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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1927 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 382 Tribune Classified Ad Advertisements MALE LE HELP WANTED __ ONE of the oldest and largest power farming machinery manufacturers needs a blockman for western North Dakota territory. Earning Possibilities are unlimited due to a commission arrangement which supplements our salary and travel- ing expenses. We can use only thoroughly experienced man_ and promptness in reply with full ref-! erences is required. Our men know about this ad. Write Tribune in care of Ad. No. 28. WANTED—Man to work ‘on dairy farm. Must be good ory hand milker. Apply Mr. Haines, in care of Armour Creameries, "Bis marck, N. D._ eas CEARN barber trade. Catalog free. Reus Barber College, Fargo, WANTED—A waiter at fe. —— ee = __FEMALE HELP WANTED WANTED—Middle aged lady with- out children for housekeeper on farm. One who cares more for a home than high wages. Give full information in first letter. Ad- dress Tribune Ad. No. 4. WANTED—Girl or middle aged lady for general house work. Must be able to prepare meals. Prefer one who could go home nights. Mrs, B. F, Lawyer. Phone 1163-R. WANTED—Competent maid for} house work, Mrs. A. W. Mundy. Phone 265 after 6:00 p, m. WANTED—Competent maid for general housework. Phone 842-W. ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Two large warm, clean furnished light housekeeping rooms in modern home. Private entrance. Rent reasonable, Call at 213 Eleventh street, one-half block from Broadway. FOR RENT—Two large nicely fur- nished rooms with board. Hot wa- ter heat. Nice location. Price reasonable. Phone 836-R or 519 Fifth street. Boarders wanted al- so. FOR RENT—Two single rooms in new modern home. Every possi- ble convenience. Ideal for travel- ing men or nurses. 309 Tenth street, phone 921. O'Brien's Classitied Advertising Rates 1 insertion, 25 words or 2 insertions, 25 words or under ......sceeeeeee 65 8 insertions, 25 words or under ........00.06 675 1 week, 25 words or Under .......seseeeee 125 Ads over 25 words, 2c addi- tional per word CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES 65 Cents Per Inch All classified ads are cash in advance, Copy should be re- ceived by 1) o'clock to insure insertion same too 30 BISMARCK "TRIBUNE PHONE 32 Rebuilt Automobiles Satisfaction guaranteed. Sevenday trial. Each car priced in plain) figures, A MAN went without a car for a long time because he didn’t be- lieve anybody could get 1 real car for the sum he was ab’. to pay. He “took a chance” one day and then found out that there isn’t any ris]. in buying a used car here. We are now showing some re- markable values. 4 For Instance, 1 Dodge coupe, @ real bargain; ‘1 model 93 Overland Coach, good as new; 1 brand new guaranteed for $1485.00, “Rebuilt Cars With a Rerutation” Lahr Motor Sales Co. FOR SALE—At very lowest prices, wholesale or retail, carrots, beets, parsnips, sal- sify. Write or phone 163, Os- car Ff, Will & Co. FOR RENT—A very pleasant front room for two persons, newly fur- nished. Phone 1126-W. Ideal lo- cation at 607 Fifth street. FOR RENT—Two modern furnished rooms for light housekeeping or| == sleeping. Close in. Also garage for rent. Phone 926-J or call at 507 Third street. FOR RENT—Extra large well light- ed moderr furnished room. Hot water heat, nice location, Ave. A West. Phone 1241. FOR RENT—Two clean modern sleeping rooms. Close in, reason- able. Call at 223 Thayer Ave. W. or phone 730-R. FOR’ RENT. Nicely furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Good location. Phone 687. FOR RENT—Warm nicely furnished sleeping 100ms close in. Call at 708 Main or Phone 342. FOR RENT—Large furnished room in modern house. Call at.801 Fifth street or phone 242-W. er FOR RENT—Newly furnished sleeping room, 610 Fifth -street. Phone 999-J. FOR RENT—Room in modern house. 508 W. Broadway. Phone 1214. desirable office rooms in Hoskins Block. See S. A. Floren at Busi- ness Service Co. HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—By owner. Si modern house with bath; east part of city. Will accept late model light sedan as part pay- ment. Price $3700.00. Tribune Ad. No, 21. FOR RENT—Rooming house, 422 Fourth street. Apartment city heat- ed, three rooms with private bath. Also garage. For sale. Iron top for gas range. Phone 905. Se: FOR RENT— Six room modern house located on South side of N. P.. track... Call at 511 Second street. E. J. Schultz, FOR RENT—Fiat at 118 1-2 Sixth street, partly furnished and partly ieiera: Call H. L. Reade, Phone FOR RENT—Five room bungalow ,at 812 Thayer Ave. Inquire at 300 Ninth streetor phone 377-J._ FOR RENT—Five room modern house. Call at 305 Twelfth street or phone 553-J. FOR RENT—Steam heated sleeping rooms. 522 Fifth street. FURNITURE FOR SALE _ FOR SALE—Large overstuffed dav- enport and chair. Also Victrola and sixty records. Priced for quick sale. Phone 947 or call at 1 West Thayer. SALE—Two sewing machines for storage, cheap. Phone 22 or call at 208 Main Avenue. FOR SALE—Houschold furniture, in good condition. Phone 999-‘V Call at 608 Fifth street. FOR SALE—Dining chairs, table, buffet, kitchen cabinet and sani- tary couch. Phone 639, FOR SALE—Household. furniture, also ae Majestic and one Jewel Phone 530. TOME LAUNDRY _ THE BEST address for for washing | your blankets, bed id sureadis fam- ily and finished es is Mar- uerit Bulten’s Home Laundry. lo No inioey to fabric. No chemicals verything dried in fresh At Men's shirts a specialty. We re and deliver. Call at 203 Ave. W. or Phone 1017. BY DAN THOMAS NEA Service Writer Cedar City, Utah, Oct. 12—This city was very much in the news a few weeks ago because of some kind of a war between two movie com- panies. It seems that Edwin Carewe and Al Rogel arrived. .here about the same.time and both claimed the same location spot about 12,000 feet up in the anna ine The cause of the whole th might well. be hy at the feet o! Bod Dempsey and .Gene. Toney. veryone. . ots companies was sore because t chance of them get meee See ie Chicago ting to donate some forty dollars each to Tex Rickard. So. they decided to stage er oun B pelvate scrap. They even the sheriff into it. At “pres reports stated that the sheriff had to exercise his official authority to. bring about pone m the movie war- rs. I couldn’t learn of any casyal- ties upon ai ving, here, however. Let make snow pictures in sweltering weather. But | there, “here it is just the opposite. Al) that hundred dollars and I'll take| chairman of the iat only by a narrow larly. I hauled for 120 residences last winter and think I gave sat- isfaction. Also black dirt and very good fertilizer. Please phone 977-J. T. M. Burch, 415 Seventh street. BARBER wants position in a fair sized town. Experience, one and one-half years and have complete working kit. Mr. Basil E. O’Con- nell, Braddock, N. D. WORK WANTED—Call Gibson to have your storm windows put on. Experienced. Also wall paper cleaner. Phone 397 evenings. that leaky radiator to Radiator Shop. He sure can cenaic it. Back of Malm’s Service Sta- tion, 112 Second street. ig of pearls. Own- a may call,at if E. Barneck Jew- elry store and identify. AUTOMOBILES ‘ord touring wi cozy ‘klozure. Call at 618 Second street.or.Phone 510-M. Chrysler sedan, fully equipped and| _ SALESMEN CANDY SALESMEN CAN name own salary. Permanent. Must have an established trade. Old reliable Minneapolis factory. No wagon men wanted. This is for country territory. Give ail details confidentially and address __Bismarck Tribune Ad. No, 22. WANTED—Sulesmanager. Seo Mr. G. L. Baird at Jarrell Hardware Tuesday morning. Salary and com- missions for energetic young man, ee APARTNE FOR RENT—One three room unfur- nished front apartment in Rue apartments, all modern. Also one small furnished basement apart- ment. Phone 697-J or call 711 Bi), Ea ener FOR RENT—Three room furnished apartment with bath, lights, water and heat. Possession at once. Rent $40.00 per month. Call Hed- den Real Estate Agency. Phone 0. FOR RENT—Furnished apartments in modern home, near William Moore school. Guaranteed good and warm. Call at 930 Fourth street. Ne FOR RENT—A_ beautifully fur- nished sleeping apartment, com- fortable summer and winter, suit- He for one or two persons. Phone FOR RENT—Apartment atthe Woodmansee bites or without gar- age. Apply Woodmansee. Phone 1188. FOR RENT—Apartment, furnished one room and small kitchenette. Hazelhurst, 411 Fifth street. FOR RENT—A two and ‘a three room apartment. The Laurain Ar’. Phone 8038, a FOR RENT—Furnished apartment. Call at 411 Eighth street or phone 540-R. re ROOM AND T—Room modern home. Reasonably priced. __307 | So. Seventh. Phone 456-M. _ RD PERSONAL EPILEPSY—How poisoned blood causes fits. How to stop fits promptly. Free treatise and in- structions. Write Western Medi- al Ass'n 125 W. 62nd St., Chicago. DRESSMAKING DRESSMAKING—Neat work guar- anteed. Reasonable, 930 Fourth street. Mrs. K, Erickson, Phone LOTS FOR SALE—Colonel Maus of the army, well known to old Bis- markers, offers some choice lots in Flannery and Wetherby Addition. He advises young men to secure lots now for their future homes, believing that property in Bis- marck will never again be sold at such low prices. Taxes on these lots have been paid to date. For information éall on the Hedden Real Estate Agency, Webb Block, Phone 0. MISCELLANE FOR SALE—Columbia, B flat cor- net, silver plated, recent model, free from dents, leather velvet | lined case, extra parts, all in ex- ; cellent condition. Sole leather trombone case. Conn, silver plated, alto horn old style. Phone 999-W. Call at 608 Fifth street. FOR SALE—A brand new Olive Drab overcoat size 42 for $10; al- so an clectric plate, beautiful brass’ oil laip, set of flat irons, picture frame. Inquire 502 Seventl street. _ Fists a FOR SALE—Potatoes 60c bu., Hub- ard squash 2 1-2c Ib., -rutabagas, beets, carrots 70c bu., cabbage 1c Ib.,, onions 1.50 bu. Cail after 5 . m. 510 So. Eleventh Street. FOR SALE—Up to date cleaning plant. Call and look the plant over or write Caroline Greenwood at Hettinger, N. D., for informa- tion. bed Sea As Bes FOR SALE —Sheep-400 breeding ewes, 12 bucks, all ages. J. B. Davis, Pretty Rock, N. D., 16 miles southwest of Leith. FREE FOR hauling away, a seven section ho. water furnace, com- plete at 411 Fifth street, Bis- marck, N. D. FOR SALE—Persian kittens, well bred. Two-months old. Phone 551 or call at 323 Third street. WANTED TO RENT—Equipped meat market. A. L. Harper, San- born, N. D. a lot about “location lunches” up here. I: say -“up” because we are up in.-the..mountains. The usual meal ser m location trips con- sists of a box lunch. Both Carewe and Rogel are’ serving their pote panies hot lunches every da: meal I just finished at Chrewe's “Ramona” camp was better than anything the. cinema village has to offer. cack There’s a red cap porter here who is the chief entertainer aor the entire film aggregation. I have never seen a porter one-tenth as industrious. He just about rur_ the train—which goes fon See to ie main _line— si handles all of tI he nga, and ts mail, sells tickets, ee the pong ay neer the SretaaE AY signal ca h Plater and the comfort of the Bee sengers. Whenever things at lull, all we have to do is to drop down to the railroad station and watch Tear Down Houses _ For University London. —- (AP) — Parliamentary powers are to be sought to close the eight-block area which the London university has acquired in Blooms- bury, so that a $5,000,000 range of buildings may be erected on the site. The 100 houses which will finally vanish to make room for the uni- versity stand chiefly in Torrington square and one side of Russell square and Malet street. A row of red brick, five - story houses in Russell square will ulti- mately go. Once they were fashion- le|able residences but now they are offices. Torrington square is an avenue of hotels, boarding houses, and private residences, with two long rows of tal trees standing in the narrow garden which takes up the center. In that great area, when the new headquarters have been finished, that porter work, s If the: ae tr Rita br ei t." Sno of the sequence juences in Bemona” was shot on a igh cliff which: coul be reached had ar to have Rita and penn “the hillside hile band f the rode | sought. wi ol com! Much has been. writin about i ey The T Ses. “I don’t want to be curried uv ded,” declared Rita. “Save a horse.” But she didn’t get her own way, col on highways ofthe U the United States is responsible for an annual loss’ of 1 is shoot routh scenes for} a chance on e Shepherd of the Hills.” Just as he was in the mi a sore aie be dying fron. the rest: 2 a tae days| and aed ago, snow started to fall. four billion dollars in time and Hollywood Hesctors could learn! wasted fuel. there will be a senate house, a cere- monial hall, and examination hall. The students’ union headquarters will almost certainly be there, as well as a great library. he range of buildings will have a character of its own—a striking skyline of halls and towers. An ar- tist who can design it will aes be University of London’ is al- teady the greatest university in the world,” according to Mr. 8. L. Loney, convocation. of Lon- don university. “It has 10,000 stu- dents—as many as Oxford, Cam- bridge, Bancieete and Liverpool r—and its income is more than ‘equal to the first three of those four.” Tribune want ads bring anti Pulpit Is Shared by Pastor and Wife Pe ag nd Oct. 12.—(AP)—The Rev. Dr. Joseph Cannon Ellis and his wife, Rev. Mar; ay Hubbert Mun- ford Ellis, both ordained ministers, take turns in preaching o their “I do not believe in a pastor |his. own hands the church of which accepting money ‘or his church he is now the pastor. work,” says Mrs, Ellis. “He — or f “Bills Allowed by | by she — should have other employ- | ment during the week and earn City Commission enough in tha’ way to obviate such City Auditorium, pay roll ...$110.50 a necessity. “We don’t make any rule about |}@———————_—________6 who is to preach on a certrin day. 1 board in| See eatin’ ch imitive Met jist chure! ere. Bo give their services without|® certain time.” During the 15 PDE. Ellis, who is ¢, precticing| ried life, Dr. surgeon, conducts regular biweekly meetings in the church. His wife bears the title of assistant pastor. MOWM’N POP try. Pel THIS FETY ENTS AMILE FOR cour as WHY, THATS, ROBBERY, sa THIS 1S Fine! Z can COAST THE REST Freckles and His Friends ARE ALL SET FoR THE BIG RACE BETWEEN ‘LINDY’ AND CLARA CON! GIDDAP! GIDDAP-GIDDAP: OUT OUR WAY IT WAS AW RIGHT —— WES ~ ZHASH ACCIDENT AWS CUR, “ou RIGHT. RAN ‘RIGH ZTUIN Gut INTO tT L se ahs THESE POT rd|It depends on which of us the congregation seem= to need most at ears of their mar. ! lis an have conducted evangelistic serv- | ices in mary sections of the coun- Dr. Ellis helped to build with Street Dept., pay roll A Cinch , WELL, Sybil CAN ‘e.par.orr:: o1ex7 By mExeenvice, we._Up\ORO nm Waterworks Dept., pay roll . te vd { Police Dept., pay roll, « 263, | Aug. Helle, ‘labor ... 32. 1} $51.41 d his wife! Me repairing side- 39.00 oo» 240.95 M. Wildes, labor By Taylor Ready! Set! Go! I S'POSE TAG ANILL CLAIM a, HEE-HE KNOCKED TH FEED Box O' CAWN DOWN AN’ HE “THINKS “| fully an hour, but could learn noth- PAGE SEVEN | BENSQNMURDER CASE CHARACTERS OF THE sTORY PHILO VA! JOHN Fat TARKBAM District Attorney of New York County ALVIN H. BENSON.......Well- known Wall Street broker and man-about-town, who was mys- teriously murdered in his home ace LOG e as ee other of the murdered man waa Houskeerer for Alvis ‘Binion . Housekeeper for MURIEL ST. CLAIR ..... Ay CAPTAIN PHILIP Lekeo Mins St. Clair’s fiance FYFE ses. mate of Alvin Benson's MRS. PAULA BANNING . eessees A friend of Pfyfe’s ELSIE HOFFMAN Secre of the firm of Benson and jenson | COLONEL BIGSBY OSTRANDER A retired army officer MORJARTY ee snd McCoy, Ac MAURICE DinWiDbre . Assistant deed ERNEST gas S' ant of BURKE, Sharia EMERY . Detectives Homicide B BEN HANLO! a Commend. ing Officer of Detectives as- sere! to District Attorney's PHELPS, TRACY, SPRIN HIGGINBOTHAM .... Detectiver as- signad to District Atturnay’s office CAPTAIN CARL HAGEDORN . » Firearms expert Bureau) Medical examiner FRANK SWACKER . . retary to the District “Attorney CURRI Vance's velct 8.8. VAN DINE, . eo Narrator THIS HAS ‘APPENED Suspicion falls on Miss. St. Clair when her gloves and hand- hag are found at the scene of the murder, but Vance demon- strates by measurements that the murderer must have been approximately six feet tall. Mrs. Platz tells of a box of jewelry she had seen on the table and which has since dis- appeared. Pfyfe tells Markham that Captain Leacock had once threatened to kill Benson. * NOW BEG THE STORY CHAPTER XXV Pfyfe looked at him coldly, but only a vacuous countenance met his| P: gaze. “yp an. acquainted with the gen- ” he replied haughtily. s Colonel Ostrander present at this delightful little social affair of yours?” Vance’s tone was art- lessly innocent. “Now that ,you mention it, I be- lieve he was,” admitted lifted his eyebrows inquisitively. But Vance was again staring dis- interestedly out of the window. Markham, annoyed at the inter- ruption, attempted to re-establish the conversation on a more amiable and practical basis. But Pfyfe, though loquacious, had little more information to give. He insisted constantly on bringing the talk back to Captain Leacock, and, despite his eloquent protestations, it was obvious he attached more importance to the threat than he chose to admit. Markham questioned him for ing else of a suggestive nature. When Pfyfe rose to go Vance turned from his contemplation of the outside world and, bowing affably, let his eyes rest on the other with ingenuous good-nature. “Now that you are in New York, Mr. Pfyfe, and were so unfortunate as to be unable to arrive earlier, I assume that you will remain until after the investigation.” Pfyfe’s studied and habitual calm gave way to a Ic © of oily aston- ishment. “T hadn’t contemplated doing so.” “It would be most desirable—if polceal could arrange it,” urged Mark- am; though I am sure he had no intention of making the request until Vance suggested it. Pfyfe hesitated, and then made an elegant gesture of rsignation. “Certainly I shall remain. When you have further need of my serv- ices, you will find me at the An-| sonia.” | He spoke with exalted conde-| scension, and magnanimously con-! ferred upon Markham a parting smile. But the smile did not spring} from in. It appeared to have been adjusted upon his features by the unseen hands of a sculptor: and it affected only the muscles about his mouth. When he had Markham a mirth. “ “Elegancy, facility and golden cadence.” . . But put not your faith in poesy, old dear. Our Cice- ronian friend is an unmitigated fashioner of deceptions.” “If you're trying to say that he’s a smooth liar,’ remarked Heath, “I don’t agree with you. I think that story about the captain's threat is straight goods.” “Ob, that! Of course, it’s true. . And, y’ know, Markham, the knightly Mr. Pfyfe was Sealy disappointed when you didn’t in. it on his revealing Miss St. Clair’s name. This Leander, I fear, would never have swum the Hellespont for a lady’s sak “Whether he’s a swimmer or said Heath impatiently, “he’s given us something to go on.” Markham ing that Pfyfe's re- cital had led materially to the case inst Leacock. “I think I'll have the f pone Vance gave of suppressed not,” captain down to my office A giaibag and ' question him,” he said. A moment later Major Benson en- tered the room, and Markham in- vited him to join us. “YT just saw Pfyfe get into a taxi,” be seit, hen Be had mt down, “tT sapeemy zovegemn asking, his Arias affairs. . . Dia be Me hopes for all our sakes,” See aoe gy iad eee his eyes to Ll fe e capa’ =e, my > Kivn pe vin yest vale I thin Pas He Ew in wel ink; m ian le they > "t hit it or epee ta +. » Surely you don’t connect him with this affair?” Markham the question. “Did you happen te attend a DINE @ ques enw os party of Pfyfe’s the night the cap tain threatened your brother?” “I went, I remember, to one or two of Pfyfe’s parties,” said the major. “I don’t, as a rule, care for such gatherings, but Bed con- vinced me it was a good business policy.” He lifted his head, and ‘frowned Bt tN into space, like one search- for an elusive memory. ees T don’t recall — By jorge! Yes, I believe I do. Bet if the iulawes T am thinking of is what you have in mind, you can dismiss it. We were all a little moist that night.” “Did Captain Leacock draw a gun?” asked Heal The major pureed his lips. “Now that you mention it I think he did make some motion of the “Did you see the gun?” pursued Heath. “No, t say that I did.” Markham put the next question. “Do you think Captain Ss le of the act of murd ‘Hardly,” Major Be swered with emphasis, isn't cold-blooded. The woman over whom the tiff occurred is more + eee of such an act than he is.” short silence followed, broken byt Vance. “What do you know, Major, about this glass of fashion and mold of form, Pfyfe? He appears a rare bird, Has he a history, or is his Presence his life's heeds “Leander Pfyfe,” said the major, “is a typical specimen of the mod- ern young do-nothing, — I say young, though I imagine he around © was pampered in p= bringing—had everything he wartell I believe; but he became restless, and followed several different fads till he tired of the: “He was two years in South Africa hunting peg sa game, and, 7 think, wrote a ting adventures. Since then 1 he has ‘tone nothing that I know of. He mar- ried a wealthy shrew some years ago—for ber money, I imagine. But the woman’s father controls the purse-strings, and holds him sone to a rigid allowance. 4 a waster and an idler, but Alvin seemed to find some attraction in the man.” The major’s words had been care- less in inflection and undeliberated, like those of a man discussing a neutral matter; but all of us, I think, received the impression that he had a, strong personal dislike for eC. ravishing personality, e. “And h ill,” supplied Heath, with a puzzled frown, “a -feliow’s got to have a lot of nerve to shoot big game. . . And, speaking of nerve, T’ve been thinking that the guy who shot your trother, Major, was a mighty cool-headed proposition. He did it from the front when his man was wide awake, and with a servant upstairs. That takes nei “Sergeant, you're positively bril- liant!” exclaimed Vance. June 18; forenoon.) the district attorney's office the fol- lowing morning a little after 9, the captain had been waiting 20 min- utes; and Markaam directed Swacker to_send him in at once. Captain Philip Leacock was a typical army officer, very tall—fully f 2 inches, — clean-shaven llis face was grave and immobile; and h__ stood before the district attorney in the erect, earnest attitude of a soldier awaiting orders from his superior officer. (To Be Continued) M. E. Missionaries Will Meet Oct. 25-30 Minneapolis, Minn., Oct. 12—(AP) —The greatest gathering of Metho-| dist Episcopal foreign missionaries, in years is expected at the F8th an. nual meeting of the general exec tive committee of the Woma: Foreign Missionary Society in Min- neapolis Oct. 25-30. Last year $2,300,000 was spent it the work of more than 700 mis. sionaries under the jurisdiction off the board. Because of war conditions, th contingent from China is expecte: to be aug ented. In addition, th new rule, making the second term of service five instead of six years, goes into effect this year for thd first time. “hat will bring man; missionaries home who ordinaril; would not return until next year. Mrs. Thomas Nicholson, president of the society, is in Europe. In hey the meeting will be di. Mr: F. F. Lindszy, first vice president. mrarees. = eed DEPARTMENT if AYS Erepeeie Tor furnishing the follows ing snow removal oc ipment 7! received by the pate Highw mission in the offices of nee De ment of ‘Stat Highways at Bismarci Dakota, not than 1d o'clock A. October 27th, Oe which time and place they will pen liely. AR and read: or Trucks. 3 to 6 ton equipped with pody and hye plow: Price bia to Tnelude pre paid freighi 9 eualler City, Minot and Grand ‘or’ Delivery to be made within 80 da: after contract is awarded. A certified checks “for 5 fo ether with a bidder's Bon in the ‘ull amount of the bid the De) tment ° ae! Highways, ‘Bismarck, Nort! The “right is reserved to reject a1 pean rare techniral mined te” o tor “ihe "Dest ater] este at of the Stat STATE HiGAway COM MERBIO! 10-5-12-19, Second-hand freight el- evator with hand pow- er. Write No. 777, co