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' MONDAY, JULY 16, 1917, ' es } d. F.E. Young Real Estate|Company! a FOR SALE—The largest and best; the Penitentiary to the river, and \ "y line of houses of any dealer in the], from the bottoms to the Capitol; city. most of them on monthly payments. FOR SALE—The largest list of farm)” There are always splendid bargains Re ee of any. aealer inthe county. on our lists, in either farm lands or SALE—We have the exclusive ti a ill \ save handling of Lincoln Addition and etty aa if ane Ra ay We al- Riverview Addition, besides hun-|™oney by dealing through us. dreds and hundreds: of lots from] ways protect our clients. '» .F.E. Young Real Estate Company Tel. No. 78 Offices 'n First National Bank Building . ANTED MALE FOR SALE—New, fiveroom modern ___HELP WANTED MALB cottage, with good basement. Easy WANTED—Cook, at Home Cafe, Ha-| terms. A. Van Horn. 7-14-30 zelton, N. D. 7-12-6t| FOR SALE —B eautiful mahogany WANTED—Two young men to work Packard piano, cost $600.) Will sell ‘ by month, 421 Twelfth St. 7-14-2t] cheap. Large, white, shadowless . WANTED — Experi = electric light fixture and range with J ey TED — Experienced . Led water front. Phone 857R or. call clerk. “Apply _at Gussner’s, 7-163t) 39 wieventh St., or write State Ex- WANTED—Blacksmith. First class} aminer. 7-14-6t horseshoer and blacksmith wanted | FOR RENT—One or two-car garage, immediately. Steady work for com-| at 209 Seventh St. A. Van Horn. oe petent man. Wachter Transfer Co. i T-14-6t S 1610 | TS 4 2 5 FLATS FOR RENT : } HELP WANTED FEMALE | FOR RENT—Modern, front . rooms 4 4 W —————_——|_ Varney Flats. F-1L-6t ‘ s WANTED—Competent girl, for gen-| FoR RENT—Apartment. Apply Cow- ‘ , eral housework. Best wages. Phone! ans drug store. 7-16-2t 587 or calk at 36 Ave. A. T-AY-6t WANTED—Good iron girl for laundry work. H. Wah, 518 Broadway. HOUSES FOR RENT 7-16-3t| FOR RENT—Furnished house. Mrs. WANTED—Lxperienced girl, for gen-| F;_U-Shuman, 412 Third St. enone eral housework. Mrs. R. C. Battey, | .. 455. tt baad 514 First St. Phone 491. 7-14-3t|FOR RENT—Six-room, modern house. Phone 2 7-13-3t ee ! FOR RENT—Modern, five-room bun- X ‘ - ue f x galow; disappearing beds, bath and pe fecal fps ; full: basement with laundry. Mrs. / : ; F. E. Titus, 18 Thayer St. _7-16-3t JH. HAN, FOR RENT—A sovenroom, modern nas house, furnished. Will rent to Octo- REAL ESTATE BARGAINS ber 1 to desirable tenants. 208 Ros- ——— ser street. Harvey Harris & Co. FOR SALE—House of seven rooms, 714-4 j close in, modern; tree, aston, | ———————=_=_—_— fine lawn, $2,800, $750 cash. Rents : " iy for $23 per month LOST AND FOUND ed 4 ———_________________| LOST—A brooch, set with moss ag- FOR SALE—Farm close to Bismarck.| ate, Finder, please leave same at FOR SALE—One of the best lots on N. G. Nelson’s billiard hall, c yo , i Ay hotel. 7-12-6t Ave. B. $850. ———— | FOUND—Child’s coaster wagon Sat- 4 FOR SALE—Land close to Bismarck.} ‘urday morning. W. H. Ebling, 824 ‘Seventh St. Owner may have same Seen ‘|'_ by paying for this ad. 716-2 , Rooms 2 and 4, Lucas Block LOSt—Two trunk keys and a Yale “ eA Phone 745 key, tied with yellow ribbon. Re- ‘y + turn to 206, Bismarck Tribune office. . 7-16-3t * Cs DRESSMAKING MOVED—From Kupitz Block, to exer SITUATIONS WANTE: Union Mercantile Block, 112 1 NC SW, D Sixth St. Phone 493V. Miss Linda STEAM ENGINEER desires a posi- ty 7-11-5t Geyer. Hon Experienced. Wife also Wants | eS position; good’ cook. Address, 204, Tribune Office. 7.12-3t MISCELLANEOUS é wy SITUATION WANTED as cook in| REMEMBER CASPARY—For | your 4 . hotel or cook -car: Address 200,| suit cleaning, pressing and repair- , , Tribune. ‘ 7-16-1t| ing. Bismarck Fur Co., 418 Broad- | ——— ene | WAY. T-12-tt 1 WANTED — Bismarck rug cleaning APARTMENTS FOR RENT works now open. R. J. Anderson. P FOR RENT—Strictly modern apart-| Phone 755. 6-20-1mo ment, in the Rose Apartments. Ap-| FALSE TEETH—We pay as high as ply #. W. Murphy, 204 Main St. $22.50 per set for old false\ teeth, no : \ 7-3-12t] matter if broken. Also gold crowns, bridgework. Mail to Berner’s False ri Teeth Specialty, 22 Third St. m., om | if : ____ BOARDERS WANTED “=.| Troy N. Y., and receive cash by re- / WANTED—Roomers and boarders, at|_ | mai Dunraven, 212 Third St. Under|§ YED—From our pasture, south new management. 7-5-1mo| of Bismarck, 1 large, red steer WANTED—Roomers and boarders at| (horns sawed off); 1 white and 208 Thayer. Phone 389K. Reason.| rown spotted cow and calf—the ‘ able prices. 6-23-1mo. calf has white face. Information = i 1 regarding whereabouts of these an- imals will be appreciated by Brown RENT & Jones. 7-12-3t Y y = ROOMS FOR WANTED—To pay best prices for oe FOR RENT—Room in modern house; ear corn, speltz and other feed hot.and cold water. Phone 689R. grains. Will also need winter rye. R — Three unfurnis 7-14-4t s rooms for light housekeeping. 417] WANTED—To pay best prices for ear Tenth St. Phone 478X. 7-16-3t corn, speltz and other feed grains. For RENT—Large, strictly modern Will also need winter rye. Oscar room; 38 Ave. A. . .6-28-Imo] Will seed store. 7-16-4t FOR RENT—Rooma. 377 e—EeCEaSVV—S»»c Phone Te WORK WANTED FOR .RENT—AIl WANTEO—German lady wants laun- front room in a wee aati: dry work. Will do it at your house t 7 strictly mod fi | or call for it. Does not speak Eng- a Bee y gnodern in every way.) ish. Call_at 600 12th St. 7-14-2 t Phone 698R or call at 611 First street. 5:23-tf FOR RENT—First floor, back room, 50x25 feet; good back light and en- trance! Address P. O. Box 511. Phone 562R. . 7-13-8t R rnished rooms. Call. at the Business college or phone 183. 7-13-1mo FOR SALE FOR SALE—Cheap, if taken at once, good Indian motorcycle. Phone 254. 7-13-3t FOR SALE—30-inch wrapping paper, at 9c per pound, by the roll. See Faunce, Fourth St. 4-14-3t FOR SALE—Farm. A young man subject to draft oeffrs 271 acres cheap—about half ‘tual value— and would accept small house jn Bismarck as first payment; galas easy terms. Good soil, open spring of good water, extra stock farm. J. K. Doran. 7-29-16 FOR SALE-—Shield gl of all sizes at lowest prices, cut and set on short: notice. See Faunce, Fourth street. All other kinds of glass for sale here. 7-16-6t FOR SALE—At a great sacrifice, if taken quick, high grade Kimball piano, good as new. Phone 254. 7-13-3t Fi indian twin cylinder motorcycle; good tires and equip- ment. For quick sale at $85, at Harry Clooten’s garage. Phone 27 FOR SALE—By owner, two bunga- lows, four and five rooms, well built, modern. Seventh St. Lundeen. Phone 548X. 7-16-1mo FOR SALE—Only meat market in good town on main line N. P. Ry., doing $35,000.00 ‘business yearly. Shop perfectly sanitary. Address 205, Tribune. 7-16-6t, FOR RENT BARN FOR RENT—Barn holdim& 26 hor: Apply at Clooten’s livery Phone 105. 7: Relief at Last. “The nonchalance with which those Mexican peons face a firing squad!” “Oh, that isn’t so remarkable, under the circumstances.” “Now?” “I dare say if you had spent most of your life in search of a square meal, without finding it, {t wouldn't be so hard to face a firing squad.” A Modern Tendency. “I don't see why the girls dislike me,” said the soulful young man. “J quote beautiful poetry to them.” “My boy,” said the elderly person, “you are years behind the times. The only poetic feet the young woman of today is interested in are the kind that move gracefully over a ballroom floor.” —>s=—— ay Easily Spotted. “Do you recognize-the profession” asked the sniall-time vaudeville per+ former, extending his card to the man- ager of a No. 1 company. “Yes,” replied the expensively} clothed person. “I recognized you at once. Nothing doing in the way of passes.” A Gerreral Mix. Mr. Youngwed—Did you mix We dough for this cake? aime Mrs. Youngwed—Yes. \ att Mr. Youngwed—Well, ‘I think gee mized the dirocti N BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE y SEVEN By Condo BRING ME A CARGE PORTERHOUSE STEAK SMOTHERED IN ONIONS BAKED POTATO, ( AND. CHEESE, DOUBLE ORDER OF BAKED BEANS, FRIED OYSTERS, SLICED TOMATOES, FRIED EGGS MACARONI DOZEN AND A POT OF CoprFee. ARE YOU ORDERING THAT FOR A SQUAD OF SOLDIERS OR ARE YOU GOING To HOS IT DOWN LIKS THE GLUTTON You ARE? “EVERYONES WHO IS - INANTS . TO .KNOW II! ‘\SeTHAT ENOUGH 2 HELPING TO WIN THE WAR ~ BY, PRACTICING SELFSDENIA VILLAIN OF MOTORDOM Iam nothing, yet I exist. I am the root of motoring evils. I am an instigator of pro- fanity. I am a destroyer of property. I steal men's time. I attack without warning. I break up weddings. I cripple ambulances, 1 I defy the police, ~ I impede firemen. I stop delivery of food. I am particularly annoying to women. I harass the rich, I blockade traffic, I am tlie assassin of joy. I am the stumbling block of progress. I am the villain of motordom. I am the Puncture. SUMMER HINTS FOR AUTOIST Good Driver Never Applies Emergency Brakes Swiftly Except in Cases of Emergency. In the Woman’s Home Companion there is an article about motoring in which the writer says: “The good driver never applies brakes swiftly except In-an emergency. When di#witig' up at a street sidé,‘she cuts off {¥nitidn “early and -alldws‘ino- mentutn' td éarry ‘the car to thé stop-' ping place, using the service brake usually, The good. driver thus saves gasoline and wear upon brakes, coast- ing to a stop with the smoothness of operation of an easy start. “A good driver never uses the emer- gency brake, because she never has emergencies! She sees and avoids the emergency before it arrives; the poor driver rushes into trouble and depends upon quickness in grabbing the emer- gency lever to save life. More than ene accident has followed a futile at- tempt to find the seldom used emer- gency lever in a hurry. “The good driver rounds sharp cor- ners to the right, goes over extremely rough stretches of road, or hits unex- pected thank-you-ma’am's, with clutch disengaged, to save the rear axle mechanism. “The good driver uses the wheel with the least possible motién. She does not drag it suddenly from side to side, but turns it so gradually that pas- sengers are unconscious of the fact. In rounding a corner she commences to straighten the car up before it ta halfway around.” WHY HE HURRIED. —, Aaron, seeing Beerbaum with a new overcoat, asks, “vere did you get it?” “I was hurrying across Michigan avenue,” said Beerbuum, “when I ran against a big car and tore my old coat. Just then the ewher came out of the Chicago club and gave me $50 to buy myself a new one.” Aaron pulled on his own coat and, seizing his hat, started for the door. “Where're you going?” asked Beer- baum. “Out to see if that automobile is still there.”—Chicago Herald. Friend—Doctor, how do y to stand the high cost of li Surgeon—By cutting out something, Discomfited. # ‘3 "We've studied ‘the reformer And this conclusioW reach: Allowed.to. make a speech, He mourns his tot when be ts not 4 | firat speed ‘TO AVOID SKIDDING There Are Some Drivers Who Ap- “Btar to Court Qanger. | {| Radiators . USE THIS WANT AD PAGE AND BUSINESS MEN’S DIRECTORY LIKE YOU USE THE DICTIONARY The Outbursts of Everett True, JOHN BORTELL Sheet Mctal and Radiator Works BISMARCK, N. D. Round Oak Moist Aid Heating Sys- tems. Health- jest and cheapest mcthod known for Heating a Home. CALL AND SEE SAMPLE e- paired and re- built, Prompt service. Rea- i} sonable prices, if, Best known “ methods used to do the work TAXI Phone 05 Freightand Baggage DRAYING x Clootens Livery Temporary Office Basement Cowan’s Drug Store “Fourth and Broadway OR THE |TELEPHONE BOOK TAXI Phone 5 v4 S. LAMBERT TAXI Phone i, E. SMITH | ——= H. Al WAGNER “Telephone Number Optical a Specialist ested and Glasses Fitted, also s Changed and Renewed SMARCK, N. D. = = Rooms 1 and 2 Hughes Building Opposite Grand Pacific Office Hours %to 12 and 1 to 5 P Machine Hemstitch- ing and Picoting. MRS. M. C. HUNT 314 2nd St. PHONE 849 FREDERICK W. KEITH ARCHITECT ‘Webb Block Phone 449 Undertaking-Embalming Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 50 Night Phone 687 WEBB BROTHERS Undertaking Parlors A. W. Lucas Company Day Phone 465 Night Phone 100 A. W. CRAIG Licensed Embalmen in Charge 90% of toad stone Soild HubberTires MTT OH and Wes YOUR delivery service can be made 75 per cent more offic nt.and the coat eut to one-third with the Ford: Dearborn Qne-Ton Truck. You_get Ford Effie ciency, Ford Simplicity, Ford Economy and Dearborn Strength. FORD-. EARBO OneTon Truck Corwin Motor Go. la ANDA FORD OLD MAKES A CORNER TURNED TO0 QUICKLY Best Plan Is to Let Car Coast and Hold It From Getting Into, Trouble by Using Steering Wheel— Use Brake Carefully. - — Did you ever haye an automobile skid under you? Hfyygu never have, then you have yet: ppreciate the most “hopeless feeling’ in the world— that of the occupants of a skidding car. It has to be tried to be appreci- ated. And that isnot all; for when a car starts well on,to skidding, there is no telling where it will bring up or what the result of the action is going to be; and yet there are drivers who appear to court this danger, or else they are unaware of why cars will skid. Perhaps the greatest cause {s turn- ing a corner at too-high rate of speed, which often causes skidding of the front wheels as well as rear wheels; the car going so fast that the front wheels do not get traction enough to change the direction; and when an attempt is made to make a turn they skid, and the car goes for the side of the road. Applying the brake will usually overcome this skid. Let Car Coast. | On the other hand, if the rear wheels alone are skidding, let the brake alone. It is best to Iet the car coast and hold it from getting into trouble by using the steering wheel, turning the front wheels in the direc- tion in which the rear end of the car is skidding. If there is still danger of going into something, use the brake very carefully, not enough to keep the rear wheels from turning. A bent axle shaft will sometimes cause a skid, the rear wheels not turning with the front wheels. A drop into the street car tracks will sometimes start a skid; and this suggests the wisdom of keeping out of the street car tracks when they are wet and slippery. It is a good plan to keep out of them anyway, but “safety first” urges it when the rails are slippery. Unevenly Adjusted Brakes. If the brakes are adjusted unevenly #0 that they are applied to one wheel more than they are to the other, the car will skid. Probably the best help against skidding is non-skid chains and on muddy or snowy roads and on slippery asphalt they are essential; but they should not be used except when needed because they do cause undue wear on the tires. Finally, the best guard against skidding fs the driver himself. Accidents happen even to the best of drivers.—Power Farming. COASTING DOWN LONG HILLS Use Motor as Brake, Going Against Compression—Stop Ignition and It Will Cool Motor. When coasting down a long hill | change from one-brake to the other to allow them to cool. Unfortnnately this does not cool the brake drums. So use the motor «1s a brake and go down Avery stecp hill against compression. Leave the ¢ in high speed, or, if Bismarck, N. D. ~~ COUNTRY ROAD TIRE Wrapped tread is uaranteed 5000 Camping Trailer 1917 Model Now on Display Corwin Motor Co. Blsmarck, N. D 3 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 purpose, CORWIN MOTOR COMPANY Bismarck, N. D, CORWIN MOTOR CO. BISMARCK, N, D: Jobbers: LICENSE SIGN FOR MACHINE Unwarranted Change of Numbers or Removal Thereof in Case of Ac- cident Is Prevented. In illustrating and describing a li- cense sign for automobiles, the inven- tion of H. Brewster, 8 East Twelfth street, New York, the Scjentific Amer- ican says: “This invention relates generally to leense signs of automobiles, and more particularly to a rigid sign which may The Electric Shop B. K, SKEELS Barbie’s PHONE 394 409 Front Street We Call for and Deliver Everything Electrical Wiring Fixtures and Supplies Delco Farm Light Plants Phone 370 408 Broadway 7 License Sign for Automobiles, be plainly seen both in daylight and at night, the object being to provide a license sign by which unwarranted change of numbers or removal thereof in case of accident, overspeeding or law-breaking expeditions may be en- tirely prevented.” AUTOMOBILE TIRES FOR 1917 About 125,000,000 Pounds of Fabrio Will Be Required to Meet Estimated Demand. Automobile tires average about five pounds of fabric each, and as it is es- timated that the 1917 tire production will reach 25,000,000, about 125,000,000 pounds of fabric, equivalent to over 250,000 bales of long-staple cotton, will be required to meet this demand. 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 (Transfer & storage | We have unequaled facilities for moving, storing and shipping household goods. Careful, experi. enced men; also 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 Houses & Lots For Sale Shoes Repaired . Webb Block Phone 0 7 ge Arete ae i] We have a number of hous- es and lots in different L. E. Larson parts of the city which can 4 Main Stree || be bought under very desir- = é oe terms. Mts bre ag interested can obtain ful PIANO TUNING information by calling at A. 8. HOFFMAN ’ aaa ee The Hedden Ag’cy | Residence. 623 Sixth. St. CITY LOTS Bismarck Realty Company Bismarck Bank Building RENTS HATS Cleaned & Re-Blocked AT REASONABLE PRICES Especially Ladies Straws and FARM LANDS | you find that too fast, the second or Stop the ignition and it je same_time, Will cool you , attery Ser Loden’s Battery Shop Panama’s Work guaranteed and done s | promptly V I Cc e if EAGLE HAT WORKS 408 BROADWAY =f Phone 682: 395 BISMARCK, N. D. J!) Opp. Post Office. BISMARCK