The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 25, 1928, Page 11

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} HELP WANTED MALE ee ta man to operate coal mine, ied man preferred. Steady work, beginning at once. House furnished. Write Tribune Ad. No. 2. Pa esas LEARN Barbering during winter months, big demand, good wages. Free catalog. Moler Barber Col- Fargo, N. D.-Butte. Mont. WANTED—You: man for, book- keeping and office work. Apply at Stary Bismarck. FEMALE HELP WANTED. _ WANTED—KEither High School or Business College girl to work for + board and room, in good home. Close to high school. ‘all at 6: Eighth street after 5:00 p. m. Mrs. general house- family of two Mrs. 0. W. 0. work, good cook, adults. Good wages. Roberts, 117: Main Ave. Phone 751. WANTED—Girl for housework. One who can go home. nights. Do not phone, “Call at 201 First WANTED—Competent g: eral housework. Must like chil- _ dren, Call at 314 W. Rosser, WANTED—Competent maid for eneral housework. Call at 826 ifth street, _APARTMENTS FOR RENT—Newly decérated two * room apartment with closet. Con- vient to high school or capitol. Suitable for two ladies or man and wife. Also large sleeping room suitable for two. Call at 812} Seventh or phone 300-W. FOR RENT—Ore room, kitchenette and bath, unfurnished apartment in Tribune Bldg, $40.00 per month, Laundry waeee Write Trib- une Ad. No. 1 FOR RENT—Three room corner apartment. Furnished. Possession at once. The Laurain Apts. Phore WANTED—Furnished __ apartment, reagonably priced. Call at Mont- —Somery Ward & Co's. FOR RENT—Completely furnished apartment. Close in, Call at 120 est_Rosser. FOR RENT—Modern apartment in Tribune Bldg. Apply at Tribune. Phone 32. A ROOMS FOR RENT | FOK RENT—Nicely furnished front sleepint room on ground floor. Call at 411 Fifth street, Hazcl- _hurst. Phe ies 0 FOR RENT—W ished room with litch.yette for light house- keeping. Call 411 Fifth street or phone 273, FOR RENT—Furnished sleeping rooms in modern home. Call at 401 Ninth street. Phone 1156-J. FOR RENT- nished or unfur. nished room for light housekeep- ing. College Building. Phone 183. FOR RENT—One furnished sleeping room in modern home. Close in. __ Call at 219 Seventh street. BOR RENT—Two nicely furnished rooms. 113 Thayer Ave. Phone R RENT—Large, comfertable room, Phone 129i. 5 FOR RENT—Room at 406 Sixth street, Phone 431. ____ HOUSES AND FLATS _ FOR RENT—Four room modern house, suitable for couple. Only responsible parties need apply. Call at 309 Seventh street. FOR RENT—By Nov. 1st, all mod- ern 5 room house with bath. Fine condition, Gas range, Call at 112! bo EES alata aah FOR RENT—Strictly modern :tucco bungalow with eae, Tmniedi- _,ate possession. Phone 751 or 15 FOR RENT—Five room,house, 1313 Rosser street on Nov. Ist. Frank Krall, the Tailor on Fifth street. FOR RENT—Seven room modern thouse at 323 Twelfth street, Phone 1404-W. Dependable Used Cars 1927 Pontiac Sedan in good condi-j tion, good tires. z 1927 Studebaker Dictator Sedan with | mohair trim, 1926 Dodge Sedan with mohair trim, tires look like new. 1926 Dodge Sedan with leather trim, mechanical condition, finish and tires good. | | 1926 Dodge Business Coupe in good | condition. 1926 Buick Master Six Sedan. 1923 Ford Coupe 194 International Truck. Terms if desired. M. B. GILMAN CO. 7 Our guarantee protects you af. solutely. We know cars! At a low price we sell high grade cars that give good service. 1927 Star Sedan i 1924 Dodge Sedan i 1926 Overland Six Sedan { ee! Tribune Classified Advertisements PHONE 82 —=_— Classified Advertising Rates || Effective Jan. 3, 1928 | 1 insertion, 25 words .75 2 insertions, 25 words or under ....... Bk) 3 insertions, 25 words or under ............ 1.00 1 week, 25 words or CHE sateceas.. TAS Ads over 25 words, 3¢ 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 day. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 32 SALESMEN WANTED—Salesman, exclusive line. Sell business firms only, perman- ent position. weekly to hold ‘Bribune Ad. No. 100, FL dairies and ranches, feet. for free list. Beach & Son, Moore _Haven, Fla, FOR SALE—E 1-2 of 35-139-79, E 1-2 of 32-13: 1-2 Brown at Gussner’s Store. 1927 Chevrolet Grain Truck. Good ¢ 1926 Star overhauled, very fine and good rubber, 1927 Oakland Coach, fine shape and HUDSON Brougham. q SEVERAL cheaper cars, including Ford Tudors. terms. HEDAH ~ WANTED at once prac ly 85: PA 1 WANTED” TO BUY—Good feed oats, i | z 1925 Chrysler Touring with wiater enclosure. 1925 Hudson Coach Aires 1926 Overland 4-cylinder Sedan 'Fords—all models—$25 and up. Lahr Motor Sales Co. Phone 480. $80.00 Write Must make position. FARM LANDS LORIDA’S richest farms, gardens, Soil 2 to 15 Farm the year round. Write 79 and W 1-2 of W 33-189-79. Apply to Paul * FOR SALE condition, Six Coach, completely condition priced right. This car must be seer to be appreciated. We trade and give LM R Ce WANTED Tu BUY new truck. 1-W. RTY wants to buy a good bunga- low with three bed rooms, in a pe posation: Write Tribune Call Carl Scott, Wachter Transfer Co. + THIS HAS HAPPENED SYBIL THORNE, wi band was killed on divorce came to trial, velo} has been a victim of am- Wherr embered ma blank revived, pant that bad by years, He tells sy to be married, still Loves him, n fn bis arma, and kinses ... MABEL MOOK Foom unexpected! elr long friends! to remonstrate wi bexs her not to ri mance with Johi all she know: fe has been that he ts about me asks her if she t e her ently impossible for two Beople, who have lea}, to continue once was young Sybil revente Mal to call on John Lawrence at bis apartment that evening. "Th taken her child, rte, wtill amart- er Cale hos Won the heart of Httle KITTY BURNS, : NOW GO ON WITH THE sTORY CHAPTER LXV SYBIL Sot to her feet, laughing. “Here's Teddy,” she said. “We'd better be running along, Mab. It's past his bedtime. , . . Hello, Pre. Whose beautiful big boy are cloust you?” She caught him to her, and kissed his rosy cheeks, ‘ “Angel, child,” she told hfm bol emnly, “you're the most beautiful ++ And thing that ever lived... she kissed his small red nose. “May I give him a cookie, Sybil?” asked Mabel, “Tookie! Tookie!”. ‘elamored Teddy rapturously, He took it in both his hands, and smiling . beatifically above the crumbs, beamed on: Mabel, “Tanny.” he said. “Tan®y too.” “He wants some candy,” ex- Dlainod Sybil. “He's just like his mother—aren’t you, Previous? He's Bot to, eat life with. both hands, ssMab. .-. . No, darling=no candy, Say goodby to Aunty Mab, dear.” Mabel took him in: her arms. “Goodby, Teddy-boy. Come see your old aunty soon—and we'll| have some great big cookies, And candy, Teddy. Nice candy! Now give me a big bear bug, Itke a good boy—and the very best kiss you've ¢ Sot, Sweetheart.” The baby hugged her gleefully, and when she put ‘him down, he clung to her knees, and raised bis sticky lips for apother kiss. “You'll phone fomorrow, Sib?” “If you want me to.” Sybil was drawing on her gloves. “Don't touch, Teddy! Naughty. ‘Naughty,” She stood with her hand om the door. -“You've been brutally Mab. well.” ~ “Haven't 1 a right to be frank, Sib?”. frank, But 1 suppose you meant Way COPYRIGHT 1928 4Y NEA SERVICE WORK WANTED WANTED—To do alterations and. repairing ot ladies winter whe 0 Fifth street, Krall Tailor Shop, and dresses. Also relining. Mrs. J. Wentz. YOUNG MAN ‘w: corn, also a farm to take care of for the winter. Harry E. Knight, Bantry, N. D. GJRL WANTS light housewOrk on iss farm or in town. Hensen, Driscoll, N. as FURNITURE Fi FOR SALE—Simmons bed 695. __603-M. BARGAINS in used furniture. hoe Furniture Co.. Mandan, REAL ESTATE | SIX ROOM strictly modern _bunga- span, id not be re- low, east front, spick and basement garage; cou! placed for $6300.00. SEVEN ROOM modern house, well located, a bargain at $4000.000. FIVE ROOM'’strictly modern bunga- Pay- low, brand new, reasonable ments, $5000.00. FIVE ROOM modern bungalow, built five years ago for a home, clean and neat, just off paving, a bar- gain at $3800.00. FIVE ROOM modern bungalow, al- well built and most down town, warm, $5000.00. SIX ROOM house, large lot, improvements to worth $4000.00, only $2300.00. SEVEN ROOM modern house with basement garage, brand new, act- ually the best bargain in the city for $5200.00. FARM LANDS—The past few days sec- tions; today I have submitted of- fers on three other quarters and have sales pending on over twenty The land business is coming back, BUY NOW be- I have sold seven quarter other pieces. fore the real bargains are gone. INSURANCE—Fire, tornado, auto- mobile in good, old reliable com- ‘panies. DO YOUR REAL ESTATE BUSI- NESS with the busiest dealer in Over 2600 sales made without a complaint from any buy- the city. er. MY business is growing by times what it was a year ago. F. E. YOUNG. ants job husking Bertha “with Waysagless springs and mattress, $12.00, white ivory dressing table $15.00. Call at 807 Rosser. Phone with cost not over $500.00, this property would be leaps and bounds and is nearly four} South Carolina’s first “master }and two sons. maker.” footsteps. Lake is a “master Their eldest son already C.—(AP)—H. L, Lake , Aiken county farmers, have made the winning of state hon- MISCELLA US DIAMONDS direct from cutters and importers. The qualities are high and the prices extremely low. Cash or easy _paymi Wholesale or retail. For diamond engagement rings see James W. Marek. Ex- clusive diamond dealer. Office at 108 Third street, south Df Hotel Prince, Bismarck, FOR SALE—Choice Canary singers, imported German Rollers and Hartz Mountain, also native sing- ers. Cages, seeds, treats, ete. Phone 115-J, Jacob Bull, Dickin- son, Box 728, NAT L CASH REGISTERS— New and second hang. Over 500 styles and sizes. We have one to fit your business. W. E. Stitzel, representative. Patterson Hotel, Bismarck, N. D. FOR SALE—Two chair barber shop with bath. Good business. Rea- son for selling, have other plans. _Write Tribune Ad. No. 99. FOR SALE OR RENT—New six room house, hot water heat. For rent: Two new modern apart- ments. Phone 1250, g -| years’ salary when he took two gov-| to Cedar Rapids. the United States departmeni of | They bet and if Mullins loses he Ernest Sowerbutts of Manchester en; commerce, recently spent three | will pull a toy automobile from here jJoyed it so much he has decided ‘te: | Askew as loser | continue his residence there, (og | would do the. same. Mullins favors = | Smith, Askew Hoover. | TO THE POORHOUSE ernment officials to lunch. ADD ELECTION BETS —— ~ | Innocent Wife: What is this Sidney, Ia.—(®)—Ed_ Mullins, | LIKES NERVE CURE iticket, darling? mayor of Thurman, and H. H. As-| Newport, Isle of Wignht.—(?)—| Hubby: Only. a pawn ticket. kew, wealthy land owner, differ as|Living for seven years ig a small| Innocent Wife: hy didn’t Si to whether Governor Smith or Mr.| boat at a secluded spot on a river |get two, then we could both go?—- Hoover will carry New York state. | to rest_his_war-shattered nerves, | Passing Show. ' [our OUR WAY ~~ Y By Williams |. farm family,” H. L. Lake, his wife farmer,” his wife a “master home- has decided to follow his father’s {ors a family affair, Lake is a mas- ter farmer and Mrs. Lake is a mas- ter home-maker, These honors were awarded dur- ing the 1928 “farmers’ week” at Clemson college, the state agricul- tural college. First, Mrs. Lake was decorated as a master home--maker. She soon had to share congratula- tions with her husband, for when the master farmers were announced a day or so later his name was among them, They are the férst husband and wife in the state to win both honors, either the same year or at any time. Although they have reached the pinnacle of agricultural recognition, they plan further improvement of their farm, adoption of more modern methods and still greater income. They have two sons, the elder of which has decided to be a farmer. The other is too young to definitely select his vocation, ‘heir parents offer both the same advice, “What- ever you do, do it right.” OUTGO EXCEEDS INCOME Pensacola, Fla.—(#)—Perry Reed, who gets $1 a year as manager of the cooperative office of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce of earn LOST FOR RENT—Good garage 2 1-2 blocks from postoffice. Call after 6p. ae at 407 Third street. Phone 1052-M. LOST—Somewhere between Webbs store and postoffice, or from post- office and 4(: First street, a dark blue georgette dress, Finder kind- YOOR RAHAAY! ALL MY VERY PRIVATE POWN AT LAST! HOO RAAY! HES OLTGROWN MY CLOTHES--EVERY THING BUT MY NECK TIES! HOO RAY! WHAT LE L D0? MY DATE 1S IN || 20 MINUTES, AND MINE -ARE Too SHABBY. nea usnmor, THE GYP_OFF THE OLD BLOCK. comm a7abluonas |MOM’N POP — FER THe Latest Bulletin from the Front By Cowan | YOu HAD GENE ‘TUNNEY, GUNN GRABBING OR SOMEBODY » PLANTED (N THE ME AND WHIRLING ME PARK To BEAT UP foP GUNN AROUND AND THEN THE |_ly phone 586. Reward, i ; i i BERNARD, NOU _TOLD -.1 ONLY REMEMBER ' | “Oh, I suppose so.” “But I've made you angry?” “Well, I can’t say you’ve made me particulesiy happy. It’s cer- tainly been illuminating—this ti- rade of yours.” “My dear, it was for your own good.” “That's what people always say when*they tell me hateful things. Oh, I’m not sore, Mab, or anything like that. You've simply opened my eyes to what you really think of me, and since you've been so frank, T'll be as honest with you. “I am going to see John Law- rence tonight, exactly as I had planned. And, my dear, if you don’t like {t, you'd better chloroform your sensibilities. You're too darn Victerian, Mab—that’s what's the matter with you. ... Here, Teddy angel... . Where are your mittens, Precious?” Sybil turned her son’s chinchilla collar up and pulled his earlaps down. “Kiss Aunty Mab, Sweet.” Mabel lifted him in her arms ‘again. “Goodby, darling little boy. Sib, it I had a child like Teddy, I'd cut my right hand off before I'd draw a breath to jeopardize his future.” Sybil laughed. “Gertie Gloom!” she taunted. eee Kr BURNS was a stenog: rapher in the office of the Al- Ned Shoe Machinery Company. The girls all thought she looked like Clara Bow, with her big, brown eyes that flashed and rolled like a first-class movie vamp. Frivolity was a sort of veneer with Kitty. Beneath her raspberry rouge, she was sweet ‘and guileless as a little plaster saint. One morning, Roger Caldwell, dropping in, leaned over Kitty’s her that evening. For six weeks that same young man had been Kitty’s “intention,” and to win his notice she had prayed that God might make him look her way. It was a very quiet little ro- mance. Roger had been baptized and confirmed, and. taken the pledge, before Kitty accepted the dazzling solitaire he cho Then she gave two weeks’ noticé, and the girls gave her a miscellaneous shower and a mahogany butterfly- table. The banns were published. and Roger bought the wedding ring. ‘The- wonder of the thing never dimmed. “Oh, why,” they asked each other, “why did YOU ever love ME?” . ees r was seven o'clock, and Kitty in her little room at the Franklin Square Howse was getting worried. “Are you SURE, girls, there ee message before | came in?” “ “For heaven's sake! NO! How many more times are you going to ask? He's gone back on you, Kitty. + He's too handsome to be true! +» Poor Kitty!” : But she laughed at their humor. “There's the pyone now! What do: you bet it’s not for me?” She raced down the hall, and they heard her. before the sooth desk~and asked if he might see). cA Ae AAR LAVIN ELEANOR EARLY “You're a sweet child,” the voice at the other end was saying. “I {wish to the Lord this other thing hadn’t come up, but I can’t get out of it very well. And we'll see Har- old Lloyd tomorrow night .. .” As a business woman Kitty | Burns prided herself on being rea- | onable. “Of course, I understand,” she told him. “Anyhow, I’ve a milHon things to do.” “TI love you, Catherine Agnes,” he interrupted solemnly, taken in confirmation. The sisters made her do it, because Agnes was |her patron saint. But now she ig- nored Roger's teasing. “Me, too,” she told him. It was their little signal. If there was No one near, Kitty would whis- per over the wires éach night: “I love you, sweetheart.” But if there were girls in the corridor, waiting for the booth, then Kitty, when Roger repeated the holy ritual of lovers, would reply so that he might know there were listeners about, and the conversation was shortly concluded. “Phone me in the morning?” “You bet. Good night, Kitty- girl.” He hung up the receiver wearily, and sat dejectedly on the bed, star- ing blankly, “Oh, God, what a mess!” see ITTY’S fiance had succeeded re- markably in a business way. The girls agreed that Kitty had done pretty well by herself. “Now {f you can only hold him,” they told her, and warned her out of their hard young wisdom, “The more he has known of the many, the less he will settle to one.” For Caldwell had been as noto- tlously successful with women as with real estate. The suite he occupied at the Fair- more was Indicative of his mone tary achievements. Sybil would be impressed with the luxury of his surroundings. A small glow of satisfaction in: truded upon bis misery. Better that she found him this way than a broken wreck of a thing in that hospital ward in Washington. He didn't want her pity—not by a darn sight. He hoped she wouldn't think she had to resurrect their romance. Now, if Kitty... H He ground his heel into the Boft- ness of an Oriental rug, and paced restlessly about. Sybil was won- derfii—no doubt about it. He re membered now every detail of theit youthful. passion, The way she lifted her Hps to his. The way her soft arms crept about bis khaki shoulders. until. her fingers clasped behind his‘neck, and she drew his face to -hers. The agony of. their | Darting—and the way she cried. God bless her dagling heart! They'd wanted so fearfully to be married. What a different story life would have been! No use philosophising about that. ‘ Different, {ft they had found Kitty hated the name she had} worship. There was a bit of the spiritual in Kitty's untouched charm. It set her apart from all the other jaded little girls. The discordant note ot the tele phone interrupted his meditations. “Hello!—Oh, hello, Sybit. I'll be right down,” eee | GHE was sitting in a big chair in the foyer, one slim knee thrown over the other, and a dainty foot jswinging nervously, Pate with the | sophisticated pallor smart women affect, wtih lips painted vividly. Her cosutme was smartly black, re- |leved by pearls about her throat | and in her ears, “John!” She rose to meet him, | extending her hand. “Sybil! My dear!”” The little girl for whom his heart had ached in throes of crucifying tenderness, The darling child who brought him fudge at Devens, and knit the socks that didn’t fit. The ; Weeping angel who cried on his shoulder, and blew her little nose |on # rooky’s cotton handkerchief, | breaking her heart with grief be jcause she loved him so. How she had changed — this charming sophisticate! This pale, svelte creature, with hands as cold as ice, and eyes like Mquid pools of wisdom. He took her arm as they walked toward the elevator, and felt her tremble. When they reached the rooms she exclaimed delightfully at the open fire, and chafed her hands before its blaze. “I was too excited for dinner,” she explained. “Couldn't you have some coffee sent up? I'm simply frozen.” He accepted the suggestion eager. ly, supplementing it with hors d'oeuvres and chicken {n a chafing dish. “The very thins,” “tor a cold night.” While they waited they sat ip constrained silence, making conver- sation with effort that was almost ludicrous. Ontil finally Sybil shat- tered the polite discourse, “Ten years,” she cried; “and we were lovers!” She leaned toward him, and she was very lovely in the firelight. She looked younger with her hat off, and more girlish now that her face was flushed. “And we're talking like a couple of mdidle-aged fogies,” he coun. tered lightly. “We've grown old, Sybil.” “I baven’t!”.she cried, and her eyes and cheeks were flaming. “You're extremely provocative,” he remarked evenly. “Tremen- dously desirable, my dear.” He poked the fire vigorously. “I'm absolutely crazy about you.” “Yes?” Now she was angry.’ “I nevgr would bave dreamed it. Anybody’d: think, you considered me quite beneath your interest.” He rose to light a cigaret, and stood, when he had done it, with his back to the blaze, his hands be insisted, each other six “months. ago, Now there waa Kitty; gentle littie Kitty. He was the luckiest fellow in the world to have her. Sweet. Inno cent. Sybjl was different. She'd been door closed: “Hello ‘hello, dear. You yl Oh, that’s too bad. No,’ 1 dont care—not really. It doesn't make a bit of difference...” through the mill. A married woman now, with a baby. Somehow, beside; Kitty, Sybil looked hard and.a little weary. Freshness was something to REECE GRICE RA TOOLS AONE ESS EE deep in his pockets. “Sybil, 1 hate-evasions. What do you want me to do?” (To Be Centinugd) (Do Bybti and Joan go on with their old romance? Or does Bydil play with firef There's stark tragedy etelking through the sad CRORE OPI 2 69950, FOR OU— WHAT HAPPENED LIGHTS WENT OUT hare 2 OW, MY HEAD SMOKE CF BATTLE CLEARED AWAY (T WAS QUITE ENIDENT THAT SOMETHING MAD GONE WRONG WITH THE NEW , NEIGHBORS PLAN APTER THiS You LET FoP Gunn Win EVERY ARGUMENT. THE WAY HE CLEANED AND PRESSED THE NEN NEIGHBOR HE MUST HAVE WORKED ON HIM WITH A CLUB-AND RETURN “THAT NICKLE-FLATED CORK SCREW You BOTH LOY CLAIM TO.D0 You —AND EMILY, I WAS AWAKENED OUT OF A SOUND: SLEEP BY THE CLANG OF THE AMBULANCE. THEN 1_ HEARD A RUMPUS IN THE HALL FOLLOWED BY A BLOOD-CURPLING SCREAM.J RAN OUT JUST IN TIME To SEE THEM CARRY THE NEW NEIGHBOR IN, DEADLY PALE, ON A STRETCHER, ALL SWATHED IN BANDAGES - YOU HAVEN'T HEARD ABOUT “AT P— TLL BE RIGHT OVER— WELL. (T_ MAKES NO DIFFERENCE “To ME BECAUSE I'VE DECIDED TO FOLLOW YOUR. ADVICE AND SWEAR OFF THE STUFF | Freckles and His Friends Only One Thing " ANILLIE SAID ATAXI- 2 sr STOPPED IN FRONT OF 4 YOU DOF WELL. / Ost AND A GUESS WHO} / WEN WE LEFT MAN GOT OUT= yan) ase oag LNW war ALL 4) 'S

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