The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 21, 1927, Page 7

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Classified Advertisements prosperous, get into the Automo- tive Industry, Electricity or Avia- tion. Write for FREE catalog. STATE AUTO ELECTRICAL & ae SCHOOL, Aberdeen, ‘WANTED—Ginl for general house- work and companion. Call at 619 Mandan, Phone 1304-W. ‘WANTED—First class experienced clothing man and window trim- ._S. E. Bergeson & Son. . Catalog free. aay Barber College, Fargo, FEMALE HELP WANTED __ r. 5 '—Fifty attrac tive girls 4 for Smith’s Greater Bismarck Ladies Band. et’s snap into it, girls, and give this town-a real band. Apply Ei et Shop, Bismarck. Ask for Mr. ‘WAN’ —Housekeeper for an ex- cellent home in Bismarck. Must be clean, steady, well recommend- ed and middle aged. Write Trib- ___une, care Ad No, 24, WANTED—A lady about thirty years of age to keep house | on farm, Scandinavian custodian. Write Tribune Ad. No. 27. WANTED—School gisl to work for hoard and room. Call at Mohawk, 101 Fifth stree! ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—One large modern fur- nished room suitable for one or Close in. Also garage for re Phone 926-3 or call at 507 Third ‘street. se : FOR RENT—Furnished room in modern home for sleeping or light housekeeping. Also a garage for __ vent. Call at 319 Eighth street. FOR RENT—Two furnished light housekeeping rooms on first floor, ae. a sewing machine for sale. Call a 604 Third street. FOR RENT—Extra large well light-|3 ed moderr furnished room. Hot water heat, nice location, Ave, A 7 West. Phone 1241, FOR ENT—Light housekeep' rooms, new decorated and electric range, $20.00 per month; 706 ‘Tha ver Street. sot FOR ~ RENT—Nicely furnished rooms in strictly modern home. _Call_at 816 Main or phone 919-R. FOR RENT—Two_ steam heated rooms above S. Bergeson & Son’s Stor: 20 or 1087, Pl _WORK WANTED st DON’T throw your old leaky or damaged radiator away before seeing us. We can repair it and . Save you money, and guarantee our work, Radiator Shop, bi tation. desires to do evening work. Will take outside dictation and do the typing at her own home. Write Tribune Ad. No, 26. a eee _ FURNITURE FOR SALE FOR SALE—Library dinette, ward- robe, daybed, kitchen cabinet, mat- tress, 9x12 axminster rug, bridge lamp, windsor rocker, octhophonic victrola and kitchen stool, all prac- tically new. Phone 786-R, 414 L ne child's go-c i- brary table, clarinet, one floor an table lamp, Call at 719 Ninth street. ey ae FOR SALE—9xi2 Wilton rug and Malable range with or without PHONE 82 1 insertion, 25 words or UNdEr ..sscesssseoeee u $ 50 2 insertions, 25 words or or under 1 week, 25 under 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 day. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 32 Rebuilt Automobiles Satisfaction guaranteed. Sevenday trial. Each car priced in plain} figures, EXPERTS agree that any good mad- ern new car has a potential mile- age of at least 100,000. If it cost $1,000 and has been driven 20,000 miles, i+ should be worth HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—Modern 5 room house and lots 13-16, Block 69, McKen- zie and Coffin addition. Price $3600.00. Liberal discount for cash. Write Box 505, Jamestown, __.N. D., or phone 420 Bismarck. FOR SALE—AIl modern five room house, five blocks west of post- office. Immediate possession. Bargain. Will take late model sedan as part payment. Terms. __Phone 973-M. FOR SALE OR RENT—Six room modern house practically all new inside, partly furnished. Will baal ea to the right party. aymond street. Phone 942-R FOR RENT Reoming house, Fourth street. Apartment city heat- ed, three rooms with private bath. Also garage. For sale. Iron top __for gas range. Phone 90 FOR RENT—To June cottage (completely fur 216 Thayer Avenue, $65 month. Inquire The B)-ne Agency, Big- marck Bank Building. FOR RENT—A good six room mod- ern home, 706 Fourth street. Hot water heat, laundry and garage. augue at 404 Ave. C or phone 186. FOR RENT—Large nine room house with full basement and large barn at 333 South Eighth street, In- quire of O’Hare, Cox & Cox. FOR RENT—Weil furnished modern house, including electric range $800. But you buy it here for half that, or less, Come in and see for your.elf, “Rebuilt Cars With a Reputation” Lahr Motor Sales Co. FOR RENT—Very nicely furnished modern apartment including piano and electric washing machine. Clean, warm and always hot wa- _ter, Call at 807 Fourth street. Furnished or unfur- nished apartment 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- oe for one or two persons, Phone RENT—One three room un- furnished front apartment in Rue apartments, 697-5 or cal 1 q FOR RENT—Apartment at the Woodmansee with or without gar- age. Apply H.J. Woodmansee. _Phone 1188. Pee ex FOR RENT—Three room modern furnished apartment with private fee 721 Third street. Phone -R. FOR RENT—Furnished apartment. with bath. Guaranteed good and warm. Call at 930 Fourth street. FOR RENT—Furnished small apart- ment in modern home, 618 Sixth street.” Phone '568-W. : FOR RENT—Apartment in Tril une Bldg. Apply Tribune office. Occupancy Nov. 1st. a as FOR RENT—A two and a three room apartment. The Laurain Ar's. Phone 303. OFFICE ROOM FOR RENT. OFFICES FOR RENT—Suite of two desirable office rooms in Hoskins Block. See S. A. Floren at Busi ness Service Co. j HOME LAUNDRY FOR $150.00 Mahogany Vic- trola end 40 double records $50.00. Phone 967. _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. AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE—Whippet Sedan. Used very little. Looks like new. Will sell at discount or consider ex- change for larger car. Address Box 481, Bismarck, N._D. od New Yorker ode Paris ™ Paris, Oct, 21.—Art flourishes in Paris even as bright lights flourish on Broadway and automobile fac- tories flourish in Detroit. After a day of the Louvre, the Luxembourg and the byways of Montparnasse, you will agree me that art in Paris is as great a commonplace as Fords in Main street. Paris may not have bath tubs; Paris may not have heat and “jambon and ceufs” may be a bit. hard to get—but it has enough art to feed the souls of all the creatively starved good folk of the world, And Paris, or rather Parisians, love to remind you that they care nothing for the creature comforts of America, You are so commercial— 50. machine made. Ah, you have not art! wi front, Phone 853-J. After a day in the art centers, you | $f etagger dizzily down the street, your es i laden with catalogs, hundreds of pages in thickness, showing you not only art of these places, but the “superior” modernism of Vienna, Phceoupen you map rasch & com ereupon you may le clusion such as struck me, that there is quite too much art in the world; that overdoses of art can leave one as weary as overdoses of and noises in New York and overdoses of Babbitt conversation, Broadway, playgoing, movies and whatnot. One is informed. that the Louvre is “something to do” on a rai day and since rain seems perpetual in Paris... at least this season— I was surprised at the smallness the crowd, And, after one outward glance at the Louvre,.as it spreads over several dozen blocks of seek open spaces you may, hesitate about entering at all, lest you find ‘your- self half way round at the end of a solid Soc ot traveling. You must lunge boldly in, making up your pie ‘what you are going to look for, and strike out. By visiting every tenth room it is josvible to mske about a third of THE BEST address for washing your blankets, bed spreads, fam- ily and finished washes is Mar- uerit Bulten’s Home La Ro injury to fabric. No chemica! used. Everything dried in f: air, Men’s shirts a specialty. We call and deliver, Call at 203 Ave. A W, or Phone 1017. — __LOST ser eter LOST—Man’s small purse contain- ing fifteen dollars and change, to- gether with hunting license tween Third and Fourth street on Avenue D. Finder return to 813 Third street, Reward. the trip through the Louvre in the course of a hectic afternoon. And if you've rushed through the Lux- embourg in the morning, there’s still time to make the byways of Mont- parnasse in the evening. Now Montparnasse hangs its pies where it finds them, as a ittery it finds shelter. You may see hanging from the door- ways; may see it decorating the exterior of a sidewalk cafe or the interior of a bar. You may find it with | in your pension or you may find it in NOTICE OF EXECUTION SALE OF NAL PROPERT State of North Dakota, County of urleigh. In District Court, Fourth Judicial District. State of North Dakota, Plaintitt, vs. Lizzie Hoff and Christ Hoff fer husband, and all other persons having any right, Title or inter- est in a Ford Touring Car with winter Enclosure bearing 1927 Boath Motes Number 10g7eseh , Motor Number > “ Defendant. the above entitied ection in favor of e above entitled action in favor o! the above named Plaintiff, and against the above named Defendants, Lizzie Hoff and Christ Hoff, and ail other ons having an; ig title and Interest in a ord Touring Car, with winter Enclosure bearing 1927 Li- ge Number, 56299, Motor Number 76351. The said property. being forfeited to the State of North Da- ota in said Judgment under the Law relative to the sale of forfeited prop- erty and sale thereof of Automobiles sed transportation of intoxi- wu the cating liquors, which ecution has Boast ed je! oped. to ‘me, the w in i have levied upon the foll wing lescribed %, of and bel ing to-wit: One ne Winter en- to} Npmper 10976351, Li- mber, ‘ad te of rth Da- cote, thi Car, wit! fea, Fr of the Court se, tn the Cit: Ie f Bur- kota, on the 26th iF 1927, rhe bone er 3 bet ys as iat oey, Ba Sea i at ‘the aforesaid exes ‘and interest ‘and ated ¢ 5 19 Dated this 24th, ret Oct., 1927, Reese of Burleigh County, First publicatio: t. 14th, 1927, puplietio/acan) Vth 393% 3 | develo} ratus and washing machine. Phone 171 or call at 414 Eighth strect. 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. re Oxford s all of good size, well boned and denise fleece, pa pers furnished. Duroc Jersey boars and gilts, long and heavy boned, papers furnished. Regi: tered polled milking shorthorn bulls, These are of good milking strain. Come and sce them, three miles north of Bismarck, Nagel & Strutz, Bismarck, N. D. Box 21, DIAMONDS set in very latest mountings. Engagement, wed- ding, dinner cluster, two and three stone rings, brooches, bracelets, ins, earrings, combination lava: Cash or Xmas. sive diamond dealer. 108 Third street, Bismarck, N. FOR SALE—Fancy large solid cab- bage, one cen€ per Ib. 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. B FOR SALE—Electrically equipped blacksmith shop,’ in live town of 600. Only shop in town. Bar- gain if taken in 30 days. Inquire at Union State Bank, Hazen, N. D. FOR SALE—Choice Imported G man Rollers and Hartz Mountain, credit. “ Buy now for James W. Marek, exclu- Office at D. also native singers. Cages, seeds,|' treats, ete. Phone 115-J, Jacob Bull, Dickinson, N. D., Box 728. FOR SALE—Confection and lunch room, all modern, good business. Part cash, balance to suit pur- chaser. Address Box 103, Garri-| ght) et A | a eee ae Me WANTED—To hear of parties hav- ing Roan Short horn bull 15 to 20 months old and state price. W. F. Pesonew, Wing, N. D. Lock Box ORDA ao Re peste’, * he ey FOR RENT— Garage opposite post- office. Call at 208 Third street. Phone 885 ie ae FOR RENT—A garage. Call at 104 Thayer Ave. West. the cafe where you take dinner. You will find it carefully priced and the veriest waiter can tell you what it’s all about and who executed it. And, after being told night and day that Americans have no art, you wilt be amazed to find that a goodly reentage of the‘things you see ave been done by Americans. You will be further flabbergasted to find that most of the young artists in font of the cafes are young Amer- icans and when you wander through the colonies at Honfleur and Caens, outside of Nice, or trot over to Con- carneau in Brittany, you'll see “my country ’tis of thee” written all over the members of the art colonies. “Ah,” the Frenchman will tell_you, “but this is the influence of Paris .. of France. You do not have it yourselves, You must come here.” And ay advice is, never try to argue with a Frenchman, particular- ly when your French is limited’ to counting up to ten. : GILBERT SWAN, (Copyright 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) MACHINE DOES ieres and brooches, $25 and up.|' solve practically and accurately problems of advanced electrical y, which have troubled en- gineers, The “Product Integraph” might be called an adding machine carried to an extreme in its design. Vhere workers in the business world are ordinarily satisfied with addition, subtraction, multiplication ion o$.numbers, the engineer deals with curves and graphs which represent for him the past, present and future of the things in which he deals,” said Mr. Bush. MOW’N POP SAY~MR. GUNN ~ Do You HAVE AN A ONE CENT SALE! WHATS TH UM ALL ODT, HENRY 1 WAS JUST GOING To. SEND AMY UP \f WELL, FOR INSTANCE,IF YOU BUY A HALF DOZEN BLADES FOR 35CENTS-Yov CAN GET AN EXTRA PACKAGE FOR A PENNY MORE_g@f In operating the machine _ the apparatus keep on the curves of the! mathematician or engineer, in effect | plots. | feeds into it the equation and parts the pointers move along the of the problem which cannot now] curves the flowing through | be solved by formal mathematics.|the meter S proportionally and The answer is turned out in from/that used is totaled and recorded eight minutes to a few how The meter controls a motor which A watt hour meter, ilar tod a pencil along another mov- those used in the house for recording | i f on which a curve, | electrical power consumption is the aced and | foundation for the mac . The engineer using the machine plots on paper the equations used and th are passed slowly under point: which operators stationed along th pow By Taylor | THIRTY FIVE CENTS: A HALF DOZEN~ BOT THEY'RE HAVING A “ONE CENT SALE* Imagine This? WELL, ASK HER To GET ME SOME, Too - HOW MUCH ARE THEY? I DONT REMEMBER, WELL, LOAN ME A CENT, WILL YA? I DON'T Have ANY CHANGE. JUST UP ANY GRABBED TIS GRIZZLY BEAR BY 728 THROAT AN’ Even Jay Knows by Bioscer| AY! AY! WASNT) ANY UNCLE CLEM YOUR UNCLE CLEM )GET SCARED +? SCARED AT ALLY? HAOM"' AE DOESN'T KKOW WHAT UC FEAR MEANS' = a WAY, AE MUST BE DUMB! Wy DON'T KE ASK WORK OF MIND} Inaccessible Fields of Research Opened by Perfecting of ‘Mechanical Brain’ Cambridge, Mass., Oct.- 21.—(AP)'| An electrical machine th 8 nical mind” that solves in- volved mathematical problems complex for the human brain, has the Massachusetts perfected at tl hi Institute of Technology by Dr. Van-. nevar Bush, professor of | electric. » and a staff of research, rs The institute, in affnouncing the today, said the. - as & luct: was begun several years ago in an effort to evolve a machine iat that would}. . By Williams Ss ” . HEE-HE SHOULD BE Goin ANYTHING * ON PRESSIN' BUSINESS MEW: YAHOOS BUT IT WONT GITIT. HE KEEPS IT IN A PICKLE BARR'L HENCE TH WARTS, HOH WES —LET ME DIE NOW-IVE SEEN ENERY THING. TRwvillians (01927 BY NEA SERVICE, INC * ALVIN H. BENSON ; MAJOR ANTHONY BENSON CHARACTERS OF THE STORY PHILO VANCE JOHN F.-X. MARKHAM District Attorney of New York War” Fell known Wall Street’ broker and man-about-town, who was mys- teriously murdered in his home ...Brother of the murdered man MRS. ANNA PLATZ -. Housekeeper for Alvin B MURIEL ST. CLAIR A CAPTAIN PHILIP LEACOCK te alisg St Cla . A friend FMAN Secretary of f Benson and Benson COLONEL BIGSBY OSTRANDER A retired army officer WILLIAM. H. MORIARTY ..... An alderman GEORGE G. STITT Of the firm of Stitt snd McCoy, Public Accountants MAURICE DINWIDDIE .... Assistant District ERNEST HEATE . geant of the Homicide Bureau BURKE, SNITKIN, EMERY .... Detectives of Homicide Bureag BEN HANLON Commeand- ing Officer of Detectives as- signed to District Attorney’s office PHELPS, TRACY, SPRINGER, HIGGINBOTHAM ...........6 Detectivor signed to District Atturney’s CAPTAIN CARL HAGEDORN .. Firearms expert ner s ER ... «. See- retary to the District Attorney CURRIE ...... Vance's valet S. S. VAi The Narrator THIS HAS HAPPENED Suspicion attaches in turn to Miss St. Clair, yfe and Lea- cock. Vance eliminates Miss St. Clair, and when P mony tends to incriminate Lea- cock, Markham is about te ar- rest the latter when Vance in- tervenes. Major Benson brings “Miss Hoffman to Markham's office, see NOW BEGIN THE STORY CHAPTER XXXIIL The girl raised her head prettily, and related her story in a capable, well-modulated voice. “About a week a ago—I think it was Wednesday— Mr. M | ks loudly in’ Mr. office T can hear them. a minutes Mr, Pfyfe and Mr, Benson} began to quar J thought it was | funn for they were such good! friends; but I didn't pay much at- | tention to it, and went on with my} got loud, | ght several words. J ked me this morn ing what the words were; so F sup- pose you want. to know, too. Well, they kept referring to a note; and/ onee or check was men tioned. times I caught the word ‘f: in-law,’ and once Mr. Benson ‘nothing doing.’ “Then Mr. Benson called me in and told me to get him an envelope marked ‘Pfyfe-Personal’ out of his private drawer in the safe. T got: it for him, but right after that our bookkeeper wanted me for some thing, so J didn’t hear a nore, “About J5 minutes later, when Mr. Pfyfe had gone, Mr. Benson called me to put the envelope hack. | And he told me that if Ptyfe ever called a Iw "t, under} any circumstances, to Jet him int the private office unless he himself was there, He also told me that I wasn't to give the envelope’ to any- body—-not even on a written order +. And that is all, Mr. Markham.”| uring her recital I had been as! much interested in Vance’s actions as in what: she had been saying. When first she had entered the! room, his casual glance had quickly) changed to one of attentive anima- tion, and he had studied her clos When Markham had placed th chair, for her, he had risen and} reached for a book lying on the| fable near her; and in doing so, he had leaned unnecessarily close to her in order to inspect—or so it appeared to me—the side of her head. And during her story he had} continued his observation, at times bending slightly to the right or left} to better his view of her. Unaccountable as his actions had emed, J knew that some serious ion had prompted the scrutiny, . When she finished speaking Major Benson: reached in his pocket, and tossed a long manilla envelope on the desk before Markham. “Here it is,” he said. “I got Miss Hoffman to bring it to me the mo- ment she told me her story.” Markham picked it up hesitantly, as ifdoubtful of his right to inspect its contents. , “You'd better look at: it,” the Ma- jor advised. “That envelope may very possibly have an important bearing on the case.” Markham removed- the elastic band, and spread the contents of the envelope before him, They con- sisted of three items—a cancelled check: for, $10,000 made out to Leander, Pfyfe and signed by Alvin Benson; a note for $10,000 to Alvin Benson signed by Pfyfe, and a brief confession, also signed by Pfyfe, saying the check was a forgery. The check was dated March 20th of the current year. The confession and the note were dated two days later. The note—which was for 90 days—fell due on Friday, June 21st, only three days off. e For fully five minutes Markham studied these documents in silence. Their sudden introduction into the case’ seemed: to mystify him. Nor! had any ofgthe perplexity left his face when he finally put them back in the envelope. He questioned ‘the girl carefully, and had her repeat certain parts of her story, But nothing more could be learned from her; and at length he turned to the major. “T'll keep this envelope a while, if you'll let me. I don’t see its significance at present, but I'd like to think it over.” SQN MURDER CASE INE © Guns cond on! retary had gone. Vance rose at! 5 is legs. ba he murmured, “‘A things ,journey: sun and moo morning, noon and afternoon, nig’ and all her stars.’ Videlicet: ¥ begin to make progress.” “What the devil are you drivir. ‘ int’restin’ young woman, th Hoffman—eh, what?” Van joined irrelevantly idn’t care especially for tH deceased Benson. And she fair detests the aromatic Leander. EF had prob’bly told her he was mi understood by Mrs. Pfyfe, and vited her to dinner.” “Well, she’s pretty enough,” can mented Markham _ indifferentl. “Benson, too, may have made at Neues ied is why she dislike im.” “Oh, absolutely,” Vance mused moment. “Pretty—yes; but mi leadin’. She's an ambitious gel, an capable, too—knows her busines 's no ball of fluff. She has solid, hoaest streak in her—a bit ¢ Teutonic blood, I'd say.” He paused meditatively, “3 know, Markham, I have a suspicie you'll hear from little Miss Katink again “Crystal-gazing, eh?” mumble Markham. “Oh, dear no!” Vance was loob ing lazily out of the window, “Bt I did enter the silence, so to speal and indulged in a bit of craniologic: contemplation.” "I thought I noticed you oglin the girl,” said Markham. “But sinc her hair was bobbed and she he her hat on, how could you analy the bumps?—if that’s the phrat you phrenologists use.” ‘orget not Goldgmith’s preacl Vance admonished. s lips prevailed, and thos to scoff remained « . To begin with, I'm n> t. But I believe i acial, and heredit’ry var ations in skulls. In that reg J'm_merely an old-fashioned Dai n. very child knows that the sku of the Piltdown man differs fro that of the Cromagnard; and eve a lawyer could distinguish an Arya head from a Ural-Altaic head, or Maylaic from a Negrillo. And, i ed at all in the Mendelia , heredit’ry cranial, simila: s can be detected. « . “But all this erudition is beyon you, I fear. Suffice it to say tha despite the young woman’s hat an hair, I could see the contour of he head and the bone structure in he face; and I even caught a glimps of her ear.” i “And thereby deduced that we hear from her again,” added Mark ham scornfully. “Indirectly—yes,” admitted Vane “I say, i ie 's revelatior do not Colonel Ostrander’s con ments of yesterday begin to-tak, on a phosph’rescent aspect?” “Look here!” said Markham ir i y. “Cut out these circun and get to the point.” Vance tutned slowly from the wir und regarded him pensively. larkham—I put the questio doesn’t Pfyfe’s forge . with its accompanying con on and its shortly-due note, cor stitute a rather strong motive fo doing away with Benson?” Markham sat up suddenly. ou think Pfyfe guilty—is tha ‘Well, here's the touchin’ situe tion: Pfyfe obviously signed Ber son’s name to a check, told hi about it, and got the surprise of hi life when his dear old pal asked hir for a 90-day note to cover th mount, and also for a written cor fession to hold over him to insur payment, “Now consider the subs‘quer st, Pfyfe called on Ber son a week ago and had a querre in which the check was mentioner ~-Damon was prob’bly pleading wit is to extend the note, an ulgarly informed that ther: nothing doing.’ ‘Secondly, Benson was shot tw later, less than a week befor note fell due, * ‘Thirdly, Pfyfe was at Benson’ house the hour of the shooting, an not only lied to you about his where abouts, but bribed a garage owner t keep silent about his car. “Fourthly, his explanation, whe caught, of his unrewarded search fc Haig and Haig was, to say the leas a bit thick. And don't forget ths the original tale of his lonely for nature's solitudes in the kills—with his mysterious stop-ove in New York to confer a farewe benediction upon some anonymou person—w:. not all that one cou! ie hoped for in the line of plaus ility. “Fifthly, he is an impulsive gar bler, given to taking chances; an his experiences in South would certainly have familarize him nya saggy ne 2 “Sixthly, he was rather eager involve Leacock, and did a bit of cac dish Tala DeSOnE 1 that end, eve, informing you that he saw the Cay tain on the spot at the fatal mc ment. “Seventhly—but why bore Have I not supplied you with the factors you hold so dear,—-wh: are they now?. opportunity, aning, is ost then, the in’s gun, bottom of the East River; so you's * not very much better off in his what?” [ Tustajingle The salesman’ said, “Thet de Right off; our hand, ne kid,” : When Major Benson and his sec-|

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