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paramo DECEMBER 1, 1928 ear, Tribtme Classified Advertisements ‘PHONE 382 GOVERNMENT — Patrol Inspector- Guards necded frequently for Cane- dian and other borders. $1680 year- ly. Particulars free. Write Oz- Ta 3-P, St. Louis, Mo., immediate- iy. MEN AND WOMEN barbers in great great demand at good wages. Short time required. Catalog free. Moler ae College, Fargo, N. D. Estab. WANTED—A first class all oe tailor, Write Tribune Ad, No. 7: CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR SALE—Hand embroidered linen, cut glass, two beautiful upholstered chairs, floor lamp, Edison phono- graph, records, electrical appliances, and other household fixtures. This is all new merchandise which will make suitable Christmas Gifts. Phone 737-R or call at 408 West Rosser street, sean APARTMENTS FOR RENT—Modern bungalow apt. four rooms, light, heat, water in- cluded, laundry facilities and heat- ed garage, hot water heat, gas stove and kitchen cabinet. Phone 842-M. alLat 624 Tenth street, FOR RENT—Four room modern apt. Varney Flats, Phone 773 after i apartments coping. 620 Sixth Mrs, Rohrer. tor light. Bowne street. Phone 329-W. 5 icely furn cozy sleeping rooms, Also light house- keeping rooms. Close in. Phone 1052-R or call at 422 Fourth str FOR RENT—Two large modern light housekeeping rooms. Call at 213 Eleventh street, % block from Broadway. FOR RENT—Two large rooms fur- nished for light housekeeping. Phone 543W or call at 924 Fourth street. Ue FOR RENT—Good sized front room with closet and kitchenette. Well ee 411 Fifth street. Phone FOR RENT—Two unfurnished rooms. Call at 4 Second street after six or Phone 475 during day. PUR KENT--Furnished sleeping room for gentlemen. Phone 167. WOKK WANTED WORK ~ WANTZD—Painting, * kal- somining, and paper hanging. Prices reasonable. Call 525-W for esti- mates, Lost. jan’s Bulova wrist wate inder return to the First Nation- al Bank for reward. LOST—A chain for a balloon ti tinder please Phone 894-M for r 3 PERSONAL PALMIST and Phrenologist. Lattimorelle here at 416 Fourth St. Reading hours: 2 te 5 and 7 to 10. Helps find lost articles. See her today. ater WANTED—Information of George Young, 18, light hair, blue eyes, last heard of Marmarth, N. D., Sept. 1926. George, please answer. Ethel Young, So. Colton, New York. WANTED—Maternity cases with good 11 at 504 Ninth street, Mrs. care, € ____ HOUSES AND FLATS FOR RENT—A four room modern Posses- house at 115 Mandan Ave. Madam | FO Inquire at 924 Fourth ey Smith. sion at once, se Sid = oe other meg, cabarets or the like. Hut FOR RENT—Seven room Bolen __ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY _| hunted t@ its real source, the real house at 519 Sixth street. Ma at 9] reason is revaled in the ‘install- occupied Jan. 1st. Inquire at Neh t. Ample Security. Write] ment plan’ furniture. __holt’s. iermacbasgkess ‘No, 93. Live Above Means FOR RENT—Five room modern bung-|“ “The engagement ring, purchased alow 2 blocks from postoffice. Hai vey Harris & Company. X FOR RENT— Eight room house with garage. Furnace heat. 806 First street or Phone 480, | MOM’N POP { YM MRS KLOTS | NEXT DOOR -THOUGHT | 1D DROP IN AND GET ACQUAINTED Classified Advertising Rates 1 insertion, 25 words or under .. seeeee 2 “s jpapedietdanton or 3 inaertins, 38 words ot 1 week, 25 word: tional per coy CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES 65 Cents Per Inch All classified ads are cash in advance. .Copy should be received by 12 o'clock ¢o in- sure insertion same day. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 32 AUTOMOBILES DEPENDABLE USED CARS WE TAKE’ as good care of our Used Cars as of our new stock—-this is because we consider both as valu- able merchandise. Come in to our Used Car Salesroom and see some of our bargains, 1926 Overland Se- dan; 1925 Dodge Sedan (leather); Ford meres Chevrolet Panel WE ALSO’ do first class automobile jodge Truck; 1924 Coupe. Easy time payments. M. B. GILMAN CO. Bismarck. YURNITURE FOR SALB FOR SALE—Kitehen Cabinet, dress- | Phone 428 Open Evenings to 8:30 er, bed complete, chiffonier, six chairs, kitchen table, library table,| ioMK-LAUNDR} cot, rocking chair, baby buggy, high chair, phonograph and records, ironing board and baby bed. Call at 210 Twelfth street. Christ Free. PRICED TO SELL—Practically_ velour davenport and wing chair, blue with slight rose background. Call_910 or No. 21 Hughes Apts. FOR SALE—One and one 8-3 x 10-6 Wilton Velvet rugs. Practically new. Call at 700) Mandan Ave, or Phone 366-R. Se EEE EEE aE punapapenesnpepmeeeeeeee FARM LANDS FOR SALE—A_ quarter land under cultivation $30.00 per act Hugh Brown Place, ae hip. Also a house located in ek, reasonable. Inquire Mrs. Minnie Baker, Menoken, N. D. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE--Elks Diamond set. stick pin $8.50; Masonic diamond set stick pin $8.60; stick pin one dia- mond $10.00; stick pin 7 diamonds $75.00; le ring one diamond $15.00, also Genuine American Elks arm $18.00. James . t Guaranty Bank Bldg, D. Chappers and, German Hartz Mountain, also native singers. Rollers, Gages, seeds, treuts;—et Phone 1155, Jacob Bull, Dickinson, N. Dak, Box 728, FOR SALE—A team of g: horse, one mare about 12 Will be sold at the front door of| $ postoffice at Arena on Sist of De- cember, 1926, Geo. Boelter, Appraiser. _ aii RADIO FOR SALE—Have one new Harldyne left, 5 tube guaranteed, sells for $150.00, will take $75.00 cash or $80.00 time. Phone | WAY FOR SALE—Can sell $14.00 F. 0. B, McCloud, N. D. Good midland hay, 12 to 400 tons. Call 691-W. section of | Boyd) AUTOMOBILE REFINISHING WE NOW have alll necessary equip-| ment for first class Duco and L quer Automobile refinishing. At| present we have on our floor for your inspection one automobile which we have just reDucoed. NOW, It is not essential that you have the cash for such a job, We will paint your car and let you pay for it in small monthly payments. COME IN and let us give you oyr prices and terms, or call us and we will look your car over and make you’ a price and terms which will meet with your approval. All Work Guaranteed exer AUTO SALES Oldsmobile Sales and Service BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA Phone 428 215 Main 8 Open Evenings Until 8:30 ' cY! clog i RUOI REHONING REBORING the necessary ment to do first class cylinder block rehoning and reboring. This work can be done without taking the motor out of the chassis, saving considerable time and expense. Out of town people may ship their mo- bead to ae and prompt service will repairing on any make of car. Qur work guaranteed. Special prites during the winter months. WE WILL repuir your automobile and let you pay for it in small monthly payments, Let us, quote you prices, DAKOTA AUTO SALES CO. INC. 215 Main Street Bismarck, N. Dak. LAUNDRY rst class work done. For men’s shirts, blankets, and nurses’ uniforms, a specialty.| Also family washings taken, We call and deliver, Marguerit Bul- ten’s Home Laundry, 31 Ave. A, cor- ner of Mandan Ave. Phone 1017. t|Says Mothers-in-law Cause Few Divorces Chiecago,Dee . 17.—VP)—The age old of the mother-in-law as a cause of domestic woe is all wrong, concludes Charles rbstein, who a record of his di cases to Prove that the mother-in-law angle d into so few as to be almost | Out of 1,772 divorce cases in which has appeared as counsel, only six ‘ould be attributed to mothers law, said the attorney, who gave as | the’ most prolific cause of legal separation “the light oak piano or purple plush patent chair in the| jor"—meaning “installment plan” buying of furni Drink, Cruelty Second “In my expericence I have always found mothers-in-law eager and ling to smooth out the domesti ference their children,” in in his new book “The‘ The aharney lists the causes lead- ing to divorce as follows: “Install- ment plan,” 656; drink and cruelty. F arets and dance halls, 178; ! cooking, vamps (both sexes) 122: | s' to husbands, 114; court of ¢ relations, 95; stage ambi- 3 lack of children, 21; trave ing jobs, 15; mothers-in-law, 6; mis-! cellaneous, 4. “The great American ‘installment | plan’ makes marriage easy-in contem- plation, at least—and it makes di- vorce excusable,” he declared. “The! broad item ‘installment plan.’ mov cover divorce, cases which apparently came through drink, other women or OFFICE ROOM FOR RENT —On January ist next. 1|to show the other girls in the store |dome—a block away—birds t! FOR RENT, On Zenuaey et meet Lee Nr the: weieeietnoed: Ais daeel | oe neces ieee oeiee R.-D.- Hoskins or S.| thousands of young couples into the] grain which is dealt in on ‘change in| will have two o! for rent. See . Floren. |OUT.OUR WAY jaccounts and visits to the loan shark. | -|to the sauth, jeago brokerage offices who become | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘ PAGE ELEVEN By Williams SEWING EROUSERS IN FRENCH PRISON Yeu MA, iT ud BEA IS DOTY’S TASK OF THARD LABOR LITTLE OIFFRONT IF T ONS DONT WANT Bg Oe ay mf wats ake: a : PEEPOL “HINKN’ 2M A cris etore gle i Conse | ott Hand Rae he ap tye i HUSBUND ~N! “TH! pee Pare of trousers Tar the army. ALL BE HOLLERIN’ POPP) AT ME-N DADDY.N' STUFF LG f Zi Wt LY; LYE Albertville, Savoie Pairs & () Hopeful that his deserter’s | sentence of eight years in the gloom France, Dee, 17 own mending simply now T ns cheerful a s ette ever did my urageou: when I was in the Legion, © “worrie: couldn’t handle a needle. And spondent have to tur of The re int in three completed pairs LIKE AT! GOSH MA, His fingers are slow in The best I can ’ my trousers, the “hard] finish up is one pair and one leg and YA GOTTA THINK A THEM labor” to sentenced,| | am steadily falling behind, It wor- lie is harder on the rigger of the rifle, 1 he's afr | back home will think cowardice, instead of mesickness, prompted his flight jfrom warfare in the arid Syrian de- sert. Is a Model Prisoner Doty was sentenced by a French | court martial at Damascus on August st to the military e for his attempt to leave the | French Foreign Legion when serving | on the soil of an alien land. There, under the name of Gilbert Clare of | Memphis, Tenn., he had fought the Druse rebe in the campaign before Soueida and the mountains of the | Houran, ries me “HINGS! ITS VERY iter ide Ng ng to found me another war a “'Twas nothing, we couldn't very well run away from those birds,” was all he would say of the deed that won for him the croix de guerre. Captain Besancon later produced Clare's citations for valor. Denies Was Afraid a hope they don’t think that I ran Perched high in the Alps, in the] a cause 1 ared,” Clare shadow of Mont Bl the ‘military said suddenly. ‘T-don't know what | penitenti of Albertville, overlook- over We hadn't gone three ing a beautiful valley surrounded by that I knew we had puiled a | snow capped peaks, has a forbidding} boner, but it was too late to turn gloo: pect. Palestine certainly did look f > : | “Clare is a model prisoner,” said| to me like the Promised Land that | Captain Besancon, commandant of ning.” | the institution, “His army r Clare feels some anxiety about the | splendid and he is a fine b disposition which will be made of little thinne him when, in conformity with Pr clothed i ier Poincare's program of economies, uniform, long brown © cap,, the military penitentiary here is clos- | wooden shoes, Clare presented a! ed Decem | sharp contrast from the proud soldier| “I am worried lest I be sent to | whom the correspondent had visited vil prison with a lot of sneak in the citadel at Damascus last June, pickpockets, burglars or hold~ | up-men,” he said. “I have committed i * Not Impaired no crime against society and I don’t | e is unimpaired, however,] want to be penned. up with real jail- {and he greeted his visitor with evi-} bi dent pleas: Expects Early Freedom Not too bad for a man who was ain Besancon informed Clare rted executed lust June,” he re-| that he would probubly be sent to a piled to aus to his health. ary prison either at Bordeaux or TRanLliams ©1026 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. TAGE TURNING POINT. que: of. ‘easy payments,’ only to. wreck A GIFT | to see if it was tain had begun to| 1 be er so and walk in the thenf’on the hidden shoals of bank-| Atchison, Kan-—An Atchison wom- ghted old gonticman,| UR" said thecAlpine C! ruptey and divorce. an and her daughter had just) .« wand her small child | !¢, “Blue Devil” with fixed “It also strikes the married pair of | emerged from a store and stood un-| und the outstretched hand, placed a, 'treling the inner court. the prisone iF more substantial means who find) der an awning. It looked like rain, dimes ine the woman's palma He) Sikh walls and in an Phink they will let ‘the easiest way’ to hold their heads 0 so the woman stretched out her hand| thought she was blind. overhigh among neighbors, are charge | (THE PAPERS SAY > for their cause and I when this ballyhooing hey will edge me out espondent walked and forth for an hour, while ¢ By Knick try studiously looked th “Yes, T get plenty to ext A big bow! of soup in th Higher in the financial scale, .it reaches its tentacles into the homes, where the limousine and electric al ready are mortgaged, but where the pampered wife ‘just can't see why’ her husband cannot afford to buy her piece of meat, one pound of bres a new town car with more fashion and ‘a plate of vegetables at noon Able ipo another quart of soup wt n It ainst the isn’t the Ritz hotel, but I can't kick.| ba Yi ite farewell: Ie might have been daisi the| “7 a life, if you don't roots! Grain Exchange Has Way to Stop Pigeon Feeding Dee. We: (P)—When ie to a question of pigeons, \Chicago is right in the same class with Venice. ve been held ided tendency i ew y North Dakota spects in western to fain with supy ny ewe lambs h with a dei with o pand om th on the rang: to stock “Constant wi aver t gael cna ‘i nee eats OF DIFFEREN ort wint for sheep 0 see Chicago flocks of pigeons rs v winter k for shee} irling betw e skyscrapers or ly good except in a few cases VTonsiive lane tee tuuswente raat: the WANS THIS BABY tment of Agriculture. In the where, water, i ton the deserts Rialto, the cred bridge that in WANTS TO FIGHT ALL (northwestern part of the state the of Idaho, Nevads The con- regulation Venice style connects the Te T feed supply is generally sufficient dition of skeep is ¥2 per cent of Board of Trade with tall office suites put the remainder of the western compared with half of the state is short on tle and sheep are in good condi n though both show a slight de \F T BLY S¥ Known as the Rialto long before ithe garish theatre district farther i identi KEGS I CAN SAVE condition reported ny h had ited Hentical Venetian title the Bridge in the rear ENOUGH MONEY se ns sietraateines have MOVIE BEAUTY the favorite ‘Chicago. paradescrvud | FOR A HAIRCUT. Abies youl are practically: completed. CREDITED TO South Dakota ‘ 7 oF South Dakota the CAMERA MAN that there ample feed iy in the western counties in| Hollywood, the Pine Ridge country. In the east- | Paces in the part of the state the supply of) more b «rough — feed | credit u of the pi Grain samples, esp- ecially corn, are the attraction for the flocks which fascinate passer. by, especially visitors to Chicago, and) which show the same ab: imidity characteristic of t brated pigeons of St. Mark's in Venice, Guileless new office boys in Chi- | AUTOMOBILE 7 Cal, Dee, 17, sometime: South Dakota Haan anibhel vecycclbde: on i hasturee and eangee:te alort tiractivencs. d upon th over-enthusiastic about feeding the pigeons are never repro traditional remedy is to youths hurrying to other ¢ fices and bearing an urgent for “corn to feed the eagles.” Each office refers the luckless cher | to another place. Eventually the fact | is disclosed that the cagles ques- tion have no relation wha Board of Trade vigeons but ea Jost a ver GIRL WHO WINS THE PRIZE FOR CONSTANT SPENDING. Sue's air te good the weste led beneath makeup, but littl) ¢ being well sup; n be done for irregular and The smallest make shadows. jazel_ Eyes Film Best © and snow i gone on the lower ‘so much down and so much # week’ sea of matrimony on the flimsy raft! ALWAYS ounery | cause of the great photographie! y_ of blue light and the negligi “ of red 1 , hazel eyes : h with light ring: r | 3 : WYOMING | : photograph the best,” Haskins de- " — 4 Pile : jel though in life they are not. huge bronze engles on the post-office | Montana cattle and sheep a jxood cond been neces Chicago. Show | Usually as attractive as brown or Mad oe tne Me | blue. ” Hazel show the _ most aERaRe SER Eh ta oak: | character and pression, Brown) i p a eyes photograph too dark for expres= on, blue eyes too light, although taken | the effectyof the latter may be modi- a fied by the use of filters and ma- | genta light. “When colors are absent, the shad- the slightest: bumps or ir- of the face are very pro- Many of the players most! ractive on the screen appeal to ong| |us unusual rather than beautifull y East. ; When seen off screen. Their faces) ern sections of | often have a decided style about them,| Kansas and on, Feature by featu may be far] a want of the | from perfect, but there is something Reins derieg about the tout ensemble on the screen, Pr mois: | that is very attractive. Brunette Men Preferred East) “In the filming of character actors, 's did some | the cameraman’s problem is often just; supply of hay and/| reversed, Here he must paint in with s is generally good except | lights and makeup, trials, sufferings, in Western North Dakota and Kansas | triumphs and ecstacies which the ac- jtor has perhaps never really exper- | ienced. Brunette men and blonde women| have the best chances in motion pie- tures, asserts John Nickolaus, head of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s camera de- partment. “A dark-haired man,” he said, “photographs more strongly. His outlines stand out, and thus, in a. man, the dark types give an expres- | sion of strength and virility. Also, blue eyes photograph gray, and in a man this gives, in most cases, a lack of expression. “A woman is different. Her face does not have to show strength and | character, and blonde lutfiness lends her a charm which in a nyan is hardly to be desired.” SHOOKS | AND SHOOTS Honalult-An American million- aire's son is recovering fron from the sur-| Prise af a valley ee keh afore- shot og nese rice planter while ‘Site a are generally with sheep has NO~NOT A THING ~ \ BUT T KNOW ALU ABOUT MRS TYTE “TOW.SHESA Nice lime ‘WOMAN. — (F LHAD THE MONEY SHE SAYS THEY HAVE. VO BUY SOME FIT LookiNnG CLOTHES — SHE TOLD Ke te “DRESS SHE HAD ON fap BEEN MADE OVER Four - TSS iv, ee + WEL, s'Pose YouKaow acc A Ww BOvT NEIGHBOR BY Tes Time Western Ranges ti | nounced. ma and pa jorado hay in Idaho, Utah and Ne- is a large carry over of Il make up the shortage op. The condition of | ranges 81 per cent of normal com- — | pared with 83 per cent last month, |91 per cent a year ago and 77 per cent two years ago. Good feed conditions have made it | possible for cattle on the western inter in very condition. in the South- Montana, Wyoming and © orado are in better condition last fall, while in the ern Bec | tions of ‘th Dakotas, Ne ka, Kan- {sas and west of the divide dry con-| ditions during the summer cut down! the flesh of the cattle. The cattle situation in the west has shown a (eae provement during the fall, ith less liquidations he a alight ncy to restock. 'exas there bern a strong demand for stock- feeders to go on winter pas- tures and feed. The condition cattle is placed at per cent of normal tbe same as last month while & year ‘ago it was 92. per cent and 85 per cent two years ago, | Sheep in ee states are coming on to -winter ranges in very’ good shape, breegii = erally in fine ce few on the desert rai Utah and Nevada. "The ran .to markets and feed: lots is Muaateaee than EVER THINK OF ING NAUGHTY OR Wye NO! 1028 ev nea SERVICE, ne. UNKIND —