The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 13, 1917, Page 7

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BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE USE Wanted: ~ A’ "00d ~ man to ake charge of our city gales, and to learn the real estate business. \This is a splendid opening for the right man for there is a wonderful future in this ‘business. We will'work him into the farm land end of the business ‘and It he makes good his future is assured. Answer this ad by letter only and tiot later than August 20.- Give full par- ticulars as to age, present and pre- vious occupations ane sales bl tar THIS WANT ence. F. E. Young Real No. 71 Offices Estate Company In Firet J. H. HOLIHAN Real Estate Bargains FOR SALE—House of seven rooms, 10 lots, trees, windmill and other buildings. . East part of the city. $2,700," or’ will ‘take* automobile as part payment. WE: WRITE insurance in all lines, J.-H. HOLIHAN Room 2 to 4 Lucas Black Phone 745 ———————_—_— HELP WANTED—MALE WANTED — ‘Trustworthy man with ability to sell. For automobile sales. Experience unnecessary. Pernianent Position. Opportunity for advance- ment. Apply Labr Motor Sales Co. 8-9-6 Oe CARPENTERS WANTED—Six good men at once, call or phone © R. Calkins, Garrison. N. D. 8-7-30t WANTED—Competent mechanic at Lahr Motor Sales Co. 8-1-tt = ______=====EEE HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—Chambermaid at once. at the Banner ‘House. 8-11-2t WANTED—A thoroughly competent maid for general housework in fam- ily of two. Wages $35 per month. Address 230, Tribune. 8-10-3t WANTED—Woman for general house- work on farm. Phone 410F21. 8-9-6 D. T. OWENS & CO. Real Estate, City Property, Farm Lands, Loans and General ‘iisurance. For sale small house and lot in northwest part of city. Price $450 cash; Lot alone worth the money. For sale & room bungalow on the south side. Full basement, 50-ft: lot, hot air heat, maple floods. House 2 years old and in fine repair. Price $2,500 terms. D. T. OWENS & CO. errant FOR RENT—Large, modern room; 38 Ave. A. Phone 308K. 7-20-1mo FOR RENT—Furnished rooms. Call at the Business college or phone 183. 4-13-Imo FOR RENT—Large, modern rooms in Haggart Bldg., steam heat, hot and cold water. Apply at Hughes Elec- ___ BOARDERS WANTED WANTED—Roomers and boarders, at Dunraven, 212 Third street. Under new management. LANDS FOR SALE—80 acres good farmland in Wisconsin» Will trade for Bur- leigh county land or 1917 auto. A. L. Garnes, Regan, N.-D. 8-9-6t MISCELLANEOUS _WANTED=GnT for general house work, $30 per month. Phone 410F2. WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral housework. Apply 612 Ave. A, or phone 483. : AUTOMeBITES~ MOTORCYLES 8-11-3t | - FOR SALE—Piano and household furniture. Also kitchen and laundry utensils. Prices very réasonable. Phone 279L, or call 222 Second St. between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. 8-114t FOR SALE—Six-hole Garland range, ~ in, perfect condition. ‘Remington, 610 Seventh St. /8-11-3t “MAXWELL ROADSTER IN GOOD RUNNING ORDER, FOR SALE CHEAP. THIS IS THE BEST BUY IN THE CITY. ADDRESS XYZ TRIBUNE. FOR SALE—Buick Six, D45. Run about 6000 miles. In good shape. Will take good Ford in trade. In- quire or write Linton Auto Co., __8-10-5t Linton, N. D. FOR SALE running condition at a bargain. quire at 714 Thayer. Phone 137 or 617. 8-10-6t FOR SALE OR RENT—HOUSES ___ AND FLATS FOR SALE—Neéw, modern house on Thirteenth St. north. 8. S. Clifford, city. etn, 8-7-6t WANTED TO RENT—Bungalow or cottage September or October first. ‘Must be well located and all mod- In- ern. Family of three adults. uive location and rent. Address P. O. box 495, City. 8-11-2t FOR RENT—Four-room flat thorough- ly niodern; first floor. 114 Ave. A. Phone 169L. L. A. LaRue. 8-11-3t FOR SALE Paige 4-40, electrict starter and lights, Hartford shock absorbers, newly repainted, new, storage battery, gen- erally overhauled, radiator rebuilt, etc., Leather in Al condition. Chains, two extra rims, extra tire, etc. Price $350 cash, no terms. Inquire Cc. G. Lucas. _ Salt LOST AND FOUND fOUNO—Ciass pin marked “B. C. N., ’11.” Owner call at Tribune, prove property and pay for this adv. 11-3. ‘ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Rooms at 309 Eighth St. 8-11 3t FOR RENT—Modern, furnished room __at:510 Fourth St. 8-11-3t FOR RENT—Rooms. Phone 377K. 1-1mo Fifth t. Phone 59: 8-9-6t FOR RENT—Two newly furnished, modern rooms. 223 Twelfth street north. 8-10-3t FOR RENT—Modern furnished rooms reasonable rent. 46 Main St. + 8-10-I1mo Phone 592X. FOR RENT—Room in modern house.+ 422 Eleventh street. Phone 857L. _ 8-7-6t FOR RENT—Excellent modern rooms, some suited for Hight housekeeping. 622 Third St. 8-1-1mo FOR RENT—Furnished rooms. 621 Sixth St. T-1-Lmo. FOR RENT—Rooms in modern house hot and cold water, bath. 223 Second St. Phone 349. 8-1-1mo FOR RENT—Rooms. 620 Sixth St. é 7-27-1mo FOR 'RENT—Strictly modern room. 814 Ave. 'B. Phone 384R.. 7-25-Imo FOR SALE—Household furniture. In- quire of Mrs. Reipteck. 116 Ave B 8-10-4t ‘PIANO FOR SALE—Gond, slightly used, high grade Adam Schaot piano. Cheap for cash or monthly payments. Box 26, Bismarck. 8-10-7t FOR | Quick SALE—AWill sell } Hazel- ton billiard parlor, one carrom and three pocket tables, one Pinnet al- ley, confectionery, tobacco and soft drinks Building 22x56 with alley’ in rear. Hot water heat, full base- ment; only amusement place in town. W. W. Tibbetts, Hazelton, N. D. 8.10-2t. TO EXCHANGE—Am looking for first class farm, operate myself, will trade my fine, new, $125,000 dusi- ness block, in hustling and enter- prising section Chicago. Rented $12,000 year; in section where rént- ers are guaranteed and values rap- idly increasing. Must have farm of same high character as my build- ing. H. Rupert, Rm. 1032, National Life Bldg., Chicago. 8-11-1t FOR SALE—22 H. P. Advance steam engine, at a bargain, on easy terms. A. L. Garnes, Regan, N. D. 8-9-6t FOR SALE—New furnishings for Price less than present wholesale. Phone 633U. 8-9-6t FOR SALE—Only hotel in a good North Dakota town of 800 popula- tion. Write No. 227, care Tribune. 8-8-5t ANSWERING THIS AD with your namé afid address will bring you,| free, some interesting facts discov- ered .by me while’ in the new oil! fields. Box No. 229, care Tribune. 8-7; 8-9; 8-12 WANTED TO RENT—Modern medi- um sized house. Address 226 Tri- bune. 8-7-6 HAVE JUST RETURNED FROWN oll fields. If you are interested in oil or oil stock I’ll gladly tell you what I learned while there, free. Box No. 228, care Tribune. 8-7;8-9;8-12 STRAYED OR STOLEN trom my premises Friday night, Aug. 10, one white mare pony, weight about 700 Ibs., branded as follows: On left hip, letter “H” closed at both ends; on left shoulder, “V.H;” on right on left shoulder, “V. K;” on right able reward will be paid for infor- mation regarding the whereabouts of the pony. Paul Brown, Bismarck, IN. D. 8-11-1t BEER BOTTLES WANTED—Highest prices for quart and pint bottles. Geo. Coleman. PIGEONS — Utility and exhibition stock in Carneaux, homers and whites; dressed squabs 25c each. + Phone 498L. 7-27-6t FOR SALE—One second-hand Detroit gasoline range, four burner. Inquire at 418 Fifth St. Phone 512R. 7-26-3t REMEMBER CASPARY—For your suit ‘cléaning, pressing and repair- ing. Bismarck Fur Co., 418 Broad way. 7-12-46 Reconciliation. No matter how serious may seem the quarrel between the leading man ahd the “heavy” during each perform- ance, they are sure to make up before the next one. Se RS eS te 8-9-Imo | _. Inquire- P...4 ADWJPAGE AND Too HIGH, ‘ROBERT! es a HERE'S OWE A LITTLE GoweR!$ Do you THINK THIS BATHING SCIENCE OF WAR IS CHANGED Developments of the Past Three Years Have Rendered Obsolete Most of the Old Methods. During the last three years ‘the sct- ence of war has undergone radicul changes, rendering obsolete much which ‘past effort and study had es: tablished as standard. H. H.- Wind sor writes*in Popular Mechanics. Cav- alry has largely given way to Infantry, which now moves farther and faster in motor cars than was ever possible with: animals,* Machine guns have cl d with conditions of infantry Heavy artillery at long range much of what for sned to an infantry charge. The difticult, and always peril ous work of the field spy and seout hus been left behind by the airman, who goes forth openly and noisily, sweeping over enemy lines at a mile a minute. On seu, it 1s no longer the chip which can shoot the farthest, or the fast crulser which cannot be over- taken, that sinks the most enemy ships, but the submarine whose underwater missiles are often unseen aud never heard, Trench warfare as practiced today ig an evolution of the old earthwork idea, but so changed and expanded us to have little resemblance, It was a German invention, worked out to {n- clude streets end alleys with main arteries of communication from the renr, and complete underground habl- tations capable of housing men by thousands. ‘hese underground rooms fre not only one but often two stories deep, the lower level being reached by concealed trapdoors. In the Japanese Russtan war the Japanese made use of “wig open trenches as a means of approach to a fortress, but to nothing like the extent employed now. Prickley Pear a Pest, Ih Queensland the prickly pear is literally overrunning millions of acres of th Tid. All efforts’ to eradicate the pest have proved futile. The rapid pad of the thorny plants and the Im- lity of killing them off so that the land that they occupy can be utl- luzed for farming or grazing purposes hus so alarmed the government of Queensland, as well as that of the com- monwealth itself, that scientists have been invited to study the perplexing situation with the view or devising Ways and means for ridding the coun- try of the ruinous pest. Value of Horses Daclines. ‘The value of horses on the farms in this country seems to have fallen slightly, for the department of agri- culture reports that the average value of these horses on January 1, 1917, was only $193, as compared to $109 on Hdd 1, 1914. The difference in between the horses exported and those on the farms is due chiefly to the fact that only the youngest and best horses were sent, abroad, while those on the farms include the lame, the blind and the halt of all ages. Macedonia Country of Queer People. Here in Macedonia we are so. very far away. In actual distance we may be nearer home than if we were in} Egypt, says a correspondent of the | Manchester Guardian. We knev: a lot ubout Egypt before we wcut there, pat very few of us knew anything at ¢ about Salonica, and the county w! hich les behind it, nor did’ that country know anything about us. Coming here you pass through that highly flavored town as through a gate, and enter a strange country, a country of queer. people; queer gnimals and queer names, NAME MIGHT BE auo VADIS At Any Rate « ‘dali Ye Young Chi- nese Who Studied In United States, Has Kept on Going, A brilliant young Chinese gentle- man, Quo Ti-Chi .by name, is among the eminent military and naval lead- ers conferring at Shanghai in the name of the Chinese Républic, writes Gir- ard in the Philadelphia Ledger. “Quo,” as everybody called him, graduated several ‘yeurs ago at the University of Pennsylvania, He was president of the Economic club, an editor of the undergraduate magazine and a skillful debater. I met him at a Phi Beta Kappa din- ner at the University club, when he was one of the speakers, “Do you suy ‘a Chinaman’ or e Chi- nese’?” I asked him. He smiled. “You wouldn’t say ‘an Americamén, would you?” he an- swered, He told me that when he went home for vacation he had to travel 2,000 miles inland up the treacherous Yangtse-Kiang to reach his home. Quo became secretary to the first vice president, later the president of the republic, Young as he. is, he is one of the big men among his people today. Judge Gest suggested that his last name might well be “Vadis.” At any rate, he ‘has kept on going. FIGUREHEAD IS SEEN AGAIN Makes {tq Appearance on Old-Fash- loned Craft Resurrected ae Result of Cry for Tonnage. In answer to the war cry for ton- nage, a strange procession of sailing vessels is plying up and down the American coast these days, @ company ; of old-fashioned craft whose noses have long been in the mud and whose commercial value seemed to have van- ished. But now with brave front these old relics are filling the meeds of ves- sels—and the brave front of the elght- eenth ¢entury ship, with its heroic figurehead, is again seen in New York harbor ‘after many years, The figurehead died hard among other nations. As an expression of the poetry and superstition of seamen it has lived since the Egyptians and Phoenicians decorated their prows with the carved figure of an ibis, a lo- tus, a phoenix, or sometimes a gigantic and all-seeing eye, and then confident- ly set sail under its protection. For these thousands of years the figure- head has been the seaman’s god. He has trusted the figurehead no less than is not a saflor today of the old school who would not welcome fts return to modern vessels, The Downhill Road. A. J. Balfour, head of the British commission, told a pathetic anecdote ata New York reception about a young peer. “He was dreadfully wounded at Mons,” said Mr. Balfour, “and, though he lingered on a long time, he knew, as we all knew, that his hurts were mor- | “I met-him limping painfully on his crutches in Piccadilly one morning. He ; was the shadow of his former self. 1 “You're walking very slowly,’ I sald. \ “He gave a sad kind of laugh. | “But Pm going very fast, eald he.” | Where Is She? Gabe Harkin sez. “What has becum of th’ ole time telefum girl who useter give you yer number right away?” “i to do the work 105 Froightand E Baggage Clootens - “Livery his compass or his captain, and there | | throwing Hguid fia JOHN BORTELL Sheet Metal and Radiator Works BISMARCK, N. D. - CALL AND SEE SAMPLE Round,Oak Moist Ald Heating Sys- tems. Health: lest and cheapest method known for Heating a Home. Radiators Ke- paired and re- built. Prompt / 2? \ service. Rea- ‘Auta sonable prices. Radiator | Best known i Repairing methods used cia TAXI Phone Temporary Office . Basement Cowan's Drug Store - Fourth and Broadway 90% of load carried ele Sie aed See ctouewolld Hubber tires ULL ican a Yn MMi Miss Up He 1g Y aes more efficient and the go M. ed Ye 7 Ford Sim| pi ity Fa te i Aston BARBOR Corwin Motor Go. Bismarck, WN. D. Corwin Motor Co. SHARAN C TAXI Phone & B. SMITH BUSINESS MEN’S DIRECTOR LIKE YOU USE THEY DICTIONARY OR THE TELEPHONE BOOK Fe E. Young Real Estate, Company, The Outbursts of Everett True ~ By’ Condo TAXL Phone & Ss. Phone OF Battery Service Loden’s Battery y~ 408 BROADWAY. BISMARCK, N. D, Machine Hemsfitch- ing and Picoting. MRS. M. C. HUNT 314 2nd 8t. PHONE 849 FREDERICK W. KEITH ARCHITECT ‘Webb Bleck Phone 449 A. W. Lucas Company Day Phone 465 Night Phone 100 A. W. CRAIG Licensed Embalmer in Charge Trailer 1917 Model Now on Display Corwin Motor Co. Bismarck, N. D, 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 SOMPANY Bismarck, N. D, WILL Buito THEM CORWIN MOTOR CO & man NG Undertaking = a= WARNER | foyer ndertaking-Embalming Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 50 Night Phone 687 WEBB BROTHERS > N YROADE ye COUNTR TiIR Wrapped tread is puarantee ed 5000 3 miles CORWIN MOTOR Co. BISMARCK, N. D. Jobbers BASQUE PITCHING” RETIRES GERMANS Expert “Pelota” Players Strike Out Teuton Regiments With Hand Grenades. ENEMY GUNNERS ARE BAFFLED |Pyrenees Troops Hold Craonne Key Position Despite Desperate At- tacke—German Artillery Fires Almost at Random. French Front.—Grenades thrown with wonderful precision by devotees of “pelota,” the national game of Cuba, of Spain and of the Basque country in, the southwest of France, have done much toward defeating the almost In- cessunt counter-attacks by the Ger- mans on the plateau of Californie, overshadowing Craonne, and on the Casemates plateau, further west along, the Chemin des Dames, which are joined by a narrow crest. These men, whose homes are in the Pyrenees, the outbreak of hostilities. It was they the eastern end of the Chemin des Dames, and it was they who were in possession of the town and its vicinity when the Germans made their repeat- ed efforts to reconquer the ground, to which their commanders attach 80 much importance. The latest vain German effort was made on June 3, when General von Forty-first, who had just been hurried back from the Roumanian front, as- saulted the Californie and the Case- mates plateau with a suddenness and fury such as has rarely been noted on the part of the Germans. Snug in Their Shell Holes. The attack opened with a most in- tense artillery bombardment, under which, however, the Basques sat tight shell holes, When the awful hurricane of shells ceased the occupants of the trenches saw advancing toward them wave after wave of German fnfautry, who crossed the torn up ground elbow {| to elbow, their numbers far in excess | of those of the French defenders. Not a sign, however, was given by the Basques of yielding ground until the German ranks opened and brought to view men equipped with implements mes. Then sndonly . have fought gallantly since | who took Craonne, the key position of | Bohm with two fresh divisions of, Rhenish troops, the Fifteenth and the In their trenches tmprovised out of, The Electric Shop Everything Blectrical Wiring Fixtures and Supplies Delco Farm Light Plants Phone 376 «0s Broadway Barbie’s PHONE 394 409 Front Street We Call for and Deliver then the Basques fell back at those portions of thelr lines which were sprinkled with blazing spirit. This retirement was but a temporary one. The French soon organized a counter- attack with grenades and bayonets. The hand grenades were thrown by, them with such precision owing to their lifelong practice at their favorite game that they forced the Germans out again rapidly and in the fury of their onrush even advanced beyond their original lines, On the right of this Basque line the famous chasseurs had an equally se- vere fight with the attacking Germans, who were eventually thrown back, aft; er suffering great losses. German Gunners Baffled. Not an inch of the ground gained by, ‘the French in the first movement of the offensive has been lost. The Ger- man artillery 1s compelled to fire aly most at random, since the French pos) sess all the most valuable observa- | movements of thelr enemies in the valley of the Allette down below and on the crest at the other side, which before the French offensive was thd third German position, Information gathered from the pris- oners shows that the German high command cannot reconcile itself to the loss of Craonne and the Chemin des Dames, and the officers of the fighting ; units have been ordered repeatedly to retake them at any cost. It Ran in the Family. Suicide is very imitative, according to Wynne Baxter, the coroner. He said he had held inquests upon @ grandfather, a father and a son, who had all taken their lives tn precisely the same way.—-London Observer. | tories, whence they can watch the]; For first class shoe repairing go ty Bismarck Shoe Hospital H. BURMAN, Prop. 411 Broadw: Transfer & storage We have unequaled facilitt moving, storing and shipping household goods. Careful, expert. enced men; alse retail ice and wood. Wachier Transfer Comp. | Phone 62 __Ne: We Fitth Ou. Shoes Repaired West Equipped Shop in the Northwest : | L. E. Larson 400 Bain Stree 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. BISMARCK Bismarck Realty Company Bismarck Bank Building

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