib- une. . APARTMENTS FOR RENT FOR RENT3-Strictly. modern apart. ment, in the Ruse Apartments. Ap- ply #. W. Murphy, 204 Main St. 7-3-12t HOUSES FOR RENT FOR RENT—Cottage on East Brond- way. Rent $19.00. Phone 250. A 7-10-3t FOR RENT OR SALE—If you are in the market for a modern house, either to rent or buy, see A. J. Os- trander, No. 9 Thayer St. Phone 263. 7-9-6t nd LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Terrier dog. Owner may have same by paying for this ad. H. T. Murphy. 7-10-3t LOST—First ‘National check book, containing valuable papers. please return to Tribune. BOARDERS WANTED ae WANTED—Roomers and: boarders, at Dunraven, 212 Third St. Under 75-1mo Phone 389K. Reason- 208 Thayer. is 6-23-1mo. able prices. HOUSES FOR SALE FOR SALE OR RENT—New, modern pungeloy at 614 Hannafin St. Phone aK, 7-6-tit POSITION WANTED WANTED—Position as competent housekeeper. Write 203 Tribune. = 7-10-3t STENOGRAPHER—Six years experi- ence, wishes permanent px en Box 57. 7-10-17; 7. WANTED—Position as igtiseiseper by widow with one child. Mrs. E. Fisher, Bismarck, N. D. 7-9-17, 15, 7-16-17 MEAT ER and all-round Butcher, who is capable to take full charge of a market, would like steady position. Address Box 43, Cavalier, N. D 7-9—6t. ROOMS FOR RENT ROOMS for light housekeeping. Also sleeping rooms. 317 8th street. Phone 236-Y. 7-9 3. FOR RENT—Two small and _ two large rooms, for light housekeep- ing; 404 Fifth St. Phone 512K. anes = ene 7-9-6 FOR RENT—Office rooms over Knowles & Haney’s Jewelry Store. Apply at Knowles Haney 7-93-61 FOR RENT—Furnished room in inod ern house; electric range; Rudd gas water heater. Phone 404K, or call 801 Fourth St. 7-6-26t FOR RENT—Modern, furnished room. 514 Fifth street. 7-5-6t ‘FOR RENT—Large, strictly modern room; 38 Ave. A. 6-28-Imo FOR RENT—Rooms. Phone 377K. | 6-7-1me rooms, 621 FOR RENT—Furnished Sixth street. 6-13-26t FOR RENT—AI newly furnished front room in a new bungalow, strictly modern in every way. Phone 698R;or call at 611 First street. 5: 23-tf, FLATS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Newly furnished flat, in- cluding gas range, in modern house. No children; 807 Fourth St. Phone 404R. 7-9-6t ————— MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE— Second hand. 5-passeng- er touring Dodge car. ‘In good con- dition. Tires almost new. If tak- en today, $335. Lahr Motor Sales Co., Bismarck, N. D. FOR RENT—One half a large office; well located. Write 199, care Tri- bune. _7-9-12t FOR SALE—Ford roadster, in good condition. Inquire 522 Eighth St. 7-9-3 FOR SALE—Furniture for four-room apartment for sale. Phone 632. (-6-6t FOR SALE—Majestic range gasoline stove, rug, washing machine. "Phone 622 or call 104 Ave. A morn- ings. 7-2-6 FOR SALE—One Hughes electric stove in good condition. _; Price, $30.00. Will take half. Mri R. H: Thistlethwaite, phone 275-Rj; 7-9-3t WANTED — Bismarck rug cleaning works now open. R. J. Anderson. Phone 755. 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. MOUNT W'KINLEY _IS REAL MONSTER 2éntral Feature of Uncle Sam’s Newest Park Presents Amaze © ing Spectacle, SEEMS LOFTIER THAN OTHERS Abrupt Rise of More Than 17,000 Feet Makes Mass Appear Higher Even Than Tallest ‘of the Himalayas, . Uncle Sam’s new national park in Alaska is one of the monster specta- cles of the world. To say that it rises 20,300 feet above sea level and that It is the loftiest peak in America is to convey no idea whatever of its gran- deur, There are several mountains in the Himalayas which materially exceed Its height—one which rises more than 25,000 feet above sea level—and yet Mount McKinley, to the observer, is loftier than any of these, The reason is that the greatest Him- alayas are seen from valleys 7,000 to 10,000 feet in altitude, while Mount McKinley rises abruptly from valleys 3,000 feet and even less in altitude. The visitor to the Mount McKinley Na- tional park will look up more than 17,- 000 feet to the double peak, the upper 14,000 feet of, which are covered, with perpetual snow. This enormous mass is the climax ot the same Alaskan range which ex- tends roughly east and west across southeast central Alaska, separating the vast northern inland from the more populated country whose shores are the Gulf of Alaska. The range par- allels the mighty Yukon many miles to its south, Titanic Alpine Scenery. The reservation contains 2,200 square miles, Its northern slopes, which overlook the Tanana watershed with its gold mining industry, are broad valleys inhabited by enormous herds of caribou. Its southern plateau is a perpetual water wilderness through which glaciers of great length and enormous bulk flow into the valleys of the south, In this national park, which the railroad now building by the government into the Alaskan interior will open presently to the pub- le, America possesses Alpine scenery wpon a titanic scale. From the stormy south, Mount Me- Kinley is wholly inaccessible. But from the plains of the north, valleys of easy grade lead one from another to its foot. “It is an awe-inspiring region of mas- sive mountains and ice-capped peaks,” Belmore Browne of the Camp Fire club, testified before the senate com- mittee on territories, “The Piedmont plateau that follows the range affords a beautiful roadway direct to Mount McKinley, and when you reach the plateau all difficulties vanish and you see a view that is unique on this earth. You see the huge mountain line of perpetual snow, rising like a great wall on the southeast. You can ride a pony to where Mount Me- Kinley rises 17,000 feet above you in -of the country. fa glittering wall of snow and ice. It is flanked by stupendous mountains which make a wonderful setting for the monster.” Enormous Herds of Caribou. ‘North of the vast mountain, howe (SHAKE HANDS [MR TIGHTWAD, !You Sa¥ You HAvE NOT lanD witc NOT BUY [any CiBeRtyY | Bonds. Altow ME TO CoNe© =GRATULATS You On Youve UNFALTERING ons OF —— — THOSE wiInDows — —— ITS ee AWFUL CLoss —~ IN HERE — ' ever, is a rolling country dotted with beautiful lakes and forests and Inhab- ited by enormous herds of caribou. In fact thé special reason why congress set apart, the region at this time was to conserve the wild animal life in ad- vance of the invasion of hunters which the new government railroad will bring into Alaska, the road as projected run- ning within twenty miles of this great est of nature’s spectacles, Charies Sheldon of the Boone and Crockett club told the senate commit- tee that several times he has counted as many as 500 mountain sheep in a single day of ordinary travel, and that herds of caribou numbering from 1,200 to 1,500 are frequently seen. As a game refuge and breeding ground, the new National park .con- serves Alaskan game which elsewhere is rapidly disappearing, As in the case of Yellowstone National park, the reservation serves a¥g perpetual cen- ter of game supply for large neigh- boring areas. These animals do not greatly fear man, because they have never been hunted. One can approach the great herds of caribou. There are also many Alaskan bear of great size. FEW GERMANS ALIENS Most of Those Living in United States Naturalized. Great Proportion of Austrians, ‘Hun: garians, Turks and Bulgarians Not Citizens, However. The natives of Germany, Austria- Hungary, Bulgaria aud Turkey now residing In the United States aggre- gate approximately 4,662,000, or about 4% per cent of the total population The foregoing total is announced by Director Sam L, Rogers of Uncle Sam's bureau of the census, as the result of a calculation based on the census figures of 1910, the reports of the bureau of immigration for the period between 1910 and the present time, and the estimated mortality dur- ing that period. Although it is not possible by this method to determine with absolute exactness the number of natives of the countries named now living in the United States, it is be lieved that the results obtained repre sent a reasonably close approximation to the facts. These 4,662,000 foreigners are dis: tributed, according to country of birth. as follows: ! Germany .. Austria .. Hungary Turkey . Bulgaria It is impossible to say whether the proportions of aliens—that is, persons who have not applied for naturaliza- tion certificates—among these for. eigners are approximately the same as they were in 1910; but, assuming this to be the case, the number of male aliens twenty-one years of age andj over included in the above total would be approximately 964,000, or about 3.2 per cent of the total number of male inhabitants of the United States twen- | ty-one years of age and over. The dis tribution of these aliens, according te country of birth, we be as follows: Germany .. 2 6.136,006 Austria . Hungary Turkey Bulgaria The proportion _of -aliens _amo amon -) ; government, male Germans twenty-one years of age and over is very much smaller thar the corresponding proportions for the other count S “hanied, having beer only @ Httlesmore than 11 per cent ic 1910, i , against approximately 63 per cent’ jr Aus Sy a4 per cent foi! Hungarians, 82 per cent for Turks and nearly 90 per cent for Bulgarians ngs { He Had “Hypopituitarism,” _So Couldn’t Join Marines of Newark was given a some- what different diagnosis of his case when he was rejected by United States Marine corps medical examinerd ‘at Philadel- phia. Stilwell, who weighs 284 pounds, was accepted by recruit- ing officers in Newark, but failed to pass the local doctors, who found he was afflicted with “hy- popituiturism,” a disease which is given the following analysis in the doctor’s report: “A condi- ‘tion due to pathological activity and of the pituitary body, marked by excessive deposit of fat and the persistence or ac- quirement of adolescent charac- teristics.” Both the doctor’s report and Stilwell weight. considerable : | 3 r Because telling a man he is too fat to serve his country may have a tendency to dampen pa- triotism, Howard Alva \Stilwell ‘a 4 q | : carry t ~ 1 PARKS ARE DE ARE DEVELOPED New Bureau iF to ar Manage All of Uncle Sam’s Playgrounds. Several Already. Have Been Mad Self-Supporting as Result of Increased Patronage. The National Park service which was created by congress to udminister the national parks under one correlat- ed system hus been organized. Sec retary Lane of the interior department has appointed as director Stephen T. Mather who, to accept the place, re- signed the office of assistant to the secretary of the interior, Horace M.} Albright becomes assistant director. | Secretary Lane began the work of} national parks development, the suc-| cess of which is insured by the or-| ganization of this new bureau, two! years and a half ago, During this pre- liminary period much has been accom- plished of importance to the cause. All national parks have been opened | to automobiles. New roads have been projected of which many have been built and many improved, Co-opera- tion in the public interest has been promoted between railroads + between = conc and park managements, and between | parks, Large private capital has been | induced to enter several national parks | for the enlargement and improvement | of hotel and transportation service. Prices to the public have been de-j creased wherever possible. ns have been made on | a basis destined to make national | park: 1f-supporting under conditions | of increased patronage, and several parks already have become self-sup- porting. Larger appropriations have been secured from congress for road JOHN BORTELL Sheet Metal and Radiator Works BISMARCK, N. D. * Round Moist i Heating Sys- tems. Health: jest and cheapest method known for Heating a Home. CALL AND SEE Kadiators Ke- paired and re- puilt, Prompt service. Rea- sonable prices. Best known methods used to do the work TAXI 105 Phone Freight and Baggage DRAYING Clootens Livery Temporary Office Basement Cowan’s Drug Store Fourth and Broadway Jt SAMPLE | Phone 4, B, SMITH Phone S. LAMBERT THE DICTIONARY OR THE |iTELEPHONE BOOK TAXI TAXI 57 Office = H. Rooms 1 and 2 Mughes Building Opposite Grand Pacific Hotel J. WAGNER Eyes Tested and Glasees Fitted, also Glasses Changed a Optical Specialist Renewed BISMARCK. N. D. hone Number 533 Office Hours 9 to 12 and Machine Hemstitch- ing and Picoting. MRS. M. C. HUNT 314 2nd St. PHONE 849 FREDERICK W. KEITH ARCHITECT Webb Block Phone 449 Undertaking Parlors A. W. Lucas Company Day Phone 465 Night Phone 100 A. Licensed Embalmer in Charge W. CRAIG Day Phone 50 Night Phone o % of load carried on peor casio ned he 7 Track, Springs — stone Solid Mubber' / YY and bel Delivery U ¥' OUR Gelivery service can ANDA be made 75" per cent more efficient and the cost FORD NEW cut fo onecthird. wit the ear CLD Trucs. roe Ford Ef ro ciency, Ford Sunplicity, Ford ras fsonoiny and Dearborn Strength. ARBOR ARB 30R Corwin Motor oP’ Bismarck, N. D. WARNER’ Camping Trailer 1 917 Model Now on Display Corwin Motor Co. Bismarck, N REBORING - Has your, motor Igst its power? Let us rebore the cylinders and fit with ove purpose, « CORWIN MOTOR COMPANY Bismarck, N. D. pistons, on a new machine built especially for that TIRE Undertaking- Embalming Licensed Embalmer in Charge 687 WEBB BROTHERS RACINE COUNTRY ROAD Wrapped tread is puarantoce 5000 miles . BISMARCK, N. D. Jobbers ia CORWIN MOTOR Co. The Electric Shop B. K. SKEELS Everything Electrical Wiring Fixtures and Supplies Delco Farm Light Plants Phone 370 408 Broadway Bafbie’s DRY CLEANING AND DYE WORKS PHONE 394 409 Front Street We Call for and Deliver tary iiid Offer Conditions, An e: sive educational campaign has been inaugurated for the information of the people concerning the hitherto un- known quality and extent of their seenic and recreational possessions, under which public interest in our na- tional parks is growing with unanticl- pated speed; and public realization, interest and practical use is the con- dition as well as the object of nation- al parks development. ~ublic patron- age of the parks has increased rapidly and steadily. These and many other beginnings point the way towatd the system which it will be the object of the new service to builu and perfect. Try a Tribune want ad for results house, PHONE ues REMEMBER that we pay top market prices for scrap iron, rags, rubbers, 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 Corner 9th and Sweet St. PHONE 783 metals, paper, bottles and barrels. Phone 783 | PHONE 763 Transter & storage We have unequaled facilities for shipping Careful, experi. also retail! Ice and moving, st household goods. enced men; wood, Wachter Transfer Comp: | No. 202 Fifth 8t. Phone 62 oring and Store Second Hand Clothes Bought j Hats Blocked and Cleaned, Carry a Line of New Goods, Buy all Kinds of Junk, For first class shoe repairing go to Bismarck Shoe Hospital H. BURMAN, Prop. 411 Broadway Shoes Repaired Best Equipped Shop in the L. E. Larson | A. 8. Northwast Maln Biract HOFFMAN Work Guaranteed Residence. [PIANO TUNING| 623 Sixth. For Sale es and lots in information by calling at St. Webb Block Phone CITY LOTS building and the perfecting of sani- "Bismarck Realty Company Bismarck Bank Building RENTS Battery Service | Loden’s Battery y~ 408 BROADWAY i BISMARCK, N. D. ff) FARM LANDS COLEMAN’S New and Second Hand sold, Clothes Clean and pressed We We PHONE 358, HOUSE: PHONE 437k OPPOSITE McKENZIE HOTEL Houses & Lots | We have a number of hous- different | parts of the city which can ‘If be bought under very desir- able terms, Those who might be interested can obtain full The Hedden Ag’cy 0 HATS Cleaned & Re-Blocke AT REASONABLE PRICES Especially Ladies Straws and Panama's H Work guaranteed and done promptly EAGLE HAT WORKS Phone 682 Opp. Post Office. d BISMARCK