Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1917. f FOR. SALE—The__ largest and best oe line of houses of any dealer in the , city. t “BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE SEVEN 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 S ‘There 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 i HELP WANTED MALE WANTED—Messenger boy, at West- n_ Union. T-lltf NTED—Cook, at Home Cafe, Ha- ‘ } zelton, N. D. 2-126 fan or ‘boy, acquainte with town, for general delivery work. Geo. Gussner’s store. 7-12-3t WANTED—Man and wife, without children, to go on farm by the year. C. A. Rust, Underwood, N. Dak. ‘ 7-10-5t WANTED—Blacksmith. First class. horseshoer and blacksmith wanted immediately. Steady work for com- petent man. Wachter Transfer Co. 7-6-10t work. Apply Wah laundry, 518 Broadgay. TALtE WANTED—Competent girl, for gen- eral housework. Best wages. Phone 587 or call.at 36 Ave. A. 7-11-6t WANTED—Girl, for general house- \ * work; two in the family; 622 Eighth] i; St. Phone 457X. TLL -3t WANTED—Girl for’ general” house- work. Mrs, :L. i. Birdzell, 400 Sixth street. T-AlL-it is ea WANTED—Woman cook and dining room girl for small hotel. State wages required. Zap hotel, Zap, N. D. T-7-3t SS eee ered WORK WANTED WANTED—Work by the day, by com- petent seamstress. Call 212 Third street or ‘phone 438. T-11-3t FLATS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Modern, —front rooms Varney Flats. T6t FOR RENT—Modern, four-room flat with ‘bath, light and tglephone serv- ice; hot water heat. Call L. Lind- berg, 454X. 7-10-3t ‘OVR ZEA (S_ SEFORT UASTED. ISOING TO SAY. L KNOW WHAT You WERE You WERE SOING To Tecc MS THAT (XT WILL CAST.ONLY A SHORT TH THAT IT WiLe COME To—s° Abeediaieli FOR RENT—Newly furnished flat, in- cluding gas range, in modern house. No children; 807 Fourth St. Phone 404R. 7-9-6t ee —<—<_$_$_¥_—X<——_—XX* HOUSES FOR SALE FOR SALE OR RENT—New, modern bungalow at 614 Hannafin St. Phone aT8K. Tb6t SN __—X—X———X—X—X_——_~ LANDS Quarter section, near Carson; good land; good, soft wa- ter; good hay. F. H. Kendall, ‘Bis- marck. F-A2-1t FOR SALE CHEAP—Excellent stock farm. Owner subject to draft. Would accept small house in Bismarck as first payment. Balance easy. J.K. Doran. T12-1t WANTED—To hear from owner of wv J. H. HOLIHAN, REAL ESTATE BARGAINS FOR: SALE—House of six rooms and » bathi:;:and...woodshed. Nice large on Shade:itrees, fine lawn, east front. d 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. JW. HOLTHAN Rooms 2 and 4, Lucas Block Phone 745 t. if SITUATIONS WANTED SITUATION WANTED as cook in ho- 4 tel or cook car. Addres 200, Trib- un ‘ 7-9-3 he APARTMENTS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Strictly modern apart- ment, in the Rose Apartments. Ap- * ply F. W. Murphy, 204 Main St. good farm for sale. State cash price, full particulars, D. F. Bush, Minneapolis, Minn. 7. t ——_——————— HOUSES FOR RENT FOR RENT—Cottage on East Broad- way. Rent $19.00. Phone 230. : 7-10-3t FOR RENT—Modern, ten-room house, “well located. Geo. M. Register. 7-10-3t FOR RENT OR SALE—It 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 a? 7-9-6t ———X—X——X*_“= LOST AND FOUND: __ LOST—Bunch keys. Corner 7th St. and Ave. FB, Tuesday night. Finder, return to Tribune for reward. i T-12-3t Lost—Between French & Welch Hardware Co.’s store and corner of Fifth and Thayer streets, Monday afternoon between 4 and 6, purse contatning ‘some paper money and ification cards. Kindly leave at ~. \Wribune and receive reward. 7-10-3t d ‘air eye glasses. wner may have by calling‘at Tribune of- fide. TA2tt RCO r terse ee ech eee te ee LCOST—A brooch, set with moss ag- Finder, please leave same at P. ate. N. G. Nelson’s billiard hall, hotel 7: a DRESSMAKING 7-3-12t __ BOARDERS WANTED WANTED—Roomers and boarders, at Dunraven, 212 Third, St... Under wer ement.. ):*}""_7-5-1mo f [ANTED—Roomers and boarders at %4 "208 ‘Thayer. Phone 389K. Reason- ‘ sable prices. 6-23-1mo. POSITION WANTED WANTED—Position as competent housekeeper. Write 203 Tribune. i i 7-10-3t WANTEO—Position as housekeeper near school. by middle aged woman is with small boy. Will work for board. Address Box 205, Dawson, N. D. STENOGRAPHER—Six years e: ence, wishes permanent. position. Box_ 57. 4-10-17; 7-17-17. WANTEO—Position as housekeeper by widow with one child. Mrs. E. Fisher, Bismarck, N. D. T-9-17, 15, 7-16-17 = R and all-round Butcher, who is capable to take full charge of a market, would like steady position. Address Box 43, Cavalier, N. D’ “79. ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Two rooms, for light housekeeping; 1014 Broadway. 7-11-3t FOR RENT—Light housekeeping rooms. Call 340. 7-11-21 FOR RENT—Two nice down stairs rooms; close in. 311 Fourth St. Phone 627R. G-11-3t FOR RENT—Two small and two large rooms, for light housekeep- ing; 404 Fifth St. Phone 512K. S 7-9-6t FOR RENT—Office rooms over Knowles & Haney’s Jewelry Store. Apply at Knowles Haney's. 7. FOR RENT—Three rooms for light housekeeping. 118 First St. Phone 49 Tig-lt FOR RENT—Large, strictly modern room; 38 Ave. A. . .6-28-1flo FOR RENT—Rooms. Phone 377K. 6-7-1mo FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, Sixth street. 621 front room in a new bungalow, strictly modern in street. Elana lsatde* 2 eee Memeo aoe A FOR RENT—All newly furnishea| two “Oh, just like all the other little every . way.} country towns. Every. nig Phone 698R or call at 6i1 First] ily I was stayingwith dragged mi 5:23-tf} out t MOVED—From Kupitz Block, to over Union Mercantile Block, 112 12 Sixth St. Phone 493V. Miss Linda Geyer. 7-11-5t —_—————— MISCELLANEOUS FOR RENT—One half a large office; well located. Write 199, care Tri- bune. 7-9-12t FOR SALE—Furniture for four-room apartment for sale. Phone 632. E 4-6-6t REMEMBER CASPARY—For your suit cleaning, pressing and repair- ing. Bismarck Fur Co., 418 Broad- way. T-A12tf FOR SALE—Dodge automobile; cost, new, $900; for quick sale, will sell for $350, cash. J. H. Holihan Phone, 745. T-AL-3t WANTED — Bismarck rug cleaning | works now open, R. J. Anderson | Phone 7 6-20-1mo | pantie icecemele ee Peranai dia i FALSE TEETH—We pay as high as, $22.50 per set for old false teeth, ‘no; matter if broken. Also gold crowns, bridgework. Mail to Berner’s False Teeth Specialty, 22 Third St. m., Troy N. Y., and receive cash by re- mail. STRAVED—From our pasture, south of Bismarck, 1 jiarge, red steer (horns sawed off); 1 white and brown spotted ‘cow and calf—the calf has white face. Information regarding whereabouts of these an- imals will be appreciated by’ Brown & Jones. 7-12-3t —_——$ No Choice. Mary had some breakfast food, ‘Which she didn't seem to like; But ‘twas that or nothing, for ‘There was 2 butchers’ strike. — Finely Trained. The Trainer—De kid's over weight. Sut his hair. The Rubber—He ain’t got a hair eft, The Trainer—Den trim his nails. The Rubber—We done dat, too. The Trainer—Den pull a couple o° teeth. peomeeeee No Rest-for the Weary. “How was that little country town 6-13-26t] where you went to rest for a week or 9” Ov icture WW.” ! — AN END ALL or A SuDDEN, Just Uke THAT INDIAN 1S. HEALTHE Uncle Sam’s Fight to Save Race Is Bearing Fruit. Trachoma-Largely Subdued in Schools and Infant Mortality, Once Ap- _cqpalling, Reduced. Those who think of ‘the Indians as members of a dying race are not ac- quainted with the progress of the work casried on in their behalf by Uncle Sam's department of the interior. To struggle against tuberculosis and trachoma, and the fight to lower a high infant mortality rate, are generally conceded to be the greatest problems confronting medical men of the Indi- an office. Supplementing the work of regular agency doctors, special phy- sicians at intervals visit the various reservations, performing eye opera- tions, caring for defective teeth and spreading information. Already trachoma has been very largely subdued in the schools, and such new cases as appear /generally come from outside. Acute cases sre segregated and treated with regularity, and at present a large majority of the cases known are among the old and feeble. The unhealthy manner of liv- ing that marks the period of transition between the old life and the new is fast passing. The buliding: of sanitary heres 1s urged andthe value of clean food and cooking uténsils emphasized... As a re- sult of the campaign, there has been within the last three years’a very t10- ticeable falling off in the number of {IInesges and deaths from tuberculo-. sis, Last year structures valued at $775,- 885.57 were built on Indian ‘reserva- tions, and included practically every- thing from frame cottages and office buildings: to heating plants ‘and flour mills and laundries. ‘The younger generation now knows ' [ thbbhbbhhbbhb the btbbbbet £ NEW MONSTER U:BOATS : f NOISELESS, SAYS SWISS & # @ Swiss newspaper corre- i gpondent who recenthy visited Hy Kiel ‘sfiys the Gerjan subma- rines ‘of the latest ‘type are i cruisers of 2,000 or more tons, with a radius of action of thou- E sands of miles, At least four of these new U-cruisers have £ already been built, and: several others will be completed this summer. The submersible cruisers have several batteries of six- inch guns and three torpedo tubes. Their speed is said’ to be over 20 knots per hour on the surface and 12’knots sub- merged. Each one of the ves- sels;has a crew of more than 100 men. an enemy ship even with the finest instruments, PEERED E EEE EREEEEEEEEEEE POOH-BAH JOINS THE ARMY Sandberg Held Nearly Every Office in His Town, But War Wooed Him, Bangor, Me.—When Carl J. Sand- berg of The Folks enlisted the other day’ with Company E of Skowhegan, which is now doing guard duty, he up- set the entire officialdom of the town. He was principal of the high school, assistant postmaster, chairman of the board of selectmen, superintendent of schools, notary public, tax collector and game warden. But patriotism overcame all these honors, and he walked out of all these official robes to help Uncle Sam in his scrap with the kaiser. “_ An important.feature of the new monster submarines is that they have noiseless motors. Af- ter diving they move silently through the water and their presence cannot be detected by i that a sturdy child grows into a sturdy man, and great care is taken of the young mother in childbirth. Before the present administration assumed control, three-fifths of the little Indi- The Folks is not a large place, hav- ing about 200 residents and a valua- tion of about $300,000, It is largely a lumbering community and is fifty miles southeast of Skowhegan, in ans died before they were five years old, The introduction and enforce- ment of modern methods has reduced this appalling percentage, and the health of the Indian is now, as a whole, far better than it has been at any other time since he came under the influence of the white man. INDIANA WOOD IN FRANCE Used in the Making of Gunstocks and the Wooden Part of Air- planes. Noblesville, Ind.—Airplanes, the wooden parts of which are made from walnut trees from Hamilton county, are flying over the battlefields of France, and gunstocks made from the same kind of wood, cut from the same territory, are in the hands of the front. D. I, Neher, who operates a saw- mill in this-city, is filling an order for the British government for walnut tim ber. The contract calls for 30 carloads, and all the lumber is to be yscd in the manufacture of airplanes and gun- stocks. Neher has contracted with A. L. Puisel for 25,000 feet of tvalnut tim- ber in a strip of woodland in the vi- cinity of Nora. It brought the top price of $6.50 a hundred _feet. | Try a Tribune want ad for results. — British who are fighting on the western | Somerset county. Sandberg was not the whole town, but as shown by the honors conferred upop him, he was @ real somebo' in the’ community. |- ——— |STONE AGE WEAPON FOUND Flint Dug Up in Trench Found to Be Club Head Used in Prehis- toric Days. London.—An Australian soldier dig- ging a trench in France found a strangely chipped knob of flint and fastened to it a strong handle, thus converting it into a knobkerry, which he always ,carried in his belt. He used it to crack German heads in trench raids. When he brought it to England the interest of antiquarians was attracted by the flint. Investigations and com- parisons resulted in authorities agree- ing shat it was a war weapon of the Stone Age, used then in exactly the same manner as the Australian was ‘using it in 1917 and showing that in the Stone Age men fought over the same battlefields. Ne, The Reason. “Gracious. man. On your honeymoon trip and looking so worried?” “Yes: it keeps me worried trying to thigk up things to do to make people believe ['m not just married.” 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. i. B. SMITH Office Rooms 1 and 2 eS built, Prompt BISMARCK, N. D. USE THIS WANT AD PAGE AND BUSINESS MEN’S DIRECTORY LIKE YOU USE THE DICTIONARY : : F.E. Young Real Estate Company, The Outbursts of Everett True By Condo Barta AEC CoNe wake ErrRT CARO. TA GIT OF DouBT BUT THAT TH WAR WiLL ONLY — eas OR THE |iTELEPHONE BOOK TAXI | TAXI! Phone: 2 7 Phone 57 S. LAMBERT H. J. WAGNER Telephone Number 3 CALL AND SEE SAMP LE Hughes Building Optical Office Hours Radiators Ke- Opposite Specialist 9 to 12 and paired and re- = Grand Facile Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted, also Vto5 e (Glasses Changed and Renewed M. to do the work TAXI 105 Phone service. Rea. (i arg sonable prices. = Best known /BRepairing . . methods used ¢immzsaes Machine Hemstitch- ing and Picoting. . MRS. M. C.° HUNT 314 2nd St. PHONE 849 EREDE RICK W. KENH ARCHITECT Freightand Baggage DRAYING E Clootens Livery Temporary Office Basement Cowan’s Drug Store Fourth and Broadway A. W. CRAIG Undertaking Parlors A. W. Lucas Company Day Phone 465 Night Phone 100 Licensed Embalmer in Charge Undertaking-Embalming Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 50 Night Phone 687 WEBB BROTHERS 90% of load carried on Bruck Surings — fire: 2 — Fires ‘@toneSolid RubberTires Trailer 1917 Model Now on Display ery service can e 75 per cent ant and the cost 2 You pet ford Ei ‘ou_get “fie Ford Sip, Ford earborn ciency, Economy and Strength, FORD- Bismarck, N. D, Camping Corwin Motor Co. BARBOR OneTon Truck Corwin Motor Go. Bismarck, .W. D. Has your motor lost} Let us rebare the cyj purpose, Bismarck, N. D. WILL BuiLp TH Wrrevercerrrr tT sg ah) NO REGISTRATION CARD, | TWO NEGROES BEATEN Kansas City, Mo.—Uncle Sam- uel has a misguided but willing conscription aid in William Mac- Clellan, twenty-two, a structural steel worker. Shortly before mid- Clellan halted a pair B. K. SKEELS Everything Electrical of negro ‘ “See this,” he queried, shov- ing one of the little blue regis- tration certificates under their noses. “Got one?” nen BELTER CARS 4 RE Bop, : ¢: {7 The Electric Shop Wiring Fixtures and Supplies . Delco Farm Light Plants 408 Brosdway fit with oversizé:piston§; ‘on a new machine built e#pectally for that CORWIN MOTOR COMPANY CORWIN' MOTOR CO. Bis mses ND: wo’ “ETRE Wrapped treadis guaranteed’5000 | CORWIN MOTOR CO. BISMARCK, N. D. \ Jobbers Barbie’s PHONE 394 409 Front Street We Call for and Deliver “No,” one of the negroes re plied, “and what's more, we ain't goin’ to wear one’ of them things.” Whereupon the — structural steel worker proceeded to dem- onstrate the superiority of trained muscle and shortly after- wards marched the negroes up in front of the sergeant’s desk at the police headquarters. It was a fateful match for the trio, All moving, storing and household gcods. enced men; also wood, Phone 62 Transfer & storage | We have unequaled facilities for shipping Careful, experi. retail Ice and Wachter Transfer Comp. No. 202-Fifth 8t. three were charged ‘with disturb- ing the peace. “That's all right,. sergeant,” said Uncle Sam’s co-worker, “just put ‘em in a cell with me.” MacClellan’s request was not granted. EEEEEEEEEE EEE EE go to 411 Broadway Petretrtetetttttttttrtitt tht titt ttt ttt ttt ttt: Like Father, Like Sdn. “Science has reached the conclusion is hereditary.” “So I hes “There must be something In that theory. Observation has taught me that the habit of sitting in the front row at theaters is also hereditary.” Northwest Taking a Back Seat. “The home should be a center of cul- ture,” said the high-browed woman. “I don’t object to that,” answered Mr. Dubwaite, “but personally I pre- fer, while Mrs. Dubwaite enlightens the children, to play the part of ap interested listener.” A. 8. HOFFMAN Work Guaranteed | PIANO TUNING For first class shoe repairing Bismarck Shoe Hospital H. BURMAN, Prop, = Shoes Repaire Rest Equipped Shop in the | L. E. Larson | ee Bain Stre | Residence. 623 Sixth. St. Bismarck Realty Company Bismarck Bank Building CITY LOTS RENTS FARM LANDS a: Loden’s Battery Shop 3attery Service 0S BROADWAY ISMARCK, N. D. COLEMAN’S New and Second Hand Store Second Hand Cijothes Bought and sold, Clothes Clean and pressed Blocked and Cleaned, We Carry a Line of New Goods, We Buy all Kinda 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-Blocked AT REASONABLE PRICES Especially Ladies Straws and Panama's Work guaranteed and done promplly EAGLE HAT WORKS Phone 682 Opp. Post Office. BISMARCK