The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 22, 1928, Page 7

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" FOR SALE—One Winchester 12 ga. pl 151-1 ' FOR OR RENT— Well furnished front WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1928 Tribune Classified Advertisements —= PRONE 32=—— MALE HELP WANTED wants travel- ing Salesman-Auditor. Solicit contracts. Appoint sub-agents. $100.00 weekly. Give references. INTERNATIONAL, 2356 Mills Bidg., San Francisco. YOUNG MAN with several years experience in bookkeeving and general office work, desires per- manent position. Phone 161-W WANTED—Licensed barber at the hotel and pool hall at Baldwin. Write Sam Hanson, Baldwin, N. D. ANTED—Young man with car for Gre a ea _Ask for’ Mr. Vine, Grand Pacific hotel, city. AUTOMOBILE salesman wanted. Inquire of New Salem Mercantile Co., New Salem, N. D. FEMALE HELP WANTED WANTED—German speaking sales- woman for A le gore department. Only those of -xperience need apply. State eae and give references in first aes Address Tribune, care of Ad. 3 ANT! Serena 0) for general housework. No laundry. Anyone not competent need not apply. Write Tribune Ad No. 34. MINETTE BEAUTY SCHOOL. Write for information. More jositions open than we can fill. 66 1-2 Broadway. Fargo, No Dak. WANTED--Girl for general house- work. One who can care for baby. Phone 959 or call at 718 Third street. @OUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—Large, beautiful Bis- marck residence, centrally located, with large grounds and lots of trees and shrubs. House is strict- ly modern and everything both in- side and out is kept in spic and span condition. Two car garag Might accept, as part payment, if} desired Burleigh County unim proved land. Be sure to see this property if you are looking for a home. Address Ad No. | ¢-o Tribune. FOR 8A Seven-room ho’ | Modern in every way, including! heated gartge, full baser:ent. One of the best built homes in Lis- marck. On pavement, shrubbery and good lawn, always kept in best condition. Excellent location. Well furnished. May be pur- * chased with or without furniture, direct from owner. For informa- tion write Ad 28, c-o Tribune. FOR SALE—Eig! mm modern home in good condition, lot 150 x 50, close in, east front, garage room for three cars. Priced rea- sonably. Call 608 Third street. AUTOMOBILES: FOR SALE—28 passenger bus, dual wheels, four speeds, suitable for wheat hauling, gravel, lumber,| passengers,. most any purpose,/ 7-36x6 splendid tires. Cost $10,000. | Would consider car in trade, very cheap. A little more than the’ cost of the tires. C. C. Hibbs, | Lucas Block, Bismarck, Nv. Dak. | FOR SALE—1925 Ford coupe in| ition. Phone 1452. ll ¥OR SALENew 1088 Tudor Ford| for cash only. Call 518-R. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE—26 H. P. Advance} steam engine, ren earls ey Grain Separator in good umley 28x44 Separator with eee Oil Pull 16-80 engine. Separator in Alshape. G. J. Kundert, Exam- iner, Northville, So. Dak. WANTED TO TRAUE OR Shit— Hotel at Kulm, N. D. Good pay ing proposition, five lozation. G terms in seliing. Write! Matt Clooten, Kulm, F'ull infor- mation will be given. WE REPAIR all makes of sewing machines at reasonable prices. Needles, parts and supplies for all makes. Singer Sewing Machine Shop. Phone 254 or eall at 210 Broadway. | shotgun, shells, waders, vests, one high chair, two one library lam Ls 108 Ave FOR SALE--O:.: 15-30 gas tractor or will consider using same with. separator for threshing seeson. Phone No. 810. _Scett Cameron. E—A range in good con- dition. Call at 612 Ninth street or phone 302. FOR SALE—Girls’ coats. Call at 800 Ave. B. or phone 1257. FOR SALE—Casting box. Cheap. Trib Inquire office. WANTED TO RENT WANTED TO RENT—A_modern five or six room aouse. Close in. Write Tribune, c-o Ad No. 38; WANTED TO RENT by Sept. 1 or i a small modern home. Call 5 fi : ——_—————— FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR SALE OR TRADE—32-58 Case Separator and 20H. P. Case an gine in first class condition. A Pars Harry Robb, Garden City, LIST YOUR PROPERTY FOR SALE or exchange, as we have buyers, also clients who will ex- change. L. Van Hook, : No, 12 Lueas Block. Phone No. 289. ROOMS FOR RENT ROOM FOR RENT—In modern new on car line, two blocks frcm Grand Pacific Hotel, Always bot water. Gentlemen _ preferred. Phone 120-R, or reall at 503 Fourth st FOR RENT=Two Tayge unfurnished light housekeeping rooms in | ern home. Close in. Call at 2! W. Broadway. modern home. Hot water heat. oa reg 404 Tenth st eet or phone, f YOR RENT— a Tarniahed | sleeping room hone call at G23 Bish Ste or hone 1151-R. ith kitehenette and. closct. aac Fifth St., or phone 273. FOR RENT—Lig housekeeping rooms, unfurni . Call at 418) First. ed pone In- caizw at ALA Flee tooo! | 4 Classified Advertising Rates Effective Jan. 3, 1928 1 insertion, 25 words - 2 insertions, 25 words or under 8 insertions, 25. words or under ............ 6 1 week, 25 words or under . 15 Ads over 25 words, 3c addi- tional 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 a ‘TH BISMARCK "TRuBuN E PHONE 32 WORK WANTED LET ACK’S Raciator Shop clean ovt or r ir that leaky or loss 1 radiate anteed_and WANTED—To repair, ae or re- model ladies’ and gentlemen's fur | garments. 507 Third street. Erstram. FOR SALE FIVE ROOM NEW MODERN stucco bungalew, hardwood floors, fire placs, double farage, very good Iccation. Sale p-ice $6750. Terms. Mrs, Mattie SIX ROOM MODERN :V. ) STORY | house, hardwood fiovrs, tire piace, south front, west end. Sale price $6500.00, Gocd terms, "IVE ROOM MODERN BUNGA- low, hardwood floors, built-in fea- tures, basement garage, good con- dition. Sale price $4700. Easy} terms, EIGHT ROOM MODERN, TWO story house, hardwood floors and trim, hot water heat, fire place, bailt-in f. tures, sido garage. Terms. THIS AGENCY HAS A LARGE number of very desirable lots and houses at all prices and can sat- isfy any buyer. HEDDEN REAL ESTATE AGENCY Webb Block Sale price ,$7850. Phone 0. - BARGAINS in used furniture all bebe eee | Serpe Furniture Co. Mandan, Phone 926-J or call at! {FOR RENT—Modern seven room South frent, out; modious and convenient. APARTMENTS FOR RENT—Apartment, three rooms and private bath, city heat. For sal Heating stove bed with mattress and springs, most new, tennis racket and an oak kitchen cabinet. Phone 905 after 5:00 p. m. FOR RENT—Furnished apartment. 7 Laurain Apartments. Phone | te, For RENTS Modern three room hpi with kitchenette. Phone FURNITURE FOR SALE FOR SALE—Deak, chair, rs, dining ta'le and’ chairs, buffet, corner china closet, tables, Simon's bed, commoe and glass, and pier er sewing machine. an a 819 Fifth stre:t or phone 242 ing Foo furniture and "ynitcellaneous ar- ho Call at 300 Av ba or phone Fo ex Household artie es, such as China closet, Mason jai electric washer, ete.” Call at’ 223 Thayer. furniture. ESTATE FOR SALE _ house by September first, hot wa- ter heat, suitable for roomi house. Must be seen to be ap- preciated. Phone 1419-W or call at 206 West Thayer. PERSON’ 4L WANTED—Information for busi- ness matters, as to address of Mrs. Margaret Moore, who has been a resident of Butte, Montana. Kindly submit same by writing Bismarck Tribune, eare of ad No. 39. Will give reward. a a GARAG™ FOR RENT GARAGE FOR RENT—$3.00 per month, 1300 Thayer street. Call 294, NEW BAGS New purses for autumn are com- Pouches are longer and narrower, envelopes are nearer square. Both are apt to have outside pockets for cigarvis and) carfare, FLAKY CRUST A squeeze of lemon juice, or a quarter teaspoonful of vinegar} jmixed with a few drops of olive oil and added to the water used to mix, pastry makes it flakier. om a amt rm Pen 3 modern ;* Is HAS HAPPENED Se’ had "once retuned. to, mar beeause he wan poor. 8 micets and marries CVRUS LOR nd. Rod young MARCO PALMER to re- tallate, merely co swimming explanation, ai Lila has won try to find him -wit Bertie Lou ohsaine acek forget- fulness in Marco's gay z ered: Shs nerv. begs her nad she te emptied by ut tells him that ahe still loves Rod. ; NOW..GO ON WITH THE sToRY CHAPTER XLI arco sald good night to Bertie Lou with great reluctance. He thought she was really fll and necded the attention of a physician. But Bertie Lou would not consent » to have him take her to the doctor who had attended her during her nervous breakdown, as he wished to do.” gan “Let’s just stop at the hospital a minute,” Marco pleaded when they got back to the city. “No, no. I'm all right,” Bertie Lou protested. Marco did not be- Aleve her, She looked so tortured, with a wild, feverish Nght in her eyes, and @ heartbreaking way of - pressing her finget-tips to her: ps, as though to Pe back a cry of anguish, * “You shouldn't have coms, out today.” Marco told ber reproach: fully, “Buying that house was too _ much for you, Bertie Lou. ‘Of course it’s your own affair, but that sort of sentimental indulgence is worse for you than the kind of “things you say you won't 0, aoy more.” * Marco. spoke harshly. It aw noyed him that Bertie Lou wouldn't take bim Into her confidence about the house, He could guess that It meant something close to her heart. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE YOUNG AND OLD RIFLE EXPERTS | READY FOR SET; Camp Perry, 0—( bead Ab ad who sq aoe sights bs ted “no man's ead and youths still their ’teens will test their eyes and |t2 nerves in the only sport spont by an act of congress, the national fambe se aa which open here Sep- mber A city of tents on the shore of Lake Erie will shelter between 3,000 and 5,000 marksmen, who come here each year from civilian and military. life to contest for the dozens of trophies worth a king’s ransom. thousand competed last year. Boys who buy their small rifles with money earned selling papers exchange Siloghessinad with grizzled experts of the army. navy and ma- rine corps; or civilian sportsmen who carry special Swiss rifles with German “scopes.” Captain J. L. Tupper of the ine fantry team which won the national rifle match last year will be on the line again this year when the “com- pag firing” teal is given. Last year Tupper registered 20 bullseyes at 1,000 yards. He is one of the oldest marksmen in point of service, with a record of 20 years behind the army rifle. He is a native of Cali- fornia, but now is stationed at Fort: Williams, Me. Sergeant W. F. Bissenden of the infantry team, who turned in a score of 294 out of a possible 300 over several difficult ranges, will come up from Fort Moultrie, S. C. He holds the world’s record. The president’s match, which at- tracted 1,371 entrants last year, again will assemble the cream o: is awarded by the president. Other’ matches for the two-week period include the marine corps cup, the navy cup, national individual rifle, National Rifle association members’ match. Leech cup, Wimble- don cup, individual Palma, cham- pionship regimental, and the Nation- al Rifle association rapid-fire cham- piorship. f Menus For the ] B Family BY SISTER MARY Breakfast — Cantaloupe, cereal, cream, potato omelet, radishes, prune muffins, milk, coffee. tte eid tan cold boiled hem, po! salad, blueberry batter pud- ding, milk, tes. Dinner — Boiled calf’s tongue, ‘steamed spinach, creamed carrots, : peach and oe sherbet, sponge ‘cake, milk, co’ Season the sauce for the carrots TOUT Nan nmni0£7, with.a bit of mustard, ae spoon for 1% cu ets the mustard thoroughly with salt and die blending. Mustard gives 8) istinctive flavor to the sauce which is. Pusey pleasing with young carrots. Serve the tonguc on a bed of; spinach well seasoned with lemon juice and butte.. Blueberry Batter Pudding Two cups flour, % teaspoon salt, in| field sugar, 2 e 2 cups milk, 2 ee Ons os 2 cups washed berries. Mix and sift Tien, salt anc sugar. Beat eggs until very light, Heogps | in milk. Add to dry ingredients an beat hard with egg beater. Beat un- til batter is full of bubbles. Add berries and turn into a bifttered pudding pan. Dot with bits of but- ter and bake ‘orty minutes in a hot oven. Serve with hard sauce: (Copyrigh:, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) Sealed bida for 100 ore oF less, Lignite coal will be Téceived at the Clerk's Office in Arena, N. Dak. The Board reserves the Fight to’ reject any or all bi hh day of August at Dated this i Arena, N. Dak. ans. RUTH LAMBERT, Clerk meee School Dist. 30., a; ate He ee 25+27-28-29-30-31 NOTICE or mtanGn FORE- Notice Is Here! oy Given that that certain mortgage executed and deliv- ered by Marie Morrow, a_ single woman, as mortgagor, to the Farmers & Merchants State Bank of Dris & corporation, as mortgagee, dated the 22nd day of October, Si9i7 4 [filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh Couaty. North Dakota, on November 26t 1917, at nine ‘o'clock A.M. in Book 1150 ‘of Mortgages at Page 89. and which mortgage was on the 5th day of December, 1917, assigned to the Northwestern Fire’ & Marine Ingur- jance Company, of Minneapolis, Min- Resota, which assignment w j29th day of September, 1: o'clock “A M. recorded in of the Register of Deeds Book 139 of Assignments at Page 291, will be foreclosed by a sale of the mortgaged in such morte: which are hereinafter descr! which sale will take place ai front door of the Courthouse in the City of Bismarck, County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, at the hour of three o'clock in the s{ternoan of the 22nd day of September, 1928, to satisfy the amount on such mortgage on the day of 8 with the costs of thin forecioy Tho premisen described a Mortgage and which will be sold t satisfy the same are situated in the County of Burlelgh, State of North akota, and described an the South- west Quarter of Section 26 in Town- ship 141 North of Range 77 West of the Sth P.M. There will be due on said mortgage at the date «f sule the sum of $1177.7 NORTHWESTERN FIRE & MANNE Peace of Minneapolis, Minnesota, Assignee of Mortgagee. Dated Aug. 11th, 1928. sicIntyre, Burtness & Robbins, Attor- "Ba for Assignee, Grand Forks. 19 - we ee pnoetasen vene- t RE | w hereas, 4 deraulte has heen made in VE EFUK 1 WO jJazzing, youth-squandering life they had been leading. It would give him a strong factor in favor of his marriage to her when the time came to talk to his father about it. But he wished that: his reason for being pleased was the same as her reason for changing. Wished it had been for him that she'd settled down to live quietly and not for some secret cause. A cause that had to do with another man, no doubt. He suspected, of course, that the man was her husband. The suspl- cion prodded him to harshness. Then, too, he dreaded leaving Ber- tie Lou without someone to look after her during the night. He remembered; with a pang of remorse, that it had been he who had made it possible for her to follow the health-wrecking road that leads from pleasure haunt to pleasure haunt. He thought of that day on the train when he'd met her for the first time. She had been aloof, unwilling to promise a future meet- ing. He'd never expected to hear from her again, . . r was easy to guess now, in the face of his greater knowledge of her, that she had been driven by unhappiness to seek his companion- ship. She could, he offered in his own defense, have found another willing courier on her voyage to a hospital cot. But—and this was what troubled his conseience— there had been times along the way when her spirit had lagged and her feet had grown weary—times when he knew she was tired of the brittle hollowness of their contact with a world of incandescent radi- ance, mad music, and “don’t care,” People. . Close to her laughter had been honest tears. Her dancing feet had wanted to stop. And Marco had known it. He admitted, to him- self, that he had known it. And now it troubled him that ke had urged her on, piqued her when he could, done everything, in fact. that he could think of to keop ‘her going. He had always liked her, from the start of their friendship. He hadn't wanted her to drop out. “You'ro in no condition to be left | | alone,’ burst forth crossly.. scek- ing, in @ golicitude for her, to put fovp is troublcsomie ‘scl? scarch- Ing. Bertie Lou’s nerves were begin- ning to cover her body with the feel of @ fine nctwork of scaring wires, She knew what that meant. The hospital cot.egain. Somehow she must hang on, must keep calm. Marco had been right. Tho emo- tional crisis she had undergone in buying tho house of Rod's dreams had upset her. No, {t was Marco himself, with his unending desire to marry her. She knew better, Marco, It was her clear. Dear.God, couldn It wasn't ‘And be was oo of her inter. | get ests, Ip réality be was gyatified at ‘the change in ber—the way she was turning her back on the drinking. she had only to think a little fur- ther to feel Rod’s kisses upon her hair, her eyes, her lips. Sweet, the hour of youth... . eee arco was saying something. She would not listen. Why try not te relieve her brief joy when it was impossible to dorget it? Marco would be talking sense, and there was no sense in the world, She could not tgnore him, though; she must not. If she sank 80 far into the past as to forget ‘ely she might lose con- She felt as if she could sink into a stupor from sheer in- ability to let go her poignant re membrance. Marco would rush her off to the hospital. ning she would be better. It ad never been quite so bad before —this looking backward. Induced by imagination. of course. She had pictured, too unenduringly, herself with Rod in the little house at Moonfields. But {t must be dispelled, this mood of black regrets for a dead past. She must not be silly. Per- haps . . . if she had word of Rod + + . tomorrow she would do what she had resisted doing many times « + « she would telephone to Cyrus Loree. She could disguise her voice . . . oh, she would not have him speaking of it to Lila. . . Lila would carry it to Rod. Cyrus might tell her what Rod was doing, it she. pretended to be a friend from Wayville. She knew Rod was not workiag for Cyrus. Her mother had told her that much. But no ome who would have told her more about him seemed to know. Molly, she was sure, could have given her some information had she wished. Bertie Lou had suffered over mele attitude; it indicated that Rod ‘had made unkind remarks about her. That was hard to be eve, though. Rod had never been contemptible. Hadn't hé though? Since he'd fallen under Lila’s in- fluence. Still, Molly never had Mked her. It did not need an effort on Rod’s part to make her more unfriendly. Bertie. Lou was buoyed up by the promjse te herself to try to get word of It-was s comfort she bad stoically denied herself, but now that she had made up’ her mind to it, she felt better, in spite of the bruise she knew it would be to her pride to risk having Lils or Nod guess that the call had come from her. eee SHE turned to Marco, and he glanccd up from his steering long enough to seo that grown calmer. There had been @ silence of’ many minutes since his last remark to her.” “I'm out of it now,” she’ said quietly, “What the Wcvil was the matter with you?” ho replied peevishly. She'had glyen him 9 good _“&. touch ‘of rd Eatery she ‘him, Marco did mot Ifke what she gaid: becguéo fe did not be ‘| Hove tt, but be ®as too much ip from, e crucible wherein burned hér chance for banpiness. And then : .; love with her to express his doubt, He knew. he, bed no ” Jealousy. Bette Low If she gained her bed . . . by} ’<&y RUTH DEWEY GROVES ©1:2228%,. couraged him to think she loved him. When he left her at the door of her rooming house he gazed very earnestly into her eyes. Bertie Lou put out a hand to say good- night. Marco took it and did not let it go. “I wish you would let me take - care of you,” he said. “This is so dumb, Bertie Lou; your living in a place like this.” “Maybe it is,” Bertie Lou re turned with a wistful emile, “but just now, just this minute, Marco, I'm glad I didn't listen to you.” She was thinking of the call she was going to make the next day— the telephone call to Cyrus Loree. There was no hope of a reconcilla- tion with Rod. e wasn't sure that she could love the man Lila had made of him as she had loved him when he was her ideal—but still she found a faint measure of hap- Piness in being unchanged her- self; in being the same Bertie Lou that Rod had married. A miracle might happen—she did not expect it to, but it might. Cyrus could tell her something fine of Rod, It might be a mistake about him and Lila. It might be. And then she would be so indescribably, so deliriously, happy that she had not said yes to Marco, She laughed at herself as she un- ressed for bed, laughed and called herself a little fool. It was a sad sound, her laughter. And partly on account of Marce. She hated te treat him shabbily, keep him hang- ing on until she made up her mind. Her mind wes made up! Why had she thought sueh a thing? eee Beate LOU lay long awake. asking herself questions. And she found that under all her eur- face denials, and even her joy in being free to dream impossible dreams of a reunion with Red, there was a@ feeling of satisfaction in her heart over knowing that Marco stood by to take her out of her hall bedroom whenever she was ready to leave it. It made her feel like a cheat. To be subconsciously leaning upon his love, while professing her deter- mination not to accept it, was de ceittul, she realized. She broke the next engagement she had with co. She told him over the telephone that she would not sge him again. Marco worked up @ little huff over it. A huff that lasted geveral days, during which time he made ne attempt to see her. Bertie Lou went back to work. She was in @ dual state of firm- ness and softness. She would be firm about Marco, but she was ex: tremely tender over the bouse she bed! wes building. It was to be the temple of @ ghostly love, i was dead. Her Rod, that The other? She would. Aa him. Cyrus had spoken very abruptly to her when she had telephoned and asked about Rod. She had given a fictitious name-and siid she _ was from Rod's home. And Cyrus had let her understand that he bad His tone was eo caustic, and short, that Bertie Lou had quickly hung up: So Cyrus had come to hate Rod PAGE = sarre | tion Seventeen 117). ia. T of the | Hun Forty-four (1 vel 'y-eight 178), Burl | Pepper and sift into sauce to insure! 0°” susie 18 tl that the certal cuted and delt ides a disbursemente. a8 mortgagor, ek sale. Dated Lisbon, N. D., August ‘th, The premises described in 1938. morteage and which, will be, sold: to THILLA HALLUS, patisty the namo are Gencribed as fol- | Kvell, Adama de wi Yor Mortrngess Livbos The * 8:8-15-22: mortgagee, dated ene vind ts ee. dated February 2nd, 1 and flea for tecord in the office of ad Register of vale of Burleigh County, North on_ February 6th, 1925, and recorded’ In Book ‘163° tie Alcorn rity ae lows, —_—. |OUT OUR WAY Mom oy om HA AAAH! DEE LISsHOuS WEN YOU PULL TN “OUR SHIRT DOWN N’ Ouch DEEPER HEROES ARE MADE —~NOT BORN. 088, U. 8. PaT.ory, Mrs. Snoop Comes Across By Cowan =NESOUR RECORDS SHOW “THAT A) YES T UNDERS S690" CHECK WS DRAWN ON US _/ “THAT PART OF IT, BY ‘BRUCE DANGERFIELD, In MR. DANGERFIELD FANOR OF “Tw BUTZ WoTEL? 1S MY COUSIN AND AS MR.DANGERFIELD AND WIRED MED HAD ‘NO KCCOUNT WITH US,IT | ATTEND TO The WAS RETURNED. BUT AS THE MATTER. JUST A SMECK WAS O.1CD BY PoP GUNN TM SURE— WILE GUS KETCHEM, THE DEMON SLEUTH, HAS PoP WIRING AEROPLANES “Tod RUN DOWN MNTHICAL CLUES as TO WE WHERE ABOUTS OF BRUCE DANGSRTELD- PRESTIGE GAMED THROUGH HER NOTORIOUS MILLIONAIRE, COUSIN 1S SUCH SWEET MUSIC To MRS.SNOOP'S EARS THAT SWE DECIDES To PROTECT WIS CREDIT Av ANY* COST, ENEN To THe EXTENT OF $ 690, 7 aw WS TREK DETECTUE .$ 690'! WELLAT'S WORTH IT! IF THAT EVER GOT AROUND ThE WHOLE NEIGHBORHOOD Bh WOULD GNE ME ThE MERRY RATLBERRY. \ AND SUST WHEN TM CONSIDERED IN THs. MULIONAIRE §=SET— : : ? | Freckles and His Friends The Contents Revealed! By Blosser |

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