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ARB eG HY THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE osha ae Lost LOST--12 gauge Remington auto- | matie shotgun between Lake Isa- | bella and Dawson slough Wednes- day, Oct, 31, $10.00 reward of- fered for the finder returning same. E. G. Erbe’s Barber Shop, __ Bismarck, N. D. LOST—Red TENNIS WITH A “STING” London, Nov. 27.—A wasp has the { distinction of having held up achame / ionship tennis tournament at Scar- jorough. He worried one of the women players until she stopped long enough to chase the insect the court—to the great delight of CHEMICAL IN PLANTS | A STRANGE SHIPMENT pevebpa mania eter reo gre ex-| Londen, Nov, 27.—Police are in- y De ent of Agri-| i onti culture workers indicate that the | Yestiating an unusual shipment re~ chemical element manganese is es- | cently received by a woman resident sential in the production of green | of Leigh-on-Sea. It consisted of the color in plants, At the same time | body of.a baby hoy packed in a wood- the tests showed that very little is {en box. The sender is being traced required to produce satisfactory re- | through a threatening letter included | Indian Prince in Quiz The Maharajah of Kapurthala, one of the richest and most powerful of the native Princes of India, is pictured here as Tribune Classified Advertisements —=—=PHONE 82==—_ HELP W‘NTED MALE 7 x hunting dog, Dependable Used Cars ou x “ginter i i i | in the package. spectators. Barbe: a ter | age on es . | named Rex, has four white paws| he arrived in Lon sults. yin voonths, ‘big HeMaia.: gue wanes. Classified Advertising Rates || 1927 Dodge Sedan leather upholstery; and white’ breast. _Minneapolis| don to appear be- ata eee 2 Leas ead ike eo Free catalog. Moler Barber Col- Effective Jan. 3, 1928 1926 Dodge Sedan mohair upholstery ee (ine. Ne 4099, eee Chris ion & British com- _ lege, Fargo, N. D., Butte. Mont. || 1 insertion, 25 words .73 |] 1926 Dodge Sedan mohair upholstery | _Martineson for reward. mittee investigat- WANTED— v solicitors with cars|} 2 Phe Al 25 words ‘5, || 1926 Chrysler Sedan 4 wheel brakes | ANEOUS aia tid OUT OUR WAY By Williams Nbiities. "Apply, Bismarck Trib. 3 insertions, 25. words 1927 Studebaker Sedan 4 wheel) DTXMONDS—Direct from cutters! affairs. Kapurthala une Circulation Dept. or under ............ 1.00 ed and importers is the reason we sell | ~ ,,.-——"—=====——=_ ~ id 1 week, 25 words oF 1927 Pontiac Sedan 4 wheel brakes | beautiful *iamond rings at great| fiance plan. Might | consider FEMALE HELP WANTED =|} ander’ .............. 1.43 |] 1925 Willys Knight Coupe Sedan savings to you. Cash or easy pay-| {ade for, city property, of sma! WANTED—Two young ladies to|| Ads over 25 words, 3c addi- |! 1923 Studebaker Sedan . all transactions confiden- e Tribune Ad. No. 37. HAS TER Gr represent large Chicago firm in tional per ward 1923 Ford Coupe tial, Whetetale and retail. James eo ae ee in gead eonaieon, Sast A ALTER MOBILL i x i " rek, usive nd deal- 5 A Bismarck... Reference, required-|| CLASSIFIED DISPLAY |] 1924 International Truck er. Office south of Hotel Prinee,| the thing for taxi or bus line. For OBILL, Thursday morning for appoint RATES M. B. GILMAN CO. | _Bismarck. Stee tied te tale iach Ai 10 UiSsS Too __ ment. pie amas s WANTED—Agents to buy old wild ‘sor blemished horses for slaughter. We also buy registered draft stal- lions, The Elder Horse Sale Co., OR NS WANTED—Experienced maid for general housework, small family. Call in perscn at 718 Third street. | WANTED—Woman for _ kitchen work in Cafe. Address box 132, Bismarck, D. POSITION WANTED YOUNG lady desires office work. ion as a_ stenographer pre- ferred. ling to work for ex- perience and low salary. Refer- ences given. Write Westfield, N. D.. box 45. WANTED-—Stenographical position, several years’ experience, Call 1324 between 5 and 6 p. m. WORK WANTED ED ‘ied man de- ed _| FOR SALE—160 acres good virgin FARM FOR SALE—160 ac 90 Cents Per Inch All classified ads are cash in advance. Copy should be re- ceived by 9 o'clock to insure insertion same daz. i THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 32 FARM LANDS soil, all but few acres can be cul- tivated, five miles north of Bis- marck. lots 7 to 12 block 41 in Flannery and Wetherby Addition to city of Bismarck. Adelia Gibbs, 409 Fifth street, Bismarck, N. D. 1-2 mile from small town with con- solidated school and two elevators. 100 acres broke, ments, ‘ good improve- Inquire at Menoken Gar- WANT—Renter FOR RENT—Four big rooms, bath- Lots 1 to 6 block 25 and) — | FOR RENT—Two furnished light FOR RENT—Furnished room ASE h “plenty help and tractor for section near Glen- coe. Buildings, pasture, hayland. 110 summerfallow to buy. bank references first letter. Kratt, Sheldon, N. D. ROOMS FOR R 1 room and kitchenette, on second floor. Hot water heat, for only $40.00 per month. No furniture ex- cept a good gas stove. For full in- formation call at 112 Thayer Ave. W. or phone 956-J. housekeeping rooms wi entrance and one sleepin; also garage for rent. Eighteen pigs. Call at 52: street south. in without board. Close in. Call at 120 Ave, modern home with or Give| FOR 3ALE—Registered Duroc Jer- sey boars. These are the large type. Also some fine gilts. Have a few good polled shorthorn bulls for sale of cerviceable age. Strutz a Nagel, Rismarck, N. D. Box \NATION@2 CASH KeGISTERS— New and second hand. Over 500 styles and sizes. We have one to fit your business. W. E. Stitzel, representative. Patterson Hote! Eismarck, N. D. FOR SALE—Registered Labrador retrievers, females three months old, $15 each, Male pup six months old $40. Chas. Quigley, Bathgate, N. Dak. a {FOR SALE—Used cash register, adding machine, typewriter and safe, all in good condition. Write Tribune, care of Ad. No. 88. WANTED—Cers for dead storage. Cars $4.00 per_month, trucks $5. Apply at 108 Third street or 215 South Ninth street. 26, care of the Tribune. ___FURNITURE FOR SALE FOR SALE—An old fashioned cup- board for $8.00; two iffoniers, one $4.00 and $8.00; 75 Ib. ice box $8.C0; kerosene ove: $1.00; and spring $12.00; two congoleum rugs $1.00 cach; dining :able $5.00, and Wilton rug size 6x9, $20.00. _Call at 422 Twelfth street, FOR SALE—A child’s_ kiddie car, bath tub and basket, high chair and walking swing, imported din- ner set and large and small road- sters and cedar chest. Priced for quick sale. Phone 366-W, 181 Rosser A’ BANGAINS i used ‘furniture. Kennelly Furniture Co. Mandan, N. D. re ee CLIMBS WETTERHORN | Grindewalc, Switzerland, Nov. 27. —Wetterhorn, famous peak of the Bernese Oberland, 12,165 feet high, has been conquered by the Japanese LOUD FOW : BUGGY RIDIN alpinist Samatsu. The ascent was made on the western side, which had b idered impossible to climb. FOR SALE—Fancy Early Ohio po- 50c_per bushel delivered. | -4. Julius Audahl. UE—Murphy In-A-Door bed. ‘."¥. Murphy. 204 Main or phone 427, - en, WANTED—Buick 1927 or 28 coach, | will trade Baldwin player piano, | __A or phone 983-W. FOR RENT—Nice furnished in new modern home, three blocks | _P! from postoffice. Phone 1432 or| FOR sires any kind of work. Steady if possible. Also young woman wants to do washings in own! home. Call at 311 First street. WANTED—To do alterations and : repairing on ladies winter coats and dresses. Also relining. 107 Fifth street, Krall Tailor Shop, Mrs. J. W. rm on Red near Bismarck. About 120 acres in cultivation. Has good bungalow and other improvements. On terms. Geo. M. Register. _FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR SALE OR TRADE--Improved farm 230 acres, 1% miles south- room| Voyages for a Rest In line with the postmen who go walking for pleas- lure is Sir Percy call at 308 Ave. A. FOR RENT—Nice warm room in modern home, close in, gentlemen} preferred. Phone 926-J or call at} 507 Third street. ‘| WORK WANTED—Painting, paper FOR RENT—Well furnished is ie i 7 room H Bates, vice chair- hanging, and decorating, any kind] West of “argo. What nave you?|~ ang kitchenette for light house-| like new and pay difference for 2 : | of trucking or any kind of work.| Otto Nothnagei, Route 2, Daven-) {ecping. Gall at 411 Fifth street.) good Write Tribune Ad. No. Utenwship: cot = = = __L.G. Knowles, 100 Thayer A Pai Os Phone 273. pO pany, who came ie = = A WELL experienced girl desires a} WANTED TO RENT FOR “RENT—Furnished rooms in| FOR —Harly 1927, Chevrolet | sailing to America . = RESPONSIBLE >arty wants to rent 5 or 7 room furnished house by coupe in excellent condition. Also/ for a vacation. Aft- steady job ina modern home.| Ford coupe $115.00, Ford tourings| er a few days of modern home, hot water heat. Call Write Tribune, care of Al. No. 40.| ‘ v Phone BS c THE STOP—AND GO SIGNAL. aoUs este! yee Ieesoe later) ClW” AHEnIN eping room in mod-| —-$35.00 and up. Hedahl Motor Co. fishing in Canada, ee DESO ROR BN, see ch reference. Write Tribune Ad. No.| ern home. Phone 947 or call at| FOR SALE—New Essex sedan, aj re will return on # OR RENT—Seven room_ modern} “home, well furnished or if desired! will rent unfurnished. One of the best homes in town, good location, close in, heated garage. Small family will be considered only For further information write Ad. Yo. 39, care of Tribune. cash or terms on! the same boat. Sir Bates TU 711 Sixth street. bargain for eran Te MOM’N POP ‘SURE cc HUM! Bur iF A UTTLE FAIRY SHOULD COME AND TELL YOU THAT SHE'D GIVE YOU ANYTHING YOUD WISH FOR, WHAT soins iT wALL RIGHT, YELL MAKE & BARGAIN WITH ‘YOU. TLL GIVE YOU THE PRICE To THE MOVIES IF YOU'LL TELL ME WHAT MOMS SURPRISE 1S GOING. = T KNOW WHAT THE SPRISE PARTY IS THAT MOM WAS ON ICE FOR YOU THANKS~ GWING. 1 HEARD HER TELL MRS.TYTE ALL ABOUT IT AND YOU OUGHT TO HBNE HEARD THEM LAUGH. BUT L CAN'T TELL BECAUSE MoM MADE ME PROMISE 6 | | 01 house .t 2*3 Third street. Belk “928. Onea Service| ‘SS HAPPENED cn JERRY RAY to N lodern fur-| nished home, hot water heat, Write Tribune Ad. No. 36. FOR RENT—Dec. Ist, six” room modern house. Inquire 719 Si: _ street. FOR RENT—Duplex, possession = Dec. 1st. H. J. Woodmansee. AGIRL LOVES’ Two'ee shows her attention. Unable to buy a new gown for a party Alester has invited kez to, FOR RENT—Modern 3 sniall room! apartment partly furnished, first, floor, private entrance, down tow! Just right for two. Call rear 118 i ¥F i HoT MOM'S: THANKSGIVING SURPRISE 13, PoP TRIES BRIBERY AND NY GETS LESS THAN HE BARGAINS FoR ~~? ston about ruining the dev weeks a apartm.nt. Furnished. Possession | at once. The Laurain Apts. Phor: 303. is FOR RENT—Modern two room! apartment. No children. garage. Close in. 523 street. docs not belteve in love going to try to m feaves her after Si: HERE YOU ARE. NHAT (S_\T 2 / SL RIGHTS 1 YOU. GIVE | ME THE QUARTER Dan bappens along and, under cover of his presence, Jerry forces Alester to take her home. Hi she anys his necou her in a chorus, Next di her to interview th FOR SALE THREE ROOM partly modern dwell- ing, the premises are fenced, screened in porch, partly finished addition to house, large chicken house, with nearly enough furni ¢ ™ ture for the house, for $2100. SEVEN ROOM modern house in Riverview, 3 bed rooms, all oak | floors, garage, sun parlor, good < Jot and near school, for $6000, on terms. SIX ROOM modern house, 3 bed! rooms, well located, fine 50 foot lot, near schools for $1500 cash. FIVE ROOM partly modern house, !§ 2 bed rooms, good shed addition, fine cellar, premises all fenced,| large front porch screened in, back porch, 75 foot lot, for $2625, on! 3 terms. FIVE ROOM modern house, at least 2 bed rooms, kitchenette extra, well located in desirable part of bse good condition, for $4000, on rms, who promines to take a stage test. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXV myoU will need this now,” Ales- ter said, flicking the ring a little nearer to Jerry. “Jake's girls will consider you declasse if you haven't any jewelry.” Jerry did not pick it up, and Alester leaned forward with a smile, He picked up the ring himself and held it out to her. Jerry let him slip it over her finger, then she turned her head quickly to see if they had been observed. No one appeared to have noticed. Not that | +. it mattered, she told herself; it wasn’t an engagement ring. . . she wonldn’t want to receive that in public . . . anyway she needn't girls to accept presents. the jars and bottles on the table farther down to clear a space for Jerry let him slip it over her finger . . . People expected show “Miss Ray, of the chorus,” she|utes,” Jael called. “Better go on said to the doorman. to the dressing room and tell the The Working Plans! Freckles and His Friends By Blosser feel guilty . . . she was a show| He smiled. “A greenhorn,” he| wardrobe mistress to fix you up.”|Jerry’s hat and bag. DESIRABLE 50 foot lot for sale. xl BoM Fools expected them to|said to himself. Aloud: “Go right eee. “I'll tell you what to get,” she GEO, M. REGISTER. ida I in, Miss Ray. I'm sure they’re|QHE hesitated and looked about|was saying when a girl in a very WELL. WHERE FIRST Z WANTA SHOW at once! A guaranteed car hauled. assured. 1928 Chrysler “72” Sedan. 1925 Hudson Coach. 1926 Ford Coupe 1926 Ford 4-door Sedan. 1927 Essex Sedan. You'll be thankful If you act that has been thoroughly over- Perfect performance 1926 Overland 6-cylinder Sedan. 1926 Overland 6-cylinder Coach. 1928 Whippet 4-cylinder Coach. 1925 Overland 4-cylinder Sedan. ERRY could not restrain a show of pride when she displayed the ting to Myrtle. The latter said it was too bad it wasn't set in plati- num. “But I like the jade,” Jerry re- Dlied. “It matches my. eyes.” Myrtle guffawed. “That's some of Alester Car- stairs's boloney,” she jeered. “That bimbo’s going to have you eating out of his hand yet.” “You should worry,” Jerry re torted; “but wait until my show opens; there's no boloney about that.” “I wonder what it cost Alester to get you in?” Myrtle mused. “Nothing,” Jerry said with a flush. “Then you don’t owe him any- thing,” Myrtle said pointedly. “I'll feel that I do if I don't make good,” Jerry replied. “Gee, you're ‘ucky,” Myrtle said, “to get a chance like that. Of course you'll make good. What's it like, anyway, the theater in the. day time?” “l-baven't been back stage,” and went on to tell hat she had seen. ie sald, “the way Mr. Welnertz- bawled that chorus girl out before everybody. I hope dio one talks to me like that.” “Well, they will,” Myrtle de clared. “You don’t want to be that m Lahr Motor Sales Co. Phone 490 touchy, kid. Learn to hand tt back. When are you going to rehearse?” “Tomorrow morning at 10.” “Aren't you lucky! You can sleep until nine!” ee _° Bt Jerry couldn't. Myrtle dis- turbed her when she got up and dressed. At eight she herself was up. At 20 minutes to 10 she was at the stage door. waiting for you.” Jerry flashed him a look of alarm. Had she made a mistake in the time? “Rehearsal begins at 10, doesn’t it?” she asked excitedly. The man relented. “You got plenty of time,” he said; “go on in.” eee i haps stage door was opening often now. She could see girls pouring in as if they had timed their arrival at 10 minutes to 10 precisely, not a minute before, and not a minute after. Well, she'd better think about what should do. Go to tlie offi nd inquire? The sensible thing would be to find the stage director, she decided, looking about her. She saw no one but the young man at the plano and the noisy chorus girls. She wouldn't ask any of them. The young man “Will you please tell me w! I wil find Mr. Hule?" she quired. The young man was -playing Jazz now, mechanically. He did not stop when he answered, after one glance at Jerry. “You're the Carstairs girl,” he remarked, with @ bitterness that Jerry could not understand at the time. Later she learned that Jae) Thane had given up 8 promising career as a concert artist to follow a show girl into the realm of jazz only to lose her after a few months to a man who made a star of ber. ~ He had never gone back to his concerts, or on from the place where she had left him—playing the piano for Jake Weinerts’s re- bearsal s. Jerry turned away from him,|. affronted. “He'll be bere in a few min- her for the wardrobe mistress. What she saw was a long table with stools at each side of it and a double row of upright mirrors dividing it down the center. Some of the stools were occu- pied by girls who already had re- moved their street clothes and/| were in various stages of undress. That was all she saw then, for the door swung open behind her with considerable force and caught her on the arm. She cried out sharply. “Oh, did I hurt you? I'm so sorry!” a lovely voice said quickly. Jerry smiled at her. The pain wasn’t lasting. “It's my fault,” she sald. “I was in the way.” “But I shouldn't be always banging doors,” the other re- turned. “You're a new girl, aren’t you?” she went on with a friendli- ness Jerry had not expected to meet here. “Then come along and take a stool next to mine,” she said to Jerry’s affirmative nod. “My name's Evelyn Starr. I've been in a Weinertz production for two seasons.” “I'm Jerry Ray,” Jerry told ber. She had taken Jerry by the arm and was hurrying her along to @ place at the far end of a table. Jerry saw now that the room con- tained several Itke the one had noticed first. A few of the girls turned to watch them. ~ “High hat's found someone good enough to hand out 4 little conversation to,” one of them re- marked sneeringly. Jerry felt Evelyn's fingers tight- en on her arm and guessed that they were the objects of the girl's comment. When they came te Evelyn's place she pulled a stool up beside her own and the. started pushing self, little one. “Old Hule ts .. erybody on the stage! on the stage!” her first rehearsal! short, black satin dress rushed up and wanted to know what in the blankety blank blank she thought she was doing. Evelyn looked at her coldly. “I'm taking advantage of. the rule you girls applied to m said calmly. “I wish to have Miss Ray sit here—that's the rule, you know. Friends may have places together even if someone else must change.” “Is that so?’ satin drawled. move, see?” She jerked a stool before the place that Evelyn had cleared for Jerry and popped down on it with decisive finality. Evelyn said nothing more. She was tight-lipped with anger, but she controlled it admirably. Jerry realized soon that Evelyn had gone for the mistress of the wardrobe, for she returned with the latter in a moment. “Don’t make trouble, Lucile,” the matron said to the rebellious girl on the stool. “Miss Starr ts right. can claim your place Remember, you girls, the girl in black “Well, I won't But no one else seemed to mind it. Evelyn was perfectly calm. “Hurry,” she said, “and put on your suit.” She pointed to @ folded garment on the table and derry picked it up. “T'll have your size nex time,” wardrobe mistress was say- “but you'd better shake your. “Everybody on the stage! Ev- - Everybody She was going to. be late—at Jerry turned faint. (To Be Continued) Is IT? YOU TK PLANS OF