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THURSDAY, Avcusr 20, 191% | BISMAROK Dam.y TRIBUNE - 2 ag lf You Prefer To Live in ‘urnished this winter you willl find In the Tribune’s “Reoms For Rent” Columns many suitable places. Phone «. BE SMITH: Battery Service |Loden’s Battery Shop lee if | —— F.E. Young Real Estate Company FOR SALE—A fine new seven room , modera house with gas range, hot ‘air furnace, furnace and laundry stove connected with hot water tank, wost front, on paved street in good resident portion of city, en- cumbered for $$2,000.00 at 8 per cont. A: bargain .for $3,700.00 ‘Terms, $700.00 cash, : assumpUon of mors gage and balance on monthly pay: ments at § percent. F.E. Young Real Estate Company ‘Fel. No. 78R Offices In First National Bank Buliding HELP WANTED—MALE WANTED—Three men to travel, to! take orders for made-to-measure , suits and overcoats. Call 9 to 12! a.m. Bryant Tailoring Co. 412 Real Broadway, Bismarck. 8-28-6 a WANTED—Man to drive team for 60 days.on farm. J. J. Ryan, 510 1:2 FOR SALE—tive-room Fourth Street. Phone oe ae Seventh street, close in. ie _ __ 8 38 ot! Price, $2,300; part cash, CARPENTERS WANTED—Six good’ on balance. Men at once, call or phone .C R. FOR SALE- Calkins, Garrison, N. D. 8-7.30t) Mandan -avenue, vot lot, cast front, price $2,000. is a good interest paying proposition. "CHOICE building lots in all parts of city. ~ D. T. OWENS & CO. D. t OWENS & CO, Estate, City Property, Farm Lands, Loans and General Insurance. cottage on Lot 50x140, yon HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—Dining room girl Man- darin Cafe. 8 29 6t WANTED—Dright intelligent” yoyng lady for office work. Address 244 _ Tribune. 8 27 6t WANTED—Competent girl for gencral housework. Permanent; $25 to start. Address P. O. box 568, City.! t! FOR SALE OR RENT—HOUSES AND FLATS NT—My conipletely fur: nished modern house, close in. Rea- sonable price if at once rented. Mrs. . A. Stickley, Phone 349 or all 223'Second street. 8 ENT—modern ~ room fur: nished house from Sept. 1 to Oct. 1 Phone 403R. 8 30 It. FOR REN ve room modern house, furnished, partly furnished, or unfurnished. Inquire LE. A. Waia 813 Ave. C. 8 30 Gt. WANTED—Girl for general house- | work, $5 a week. Call phone 834l or Rembrandt studio. 8-293 WANTED—Girl” for” general” house- work; steady work, g od pay. Call 2 1 eral housework. Phone 459L. 8 24 6t POSITIONS WANTED ‘WANTED—Ry man of family, not sub- ject to draft, an office position. Have The Outbursts of Everett’ True By Condo Have You ‘Gor! A MATCH ON You, MISTER 2 War News SAVE MONEY Have Your Old Felt Eat Cleaned & Re-Blocked It will look like new and be as good as new EAGLE HAT WORKS Phone 682 % Onp. Post Office: 105 Freightand Baggage DRAYING Clootens Livery Temporary Office BISMARCK TAXI Phone . Basement Cowan’s Drug Store Fourth and Broadway TAXI Phone 57 S. LAMBERT 408 BROADWAY BISMARCK, N. D. Machine Hemsjttch- | ing and Picoting. RS. M. C. HUNT 314 2nd 8t. PHONE $49 FREDERICK W. KEL ARCHITECT Undertaking- Embalming Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 50 Night Phone 687 4“ EBB BROTHERS! Undertaking Parlors A. W. Lucas Company Day Phone 465 Night Phone 100 A. W. CRAIG Licensed Embalmer in Charge FOR RENT—Houses; one modern and one partly modern. Inquire 422 First street. 8 28 3t FOR RENT—Furnished apartment for light housekeeping. IF. W. Murphy, |_204 Main street. 827-6 FOR RENT—Strictly modern, cight- room house, 101 Ave. C. O. W. Roberts, phone 151 or 751. 8-28-tf FOR RENT—Small cozy cottage. _ Phone 250, _ 8 27 6t. FOR RENT—Four-room and two-room house. Phone 8-25-5t FOR SALE—Modern, five-room bun- galow in choicest part of the city. $600 will swing the deal. Address 238, Tribune. 8-20-1mo had 20 years’ experience and can, furnish best of references. | XYZ, care Tribune. | Ce a a CLOTHING SALESMAN WANT- & ED — Experienced . clothing ~ and shoe salesman to help out @ saturday evenings or all day. % Box 606, Bismarc 8 24 Bt, A 2 a a acres Stutsman county land 3 1-2 miles from Court- enay, N. D. $30 per acre. Will con- sider trade for-city property. C. B. Aasness. Phone 222 or 307L. “8 29 St. FOR SALE—120-acre farm. For par- ticulars call on or address KE. FOR SALE—; BOARDERS WANTED WANTED=—Roomers and~ Toardors a at __the Cozy cafe, 114 Main WANTED—Roomers ana Faarleed at Dunraven, 212 Third street. Under new management. 8-9-1mo. EK Warner, owner, Harris, Minn. Route No. 3. °8 30 6t ___.. WORK WANTED WANTED—To do washing. 1214 __.Broadway._ Phone 572L. 8-28-6t MISCELZ. ANEOUS _ TF YOU WANT young men and wom- en to work for board, phone 183, Business college. 8-29-1m FOR SALE—Lot 125 by 150 feet on Seventh street. $300 down. Phone 104 se pe! 827 mo} modérn“house. 400 Seventh St. FOR SALE—Several horses, two farm Phone 506K. 8 29 3 wagons, one light double ‘driving, FOR RENT—A large front room, for harness, or will exchange for any-| one or two. 415 Fourth St. 8-29-3 thing we can use. George D. Drown FOR RENT—Dediutiful, comforable 0. 8 27 5 a rooms for teachers, capital en WANTED—Ten or tweive loads’ off ployeos, or others appreciating a rich black dirt for top filling. C. B: comfortable home. 622 Third St. Aasness. Phone 222 ‘or 307L. 8 28 Gt. 8 29 3t| Som -RENT—AIOET Tumi OS see a ete FOR RENT—Modern, furnished rooms FOR SALE—China cioset and book-} for light housekeeping. 1100 Broad- cone amin wring desk. 220 Foul way. 8-28-4 SES EhononZesX 29°31 FOR RENT—Strictly modern” FOR SALE—One six h. p. Fairbanks Sine oer 3206 Morse gasoline engine about new: me 1 one double Burr feed grinder; one on at mor warehouse Fanning mill. George D. 8 eve Brown Co. 8 27 6 - rooms. FOR SALE—One 30-0) Aulimon-T for. Hen housckeeping.. . $16. 0 lor gas engine with gas ta k and Phone 4 plain guide and one § furrow P. &| FOR RENT —Splendir rooms for light O. Mogul engine plow with stuoble housekeeping in modern house and breaker bottoms. This rig Phone 464K or call at 801 Fourth has only plowed 300 acres and is as} Street, or inquire at secondhand good as new and can be purchased} __ Store. Geo. W. Little, 8-27-ImG. at much less than’ prices now quot-| FOR RENT—Modern furnished rooms ed. Rig is at Sterling, N. D. A. E. Board if desired. 46 Main street. Jones. Lisdon, N. D. 8 27 6t on, ) U 8-10-1mo FOR SALE—A number of Auto trail- Phone 377K. ers, just the thing for hunting par- 8-11-Imo ties, and camping trips. George D.} FOR RENT—Excellent modern rooms. Brown Company. 27 6t some suited for light housekeeping FOR SALE—1 new 26-in grain SEE 622 Third St. 8-1-Imo er, complete: one 32-in. Nicholas & Eat Shepard grain thresher nearly new: EORSRENT a prtsheaey Toon ae several gas tractor engines, all RE 4 " sizes. George D. Erown Company. FOR RENT—Rooms. 629 Sixth St $27 bt 7-27-1mo FOR SALE—Household furniture and FOR RENT—Furnished rooms. Call stoves. 1019 Seventh street. Phone| #t,the Business college or phone 3001. 8-24-6t 7-13-1mo FOR SALE—Hay; 3,000 tons bailed. $10.09 to $12.00 f. o. b. Soo or Nor- thern Pacific. L. H. White, Cogs-| The secretary bird gets its name well, N. D. 8 27 6t} from the tufts of feathers which grow FOR SALE—Good gentle pony for]on either side of its head and look either saddle or buggy. Also colt.] exactly like a bunch ef pens stuck be Call 610 Third street. § 24 6t jhind a clerk's ear. This bird has long FOR SALE—Number 9 steel range | fase and large wings, with which it with high heatire closet; one four-| can ascend toa great height. It builds teen inch self fecd hard coal heater.| strong nest ina tree, and lives in it A. ye Peterson, 515 Fifth St. Phone|vear after . subsisting on small z 8 23 tf] animals and tiny snakes. To renee 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 age, Shorthorns preferred. Address J. A. Gustaveson, Albert Lea, Minn. 8 23 12t BEER BOTTLES WANTED—Highest prices for quart and pint bottles. Geo. Coleman. ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room in modern house, for light house- keeping. Laundry privilege. Phone ! 15K. Call 921 F FOR RENT—Furnished room able for light housekeeping. M77 FOR RENT—Large front room in hed ern house, at 614 Sth street. FOR RENT—Two furnished — FOR RENT—looms. The Secretary Bird. HOW TO ANSWER BLIND ADS. All ads signed with numbers 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. EGGS ARE RICH IN PROTEIN Ninety-Seven Per Cent of Portion Eaten Is Digested and Shell Is, Only Part Wasted. The principal food element fur- nished by eggs is protein, the nitro- genous tissue-bullding element whose presence in considerable proportion also gives meats, fish, milk, cheese, ete, their special food value, Eggs can, therefore, be substituted in the diet for the latter foods without ma- terially altering the protein con- sumed, In ‘addition, eggs also furnish fat and a number of valuable mineral ele- ments, including sulphur, phosphorus, fron, calcium and magnesium, In an Neved also to be rich in certain essen- tial vitalizing elements called vitam- ins, Like milk and unlike meats, eggs do not contain certain substances con- vertible in the body into uric acid. Their shells constitute the only waste materials. Ninety-seven per cent of the portion eaten—a high proportion compared to other foods—is digested. No extended ccoking is necessary saving of time, preparation when they are compared with many other foods. For all these reasons eggs deserve an fraportant place in the diet for use at-times in place of other foods rich in protein, provided egg prices are not so high as to outweigh the other considerations, DEVIATION OF THE COMPASS Only at Certain Points Does the Mag- netic Needle Point Due North and South, Soon after the compass was invented It was noticed that it did not point | true north and south. For a long time | it was, supposed that this deviatio: or declination was everywhere the same until Columbus, on his way to America in 1492, discovered near the now-published by the different govern- ments give lines of equal declination. ; In the extreme eastern section of the ! United States the declination {s as ‘much as 20 degrees west. This de- creases t zero at a place near Cincin- | nati, O., and becomes an easterly decli- nation amounting to 20 degrees ens | in the northwest. The discovery as to “dip” was made nearly 100 years after the time of Co- lumbus. It was found that if a com- pass needle is perfectly balanced so that it can ‘swing up and down as well as sideways its north-seeking pole will dip down at a considerable angle. This angle increases as one goes farther north, and decreases as.one goes south, In the southern hemisphere the north- seeking pole of a needle poiats up in the air. During Shackleton’s south polar ex- | pedition, a point was found on the i great antarctic continent where a | needle would hang vertically with its north-sceking pole on top. Profitmongering. To those who dislike that intruder into the English speech, “profiteering,” there is at hand the more formidable word “profitmongering.” For good old “monger,” which merely means “deal- er,” bas its roots deep in the past— the shady past. In Sanscrit it means “ta.deceive :” and althouzh there are easily assimilable form, and are be-; for eggs, and there is, therefore, a: labor and fuel in their | Azores a place cf no declination. Maps | mongers" Of" fish’ 6r “iron, “the practices of tco many other sorts of dealers have ‘ceply tainted the word, as all scandaliongers know, Trading and cheating are sometimes closcly related, and even Ireland's “Great Book of the Law” gave legal sanction to the kinship. That venerable docu- ment defines the three rents of land —the fair rent (which a member of the clan paid), the stipulated rent, and the rack rent, imposed upon the stranger. The stranger ‘suffered so much under this ancient village com- munity law that the “monger” in time | beeame a somewhat disreputable per- son.—London Chronicle, Mark Twain on George Eliot. Mark Twain was very outspoken In his comments oa books, He did not like George Ellot’s novels, and in a let- ter to W. D. Howells, writtea back ta | 1895, and published in Harper's Month- ly, he says: “I bored through ‘Middle- march’ during the last week, with its labored and tedious analyses of feel- ings and motives, its paltry and tire- seme people, its unexciting and un- interesting story and its frequent blind- ing flashes of single-sentence poetry, philosophy. wit and what not, and neariy died from overwork, I woulda’t read another of those books for a farm, I did try to read one cther, ‘Daniel De- ronda.’ I dragged through three chap- ters, losing flesh all the time, and then was honest enough to quit and confess myself that I haven’t any romance lit- erature appetite, as far as I can see, except for y Nature's Wondrous Ways. One of the t curious of nature's fs that of an egg that can’t elf, It is absolutely impcr- tant to a certain species. of seabird— the murre. This feathered creature builds no nest, but lays its eggs ca n aw shelves 6f precipitous rocks, Ordinary eggs—those of the domestic 'hen, for example, if deposited in such Jaces, would be Hable to roll off and ‘emash. But the murre’s egg is of such {a shape that if disturbed it simply rolls ina circle, Such being the ca: the female murre experiences no anxt- ety. She could incubate her progeny on an ordinary mantelpiece and be sat- istied of thelr safety. ‘roll off a Town and Country. A town man.occasionally can shape his business so that he may. lie down! beside it and take a nap. But a farm-| er, after his regular work has been attended to, always has a well to dig. —Topeka Capital. Coal Mine Found at Grass Roots. A four-foot seam of coal, cight feet; below the surface and only 30 feet} from the main line of the United} States railroad in Alaska has been} discovered at Mine 175, not far from) Seward. “Cock-and-Bull Story.” The phrase “a cock-and-bull story” | fs a corruption of the words: “A con-| -eocted-and-bully story,” the latter term; being derived from the Danish word | “pullen”—exaggerated. Ike Walton Note. Madagascar fishermen sprinkle a substance on rivers and lakes which} paralyzes the fish and causes their bodies to rise, when they are caught | by hand. 2074 of toad carried on cue caio and ee Jrceat hints Wires stoneSold kudberLives yQUR R delivery, service can, ‘ber cent ent.and the cost third with the Ford. Dearborn x Truck. You_¢ ciency, Ford Si Economy and Deatbor a Strength, ARBC oa ARBOL Corwin Motor Co. Bismarck, N. D. Warner Camping Trailer Complete with two double beds, Sagless Springs, Mat- tress, Stove, Table, ctc. Sample on exhibition. CORWIN MOTOR Co Bismarck, N. D. Used Cars for Sale 25 h. p. Case with starter, wees $425 Saxon Six with starter $400 25 h. p. Studebaker .. $300 2 cyl. Maxwell ...... $50 1 cyl, Cadillac ........ $50 CORWIN MOTOR Co Bismarck, N. D. CORWIN MOTOR CO. BISMARCK, N, D. Jobbers Chemists discovered by research years ago the process of making artl- fictal indigo, but it was only when a thermometer broke in the solution that they fornd out how to make the indigo cheap enough to be commercially val- uable, The mereu ‘o increased the yield of a certain that the proc- ess was Cheapened sufliciently to make artificial indigo Iess expensive than natural indigo, Begonias in Philippines. The Philippine nds are very pro- ductive of begonias and a California begonia expert is responsible for the statement that of late some y spe- cles and varictics never known to com- meree have of late been found in our far eastern insular possessions. It is feared, however, that all of these need tropical temperatures and, therefore, are only subjects for greenhouse cul- ture. Constantine's Cress, The cross was the emblem of a | slave’s death and a murderer's. pun- ishment and was naturally looked | upon. by. the Jew with horror, After the celebrated vision of Constantine, that ruler ordered to be made a ere of gold and such as he had and the “tree of cursing and shaine | sat upon scepters and was engraved | and signed on the forehead of king: Furniture Bruise, Wet the part with warm water, double a piece ef brown paper five: or six times, soak it and lay it on the | place; apply en t a hot flatiron till} the moisture is evaporated. If the; bruises on the furniture are not gone, the process, After two or three | tions the dent or bruise will iscd level with the surface. Our National Asi Heap. America annuaily registers a $250+ 000,000 to $300,000,000 fire loss. This is several times in excess of any other i | eouniey contribution to the ash heap. Cost of High Living. ' “The necessaries of life are a lot higher than they were a few years ago,” “Yes, and just think how many more there are of them.” ‘The. Way They Look at It. Optim—“Oh, well, things might be worse.” Pessim—“Yes, and I believe they are going to be.”—Boston Tran- script. Ss FOR SALE Oil Barrels with Faucets at $23,60 CORWIN MOTOR CO Bismarck, N. D. Meat Diet and Bad Temper. Do you know that meat cating 1s} said to be responsible for bad temper? | The philosophy of this i at meat is a stimulant, and that after the briet happy effect of this stimulant bas worn off there comes a long effect of ill-humor d irritability. All heavy | meat caters are said te bad dis- positions because they are always sul- ‘fering from their food's aftermith, That is what the vegetarians aflirm. Meat eaters consider the charge Durely fanciful, Transfer & Storage We have unequalled facilities for moving, storing, and — shipping houschold goods. Careful, experi- enced men; also retail ice and wood. Wachter Transfer Comp. Pari: v 5 aris Postwomen, Phone 62. No. 202 Fifth St. Paris, France, is putting its entire | mail distribution system into the hands of women carriers, Experlini in two districts proved highly suce ful, so the plan is to be made gene Women made the rounds faster and delivered more mail in less time than men. Women carriers are to h severely plaia special uniform and to be paid $1.19 a day more than men received before the war. Foy first class shoe repairing go to Bismarck Shoe Hospital H. BURMAN, Pron. 411 Broadway a | | | | | | Shoes Repaired iP Best Eauipped Skop in the | Northwest L. E. Larson 408 Man Street ee) IMPORTED CHINA TEA SILK HANDKERCHIEFS FOR SALE H. WAH 518 Brdy. BISMARCK, N. D. | Barbie’s DRY CLEANING AND DYE WORES PHONE 394 Farm Lands and Garden 409 Front Street Plots _ We Gall for and Deliver Residence and Business |, neve mcmaates ROD Lots FOR SALE Offices and Stores For Rent { I | | | | ! The Electric Shop B. E. SKEEIS Everything Hlectrical Wiring Fixtures and Supplies Delco Farm Light Plants Bismarck Realty Co. 212 Bismarck Bank Bldg. Phone 278 408 Broadway