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ha bem at- 000 of- di- ois ‘= WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1928 ~ omy MALE SLP WANTED WE ARE enlarging our sales force and will n new men to start work in the country at once. Ex- Berience selling among farmers lesirable. Our work is perman- ent year round work. Company in business 60 years. Applicant must be more than 25 years old and be able to furnish bond. State age, sales experience, make of ur car, address and phone num- r in your first letter. Address: Ad. No, 42, care The Tribune. TO HANDLE package freight. 70c per hour for day work, eve- nings and Sunda: Ex to be very busy. D. J. NUGENT, No. 1 Sixth Street, Viaduct, Milwau- kee, Wisconsin. a COLLECTION AGENCY wants traveling Salesman-Auditor. Soli- cit contracts. Appoint sub-agents. $100.00 weekly. Give references. INTERNATIONAL, 236 Mills Bldg. San Francisco. Bae MEN, why not learn a profitable profession easy work special short course, free catalog. Moler Bar- ber Neda Fargo, N. D.-Butte, ont WANTED—Capable mechanic, ay work, good wages. Phone ‘OMEN inexperienced ited by manufacturer who can earn $20 weekly spare time sewing aprons. Materials cut; no selling; stamped, envelope _ brings particulars. Morning Glory Apron Co, Mt. -_vernon, If. ¥.__ WANTED QUICK—Young woman to play parts in dramatic com- any. iano player preferred. For particulars write A. E, Evans, Mott, N. D. to cook. Mrs. Gordon Cox. SALESMEN WANTED SALESMAN WANTED for local territory. If $50.00 a week inter- ests you call H. D. Jorgensen, room 421 Prince Hotel, Bismarck, N. D. Out of town applicants write. _____ ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Furnished _ sleeping room, Also for sale: Four sec- tion bookcase, foreign dictionaries and other books. Call at 623 Sixth street. Phone 1151-R. FOR RENT—Furnished light house keeping rooms .in modern home with private ewtrance. Phone 544-W or call at 820 Second street. FOR RENT—One furnished or un- furnished light housek beniog: room on ground floor. Also sleeping rooms. Close in.. Phone 981-R.. FOR” RENT—Light housekeeping room and kitchenette, suitable for two ladies or man and wife. 422 Fifth street. FOR RENT—Furnished or unfur- nished, two room light house- keeping rooms. Call at 109 Man- dan street or phone 1426. FOR_RENT—May Ist, rooms in strictly modern home. Close in. Board if desired. Call at 816 _ Main. Phone 1411-M. ag FOR RENT—Newly _ furnished steam heated room in modern home. Close in, $12 per month. 610 Thayer Ave. + FOR RENT—One furnished sleep- ing room in modern home. Close Phone 342 or call at 708 FOR RENT—Well furnished single room and kitchenette, Call at 411 Fifth street. Phone 273. FOR RENT—Two rooms for light housekeeping, modern, first floor. Call at 1022 Broad: Tl rooms, also home cogking. ——S : WORK WANTED és LET ACK’S Radiator Shop clean out or rc air that leaky or elogge radiator. All work guar- anteed and price reasonable, _ MISCELLANEOUS _ ENRICH your lawn or garden. Pure pulverized cow- manure. lus moisture removéd by _ aeration. Not messy or smelly. 15c bushel delivered. Poole, Box 248, Bis- marek, NATIONAL CASH REGISTERS new and hand. Over 500 styles and sizes. We have one to fit your business. W. E. Stitzel, representative. Patterson Hotel, Bismarck, N.D. SODA FOUNTAIN—Eight foot liquid carbon, with back bar and r all in good condition. Call or write for further particulars. C. P. Buzzell, Cleveland, N. D. FOR SALE—Choice Imported Ger- lers Mountai: rs. TIES" Jacob Sci tens 115-J, Jacob Bull, Dickinson, N. D., Box 728. ‘OR RENT—Two hundred acre pas- ture with three wire fence, water and shade. Must rent by May 9th, Cash rent. North of McKenzie. Write Tribune Ad. No. 41. FOR RENT OF FOR SALE—One 54x26 barn. Call at 806 First street. For information write Clooten, Kulm, N. Dak. FOR SALE—TWO 2x6 Seiberling, truck tires and tubes in first class condition. Phone 544-W at $20 street. IR SALE—One wheel chair good condition. Royal Ne: wae jor- of America, care Mrs. dan, 0) —" garden farm. Close in. Also bebe. chieks for sale with brooder. Phone 1246-R. For SALE—First class fall cguipment, HE hb? _N. Dale Ta R SALE—One Van ae drill, wagons. fachter Transfer Co. LIST YOUR Bismarck pro with The Helling Aeech Poems 817. FOR SALE Teri:y eggs” $4.50 per dozen, Phone 500-Be | WILL TRADE 160 acre farm for HAVE Client who wishes to ex: FOR RENT—Sui Tribune Classified Advertisements == PHONE 82 =_— DEPENDABLE USED CARS Classified = Ra YOUR DOLLAR never went so far Advertising tes as tert ae in buying a heh fe just read is ante Fad fist, and then come in and look at under ,......... 8.78 bo Vago ereel aR words ach; joupe; 01 a bf dan; "27 Studebaker, Custom Be- dan; Oldsmobile Sedan; '27 Gra- ham two ton truck. ay M. B. GILMAN CO., Bismarck. eel eeenenaanaenannny Ads over 25 words, 3e eddi- APARTMENTS FOR RENT—Unfurnished apart- tional per word CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES 90 Cents Per Inch F Guaranteed Rebuilt Automobiles A Used Car Is No Better Than the Dealer Made It. i IF WE were out for quick _ profits you couldn’t buy some of these cars at the figures tagged on them. But the first owner took the big loss, and our policy is to fon this along as gain to our xe- uilt car customer, to the end that he will want to remain ouc cus- tomer. “Rebuilt Cars With a Keratation” Lahr Motor Sales Co. FOR EXCHANGE —_| N. D. ; FOR SALE—One India ment, 4 rooms and bath. Front and rear entrants. Hot water heat. Well ventilated with 10 windows. No family with chil- dren need apply. Call at 514 Seventh street, city. WANTED TO RENT—Four or five furnished or partly a reliable party. Write Box 172, Bismarck, N. D. or aj ent for young couple, no children. Phone 1207. Lost LOST—Year ago. Horse, white face, one or two white feet. a Sire ie! shoulder and 371 on right thigh. Also 8 head with K on left should- about 1100, with 7UP on ers, Finder please notify R. Menoken. LOST—A pair of shell-rimmed yrereg in downtown _ district. ‘inder please return to Quanrud, Brink & Reibold. SE 1 FIFTEEN years in the chick busi- ness is aad that we satisfy. Pelkey’s Poultry and Chick Farm, zo. N. Dak. ‘OR RENT—Large two room fur- nished be id on ground floor. be ee Fourth street. Pnone FOR RENT—Modern 4 room apt. Also 2 rooms for light housekeep- ing. Sau at College Bldg. Phone Ss RE Eger eae ce FOR RB ‘—May ist, furnished or unfurnished apartment. Varney apartments, Phone 7” neers FOR RENT— Furnished a ae on groun oor, ‘vel my ire nished. Call at 930 Fourth street. FURNITURE FOR SALE FOR SALE—Walnut bedroom suite, reed living room set, kitchen Rook range and other household furniture, reasonably riced. saat D. E. Wharton, McKenzie, ey bed 13 Third room suite. Call at street or phone 1150 from 3:00 p. m. to 5:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m. to 8:00 p. m. |FOR SALE—Oak buffet,” almost new and in Al coi if taken at once. Phone 733-J. dition. Cheap grocery store in small town. Farm located a mile and a half from FOR SALE—Retrigerator cellent condition. Priced very rea- sonable. Phone 978-M. Driscoll on No. 10 Highway. No debts against ferm, perfectly level and all under plow. Write Tribune Ad. No. BARGAINS in used furniture. Kennelly Furniture Co., Mandan, MOUSES AND FLATS change new Player Piano for city lot or good car. The Helling Agency. Phone 877. OFFICE ROOMS of 8 desirable office rooms, available May 1st in Hoskin block. See S. A. Floren, Business Service Co. Phone 401. THIS HAS HAPPENED SALLY FORD, ward of the at te from an ens her with hin attentions—, VAN HORNE — that Bountiful is ENID | B. t Sally fasiate daslike ie Ege poate aad ner ceanst take Sally tn their Rome Jost yet. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XLII - T was the loving distress on Enid Barr's quivering face that quickly brought Sally to bewil- dered, humiliated submissios rather than the cold anger and {ll- concealed hatred in Courtney Barr's pale gray cyes.. Enid had left the arm of her busband’s chair and had drawn Sally to a little rose upholstered settee, and it was with her mother's hand cuddling hers compassionately that Sally listened as the man’s heavy, judicial voice went on and on: “I am sure, Sally, that when you have had time for reflection you see my viewpolut. Naturally, your mother’s happiness means more te me than does yours, and I believe I know wife well enough to state positively that a newspaper scandal or even gossip ‘among our own circlé would cause her the most acute distress. It shall be our task, Sally, to see that dhe is spared such distress. “I'm sorry to appear brutal,” Barr said stiffly. “But it is bet ter for us to face the fects, for if our friends ever know them they will not mince words, If you FOR RENT—Modern six room house with garage, in good loca- tion and near school, den spot. Call West. ne_5' Large gar- at 402 ‘Ave. c FOR RENT—By June ist my home at 819 Second street, strictly modern, hot water heat. Mrs. T. E. Flaherty. would disgrace my mother, why don’t you let me go? I can marry David and no one will ever that I have a mother—" “That very sensible, Sally,” Courtney Barr nodded, a gleam of kindliness in his cold eyes, “and I have tried to make your mother bel that your happiness would be assured by your sticking to your own class—" — “It isn't her class, {f you mean that she's suited only to poverty and hard work!” Enid Barr inter- rupted passionately. “Look at her, Court! She's a born lady! She's fine and delicate clear through—” “And so is David!” Sally cried indignantly. “He may be middle. class, but he's the finest, most hon- orable man in the world!” “We shall not quarrel about class,” Courtney Barr cut in with heavy dignity. “The important thing fs that your mother is de termined to have you, to fit you for the station to which she be- longs. I believe she is making a mistake, both from your standpoint and from hers, but I am willing to agree to a sensible arrangement. Our plan now, Sally, is to put you into @ conservative, rather obscure finishing school in the South. several relatives—‘poor rela- I suppose you would call them—in the South, and it is my suggestion that you enter school as my ward—mine, you under. stand, not your mother’s, so that any suspicion as to your real par- entage will rest upon me, rather than upon her. eyebrows at Sally, looking rather consciously noble, and nodded miserably. “During the two years that you will be in school—” “Two years!” Sally echoed blankly. Two years more of lone- Uness, of not belonging, of being an orphan! “Two years will pass very quickly,” Courtney Barr assured her. “Enid please control yourself! Tam infinitely sorry to distress you in this manner, but it is the only sensible thing to do.” “Yes, Court,” Enid choked and buried her exquisite face in her small, useless-looking white hands. Sally put her arms about her mother, and leaned ber glossy black head against the golden one. “I'll try to be contented and happy, Mr. Barr. Of course I want to pro- tect Mother—" “That is another thing, Sally,” Courtney Barr interrupted in almost gentle voice. “You must should come into our home now, | begin as you are, gossip id imme diately set themselves to dig up the Hen ba Toa peopl “es now sought by the tales ts a—delio- quent. My wite 4 could not trnordloary latefeet fa, s.tueaeay i a a. rat orphan... Do you & tie, Bally?” He tried i his voice Isind, but bis éyes were a8 cold and 2 agreed in bi Ir,” Sally a er felt co sick with shame and anger that only desire then was to _ pegs: whieh t pendence bad fostered tp her ae serted iteclt, “But, Mr. Barr, if it known that Mrs. Barr and 1 decided to adopt you as He arched his | that P WANT ADS PAY | WANTED TO RENT—Furnished or partly furnished modern house THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SCHOOL WORK Responses to uates Plan to Teach HAS NO APPEAL FOR YOUNG MEN Questionnaire | Show Very Few Male Grad- School teaching is losing its ap-| peal to male graduates of North! Dakota high schools in the opinion of E. P. Crain, director of certifica- tion for the state department of public instruction. Slowly but surely the number of men entering the teaching profes- sion in the state is getting smaller) @s compared with the number of | women engaged in <nat work, Crain observes, The tendency is borne out by the answers submitted by high-school principals to a questionnaire which Dolores de! Rio, Seldner (right). NMA daughter, quaintances know that it has been @ great gricf to us that we have no children, and I believo our action in this matter would occasion no great surprise. The adopticn it- will take place before your 18th birthday, while you are still in school. If there is any newspaper publicity, it will be of an innocuous kind, I hope. “Naturally I shall take care that any newspaper investigation will not be able to go back of the story I shall prepare very carefully, and if there fs any hint of scandal at all, it will inevitably reflect on me and not on your mother, as I have already pointed out. After your adoption and your graduation from the finishing school, you will of course take your place in our home as our daughter, will make your debut in society that fall. and, I hope, be very happy with us and in your new life.” Sally sat very still, her eyes wide and blank, while her bewildered, unhappy mind tried to picture the future which Courtney Barr was outlining for her. At last she shook her head, as if to clear away the mists of doubt and bewilder- ment. Her mother had taken Sally's little lax, cold hands and was cud- dling them against her cheeks, bringing a fingertip to her lips occasionally. “Poor baby! And—poor mother!” Enid whispered brokenly, and the spell was broken. The hard lump of unhappiness and resentment t been aching in Sally's throat since Courtney Barr had be. gun to speak melted in tears. They wept in each other's arms, while Enid’s husband walked impatiently up and down the room. ‘When the storm had spent itself, Sally remembered David again, and pain and fear contracted her heart sharply. “Did you see David, Mr. Barr?” She sat up and dabbed at her wet cheeks with one of the exquisite sheer linen handkerchicfs which Enid had given her. “Oh, yes, yes!” Barr answered quickly, anaged his affairs very neatly. Rand, the district at- torney, personally attended to the quashing of the charges against him, and {t cost only a thousand dollars to get Carson to issue a statement to the press that he had really seen nothing compromising between young Nash and yourself. Ho also admitted that the boy's anger had been in a measure justi- fied, that the assault had been pro- own mistaken charges id Nash. The boy's cleared now and he . 1 is grandfather and per- that the boy had been than a blackguard. is at bome on- his 's farm again, so that be away at David is io wrote him tonight, write a new all + Hi how happy I am that he's of those awful charges—” Sally.” Barr interrupted, ii? young Nash, that there must be no thought of an engagement between you" DOLORES TAKES DIVORCE STEP | All our friends and ac- Mexican beauty of the films, took her pen in hand in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, starting the legal machinery which she expects will result in a divorce from Jaime del Rio. She Is shown between her counsel, Gunther Lessing (left) and Adolfo Dbarra AUTHOR OF *SAINT AND SINNER” ave his promise not r told her im- nds the ‘our mother are entering upen a new life to- morrow wiicn you leave for Vir- ginia with me, a life that will be totally different from David Nash's. You will—though you don't seem to realize it-—h heiress to great wealth some day: “You told him that!” Sally ac- cused him hotly. You told him he'd be a fortune-hunter if he tried to marry me when I'm of age! Oh, you're not fa You have no right to turn David against me, when I cut in sternly “Y the meaning of the word love—" Court,” Enid begged, her own face white d drawn with pity for Sally. lease let die this myself. Sally is row, nervously ex- Come along to bed now, she coaxed, her little upon Sally’s shoulders. “Let Mother tuck you up and sing you a lullal I'm not going to be cheated of that experience even if my baby is bigger than I am.” Fresh tears gushed into Sally's eyes, and she allowed herself to away. At the door she night, Mr. Barr. I—I ant you to think I don’t te what you've done for d David—and what you're to do for me, I do think you're good and that you want to be kind to me, but I know you're making a mistake about David and me. I am young, but I know I love David and that I'l) never want to marry anyone else.” Courtney Barr flushed and looked embarrassed. “Thank you, Sally. I'm sure we'll be friends. I want to be. I expect to take my duty as your father very seriously, to try to make you happy. As for David, time has a way of settling things if we only give it a chance. By the ‘way, my dear,” he added hastily as Sally was about to pass on into her bedroom with her mother, “I think it will bo wiser if your mother does not accompany us to Virginia, I will arrange for you to board with my relatives in Virginia until school opens this fall. They will be glad, for a con- sideration, to do and say anything I wish them to in regard to you, and we must begin immediately to take every precaution to protect your mother.” “Yes, sir,” Sally answered faintly, her cyes appealing to Enid for consolation. When Sally was in bed, having been -flutteringly and lovingly as- sisted in her preparation by her mother, Enid bent over her to whisper: “Darling, darling, don’t look so forlorn! Two years will pass so swiftly and if you're very good, we'll let you ask David to your coming-out party.” (To Be Continued) Bally begins to fear that David is lost to her and that promiscs do not mean anything. aR AA SE has been sent out by the state de-|These forn partment. The principal: asked to advise the depart: the number and names of who will graduate from hig’ this year and who expect to ut no boys. SAM, | MOM’N POP WELL AG. & BIG Ss EXPLAIN 8 the work of teaching next fall. jetta oll list a number of ¢' Blanks have been sent out to the}must have 14 high schoo! principals for use by the | school work in apy prospective teachers in making ap- plication for teaching certificates, are to be presented to/he must meet the general require. js were the registrar of the normal schoo! |ments of the state department of ment of at which the student matriculates ieducation with regard to standings students | this summer and the signature of the |in agriculture, senior review, arith- h school | registrar upon compl n of the | metic, senior review oe 4 take up| summer school work will entitle the | geography, methods, school ma. y ‘student to a tede certificate. jment and psychology. The Under a state law, effective this |four are to be taken in the be 4 tyear, each high school graduate |school and the lest two mus} 12 weeks of normal|studied at the normal school. ir roved subjects! subjects is the maximum which aay eligible to receive alstudent may carry at the summer In addition!normal school sessions. aia es Tae is certificate, | before he teachers ALL OUR SWEET SMELUN FLOWERS SPOT! NOTHIN’ SWEET COULd EVER RUINED! ROO HINNED!! Go THRO THAT AN! STILL BE SWEET. niet lat UR = MMM. wit AT ROON | OUT OUR WAY By Withams | "ROW FLOWERS ! WHY , GOoD SuFFERIN iTS RUINED MY HEALTH 00, PoP, 1t'S GREAT To WANE YOU BACK AND you - TwaT’s WHAT LT WANT YOU To THE WAN SHE MADE i “ iis, Wagan Wipers’ Wan Vite wad, aN TRwillams 2 ©1020, BY WEA SERVICE, HNC. THE AIR POCKET. Word By Cowan] e Y oe A CHOCOLATE CAKE-\/ OW BOY! SAN. YouR FANORITE DISH- WHAT MADE VER AND ANOTHER THING, I'M DROP THE CASE NOT GOING TO SHY ONE { ANYWAY 9? WORD oR RAZL You ~ ABOUT THE WIDOW ~ LET BY-GONES ¢ BE BYGONES § Not a AIN AND UNE URPRISE FOR NOU WERE ALL EVES FoR HER. 3'M HALF INCLINED Te OVER YOU .WHEN MRS.SNOOP CAME TOWING YOU INTO COURT BY TWE EAR, WAS SICKENING WIPING YOUR FACE WITH HER HANKERCWIEF AND WHAT'S TWINK THE WAY THE NEIGHBOR: WAS A CONVENIENT FAKE TO GET YOURSELF OuT OF DISAPPEARED ; | [ i ge PROM CAMP YESTERDAY - MORNING SINCE see MEANWHILE. FRECKLES, WO BIN WELL, Z MERE BYAK A TIGHT HOLE — MORE — BOX 7 MAYBE A LION SNEAKED OP JN THE NIGAT AND Took, BOTH OF TUEM AWAY=STILL, L DONT TAINK IT DID 'CALSE SONETWING SURELY AUST, HANE HAPPENED 70 UNCLE MARRY AND AR. HIGGINS OR THEY'D BEEN BAcK 4! BOBO AND TLL smanr OUT AND Look FoR THEM, hae ee we'll