The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 18, 1927, Page 7

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Tribune Classified Advertisements PHONE 82=— ‘MALE HELP WANTED _ First class @xperienced clothing man and window im- mer. 8. E. Bergeson & Son. LEARN barber trade. Catal 4 free. Margo, § Moler Barber College, NoDe i ee ____FEMALE HELP WANTED 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 1153-R. ty WANTED—Housekeeper for an ex- cellent home in Bismarck. Must ¢ be clean, steady, well recommend- iu ed and middle aged. Write Trib- gia cate AG Nos 28 WANTED—Competent maid for house work, Mrs. A. W. Mundy. Phone 265 after 6:00 p. m. general WANTED—A girl for housework. Call at 1100 Broad- way. Phone 129-W. i WANTED—Two dish washers and one waiter at O’Brien’s Cafe. q WANTED-—Girl for general house- work. Phone 1241. WANTED—Experienced waitress at ‘i Olympia. a ROOMS FOR RENT j FOR RENT—Furnished room in i modern home for sleeping or light housekeeping. Also a garage for rent. Cail at 319 Eighth street. FOR RENT—Extra large well light- ed moder: furnished room. Hot a: water heat, nice location, Ave. A 4 est. Phone 1241. FOR RENT—Modern room. Light, warm, clean and roomy. Suitable be ay or two. 719 Ninth. Phone FOR RENT—Two_ steam heated rooms above S. E. Bergeson & i] } ‘, ___Son’s Store. Phone 20 or 1087. FOR NT—A pleasant room in modern home. ood location. Call ve. W. house. Call at 210 Eleventh street North. Phone 535-M. ¢ DON’T throw yo I y damaged radiator away before seeing us. We can repair it and save you money, and guarantee our work. Ack’s Radiator Shop, back of Malm’s Service station. ¥ (G MAN, experienced in_ship- ping, receiving, purchasing, or of- fice work wishes position. Address Tribune Ad. No. 25. ——___ z LOTS FOR SALE 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 call on the Hedden Real Estate Agency, Webb Block, Phone 0. u FARM LANDS ~- FOR SALE—A clean partly im- proved quarter section between Steele and Driscoll, in 140-74. $240 cash, balance easy. Address Box 152, Detroit Lakes, Minn, - nn eaten —— FURNITURE FOR SALE _ FOR §. ‘Library dinette, ward- robe, daybed, kitchen cabinet, mat- tress, 9x12 axminster rug, bridge lamp, windsor rocker, orthophonic victrola and kitchen stool, all prac- tically new. Phone 786-R, 414 match, with marble dresser. Apply Box 352, Lakota, N. D. ‘% Paris, Oct. 18—At le Bourget field, if you didn’t see the huge birds of transit aarting in and darting out, you’d swear you were in the Dalgiborhood of a railroad station. same scurry of porters and baggage and taxis drawing up; the same consultations of train times, the same welter of trunks as the busses draw up from hotels, the same last minute arrivals. . . . Bourget field is the Grand Central station of the airways. Here you see pepe taking off for Vien- na, Prague, Munich, Moscow, Lon- don, Nice, Rome . . . almost any place on the face of Europe. . as casually as a merchant jumps the night train for Chicago. Tourists are whisked over the Europegn ma as though the magic carpet was sti available. | aiseiss 1” All about you can hear the whirr of the pro rs and the rising { rhythm of motors. Out of no- where comes a great bird, descends \ in its particular lane; out pile th | passengers and into taxis, or } poe cars and Are shied anny. engers transfer to another destined, in a few minutes to take i off for Zurich. _ : The Europq:n is astounded at the American’s surprise. Having seen the American’s amazing air ex- ploits, having read ef the scores of| air derbies and long aistance flights and such, the European cannot un- sderstand that we have no such air | | ! X Ir, j transport at home. The Europeanicash has had it so long’ that he expects ) planes actually to lefve and arri “son ee eens, And, for the most pa: y do. What is more the planes come in and out with startling rapidity and regularity, In the morring, at least, there are few minutes of leisure; something seems to be doing all the time. There is that same undercur- rent of excitement that one finds at the biggest railroad stations and, departing in various directions and ; \ a8 many coming in, while friends come down to see them off or greet pig eek yy poner yt i an 0 ‘a | American depot, from Pennsylvania Station to Los, Angeles. Listen to the Americans and you find most of them srsting to live in Europe. Listen to the Europeans and you find most of them wanting ; to live in America. And you can’t blame either. | ‘Drop an American, myself for in- I \ Ave. B._ ieee FOR SALE—One solid black walnut} __ four poster and dresser to | town considers it a great holiday if since a hundred or so folk may be} 2: Classitted Advertising Rates 1 insertion, 25 words or under .....ccceseeee 8 5Q 2 insertions, 25 words or under ... seeseee 3 insertions, 25 words Or under ......ecc0006 75 1 week, 25 words or under .........60005. 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 15 o'clock to insure insertion same day. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE : PHONE 82 Rebuilt Automobiles Satisfaction guaranteed. Sevenday trial. car priced in plain) figures. \ NO question about it, new car buy- ers nowadays get excellent value for the price they shave to pay. But by the same token, our used car customers get more than a dollar’s worth of automobile for every dollar they spend. We have many outstanding values on hand right now; come in and see them. “Rebuilt Cars With a Rerutation” Lahr Motor Sales Co. APARTMENTS FOR RENT—Very nicely furnished modern apartment, first floor, piano, electrio washing machine and frigidaire, clean, warm, hot water always. Call at 807 Fourth _Street. ae FOR RENT—Fornished or unfur- nished apattment in modern home, on ground floor, private entrance, lights, heat and water furnished. __415 Mandan street. Phone 858. FOR RENT—A beautifully fur- nished sleeping apartment, com- fortable summer and winter, suit- able for one or two persons. Phone FOR RENT—One three Ttoom un- furnished front apartment in Rue apartments, all modern, Phone _ 697-3 or call at 711 Ave. A. FOR RENT—Apartment at the Woodmansee with or without gar- age. Apply H.J. Woodmansee. __Phone 1188. nee ED eeping Little, 801 794, rnished light house- » Geo. W. ‘ourth street. Phone ROR RENT—Three room modern furnished apartment. 721 Third __Street. Phone 678-R. : FOR RENT—Apartment in” Trib- une Bldg. Apply Tribune office. Orne OV as FOR RENT—A two and—a three room | ent. The Laurain Ar's:_Phone 303. HOME LAUNDRY THE BEST address for washing your blankets, bed spreads; fam- ily and finished washes is Mar- HOUSES AND FLATS __ FOR RENT—Rooming house, 422 Fourth street. Apartment city heat- ed, three rooms with private bath. Also garage. For sale. Iron top acnor wad Ranke.” ENONG O05. | FOR RENT—To June Ist. Dietrich cottage (completely -furnished). 216 Thayer Avenue, $65 month. Inquire The By.ne Agency, Bis- marck Bank Building. FOR RENT—Three room house with finished basement, All modern except bath, located on Fifteenth street. Inquire at 210 Main or Seven room rn house, full basement, hot water heat. Also garage. 508 W. Broad- Phone 676-M after 5:00 SALESMEN WANTED—Refail automobile sales- man. Good opportunity for the right van. Super Six Motors. OFFICES FOR RENT. * desirable office room: in Hoskins Block. See S. A. Floren at Busi ness Service Co, WANTED—Roomers and at 816 Main Ave. c MISCELLANEOUS DIAMONDS set in very latest mountings, Engagement, wed- ding, dinner cluster, two and three stone rings, brooches,» bracelets, pins, earrings, combination lava- lieres and brooches, $25 and up. Cash or credit. Buy now for Xmas. James W. Marek, exclu- sive diamond dealer. Office at _ 108 Third street, Bismarck, N. D. FOR SALE—Fancy large solid cab- bage,. one cent per Jb. Large dry onions, two cents per Ib. Or- ders must be 100 Ibs. or more. Cash with order. Prices F. O. B. Washburn. Sacks free. Clarence Burg, Washburn, N. Dak. FOR SALE—Choice Imported Ger- man Rollers and Hartz i C boarders also native singers, Phone FOR SALE—12 gauge Remington automatic in excellent condition, little used. Opportunity to try out pattern if desired. Price $30.00. 208 Ave. B or phone 98: FOR SALE—One regis! horn bull. Priced reasonable, of splendid line of breeding, service- able age. Call at 718 Fifth. Mr. .. all. R SALE—Corfection and lunch room, all modern, good business. Part cash, balance to suit _ pi chaser,. Address Box 103, Garri- son, N. D. ee ee FOR SALE—Pool hall located - in small lively town. “Just the thing for some live wire. For informa- aon Write G.F. Pelke, Center, N._D. FOR SALE—Up to date cleaning plant. Call and look the plant over or write Caroline Greenwood at Hettinger, N. D., for informa- Ln a ee FIXTURES priced for quick sale. One candy case, two National Cash Registers. Inquire The “Ar- cade,” Mandan, N. D. GERMAN POLICE DOGS—Weil ee Bulten’s Home Laundry. lo injury to fabric. No chemicals used. Everything dried in fresh air, Men's shirts a specialty. We call and deliver, Call at 203 Ave. A W. or Phone 1017. leath Find nap leather case. Finder please phone 996 or 25. e é stance, into any one of the charming and colorful little towns outside of Paris and Nice and, within an hour, comes the discovery that you could rent the house-you'’ve-been-looking- for-all-your-life for the amazing sum of $40 per year. You then pry into the cost of foods, wine and such and, ere the day has ended, you find it possible to eat, drink and be mer- ry on something like one dollar a day. By this time you wonder how you can afford to live anywhere else. And recalling those hundred-dollarg a-month rentals in New York, there seems to be nothing to argue about. On the other hand, the European sees the American spending money and that’s ill he needs to know. In spite of the high rentals, food costs and such the American still seems to have enough money to get acrost the ocean, where:s the richest of persons in the $40-per-year rental he can take his family into Paris twice a year, though the round trir railroad fare comes to something like $4 in American money. For_ Europe is still very poor. Even Paris, tich by contrast, thanks REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF The First State, Bank of Regan, at Regan, in the State ‘of Nort! = kota, at the close of business Mon- day, October 10th, 1927. arces Loans and discounts Overdrafts, secured ani secured .. Bankini hou: and fixtur Other real et 5,351.74 12,945.08 i undivided 218.87 2,670.90 items d oth nks . Total .... 1,01. 21,479.88 «$ 81,161.63 Lie Capital stock -$ 10,000.00 Surplus fund =~ "3000.00 tMponits. sublect ju fo check 2» +.-:8 80,962.66 = ° Ceepole ves 145,95 Demand certiti: cates of deposit Time _certifica: of deposit ‘otal di 1,108.71 ler ie payable ™ $ 81,161.63 ST. He DAKOTA, urleigh—ss, arnes, Cashier of the above named ban! 80) Teer the “abons atatenes Pete: the best of my bac ‘true Re, belief. ES, ler. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 16th day of October, ee (Beal) -, Froth to i AF. TOURTLOTT, Notary Pubifc, Burleigh County, North’ Dal ota, pn ray. My commission expires March 7th, ect, Attest:— £ GRRE: Directors.” QO. a bred pups for sale. Male $15.00, female $10.00, E. J. Schaeffer, Ashley, N. D. este FOR SALE—A 12 gauge repeating inchester gun in excellent con- dition. Price reasonable. Phone 1193. a to tourist trade, lacks general pros- perity. Most folk are content to live from hour to hour. A few francs, so carelessly tossed about by tour- ists, is greedily seized upon. Lon- don, being bigger, seems even poorer and when you hear the shopgirls tell of their few shillings a week, you wonder how they live. é A fur coat on an American woman actually causes faces to turn about and, in an out of the way cafe, the display of money ‘in any aaactity sel causes an uneasy ex- c ‘of glances. . a sitie GILBERT SWAN. How Bachman’s Band Received Its Name Bachman’s Million Dollar Band, which will play in Bismarck on Oct- ober 21 at the city auditorium, orig- inated at the outbreak of the World War and was originally part of the Second Regiment, North Dakota Na- tional Guard, which was stationed at Bismarck before leaving for over- seas service, This band was later 7 No. 854 REPO! OF THE CONDITION OF The Sierais ptate a at eee ae he State of North Dakota, Eisne of paginess. October 10th,’ 1927, +8 61,310.94 a TUTE itocks, tax cer- B e a, claims, et ae 2,656.87 Y » fur 6 ‘and 1 fixtures. seseseee ++ 8,982.50 Checks and other cash items .... 22.06 ‘Coab ane ene 01 e banks : seeeee 54,800.32 54,922.38 Total ..............- + $122,950.43 Liabilities fs Gapital stock paid in $ 10,000.00 Surplus fund 2,000.00 Undivided profits, less ex- benses and taxes paid .. 116.19 Individual de- penta subject, check ......$ 56,392.35 Guaranty, fund ifeponl sigkains 235.20 ime cer: es oft de; oes 53,532.09 Cashier's — chec' outstanding ., , 674.60 110,834.24 ‘Total «$122,950.43 STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh—ss. I, F. H. Pillsbury, Cashier of the above named bank, do solomnly swear that the above statement is true, to fhe. best of my knowledge and be- . Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 15th day of Oct., 1927. 4H\ EB. WILDFANG, Notary Public, Burleigh County, North Dakot: 2. My commission expires Jan. 4th, 1932. Correct. Attest:— pS aoegare si BENZ, Sasbs ER, Directors, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SAIC La A MO attached to the 116th Engineers,| for good band mus: 41st Division. over the United States. During this past win- On a certain occasion while’ serv-| t@r General Hunter Liggett was a MOWM’N POP SAY. CHICK - HOW DID THAT DENT GET IN THE FRONT FENDER OF THE CAR ? eter I DON'T CARE ABOUT THE DAMAGE~ IT'S THE PRINCIPLE OF THE THING ~ AFTER THIS BE AG tend ERE'S ANYONE 2 TAPS A PERSON, WHO DOESNT TELL THE TRUTH — ing in France with this regiment,| guest at the Tampa Bay Hotel which General Hunter Liggett said, “That) is located in the same beautiful park band is worth a million dollars to} where Mr, Bachman and his band the American Army.” This occasion] played every afternoon and evening was commented upon around the| for the entertainment of Tampa’s division until the band became known| thousands of tourists and winter as. “The Million Dollar Band.” Sever-| v: al members of the original Second North Dakota Regiment band as.) sociated themselves with Harold) man was very much honored and Bachman in the professional band) gratified by receiving a note from which he now conducts and the ni name given this band in 1917 in} “I still believe -hat what I said abo France is now taken as a synonym! your band in France is true.” itors. General Liggett attended y of the band concerts during sojourn in Tampa and Mr. Bach- him before he left in whjch he said, Winey certainly gives the stamp of authen- ticity to the story of how Bachman’s Million Dollar Band got its name. DULUTHIAN KILLS SELF Duluth, Oct. 18. P)—Melancholy is believed to h prompted Mrs. Alli Koivu, 37, mother of three sm children, to commit suicide late Sun-| day night by inhaling gas, Coroner C. F. McComb, declared after in-! vestigating the case. She did not| leave any note of explanation but| in the past had several times threat- | ened “to turn on the gas and end it all,” Dr, McComb Good Advice NOW DONT TELL Me THAT— By Taylor YouRe THE LAST ONE WHO HAD THE CAR ——WHY COULDN'T YOu BE A MAN (SEARCH ME— _ L DUNNO SAY, POP: NO Pee gs = acres. oa oars Zors Fo GS LEESON * AMAN ON THE PHONE WANTS TO SPEAK WITH AND TELL ME THE TRUTH? TT TELL HIM “LM NOT HERES ti Freckles and His Friends pots are | US FELLAS TEASED OSSIE ABOUT MIS DOAN, 1 SO MUCK UAT KES GOING To SELL. 1% TAG=A, SURE IM GOING 7 SELL Ay DOA! Wry Aor? Dal Qtr) UNDER WEAR You YoU WANT 70 SELL IT? WHOENER BUYS 17 NOT AISAICE DON THAT HIS UNCLE CLEM GANE HIM? GAD AHET Was (ol Ich ¢ “TOOK EVEN YoRE RIGHT ‘OFF: TEASE AIM UKE THAT= LAAGLAD YOURE GOING TO KEEP YouR ) YES, TLL KEEP Dork, OSSIE=LET'S AUNAYS BE, GOOD FRIENDS! YOU FELLAS GU6LT TO KNOW BETTER THAN TO NOW HELL TWIN I AM TO BLAME AND BE MAD AT ME / 7 i « IT-COME ON AN’ WATCH ME | FEED IT Some | NICE CHARACTERS OF THE STORY 1) PHILO VANCE JOHN F.-X. MARKHAM 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 MAJOR ANTHONY BENSON .. -.-Brother of the murdered man MRS ec N hs ee 485i saeee .. Ho eeper for Alvin Benson MURIEL ST. CLAIR .........+ ikcha vn hit Satie A_young singer CAPTAIN PHILIP LEACOCK i Pree Miss St. Clair’s fiance LEANDER PFYFE .... i -..+..Intimate of Alvin Bi MRS. PAULA BANNING . Seen a Vibe a, A frierd of ELSIE HOFFMAN Seeretary of the firm of Benson and Benson Li L. BIGSBY OSTRANDER retired army officer MORIARTY a y, Public Accountants DINWIDDIE ........ Assistant District Attorney T HEATF . + Ser- of the Homicide Bureau SNITKIN, EMERY .... of Homicide Bureaa ANLON Command- Officer of Detectives as- izned to District Attorney's office °S, TRACY, SPRINGER, HIGGINBOTHAM :..... “ eae «+. Detectivor as- signed to District Atturney’s office CAPTAIN CARL HAGEDORN .. irearms expert DR. DOREMUS . Medical examiner FRANK SWACKER . Sec- retary to the District Attorney CURRIE .......... ++ Vanoe’s valet 8. S. VAN DINE... ; The Narrator * THIS HAS HAPPENED Vance demonstrates hy meas- urements at the scene of the shooting that the murderer must have been approximately six feet (all and thus eliminates St. Clair as a suspect. Pfyfe tells Markham that Lea- cock had threatened to kill in Benson. Markham begins Leacock guilty. ‘Then s brought that a large automobile that had been putside Benson’s house the ht of the murder isted in Pfyfe's name. +o * THE STORY x (Monday, June 17; 6 p.m.) Vance and I spent an hour or so afternoon at the Anderson G leries locking at some tapestr which were to be auctioned the n day, and afterward had tea at at the Stuyvesant Club e 6. few minutes rkham and Pfyfe arrived; nt at once into one of} » to see he far from amiable, and gave him an almost brusque 1 tation. had merely nodded, and now garding Pfyfe dy as if ing to find some excuse for his istence, but utterly unable to kham went directly to the Mr. Pfyfe, that achine in a gar- d gave the bout it.” a hurt look, deeply wronged,” he “I gave the man am glad you admit the fact By William: aa Boy, aH DOAN WEAR NO UNDERWEAR, Gop DATS SKIN p “O SEE. ’ returned Markham. sw, by the newspapers, of at your machine was seen nson’s house the night he| hot. hy else should I have paid so Eberally to have its presence in New York kept secret?” His tone in-} dicated that he was pained at the other’s obtuseness. “In that case, why did you keep it in the city at all?” asked Mark- ham. “You could have driven it back to Long Island.” Pfyfe shook his head sorrowfully, a look of commiseration in his eyes. Then he leaned forward with an air of benign patience:—he would be gentle with this dull-witted district attorney, like a fond teacher with a backward child, and would strive to lead him out of the tangle of his uncertainties. “I am_a married man, Mr. Mark- ham.” He pronounced the fact as if some special virtue attached to it. “I started on my trip for the Catskills Thursday after dinner, in- tending to stop a day in New York to make my adieus to someone re- siding here. ‘ “I arrived quite late—after mid- night—and decided to call on Alvin. But when I drove up, the house was dark. So, without even ringing the bell, I walked to Pietro’s in Forty- third street to get a night-cap,—I keep a bit of my own pinch-bottle Haig and Haig there,—but, alas! The place was closed, and I strolled back to my car. ... To think, that while I was away poor Alvin was shot!” i He stopped and polished his eye- glass. x “The irony of it! . . .I didn’ even guess that anything had hap- pened ag the dear fellow, — how id “I drove, all unsuspecting of the tragedy, to a Turkish bath, and re- mained there the night. morning I'read of the murder; and in the later editions I saw the men- tion of my car. It was then I be- came—shall I say worried? But no. ‘Worried’ is a misleading word. “Let me say, rather, that I be- came aware of the false position I might be placed in if the were traced to ae oe Larere oe the man say etn of its whereabouts, lest its discovery confuse the issue of Alvin's death.” One might have thought, from his tone and the self-righteous way he looked at Markham, that he had bribed the garage-man wholly out of ideration for the district attor- ney and the police, | tr The next | © ureters “oi PAGE SEVEN QN MURDER CASE “Why didn’t you continue on your trip?” asked Markham. “That would have made the discovery of the car even less likely.” Pfyfe adopted an air of compas- sionate surprise. “With my dearest friend foully murdered? How could one have the heart to seek diversion at such a sad moment? . . . I_ returned home, and informed Mrs. Pfyfe that my car had broken down.” “You pie have driven home in your car, it seems to me,” observed Markham, Pfyfe offered a look of infinite forbearance for the other’s inspec- tion, and took a deep sigh, which conveyed the impression that, though he could not sharpen the world’s perceptions, he at least could mourn for its deplorable lack of under- standing. “If IT had been fn the Catskills away from any source of informa- tion, where Mrs. Pfyfe believed m to be, how would I have heard of Alvin's death until, perhaps, days afterward? “You see, unfortunately I had not mentioned to Mrs. Pfyfe that I was stopping over in New York. The truth is, Mr. Markham, I had rea- son for not wishing my wife to know I was in the city. Consequently, if I had driven back at once, she would, i regret to say, have suspected me of breaking my journey. I therefore pursued the course which seemed simplest.” Markham was becoming annoyed at the man’s fluent hypocrisy. After a brief silence he asked abruptly: “Did the presence of your car at Benson’s house that night have any- thing to do with your apparent de- sire to implicate Captain Leacock in the affair?” Pfyfe lifted his eyebrows in pained astonishment, and made a gesture of polite protestation. “My dear sir! His voice be- tokened profound resentment of the other’s unjust imputation. “If yes- terday you detected in my words an undercurrent of suspicion against Captain Leacock, I can account for it only by the fact that I actually saw the Captain in front of Alvin’s house when I drove up that night.” Markham shot a curious look at Vance; then said to Pfyfe: “You are sure you saw Leacock?” “I saw him quite distinctly. And I would have mentioned the fact yesterday had it not involved the tacit confes ion of my own pres- e ther “What if it had?” demanded Markham. “It was vital informa- tion and I could have used it this morning. You were placing your comfort ahead of the legal demands ; of justice; and your attitude puts a very questionable aspect on your own alleged conduct that night.” “You are pleased to be severe, sir,” said Pfyfe with self-pity. “But. having placed myself in a false posi- tion, I must accept your criticism.” “Do you realize,” Markham went on, “that many a district attorney if he knew what I now know about ‘our movements, and had been ed the way you've treated me would arrest you on suspicion?” “Then I can only say,” was t! suave response, “that I am most fortunate in‘my inquisitor.” Markham rose. “That will be all for today, Mr. Pfyfe. But you are to remain in w York until I give you permis- sion to return home. Otherwise, I will have you held as a material witnes: Pty nade a shocked gesture in deprecation of such acerbities, -r bade us a ceremonious good-after- noon, When we were alone, Markham looked seriously at Vance. “Your prophecy was fulfilled, though I didn’t dare hope for such luck. Pfyfe’s evidence puts the final link in the chain against the Cap- tain.” ce smoked languidly. ‘lll admit your theory of the crime is most satisfyin’, But alas! the psychological objection remains, Everything fits, with the one excep- tion of the Captain; and he doesn’t fit at all... . . Silly idea, I know. But he has no more business being cast as the murderer of Benson than the bisonic Tetrazzini had being cast as the phthisical Mimi.”* "Obviously a reference to Tetraz- zini’s partons in aA Benen . the Manhattan Opera House 3 (To Be Continued.) NOTICE TO ye en N.THE MATTER OF THE ES’ Tor Andrew Niva, Deceased. Notice is hereby given by the une dersigned, Emi! Niem}, the adminise trator of the estate of Andrew Niva, lato of the township of Lyman, in the County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within six months after the first polcagen of this notice, to said Emil Niem!, said administrator, at his idence on the south-east quarter (8. E.%) of sec- tion twenty-two (22) in township one hundred forty-one (141) north, range seventy-seven (77) west of the fifth principal meridian in Burleigh County, North Dakota, or t Judge of the County Cout of said Burleigh County, at his office in the Court House in the city of Bismarck, in Burleigh County, North cota. You are hereby further’ notified that Hon, I. C. Davies, Judge of ti County Court within and for th ant tate County of Burleigh, North Dakota, hi of May, A. D. 1938, at th o'clock’ in the forenoon of sa: y, at the Court Rooms in the Court House in the city of Biamarck, in said Burleigh County, as the time and place for hearing and adjusting all claims against the estate of the said Deces whi Andrew Niva, ich have been duly and regularly presented as hereinbefore pre" ded. Dated October Sth, A. D. 1927, EMIL NIEMI, Administrator of the Estate of Andrew Niva, Deceased. HO. M. REGISTER, 4 Attorney of said Administrator, Bismarck, North Dakot Bw publication on the llth day ” Goss

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