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f «$5,500. » SEVEN ROOM modern space, ‘ EIGHT ROOM modern house, “a Tribune Classified Advertisements “FOR SALE FOUR ROOM modern bungalow, two bed rooms, full basement, het. w: ter heat, Houblé garage. ~ Price $4.300. Terms. ¥ FIVE ROOM modern bungalow, hard- wood floors, full basement, fur- nace heat, ater, gas range. Term: FIVE ROOM modern bungalow, wood floors, fine basement, £1 nace heat, bouble garage. Price Terms. ‘ dwelling, hatdwood floors, full. basement, east front, A No.1 condition, gar- age. Price $5,500, Terms. H FIVE ROOM modern two story dwelling, hardwood floors, oak! trim, fire place, lawri, trécs, garde: garage. Price $5,500. Terms. five east | Price} g bedrooms, double garage, front, trees, garden space. $5,800, Terms. LARGE NEW, three-bedroom, two- story dwelling, west end, basement! arage. full basement,” hardwood! lors. Price $5,750. Terms. ‘FIVE ROOM modein bungalow, full| basement, furnace heat, hardwood 7 Price $4,700. ‘$800 cash,| | balance monthly. i FOUR ROOM bungalow, built 1921,} east front, full complete basement, furnace heat, hardwood floors, built-in features, electric stove, screened porch, near schbol. Price} $3,500.. Good terms. $550 CASH and $45 month including! interest buys a modern six room house, hardwood floors, hot water heat, garage. East front. Price $3,850. This agency has a most complete list of houses, lots and farm lands, with new listings coming in every day.| Insurance of all kinds written in re-| liable companies. HEDDEN REAL ESTATE AGENCY) “Ever Ready to Give Service” Money to Loan Webb Block. Phone ‘ —=————— | MALE HELP WANTED | WANTED—Men and women to learn | barber trade. Great demand: big} wages. Few weeks completes. Cat- | alog and special offer free. Moler Barber College, Fargo, N. D. 3-21-1mo. | ood reliable agents to; fe, Health and Accident In- for good companies, Sce A. A. Doerner or write Annex Ho-| tel, Bismarck, N. Dak. 4-4-1w | WORK WANTED—Experienced cook | wants job cooking for bridge or! road gang. Phone 164 or write! Bismarek Employment Agency, Bismarck N. D. 4-9 1wk | WANTED—Salespeople, men and wo- men, salary and expenses, See Mrs. Martland at G. P. Hotel. | 5 4-8-3t | HELP WANTED—FEMALB GREAT OPPORTUNITY—Women to travel, salary, expenses advanced. See or, call Mrs. Maitland, Grand | Pacific . 4-7-4t WANTED—A girl to do housework on farm. Mrs. W. E. Breen, marck. Phone 8F3, 4 WANTED—Experienced girl for gen- eral housework. 20 Ave.-Br West: _ Phone 458, 4-8-tf WANTED at once, girl at the Mo- hawk for general house work. Phone 145. 4-9-5t WANTED—Experienced git! _ for waiter, at Sweet Shop. 4-0-2t FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND PLATS FOR RENT—A five room cottage at 508 2d St. Partly modern, $26.00 per month. Also a two room fur- nished apartment, Phone 275-W. 4-1-tf FOR RENT—Four room strictly mod- ern apartment, furnished or unfur- nished. Varney flats, Phone 773. SCN Aion es Me ROME ___.3-23-tf FOR RENT=Furnished, rooms for light housekeeping near the Capi- tol on car line, 390 4th street, 4-6 Iwk._ FOR RENT—Apartment in Tribune block available May ist. Apply Bismarck Tribune Office. 3-30-tf room modern Close in.| 4-1-tf apartment Apply 3-30-t: floors. ‘surance FOR RENT—Four house to right parties. Write Tribune No. 961. FOR RENT—Two room over Cowan Drug Store. Cowan Drug Store. FOR RENT—May Ist, modern five room apartment. L, K. Thompson, phone 227. . 4-4-1w FOR RENT—Four room house part- ly modern. Call 214-5th Stre 10-1w. mit LANEOUS FURNITURE AT A BARGAI on- goleum rugs, $5 and $7; dresser $7, fumed oak bookcase, $8, rockers $1 to $4, plain chairs $1.25, two kitch- en cabinets, chiffonier $5, library tables $3 to $6, porcelain top kitch- en table $8, bed complete $10, new Singer machine, sanitary couches, folding screen, pillows, porch shades, canning jars, axe, etc. Phone 464R. . 6 -6 Iwk SAVE COST OF NEW FLOORS—O1d| "4, floors are made like new the Amer- ican Universal Way. Quick proc- » work done perfectly. Brightens the’ whole house: Worn .spots, dirt, stains, paint, varnish—every- thing unsightly disappears without | trouble or mi ‘Work guaranteed. 3 1 Goplin; 806 1st St. » ives 4-6 Iwi cation, good: price rh s straight Write cord, Bismarck Tri- hune —8-2-tf » FOR SALE—At § hatgain, two wood- en type case stands, fully equipped with slides, real bargain for print- er, who needs new eqtipment. Sale for cash only. Apply .Tri- Ld §-28-t OR -RENT— fe Tocated Avenue C in the 10 block. ‘Also have a four-hole range for sal ‘Phone 376 L. M. “4-6 lwk. - ULING Ashes, Black dirt, fertiliz- e 1 Id, Plowing gar- dene apd. san fyrnish geod. sand. ; ing, noon pr evenings. Phone 538J. sf g 4 at URN "FOR SALE rr table, rockers, buf; er piano, libra’ et, 1 insertion, 25 words or 2 insertions, 25 words or ie 75 ‘or un- Soucek under ..... 1'week, 25 wo! der ... Ads over 35 words, 2c addi- tional per word. CLASSIFIED DISRLAY 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 FOUR ROOM cottage, with toilet, right down town. £ast front, Easy terms, $2,650.00. : SEVEN ROOM house, east front, nice part of city, modern, $4,000.00 EIGHT ROOM house, west front, modern, trees, nice part of city, $457.50 on easy terms. SEVEN ROOM house, east front, modern, hot water heat, $3,850.00, easy terms. BUILDING LOTS; hundreds of then in all parts of the city at all sorts of prices and’ terms. FARM LANDS; The biggest acreage in years is being seeded; more sales have been made this winter than in years. BUY NOW at ro¢k bottom ices from the one man who has cen a continuous booster for Bur- leigh county during the past lean years, JRANCE; Fire, tornado and au- tomobdile, written in good compan- ies, PF. E. YOUNG. 4-7-5t —[——$$—$—$—$_—$—————————_——_ FOR SALE—6 room new modern house, 3 bed rooms, garage in base- ment, oak floors, sun parlor, lawn, trees and shrubbery, close to school, for $5800., on good terms and quick possession given; Fine bungalow, stuccoed, hot water heat, south front, one of best built houses in Bismarck, and a fine home for anyone, near school, at a reasonable price; 8 room modern house, with 5 bed rooms, east front, jawn, trees and shrubbery, hot water heat, a fine home, well located, oak finish down stairs, at reasonable price; One of finest building lots in Bis- marck at corner of First and Thay- er Strects, east front. Geo. M. Register. 4-T-1lw PosfrioN WANTED WANTED—Competent Stenographer with law experience wants a posi- tion. Phone 121. 4-7-lw —-BAB¥»CHIX—BEE SUPPLIES. STRONG husky baby chix. 100 per- cent guarantee. We distribute A. I Root Bee Supplies. Write for catalogs, Mondakomin Chickeries. Box _736-A, Fargo, N. D. WANTED TO RENT WANTED TO RENT—Furnished apartment or furnished house for summer months. Couple with no children, Write Tribune Ree we WANTED TO RENT—Modern fur- nished hotel medium sized town, good locatit About fifteen rooms. - No ing room. Exper- ienced, Box 824, Jamestown, N. D. 4-1 SALESMAN “WANTED—First. class experienced grocery man for one of our Western térritories with Bismarck as. headquarters. Must be ener- getic, hard-working and experien- ced, or need not apply. Good op- portunity for right man.” Fargo Mercantile Compi 4-4-lw WANTED—First c! clothing Sales- man and stock keeper. German pre- ferred. References required. State full experiente in reply. Apply to Ad No. 954, care Tribune. _3-18-tf FARM LANDS FOR SALE—Until April 7, 1925— North % of Sec. 19, Boyd Twp. Price $27.50 per acre net. Rei sonable down payment. terms on balance at 6*percent. Kreis, Auror. te dealers in- 3-31-15t / LOTS FOR SALE / LOST—Somewhere between 8th St. ahd the ,Eltinge, a pair of dark ell rimmed gl about 7 or return to the Tribune. ¢ E—Five .qcre suhurban lot; splendid location right in cit; limits. Public road on one end. Easy terms. Write Tribune 958. eens eet oa Lost 4 LOsT—Shriner's\ stick pin crescent red with word Kem written on it. Finder. please return tosTril 5 t 4-1-1w |ABY CHICKS, a 100 percent guarantee. All leadi varieties, * Bart; quality: flocks ‘pay guccessful season. "Claytor Bust, Fargo, No. Dak. $-17-1m ‘ing: and *E modern:-hot street ‘fp rij it ‘ 300 AVEC wr Phone " sos. AW mone ip Ress 4 ir Phone 4-9-8t 2 Sat rantacd. “Aiso’ second’ wanted. Call igh “62: W. Mi Free price list. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘WORK WANTED WORK WANTED—Plowing gardens, removing ashes, delivering black dirt, also hauling dirt away from excavated cellars. Phone 364R. R. Danley. 4-8-1w WORK WANTED—Good work done by hour or day. Phone GIGR. i? PhoPLE’S FORUM | | PLOPLE’S FORUM | Bismarck, April 9, 1925. Editor Tribune: And now comes the LaMoure Chronicle criticizing. the Richland County Farmer for having said that littie or nothing has yet been done by way of, relief legislation for the farmer, . Publisher ‘Taylor even per- mits himself to feign indignation at Hn repeated preposterous state- ments that the farmer could be ben- efitted by legislation and calls it “bunk.” Spon us Now, I have often. wondered how otherwide sane and reasonable men can allow themselves to.fall for such patent counterfeit-coined phrases as “you can't legislate prosperity 7 Up- on closer analysis I-fear this de- serves no better term than “bunk. The fact of the matter is that le; lation has more to do with prosperity than any single thing in the. world, \ «Do we not boast in press and speech, from platform and pulpit of enjoying the best government and the best laws in the universe right herein U.S. A., and that this coupled with the vast natural resources we have makes us the superior nation of all nations? .I read, in a maga- zine some years:ago, an article on Venezuela, which I think illustrates the point I wish to make. The writ- er told of an estate comprising one million. aeres of land in a rich, broad valley. This estate had be- longed to an Englishman, deceased, and was then advertised for sale by the heirs at 50c the acre because the Venezuela government imposed up- on it such exhorbitant taxes that they could not make it pay. The ar. ticle pointed out that although be ing situated in a most' splendid cof- fee raising section the toll exacted hy the government was confiscatory, and the plantefs lost considerable money on every sack of coffee pro- duced—exactly as did the wheat farmers of this ‘country the last sev- eral years. The journal doubted whether the English heirs. would ever tion replacing bad legislation. is your own argu- ment, not mine; but it surely de- cides the case—in favor of the Rich- land County Farmi One might enumerate examples ad infinitum. The Chronicle will recall that a | bill was introduced in the recent leg- islature providing for cutting out certain items of publicity now re- quired by law to be done in the newspapers. I have not the data at hand, but anyway had it gone thru it would have affected the prosper- ity of the newspapers, or they would not have complained and opposed it the way they did. No one ever claimed that legisla- tion alone will produce wealth. You may lead a horse to water, but he cannot be made to drink. But legis- lation can certainly make or break an industry after production is made. So here. present circumstances, is just as de- pendent on the opportunities made for him as is the horse. He must take whatever is offered for his prod- and sane legis! he buys. And just so long as he is satisfied to remain indifferent to his own political interests, just so long must he also be contented to take whatever is tendered him by way of. legislation by those others who do take interest—and it is only human when they who control also help themselves first. Apparently the Bismarck Tribune, the Valley City Times-Record and the LaMoure Chronicle are all yearn- ing for the good old halcyon days when there was a real Republican party. in this State, and they all seem ready to subscribe to any plan “de- signed to enli gent leaders and to promote sound economic: and good govern} The farmer, under the} cr ‘ucts and pay whatever is asked when | d t honest and intelli- |i ment” as the Chronicle expresses it,| 19. 1. while the Times-Record wants a si- -dyed-in-the-wool-honest-to- Republican party. If any- for more than-this—beware of buncombe. Surely that should satisfy anybody But, pray tell us how be had? Of course, the Dem crats would want to substitute “Dem: ocratic” instead of ‘Republican.’ But, is it not idle to talk about pure partyism in any party? There will and must be shades #hd varied views —factionalism, if you please, as long as man is constituted as now. We recall Republicanism under the McKenzie regime. How long that lasted before insurgency set in I do not know. Those who bolted then used the same phrases and prayed for puri ation and delivery from the McKenzie dictatorship as ardent- ly as does this trio of papers now ry for delivery And haven't we had “real Republicans” and all kinds of Republicans the past fifteen or twenty years? To. wish ourselv to the so-called good, old party s is as futile as to hope for the return of the old, genuine competi- tion of the cross roads grocery, that the late President Wilson yearns for in his “New Freedom,” dealing with the present day trust problem, It can’t be done. The reason why is to be found in the ever. nging cinema of life.and its problems, its new requiremen’ And one of the biggest factors in this scheme of evolution is the item of public vs. private ownership. Right here, in my estimation, the bone of contention upon the settle- of which will depend whether vill be nsion and factional- ¥ harmon: nd peace in either of the old major partie: S. A. OLSNE it ¢: find buyers even at the ridiculously low price mentioned so long’ gs the country was handicapped by, foolish rulers and unwise legislation. Just so. Had not the government of. this country placed an:embarga on wheat during the war, the wheat farmers of this northwest would have prospered as much more as the price would have increased. Has not industry prospered in this country principally because of the high pro- tective tariff legislation ,thanks to the Republican party to which Mr. Taylor is proud to belong? Is it not a fact that we can legislate any. in- dustry to death and that we can in like manner create new enterprises The Volstead act destroyed the Amer- ican salodn, but it made prosperous the» business: of-seda’ fountains and soft drink parlors. It_was legislation that gave the N. P. Railroad Co. and other trans- continental lines their great land grants, thus making possible the spanning of this vast continent coast to coast for trasportation; and if I mistake not the Chronicle has joined oftimes in the popular refrain that this was wise legislation, to which again, is due the great general pros- perity of the whole country as well as of the railways. Most assuredly we prosperity, as well as povert but mark you, more especially this true in regard to certain industries or classes than as a whole. For what is ones gain is often the others loss as per examples cited. - I shall further prove this by re- ferring to the very attitude of the press which fought the farmers pro- gram. Did thev not brand our pro- gram as class legislation because of certain advantages it proposed to give to the farmers? And that same Program was considered bad for banks and business. men, which of course it was not. Anyway. it is a had rule that works not both ways. If youycannot léxi perity neither’can you le; Still this latter is ion to the League wehemently claimed was being done, and they are just as emphatic in as ting that prosperity fs now her can legislate without trouble. letter is given. HORIZONTAL Thin piece of wood. Rodent. Starting bar of a machine. Sea cagle. Mean. Stir. Dogma, tree. orating med To change a ring fitting. Common. viper. Scarlet. Lets it stand (printing). Foretoken. Stalk of a plant. Toward. Twelve months. To float. 1416. Wrath, Columbium, a metallic element of steel gray color, (Unkeyed letter “b"’.) Cyst. : Second note in scale. To pierce, To migrate (chiefly South Afri- Paid publicity in print. taspived with reverential feat. Frozen rain, Act of objecting. To wager. A great quantity. To creep. To be on the border. English coin, Sugary. Eon. kxternal part. Beer. purely because of their redemption: CROSSWORD PUZZLE There's only one new word in this puzzle, For those who aren’t chemici and chemists should get it lly inclined, the unkeyed », Answer to Yesterday’s Crossword razzie, Patterns. Rooster’s More evil VERTICAL To place, To take particular course, Hotel. Shrub used by Arabs for a be- verage. To allude. Gets up. Weighed to determine weight of container. To allow. Truck used ture. Decree. Large fabulous bird. Foe. wife. net for moving furni- OUT OUR WAY . == = UNOUH WO 0 —m| A LESSON ~T’ MISJUDGED MY CARRYIN POWER, BOUS IM SINKIN FAST. BOYS,IM DONE FER! MY LAIGS JES WoT HOLD UP THEM BISCUTS. “TH' FUST ONE SHOULD O' BEEN ME- IT ORO Or EN PORE BUNKIE. ORAGGED DOWN \ BISCUITS. THEY BY-Wo MUCH OOUGH -B' HOO. By Williams MU CAINT FOOL. ME Yu RAZOR BACHED POLECAT?! YO NEVER ET A ONE O THEM AINT A ONE MOM’N POP inal | 0. Plaintive poem 1 8 ein a pod. used in tanning. ed cloth, ss of dawn, work with needle and thread. an of hearing. pall mound of earth on golf course. nd knock the head Kip. Part of verb to be. Fresh water mussel, also a ny- 2 to convey mph. Ferments. dead to Sorrow. CERTAINLY MRS KING- j SHE CAN ) Puay wit 4 CT DN AMY WHILE 4 FR NIT YOURE GONE eT sy MRS. GUNN - MAY TL LEAVE CYARLOTTE WITH You WHILE L { GO DOWNTOWN To PAY SOME BILLS? HERE AMY IS A NICE APPLE FOR Yo AND CHARLOTTE ~ Now DIVIOG (T POLITELY ies sca Webi | H'Lo CHARLOTTE SEE aoe WHY GIVE THE BIGGER PIECE “To THE WHAT Do Hou GTHER PERSON MEAN MOM: BY DIVIDIN! IT ‘i HERE CHARLOTTE - You DIVIDE (TI! BY STANLEY | | ee, fy (HOLD ER : NEWT = SHES, ——] TH’ CLOCK, THAT PICTURE |/2 OF NIAGARA FALLS IN - WINTER, TH’ FIDDLE TWO HOUND DOES AND TH’ FOLDING Mt Cys NO-NO- | SAY WHOS GOING ON TH’ COAT FIR You SAY- BOB OUGHT To TRY v: Gz a FOR SIXMONTHS BOB BLOOGETT HAS HAD HIS EYE ON THE FUR COAT HANGING IN FRONT OF THE SECOND HAND STORE — TODAY HE CAME. IN TOWN PREPARED TO TRADE FOR IT Then He'll Know ‘ am * OK-WELL GO AN! TELL AAY MAOM> T KNOW SHE'LL. -BE GLAD TO Freckles and His Friends YEAN-N You OUGHTA SEE How CUTE IT REALLY? ISN'T THAT ee SPLENDID! Is ITA Boy LDPNT KNow, OR GIRL, FREDDY ae AY ANOTHER HASNT AN CURISTENED IT. { vert 4 WHAT DO YOU THINK, NOM FREDDY OLSON SAID THEY 60r A > AEW BABY AT His House!