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WANT COLUMN | _-_ MELP“WANTED—MALE 7 COAL MINERS WANTED By Beulah Coal Mining Co. at Beu- lah, N, D. Steady work. Apply at mine or-at Bismarck office in Haggart Building. 7-24-tf CLERKS en women) over v7, \ for t MailoService. . $135 month. Ex. ust, Expérience unnec e particulars, write R. ir Civil Service Examiner) b wre Goatinentat Bidg:, artnet D. -31-3t WANTHD—Man to work nights in gar- age. Prominent position for right man. Lahr. Motor Sales Co. T-31-1wk WANTED—1st clas: ‘papt all_ man. ‘Good wages, Write, Not iibune _, HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED AT ONC! Dining room girl and first class cook, wages, per- manent place. Room and board furnish- ea Work . not peanys Phone. or vrite, nderwood Hotel, Underwood, N. PP -5t WANTED—Experlenced girl for general housework, Permanent ppaition 3 at ene est wages. Apply ‘Mra. W. Phone 657. WANTED—Experienced dining room girls. Good wages. Good place to work. Phone reef! or write, Annex Cafe, BS marck, Dd. 8-: WANTED—Gitl for general nousewari, Dr. Stackhouse, Phone 742. 8-2-t! WANTED—Saleslady. Call Barker Bakery. WANTED—Waitress at Homan's Fourth St. ____POSITION WANTED —_ EXPERIENCED GRAIN BUYER wants position as manager of farmers ele- vator company. Best. of ‘references. Competent bookkeeper, ‘Address Box 951, Janiestown, N. D. }-30-5t EXPERIENCED atendgrapher wants po- sition At once. -References. farlaheds _Write 120, care of Tribune. ___' WANTED—Position gs-cook with eae ing crew. Write Mr& A. C.,.Sanger, N. D.- Box 22.7 7-31-3t ROOMS FOR RENT in attains Gate. k 7 THINK THIS 1s A REGULAR \DEA You WAVE ‘Tom — U NOTICED MN TONIGHTS, PAPER WHER! } SQmE PEOPLE WeNly AWAY ry “ON; A VACATION AND HAD Att Their Sock STOLEN : (TLOOKS KE Q ALOT’ OF OLD ia AND, FOR RENT—Two rooms for light: house- |; keeping on first floor. Alsay one.-front room with kitchenette ‘on second, floor. 411 5th St. Phone 273. 4-3153t FOR RENT—Room_ in, all -modetn house. Inquire 416 12th St., or_phone Au at OR RENT—=Modern furnished rooms tor! ta housekeeping. 1100, away. ee ad pres e 3 OM. for WYereds 625 f2 Stn RE, Phone 485i. FOR RENT ‘urnished. Foo! Rtn street. FOR. RENT rogms....Gall 7a. 9 Thayer St FOR RENT—J jarge TOOMs, Call =, 4 15th FOR SALE OR RENT -HOUSES AND a FOR SALE—At a snap, nice little cottage 2.blocks from post office: For price and terms apply to_J. H. Holihan. _7-30-5t FOR RENT—Three-room, modern fur: nished apartment for light housekeep- ing. F. W. Murphy. Phone 862. “for light 3 Phone SOK. quhone see en a 8 AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES |'"° FOR SALE—Five-passenger Reo car, just overhauled and cylinders rebored; cheap for cash,.or will sell_on. time. .F. W. Murphy, Rowe Apartments. Phone 892. 7-30-1wk FOR SALE—1 Overland, model 90, excel- lent condition, ‘Sell’ cheap. Address _ 76 Tribune. Z 5-22-tf FOR SALE—Ford touring car in good condition, Call ‘Soo freight, office after 2_p.-m: sorg 480-1wk FOR SALE—Good motorcycle. Cheap for quick sale. Write No. 124, care Tribune. TB1-8t FOR SALE—Chegp if Wtawen at once once, Ford car,’ 1920 model. Call 803: 8-2-3 ZAND ®RADE—For land, store Palit iershend pe, or tc ae RS w. 1-23-2wk LOST AND FOUND LOST—Bunch of k keys. Finder return to he 3 Tribune office: 1. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE—One Advance 22 ¥ team Traction Engine. One Advance 36x60 Separator, ‘complete with Wind Stack- er, weigher belts and Ruth Feeder attachment. ‘One: Advance 12-barrel wood water tank. One half-round 12- barrel _wood water tank, One set of eight bottom John Deere engine plows.‘ One Avery ‘Separatof, One 32<inch Barthelomew Bgnd cutter and Feeder, One J, B, Farmers Friend Stacker, One Weigher, one Sattley. At- tached Stacker. One Avery’Gas Trac- tor 25 H. P. 50 Break power. One Avery 15-barfel mounted Gas tank. One Can- vas Drive belt. apoly. to Regan State ink,“ Regan, N. or the City Na- __tignal Bank, ‘Bi N.gD. 7-30-21 FOR SALE—12-foot amblnatlan erthe der and binder,’ one Minnesota bind- er, one Bell City silo filler, one Dean stacker, one Dean power lift sweep rake, one Deering corn. .bi 10x20 cook car on. truck: _ Box 169, Bismarck, N. D. FOR SALE—Two fine corner lots en pav- ed street; one. 100x150 and. one aig Finest residence lots in ‘the city. Ostrander. 1a \FOR SALE—Plumbing, Heating — and Electrical business, established 12, years. €an reducé stock to suit. derlin, N. FOR SALf—One of the best coal mines in the state. Mine in full operation. Write, ew ~ Perfection Oil sons Call 418 Mandan Ave.. ‘or 5 EES ye BSS WANTED TO RUY—four burner gas stove with-oven. Call No. 103 Tribune. 6-24-L WANTED—Rought h dry washing. Call Mrs. V, Brych, 318 13th St. » BNO FOR SALE—Ba tion. Call 3 SOME ONE to put up 1-2 See. of hay on shares. Call 405 F: 3-1wk FOR SALE—Cow.. wis 125, care Trib- une. -1wk ——EE eee Panama, Aug. 2.—Dr. B. Porass can- didate of the liberal-conservative Barty. was re-elected president of the Repyb- lic Of Panama in the election held yesterday. His opponent was Dr. Urriola. Z Lid a Judge Holds a Drawing. - Shelbyville, Ind.—Farmland totaling 196_acres belonging to the estate of Angie Hawkins: was. to be divided among. four. children. The.-children couldn’t agree, s0\ the judge put the numbers of four divisions in a hat and made them draw for it, And all were satisfied. Wanted: * Girls pr boys over 16 years of age to learn press feeding. Apply Triburie office. BR, S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Saite 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phone 260 Wa my Kea } i er hae \VERYBODY deesa country ‘ees leeva. too. high now, Before da prohibish ees. go to work steady job could somatime dreenk leetle bit for feela good. But now when ees alla dry up only ting can d6 ees eat too och, I tink een few year all da ceetzen een Uniteda State ees getta pain een da, belle and..dunno... wot's, . matter. Everyting. go lika devil’ too fast and fiva, seexa time every day people eata somating. EN One guy, een da restaurant other day - aska’ fof stack of wheat. ‘But ‘mebbe he tinks he was ‘threshing ma: chine, I dunno, I feegure anybody wot edt stack ot wheat no-Jeéve ver lon; And een da park ees:’one place where ‘sella hot dogs for ten cents. Now. wot you tink for anyone, eata: hot dog, huh? . Bes no wonder, mosta time ive no feela good.’ We gotta hard time reada program een da restaurant. Een ‘mosta place ees made weeth leetle French, leetle Italia, leetle Uniteda State language jusa for maka.you tink gonna getta square meal.: \ Iwas een one restaurant where was so moocha music no cotld heara any- one eat. And lot of place serva dance weeth da, meal, too. Plenta people eat leetle bit, dance leetle bit and den come back and eata some more. Dat game people say would no eata hash. But after one trot foxy or sheemmie dance da. whola works ees hash jusa same... I tink tree, four yard of gooda spaghett. very day wonld maka feel better: 4 Wot you tink? 8 dM Jw I cn THE DAY BUT ONE Another Use for the Airpiane. “Eclipse observation by. airplane is declared by Paul W. Merrill to be not chimerical. "A modern plane could readily surmount any ordinary fog_or cumulus cloud, though cirrus is usual- ly too high, and, aside from cirrus clouds, the observer. would ‘have a wonderfully clear dark sky. And pho-| tographic observations are not out of| “the question. A, DeHaviland plane with a Liberty motor, at 10,000. feet ‘altitude, rides more smoothly than a train, and should permit direct photo- | * graphs on a small scale, especially if the piane were equipped with a gyro- | scopic stabilizer, “8 | Nobopy WOULD EVER. SUSPECT “Tat INA WHAT: THAT. IS BY> Looxin Ar ITP DADS ETI POSSIBLE RIVAL: ©). * TO HELEN KELLER “Photo! Western Newotser Un or ;Should the world-renowned sen Her-evershave.a rival it w: vould ‘be Jin ie person of eightcen-yeat-old Oma now under teaching - of Miss Sophia Alcorn .of Danville, Ky.,, where she attends the Ken- tucky School for Deaf and Dumb. Totally blind and deaf, she has been educated orally, one of the few in- stances in medical history where this hag been accomplished. — She reads lips in the ordinary~method used by the’blind, placing her thumb across the lips with fingers beneath the chin: She can also tell what is being said from throat vocal vibrations, a remarkable methed. She can hear over the phone by ‘placing’ her fingers over the dia- phragm. Simpson, Arsenal Cutting Down Working Staf?, The Rock Island arsenal at Daven- port, Iowa, is laying off 5,000 men at the rate of 750. asweek. is will put the. arsenal on gy peace- time basis of men. Dyfing the last days 6f t war the arsenal employed 15,000 men. Rumania now has nearly 17,000;000 acres of, forest. f \ NOME, COULD TELL EASY Tet. BY TAKING four The CoRK.AND it sraeeior AST OFF 2 BURDEN | voad of Thirty ii dears | Lifted From Woman’s Heart I Attempted’ Restitution of Sum ,of Money Which She Had Found and Kept When in Dire Extremity Filled Her With Joy. | “Thank God, 1 have found you at last. I must see you.” {t was the quavering voice of an old woman, conscience, stricken for 30 years because she bad kept $100 that did not belong to her and now able to pay with her dead son's insurance money, She was speaking over the telephone in Phifadelphia to’ D. I. Lrving, head , of Irving & Leiper,, cotton, Chester, “But I donot, know you,” he said, speaking from his mill, “Why do you want to see me?” ““L owe you money,” said the woman, Her insistence cused, hin to agree to meet her in’ Broad’ street station, where she was to wear a shawl over herJeft arm and jhold a bag in her right hand as marks of recognition. Bhe manufacturer. met her, With her-was a younger woman. Thirty years ago, she told him, she was walking in Philadelphia When she saw a man dropping a wallet. She a ped the man, It wag a close. description of James Irving, Mr Irving's father, who “died years ago 1 who was heir of James Irving & , Woo! manufacturers, Irvington, “J pleked up the wallet,” the woman ald. “It contained a $100 bill and two pennies, There was also a card in ft. 1 do not remembe that was on the card. But FE remember the mame ‘Irv- Ing, and ‘wool merchant. ! “T had lost my husbtind. only. three months before. I did-not know how to pay the rent. I had no, shoes for my children. Twas horribly tempted, And 1 did not resist. 1 did. not, overtake the owner of: the wallet. I kept, the money. “But eyer since then It has been on my mind, one my conscience. There wad nota det that Pdld not, ¢ t | that money. There was not a night that ! did not ask God in my prayer to for- give me. It was the only dishonest thing I ever did. “J kept the wallet.and the card with me always, hoping that,some day 1! might be able to repay. But I could not. I was poor all my life. And 20 years ago, in moving, I okt the wallet and the card, Three months. ago my oldest son died. He left me sqme money through ‘an in- surance. It was thé first money 1 ever had. Please, please, sir, take it,” she said, as she stretched out her hand. She held five $20.bills, When Mr. Irying asked her how she had found him ae told him she had telephoned to. hundreds of “Irvings” In the last three months. | She telephoned to Irvings In Philadelphia, Wilmington and even in Pittsburgh and New York, but always received the same curt re- ply: “You must have the. wrong party.” x When Mr, Irving told the woman he could not accept the money. because he did not know that his father ever lost Pit she nearly broke down. She begged him to take it. “Won't you please take this terrible load off my heart at last?” The manufacturer promised Mer to ask his oldest sister if she remembered the occurrence. But. his sister remem- bered it only vaguely. if at all. And | Mr. Irving wrdte a letter to the wom- an asking her to favor ‘him by -ac- cepting the $100 as a gift. The name of the woman, who lives in Tioga,.was not disclosed.—Philadel- phia Evening Bulletin. A Very Gentle Hint. Now, ehe uncle of the children was generous and the other was close, indeed, Uncle Number One, however, 4 was not satisfied with his own gener; osity. He wished Number Two to ticularly to his own nephews and nleces.. He wondered and wondered as to the best way to show him that he should be more generous. Then one day came hig opportunity. He was driving by Uncle Number Two's farm and noticed all Als fine chickens, Now,Ahe mother of the wee children did not have chickens, So Uncle Numbeé One, of generous hab- its, stopped his machine, walked up to the house and accosted Uncle Num- ber Two, of parsimonious fame. “I just saw your chickens,” he remarked , Dleasantly, “and I wondered {f you wouldn't sell me some eggs for our little nephews and nfeces to eat.” The hint was taken. Clearing House for Brains. The demand for technical men ts ‘about to be-taken care of by a pro- posed clearing house for brains which will maintain a central headquarters and will be composed of representa- tives of all the technical colleges in the country and at these headquarters a directory and filing system of the ,démands of the country for profes. sional assistance of this character will be kept. Such a system will enable the industries to Secure men that are wanted. and ‘will offer facilities for graduates and other to sécure places for which they are qualified with little loss of time or energy. i Labor Saving on Tih Cans. Gravity is the only power used In a new device for labeling tin cans, which roll down an incline over paste, thes over the pile of labels; then over brushes which smooth, the labels. New York, Aug. 3.—Prinéess Bra- ganza of Portugal, widow of the Duke of Oporto, once known in New York as the $10,000,000 widow,” came to- day from Providence, where she ar- rived,on the Britania from Europe yesterday. She formerly was Mrs. Philip Van- Valkenburgh, before that Mrs. W. H. Chapman, and first Mrs. Lee Agnev She was married to the duke in 1917 in Rome. He was exiled fro Tortugal when it became epubli “He was a brother to King los, who was assassinated. He dicd last Feb- rupry. in Italy. The princess is here in connection with the duke’s estate. ‘Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. FRECKLES AND IS. FRIENDS That What They, Do, to, Freckles BY BLOSSER \ fant BUREN one ! Big Seca oa AW, DONT. CRN. GRANDAS ILL OU-1F YOU WOULD? LEANE Your Toys LAY AROUND ON THE FLOOR ~~ Su! DONT Suv “WAT —"TEAD You « DON'T HEAR WIM AN! WELL FoRGET “But. I did not ee the name.) know and feel the Joy of giving, par- “Asa is bounded on the north ty bounded on the north d Nag on the Asia 39 by the Asia 3s On he Aste 29 07 ers Asia dy the service y ‘north on- irs Asia by — then porta sid = CopyriGht on the Sounded the ‘ngrth by “the ‘dounded dy ‘tha orth Honey bee Time Future Rapid Travel. Mr. Lindsay Bashford, writing in the Edinburgh Review, foreshadows. a London to Caleutta Journey by rail in a fortnight. “The Bagdaa railway,” be says, “be- gins at Konia, in the heart_of Asia Minor, where, by means of the Ana- tolian railway, it, connects with Con- stantinople. From Constantinople toi Aleppo the distance is some 850 miles, From Aleppo, the .line proceeds to Jerablus, on the °Euphrates, thence by Nisibin to thé important center of Mosul on the Tigris; thence southwards to Bagdad and to Basra. The distance from Aleppo to Bagdad {s about 650 miles. “Carry the imagination further, and we may reasonably picture, under the} hew political arrangements between Great Britain and Persia, the exten- sion of the Bagdad railway to Tehe- ran, and thence to Quetta and India. That done travel ‘overland’ between London and Calcutta should be a mat- ter of less ,than a fortnight.” Revenge. Sucking a stick of candy, the small! brother of the village hetle eyed the and|' visitor. ‘The belle aforesaid hid seen fit to administer severe punishment, and the small boy vas seeking ven- geance, “I know, why Gwendoline wears her hair bunched down over her ears,” he breathed between the sucks and grins , maliciously. ‘Do you?” asked the young man, to whom any news coficerning his adored one was welcome. “Won't you tell me?” “No,” he replied ; “T daren’t tell any- one. But if my ears were as big as|~ Gwendoline’s are; I'd do it, too.”— Houston Post. = Premature Ride in a Hearse. Lawrenceburg, » Ind.—Frederick A. Gumpf,, aged _ fifty-: * contracting teamster, did not appreciate the ride given him 4ff the fine motor ambu- lance of the Thomas A. Fitch under- taking establishment and he ts suing for $1,000 damages. The ambulance first khocked him into a diteh ‘and then picked him up and rushed for a hospital. ek ait Mexico’ is now exporting oil at the rate of 132,000,000 barrels annually} | BUSINESS DIRECTORY | _ BETTER KODAK FINISHING Developing, Printing ahd Enlarging. To be sure of Good Pictures, __ Bring your Films to Hoskins Inc., Dept. K. Bismarck, N. D. MAIL US YOUR FILMS All Orders Filled Promptly by Experts | Richmond sMhitney SHOE _ FITTERS 7 MAIN STREET © BUSINESS SERVICE CO. 16 [agg ‘ait Block Phone 662 MULTIGRAPHING — ADDRE: SSING — MAILING HJave your form letters typewritten Prompt ‘and ‘expert service. WEDB BI Undertakers Enmbalners on the Multigraph. \Expert Accounting. I:0THERS | Funeral Directora ‘Licensed Embulmer in Charge Jey PHONE 50 RIGHT PHONES’ 65—887 7 BISMARCK MOTCR COMPA Nae Distribu th of STUDEBAKER — and -— CADILE GO AUTOMO! ‘LES i PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmers in Charge Uny Phone 100 \ BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY 220 MAIN Upholstered Furniture Made to Order Ree * BISMARCK -NortH Dakora Corwin Motor Co. BUICK-OAKLAND SERVICE GOODYEAR & BRUNS- WICK TIRES Night Phone 100 or 687 af STREET Bring or Mail in Your Films* \for Expert Developing FINNEY’S DRUG STORE Bismarck, N. D. y, ——<—<——_—$_———— Electric Service & Tire Co. Delco-Remy-Auto-Lite- Northeast Bosch-Eisemann-K-W Exide Batteries Goodyear Tires