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4. USE THIS WANT TUESDAY, JULY 81, 1917 BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE | “AD PAGE, AND BUSINESS MEN’S DIRECTORY LIKE YOU USE THE DICTIONARY OR THE TELEPHONE BOOK F.E. Young Real FOR SALE—The Estate Company, The Outbu biggest line, of houses, lots and farm lands of any dealer in the county. Watch this space for real bargains after Aug- ust. 15th. F.E. Young Real Tel. No. 78 Offices Estate Company in First National Bank Bullding —_—_—_—_—_—_—_— — OOOO——e=Ee_e J. H. HOLIHAN Real Estate Bargains For Sale: Now is the time to buy Real Estate. I haxe some very ex- ceptional bargains in Houses, Lots and Land. The time to buy is when the other fellow. wants to sell. Re- member we write Insurance in all lines and represent some of the old- est and most reliable companies. J. H. HOLIHAN ‘Room 2 te 4 Lucas Block Phone 745 , HELP WANTED—MALE WANTED—Two Latherers at Napo- leon. Inquire or write, G. E. Meyer, __Nazoleon, N, D. 7-30-3t WANTED—Man to take care of hogs on farm. Inquire Gussner’s store. 4 : 7-31-3t WANTED—Men for steady employ- ment, highest wages for competent], and reliable workers. Hebron Fire and Pressed Brick Co., Hebron, N. D. WANTED—Boy who has had soma experience at printing. Apply at Tribune job room. WANTED—Yard man. Apply Grand Pacific hotel. 7-28-3t WANTED—Man and wife to work on farm. Write or inquire Gussner’s store. 7-30-3t WANTEO—Man acquainted with the town for delivery work. Apply Gus- sner’s store. 4-25-3t —————aX—_—e_—— HELP WANTED—FEMALE — |} ment, in the Rose Apartments. BOARDERS WANTED WANTEO—Koomers and boarders, at Dunraven, 212 Third St. Under new management. 7-5-1mo FOR SALE OR RENT—HOUSES AND FLATS —NewW, modern house on Thirteenth St. North. 6. S. Clifford, city. 7-28-6t FOR RENT—Strictly modern, four- room flat in the LaRue duplex, low- er floor. Can be occupied at once. Absolutely new. Phone 812 or call at 114 Ave. A. West. 7-26-3t WANTED—To rent small,. furnished apartment suitable for light house- keeping. Phone 812. 7-26-3t FOR SALE—Two modern bungalows on one lot; good investment. Lun- deen. Phone 548X. 7-25-10t FOR RENT—Strictly modern - apart- Ap ply F. W. Murphy, 204 Main St. 7-3-12t ROOMS WANTED WANTED—Light housekeeping reoms in private family. Call Mr. Hud- son, Lahr Motor Sales'Co. 7-30-tf MISCELLANEOUS WANTED—A woman to take into her. home two smali children and care for them. Address 219 Tribune Office. ‘FOR SALE—Team and harness. In- quire at Banner House, 104 Main street. 7-31-2t FOR SALE—Fireless cooker and gas range. Call 275R. 7-30-6t FOR SALE—New furnishings for small flat. Used only short time. Price less than present wholesale. Phone 633U. WANTED—Girl for housework. 622 8th St. Phone 457X. WANTED—Housekeeper for small family. Address No. 217, care Trib- une... 7-30-4t WANTED=Two good waitresses at Foray$b,»Monts:.u Wages’ $40 per month. ;Railnoad fare paid. Apply _ at Tribune 7-31-6t WANTED—Pantry woman at Grand Pacific_hotel. 7-30-3t GIRLS WANTED — Apply Capital Steam Laundry. WANTED—Competent stenographer and. bookkeeper. -State experience pad salary expected. Address “S” ‘Box 92 City. 7-28-5t WANTED—Good woman for general housework. Apply-Dohn’s meat mar- ket. 7-27-tf TED Wotan for general house- work." Wages'$25"pér thonth. Call at 423 ‘third st) O"'* 7-26-6t nist ew—ulrl for housework inthe country. Address E. A. Green, Bis- marek, or phone 410F-21. 7-25-6t ROOMS FOR RENT FURNISHED ROOMS at 403 Third street. _ ROOMS FOR RENT—Two large and two small modern rooms for rent. 404 Fifth St. 1-31-6t ladies. Phone 457X, 622 8th St. 7-31-3t ‘ROOM AND BOARD—$1.00 per day. Banner House, 104 Main St. _7-31-2t FOR RENT—One townstairs front room, suitable for two. 417’Seventh street. 2:30:2t FURNISHED ROOMS for light house- Keeping. 313 Fourth St. ehone} 627Y 7-30-2t FOR RENT—Rooms. 620 Sixth St. 7-27-1mo FOR RENT—Nice, airy, front room close in. Phone 263. 7-25-64 ‘FOR RENT modern front rooms for light housekeeping. Varney Flats Phone 773. FOR RENT—Strictly modern room. 814 Ave. B. Phone 384R._ 7-25-1mo FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in mbd ern house for light housekeeping or otherwise, as desired. Phone 404K _or call at 801 Fourth St.” 1 FOR RENT—Rooms in modern house; hot and cold water, bath. 223 Sec- ond street. T-24-7t FOR RENT—Large,‘ modern room; 38 Ave. A. Phone 308K. 7-20-Imo FOR RENT—Modern room at 418 Second St. Phone 544X. — 7-25-4t. FOR RENT—Rooms. Phone 377K. 6-7-1mo FOR RENT—Furnished rooms. _ Call at the Business college or phone 183. * 7-13-1mo —————EEEE———_—_—_=== AUTOMOBILES, MOTORCYLES WANTED—Second-hand Ford in good condition. Phone 726K. 7-28-6t f HOUSES WANTED WANTED—By Aug. 10 to September: 1, small modern cottage close in; family, two adults. Address No. 116 Tribune giving location and rent. ___ LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Bunch of keys. Owner may have same by calling at Tribune and paying for this ad. 7-31-1t TOSTt—Red check book containing Progressive Assurance Co. identifi- cation card and safety deposit box key. Leave at Tribune or call | 334k. i ‘ 7-30-6t —— REAL ESTATE FOR SALE FOR SALE lots 1-2-3, block 3, Stur- WANTED—Home for invalid lady. Want good care and will pay well. Address ‘No. 218, care Tribune. 7-30-4t FOR SALE—Singer sewing machine, walnut case, latest model, almost new.:\A bargain if taken at once. €all room 217, Northwest hotel. : \ 7-30-2t WE ARE paying 15 cents per load for manure dumped at our nursery west of the city dump. Oscar H. Will & Co. 7-28-3t FOR SACE—Two fine, young, Shet- land ponies. W: A. Falconer, 202 Ave. E and Second St., Bismarck, N. D. 7-27-tf PIGEONS — Utility and exhibition stock in Carneaux, homers and whites; dressed squabs 25c each. Phone 498L. 7-27-0¢ FOR SALE—One new upright piano, or will exchange for work horses or cattle. Box 256, Bismarck. 7-25-6t FOR SALE—One second-hand Detroit gasoline range, four burner. Inquire at 418 Fifth St. Phone 512R. 7-26-3t FOR SALE—Pool hall and contec- tionery store, including building and lot. Ill health reason for sell- ing. Reasonable price and terms arranged. Address, Box 215, Tri- bune. run SALE—Une mower, one $-fcot binder, two heayy double wagons, one double box, two single buggies, one pony buggy, one double driving harness, 14 horses. Geo. D. Brown company. 7-25-6t FOR SALE—One Case 30-60 threshing outfit. Chapman and Sperry, Turtle Lake, N. D. 7-24-13t REMEMBER CASPARY—For your suit cleaning, pressing and repair- ing. Bismarck Fur Co., 418 Broad- _way. 7-12-tf FOR RENT—INew, modern room, block and a half from Grand Pa- cific hotel. 311 Fourth street. Phone 627R. 7-31-3t' FOR SALE—Blectric stove, three burner and oven; excellent condi- tion, $25.00. Phone 267. 7-31-3t Extracting Broken Screw. A tool for extraeting broken set serews is described by the Scientific American as resembling a, drill with a \ coarse left-handed thread. A hole {js drilled into what remains of the screv or bolt, the extractor is inserted and as it turns it exerts a reverse influ- | ence on the broken serew and backs the latter out on tts own thread. NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE COMPANY. TAKE NOTICE, That on the 1st day of August, A. D. 1917,.at 10 o'clock A. M., at the court house in the City of Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Dakota, the matter of the application of C. B. Little, Receiver of the Bis- marck Tribune. Company, a corpora- tion, for a confirmation by the Court of said Receiver’s report of distribu- .| tion of the assets of said corporation; which is on file in the office of the clerk of. the District Court of Bur- leigh County, at Bismarck, North ‘Da- kote, and for a discharge of said Re- ceiver, and the release of his sure- ties from further liability on the Re- ceiver's bond heretofore filed, will come on before the court, and at said time and place the Court. will hear and determine any and all objections to such confirmation and discharge that may be presented by parties in- terested in said action or other per- sons entitled to object thereto. C. B. LITTLE, Receiver ot the Bismarck Tribune Company, a corporation. MILLER, ZUGER & TILLOTSON,, | Attorneys for said Receiver, Bismarck, N. D. giss addition. East Front, price right for quick sale. Address 214 Tribune 7-25-6t Tribune want ads bring results. <Peamps will supplement workhouses, the (MRS. TRUE, jou DON'T | {EXPecr M& To WEAR—— 77. — Dr. Poliksena Schnischkina Yavein, president of the “Defenders of Wom- an’s Rights,” the Bussian branch of the International Woman Suffrage al- liance. When the war broke out Doc- tor Yavein and her coworkers threw the whole strength of this powerful suffrage unit into war service for Rus- sia. ; JAP WOMEN TAKE MEN’S JOBS Wages Range From Ten to Twenty: Five Cents a Day—Actresses: Best Paid, Tokyo.—That Japanese women con- stantly are taking a Jarger part in the uctiyities of the empire is shown by recent investigations, As in Europe, so in Japan, women hre filling posi- dons formerly exclusively held by men. There are 4,000 women working un- der the railway bureau, most of them ticket sellers, cashiers and account- ants, and 6,000 women find employ- ment in the cigar and cigarette fac- tories of the government tobacco mo- nopoly. Their wages range from 10 to 25 cents a day. Male clerks in banks and mercantile houses constantly are being replaced by women, who recelve $5 to $15 a month. ‘ Actresses receive the highest wages paid to women in Japan, but their clothes are expensive, and so they are financially in no better position than the more humble workers, OHIO LOAFERS MUST WORK Tramps, Panhandlers and Such Like to Be Herded in Labor . Colonies. Columbus, O.—The vagrant who stops at the back door and-asks for a “handout” soon will be only a memory in Ohio, Tra: : handlers” ud other loafer: 3, put in labor colonies und iiaie to become self-supporting at least. The plan is Q war-efliclency measure. Detaiis are being worked out by Governor Cox and the Ohio branch of the council of national deferse.’ The latter. not. possessing sufficient stacill- rsts of Everett True By Condo XY GOT You THESE DEceEnT| WEAR THEM. ENOUGH OF A BARBARIAN “all into the furnace and started a fire. CLOTHES AND YOU Wicc You're «|! WITHOUT DRESSING LIKE’ }: ONG’ OUT HERE! PE NM, yg eR! i X SHOULD THINK You WOULD GE 1 CHEERED t UP 1 OUT MERE IN Close’ ; COMMUNION WITH NATURE ¢ ties to take care of the “wont-wor' Police, marshals and sheriffs will be hot on the trall of these parasites of society, who, on conviction, will be put under guard and. forced to labor for the duration ofthe war. DIVER HAS “NARROW ESCAPE Dragged 500 Feet on Bottom of Ocean When His Lines Bccome Tangled. San Francisco.—Facing death at the bottom of San Francisco bay, Joe Slade, diver, saved li elf by quick thinking and streng arm muscles, Slade went down to clear a barge an- chor from a pipe lir As the anchor was cleared the life nal Hines to the surface bec ed, Slade signaled the launch tewing the barge to go ahead, The launch proceeded too fast and both Hfe and signal lines parted. Jn another oment the air hose would have parte Slade seized the ancher, and towed 500 fect over the bottom, the weight of his d ing shoes threaten! to break hi hold. The launcl: was finally stopped and Slade hauled up. WAITS 20 YEARS TO SUE Ohio Man Asks $25,000 Damages for Injuries Received Twenty - Years Ago. Bet Cleveland, O.—Witnesses with long memories will star when the court of common pleas hears the case of Mel- vin W. Veile, twenty-four, against Catherine Nussdorfer, executrix of the estate of Jacob Nussdorfer and Wil- liam Nussdorfer. Veile is suing for $25,900 damages for injuries he al- leges he received 20 years ago when he lived with his parents in one of the Nussdorfer tenements. He says that on January 14, 1897, an iron gate carelessly left leaning against the building fell on him and‘fractured his skull and that he hasn’t been able to pursue any ‘regular occupation since that time. He says he_waited until he became of age before suing. Coccccevecsccoesosoooecns GOOD CAR REQUISITES $ e A good automobile should be able ‘to do the following things, necording to the head of ‘the en- gineering. department of. one of the large motor car manufac- tories: v To run ‘steadily and pleasant- ly on high gear at speeds from five te fifty miles per hour over smooth roads. To carry one over the rough- er roads as fast as one can ride with any degree of comfort. Zo pull through deep sand, mud or snow easily and without overheating. To climb any ordinary hill where there are traveled roads, on high. To get away from a standstill about as quickly as one’s neigh- bors’ cars, To do all these things as cheaply as possible, and without skilled care and constant atten- tion. 1 H : Woman Put y in’ Fire. Alliance, 0.—Picking up a handker- chief in which was $650 when she cleared newspapers from her room the other day, Mrs. Rosa Cfefzer threw The currency was consumed before TAXI F reightand Baggage Undertaking Parlors ||| Usdertaking- Embalming H _—————————— ||| Licensed Embalmer in Ch Clootens Livery}! © 4, w. tara company || Dey Phone 80 Night Fone Oa? Temporary, Office A. W. CRAIG FORD <i § #| dressing house has erected a new time. ably 1,500,000,000 cents and 500,000,000 five-cent pieces afloat in the United States, or an average of 12 pennies and five nickels for each person. discovered her mistake, = a - JOHN BORTELL Sheet Metal and Radiator Works BISMARCK, N. D. TAXI TAXI! ars Ph 7 joist weniz, || Phone D7 | Phone & : eS ‘ vate ea i, EB. SMITH S. LAMBERT method known for Heati ——— kes Hane Office H. J. WAGNER Telephone Number Rooms 1 and 2 533 Optical Specialist Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted, also Glasses Changed and Renewed BISMARCK, N. D. CALL AND SEE SAMPLE Kadiators Ke- paired and re- built, Prompt service. Rea- sonable prices. Best known methods used o& to do the work 105 Office Hours 9to 12 and 1to5 PLM. Hughes Building Opposite Grand Pacific Hotel Machine Hemstitch- ing and Picoting. MRS. M. C. HUNT 314 2nd St. PHONE 849 FREDERICK W. KELIH ARCHITECT ‘Webb Block Phone 449 Phone Basement Cowan’s Drug Store Fourth and Broadway WEBB BROTHERS a RACINE COUNTRY ROAD TIRE Wrapped tread is guaranteed 5000 Licensed Embalmer in' Charge rtd testa WARNER Camping Trailer 1917 Model Now on Dispiay 90% of load carried on Gru’ Springs = hire etoneBolld Hubber Tires Poa VO 3) BG yit CCRT Yor ey eee cae pare orbs ‘ord. Dearborn One-Ton You get Ford Eflie ANDA Truci. MAKES = ciency, Ford Simplicity, Ford Economy and Dearborn . A Strength Corwin Motor Co. FORD-. ARBOR OneTon Truck Corwin Motor Co. Bismarck, N. DD. ‘ Bismarck, N. D. REBORING Has your motor lost its power? Let us rebore the cylinders nd) fit with oversize pistons, on @ yew machine built especially for that purpose, CORWIN MOTOR COMPANY Bismarck, N. D, qe’ BEITER CARS ARE Buy CORWIN MOTOR CO. BISMARCK, N. D. Jobbers Barbie’s DRY CLEANING AND WILL Buti. THEM | CORWIN MOTOR Co.bisnarcaty 0 CORWIN MOTOR CO.B:Sman(K, ND WILL EQUIP ARMY DOCTORS | Uncle Sam's Medical Authorities Solve | The Electric Shop Problems Presented by Great In- | crease in Fighting Force. 3B. K. SKEELS One of the large problems before the army medical authorities has been Everything Electrical DYE WORKS the furnishing of the surgical instru- A ments and other medical supplies Wiring Fixtures and Supplies PHONE 394 needed for Uncle Sam’s augmented Delco F, Light Plante military establishment. There has arm been a hearty co-operation between 409 Front Street Maj. Gen. William C. Gorgas, the sur- geon general, and his assistants, and Phone 370 408 Broadway We Call for and Deliver the manufacturers, it is announced. a Satisfactory arrangements have re- sulted by which the necessary surgi- cal instruments may be obtained in a way as good as if derived from Ger- many. Lending surgeons of the coun- try assembled in Washington, after consultation, agreed on instruments necessary for surgical operations. By this means, {t was possible to compile a revised catalogue, which has been communicated to the makers of in- struments, who have signified their willingness to furnish this simplified list to the limit of their facilities. In the matter of drugs, the war de- partment is assured of deliveries in the quantities required and of the varieties needed under a system that promises to overcome difficulties that may be encountered in obtaining qui- nine and opium derivatives. A surgical COLEMAN’S New and Second Hand Store Second Hand Cioth sold, Clothes Clean Hats Blocked and Cleaned, We Carry a Line of New Goods, We Buy al! Kinds of Junk, PHONE 358, HOUSE PHONE 487k OPPOSITE McKENZIE HOTEL For first class shoe repairing go to Bismarck Shoe Hospital H. BURMAN, Prop, 411 Broadwa: PIANO_TUNING| A. 8. HOFFMAN Work Guarantesd Residence. 623 Sixth. 8t. ————————— Houses & Lots | For Sale Transfer & storage plant to be devoted to the manufac: We have unequaled facilities for ture of surgical dressings. There also is a gratifying promise of ambulances |] moving, etoring and shipping in the number necessary at home and |} household goods. Careful, experi. abroad. ‘The makers of motor vehi-|} enced men; leo retall Ice and We have a number of hous- weod. Wachter Transfer Comp, Phone 62 No. 202 Fifth 8t. 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 cles are in position to fill orders as they are placed, one concern having promised to produce from 300 to 600 vehicles a month, while another has reported that he can make an unlim- ited quantity of ambulances in a short Best Rquipped Shop in the lorthwest L. E. Larson 0 Bain Strori It is estimated that there are prob- Shoes Repaired | Loden’s Battery Shop HATS Cleaned & Re-Blocked AT REASONABLE PRICES Especially Ladies Straws and Panama's Work guaranteed and done promptly EAGLE HAT WORKS Phone 682 Opp. Post Office. attery Service 408 BROADWAY BISMARCK, N. D, Bismarck Realty Company Bismarck Bank Building RENTS BISMARCK OITY LOTS FARM LANDS e ‘