The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 4, 1928, Page 7

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ARCK TRIBUNE \'. ESTATF FOR SA FOR SALE NEW BUNGALOW, 5 rooms and bre Lang full agigrerry Raed ment wii! rage. a dai jome. Price 34600-00, ‘Terms. : STUCCO HOUSE, modern, and ber, ber, all of Mohall. suit. Owner Siz Auto Sdentitieation and p ,000; vertising charges, or call at G10 First street. Tribune Classified Advertisements ota an HELP WANTED MALE 'N immediately to learn Bar- fession. Exceptional cppor- Free catalog, ville. Border Oil and Automotive coni- pany, Mohall, $25,000; 0. A. Schie-| Tore, NEW DRY CLEANING ESTAB- LISHMENT Mott.—The White City Cleaners is ithe name of the new dry cleaning establishment whicn was opened here, J. H. Walsh i Mr. Walsh has selected FOR SALE IVB ROOM NEW MODERN gh hi , oak floors, built-in ice box, gas stovée,. gas hot water laundry stove, many Classified Advertising Rates Moler Bar- ber tunity. Effective Jan. 3, 1928 ber College, Fargo, N. D. Mont. .. Butte, 1 insertion, 25 words é orerae OUT OUR WAY 2- insertions, 25 words 3 8 COTTAGE, six rooms and bath, hot water heat, oak floors, | t° ster, bailtla, features in kitchen, FEMALE HELP \ ED WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral housework in ome where er :. away 8 hours during the or. Must like and understand children. Call 978-W after 6 p. m. vy mpetent maid for general housework, No cooking. hone 902 .r call at 802 Ave. B. HIGH SCHOOL girl wants place to work for room and board. Write R. 1, Box 3, Timmer, N. : WANTED—-Gin for general house work. One who cares for children. Call at 314 West Rosser. mpetent girl to assist with housework. Apply at 222 Third street, oe ‘WANTED—Experienced waitress at the Patterson Hotel. Apply at kitchen, SALESMEN “SALESMEN AND SOLICITORS” WANTED SALES MANAGERS—Our son is just starting, we ha lendid openings for salesmen and sales managers who have a record of being a producer. Wi make attractive offer to those that can qualify. Sales Manager, 205 oboe Bidg., Minneapolis, inn, POSITION WANTED YCUNG MAN with several years experience in bookkeeping and general office work, desires ee manent position. Phone 463-W. eee ene aaa ene ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Furnishea - sleeping room suitable for one or two lad- ies, must be seen to be mppresianes: Furhished to appeal. Close in. Call at 315 Mandan street. Phone 733-W. FOR RENT—Two large unfurnished rooms suitable for a two room apt. or two, one room apts. in mod- ern home. Phone 1426 or call at 109 Mandan Ave. BURNISHED ROOMS—Clean and attractive in modern home. Rent very reasonable. Telephone 905-R or call at 413 Ninth street. after 5:00 p. m. FoR RENT—Newly fu: ed front sleeping room with large closet, bath adjoining in private modern home. Call at 600 Tenth street. FOR RENT—Large sleeping room with private lavatory and toilet, suitable for two teachers. Call at 608 Fifth street or phone 1053, FOR RENT—One furnished sleep- ing room in all modern home with | 2 or without board. Close in. at 120 Ave. A or phone 983: FOR RENT—Modern furnished Call room in new home, suitable for| one of two, Call at 716 Third street or phone 1274, FOR RENT—Nicely furnished leeping room in strictly modern home. Call at 623 Sixth St., or hone 1151-R. FOR RENT—Furnished _ sleeping room in modern home. Gentlemen only. Call at 415 Fourth street or phone 1152, FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in modern home. Hot water heat. Call at 404 Tenth st eet or phone _745-W. poe FOR RENT—Well lighted furnished room on car line, $15.00 per month. Apply 706 Fourth street. FOR RENT—Well furnished front room with kitchenette and closct. __Call at 411 Fifth St., or phone 273, FOR RENT—Nicely furnished ing room in modern home. if. Call at 404 First street. 'T—One furnished for light housekeeping. Call at 411 Eighth street. RENT—One small furnished room in odern home. Close in. Call at 219 Seventh street. FOR HENT—Nicely rurnished sleep- ing roe i) in i home. Close in nat arenet, For RENT—Sleeping room in mod- ern home. Call at 606 Ave. A or| phone 796. a APARTMENTS FOR RENT—Furnished light house- keeping apartments in modern homé. Alco for sale: Dining room furniture in good condition, Call at@i4 Eighth street. : FOR RENT—Furnished and unfur-| & ished FURNISHED or unfurnished ‘apart- ments at Varney Apartments. Phone 773. ‘OR RENT—Furnished apartments. Call 1100 Broadway or Phone 129- FOR RENT—Furnished apartment. i Laurain Apartments. Phone § FOR RENT—Modern apartment, one 180. L. K. Thompson. _ YOR RENT Completely fostobet apartment. 980 Fourth street, eS GOUSES AND FLATS LE—! : Modern i nt 7 sou a a of the ‘beat uit homes in, Bis-| | marck. On 7 room house, Double garage. Located|: vement across from school, Buildings and premise. in very g00d condition. For information write Bax 81, Bism:rek. N lnk, ji —Kive room mouern tur nished b-tse. Vhone 1218 Roo call at 805 Third xtreet. large room un-| or under ane 3 insertions, 25 words 1 week, 25 words or under seeeee 145 Ads over 25 words, Se addi- tional per word CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES 90 Cents Per Inch All classified ads are cash in advance. Copy shbuld be re- ceived by 9 o'clock to insure insertion same day. : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 32 MISCELLANEOUS WANTED TO TRAUVE OR SELU— Hotel at Kulm, N. D. Gond-pay- ing proposition, fiue location. Good terms in seliing. Write Matt Clooten, Kulm. Full infor- <_mation will be given. WANTED TO BUY—Small grocery or confectionery store in small live town. Write Bismarck Trib- une, care of Ad. No. 49. FOR SALE—Millinery business, in-| cluding stock and_ fixtures. In-} quire Nielsen’s Millinery, Bis- marck, N. Tak. FOR SALE—12 guage Winchester ump gun with leather case. F. C. __Ellsworth, ‘Phone 795-R or 32. STRAYED—One Hereford heifer with horns, weight about 1000 Ibs. Notify State Penitentiary. FOR SALE—3 or 4. bottom used plow, good as new. Western Auto Co. indan, N. : < FOR SALE—Casting box. Cheap. Inquire at Tribune office. FOR SALE—7x9 Umbrella tent $14. rtitioned basement, basement " Sale price $4700.00. Small ‘First ‘payment FIVE ROOM NEW MODERN bungalow, oak fie built-in fea- tures, full partitioned basement, | ent garage, immediate posses $4900.00. Small first payment. SIX ROOM MODERN HOUSE, two story, hardwood floors, fire- lace, built-in features, furnace Feat. Price $6800.00. Very good terms, : A in ie] pacha) taht Liles five tooms, Jarge closets, ho’ water heat, hardwood fl loors_ and trim, fireplace. Salé price $7850. Terms, HEDDEN REAL ESTATE AGENCY Fhone 0. SN ements ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room suitable for One or two young ladies. Convenient to capitol or school. Call at 314 Ave. D or phone 1222-J. FOR RENT—Nice large room one block from postoffice, would be de- sirable for scheol teacher. Call at 218 Second street. ROOM FOR RENT with light houre- keeping privileges. Phone 122-M. ee ae ene FOR EXCHANGE : FOR TRADE—Ramsey county quar- ter section clear, residential property or other land to apply as part paymént. Will assume small mortgage. Write Tribune, care of Ad. No. 50. FOR SALE—Packard 4-door sedan, Webb Block Roy Neff, 710 Seventh street, my cern | TH roads about Devens and into Ayer were dusty, and not con- ducive to romance, but beyond the camp an orchard stretched where leafy apple trees made welcome shadows. A little away from the rest stood a gnarled old tree with twisted limbs and a crotch where two could sit and love. Beneath its shade the lovers clung. “Darling, darling... .”, When he kissed her, he felt her tears on his lips—salty, tangy—bittersweet. “Darling! DARLING!” He said it over and over. ‘ “How old are you, Sybil?” “Eighteen,” she told him. “So young,” he whispered. “So little, and so young.” ah. “Old enough.” Her lips:against his ear were saying. “No, no, I can't.” He held her from him. “I might come back all shot up. I mightn’t come back at ” she, told .bim bravely, ‘d never forgive myself ff:I'd let you go like this.” ee He was kissing her ir. “Sybil—SYBIL!”" “Oh, John, I love you s0.” Before she went they had planned to be married that week. ~~ Sybil drove home with her head in a whirl and her heart full of warm gladness. John would get a furlough. Perhaps the family would let them have the place at Wianno for a few days. That would be lots more fun than a hotel or traveling. And she would get. breakfast mornings—popovers and muffins, and puffy omelets, golden brown. There would be won- derful days-on. the beach: And nights, gloriously long. ‘The would swim in the moonlight, and lie on the sands afterward. Syba had a private conviction that @ Week of love in June was worth @ whole month of {t in the wintertime... She bugged herselt ~ inwardly with ttle. saticipatory shivers. But presently her ecstacy vas shadowed py grim forebodings end the fears of a woman for her HIR COPYRIGHT 1928 4¥ NEA SERVICE INC. A-1 shape. Western Auto Co., Mandan, N. D. , somewhere. Oh, my dear, you mustn't take on like this! Don't sive up hope. Everything may be all. right.” 3 But Sybil knew better. “Ho's dead!” she shrieked’ through her tears. “Dead, I tell you! I know. He came to me in a dream, all blood. So I know, you see, that he is dead.” eee a the war life Nad been very gay for Sybil’s crowd. John Lawrence was 10 months missing then. “Presumably, dead,” the rec- ord said. Tad came -home, romantically bronzéd and “different” looking. Something about his eyes,‘gnd the stay streak that ran tl his hair. He was very sweet to Sybil, and talked to her of “deathless glory” and “heritages.” He gave her a bit of verge of Alfred Noyes’ that he had clipped from an English paper in Paris, and Sybil carried it in her purse until it crumWed to pieces, Byt all the time she knew it was a Grand Pretense, The world was full of noble words and fine Phrases. People thought they meant them, but they didn’t really. They could tell her; John died for hymanity till they were black in their faces, She knew he dida’t want to die for humanity, or glory, —or anything else. He wanted to lve—tor her. It wasn't. fair, All the talk about “sacred trusts” and “making the world safe for démoc- racy"! People coulds’t really mean it, or they wouldn't forget so soon. Nothing seemed to make mush dit. ference, except having a time. Everybody wanted a times i Even Tad. He looked so haad- gome in uniform, with bis swagger English cap and his silver shoulder bars. Tad had come & cap tain, with a Croiz de Guerre and two wound stripes. ore 3 was tremendously proud of and wanted him to go with her. She hated to have him get back to civies, but the second day home he went to his tailor for some new clothes. lor Bismarck |’. rch, Fara "wood ‘trim, east, fron’, well located. Price $4700.00. Terms. NEW BUNGALOW, :‘ucco, five rooms an bath, five closets, built- in ice box and hitchen cabinet, full partitioned basement with addi- ional finished bed room. Garage, front and splendid lo¢ation. Price $5400.00. Terms. NEW HOUSE, stucco, six rooms and bath, hot ater heat, built-in fea- tures, garage attached to house, beautiful f'nish and wonderful home. E-st front, Trees. Price $7250.00 20; quick sale. Terms. OTHER eaually attractive hom for sale. Alsc have lots in any part of the city. Insurance of every form -vritten in good relia- ble companies. Money to loan. Phone 138, INVEST: 3 MORTGAGE SECUR- ITY COMPANY Office with Tirst Gucranty Bank. FURNITURE FOR SALE familton piano, also Standard banjo. Phone 1393 or write Ad. No. 51, care of Tribune. BENGAL Or'ental 9212 living room rug. Very reasonable. Phone 647 between F and 7 n,m BARGAINS in used furniture. Renetly Furniture Co., Mandan, SERV) LET ME haul your ashes and rub- bish. Service haat reasonable. Phone 734-R. Joe Eit PERSO IN ‘A. R. Hoffman, Hoffman" |: beloved. who, is In danger, “But ¥ will be brave,” shé vowed. “And I will make bim very. happy. Then, {fhe should have to go, I - Will send him with « smile.” ‘That night John Mebt entrained for’ -aniled, the next maldal Pie i asta : He LEFT a note for’ “It you knew how I hate the sight of the damn things!” he said ’, Poor Sybil, playing with dreams. Lawrence's feet doy at camp. A héstt-troken ‘ttle note, scribbled with Denci] on a sheet o ¥. worn so thin it-was falling Then Sybil put# in the box where there, a crushing sense of 4s it John Lawrence seo him again, ity came over her. As if that was the ifs it is i 38 Fi = Fi g #8 I i cn i 3 Fi ~ i BaF ff i | i I : E $ F g : E s “perished with his last crumbling <-protestation, and she: would sever And that night a cable came: + “Missing in eétion.” , They tried to buoy her up. To is their own fall ne . > Probably WANTED—Board in private family by girl going to high school. Write Tribune Ad. No. 47. tread, and gobs were household pets. It was eminently respectable for “nice” girls to scrape acquaint- ance with men fn uniform. The . Unless, of course, he happened to be incapacitated or looking for a job. Club’ women were beginning to get excited and talk reform: crime wave hit the. count: And éven the girls we crazy. They rolled their stockings, and checked their corsets wher they went to dances. Eventually they discarded them altogether, but that was not until later. “Cosmetics sprang into favor, and women in to make up like Jeze- bels. “The evils of the war” became a fort of slogan. Pi talked de- spairingly of “the youth of the land,”, an¢ wondered what they were going t6-do about it. Impor- tant persons were interviewed on what they thought of the Modern Girl. Desiring to be broadminded, they eulogized her, not knowing what it was all about. And, mean- time, éhe went from bad to worse. Someone had coined the ward Flapper. And the Flappers, little sisters to the War Brides, took to dressing exactly alike. They wore colored skirts of homespun, frayed &bout the ‘bottom, instead of hemmed. Brilliant little sweaters that they called slip-ons. Fiat- scled shoes—everyone, until then. had worn high heels. And large bats with fiat crowns clapped on the sides of their heads. They cut their bair and called it Castle ‘Clips, for Irene Castle, who had lost her own after a fever and wore mut she had left short of neces- ity. a . Brothers of the ex-service men ‘to gtow up. They were, for most part, a decadent lot, their deficiencies hasised. by con- trast. They called Parlor Snakes, Cake Haters and Loung Lis- @rds. At first they went in for skimpy, pinch-backed suits with high. Piaget Longs caltivaied 8 cartilage t valed the popular Debutante Slouch, and became Dancing Fools with long hair. When ft en of vale visited a changed ir sartorial effects embraced baggy Girls became independent. Mar- ‘women ‘who had found work “Young | “nobody'd. want . Ge @ sort of lover, and Tad hears veottal—ti infatuation. that Sybil, when he kis night, slapped his face him to go home to his wife. The colonel told it himself, in his cups. manner of foolish things. iy she took out a marriage license with Bunny Faxton. The intentions were printed that evening in the papers, and when reporters called at Thorne’ for pictures and a story Sybil met them calmly. thing we know,” Thorne, in her innocence. Own a car and pay as you ride. Our Budget Plan gives you immediate possession of a car you'll be proud of— FOR LITTLE CASH! 1923 Ford Touring, s snap at....... ++ $79.00 1925 Buick Standard Six Sedan, excellent buy $495.00 Lahr Motor Sales Co. Phone 490 IN ELEANOR EARLY cific things in a suit like that,” she said,—‘“and 1 may be an ef I'm not THAT kind of an egg. People knew of Colonel Bixby's But they knew, too, her one ind told To be sure, Sybil was doing One iy Place on Beacon Hill “There's nothing to it,” she an- nounced. “The crowd was drink- ing and they dared me. I'm awfully sorry and ashamed. But, truly, it was only a bet.” Of course, the papers played it up. There were front page stories and héadlines with Sybil's remark. © able statement in red ink. Mrs. Thorné wept, and Mr. Thorne raved. Even Tad showed cot cern. iderable con- “There are some things,” he told his sister, “that decent people draw the line at.” And for three days he treated her with cold disdain. eee OYALLY Tad defended her to their parents. “She's all right,”-he said. “She's only acting crazy. Grief has turned her head a little, I think.” “Sorrow should make @ woman finer,” reminded his father sternly, “It’s only fickle girls who take to cures such as Sybil has.”. “People will start. talking : first. wailed Mrs. At heart, Sybil was thoroughly miserable. “I think,” she told Tad, “that God really meant me to be a good sirl, I've made such an awful bungle trying to be bad.” Girls of her old crowd had be come the Younger Married Set. A for his businéss slogan, “The House of berv. “WHY MOTHERS Ger GRAY rovsnrer. THE BIG SUNDAY SPREAD. [mom POP 10 OK. & BUM CHECK For $690, PoP WRED SUS KETCHEM, & SLEUTH WHO LLWANS GETS HIS MANL "TO 2UN DANGERFIBLD To EARTH ~ GUS THEREUPON TOOK Por FoR aN AIRPLING RIDE 4D RUN Down & FAKE CLUE. THUS few years later they were the Younger Divorced Tad and Sybil were drifting apart... “We're a couple of eggs,” she told him affably one day. And stretching himself lazily, he retorted good naturedly: “You ere making a bit of @ fool of yourself, old girl. Why don't you marry Craig Newhall?” People that summer had come to regard young Newhall as Sybil's particular property. Most girls would bave been delighted at the assumption, for Craig'was probably the most eligible bachelor in Bos ton. Hitter because he was-ex-~ ceptionally clever, or because of his frréproachable social connections he had been admitted, following his graduation trom Harvard, to mem- bership in the finest legal frm in the city. He was long and thin and brown Ike coffee with cream in it. And is eyes were amazingly blue. When he looked at her contemplatively, Sybil always thought of @ bit of - 8 Jingle: “Blue was the sky, blué as your eye Which is the terrible reason why It's easy to live, and bard to die.” a she glanced curiously: at. “Why, Taddy,” sho ‘parried, to marry me. I'm to tell (To Be Continged) Bydit Nad come te accept Crety 4 gbe paused. How pork, Ye a, ven ih Sis 8 her brother? in the ‘heat NOW “Hey RE OFF Jo CHURCH — L cAN PICK OP fo Raitliams © 1820, ey wea semvice, mc. It’ WAT MILLIONAIRE: FOLLOWED, | coed OF WIS » GUS KETHEM ano ‘we PILOT ESCAPED But PoP TURNEO UP WSSING, LiKE A O' NOU, DANO a Sue Piney ee Nee [| DAVYSON SAME AS _ME--WAL, THESE wis at A

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