Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MONDAY, AUGUST 27,1917. F.E. Young|Real Estate Company FOR SALE—A fine new seven room modern house with gas range, hot air furnace, furnace and laundry stove connected with hot water tank, west front, on paved street in good resident portion of city, en- cumbered for $$2,000.00 at 8 per cent. BISMARCK DAYLY TRIBUNE The Outbursts of Everett True By Condo . - BEVEN TAXI Phone & Ss. 2 OT HATS Cleaned & Re-Blocked AT REASONABLE PRICES Especially Ladies Straws and Panama's Work guaranteed and done TAXI Phone ss L. E, SMITH emerges ee nee A’ bargain $700.00 cash, gage and balance on monthly nay- ments at 8 per F. E. Young Real Tel. No. 78R for Offices In First National Bank par $3,700.00 Terms, assumption of mor*- ‘cent. Estate Company HELP WANTED—MALE ‘i WANTED—A man versed in commer- cial businéss to take a manager's place in old house. Present ‘man- ager to retire ot account of age. Address D. K. Care Tribune. Z3 % 27-31; 9 3-7-10- 14. WANTED—Bank help. Can use two *. young men; also stenographer. First Guaranty Bank. 8-21-6t CARPENTERS. WANTED—Six good men at once, call or phone .C R. Calkins, Garrison. N. D. 8-7-30t — HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANT ight intelligent young D—Bright lady for office work. Address 24a Tribune. WANTED—Lady cook. pital. WANTED—Competent g: girl for g general housework. Permanent; $25 start. Address P. 0. box 568 WANTED—Woman for general house- work. Wages $5.50 per week. Call 423 Third. 8 226 WANTED—Girl or woman for gen- eral housework. Phone 459L. 8 24 6t I a a I “ CLOTHING SALESMAN WANT.- % ED — Experienced . clothing + and shoe salesman to help out Saturday evenings or all day. Box 606, Bismarck. 8 24 3t. Ch aoa i a LOsT AND FOUND D. T. OWENS & CO, Real Estate, City Property, Farm Lands, Loans and General Insurance. | FOR SALE—Five-room cottage — on Seventh street, close in. Lot 50x140. Price $2,300; part cash, and terms] _on balance. Sewer and water, FOR SALE—Four-room cottage on Mandan avenue, 50-foot lot, ‘east front, price $2,000. This is a good interest paying proposition. CHOICE ‘building lots in all parts of city. D. T. OWENS & CO. FOR SALE OR RENT—HOUSES AND FLATS FOR RENT—5 room modern house. Phone 241 R or call 205 First St. 8 27 3t. FOR RENT—Small cozy cottage. Phone 250. 8 27 6t.| FOR RENT—Four-room and two-room house. Phone 355. 8-25-5t | FOR RENT—Six-room, modern house Sept. 1. Phone 618K. 8-25-2t | FOR RENT—Modern house, corner of Rosser and Mandan Ave. Call 512K. 8-23-6t COST—2-months old male pointer pup. Liberal reward. Write A. W. Mellen, 410 9th street, Bismarck, or phone 66 8 27 8t FOUND—Bunch of nine keys, Friday night. Call at Tribune. 8-27-2t LOST—Ladies’ gold watch. Initials on case “B. J. S.” Reward. Phone 88R. 8-24-3t LOST—Aug. 20, on road between the Katz livery barn, Second St., Bis- marck, and the J. A. Fields farm, a seal brown overcoat, made of rough finished goods; pair of gloves and map of Virginia in pockets. Find- er, leave with Robert R. Boyd, 620 Sixth St., Bismarck, N. D., or notify B. Boyd, Menoken, N. D., and re- ceive reward soe $5.00. B. Boyd, Menok 2. 7S 8-S1-6F _ POSITIONS WANTED WANTED-—-Position by experienced cook, sp lin pastry. Address 243, care of Tribune. 8-27-1t FOR SALE—One six room and oie four room modern house with large barn, situated.on 3 lots, 2 blocks from P. O. For quick sale $3,000. Address 20 Broadway, City. FOR RENT—Completely furnished and modern house, close in, for the winter, to couple. References _re- quired. Address 352, Tribune office. 8:21-tf| FOR SALE—By owner; new six-room | bungalow, strictly modern, good lo- cation; vel reasonable terms. j Write No. 239, care Tribune, 8-21-6t FOR SALE—Modern, five-room bun- galow in choicest part of-the city. $600 will swing the deal. Address 238, Tribune. 8-20-1mo FOR RENT—Four-room house; Ros- ser street, neaf Fifteeith.’ Apply Mrs. A. W. Lucas, 48 Ave. A. 8-14-12t BOARDERS WANTED WANTED—Roomers and boarders at the Cozy cafe, 114 Main St. 8: MISCELLANEOUS WANTED TO | RENT—Second | hat nd piano. Phone x FOR SALE—Severai horses, two farm wagons, one light double driving harness, or will exchange for any- thing we can use. George D. Brown Co. 8 27 bh. FOR SALE—Dining room furniture, library tadle, rocker, Stude- baker car, linoleum. _ Phone 307X or call $10 Sixth street: 8 25 2t FOR SALE-—One six-hole range; one 4-hole city gas stove, one large ice box; one fine bedroom set. Some other pieces for quick sale cheap. 1010 Ave. C. Tel. 695K. 8 27 3t. 7x7 or F. care WANTED—Smiall tent, size thereabouts. Write\R. W. ‘Tribune. 8 27 2t FOR SALE—One six h. p. Fairbanks Morse gasoline engine about, new; one dowsle Burr feed grinder; one warehouse Fanning mill. George D. Brown Co. WANTED—Roomers and boarders, at Dunraven, 212 Third street. Under new management. 8-9-1mo ____ ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT Nicely furnished room in modern house. Phone 315R. ee eee tab Bo ae 8 27 3t. FOR RENT—Furnished room in mod- | ern house, at 614 Sth street. 8 27 6t; {FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms, for. light.. housekeeping... Pal ! Phone 303. 8 27 2t. FOR RENT—Splendid rooms for light | housekeeping in modern house.) Phone 404K or call at 801 Fourth! street, or inquire at secondhand store. Geo. W. Little. 8-27-Imo FOR RENT—Room. 522 Second st. Phone 283. 8-25-3t FUR RENT—Two modern rooms, close in. 311 Fourth street. Phone 627R. Elk aA MAA a se SN an Prato Mela Ce eG FOR RENT—Modern furnished rooms 114 Broadway. Phone 195L. 8 23 6t ‘FOR SALE—One 30-6) Aultman-Tay- lor gas engine with gas tank and plain guide and one S$ furrow P. & O. Mogul engine plow with stuoble and breaker bottoms. This rig has only plowed 300 acres and is as good as new and can be purchased at much less than prices now quot- ed. Rig is at Sterling, N. D. A. EB. Jones. Lisbon, N. D. 8 27 6t FOR SALE—A number of Auto trail ers, just the thing for hunting par- ties, and camping trips. George D. __ Brown Company. 8 27 6t FOR SALE—1 new 26-in grain thresh- er, complete; one 32-in. Nicholas & Shepard grain thresher nearly new; several gas tractor engines, all sizes. George D. Brown Company. 8 27 bt FOR SALE—Household furniture and stoves. 1019 Seventh street. Phone 300L. FOR SALE—Remington visible type: writer, good as when purchased choice of two guns, hip boots. Call after 6 p. m., corner Ninth and Broadway. 8-24-3t FOR SALE—Hay; 3,000 tons bailed. $10.00 to $12.00 f. 0. b. Soo or Nor- thern Pacific. L. H. White, Cogs- well, N. D. 8 27 6t WHEN IN ASHLEY, N. D., STOP AT the Home Hotel. First-class meals and beds. Charges, moderate. Mrs. John Weber. 8-21-6t FOR SALE—Good gentle pony for either saddle or buggy. Also colt. Call 619 Third street. 8 24 6t FOR SALE—Number 9 eel with high heating closet; one four- teen inch self feed hard coal heater. A. E. Peterson, 515 Fifth St. Phone 592Y TO EXCHANGE—One-half section of land, 95 percent steam. plow, one- half mile from Ingomar, Montana, a good town on the C. M. & St. P. coast line, for a stock of cattle any; Address | J. A. Gustaveson, Albert Lea, Minn.: age, Shorthorns preferred. 8 23 12t BeeER BOTTLES WANTED—Highest prices. for quart and pint bottles. Geo. Coleman. pan ae eee FOR RENT: 8-2 46t! range! $ 23 tf, ‘Modern furnished rooms. Board if desired. 46 Main street. 8-10-1mo ; FOR RENT—Rooms. Phone 377K. 8- FOR RENT—Excellent modern rooms, some suited for light housekeeping. | 622 Third St. 8-1-1mo PARAGON OF DOGS Steamboat Captain’s Pet Was in| Class by Itself. ; One Performance, However, Brought Argument Whether He Was Wisest of His Kind or Plain Canine Fool. ‘The bulldog of the Esmeralda, packet freighter for the settlements between | Portland and Machitis, in intelligence , and accomplishments, is reckoned a paragon of dogs.’ In Portland he walks uptown’ with the captain and rettirns | alone with any purchases and newspa- pers which maybe intrusted to him.' He even brings back meat, and this quota of self-réstraint puts him in a class by himself, Holman Day writes in Harper’s Magazine. One day, according to legend, this; i dog was actor in am affair which has been debated warmly ever since; it gives rise to the argument whether the dog is the wisest of his generation or just a plain canine fool. There is no middle ground among the disputants along the water front. The event itself was sufficiently: grotesque to merit mention. The captain decided to test the dog’s intelligence as a shopper. Therefore he put a coin into a basket which he hitched to the animal’s collar, and then | Tapped his knuckles on an outspread | newspaper, getting the dog’s undivided attention, Lastly, he pointed up the wharf and told the dog to “Git!” Fido obeyed with alacrity and went up the wharf’s roadway in a cloud of dust. At the head of the long wharf there was a bold terrace of a little park whose Irish caretaker had turned out to graze his pair of pet goats, hitched together with a short leash. The dog dashed up the terrace and overtook the frightened goats, setting his jaws on the leather leash with his best grip. The goats leaped from the embank- | ment, carrying the dog with them, and landed on a fruit peddler’s dozing} horse, a goat on each side, like saddle- bags; the leash held, and so did the bulldog. Down the wharf went. the FOR RENT—Firhished Fooms 621 | Sixth St. T-1-1mo { FOR RENT—Rooms. 620 Sixth Si 1 © FOR RENT—Strictly modern y 814 Ave. B. Phone 384R.__7-25-1me FOR RENT—Furnished rooms. (all, at the Business college or phone 183. 7-13-1mo HOW TO ANSWER BLIND ADS. All ads signed with humbers or in- itials, care Tribune must be answered | by letter addressed to the number | given in the ad. Tribune employes | are net permitted to tell who any ad-| | vertiser is Mail or send your answer}; to Tribune No.——, and we will for-| ward it to the advertiser. | NOTICE—SEALED BIDS. The School Board of Long Lake School District No. 48 will receive; sealed bids until 7:39 p. m. Friday,| Sept. 14, 1917, for the erection of a two-room frame building, 32x56 feet, , with full basement, according to plans and specifications, which will be on! file with the clerk of the board on and! jafter Aug. 14, 1917. This building is’ 'to be erected in the town of Moffit /and i sto be completed and ready for loecupancy within 90 days from date letting the contract. All bids must be accompanied by| \a certified check for 5 per cent of) the amount of the bid, payable to the | clerk of the board. | The board reserves the right to re-| ject any and all bids. Dated at Moffit this 11th day of | Aug. 1917. By order of the school board. L. L. LOCKWOOD, | Clerk Long Lake School District No. 48. | (8—13, 20, 27; 9—2, 9) | slight wounds, outfit, and the terrified horse ‘did not pause when he reached the end; he leaped over the rail of the Esmeralda and went flat on deck in a tangle of harness, goats and dog. After matters had been set right, in- cluding pay to the fralt merchant and apologies to the goat owner, the cap- tain took Fido to one side and dispar- nged his intelligence, rapping his knuckles once more on the newspaper and informing the canine shopper that he had not been sent for goats or ba- nanas, “Just a minute, sir!” broke in the cook, who was listening. “Do you no- tice what you have been rapping your hand on?” The captain looked at the sheet. It enrried a big advertisement of bock! beer with a goat rampant in the middle | of it. ‘Tie FeasGn was, oF COTTSe, tha number of suddeh deaths from the cause had markedly deer Good Year for Doctors. “This is certainly a great year for doctors,” remarked an interne, accord | ing to a Ne York correspondent. “Only a fe urs ago there were so many M. D.’s with their shingle out here that some of them had to,take up other business to ketp the wolf from the door, But now there is.a dearth of these professional men. In’ fact, they are so scarce that almost: every day editorials or advertisements are printed ealling for ‘10,000 doctors for | the French army’ or ‘15,000 : doctors wanted on the British battle’ front.’ The figures are growing all the time, and very -soon-tt: is likely, unless: Rus- sia recovers quickly from her ‘political and social delirium tremens,’ we shall | receive a demand for 50,000 alienists | for the Russian revolution. It ts a great pity governments don’t realty ap- preciate what, a doctor's life is worth over there.’ ei Scientist's War Service. Dr. Alexis Carrel, one of the great- est of living surgeons, head of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Re- search and winner of the Noble prize for science in 1912, is forty-four years old. Doctor Carrel, who is a native of France, is now wearing the “horizon blue” field uniform of a French iieu- tenant, having been sent by the Rocke- feller institute to the front at the out- break of the war to conduct an esten- sive inquiry into modern war surgery. | the For his invaluable sei ps to French wounded, the French govern- ment has bestowed upon him the cross of the Legion of Honor. Doctor Car- rel looks upon America as his real home, and after the war will retura to New York to resume direction of the Rockefeller institute. Welcome the Birds. Are all the beautiful birdhouses that were mide last winter now in place and occupied? Let us give a glad welcome to all the birds that can he | induced to live near us. Not everyone realizes the benefit these little crea- tures confer. The work they do in preserving our crops and fruit from the favages, of insects needs to be told again and again. Besides this great use, the happiness they give us with their songs and their beauty is not to be told or measured. Many a heavy heart has been cheered and com- forted hy the robin’s friendly “cheer up, dearie, cheer up” as he flits about a home. Robins love to be friendly, and there are other birds which love human society. Have you in your yard a dish of water fur them to drink and bathe in? If not, put one there, and observe how gladly it is‘made use of.—Exchange, Ideals Worth Striving For. > Engineers and industrial managers are 1 to make needed personal sac- rifices in support of their government. It is no mean call to duty. . Many are now consciously or unconsciously ssing through a period of’ thinking can lead but to one conélusion— Helmets Save Soldiers’ Lives. A British medical correspondent commenting upon some recent French statistics, says: “Out of 55 cases of head injury it was found, for exam-| ple, that 42 occurred in soldiers who wore no helmets, Among the 42 there were 23 fractured skulls. The remain- ing 19 cases suffered from severe scalp wounds, Among the 13 cases which wore helmets there was not a single fracture of the skull: eight showed some concussion efoets, and five had A considerable num- ber of the unprotected cases died; none of the protected died. The most significant fact which has emerged, since the helmet was introdueed was | emphasized by Doctor Roussy at the, Academy of Medicine last year. He said that the percentage of cases show-! ing wounds in the head had increased, * . that there ae some things more valu- able Every enlisted man, whether he real-| izes it or not, has that belief, and so} believing, is ready for his own supreme sacrifice if it must come. Thousands of others must accept that principle | of action for themselves before our in-| dustries can be made so effective as they must become to make the nation | ® strong.—-L. P. in Industrial | Alford, Management. —_——— A Fib. The pupils in an Alabama schoo! | were usked to construct a sentence ng the word “amphibious.” As quick as a flash, a boy gave out the following: “Most fish stories zm fibt- ous.”. i macy Seared 4K TL il, than earthly existence itself. | promptly EAGLE HAT WORKS Phone 682 Opp. Post Office. (TAXI rime LOS iFreightand Baggage DRAYING Clootens Livery Temporary Office BISMARCK | Basement Cowan’s Drug Store Fourth and Broadway Battery Service Loden’s Battery Shop Machine Hemstitch- ing and Picoting. MRS. M. C. HUNT 314 2nd 8%. PHONE 849 Undertaking Parlors A. W. Lucas Company Day Phone 465 Night Phone 100 A. W. CRAIG Licensed Embalmer in Charge pa 408 BROADWAY BISMARCK, N. D. FREDERICK W. KEITH ARCHITECT Undertaking-Embalming Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 50 Night Phone 687 WEBB BROTHERS % of load carried on peak ae aca Meee Truck, Springs = Kires KubberTires WU nes delivery servive cam be mada per cent more efficient i end the cost FORD" Ew fut fo one-third with the iD Feed, Degrorn,, One en meres glency, Ford Stmpt ita vord Soeur. a Deat orm DEARE RBO ORN ARBOR Corwin Motor Co. Bismarck, f. D. IBS PARTS ep, ‘A Pap Bees’ Eyesight. Odor is given flowers to attract Ine | sects, it may be, but bright colors are not, as it is conceded that insects are very near-sighted- and can make out objects clearly but six feet away, and scientists state that bees, wasps and hornets can see but two feet clearly, When a boy the writer knows they could see his two feet cle: t t a hundred feet away, also the remains der of his body was clearly d ned at the same “respectable” distance— Exchange. Art Aphorism for the Da: Painting is not done for exhibitions; refined work is smothered und “shout- come off better, . . . One ts on condition of one admires the a distance, ought equally to # when one looks at it The execution of a agreeable to the touch, fine pictu effect at bear analy near too. « fine painting i —Alfred Stever Propellers Run Tandem. Experiments inade in boat propul- sion wit!) one propeller, one behind the other, shaw that but little i screws site directions. either at the different speeds, has little eff the results, It is, ver, ¢ Animals Refuse to Eat. In the Edinburgh zoo there is a crocodile which is content with a rat or a piece of horseflesh eve fort- night. There is an enac which ved recently and ince steadily ol to take food 6f any kind, an example of abstention surpussed, how- ever, an Indian python, which dur- ing its thirteen months’ stay has not voluntarily taken food, Her Unexpected Action. “There woman Will do next!” disgruntledly declared the Mis- saurian, “Why, I took and gave my wife for a birthday present a ni¢e new ax, so’s she could cut her day wood in comfort. And burhung if she didn’t whirl in the first thing and knock me down with it !"—Judge. Nickel’s Worth of Sleep. Little Thelma waked up from het} afternoon nap before she had slept enough and was cross and eryins ty asked her if she would some more if she gave her a Thelma soon “T don't kn sleep a nickel inty, but Til try and 's worth,” The “Lily of France.” The “Lily of France,” the true “flow- er de luce,” is Iris Florentina. upon banners, shields, coats 6£ arms, in the livin’; Warner Camping Trailer Complete with two double beds, Sagless Springs, Mat- tress, Stove, Table, etc. Sample on exhibition. CORWIN MOTOR Co Bismarck, N. D. Used Cars for Sale 25 h. p. Case with starter, Sexon Six with starter $400 25 h. p. Studebaker .. $300 2 cyl. Maxwell ...... 1 cyl. Cadillac CORWIN MOTOR Co Bismarck, N. D. —~— RACINE Wrapped tre re is guaranteed age CORWIN MOTOR CO. BISMARCK, N. D. Tobbers viduals, Dut it is wow “properly ihe symbol of a lost cause, though tts use as a national emblem has been per- petuated. Charcoal Eph’s Thought. “What PF calls comfort,” said Char: coal Eph, as he reached for the ham, “ix wen amin can turn down a five: dollah job *kase he done got half a dollar in his pocket. “Try some salt, Mister Jackson."—Richmond Times: Dispatch. Hardly. J. Fuller Gloom that a bald-headed man can s a tall step udder and paint a ceiling with a le brush and at the sane time sin yiun to do any good.— Kansas City Star, Abuse of Words. Among the sources of innumerable s Which from age to age have overwhelmed mankind, may be reck- oned as one of the principal, the abuse of words.—Exchange. A Divorce Remedy. The topic of a popular lecturer ts “Love and Groceries.” When you meet with that combination you don't see love in the divorcee courts.—Atlanta Constitution, Contagion. Lots of things are contagious be- sides smallpox—smiles, frowns, kind | deeds, evil temper, fault-finding. What ! kind of contagion do you carry around? An Endless Job. She—“You can form no idea how bright my little girl is. She repeats every word J say.” He—“She must get frightfully tired.” It Was Flat. “What did the doctor say?’ “He felt of Brown's purse, and id there was nothing the matter with him.”— Life. Most Powerful Agent. A seandal will do more to make peo- ple Behaye themselves than the most | powerful sermon.—Atchison Globe. Greatness of Srhal! Things. Perform the small things that are unseen, and they will bring other and greater things for you to perform. A Bit Mixed. “Muvver,” la little city girl vis- iting in the country, “just listen to | that poor cow mewing for her colt.” So Trey “Are. Burglars and bookkeepers are alike I do not helieve} ont 1 Farm Lands and Garden Plots Residence and Business Lots FOR SALE Offices and Stores For Rent Bismarck Realty Co. 212 Bismarck Bank Bldg. For firet class shoe repairing go to Bismarck Shoe Hospital H. BURMAN, Prop. 411 Broadwa: | Shoes Repaired Sest Equipped Shop im the Northwazs L. E. Larson AQ Wain Strert Barbie’s DRY CLEANING AND DYE WORKS PHONE 394 409 Front Street We Call for and Deliver The Electric Shop Everything Electrical Wiring Fixtures and Supplies Delco Farm Light Plaats Phone £78 «C3 Broadway Transfer & storage We have unequaled iacilities for moving, storing and shipping household gcode, Careful, expert. enced men; aiso retail ice and wood. ete. it has.led both.armies and ind; in one respect—they are both used to making entries, Wachter Transfer Comp, “Phone: 62° No, 202 Fifth 8t.