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~HELP WANTED—FEMALE ‘WANTED—Competent maid,. family of two, highest wages. Dr. M. E. Bolton. Phone 240-W or cal} at Apartment D, Rose Apartments x_ o'clock, 7-11-tf : WANTED — All branches. At once. Mid-West Teachers Agency, Valley City, North Dakota. 9-21-1m after WAN’ —A girl for general housework. Mrs. L, A. Shipfer. 4 Ave, B. 7-19-tf i FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND FLATS FOR RE! t floor apartment with bath, Second floor rooms for light housekeeping Garage also for rent, 422 Fifth St. Call ‘) _evenings. 7-18-1wk FOR RENT--Modern furnished apartments, one, two and three rooms. Apply F. W,. Murphy. Phone 852, : 4-80-tf YOR RENT—A five room modern apartment with two large porches. Woodmansee. Apts. Apply Harris _ & Woodmansee. FOR REN' ‘Modern house, close in. Inquire at Manager's office, Tele- phone Co. or phone 1000, 1-10-tf FOR RENT—Strictly me fern apart- ment in Rose Apartments. Apply ¥. W. Murphy, Phone 862. 4-80-tf FOR RENT—4 room cottage all new- ty decorated inside. Phone 778 or _call 1202 Broadwa?. 7-5-tf TO LET—Compietely furnished mo- Rent moderate. Tel. 621 8rd St. 7-15-tf For Rent—4 room and bath modern house, immediate ‘ pdssession. _ Phone 714R. 7-22-3t. FORK RENT—Two apartments fully equipped for light housekeeping. dern home. 498-R. + _ Fhone 794-W. 1-12-tf FOR RENT—August 1, five room furnished house. Phone 618J. 418 10th Street. 9 7-19-3t FOR RENT—Five room modren flat. Apply 213 10th St., after 6 p. m. rat. “iwk a e ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Large front room well ventilated. Large closet. Nicely furnished, suitable for two. Also large front room on ground floor with kitchenette, screened porch, furnished. Phone 883, 217 8th St. 7-9-tf FOR RENT—Three modten fur- nished rooms for light» house- keeping, on main floor. Also the use of vacuum and washing machine. Also combination gas and coal range for sale. Call 523 Seventh street or pbene ats W. 7-19-3t FOR RENT—Modern rooms, close in, one single and one double, also boarders wanted by the week, good home cooking, call 314 31d Phone call 658-W. _ FOR RENT—Large furnished room for light housekeeping. ‘ Ground entrance, and also suitable rooms 1052-R for sleeping. Phone 422 4th St, For Rent rooms, furnished. Hot ‘and cold water and gas to cook with. 621- 6th S: Phone 4 FOR R rooms, also several pieces of fur- niture for sale. Mrs. Wm. Hinkel, 201 Ist St. Phone 966-J. 7-21-lwk FOR RENT— Furnished light housekeeping rooms, also * one sleeping room, 622 8rd St. Phone _Phone 132-W. 7-21-3t FOR RENT—Well furnished room with kitchenette for light house- keeping: Phone 273, nee St. ior RENT—Two pleasant rooms with or bath in a modern home. Private entrance. 617 8th St. Phone 601 7-18-1wk.. FOR RENT—Well furnished room @ modern home, on ground floor, close in. Phone 6723. 120 1st St. 2-20-tf. FOR RENT—One large room suitable for one or two gentlemen: Aiso Roard, 406-6th St. 5-5-tf NS Newspapers or Seri: advance. our First, ment Plan. denominations. ities from 1 year up. a firm of investment bankers with a record of 39 years without loss of, principal single customer. 1009 5th. St., ticulal WANTED to hear from party who is willing to give board and room Bonds. 1 week, 25 words or under 1.25 Ads Over 25 words, 2c addi- tiénal per word. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES | 65 Cents Per Inch AN classified. ads: ave: cash in Copy should be re- ceived by 12 o'clock to insure insertion same day. e. YOUNG 2 ba 26 words or a a 3 insertions 28 wotds oF under ——— MISCELLANEOUS SEVEN PERCENT ‘and Safety with Mortgage Real Estated Cash ‘or Pay- $100, $500 &, $1,000 FOR SALE—Northeast Quarter Section 26, Towh,.313, Range 79 Burleigh County; all“ tillable wheat land close to Wilton ele- vator; -wheat crop next year should almost pay for it; am too far. away to‘look after it. “Owner” °517 North Beachwood Drive’ Los Angeles, Galifornia. 7 TANKS FOR SALE—Two large vanized ntanks in good coi Also %' H. P. DC. BJ tion, motor. 204 Main St.* For Sale—Two davenport, bookcase. 7-22-24 large mirrors, one and one combination Call at 506-2nd FOR SALE THE worth seven to eight thousand dol- | lars in normal times. Ideal for BISMARCK TRIBUNE large family or for keeping radia | y “PHONE 32:, . + ers, good location, close to ‘ churches and downtown. and 2 sleeping porches. «2 gar- ages, all in fine condition, FOR SALE — ._ -|FOUR ROOM BUNGALOW, MOD- Look at these real bargains in small ern, East front, close to school. houses, on very resonable] Price $3450. Terms. terms: Pema 13th street, 4 rooms, redecorated,| SIX ROOM HOUSE, RIVERVIEW. $1,900.00. Fireplace, South ‘front, good loc: lith’ street, - 4 rooms, ’~furnace,} tion. Price $6500. Terms. $1,900.00. South Side 3 houses, 3-4-5 rooms,|FIVE RQOM'/BUNGALOW, MOD- each, $1,000.00. ern, Close in. Price $4700. $700 | Splendid lists of houses, lots and cash,. balance mot farm lands. I also write fire in- HEDDEN REAL E TE AGENCY surance. Webb Block Phone ’0 Héuses for Rent ACTING ENVOY 7-21-1wk Choice of matur- or interest Write Forman Bismarck for par- Issued by to a 7-16-2wK and small cash rent to owner, in exchanged for modern furnished or unfurnished home in choice lo- cation, in city. changed. Tribune, ad No. 792. Adults References only. ex- Write 1-18-1wk FOR RENT=Service garage, estab- lished in downtown district. per month. floor, $20, ‘per first district, furnished. Phone 400W. modern Two room apartment downtown month, Room 6, Dahl Block. $35. partly FOR SALE—Fine corger lot, 60xi60 Price aed cafiae right. naary 167 Tribune, Bismarck, N. FOR SALE—The pool room property at Washburn, N. D., complete as it stands including io’ and all fixtures and furniture. If interested do not write but come and see the property. buildings in the best jsresidence district in i ‘ Isaburo Yoshida, newly counselor and charge d’ affairs of the Japanese embassy in Washing- ton, is acting ambassador for his country in the United States now. Ambassador Masano Hanihara has returned to Tokio on leave of ab- sence. But in many quarters it is said he will not return, for his gov- ernment, it is reported, is displeased 4-19-tf 7-16-1wk gan. Phone 303. FOR SALE—20x35 Avery _ Tra¢tor with five hotiom P. N. O. plows, with extra breaker bottoms. further information write or phone Knute Johnson, Sterling, N. D. FOR RENT—The E.. A. Dawson Grocery store~by Aug. Ist. of the best locations for a grovery Store in Bismarck. B, F. Flana- with his work in view of the passage , of the exclusion act. For NOTICE TO COAL DEALERS Bids are requested for gupplying 1000 tons (more or less) best lump lignite coal, delivered in the bins of the several Bismarck public schools during year ending June 30, 1925. Bids to be opened at regular ‘meet- ».9-10-tf One 7-16-1wk FOR SALE—One Elgin Bicycle prac- tically new at a reasonable price. Inquire vice, 205 F. M. roadway. R. Electnic Ser- Phone 388. ing of board Tuesday, Aug. 12, 1924 ‘at'8 p.m, High School. Privilege reserved to reject any or all bids. By order of Board of Education, RICHARD PENWARDEN, 7-19-3t FOR SALE—Baby Buggy, good as new, also Libra: 501% Main St., FOR SALE—T head of “Registered Short Horn cattle, or will trade for Steers. Box 580, Mandan, N. Dak. le. Laskin Bldg. Clerk. Inquire} 7-1-8-8-10-15-17-22-24-29-31—8-5-7 PAINFUL BEAUTY Darjeeling, Thibet, July 22.—Wo- men of Thibet, like their western sisters, attgin beauty through suf- fering. e fashionable Thibetan 7-21-3t, 9-19-8t FOR SALE—Furniture at the ae Block, 3111-2 Main. lady rubs her face, hands and neck with melted butter before going to Bound Bhi individuals can 1 have their newspaper files.or maga- ~.| zines or other material bound atthe -Tribune’s Bindery. em - At Right Prices. Let us alle on your: ment order of ae a BISMARCK TRIBUNE BINDERY Phone 32 aad debare JOE Dave Jackson, 218 8th. All repairing on cars. 3 Have Your Newspaper Files or Magazines bed, and next morning dusts her face with finely powderéd ashes in order to whiten her complexion. Materials use in the manufacture of buttons come from all parts of the world. There are no definite records to show that Stratford-on-Avon was the birthplace ‘of Shakespeare. STUDIES SLUMS Gang life, slums, unhappy marriages. HPhese are just a few of the things ‘University of Chicago sociological students are going to look into. Ay $75,000 ‘gift—$50,000 oe He rear Spelman Rockefellex lemori ni ue sother souress= wilt Write | electric | © isttarck Bottling Works,! ;}tent to melt the flesh and shrink 5800 ON TERMS BUYS A HOUSE! mind thift, ruling, has made no sue-|look anyone in the eye. The con-| cess of its reign? 1 say that no|sciousness of virtue should have famished man will observe, after he} su ned my glance. Instead, it has conquered fear, the laws that/fell before her truculent stare. Then j men with full stomachs have enact-|1 made up my mind, ed. “All right, Mrs. Gannon; I'll pay Conscience, and the words it con- u tonight,” I told her. appointed | Without a word she held out her] possessions passed into the hands of hand jto me. I could feel myself! the paw that I would die coloring, and marveled that there} before I with the last re- ‘|was enough red in my anemic sys-| minder of different days, no tem to furnish my cheeks with a] longer binding. My duty to Mrs. Have you évet. been hungry? Dh,[ness, and “the latter suce {I do not mean the lusty appetite} eighte months of malnutrition cul- | that exercise brings, nor do I mean} minating in what promised to be} the faint sénsation of dis¢omfort that comes when dinngr is delayed. I mean hungry! Not Yor an hour, not for a day, not for af$week; but for a month, two - months, _ three months! I mean a‘hunger that is a slow starvation, that is not con- actual starvation, unfitted a man Hea manual labor? Oh; I could work like a giant for ten ‘minutes, but after) that brief time I became as weak} as a newborn kitten. But these} were matter$ that pride kept me} from divulging to Mrs. Gannon. She} had troubles of her own; mine did} the muscles, but works a fatal al-| not concern her. chemy upon the heart and mind. | Well, there ain’t nothing more) Perhaps you do not believe in| for me to say. If you can’t pay me, such an alchemy. Nevertheless you| you'll have to go. That's all there] will concede that the mind possesses}is to that.” She put her hands on great dominion over the body. And]her hips and stared at me. mistreated slaves yoverturn their | 1 had never in all my life done a} harsh masters. Why should not the} thing which the world calls dishon- body, then, mistreated, destroy the] orable. I should have been able to jured up before my mind! Honor, she reminded fidelity, duty! Well, I had won “It's tonight now,” me suspiciously. honor on a certain bloody meadow} “I mean in an’ hour,” I explained. | between’ two hills in France. Fidel- eyed’ me unbelievingly. Then, | ity? For thirty years I had held the] reluctlantly, She said; “Don’t think | faith implanted in me in childhood.| you can put anything over on me. Duty? Well, in my pocket was ajI get my dollar in advance, like} aper proving that I had been honor-| it’s due, or out you go.” | ably discharged fram the army of| I nooded to her apologetically, ~—does it matter which army? Does humbly it matter where I was born, who were my parents, what had been, before the wat, my station in life, my education? She pursed her lips, started to say something, changed her mind and let her words become an indistinguishable, @nurmud, turned = and waddled down. the hall. Let it be enBugh that I called my-} 1 mounted the stairs. I say mount- self a gentleman, that 1 s call} ed, but I mean climbed them by the myself a gentleman, and that scores,| most desperate effort. i even hundreds, your so-called] zag lines appeared and best people term me such. But I] fore my eyes; tiny points of light was’ a very hungry gentleman that] grew into great molten moons and night, not so long ago, when I re-{then faded suddenly into darkness. turned to thé shabby, even filthy] Nausea attacked me, and 1 - lodging-house on Thompson Street,] quered it only by a miracle of ef- that I calle@ home. fort. My landlady was seated’ on a chair} At last I reached my own room in the ill-smelling hall. She met}on the top floor. It was my entrance with a frown. Even had| more than a cupboard. I been the kind to shirk an issue, I] was no windo a skylight could not have avoided this one. For}what light and ventilation there she rose from the rocking-chair at! were. There no chair in the the rear of the hall. For a moment] room, nor pet. The walls | {she would remove her watchful eye| had once apered, but now from the brood of Half-grown chil-[ there remained only a few strips; dren who played in the kitchen.| grimy, cked plaster, met the Sorry as I was for myself, I was sorrier for her. on eve Yet even ide, thfs refuge was to be Looking at her, as she shuffled} denied me, unless d found means her carpet-slippered feet over the} wherewith to meet the debt that torn and stained oileloth of the hall, s incurred, I one found it hard to believe that she] ha $ room, stifling my had ever had youth, beauty and hap-|contempt with difficulty. Now it piness. One seemed to know that s desirable as an apartment in she had stepped from girlhood into|a ace, middle age, and that the step hadf; Dizzily I clutched at the wall and not, been the bounding stride of con-} worked my way around to the bed fidence, but a frightened, unplanned] and sat down upon it. 1 was shak- leap compelled by fate. ing and perspiring. It was bad Even the flesh that shook upon}enough to ‘be hungry, but to be her as she waddled toward me was| homeless so, Was unendurable. not the firm fat of the well-fed, but the gross flesh of those who live in- doors, who work too hard, and who replenish their wasted tissues with food fof the wrong nutrition value. Well, I would do the thing I had sworn never to do: 1 would pawn the miniature, inted upon ivory, of my mother. For the oath that I had made to myself, as my other blush. There is no humiliation more pain- ful to a gentleman than his inabil- ity to pay his debt to persons de- pendent for their livelihood prea lise minimum of clothing possible his financial integrity. Red with, to cover one’ edness; but I had shame, I could only stammer: “I’m|seen va one by one, the articles sorry, Mrs. Gannon.” of clothing and of the toilet that I I suppose that years before pover-| had thought indispensible, not to ty and worry and disease had left} luxury but to life. Now, save for their indelible marks upon her body|a shirt, an extra pair of socks and and character, her mouth a collar or two, the suitcase was been pleasant, even inv: 4 It] empty—save, of course, for the ivory must have been kissable, for al-| miniature to which I have referred. though I had never seen Mr. Gannon, Sone and vaguely understood that he had vanished from my landlady'’s ken a few years ago, the. presence of so many young Gannons argued the be stowal of caresses upon my land- lady’s dips. But now her mouth was thin and sharp, in violent contrast to the overhanging cheeks and the double chin. Years of contact with im- pecunious lodgers had made a sneer of what might once have been a smile, Gannon! was paramount, | Thad a by, worn-obt suitcase in the room. I had thought when I came here that I owned the irredu My dizziness passed after a mo-! ment, and I opened the case and| took out the miniature. I had no idea what a pawnbroker would con- sider the thing worth, but I knew], that it was worth millions to me; for when I should part with it, I would also part with hope. Looking at it, my eyes blurred, not the tears of weakness, but with tears of grief. I seemed to see my whole life pass before me. I was a drowning man, sinking in the, waters of failure and despair. I saw myself as a child, winning my mother’s smile by some playful prank. I saw myself at a fashion- able prep’ school, at college, in Paris playing the part of a wealthy young dilettante. I could neither paint nor write nor compose, but I flat- tered myself that I had a cultured taste for all of these. Then I saw myself reduced to sudden poverty by the failure of a trust company to which the care of the estate left me by my father had been confided. IT remember the blank bewilderment | HEADS MOOSE jorry?” *she repeated, and her shrill voice cut my very soul. “I can’t pay my rent with sorrow, much less a secondhand sorrow that I get from you.” Her own witticism amused her, but I could see that it id not soften her. ‘From the room at the end of the hall onegof the brood saw me. He raced toward us, stopping breath- lessly, “Make a penny disappear, Ainsley!” he cried. R “Let him make a dollar appear,” sggested his mother.. “Ain't you got a penny, Mr. Ains- ley?” asked the child. I suppose that my shame appealed to Mrs. Gannon. Anyway, she pushed the child away, harshly or- dering him to go back to the kit- chen. But pity for my humiliation could ‘not make her trees her own needs, “The rent for your "room was due yesterday, Mr., Ainsley,” she said. “I’m always willing to give anyone & fair chance, but with plenty of peo- ple waiting for rooms, people as is able to pay for them, you can’t éx- pect me to let you havé the room free.” She ‘told the simple truth. Even this grimy house had become at- tractive to me, because it afforded me shelter from the elements, be- ¢gause, forall its degradation, it was better than the hard benches of the park. Mrs. Gannon would have no difficulty in letting the toom which I occupied, the rent of*which was Mr. “It's a wonder me that a good big strong man like yga wouldn’t get some kind bf a job ff ‘ Jou wantebiter en 8 PAE | witha A: Merakle of: Rochester; I could not debate the question| N. ¥., will be inducted into the du- with h How make her under-|preme dictatorship of the Loyal stand that a wound, followed by ill- Order of Moose on July 30. that had overcome me as I ceal poverty, a bewilderment ‘soon suc- ceeded by confidence in my own la- An odorless onion is cultivated by the Chinese. WAAL - LM, OLD ENOUGH ‘To KNOW. THAT ALL. THAT GLITTERS AINT [| goL> AN’ NONSENSICAL | Seen ON TAKES THE } DOUBLE CHIN OFF'N * | YOUR WALLET BUT IF You CAN'T LISTEN TO P HORSE SENSE YOU'LL BE THE BURNT CHILD THAT -_PREADS THE FIRE SARCASM FOR PILLS July built on a foundation of Tahu Wiremie and faith healer, who -ar- rived ‘here recently to take p: the British London, He Stu WHAT'S THE USE OF TRYING TO TALK BUSINESS TOAN OLD FOSSIL LIKE YOu? IF YOU HAD YouR: WAY WE'D STILL GE READING PAPERS BU ALLOW CANDLES AND LIGHTING OUR PIPES WITH A FLINT | AND STEEL MOO “THINK BECAUSE MATT MOSS WAS Fook. ENOUGH To PoT UP AN OIL DERRICK THAT THERE'S A FORTUNE MADE AS SOON AS YOU STICK A HOLE IN THE (ON EGBERT WILL COME OUT OF I FEEL THAT DAME FORTUNE SMILES ON THE MAN WHO 1S WILLING To TAKE A CHANCE AND THIS PROPOSITION LOOKS WORTHY OF SPECULATION NO-NO-\F HE Empire yp Is a Bit Wary Vs al BACHELOR — BUT ‘PAGE SEVEN Wembley. 22.—“Pills, pills! | that you are Ratana,| A doctor and a t in at discovered anyone Exhibition married. WAAL - YOU'VE HEARD MY You CAN G KNOWIN' MORE THAN YOU lly BOSE INSU nur worked together for 40 that they “You have so many drug stores and pills and drugs and food + of the time.” in “Paris ¢ rs_before were PRESENTIMENTS AN’ I DON'T GIVE A COSS= GO AHEAD AN’ DRILL FoR CARELESS AS You DO ABOUT SPECULATION LWOULDN'T BE A HE TRIES MATRIMONY AN OIL DRILLIN' ARE TWO THINGS THAT ALWAYS MEAN FOR BETTER | OR WORSE ipsa ceases L BENS —BRowN RreD Te TOOTH PICISS & suveER PLA WELL IF L FELT AS WELL -A MAN NEVER KNOWS WHAT HE CAN ATTAIN UNTIL, — ITS THE FELLOW WHO TAKES A CHANCE THAT MAKES Ge SEIN un IN) THE WORLD | “oh ie SUCCESS WHY, HES NO BETTER THAN MY¥ BUSBAND HADANY INCOME) H\S PANTS WOULDNT BE PATCHED?! SS ‘ A STRANGE WHEELMAN WHO SCORCHED THROUGH TOWN SHOWED UP THE OTHER SIDE is OF THE FLASHLY BRESSED EGBERT ROBBINS FINANCIAL CONDITION TODAY — 121 by NEA Service. Int Freckles and His Friends _ CAKON MOOCH= ANE AN YOU'LL Go DOWN ‘Yo TH CREEK AN' _ RANE A Billie’s Going Cp j OTe GD to Have Co pany THAT DIRTY BILLIE OU6HT 7D Gas AN AWFUL AXOM,CAN I GO ISWIMMIN' P BILLIE CTT AN' MIS Doc JUST WENT BY SWIM ON THEIR WAY tev MIE TO TH CREEK NOW AMT DIRTY ENOUGH To GO SWIMMIN’, > nom? 7 By Taylor SS