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% MALE HELP WANTED—Dentist erator, must be registered in Dakota. Good salary and corim' sion, Write New York Dental: Com- pany, Fargo, N. Dak. B22w HELP WANTED—FEMALE. “We register teachers for all school Positions. Immediate service. No charges to school hoards, only-1 per cent to teachers, Cooperative Teach~ cts’ Exchange, 556 Temple Court, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 7-30-37 WANTED—Woman for house work and cleaning. Apply Mrag C. H. Dewall, 718 Mandan Ave. 8-7-2t WANTED— work, Bdwy. 8-7-5t ‘WANTED—Experienced girl for gen- eral housework: Mrs. J. P. Sell, 521 bth St, 8:6-3t WANTED—Young girl to assist with |) housework. Phone 715 for appoint- ment, SALESMEN WANTED—Salesmen owning cars, to sell an established line of-oils, and paints, If you qualify, you will be i in starting, by an experi- esman. Phone or write R. , In care McKenzie Hotel, Bismarck, 36-1W WANTED—Salesman and collector. Call or notify Singer Sewing Ma- chine Co., Bismarck, N. Dak. 8-2-1 es 22 of ROOMS FOR RENT | FOR RENT—Two nicely furn- ished rooms for light housekeep- ing on first, floor, bath room ad- joining, Mrs. Ada Rohrer, 620 6th strect, Bismarck, N. Daky 8-21 FOR RENT—Two room apartment with kitchenette unfurnished or partly furnished, modern and! close in,,also a piano for sale, Call/at 523 6th Stree 8. FOR RENT—Light housekeeping rooms, also modern unfurnished flat. Business College. Telephone 183, 9-18-tf FOR RENT—Two farnished rooms for light housekeeping. Call at side door. 418 Ist Street. Phone 558W. 8-2-1w ATTRACTIVE room for it for lady for rent for lady at £01 7th St. Phone 682. 8-7-5 FOR REN’ Modern, furnished light housekeeping rooms, close in, Phone 8-6-lw FOR RENT—Rooms suitable for young man, 223-4th St, 628, 8-4-lw FOR RENT—Modern room, close in: 321 8th St, 8-6-lw ROOM AND BOARD. gentlemen. 312 3rd St. Phone 464. 8-6-3t | AGENTS WANTED SELL MADISON “Better Made” Shirts direct from our factory to wearer. No capital or experience required. Easily sold. Big profits, Write for free samples. Madison Mills, 603 Broadway, New York. to buy a 5 or 6 room modern house, preferably close in, at a reasonable price, P. O. Box 343. 8-7-1w WANTED TO RENT—Four or five room modern unfurnished house; 2 adults, occupancy October 1st. Hed- den Agency. 8-8-4 NTED—To rent a house suitable for rooming house. Call 882R after 5:30 p, m. 8-6-1 _. Watches and Jewelry Repaired, ‘Twenty-five years experience watchmaker and jeweler. I have tl for general house- }' Mrs. Tillotson, 200 West]' 8-6-3t | DNESDAY, AUGUST:8,:192F 0" 5. for remare, B LORT=8 water Span ea aia tee Fe ie 7. Call Fc. SAO a Shans Uk oh Oy FOR SALE—5: room modern bunga- {4 lew, hot water heat, ful} basement, gérage in’ basement,: well: located. wt back,: my nawe on collar. Purchase. pticp $5800—-$600 cash, |, balance monthly payments. Heddon 8-8-3; FOR. SALE—5 room modern: cottage, full basement, furnace héat, South front, close to ‘schools. -Purchnse| price $3850%$500 cash, § monthly payments, Hedden Real Estate}: cy. Phone 0, iS }FOR: SALE—5 room modern cottage, close in, full basement, furnact heat, garage, lawn, trees. Vary at~ tractive. Purchase price $5000, Pay cash, balance terms. Hedden i) Estate Agency. Phone 0. FOR SALE—6 room modern house Riverview. Oak floors, fall base: ment, furnace heat, South front, close to school. Price $5695—$1295, cash, assure balance, Hedden Agon- cy. Phone 0. FOR SALE—5 room new ‘modern bungalow, hardwood floors, full basemerft, furnace heat—Bast-front; garage, sleeping porch, bedroom in basement. Price $6800—$1600. cash. a Hedden Amgentey. >|" FOR SALE—S ‘room partly moiern bungilow, close in, $2600. Small first’ payment, terms including interest—East front, trees, garage and garden space, Heédden' Real Estate Agency. Phone 0. FOR _SALE—6 room modern house, clos8 to. school and Catholic church —Purchase price $3700—$1000 cash. balance $50 per month including in- _terest at 1%. Hedien Agency. FOR SALE—5 room partly modern house, East end, purchase price $2,000—$800 5 room modern bungalow, East end; $3200, $500 cash. Hedden Agency, Phone 0. FOR SALE—My 8 room house, 3 lots, garage, and chick cub, close to the hospital, school, and church. Hot water, Heat. House is piped for gas. Full basement. A small pay- ment down, and the balance in monthly payments. $6000.00. Phone 618W. Patrick Casey, Bis 8-621W ee eee ththate| FOR SALE—A gobdd buy. A 6 room partly modern house, including 3 bedrooms, basement, porch, hard- wood floors, furnace, water, lights, not old for $2800, on terms of $800 cash, and balance of $25.00 per month. Geo. M. Register. 8-3-Lw room including 3 bed rooms, full basement, screened in porch, garage attached to house, near schogls and immediate poste: sion given, on terms. Geo. M. Reg- 8-T-1w FOR SABE—6 room modern hous including 4 bed rooms, east front, near schools, on 6th street, for $4000., ori tevms. “Geo, M. Regis- ter. 8-7-lw FOR RENT—Furnished two room apartment with. private _ entrance, joining bath, heat, lights and water, $35.00, 722 6th St. Phene|.FOR 8/ 8-6-1 | FOR RENT—Two room apartments, furnished or unfurnished. Suitable for light housekeeping. 710 7th St. Opposite high school. FOR RENT—Modern five room fur- nished flat at 212% Main street. Phone 419 in the a. m. 8-6-3t FOR RENT—Six-toom furnisheg flat. Also for sale solid oak library ta-. __ble. Phone 419, T2d-tt FOR RENT—To right parties a 4 room modern home. Inquire Tribune _N 8-4-Lw FOR RENT—Five room flat at Wood- mansee apartments. 423-5th St. ‘y 8-1-1w. balance‘ monthly | ae 6% WO) Ioana on*eity. Ur farnt property: Re- jarve “Deposit Company, Lathrop alla 8 City, Mo. i R P—Including dining room: sé; ivory finished bed room: sets; dresser, chiffonier, leu- ther reckers, library tuble, reading lamp, davenport, Wilton rugs, porch ‘qwing, refrigeratdr, and other ar- tiles at a: bargain. 120 W. Thayer . + St. Phone 837M. : 8-6-1 A FULL STOCK of hardware and impleménts, inventory- about $8,000, located in county seat, with large territory and good trade, agents for|, I national lines for past ten’ Health conditi reason for selling. No traded considered. Write Tribune No. 608. 8-8tf IS YOUR business for sale? Do you want a partner? I have a number of clients with front a few, hundred’ to three or four thousand dollars to invest in good, goihg businessés. F, E. Young. 8. |FOR SALE—High grade Grand piano in first: class: condition, exception- ally fine tone, beautiful case, Will sell at a bargain, Address No. 605, In_care Tribune, _. 8-6-1W FOR RENT—Good building for store purposes: on. 7th and Thayer Sts. Hardwood’ floors; price $30 a month. . Phone 442-J, Address ~ 616 7th St, 8-4-1w FOR SALE—1 team bay mares, weig’ about 2950 Ibs., 1 gray mare weigh- ing about 1800 Ibs., 1’ set Concord harness. Bargain for a quick sale. Phone 985J, 8-4-1w HOTEL AND CAFE FOR SALE—In good town, Division point. For further information write Tribune No. 607. , 8-7-2w SSS Arctic Traders Sell Whiskey Anchorage} Alaska, Aug. \ 8— Mystery ships-plying the Siberian aretic laden with whisky, which is bartered to the. natives for furs, still take their toll of murder in the plratical traffic, according to }Captain Andrew Predersen here, ‘who says he wag recently an inno- cent member of such an expedition. ‘The limit was actual murder, he says, when the Siberian govern- ment attempted to stop the trat- fic. Captain Predersen’s story follows: “We sailed out of Nome for what I was told would be a trading voy- age to Siberia. I will not tell th names of the owners or skipper of the trader, for reasons best, known to myself. At one port the boat took on a large quantity of furs, after getting the natives drunk o moonshine whisky. An official of the Siberian government came aboard to collect a tax and force payment for the furs. He was thrown overboard and shot. The last I saw of him he was clinging to a piece of ice, I do not know whether he died or was rescued. On the cruise back I heard talk. of murdering me because I knew too much. For nights I didn’t sleep, and while I rested in the bunk I kept a revolver in my hand ready for action.” © i, ‘Uphold Tradition‘ PAGE SEVEN Vi-0 C GL “THE MAIL SACK THROWN OFF THE LATE Traint HIT “THE NIGATWATCHMAN BETWEEN “THE BAGGAGE ROOM AND THE IRON PUMP oI > By William ae OE) AAUV YUAN VAIN NN TAT | Hy TRvullams BEA sERVICR SPORTS END FLIRTING ON SUNDAY Argentine Men Show New In- terest in Out Door Exercises NO VACANT LOTS British Immigrants Gave Initial impulse to_Athletic Pursuits Buenog Aires, Aug. 8,—“Beauty. parading” and idle strept flirta- tions, heritage of the Spanish col-| onial days, are becoming extinct pastimes in Argentina, The devo- tion given by Argentine youth to lout-door sports in the last decade, first by the young men and now in growing measure by the young women, is held accountable for the change. Twenty-five years ago, the young men of Buenos Aires, stiffly attir- ed in black, with high poke col- lars and French patent leather shoes, devoted their holiday and Sunday afternoons to strolling tong the avenues or loitering on street corners with an eye out, manly, for pretty gir The girls, decked out with the knowl- edge that they were to Mevoted the same afternoons to he” riding, forming a “beauty parade” as the vehicles drew them along the avenues past the groups of young men with whom they | mught exchange smi and fli Uocus glances. This w about all the outdoor exercise ‘gentine young folk took in those days, say the older generation. Today in Buenos Aires there is hardly a vacant lot on a Saturday, Sunday or holiday afternoon that is not the scene of a football game. Tennis matches are in progress on hundreds of courts, golf balls soar jover the fairways of eight differ courses, swift racing sculls c the waters of the River Lujan, pre pelled on sunburned arms, on run- ning tracks young men in spiked shoes seek to make records in the hundred meter dash, the hurdles and like events, swimming, basket ball and boxing haVe numerous de- votees, while young men of wealth indulge in polo and crack yacht races on the River Plate. The for- mal Sunday-afternoon black of a generation ago has been succeed- ed by) light tweeds, homespuns, flannels and sport clothes. The young men have less time to flirt: While the young women have not entirely abanddned the old Spanish custom of “beauty parad- ing,” for a semblance of it can stiil be seen along the Calle Florida at the noon hour on week days, thev, too, as If discouraged by the deart! of a rers on holida. Ee cn to outdoor sports 3 numbers, Infected first by golf, tennis and swimming, they have begun to indulge in track meets, stimulated doubtless the ex- mple of their American, British d French rs in the Northern nisphere, everal of — these “torneos aticticos femeninos” have resulted in the formation Sf two feminine atheltic clubs and now !t 1s proposed to found the Argentine Feminine Athletic Federation. The British ‘immigrants are credited with giving the initial impulse to athletic pursuits in Ar- gentina by introducing their out door games and pastimes, together with “Sabado Ingles,” as the Sat- urday half-holiday is called. Fs ored by a temperate climate, it xathered such’ momentum within the past few years that many ob- increasin Melchester, one of the equine beau- ties at the horse show at Long Branch, N. ctionately ti his own Jora Scott, ~ An innavation in the west is the i bus driver, Mrs, Hilda Bell, ks Lake, Wyo., ser er for the big lus from Lawnder to th 2 She guides the cars over wind- ing mountain roads. as relief “HAS HEART fenders for their greed, the father repled that he was not strong enough. seized the opportunity to admin- ister the overdue correction with a strap supplied to him in court. The sons took the medicing~for their moral héalth without a/mur- mur, while the old man was de- lighted. opened up a jewelry store at 415] FOR RENT—6 room furnished housc, oadway. Bring in anything in that} Good location. Phone 772M. lite, I will be glad to give you the benefit of my experience. . CHAS, LAMB, ~ 8-4-lw servers think Argentina will soon take its place among the “outdoor nations” like the United States and Great Britain. ¢ Erfcouragement of outdoor sports ig one of the special policies of President Alvear, who shows his interest by kicking off at a big | football game and attending many ~ BY SWAN |sport events, while: he sets an ex- ample himselfas a devoted golfer. Two song had attempted to de 8-62 London, A Chinese} prive their aged parent of property a OS tfather’s right to chastise disobe-| reserved But as the unfiliatsons who are FOR RENT—Apartment, French -& dient and unjust sons is illustrated|ihe rem: doth over forty years of age, now Welch Hdw, Co, See Griffith. phy .@ case in the Civil Court of|had ‘teen divided, Asked in court|appeared’ submissive before the 8-8-8t} Wel-hai-wol, and mentioned in the|-why he had not punished the Heliecinrt the parent gladly $SALESMAN $AM oS ‘YOU _BETCHAY-AN’ Those who know Broadway well realize thi ay White Way has a alk A ell-knowt nt broke” reééntly, “and THis 19 TH 45 PLACE IVE TRIED = waa, in danger of golng “ower the yo AND NO LUCK A ALL ‘Demand For Silver | i," te oon, iar a BET ON ; ie . May Bring Shortage | ea raise s202.‘Now he’s on nis fect again. {try and amateur photography, and the great demand for silver jew- * elry are responsible for a growins £ demandyof such large proportions that Robert Linton, President of the North Butte Mining Company, predicts a shortage of the metal in } | the future: | Ina statement on the subject Mr. Linton declares that 5,000,000 ounces of silver are used in pho- tography each year. This is the largest single factor in the increas- cd-demand in the. Untted States. The Orientals, take great: quan- tities of silver for adornments, the white metal being: favored by them for use in jewelry. Chine acts as a crafty trader in’ silver, buying up )imrmense supplies of it on ee merkét and holding. them until fae price soars again, Mr; Linton says. In the face of this. increased de- mand comes) the intelligence that the world's production: is “Gecitn- ing. The: righ..silver minds are nearly exhausted and.no new ones have been struck. Silver ig now, | Mr. Linton déclarea, chiefly a by- product of ‘copper and lead mining, and: the Jarger copper and lead mines ate producing less silver. New York, Aug, 8.—The wu i te silver in the motion: picture indus- | BLUE-FLAME FUEL In England the younger gencra-" tiom is repérted ta be, wearing blan- ket wraps; based. of a perfectly straight, piece ) cloth slung around | . ‘the shoulders, ind kept in place by a cord, ‘To slip on after tennis or to wearin the cool of the evening these cetmeants are ideal. , HAND-PAINTED ROSES A white taffeta frock with a full }skirt and a close bodice is ‘trimmed with hand-painted red roses“and an occasional blue ribbon, This lump. of © coal undoubtedly would burn with the bright blue flame of alcohol. It is in such’, diamonds: as: these” ‘that bring: bootleg booke to America. gita ii eee, Using wireless ‘amplifiers and a loud aker to magnify the sound of heart beats is surgery’s latest de-. 3 yelopment, —__ fet ‘ y ,