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MALE ~SLP_ WANTED WANTED—A man with light car to distribute advertising samples and call on 2000 old customers every six months. Prefer a married man with some experience in the public an © accustomed to earning not less than $140.00 per month. Al references re- quired, car necessary, territories open counties east and south of Bismarck. Write the Fuller Brush Company, Fargo, North Da- ‘ kota, at once. WANTED—Salesmanager to or- anize salesforce and sell my ‘estern Canned Fruits in_south- western part of North Dakota. ood thing for right party. Must ive reference and have some sell- O. H. Heine, Grand vod ing experience. Forks, N. D._ NEN W. ‘SD for:my evening physical culture class. Build a perfect body; get strength and pep; work without tiring. Phone 121, ask for Mr. Turner, 26 MEN WANTED at once to learn Barber Trade, Short Term now. Free catalog explains all. Moler Barber College, Fargo, N. D., Butte. Mont. WANTED—Experienced lumber in yard manager, in German com- { munity, in northern South Dakota iy Write Box 248, Redfield, FEMALE HELP WANTED " ~ WANTED—Experienced girl for eral house work. Call at 521 ‘ashington street or phone 1284. Mrs. B. F. Lawyer. i) }=© WANTED—Girl for general house- \ work, elderly lady preferred. Call at 314 W. Rosser ANTED—Experi for dining room work. Call Pat- terson hotel dining room. WANTED—Competent girl to do meral housework. Call at 719 ‘ixth street. —— es WORK WANTED WORK WANTED—Houwsework, in- cluding washing, ironing and all other work. Will work full time or part time, by the hour. Call at 807 Front street or phone ‘| 259-M. . CET ACK'S Radiator Shop clean out or rc air that leaky or elogg.1 radiator. All work guar- anteed and price reasonable. LADY with 1° year old girl de- ‘, sires position as housekeeper. Mrs. Andrew Bertsch, R. 1, Bis- marck, WANTED—Washings. Called for and delivered. First class work. Mending free. Call 1261. ———. A ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Two desirable room downtown, itable for employed people, city heat, gas and water in room, oe it front apart- ment. 304 1-2 M Phone 106 LARGE MODERN room kitchenette and closet furnished for light housekeeping, also 2 very com- fortable sleeping rooms. Call 523 Seventh. Phone 487-W . FOR RENT—Three unfurnished \ rooms, range in kitchen, first floor. Phone 884. Mrs. Erlen- meyer, 423 Third street, Bismarck. —One or two rooms furnished for light housekeeping in modern home. Phone 568-W or call at 618 Sixth street. FOR PENT—One_ nicely furnished room, suitable for one or two. re it 408 Tenth street or phone sleeping room large enough for three. Call 321 Eighth street. FOR RENT—Furnished _ sleeping room in modern home. 211 Second APARTMENTS FOR RENT—Five room and three K room city heated + private bath. For sale: Man's eLuxe bicycle, gas saving plate, kitchen cabinet, itary cot and heating stove. Phone 905 after 5 Pe erent a ‘FOR REN’ ight housekeeping apartment, living room, kitchen- ette and large closet. Rent very reasonable. Phone 705-R or cail at 413 Ninth st after 5:00 p.m. ne room furnished apartment with kitchenette on ground floor, con- venient and close in. Phone 262-M or call at 208 Mandan street. FOR RENT—Furnished light house- keeping apartments, one floor suitable for four girls. + Phone 194, Geo. W. Little or inquire at 801 Fourth. For Bene complstel furnished apartment, esr decorated on sronnd floor. Call at 930 Fourth FOR RENT—Large Toom ' us ppartenant puriahed. On first oor, } fees. ‘ourth street or phone f TO SUBLET during July and Aug- 'f ust, cozy cool apartment in Per- # son Court. Phone _1208-W. 7 FOR RENT—Nice 5 room modern ay ent. For further i ° saree. Te er informa. two Furnished or unfur- nished apartnient. Varney apa | @ ments. one 773. | & FOR RENT—Three room apartment boil i Sed floor. Call at 415 Eighth Se LOST—June 4 brief case in Bis- marck on Highway No. “10. east. Finder Teave at Hotel for beeen — black geldings 6 or 6 old, weighed about 1400 Ibs. Near Brittin, “Gall Praca gate dr FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1928 Tribune Classified Advertisements —= PHONE 8 3 a_— Classified Advertising Rates Effective J 1938 re Jan. 3, 1 inserti 3. é or ap sds $3 ted sseseoeese SS or der” 19 Ads over 25 1 per word CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES 90 Cents Per inch All classified ads are cash in advance. Copy should be re- ceived by -9 o'clock to insure insertion same day. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 82 Guaranteed Rebuilt Automobiles A Used Car Is No Better Thas the Dealer Made It. HAVE a rea] vacation this summer. Go comfortably, leisurely, econo- PAS | Ee ane EES. FOR RENT—By first of month one = mically. Move about when and as you please. The transporta- tion cost of even a modest vaca- \ tion trip will buy one of our de- pendable used cars. Have your trip and a car, too, for the price of one. “Rebuilt Cars With a Kc ctrtion” =| Lahr Motor Sales Co. reconnected Py f fOUSES AND FLATS it RENT—Five room partly mod- ern house with two bed rooms, front room, kitchen and large pantry, also cellar, located at 215 South Fifth, one block from N. P. Depot. Inquire at 213 South Fifth _stree’ FOR Ri Six room modern house. Phone 1991-R or call at 415 Griffin street. SS OAD AND ROOM FOR RENT—Rooms with or with- out board in modern home. One with two large closets, suitable for two. Others for one or two. 613 Third street. Phone 1150, PERSONAL MADAM LATTIMORELLE, P: mist gnd_Phrenologist, here at 408 Ave. B. Phone 1230. Helps find lost or stolen articles. AUTOMOBILES —1928 Willys FOR FURNITURE FOR SALE | ‘ORAGE SA! including kitch- en cabinet, dining tables, dining room chairs, chairs and rockers, robe trunk, lar; atry uphol- Catt Be stered chair. 6, and - ask for Mr. Gobel. FOR SALE—Household goods in- cluding rugs, beds, dresser, dit room set, kitchen cabinet an breakfast set, daybed, library tab! rocker, oil stove, electrie washer. Call at 422 Ninth. FOR SALE—A Maytag washer a year old in excellent condition, al- so a four burner kerosene stove with small oven. ‘Dicks Grocery Phone 279, + ; BARGAINS in used furniture. sepee Furniture Co., Mandan, Pa a) FOR SALE—Baby buggy. Phone 654-R. MISCELLANEOUS fe NA’ REGISTERS new and secund hand. Over 600 Fi feed a ec i at hed s your business. W. ze! representative, Patterson Hotel Bismarck, N. D. FOR SALE—Oil truck, cash only. Three hundred and twenty-two von tank, mounted on Ford THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE k Chassis, completely over-! Mrs, Ann Minthorn Heald, 85, aunt of Herbert Hoover, Republican nom- hauled with new engine. People’s] inee for president, sat at the radio in her cozy little home in Mayfield, Finance Co. Mandan, N. D. out of the root cellar, firm, not a sprout on $1.00 per ‘bushel and worth at Phone 279. Dreks Sirocery. tone S10. __ FOR SALE—Cabbage plants for Garage for rent. Hg 817 Twelfth street FOR SALE—Casting box and one Electric motor, ire at Tribune office. twat- Price $60.00. transplanting. Wi Phot 1-H. P. cheap. I new al er Kent Radio. Write Tribune Ad. No, 80. — real at J. J. Strain Storage Senty, Mandan, N. D. D.C. T milch cows. Flor- ence M. Little, Baldwin, North Da- kota. [Household Helps ] |_Household Helps _ STAINED-FLOOR POLISH ice dogs or Irene Calif., listenin; want to the doings of the Democrats in Houston, Tex. to see “who they'd pick to try to beat Herbert.” She RADIO PROGRAMS FEATURES ON THE AIR ,, Saturday, June 30 {Centrat Standard Time} 1:30—Demonstration Hour; Musical Program—W4J7, KYW KWK WTMJ (WCCO Woo W WFAA KPRC WOAI WHAS WM 6:00—Twin Pairs of Harmonoy—WJZ KY Y 6:30—Goldman Band; Concert Music—WEAF WGN WTMJ KSD WOC WHO WOW Ko. 7:30—Keystone Duo with Bailladiers- 2 8:00—Mediterraneans; Dance Band—' 8:15—Dance Program—WEAF WW. WSAIL WOW WMC WRC first 45 minutes; WE: last hour. 9:00—Slumber Music—WJZ KYW WRC NRA KDKA WLW WIR OW WDAF KYOO A DKA WFAA WGR WWJ WSAL WOAL WOC i Weco WSR WHO Fr WHO WMC Wow 1200—KFYR Bismarck 249.9 Saturday, June 30 9:30—Music. \5—Markets. 10:00—Weather. The following mixture is fine for | 11:00—Markets. polishing floors; a half pint of lin- seed oil, same turpentine and one | scrubbing thoroughly pint both vinegar and methylated |suds, rinsing with lemon juice and spirit. * PASTRY CARE Have care where you stand pastry just out of the oven. A col steam and makes it heavy. 12:30—Music. 1:00—Weatker, news. 1:30—Farm flashes. 6:30—Studio program. 7:30—Weather, news. drying; upside down. SPOTLESS TOWELS If you rinse your towels out in or|borax water daily, they will draughty place often condenses the | spotless and have a refreshing odor. with hot soap stay the back. It is twice as soothing. IN DAINTY parsley. quite warm olive oil before tubbing from fresh aspar- with a thick cate and de- “70” coach. Driven 2,000 miles. SOOTHING MASSAGE DESSERT WAFFLES Bargain for as turnover for SAGGING SEATS A massage often soothes a patient] Waffles make an ideal dessert cash. Write Ad. No. 84. Cane seats can be rejuvenated by |to sleep. Try dipping the fingers infor a light meal, if_served_pipiny THIS HAS RAPPENED VIRGINIA BREW: is tricked into DERICK does ul model, CHIRI, treats Finally VIRGINIA sition Mbes. 81 mot made any Promises jee. Her firm requests on a voyage as ship 1 } USED CARS Mfood tren, iet'cass Pat 93 Orerlonc: sedi " body in good , sedan, shape, good tires, fully equipped, many unused miles in this car at a ‘ reasonable . 1926 Star Six Coach, tires, : buy. will make a good Ex tener good D Tou Pie tac shea! . cheap, EBAKER SIX touring in good ‘ condition thr poy wil ane A ool bus. WE HAVE otter used cars. We ine your ion. HEDAHL MOTOR COMPANY Shop at 101 Third Street. Mekaatenl completely repainted.’| nepnenti curr CHAPTER XLVI IRGINIA was pointed. Nathantel’s her. . . it lacked tenderness, It was entirely in the nature discovery of her association wi Oliver, He hoped, and Virginia failed was having @ fine time. lucky enough to arti off my going with stuff she full of gold-dust.” Virginia finished the to leave her. STER love with NATHANIEL DANN, but ‘that he money for her, an oun her to to xe hostens, Thi met re VIRGINIA sale, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY sadly disap- letter had told her nothing of his feeling for the repressed conversations that had usurped their old, free ex- change of contidences after Niel’s sec, that ft was ironical, that she He spoke of his work, nothing definite. The bad weather she was escape. The|leyed immediate landing, and then ’ ball and, near the end: Chirt’s a peach. Been a Nttle appetite but she keeps me ys I ought to have. I think I used to mtsjudge her. Remember the time we talked about the sawdust and the quick. sand? I'm beginning to believe we were both wrong and that the kid's letter, folded it and put it away. There was a dull, heavy oppression in the fesion of her heart and s band seemed tightening round her head. Breathing was difficult and palitul. Wisely she had chosen to read the letter in the privacy of her state room, but remembering the doctor's warning against letting herself go, she closed her eyes, clenched her | “ hands and waited calmly for the little horses that were stamping their hoofs yp and down ber nerves She bad told tho medical man that ft felt like that and he had replied that she might visualize her nerve torture so if she wished, if she would promise to think of the horses as intruders that she must banish quietly, and never once feel that they were beyond her control. Virginia smiled them away, willed herself not to suffer because the thing she had set out to ac complish seemed done. Niel was not unhappy. When he heard of ber marriage to Fred- erick Dean he would thank his stars she had found out in time that she wanted a rich husband. Virginia had accepted the price of her father's honor. There was Ro way to escape now. Before the end of March she must become the wife of the man she despised. The Agena would return to New York early in January. Just a few short weeks after that day in which to make $100,000. It was hopeless. Despair became her constant companion during the remainder of the cruise. But no one on the ship, excepting the doctor, knew that she was suffering. For her protection he circulated carelessly-dropped re marks concerning her health—the tropics did not agree with her... touch of sun . . . too much work, His eampaign had a beneficial re sult. Thoughtful passengers re laxed their demands upon Vir- ginia’s attentions and no one quizzed her about-her pallor and nervguaness. Virginia no longer felt herself urging the ship te speed by men- tally conceiving herself down in the furnace room furiously feeding coal to the fire as she had done on the way from Havana to Port au Prince. She'd have preferred not to return to New York unt!i the end of her year of freedom. It would be easier to be parted from Nathaniel by distance than by a love grown cold. But the day came when the ship was berthed in the home port, ‘There was the red tape that de of ith to Virginia was back again, filled with thaniel and reluctance to see him. She had not written to him. She could not write in the vein he had employed. Silence would help to maintain the impression that she was growing indifferent toward him. For these reasons she had stifted her longing to reach bim by mail. He could ascertain easily enough when the was due to arrive it he to’know, she gangplank without @ glance at the Pier which wis nearly deserted. mingled yearning to rush to Na-| her. Suddenly a pair of arms opened out before her and she walked blindly into them. They closed about her, held her with her face Dressed tight against a rough over- coat while Nathaniel confessed his Joy at having her back. Happiness surged over Virginia like an ether that wiped out every- thing but this great, this indescrib- able, relief of being with Niel again. ie But trouble does not vanish until it is conquered. Nathaniel knew nothing of Virginia's momentarily overwhelming joy. He only knew that she broke from his embrace before he was ready to release her, and looked at him, with eyes al- ready wiped of truth, “How good of you,” she mur- mured. “I didn’t expect you.” Natbantel clamped his lips close, and scanned her face through nay- towed eyelids for a few seconds. “I know you didn’t,” he replied, with a short, rasping laugh. “But I'm such a poor fool that I came anyhow.” “Coming up to my hotel?” she asked indifferently. “No, I'm not,” he growled. “I’ve had enough. But I'll take a taxf with you, and drop off at the studio.” He was furious with himself be- cause he could not resist lingering in her company. He had come because he could not keep away. He had meant to greet her with no more warmth than she herself displayed. He wanted to turn on his heel aud walk away. And he hadn’t been able to do it. He took some pride fm his refusal to accompany her to her hotel, but it hardly made up for his weakening enough to go as far as his studio. Virginia was mired jin a strange mixture of emotio She was elated one moment because his love had endured despite her casting him to the spell of her rival, and depressed the next because she could not reveal her elation to him. No matter now what he said or did she would know that he loved + That one moment when he held her in bis arms with unre strained fervor betrayed him. He was her man, her man! Her heart sang the words in a paean of enchanted ecstacy. But 80 accustomed had she become to ‘living one character in her heart and another for the world to see that Nathaniel neved heard the oma oF even suspected its exis- To him she was just a cold, in- different, uninterested girl whom be had kissed against her will. They rode to his studio in a wih eT EL with a fecling of having stepped forever from a paradise to which there is no re-entering. Heartless, cold, unreal—call her what he would, he loved her, Dis- respect, hate, contempt, all had failed him when he sought to use them to tear her out of his heart. Iler face was sweet, her voice and body lovely. Nathaniel de splsed himself because they en- thralled him, but he had not suce ceeded in loosening the leash that bound him to her. It was impossible really to be Neve what he knew of her, Virginia grieved deeply for him as the taxicab carried her uptown. And she grieved for the lost hours they might have shared together. In spite of all she had done to Protect him from the final hurt he would experience when he learned she was going to marry another man, he must go through the or deal just the same. His pain would not be softened by the weeks of her absence. The cruise had been a needless, a use- less sacrifice all around. Virginia obtained her key at the desk, exchanged greetings with the hotel attaches whom she met, and went to her room with the knowl- edge that she had made a mistake, She might as well have lived her year of life to the fullest—the cost would be the same, She had not started to get her- self settled, her things unpacked and put away, before there was a rap on her door and she opened it to sce Chiri Mond standing in the hall. “I know I'm rushing you,” the girl said before Virginia could re cover from her surprise sufficiently to speak. “But I wanted to talk to you before you saw Niel.” Virginia stepped back and held the door open for her to enter. Chiri came in, pulled off her hat, tossed it onto the bed, rubbed up her shaggy bob and settled herself in the only comfortable chair in the room before she sald another word, Then she asked for a cigaret. “I’m sorry,” Virginia said. haven't an: “You wouldn't,” the other re turned. “Well, I won't be able to get it across quite so well without a smoke, but I think it's for the good of all hands to have it out.” She crossed her knees and threw herself back in the chair while she regarded Virginia with a set grin, Virginia’ poised herself on the edge of the bed, near the end, and leaned on the footboard. - She knew intuitively that Chirt ‘* had not come hero at this hour for any Ight purpose. It must concern Niel. They had nothing else in common. Virginia decided not to tell her that she already bad seen him. “I dare say Niel hasn't written . you anything about it,” Chirl be gan. “Well, things have changed since you went on your delightful southern cruise, Miss Brewster.” (To Be Continued) hot with strawberries and cream. The batter should be ordinary waffles. STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE Hot biscuits, split and buttered well, make idea: individual straw- berry shorte when covered with crushed berries and sugar. DRESSED-UP CLOSETS Why not dress up your closets in spring? A light ‘agri either buff, pale green or pink is good. Paint sweeter than |m your hangers too. And cretonne |the water in which vegetables have cheese dressing on lettuce. slipper, clothes and hat Lags can be|been cooked, when seasoned with le very inexpensively. butter and pepper. GREEN PEAS SUMMER CURTAINS bi Fresh green peas have a much| Inexpensive tan cotton curtains,- sweeter, more toothsome taste if|put on rods outside bedroom doors, one cooks « few of the tender pods | permit the doors to be left open for_ with them, or cooks a few leaves |air nights and yet insure privacy. of lettuce over the top. ry — CRANBERY SALAD SUMMER SOUPS An appetizing salad to serve with Hot err ever a good luncheon spring chicken is made by slicing a dish, should be of the thin variety | jar of cranberry jelly in thin por-? for summer. Nothing is better than|tions and serving with a cream OUT OUR WAY, UKE YOU? win, vou DUMB ONION, tHE ORDERED You cur THETS | WHT Yur HEFTOH 0O om TRANILLAMS (OSB. U.G. PAT. CFF. O11 MOM’N POP AWNELL SPEAK OF THE Pepa WERE COMES Mom } SHE WAS A GUSHING ABOUT TWAT 'O HER FACE. MS FRIENDS SWING ALL BEEN * ‘JUST Too DAQUNGLY ~ INTERESTED OVER. THE RETURN OF HER GIRLHOOD ROMEO. . Bruce DANGERFIELD - BVT wen \ CHIN WAGGING AMONG “INEM. SELVES , MEY ANOTHER Ciwe Among the Doubters NES. You'd Twn \ THERE'S URS. 1 QUPPOSE SHE'LL START/ FLAPPER BY THE WAN | SNIPPY BLUFFER