The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 8, 1928, Page 9

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TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1928 MALE WANTED—Clean cut snappy young | man, Bismarck high school grad-/| uate, 18 to 25 years, for employ- ment at one of leading local serv- LP WANTED ice stations, Excellent opportun- ity for advancement to hustler and business getter. Write P. 0. Box _ 33. AMBITIOUS men with light cars, anxious to connect with good) Rural Sales Te Maly where | honesty and effort count for good | returns daily. Ready to start at! once. Inquire Room 307 evenii Patterson Hotel, City. OPENING for active men with | cars. Join sales unit, travel with! ger. Must be ready to start| at once. Good moncy from start. See Mr. Snowden, pe p. m., Bismarck Hotel, Room 60. eal MEN—Why not learn a profit ble | profession, “easy work, special) short course, free catalog. Moler| Barber College, Fargo, N. Butte, Mont. MEN, why not learn a profitable profession easy work special short course, free catalog. Moler Bar- ber College, Fargo, N. D.-Butte, _Mont. jen to dig rock by the | |. Land cose to Sterling. F. A. Lahr, Bismarck, N. Dak. LADIES to paint bandker home. No experience necessat, We teach you Permanent. Silks free but not} paints. Send for free samples. BEAUTEXT COMPANY, San Franci: WANTED—At_ once _ experienced dining room girl. Good wages and good place, at New Cafe, Underwood, N. Dak. Write or Phone. es: WANTED—A competent _ gir! general housework. Call at 802 Ave. B or oe 90; WANTED—Garden ~ hauling and excavating. for sale black dirt and fert . Call at 413 > Thirteenth street south or phone 686-M. John Jah- Ree A Se LET ACK’S Raciator Shop clean out or rc air that leaky or elogge1 radiator. All work guar- anteed_and price reasonable. YOUNG MAN desires position dur- ing summer doing general office work. Can furnish Write Tribune Ad. No. 44. ‘A YOUNG lady desires position in hotel cither in or a ce town. Write Tribune Ad. No. ROOMS FOR" RENT FOR REN wo rooms, kitchen- ette and closet, on ground floor, furnished for light housekeeping. Call at 523 Seventh et oor phone 487-W after 4 o'clock week _ days FOR RI T—Nicely_ furnished front | sleeping room in modern home, suitable for one or two. Call at 206 W. Thayer Ave. or phone 1419-W. FOR RENT—Largeréom with kitchenette for light housekeep- ing. Privileges or not. Two squares from postoffice. 1437-W. ed _housekeep ing room with well equipped kitchenette; suitable for man and wife or two ladies. 422 Fifth street. in modern home. of St. Alexius bospital. 6 Eleventh street. RENT—Modern room, gentle men preferred, privilege of phone, One block cast Call at $12.00 a month. 610 Ave. A. Phone 483. FOR” RENT—Furnished single sleeping room in modern home. es ase 418 First street or phone ingle Call at 411 Phone 273. ell fu room and Titehonettes Fifth street. diamond dinner ring. F er please phone 729, Reward. a BABY CHICK BABY CHICKS FC FOR SALE—Most breeds. Have room to set 200 tee eggs May 15 and 300 references. | Phone} JR RENT—Newly furnished room| chicken eggs May 23. Call 503-R. M ‘A. Re Mies ey Bismarck. AF EN yar years in the chick roof that we satisfy. Palkel's s Poultry and Chick Farm, Fargo, N. FOR SEDUCED: baby chick pric list, write Rust’s Hatchery, Fargo, North Dakota, BOALD AND ROOM "in_ modern home. Close in. Young man pre- ferred, $30.00 per month. Call at 323 First street. Phone 966-M. nena <a MISCELLANEOUS ——__ NATIONAL. CASH REGISTERS new second hand. Over 500 styles and sizes, We have one to fit your business. W. E; Stitzel, representative. Bismarck, N. D. FOR SALE Registered “Shorthorn bull. Splendid animal. Must be seen to be appreciated. Price reasonable. A, Small, Star Ne Bis N. stink: Bell Diskinson, ND. ‘lass restaurant. Fisteese fo FOR BALE Ty rie glass seetenrsnt t., ne box azd one 7-H. P. D. C. motor. Ap- ly_at. ine office. FOR SALE—One Van Brunt drill, condition. two wagons. fachter Transfer Co. FOR SALE—Good milk cow. In- quire at: Peter ‘Mihm R. 1, Bis- marek. N. Dak. be toe Bismarck Lape FOR SALE—Irish Spanie W. Crawford, Mandan, Ne I FOR SALE—Fight foot alt show sage Bervies Drug. Faker Hotel, seeds | £ 163. Jacob Box 728. Helling Rept Foose : Tribune Classified Advertisements PHONE 82 Classified Advertising Rates l insertion, 25 w FIVE ROOM modern Waneeiow, 3% or under 8 7 Lae Pos tiey, Al condi- 2 insertions, 28 words cheap at or under” Prey SEVEN ROOM, brand new house, 3 insertions. 28 words basement garage, just off new or under. 100 paving with 9 its benefits, in t week, 25 words ‘or st part of the east side of the Under... .ssseeee city. Below cost at $5800.00. Ads over 23 words, Se SIX ROOM house water, lights, tional per sewer, garage, large lot, only Effective Jan. 3, 1928 ords CLASSIFIED | DISPLAY 90 Cents Per inch ute at gAi0.60. + i i so far this year have All classified ads are cash tn been almost exactly four times in advance. Copy should be re- amount and number of those I RATES ceived by 9 o'clock to insure insertion «ame day. THE BiSMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 82 Rebuilt Automobiles A Used Car fs No Better Than Dealer _|LOTS of folks are driving “high- 7 Lite Guaranteed he} Made It. cars—b ul they didn’t pay ice for the privilege. ta rebuilt car here, y it perhaps more than the fellow who first owner it, and wha 0 paid the high price for it. ‘Rebuilt Cars With a & utation’ Lahr Motor : ales Co. FOR. YOU the Coach; Dodge Coupe; dan; '27 Studebaker Custom dan; Oldsmobile Sedan; '27 Gra- ham two ton truck, M. wend D TO BUY. BS ade Used Car. list, and then come in and look at OFFICE ROOMS RENT—Suite of 3. desirable Seuee, May Ist in iene ne Floren, F ENDABLE. “USED CARS R DOLLAR never went so far right now, in buying a high Just read this} Buick Master Six Ford Se- Se- cars, B. GILMAN CO. Bismarck. WANTED Tu —One’ Western idle, phone 66 or write Dale, Bismarck, x 61 BARGAINS" AL condition, Phone 901. FOR SALE—1925 Ford Tudor se- dan, also 1926 Ford roadster, both LR SALE—Oaklend coupe in first| class condition for demonstration. US S CAFE—Located in one of the best REAL E. TATE SIX ROOM entirely modern house, | almost down town, nice on porch, bright and clean, $5700. SIX ROOM moderr house, 2 years old, spick and span, sun porch,” sta made last year to this time. This | “ includes both land sales and city property and I have more land iced out this year than since Do. YOUR REAL ESTATE BUSI- * NESS with the busiest dealer ‘in the city. in F, E. YOUNG. inge with hot water front. | Call at 318 Mandan Ave. in used cotnlles Furniture Co.. Mandan, ‘Quick Meal range, Al AUTOMOBILE. in good co ndition. © Telephone 11'2-W or write A, Doerner; Bismarck, . Phone 1274. _ ns a. “ 1k *) WANTED TO RENT—Four or five|' room house or larger, with yard,| oH summer Pathe Preferably | ‘ui Al: NITIES towns in South Dakota. Best! business location in town of 1500. On several good trails. Excep- Gt he FOR SALE in all furniture. | ° REAL ESTATE $5,000 FIV ROOM bungalow, hard- wood floors, Ls = features. Close in. Easy tet $5,250-SMALL coacteaeht building in good location. $5,300 NEW 5 room bungalow, hardwood finish, basement garage. parts of INSURANCE written in reliable| comnonies. THE HELLING AGENCY. 108-snd St. Phone 877 ilk "FOR EXCHANGE HAVE Client who wishes to ex- change new Player Piano for city lot or good car. The Helling Agency. Phone 877. mes FOR SALE OR ~ TRADE—For chickens, a 30-foot windmill. Ad- __dress 2022 Rosser. Phone 534-LM. a Judicial jCourt of kota, and to cer Janswer upon the s id office in the cit Burleigh Sithin thirty of Mons ddress, orth Dakota. i defendants: that the above 8 to the follow- Ing deseribod. real, property. situated | e County of Rurleigh t e te of North Dakota, namel: ao) o Block t clve (1 reis’ addition to the City o k. Murlelgh County, North Da- That the purpose’ of this ac- is to determine adverse claims id real property an in said real property in. the intiff herein and against any of defeniants in sald action; and t no personal claim) is made inst said defendants or either of them. M & SPERRY, ntitts, tit) fHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. upon the ne We ‘bb! to quiet | pre Webb | APARTMENTS. FOR RENT—Unfurnished a) ment, 4 rooms and bath, and rear entrances. heat. need apply. street, ee a Furnished aj mpartisent Murphy Apts. 204 Main street. Phone 852 or a7, Ask for F. W. Murphy. nished apartment on ground floor. Call at 924 Fourth street. Prone __543-W. FOR RENT—May ist, furnished or unfurnished apartment. Varney apartments. Phone 773. Boag ‘FOR RENT—Nice 5 room modern apartment. For a informa- tion_phone 53 .r 329-W. FORK RENT—Furnished " aarGRent, everything furnished. Call at 930 Fourth street. LOTS FOR BALE FOR SALE-—Nonresidence of choice lots hi out and owners decided to close ed a oe | Save ulting J. nt ‘ounty of F In County ¢ or interest in or pondents, © State of th Dakta to the ae hamed ne venae nt n hereby y befor unty oO} in oat State, at the office ‘ounty Judge of waid County, at Court House in the City. of Bi in said County and St y of May, A. D. 1928, two o'clock in the afte rnoon to show cause, If any you why the prayer of the petition era y a decree entered by this s-; Court establishing in the petitioner cnt above named the right of su Amanda 1 particularly c oO to such petition described, tate of and . in Town- est of the lelgh Count as required by law. Dated this ith day of May, tionally well equipped and fur- poor By the Court: nished. Lots electrical equipment. 2 (SEAL) 1 Seating capacity, seventy-five. far Gener, ‘may have same Fine business. No trade. Some } saving for this advertisment and Allen & terms. Trice $4500.00. Illness, Sai: poe reason for sling, Write Trib- . Da Attorneys for Petit une Ad. No. 46. _ vac E Pe AUN AAMT SR COPYRIGHT i928 BY CHAPTER XLVIII ALLY, crouching on the floor of her room, spread the crackling sheets of The Capital City Press, her eyes devouring the two-col- umn picture of David Nash. Two lines of type above the photo- graph leaped out at her: “Honor graduate of A. & M. inherits grandfather's farm.” He hadn't been injured or killed in an accident, he wasn't married! In a frenzy of relief and Gratitude to the God she had just been accusing of deserting her, Sally Barr, who had been Sally Ford. bent her head until her lips rested on thé lips of the photo- graph. And i¢- was rather a pity that Arthur Van Horne, “‘con- noisseur of kissing,” wi not there to see the passionate fervor of the kisses which the girl whom he had dismissed contemptuously was raining upon an unresponsive newspaper picture, When at last she was calmer she read the short item through. It was the last paragraph that brought her to her feet, her slight body electric with sudden deter- mination: “Young Nash fs living alone in the fine old farmhouse, and ap- parently is as capable in the kitchen as on the seat of a culti- vator. He says his whole heart is in scientific farming, and that “his only sweetheart is ‘Sally,’ a blue-ribbon heifer which he ts grooming to break the world’s butter-fat production record.” “David! Darling David!" She was laughing and crying at the eame time. “He hasn't changed! He hasn't forgotten that we're half-married!" Jerking open a drawer of her dressing table she caught sight of her face in the mirror, and her eyes widened with delighted sur- prise Gone was the pinched, white, shame-stricken face, in its place was beauty such as she had never dreamed she possessed. She turned away from the mirror, tremolous and abashed, for what she had to do would bet be easy. Her eyes tried to avoid the ex- quisite photograph of her mother that. stood in its blue leather frame on the dressing table, but at last she snatched it up and “carried it against ber breast as she ran to her desk. She felt that she was talking to Enid as she wrote, pleading for understanding and forgiveness from those dreaming, misty, cora- flower-blue eyes: “Mother, darling: I’m running away, to go to David. Please don’t | though try to stop me or bring me back, for I'll have to run away again if you do. I’m going to marry David because I love him with all my heart and because he'is the pe omy | rest man I could ever marry without causing you shame. He already knows the truth, and it made no difference in his love for me. You know how it was with Grant Proc. tor, You said yourself that if I told him,. he would not want to marry me. And I could never marry & man without first telling him the truth, Arthur Van Vorne knew and wanted me to be his mistress. He told me today. He did not thing I was good enough to be his wife. it would always be the same. And so I am going to David, who knows and loves me anyway. “Oh, Mother, forgive me for hurt- ing you like this! But dou't you see that I would hurt you more by staying? After a while you would be ashamed of me becauze I could not marry. I would humiliate you in the eyes of-your friends. And I could not be happy ever, away from David. I wanted to die after Arthur Van Horne told me today what he really wanted of me, but now I know I want to live—with David.. Please, Mother, don’t think my love for you—” She could write no more just then. Laying her hot check against the cold glass of the framed photo- graph of her mother she sobbed so loudly, so heart-brokenly that she did not hear a knock upon the door, did not know her grief was being witnessed until she felt a band upon her shoulder. “Sally, darling! What in the world is the matter?” It was Enid Barr's tender, throaty contralto. Sally sprang to her feet, her cyes wil with fear, her mother’s pic: ture still tightly clutched in her hands, “I—I was writing you & lett she gasped. “I—I—" “Perhaps I'd better read it now,” Enid said in an odd voice, and reached for the scattered sheets of Dale gray notepaper on the desk. Sally wavered to a chair and slumped into it, too dazed with despair to think coherently. She could not bear to look at her mother, for she knew now how cowardly she had been, how abys- mally selfish, Her flaming face was hidden by her hands when, after what seemed many long minutes, she heard her mother’s voice again: “Poor Sally! You couldn't trust me? You'd have run away—like that? Without giving me @ chance to prove my love for you?” Sally dro hep hands and stared stupidly at her mother. Enid was coming toward her, the 4 | newspaper with David's picture in it rustling against the crisp taffeta of her bouffant skirt. And op Enid’s face was an expression of such sorrowful but loving reproach that Sally burst into wild weeping. “Poor little darling!” Enid dropped to her knees beside Sally's chair and took the girl's cold, shaking bands in hers. “We all make mistakes, Selly. <'ve made more than my share. Maybe I’m getting old enough now to have a little wisdom. And I want to keep you from making a mistake that would cause both of us—and Court untold sorrew.” “But I love David and I shan't love anyone else,” Sally sobbed, she knew ber resistance was broken. “I'm forced to believe that now. darling,” Enid said gently. “And I shall not stand in the way of your happiness with him. That is Bot the mistake I meant.” “You mean that you'll let me marry him?” Sally cried incredu- prety “Oh, Mother! I love you 0! “And I Jove you, Sally.” Enid’s voice broke and she cuddled Sally's cold warm! hands jaway to marry David. You have a mother and a father now, Sally. You're no longer a girl alone, as David called you. You have a place in society as our daughter, whether you want it or not. If David wants to marry you, he must come here to do so, must marry you with our consent and our blessing.” “But—" Sally's joy suddenly turned to despair again. “He wouldn’t marry a girl with a for- tune. He told me so when he was here.” “That was when he was penniless himself,” Enid pointed out. “I've just read this newspaper story about his inheriting bis grand- father’s farm. It’s a small for- tune in itself, and since there's no immediate danger of your inherit: ing either my money or Court's, I don’t believe he will let your pros- Pective wealth stand in the way— if he loves you.” “Oh, he does!” Sally laughed through her tears. “Look!” She snatched the newspaper from the floor ard pointed to the last para- Sraph of the story about David. “He samed his prize heifer after me! It says here his only eweet- heart is ‘Sally’! Oh, Mother, I didn’t know anyone could live through such misery and such hap- Piness as I felt today! I wanted to kill myself after Van—Oh!” “Tell me just exactly what he sald to you!” Enid commanded, her lovely voice sharpened with anger and fear. When Sally had repeated the con- temptuous, sneering speech as ac- curately as possible, her mother's face, which had been almost ugly with anger and disgust, cleared miraculously. “The man fs an unspeakable cad, darling, but I am almost glad it happened. ‘since you escaped un- scathed. He won't bother us again. T’'m sure of it! He's not quite low enough to gossip about me to my friends. It is evident that he planned all along to use his knowl- edge as a club to force you to sub- mit to his desires. And now that he doesn’t want you any more, he will lose interest in the whole sub- ject. I’ve known Van nearly all my life and I've never known him to act the cad before. He's probably despising himself, now that his fe- ver hascooled. Ifyou marry David, with our consent, he'll probably turn up at your wedding and offer sincere congratulations with a whispered reassurance as to his ability to keep our secret.” “When I marry David, not if!” Sally cried exultantly, flinging ber arms about her mother’s neck. “Oh, I'm so glad I have a mother!" “Don't strangle Enid laughed. “Leave me strength to write @ proposal of marriage to this cocksure young farmer who brags that he is as capable in the kitchen as on the seat of a culti- vator!"” “He can't cook half as well as I can!” Sally scoffed. “You ought to taste one of my apple pies! He can play nurse to his blue-ribbon stock all he wants to, but he's got to let me do the cooking! And. Mother, you'll—you'll tell him how much I love him, won't you? And and you might remind bim that we only. need half a marriage cere- mony—the last half. Wouldn't it be fun if we could go back to Can- field and let ‘the marrying parson’ finish the job?” “Don't be too confident!” Enid warned her. “He may refuse you!” But at sight of Sally’: dismay she relented, “I know I?) loves you, darling. Don't worry. If I were you I'd get busy immediately on a trousseau.” “One dozen kitchen aprons will top the list,” Sally laughed. Four days later the second tele- gram that Sally had received from David rived: “Catching next train East, darling. Happiest man in the world. Can we be marricd day I arrive? Am wiring your blessed mother also. I'll be loving you always. David.” “Of course you can’t be married the day he arrives!” Enid ex- claimed indignantly when Sally showed her the telegram. “I'm go ing to give you a real wedding.” “I think the children are right, Enid.” Courtney Barr unexpect- edly championed Sally in her pro- test. “A quiet, impromptu wed- ding, by all means. Our an- nouncement to the papers will in- dicate that we approve, and since the boy is unknown in New York and Sally has only just been in- troduced, I think the less fuss the better.” Sally kissed ‘him: impulsively, aware, though the knowledge did not hurt her, that liked her better now that sh to leave his home, than he had ever liked her, David arrived on Monday, and was guest of honor that night at a small party of Enid’s and Sally's most intimate friends, at which time announcement of the forth- coming marriage was made. They remembered haying seen him briefly at Sally's coming-out party and so handsome he was, 80 mich at ease, now that he was to be married to the girl he loved; that it occurred to none of Enid's guests to question his eligibility, Sally, sitting proudly beside him, looked happily from her mother to David, Koay. that in gaining a husband was not losing a mother, e would have done if Enid had not interrupted the writing of that terrible letter. On Tuésday Sally and David, accompanied by Enid and Court- ney Barr, went to the municipal building for the marriage license, and the afternoon papers carried the news on thé front ‘pages, under such headlines as: “Popue lar Deb to Marry Rich Farmer.” But in all the stories there was no hint of scandal, no reportorial prying into the “past” of the pes daughter of the rich and nent Courtney Barrs. The wedding took place on Wednesday, in the drawing-room of the Barrs’ Fifth Avenue man- sion, and the next morning, in his account of the “very quiet” wed- ding. a society editor commenters: “The ceremony was read by the Reverend Horace Greer, of Ogn- field, ——, the choice of celebrant being gia by unexplained een- wast the society editor did not know was that “the marrying parson” of Canfield spoke only the last half of the marriage ser- vice, beginning where he had been interrupted nearly three years before. Sally and David were no longer “half married.” rt~ ‘ront Hot water Well ventilated with ten windows, No family with children Call at 514 Seventh FOR RENT—Large two row far- K. Doran, r (SE%) of thirty-nine Sreridinn, in said Bur- be made of this citation AUD. German Actors to Present ent Play Here| sido The St. Paul Stock Stock company of 10 first class professional payers will present at the Bismarck audi- torium May 15 at 8:15 p. m. an all star performance of the wonder- ful Musical Comedy, “Der Verliebte Spatz.” There can be no doubt that every- body will welcome this occasion to SSCOLT: DINNER - LITTLE LADY, AELLO! WATS TIS? A SMOULDERING FIRE !! SOMEBODY MUST HAVE BEEN WERE! a the hest known many. Even the erate means can The players are to be actors and actresses of theatres. of Ger- ee of very mod- ford to see this performance which will be given on one day only. PIONEER STARK COUNTY WOMAN DIES Diekinson.—Mrs. Emelie for 41 years a res! Lidar ident of Stark and THING, FORE WE ~YOU HIT We - POP DOESN'T LIKE TO WS LITTLE GIRL But J DON'T THINK YOU WERE VERY NICE YESTERDAY WHEN WE HAD COMPANY FOR — AND THE WORST THING WAS WHEN YOU “TALKED BacK AT MOM - NOW THAT'S NOT BEING A is iT? - atendance of 76,004 persons. eae hear and see a hw inti the originn! Billings counties, died a ded oS at her home here recently. Although left an invalid by a stroke which she suffered several years ago, her- death was unexpected. She leaves two sons, Leo Holst of Dickinson and Ellis Holst of Cody, Wyo., and one daughter, Mrs. Robert German of Dickinson. 482 group gatherings of - union Sunday schools were held, with an [ouTOURWaY By Witter Tuck —H" WH = As WHY | Most LIKELY THE such A PuRTY HAPPY THING, HE-HE WAS. OH WELL. Mt Rv R er Lue AMS ©1920, BY WEA SERVICE. inc. Wht NOU KEPT ASKING FoR A THIRD PIECE POUTING. AND TAKING OF CAKE AND SULKING AND. ADVANTAGE OF “We FACT “THAT? COMPANY ‘WAS THERE AND WE COULDN'T PUNISH YOU -—- Va PoP! po you Know THAT YOU CAN BUY DOLLS THAT CLOSE THEIR, ENES, OT THe CORNER DRUG STORE FOR ONLY FORTY-NINE WELL TAEy DON'T FEED QN US=A007 AS

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