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a a FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1928 —— per hour for day work, 85¢ eve- nings and Sundays. E: very busy. D. J. NUGENT, No. Tribune Classified Advertisements =-PHONE 82 ———"HEN WANTED} TO HANDLE ish Psgnt. roe|| Classified Advertising Rates Effective Jan. 3, 1928 ect to be 1 insertion, 25 words | FI or under .......... % 75 1 Sixth Street, Viaduct, Milwau- 2 insertions, 25 words kee, Wisconsin. MEN, why not learn a profitabie|] 3 insertions, 28 words profession easy work special short ber College, Fargo, N. D.-Butte, FEMALE HELP WANTED “WANTED CUICK—Young woman to play parts in dramatic com- any. Piano player preferred. . 6 ‘or particulars write A. E. Evans, All classified ads are cash in i Mott, N. D. advance. Copy should be re- amount and number of those I! {| SS EEE TTT TET ceived by 9 me to insure made last year to this time. This|‘ ____ SALESMEN WANTED __ insertion same day. includes both land sales and city SALESMAN A eis zor “Tocal THE Fe snd 1 have oe land} 64 ij territ a week inter-| Mer ut this t j_feetory, SON 8 week er] BISMARCK TRIBUNE to ctnastigee cata room 421 Prince Hotel, Bismarck, PHONE 32 Do. YOUR REAL ESTATE BUSI- N..D. Out of town applicants peu with the busiest dealer in i the city. Guaranteed FE, YOUNG. 1K WANTED 2 a WORK WANTED—Odd jobs after] Rebuilt Automobiles Mont. Ads over 25 words, 3c addi- CLASSIFIED DISPLAY or under ....... 1.00 course, free catalog. Moler Bar- 1 week, 25 words’ ‘oF Under ....ssesseee, 145 tional per word RATES 90 Cents Per Inch Scouts wishing to earn cnough| A Used Car Is No Better Than the \ school and Saturdays by Boy | . money to buy uniforms. Phone| Dealer Made It. ‘ __105-R or see W. L. Sherwin. hauling and excavating. Also for sale black dirt and fertilizer. Call at 413 Thirteenth street south or phone 686-M. John Jah- q elogg_{ radiator. All work guar- anteed and. price reasonab’ June Ist my home at 819 Second street, dey modern, hot water heat. Mrs. T.| BABY CHIC ‘a breed: room modern bungalow with garage in base- ment. Inquire Herman Ode. Phone 1191, LOTS FOR SA LE a nee of choice lots have decided to close out and priced ey: Save money by consulting J. K. Doran, 406 Third street. FOR EXCHANGE HAVE Client who wishes to ‘~ _ Agency. Phone 877. __ FOR SALE “OR TRADE—For chickens, 2 30-foot windmill. Ad- dress 2022 Rosser. Phone 531-LM. FOR REN’ room with kitchenette for light housekeep- ing. Privileges or not. Two| squares from postoffice. Phone | { 1437-W. FOR RENT. furnished light serrate room on ground floor. sleeping rooms, Close Phone 981-R. FOR RENT—Two unfurnished light housekeeping rooms in modern home. Private bath and entrance _Call_at 212 Second _strect. Ma FOR RENT—Furnished or unfur- nished, two room light house- \ keeping rooms. Call at 109 Man- dan street or phone 1426. FOR RENT—May ‘ooms strictly modern hom Close in. Board if desired. .Call at 816) Main. Phone 1411-M. FOR KENT—Furnished — slecpir. room in modern home. Gentle- men preferred. Close in. Call at 601 Third street. FOR RENT—Well furnished ‘single room and kitchenette. Call at 411 Fifth street. Phone 273. FOR RENT—Rooms for housekeep- ing in modern home. Call at 417 Ment eteent FOR RE icely furnished room close in. Ladies only. Call 482-W. ‘S TRY THE Mohawk for furnished | rooms, also home cooking. MISCELLANEOUS ENRICH your lawn or garden. Pure | pulverized cow manure. Surplus | moisture removed by aeration. | Not messy or smelly. 15¢ bushel delivered. Poole, Box 243, Bis- __marek. NATIONAL CASH 1 REGISTERS new and second hand. Over 500 | | i styles and sizes. We have one to fit your business. W. E. Stitzel, | { TaRssseniate.. Patterson Hotel, | _ Bismarck, N. 5 FOR § SAL choi ‘imported $ ~- Ger- man Rollers ead Hartz Mountain, | also Ce singers Cages, seeds treats, etc. nee 115-J, Jacob Bull, Dickinson, D., Box 728. _ FOR RENT—Two Tamia acre pas- | >» ture with three wire fence, water and shade. Must rent by May 9th, ’ SR ee Cash rent. North of McKenzie. __Write Tribune Ad. No. 41 \ FOR RENT OF FOR SALI —One | 54x26 barn. Call at 806 First street. For information write | __Clooten, Kulm, N. D: i Ol le a Nei aon of America, care or red Jor- _dan, Dri Driscoll, N. D FOR SALE—Wilt —~ “seed north of FOR RENT—Truck garden farm, Also ge Se for 4 FOR SALE—First class restaurant. Fixtures full equipment. J, H. Sampson, Valley City, N. Dak. ‘OR SALE—Black dirt at one dol- is fet 2 ce Bae per load de- FOR SALE S35 Serr box | azd one 7-H. P, D. C. motor. Ap- ly_at Tribune office. FOR SALE—One Van Brunt drill, | gee, condition. Also two wagons. 4 ‘acht i] : | = $3 a bu. Carl grat 12 miles | 5 3 : i i iter Transfer Co. FOR SALE—Girl’s Crown a in collet condition. Phone 489 or call at 311 Thi.d street. WE} BANE 9 large minnows, 25 te per onan. dozen. Bring your pail. ; street. as FOR RFNT—Inquire at « aa Ave. W. Mrs. Mary an. ry Me! “List, YOUR Biomarck “pipers h The Helling Agency, Poort FOr SALE Teeter, ee $50 per dozen, arage at 919 Fifth | street. Phone 1071, | WANTED—Garden plowing, “ash| "VE bir eee ee __.| built car custome, to the e ! ACK’S Radiator Shop clean} he will want to remain our cus-!. out or rir that leaky or| tomer. ‘Rebuilt Cars With a & atation” Lahr Motor Sales | Co. s right no change new Player Piano for city ham two ton truck. lot or good car. The Helling} yf, B. GILMAN CO., Bismarck. flax. Perfectly clean and graded, | © - vere out for quick _ profits Idn’t buy some of these the figures tagged on But the first owner took loss, and our policy is to is along as gain to our re- that E BY CHICKS am to s70 3 and 300! FOR SALE—Nonresidence owners| YOUR DOLLAR never went so far| WANTED—Pi no pupi : ficated and exp vy, in buying a high de Used Just read this | and then come in and look at B Master Six) e Coupe; Ford Se-; 7 Studebal ‘ jan; ’27 Gra- i COPYRIGHT 1928 _BY THIS NAS (1 recently ‘her el Kaname Cir Sally NEY BARR, ma, earning ey eo debutante jes Vlied to her comingeo ° NOW GO ON WITH THB story CHAPTER XLIV PERIODICALLY. during the four months that the Barrs spent in wandering over Europe, Enid's evasive reply to Sally's urgent question thrust itself frighteningly through: ae new joys she was ex: pevien Enid "had shrugged and said: “Remind me when we're making “p the invitation list this fall, Sal- ly." She. knew now that her motner had counted on her forget- ting David, that Enid had told her- self until she believed it, because she wanted to believe, that the transformed Sally, the Sally whom she had remade into the kind of girl who could take her place in socicty as the daughter of Enid and Courtney Barr, would be a tit. tle ashamed of her 16-year-old in- fatvation for a penniless. young farmer. But Sally's heart had not changed, One morning in November Sally knocked at the door of the small, pleasant room known to the Barr household as ‘Miss Rice's office.’ Linda Rice held the difficult, exact. ing but always exciting position of Enid Barr's social secretary. Sally liked Linda, envied her her inde pendence, her tactful, firm hand- ling of her sometimes unreasonable employer. As she. knocked now, fear of her mother futtered in the heart that was so full of love and admiration for her, For she knew that Enid and Linda were making up the invitation list for the long: discussed. coming-out party, “Come in,” Enid's contralto voice called impatiently. “Ob, it’s you. darling. How cunning, you look: Turn around so I can see how that new bob looks from the back. Oh charming! Max is a robber, but he docs know the art ‘of ‘cutting hair. Isn’t she precious, Linda?” Sally, dressed in @ deceptively SIX ROOM entirely modern house, almost down town, nice sun porch, Bet and clean, $5700.00. > IVE ROOM modern bungalow, 31% blocks from postnffice, Al condi-/ tion, cheap at $500.00, oi or under ......... . & SEVEN ROOM, brand new _ house, basement garage, just off new paving with all its benefits, in|* SIX ROOM house water, lights, Son garage, large lot, only |¢ $2300.00. SIX ROOM modern house, 2 years old, spick and span, sun porch, cheap at $4400.00, MY S. been almost exactly four times in| FUR ITURE F FOR SALE reed living room set, kitchen; } Rook range and other houschold furniture, reasonably riced. no D. E. Wharton, McKenzie Hosa India gray bed room suite, Call at 613 Third street or phone 1150 from 3:00 p. S$ FOR SALE—Most| _ Custom Se-| FIFTEEN years in the chick busi- ness is proof that we isfy Pelkey’s Poultry and Chick Farm, Fargo, N. Dak. NEA Se jsimple little frock of dark blue REAL ESTATE st part of the east side of the! city. Below cost at $5800.00. LES so far this year have} —Walnut bedroom suite, and ~ Call” at ew the sewer we nn ther xiven that said be made prior to Ma: Hf not mad made by efrigerator in first | class condition, garden hose and tools, two burner camp _ stove. Phone 552-M. Ca‘! at 1103 Ave- pee FOR SALE—Combin: coal range with hot water front. Cheap. Call at 318 Mandan A | GAID 4 ae in ae furniture. | Kennel urnitur . Call 503-R,| ND. i Mondan, | ‘THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE A. D, 1938, at| NEW CAPTAIN FOR COMPAN WANTED TO RENT—Furnished or partly furnished modern house couple, or apartment for youn no children, Phone 120' OFFICE ROOMS FOR, RENT—Suite of 3 desirable; FOR | office rooms, available Hoskin block jons, and notice 1s then th ™: Block tnd 16. ddition, 44 46 53 Block 78 80 &8 wens mets why Addition, 16 and 18. North Dakota, that main in the street or | _ avenue to a point jaside the curb I and such con’ nnections must Sth, tio! ity il ue ees erro ‘tor employed by 7 i marek) for this bdabebted and the cost thereof assesses i vy the los properly chargeable State of North Dakota, County of ae and 31, after 5:00 p.m, apartmen 23. | FOR RENT—May apartments, Phone 773. apartment. For tion phone 53 « Burleigh, Bismarck 1. Bismarck, | tr jana which was asses: | for taxation cor whe on the sth duly sold, a the delinquent and that the time for Vsatd sale will expire ninety notice. uired to re of the yservi terest he provided 1 hand and off } Pillen, the hour of ten o'clcok In the forenoon | Minot—Capt. Otto F. Gross | Wy should] been appointed captain of Co, . eof las | 164th North Dakot: Infantry, re-}Jation. Th placing car Joseph Blaisdell, who Capt. Gross’s ‘appoint: ment came April 12 from the offic: of Adjutant General G. A. Fra: and was signed by Governor Sorlie. Capt. Blaisdell has been in com- mand of Co. D for the past FOR RENT—Modern three or four room apartment, furnished ar un- furnished. Also 100x100 garden spot. For sale: Kitchen cabinet, Nbrary table and rug. Phone 905 ni spotatea aarniatete Julius Ladehoft, Mig. onaasitn att Pillen, Ad-/ sod. ‘ot this citation ministrator, now d Se He, room | artly furnishes lose i in ground floor, $20.00, Phone I ee ae 4. FOR RENT—! Large two room fur- | nished apartment on ground floor. Call at 924 Fourth street. Hnone “Furnished apartment | on ground floor, Everything fur-| nished, Call at 930 Fourth street. » furnished or unfurnished a a riment, Varney | OUT OUR WAY. IM WATCHING YOU YOUNG LADY! ITS BAD ENOUGH TO HAVE HIM “EATING BUTTERED CRACKERS IN THE PARLOR, WITHOUT YOU MAKING iT WoRSsE * YouR SENSE OF HUMOR’ WILL CHANGE WHEN YOU Ger A HOME OF SfoUR on ad ANO A CARPET SWEEPER: FOR RENT—Nice 5 room modera rther informa- 4 ION OF 88, Office of County Auditor, Bismarck, N._Dak, ff nd Tavestment from the completed service of this s described xs follows: h cay Range 80. mat this o the above amount stated, eto the holder of the cate as provided a County of Court, bovore he Listate of Julius Petitioner, » hereby hefore Friendly Enemies | MOM’N POP __ FLOWERS FROM French crepe which half revealed her slender knees, whirled obedi | ently. The heavy, silken masses of | her black hair had long since been | ruthlessly sacrificed to the shears. and now with the new Parisian cut, later to be the rage in America and known as the “wind-blown bob.” she looked like an impudent little gamin, amazingly pretty and | | asked me to do for more than two pert. Her clear white skin contradicted the effect of the impish hair-cut. however, and persisted in making her look appealingly feminine. “To think she can eat anything she wants and still keep that fiz: ure!” Enid exclaimed with humor- ous envy. “I'd give my soul to be able to cat bread and candy again.” But she looked at her own tiny body, no bigger than an ethereal 12-year-old girl's and smiled with satisfaction. “What did you want, darling? Linda and I are awfully busy.—Oh, by the way, you mustn't forget Claire's tea this afternoon. You're going to Bobby Proctor's| luncheon at the Ritz, too, aren't you? Like the social whirl, sweet?” “It still frightens me a little.” Sally confessed with a slight shiver. “Mother,” she began with a des- Perate attempt at casualness, “you're sending David an invita- tion, aren't you? You promised, you know—” Enid frowned and pretended to consult the copy of the long Ist which she had been checking when Sally interrupted. “Is David Nash's name on the Ilst, Linda? Never mind. I'll look for it. And Linda, will you please run down and tell Randall that Mrs. Barrington will be here for luncheon today? He'll have to have gluten bread for her. Thank you, dear. I don't know what I should do without you. Linda, you priceless thing!” When the secretary had left the room, Enid turned to Sally, who |“ was standing beside the desk, twist- ing ber hands nervously. “Darling, I’ve counted go on your not holding | —’ me to that foolish promise | made two years ago. You must realize that David—dear and sweet and good as he undoubtedly is—belongs to your past, a past which I want. you to forget as completely as if it had never existed.” Sally opened her lips to speak, but the futility of the retort she was about to make overwhelmed her. How could she forget those 12 lonely, miserable years in a state orphanage? And how could her mother possibly expect her to | forget David. who had been her only friend, her “perfect knight” when such dreaful trouble as Enid, in her sheltered life, could hardly | imagine, had made her a hunted. | terror-stricken fugitive from “jus: tice"? David to whom she was “half married,” David whom she would always love,.even if she never saw him agcin? But she would see him! “Please don’t get that sulky, stub born look on your face, Sally!" Enid spoke almost sharply. “I am thinking of David, too. De you really think It would be fair t> him to ack him to come to New York meicly for a party, to see the girl | he ea:inot hope to marry make her; Acbut in @ society to which he could never belong? Won't be utterly selfish, dariing! Think of me a litt! David knows— the truth. You must know it: would be painful forme to see him, after the story 1 told you in his pres: ence. I want to forget, Sally, and just be happy, now that 1 have my | daughter with me—" The lovely voice trembled with threatened tears, and the cornflower-blue eyes pleaded almost humbly with im: placable eapphire ones. “I'm sorry, Mother,” Sally an- swered steadily “But—you prom ised. I've done everything you years. I kept my promise not to write to David, because all the time I was counting on you to keep yours.” Enid Barr flushed and tapped an- grily with her pen against the edge “Of course, !f you put have no choice! How shall Linda address the tnvita- tion?” “Thank you, Mother,” Sally cried, stooping swiftly to lay her lips against her mother's golden hair. “You've made mo awfully happy.” Her voice shook @ little witi awed delight as she gave her mother the only address she knew —David's grandfather's name and the R. F, D. route on which his farm lay. “I suppose I'm having all this jbother for nothing,” Enid bright encd. “The boy would be an idiot to spend the money. on the trip— even if he has it to spend!” A beautiful light glowed Sally's wide, dreaming eyes. will com he said softly will come if he has to walk. “A hiking costume would be so appropriate at a society girl's de- but,” Enid pointed out, a little maliciously, but she smiled then, a little secret, satisfied smile, as it she hoped be would look a rube among the sleek young men who would be asked to view her daughter when she was officially put “on the market.” But Sally was too happy to notice "May I write him, too, Mother? It would look so queer, just sending him ap fovitation, without a word “Absolutely not!” Enid was stern, “The invitation is more than sufficient. Now run along, darling, and dress for Bobby's luncheon. It seems to me there were never 60 many sub-deb parties as there are this year, but you simply must go to all of them, if your first season is to be @ success, The list is go- ing to be miles long,” she worried. “Perhaps it would have been wiser to have your party at the Ritz, as Mrs. Proctor and most of the others are doing, but there seems to be little reason to keep up an enor- mous establishment like this If you can't entertain in it.” “‘Coming out’ seems so silly,” Sally. protested with’ sudden, un- usual spirit. “Of course with me it's different. The crowd. doesn't know me very well yet, but nearly all of the debs have been really ‘out’ for two or three years. They've been prom+trotting and going to the opera and the theater alone with me, even to night clubs—I can’t see what real difference it will make to most of them—" “Of course you can't,” Enid said with unintentional cruelty. “You haven't been reared to this sort of thing But you'll learn. Run elong now, and look your prettiest. And by the way, if you have a minute, won't you stop by the photogra- hers to choose the poses to be re- leased for publication? The society editors are calling up frantically 4y ANNE AUSTIN *SAINT AND SINNER? AUTHOR OF All they've had are snapshots of you, and I want them to print a picture that will do you justice. You're really the loveliest thing on the deb list this year, you know. But do run along! I shan't get a blessed thing done !f you stay bere gossiping with me.” Sally laughed, kissed her mother and ran from the room, bumping into Linda Rice, who was discreetly waiting outside the office until the interview between mother and daughter should be finished. “Linda,” she whispered, her face rosy with sweet embarrassment, “I gave Mother the name of a very special friend of mine, to put on the invitation Jist. You'll be a darling and mail it out today, won't you? You sce, he lives in the Mid- dic West and I want him to have plenty of time to plan to come. David Nash is the name.” Her volce caressed the three beloved syllables more tenderly than sho realized, and Linda Rice uodded her a knowing smile. “Of course, Sally. And I hope he comes, I'll mail it this very af- ternoon.” Sally ran up the broad, circular staircase to the third floor, scorn- ing to use the “lift” which Court- ney Barr had had installed in the Fifth Avenue mansion a few years before. She never entered her own suite of rooms—sitting room, bedroom, dressing room and bath—without first an uneasy feeling that she was trespassing and then a shock of delight that it was hers indeed. Now she passed slowly through the rooms, trying to sce them with David's eyes, or even with the eyes of tho forlorn little Sally Ford who had slaved 16 hours a day on the Carson farm for her “board and keep.” Suddenly a picture flashed across | her mind—the two-rooms-and-lean- to shack in which she and David had eaten what was to have been their wedding breakfast. A great nostalgia swept over her—not only for David, but for plain people working together to make a home and to support their children. All her life in the orphanage she had dreamed of delicate foods, skin- caressing, lovely fabrics, spacious, éracious rooms. And now she had them—and she was frightened to nausea, because they were a barrier between her and David and all the realities of life and'love which had so nearly grasped when she was slaving on the farm, working as “Princess Lajla” in the carni- val, flecing from the pursuit of the Jaw with only David to protect her. She dressed listlessly for the sub- deb luncheon. at the Ritz, chatted and laughed and pretended to be as frivolous and “wild” as any of her ‘new friends; went to Claire Bain- bridge's tea that afternoon; went to the theater with ber mother and adopted father that night, went, during the next few with only one question: would David come? She had been go sure, 80 arrogantly, proudly sure that he would come even if he had to walk— * On the fifth day after the invt tation was despatched his telegram came. (To Be Continued) Sally séce David —and gets @ shock. In the next installinent, AT WAN BE VALUABLE To You BUT NOT THE PRICE OF THE THOUSAND GRA! HAIRS (NE HAD To CHARLEY CurisTY, EM? WELL, THAT'S ONE THING ALL THIS “TROUBLE PRONED-WE KNOW, FROM “THE FLOWERS SENT ‘To US WHO OUR REAL FRIENDS ARE AND THAT'S WoRTH ST eS nn AND ALL THE NEIGHBORS COMING IN BND TELLING ME WHAT AMNESIA DID TO PEOPLE -IVE LOST So MUCH SLEEP WORRYING THAT THE LINES ON MV FACE HANE AGED ME TEN YEARS, AND HOW THAT MRS. SNOOP HATES To REMIND ME OF ITT CAN'T UNDERSTAND HOW, ANYONE CAN-BE SO SpITERUL | “Wose KIND SOULS WHO LIKE To SEE THE Danie] in the Lion’s Den! Freckles and His Friends ne, WEVE WALKED ALL DAY LONG, BoBo, AND AOT A SIGA) OF UNCLE DARRY=WE ANIGHT AS WELL. SLEEP RIGAT MERE=IT LOOKS AS GOOD AS ANYPLACE WEVE SEEN -6EE! TAN ALL IN, TOO! L DONT MANE 70 BE ISCARED OF WILD ‘tt than the prev 1913 the birth The Ame vide is th Mountain region sides of the continent. By Wilhams WHY MOMERS GET GRAY. ‘ comes 4g ©1928, BY NEA SERVICE ING - AS FOR SOME FRIENDS, THEY WERE NICE YO Your FACE, BUT THE WISE CRACK WAT CAME BACK To ME- But I Gor BACK AT HER TODAY AT BRIDGE: I MADE HER SIT FACING “TWE WINDOW AND THE LIGHT WIT HER FULL IN THE FACE - HONESTLY ,1T WAS "PATHETIC HOW (T BROUGHT OUT HER WRINKLES #! THAT WAS HOT- AND HASN'T SHE A CROP AIHNow FOR A G00D AIGATS REST WiTA_ANOBODY TO poe ‘he birth-rate for England an Vales for 1927 was the lowest eve frecorded—-16.7 per J00 of the popt 1.1 per 1000. owe — — rs wihch streams flowing _ toward By Cowan