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‘ house, full basement, block from Wachter school, 417 ‘South Ninth Street. Phone 894-M____7-30—Iwk. « FoR RENT-—Modern furnished apartment, one, two and. three rooms. Apply. F. W. Murphy. WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1924 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 4 = Tribune; Classified Adverti { rioune ; Ulassilie vertisements 4 i| nf : PEON > 3°23 . HELP WANTED—MALB WORK WANTED Jenn | WANTED—Men and Women to learn ee Mrs. Peter Rennnich calls for wash- KS che UuebeRuaade, UGVeRE GR as big Classified Advertising Rates ing. Phone 557-J,'305-16th St. So. ine Ro | wages. Few weeks completes. Cata-| | 1 insertion, 25 word 7-28-3t. . = ight 1904 ; a Tok fund) special fer “tree, Moter TOHHER foc eore: tei Sinks wD Raw - Copyright . NEA Service Inc Raber. Pango, No D4] 2 insertions, 26 words ot WANT ee a Tne Ciiwib ant (Dinnpeyved! Mien 7-29 1m: EE Arar ccs ae 0 wail Se 1NESHLEAN. 36 Wekbec gS modern furnished house, close in. aged woman, for position farm. Write Box 663, Bism: Db, 7 ith ARELP WANTED—FEMALE TEACHERS WANTED—A11 branches. At once. Mid-West 4 Teachers Agency, Valley City, | ‘North Dakota. 7-21-1m Mess Cook Wanted School, Fort Yates, North For information write to 7-24-1w. rl for W.'A. Phone 7-29-3t iirl for general house- Apply at onee. Telephone “th 2t. Agence Dakot work. 714-J WOMAN cook wan e Rex Hotcl, Beulah, N. Dak SALESMAN We ne Tew more salesmen own- | ing cars to sell our established | line of oils and paints. Desirable | territory and list af customers furnished. Interstate Oil Company, | Write or phone R. T. Swain Kenzie Hotel, Bismare blocks from P. O, priv ice, Reasonable. Also one light housekeeping room and sleeping room. Phone 464-R, 7-26-1w New four room modern 4-30-t£ FOR RENT—A five room modern apartment with two large porches. Woodmansee Apts. Apply Harris 6-19-tf Modern House, 4 rooms Immediate Possession. $40 per month, Address P. 0, Box 716, FOR Rt “Modern house, close in. Inquire at Manager's office, Tele- phone Co. or phone 1000. 7-10-tf FOR RENT ment in Rose FP, W. Murph TOL! ompletely furnished mo- dern home, Rent moderate. ‘Tel. 49X-R. 6 rd =: f FOR RENT—Tw tments fully equipped for light housekeeping. Phone 794-W. 1-12-tf FOR RENT—A five room moder ith & Front St, Phone house on y 7-29—tf. 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, under . «615 1 week, 25 words or under 1.26 Ads over 25 words, 2c addi- tional per word, CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES 65 Cents Per Inch All classified ads are cash in advance. Copy should be re- ceived by 12 o'clock to insure insertion same day. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 32 * FOR SALE—8 room modern home, including 5 bed rooms, oak finish downstairs, full basement, fine porch, hot water heat, east front, trees, well located, near to schools -one of the best homes fm Bis- marek At a bargain 6 room part- ly modern home, south front, 75 foot frontage, well located, barn on property, for $1500, 6 room new bungalow, including 3 bed rooms, east front, near school, hot water heat, fine porch and basement for $6,000 on terms. 6 room modern house for rent for 30.00 per month, Geo, M, Regis- 6-25-1wk. For fectionery Store in town doing good bu wishes to enter reli; ‘Only _con- county seat ss—Owner work. Box -1 w! Real offer to buyer. Terms. 3, Steele, ‘OR SALE—Pool room in a_ live North Dakota town with popula- tion of 1,000, with ‘four tables and fixtures, Write Tribune No. 796. 7-26-8t. FOR SAIL Quarter Section 26, Town Range 79 Burleigh County; tillable wheat land close to Wilton ele- vator; wheat crop next year should almost pay for it far uway to look after “Owner” 517 North— we Mahogany Piano Bench $5.00; Bam- boo musie rack $3.00; Good Se ing Machine $15.00; Bamboo se: ing cabinet $2.50; 1 Sectional Bookease $12.00; 1 Jardinere with foliage plant 1 Columbia Grafanola Phone FOR SALE—Fine corner lot, 650x150 in the best residence district in Biamarck, Paving, sewer, water and gas all in and partial excava- tion made. Price id terms right. 757 Tribene, Bismarck, N. = EO Taylor Gas tor, One Minneapolis 82-56 rator. In first class shape. Will sell cheap, Otterstrom Bros, Car- son, N. D. 7 =e | taxes paid by the assignee of mort- to. N. ©, Ramstad, by an instrument furnished. Phone 883, 217 8th 7-9-tf] sand pounds. One bay horse about Two furnished yooms,| ight hundred. Reward, A. W. upstairs, and two modern Mellen, Phone 828 Weep tt nished rooms downstairs, with] WANT TO BUY—30-60 Rumley Oil bath. Gas stoves in each, Phone] Pull or a 40-80 Avery; got to be rd St. 7-29-tf.]| in gpood shape. Anton Schmitz, NT—Two suites nice light} Driscoll, N. D. __ z keeping rooms, freshly decor- | WANTED— 00 as first mort- ated, Gas and washing privileges.| gage loan on first class city res- Fully modern, Phone 812-J, 517} idenee. Hedden Real Estate 2nd St. 7-29-1wk.| _Agency. Phone 0. 7-23-tf cely furnished Rooms for Rent|FOR SALE CHEAP—One 30 H. P. hy the week. Modern convenien-| Avery steam engine in first cla: ces. Call 302 Front St, Phone] condition. Anton Schmitz, Dr: 1041, 7-30-3t| coll, N, D. 7-29-3t. FOR RENT-—Well furnished room|FOR SALE—Deering Binder used with kitchenette for light house- keeping. Phone 273, 411 5th St. 7-28-—-1 w. FOR RENT—Two large well furnish- ed sleeping rooms in clean quiet home, Phone 836-M. 405 5-St. 7-28—l.w FOR RENT—2 rooms for three Gen- tlemen with or without board, with voung couple. 400 Ave B, 7-28—1w. FOR RENT—One large room suitable for one or two gentlemen: Aiso Roard, 406-6th St. 5-5-tf two seasons, J. E. Chesak, 13 mi. S. E. of Bismarck. 7-24-1wk. For Sale—Ice Box, Roll Top desk, Typewriter, Check protector, 406- 9th St. C. W. Henzler, _ 7-28—2t. WANTED TO BUY—DIAMONDs. Knowles the Jeweler, Bismarck. 7-29—3t. FOR SALE---One Edison Phonograph, also a 1920 Hupmobile. Phone 822-J. 7-30—3t. FOR SALE—Furniture at the Hare Block, 8111-2 Main, 6-4-tf. BLIND AIDS BLIND Congressman John L. Cable of Lima, Ohio (left), temporarily is groping ut in total blindness. But from his room in a sanitarium in ,Cin- nati he ig directing his campaign for governor,of Ohio. Walter E. Darling (right), a blind ex-service man, is serving as his seeretary. |, Cable lost the sight in one eye some years ago. And a flying splinter |: Rearly cost him the sight of the other a few weeks back. Specialiste, though, say he will be able to see again in a few weeks. Mrs, D. Hawley, Gen Del. LAND FOR SALE—Some rare bargains in farm land and city property. Go out and take a look at the country and then come to see me and buy something. You can’t lose at present values. I also write insurance. F, E. Young. 7-28. 7-28—3t. We have for sale several well locat- ed improved farms in the famous Park Region at attractive prices. We will be glad to hear from any- one interested in a farm in Becker County. Write us, Security State Bank, Detroit, Minn. 7-30-1wk. Sa NOTICE: OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Notice Is Hereby Given, That the certain mortgage executed and de- livered by Harry G. Higgins and Alice B. Higgins, his wife, as mort- | gagors, to August E. Johnson, as | mortgagee, dated the 6th day of De- cember, 1918, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds | of the county of Burleigh and state | of North Dakota, on the 6th day of | January, 1919, at eleven o’clock A. | M., and recorded in Book 151 of | Mortgages, on page 544, w! gage was thereafter duly a: N. O. Ramstad, by an instrument in | writing, dated the 10th day of Jun-! uary, 1919, and filed for record inj the office of said register of deeds | of Burleigh County, North Dakota, | on the 22nd day of May, 1924, at 1:30 o'clock ,P. M., and recorded in Book 139 of Assignments, on page | 545, will be foreclosed by a sale of | the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the courthowse in the city of Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, on the 4th day of August, 1924, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M., to satisfy the amount due on such mortgage on the date of sale. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the amount due on the same, are situate in Burleigh County, North Dakota, and described as fol- lows, to- The Southwest Quar- ter (SW%) of Section Three (3), ‘Township One Hundred Forty-one (141) North, Range Seventy-eight (78) West of the bth P. M. There will be due on such mortgage on the day of sale the sum of $1822.72, which sum iricludes $140.60, gagee, besides the costs, disburse- ments and expenses of ‘this fore- closure. Dated this 25th day of June, 1924. N. O. RAMSTAD, Assignee of Mortgagee. NEWTON, DULLAM & YOUNG, Attorneys for Assignee of Mort- gagee. 16-23-30 Bismarck, North Dakota. 6-25—7. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Notice Is Hereby Given, That the certain mortgage executed and de- livered by H. G. Higgins and Alice B. Higgins, his wife, as mortgagors, to August E. Johnson, as mortgagee, dated the 25th day ‘of November, 1918, and filed for record in the of- fice ‘of the register of deeds of the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, on the 6th day of January, 1919, at eleven o'clock A. M., and’ recorded in Book 161 of Mortgages, on page 546, which mort- age was thereafter duly assigned in- writing, dated the 10th day of January, 1919, and filed for record in the office of said register of deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, on the 22nd day of May, 1924, at 1:30 o'clock P. M., and re-| corded in Book 139 of Assignments, on page 544, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises‘in such mort- gage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the courthouse in the. city of Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh and state of North Da- kota, on the 4th day of August, 1924, at the hour of ten o’clock A. M., to satisfy the amount due on such mortgage on the date of sale. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the amount due on the same, are situate in Burleigh County, North Dakota, and described as fol- lows, to-wit: The Southeast Quarter (SE'4) of Section Four (4), Town- ship One Hundred Forty-one (141) North, Range Seventy-eight (78) West of the Sth P. M. There will be due on such mort- gage on the day of sale the sum of; $1907.95, which sum includes $105.95, taxes paid by the assignee of mort- gagee, besides the costs, disburse- ments and expenses of this foreclo- sure. Dated this 25th day of June, 1924. N. 0. RAMSTAD, Assignee of Mortgagee. NEWTON, DULLAM & YOUNG, Attorneys for Assignee of Mort- gagee. Bismarck, North Dakota. 6-25—1-2-9-16-23-30 SUMMONS State of North Dakota, County of Burleigh. In District Court, Fourth Judicial Chester Savings Bank, a Corporation, Plaintiff. District. va. C. T. MeWilliams and Edna E. McWilliams, Defendants. The State of North Dakota to the above named Defendants: You and each of you are hereby summoned to answer the complaint in the above entitled action, which is filed in the office of the clerk of the district court of the county of Burleigh, state of North Dakota, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the sub- scribers at their office in the Webb Block in the city of Bismarek, in the said county of Burleigh, within thirty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of such service; and in case of- your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in_the complaint. Dated at Bismarck, N. Dak., on this 31st day of May AgD., 1924. . He ISTER and GEO. M. REGISTER jreturns to his apartment. jbed than any other place. Un- i dressed, then, with cigarete on a stand beside me, I pondered the strange relationship which I had | Higgins BEGIN HERE TODAY The war left John Ainsley, a man of education and breeding, unfit for work. He becomes a master crook. “To prey upon thieves ;that shall be my career,” he decides, “For if a thief is robbed, where may he look for redress?” Ainsley visits the Jardin des Nymphes in Paris with two Ameri- can acquaintances. A tall, white- haired man is pointed out to him as the White Fagle. The White Eagle it appears, is a brilliant crook who never has fallen into the clutches of the law. The White Eagle is the company of a gross, vulgar- seeming man and woman, Ainsley suspects that the White Eagle menipulating a swindle. He finds out the names of the man and wo- man--then leaves his friends and NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY I find that one thinks better in seen evidenced tonight. What was the basis of the acquain- tance between the White Eagle, a notorious though unpunished crim- inal, and Mr. and Mrs. Josiah Hig- gins, of Cincinnati, Ohio ik I wondered that I had not recog- nized the Higginses at first glance} Still, the photographs of them, which had appeared in the American and European press, had evidently been retouched to a degree, And if I had not instantly recognized the faces, I paid proper tribute to the Higgins } come lems that, having no existence, could | have no solution, i And yet I was ashamed of these | reflections; for after all, they we simply confessions of my own in ability to meet a situation and make it yield a profit. Despite my resolutions, then, to think no more of Higgins and the | White Eagle, they were both in my mind as, turning a corner into the | Rue des Saints Peres, [collided with | 2 group of people standing before 1 muttered an apology, | k, and noted that the per- | son of the group with whom I had | contact——he | into most violent had fallen to the ground—was blind in one eye. | 1 bent over swiftly, and helped him to his feet. My perfunctory | ey became profuse and sincer ng that he was poorly dressed, I ventured to offer him a coin. Hej seized it greedily, and 1 would have passed on, only that I noticed that | the rest of the group were all blind | in one eye, i Other groups stood across the | street, in the street, and farther! down the narrow sidewalk on which 1 stood, And I noticed that every single one of them suffered the same affliction; they were blind in one | uzed horror For the the | 1 suppose that my s reflected in my face. v1 to whom | had presented uity laughed at me. lonsieur is amazed, so many of us is strange “Is this a hospital here?” I asked pointing at the building before which We stood, He shook his head, “No, monsieur, x es? To see | glory by immediately identifying their names, Who in the newspaper reading world had not heard of Josiah Hig- gins, who had been a multimillion- aire before the war and who was now ‘popularly reputed to be worth at least a billion? Statisticians had estimated how many times his for- tune, if reduced to dollar bills, would girdle the globe, how many times it would rebuild the Pyramids, if re- duced to silver co And other statisticians had solemnly affirmed it is the name of a patron of all | afflicted such as we. Monsieur has | not read this morning's Cri de Paris?” 1 shook my head, and he thrust into my hand a copy of the paper, ded back to expose an advertise nt. I read it lamely in my falter- | Translated, it ran: ntleman whose son, having | lost an eye for F i wound proudly, di h tion, until his death by a cently, wishes to honor the that it cost thirty thousand dollars to dress Mrs. Higgins for breakfast, and at least a million and a quarter properly to clothe and ornament her Their ex had become a matter of national awe. Also, the queer parsimony accom- panied their extravaghnce wes known to all the world. Higgins proudly boasted that he never gave a dollar to charit nd that he never lent money. They tipped out- rageously, but Higgins haggled with his workmen, and was probably the most cordially hated employer in America, They had assailed fashion in New York, buffs had become historic. They had failed to impress Mayfair and the Faubourgs as well as Fifth Ave- nue, but they did not lack for sate- Nites. They were in a fair way to ward creating a fashionable society cf their own, if fashion be judged, as it frequently is, by the amount of newspaper space accorded it. And this couple talked confiden- tially with sueh a person as the White Eagle! The thought of black- mail entered my mind, but I°dis- missed it at once. If the White Eagle had been threatening the mil- lionaire, the manner of each of them would have partaken of strain. No, they had been talking business What business What _ possible business could exfst between the White le and Josiah Higgins? If Higgins had had a son or daugh- ter who could have become entang- led in some underworld affair, I could understand that the White Eagle had been called upon for aid. the gates val and their re was unadmirable, I guessed at a solution of the problem that puzzled me. I could have imagined ‘that the White Eagle was surreptitiously disposing of stolen goods to the millionaire. But Hig- gins was too sane to indulge in that sort of shady barter, if he were not too*honest. I tossed upon the bed; I fumed and fretted and smoked a score of cigarets. Somewhere in this rela- tion between the criminal and the millionaire lay an opportunity for me, if only I had eyes wherewith to see it. For whatever the relation between and the White Eagle, it must be something uriderhanded, even though I could not guess why the milionaire jshoujd descend to such a matter. The White Eagle was a crock; a crook does only crooked business, whether his part- ner be honest or otherwise. That is axiomatic. But where in the axiom lay a profit for me? I awoke with a-headache; I had slept little, and that little had been interrupted by dreams in which the White Eagle took a fortune from Josiah Higgins, while I looked on> powerless to abstract the. fortune from the so-called supercrook. I tried to eat breakfast; but the combination of too much wine and too little sleep had killed by appe- tite. I was nervous, restless, and so I went for a walk. I crossed to the Left Bank, wandering aimlessly, my mind intent on the puzzle, solution of which I felt meant profit to me, and finally found myself Jin the neighborhood of the Luxembourg. ‘Phe walk had cleared my head, and appetite had come to me. I walked on to Foyot’s and ordered breakfast. Food put mein a mere philosophical frame ‘of mind. After all, I might be deluding myself; Higgins might have made the acquaintance of a Attorneys for Plaintiff, Office and’ Fost: effice address, Bismarck, North Dakota 1-28-80 8-6-18-20-27 notorious crook simply for the sake of the thrill that some people gain from such an acquaintance. At any. rate, it did not behoove me to wear out my nerves in imagining prob- of that noble son by kindn those similarly afflicted. tleman will devote part of his large fortune to the founding and main tenance of a club for one-eyed ie It will not be limited only to tho who lost their sight in the war against the cursed Boche. All men who are without the sight of one eye are eligible to the privileges of the Club, Those interested are re d to apply to Number, Rue ints Peres, between the hours of nine and twelve on Wednesda; I read this ndvertis so. typically in and my eyes filled with te a charity a wifle too 1 American tuste, but its kindness would appeal to the generosity of uny country. I placed another coin in my informant’s m, and hu ried away from the grotesque se But at the I stopped, turned, and s' man who had passed me. It was the White gle; and all my interest In hin which had evaporated while 1 read} the strange advertisement, conden- sed and flowed back into my brain. And then interest became amaze- ment, for he entered the house fore which the groups of blind men stood. Immediately upon his en- trance a servant came to the door and beckoned to the unfortunates Five minutes later they were al within the house. I waited outside, at a convenient | corner. Somehow or other I could not believe that this grotesque ad- | vertisement contained all that of interest. Of course, crooks are| notoriously impulsive, given to| streaks of extravagant generosity. Nevertheless, I waited. One by one, the blind men began to emerge from the house. All o them seemed happy, as though in- credible good fortune had come to them. Finally the whom I had tipped appeared. I accosted him, and | he beamed upon me. “Ah, it is my generous Ameri “Well, did you join the Clut asked. (Continued in Our Next Issue) he= REDISCOVER SECRET, REVIVE TOBACCO MAKE! Although present day pipe smokers do not realize it, they owe an ever- lasting debt of gratitude to an old- | time tobacco man—John Wellman by } name—for giving them one of the sweetest, coolest tobaccos that ever packed a pipe. ©The story of Wellman and his fa- mouse tobacco secrets is being told to the public for the first time in a ser-. ies of unique advertisements now be- | ing published by the Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co., to acquaint smokers with their ever-popular Granger Rough Cut. The story of Granger is this: | It seems that several generations agoAabout 1870, to be exact) John Wellmaw led the field with a sceret method of preparing pipe tobacco— to the envy and despair of all rivals, They wondered for years how he did it but never seemed able to solve the riddle. In spite of all their ef- forts, imitators never even approxi- mated Wellman’s perfection, so close- ly was the process guarded. Smokers, new generation, And so it is that through Gr ough Cut this old-time tobae t has virtually been “re-d Ro MOM’N POP | NEVER MADE A MORE LHOPE ‘To ACHIEVE FE. THE HIGHEST PEAK 1 be SV SF Liggett & Myers THE OLD HOME TOWN | SSS a a : [possible its being handed-on tc al afer a three-year period of quiet| Jamalea, ‘Leng. Island, | fixes the curfew hour of 9 o'clock for loud anger] of tobs co Se ove WELL CHICK ~My BOY-L HAVE AT LAST EMBARKED ON) THE GREAT SEA OF SPECULATION — CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS VENTURE SOME UNDERTAKING AND BY MERE COURAGE ATS IN THE OIL INDUSTRY THAT Wilt ELEVATE ME TO THE BUSINESS “try-out” among the shrewder judges Radio will be alled PAGE SEVEN in Belgian y barracks for the entertainment By Taylor THERE COMES A TIME IN) THE LIVES FOR POWER AND WEALTH — ALIFE OF MEN WHEN THEY CRAVE THE DESIRE DEVOTED AS A MERE TOOTH IN THE GEAR WHEELS OF INDUSTRY GAINS BUT. LITTLE WHILE THE MASTER GERR DRIVES THE SMALLER PINIONS IN THE MECHANISM OF THE UNIVERSE THEREFORE L HAVE BROKEN) THE REINS THAT HELD ME IN) MERE MEDIOCRITY SO. THAT L MAY GRAZE IN THE GREEN PASTURES OF WEALTH AND POWER AND AFTER I'VE STEPPED ON THE LAST ROUND IN THE LADDER OF FAME ~ Say TWO YEARS. HENCE — ULL RETIRE FROM SAY HE ee UKE ED WOURGLER 2 BoT POP ~WouLDn'T IT GE BETTER IF You'd KEEP ON WORKING FIVE OR SIX YEARS THEN WE COULD RETIRE — TOGETHER r— BANC BURGLAR)’ A STRANGE MAN RUSHED OUT OF BOYNTONS: COAL YARD AND SWUNG ON THE REAR COACH OF THE 9°45 LAST ANIGHT- My DOD'S A REPUBLICAN ALEK = WHAT'S YER 4a Y'KNOW WHAT TIM UP, WILLIE? TM GONNA BE A REPUBLICAN AN’ 47 ALEK'S GONNA BEA DEMOCRAT however, never stopped to envy but just smoked and liked and kept on liking the tobaceo. John Wellman, of course, has long since passed on—and his famous se- eret would have passed on with him, had it not been Liggett & Myers’ good fortune to acquire exclusive rights to his prize method and make! . GONNA BE WHEN T GROW Freckles and His Friends DEMOCRAT AN’ T'M GONNA BE 4 DEMOCRAT WHAT ARE YOU GONNA ) BE, Sie You BE A REPUBLICAN AN’ TLL BE A AW TM GONNA BE A REPUBLICAN es FS eeeetrnars 2