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\ Tribune Classified Advertisements —=-PHONE 82== e insurance company 3 Will train jous Nont, epportual ty to increase income, For appointment} tc Gai 1 Agent, 415 Mendan street, Bis RNG De PLEASANT paying work for your spare time. PNo canvassing. Write! for free details of a splendid op- portunity. Star Service, Taylor, No, Dak. Box WANTED—Men for driving team and cutting brush. Good wages. Apply 1 mile north of city water| _plant. C. W. Scott. LEARN barber trade. Catalog free. ar Barber College, Fargo, WANTED—Two good painters. Call at 710 Ave. D or Phone 1185. FEMALE HELP WANTED __ WANTED AT ONCE—Fifty attrac- tive girls 17 to 24 for Smith’s Greater Bismarck Gadies Band. et's snap into it, girls, and give this town a real band. Apply Melody Shop, Bismarck. Ask for peel hg lL ee ae ae oe, WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral housework. Apply between 9 a. m. to 12 and 6 p. m. to 7 p. m. Call at 406 Sixth street or phone 431. WANTED—A man to work on farm by the month,’ Good wages to right party. Inquire W. S. Cassel- man, 219 1-2 Main. WANTED—Middle aged housekeep- er for two on farm. Write Trib- __une Ad. No. 29. WANTED—Competent maid for general housework. Call 842-W. SSRIS ETT at O'Brien's Cafe. ) FOR RENT FOR RENT—Two furnished light housekeeping rooms, ‘as for cooking. Phone 442-M after 5:00 » A pleasant room in modern home. A good location. Call_at 116 Thayer Ave; W. FOR RENT—Nicely furnished sleep- Hs room in modern, home. Call FOR RE T—Modern room, close in. Reasonable. Phone 983-M. FOR RENT—S desirable office room: in Hoskins Es Floren at Busi AUTOMOBILES YOR SALE—Cheap if taken at once, 6-cylinder touring car in good cond: . Call after 7:30 p. m., 503 Ninth_ street. ‘FOR SALE—1926 Ford Tudo very good condition. Call at a2 Ave. D or phone 649-J. DON'T throw your old i 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. Stenographer desires to do evening work. Will take outside dictation and do the typing at her own home. Write Tribune Ad. No. 26. LOTS FOR SALE R SALE—Colonel Mai 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 Heal Estate Agency, Webb Block, one Xo de Paris Paris, Oct. 25.—The Apaches, those half-legendary- habitues of the Paris underworld, have degenerated into little more than prototypes of the New York street gangster. All the romantio flavor has slip; away from them and guides mention then in the past tense, as the China- town drivers of New York tell you of the “shirt-tail gang.” Their very district has been in- vaded and those who claim the glamorous distinction, if ahy, of, “Apache” are youngsters of the gang type who might find it diffi- cult to survive in Hell’s Kitchen and who would be put to rout in Chi -_e € cago. Time was when the brutal and prjmitive ways of the Apache and his girls of the half-world were mat- ters of fearsome fiction. Some there are who will tell you that . they never did exist in the sense that they have lived in the Ameri- can movies or the vaudeville dances.| ©: However, even their legends no Yonger are created: Those sections of the Montmartre] ven where it was said a stranger could not enter and escape alive, now are: occupied hy a, certain type of work-| ing man. It was ‘from one such belt that the leaders.of the anti-Ameri- can demonstratiéns came not long sgo when Sacco-Vanzetti sentiment was ronning- strong. | The Rue de. Venise which looks more like a fissure in wall than a scree, was one of the most famous Apache rendezvous. In this’ lane, that is little more than a built up Pre apay it is easy to visualize Ate te a Ee Yeon ie cing ime was a Siterary gai are but now cheap and ° dirty rinking places mark the corners. are other lanes flonan che hid out—such as whero the pura ‘Boucher, has nm written some of blood eurdling tales. Other hide-outs dart through the optekirts uf Montmartre. apa ‘ But the Apache, or such of him as is lofi, hae turned his hand to petty and cheap crime, they tell me. ite stl depends upon his wom- en of the hatf-world’ for a living and when times grea bit jad he of | — 1 we 25 words or 2 insertions, 25 words cr UNdEE vesssrereersere 3 insertions, 25 words Or under ........00.00 l week, 25 words or Pat CRE over 25 words, }- tional per word CLASSIFIED DISPLAY * RATES 65 Cents Per Inch All Classified ads are cash tn advance. Copy should be re- ‘ceived by 1) o'clock to insure insertion same day. $50 1 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 32 Rebuilt Automobiles Satisfaction guaranteed. Sevenday trial. Each car priced in plain) _ figures, ISN’T one of our low priced, depend. able used cars the answer to your! need for more adequate transpor- tation facilities? In our varied stock you are sure to find one which will please and satisfy you. “Rebuilt Cars With a Reputation” Lahr Motor Sales Co. HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—Six room modern house with excellent bath room and} 7, sleeping porch. Splendid location, lawn and trees. Built in features. Convenient all around. Very rea- aon-ble. Write Tribune Ad. No. 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 OR RENT—Six room modern house practically all new inside, partly furnished. Will, give good terms to the right party. 413 Raymond street. Phone 942-R. FOR RENT—Rooming house, 422 Fourth street. Apartment city heat- ed, three rooms with private bath. Also garage. For sal Iron top for __for gas range. Phone 90! 905, FOR RENT—Jarge nine room house oe full basement and large barn 928 South Eighth street, In-| _auire of O'Hare, Cox & Cox. FOR RENT—Seven room modern; house, 307 So, Seventh street. In- quire at 715 Sixth street. Phone rr] WANTED—One ‘passenger wanting to go west. Man or woman to share expenses of auto trip. Have complete camping equip! Leaving Thursday morning. quire 623 Sixth street. Stevens. i PA Phrenologist, Madam Lattimorelle here, 318 Mandan street. ading hours: 2 to 5 and 7 to 10. Helps find lost articles, See her today. In- G. A. acres river area hay land, 85 acres plowed, six miles north of Mandan. Prices ‘and terms _rea- sonable. Frank Williams, Man- dan, P. O. FURNITURE FOR SALE __ LE—Gi FOR 8. id gas rai practically new. Also ice box. Cheap if taken at once, Phone 7: 413 W. Thayer. connections with spies in big / hotels. Thus, if a little quick money is desired, one of the “hotel jobs” is neatly and quickly turned. He does not, however, make a profession of robbery, like the American stick-up man ional burglar. In rofessi fact, ‘he i not, pirat, often pertiipae ina ca rai He has jis agents. attend to at_and he secannes through his connections for of stolen goods. ‘ After that there are no more thefts until tim: get hard again. In other words resorts to robbery aly under he sure of great _ecessi ity. As for his ate and “women” tivy, are among the lowest classes in the Paris underworld, which is a large and elaborate industry with branches in almost my neighbor- hood, with Migs ag! from those species, who wander the sidewalks the de l’Opera, the Madeleine,| ie tes Italiens or the des Capucins and flirt with the bibblers of the colorful sidewalk cafes. “ GILBERT SWAN. "Bares 1) eel aaa Le shines ee parents are to blame for youth’s shocking disregard of con- says a New York judge.| Now will some other judge tell us who's to blame for the parents? rupt out there, the peat dent might make it pay. - HOME LAUNDRY ___ THE BEST address for washing your: blankets, bed spreads, fam- ily and finished washes is Mar- uerit Bulten’s Home Laundry. fo 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. FOR RENT—Very nicely modern apartment including piano and electric washing machine. Clean, warm and always hot wa- ter. Call _at 807 Fourth street. hree room . modern furnished apartment with bath. Heat, light and water furnished, $37 per month. 721 Third street. Phone 678-R. Te ea CITY-HEATED, clectric-lighted, partly furnished apartment, also single room equipped for light debe y College Building. FOR beautifully fur-J nished sleeping apartment, com- fortable summer and winter, suit- able for one or two persons. enone ‘FOR RENT—One three room un- furnished front apartment in Rue apartments, all modern. Phone 697-J or call at 711 Ave. A. FOR RENT—Three room modern furnished apartment with private Le 721 Third street. Phone 678-R. FOR RENT—Furnished apartment with bath. Guaranteed good and warm. Call at 930 Fourth street. FOR RENT—A two and a three room apartment, The Laurain _Ar's. Phone 303. FOR RENT—Furnished apartment. 411 Eighth. Call 540-R. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SAL E—Registered “Oxford rams and ewes all of good size, well boned and dense fleece, pa- pers furnished. Duroc Jersey boars and gilts, long and heavy boned, papers furnished. Regis- tered polled milking shorthorn bulls. These are of good milking strain. Come and see them, three miles north of Bismarck. in very latest mountings. Engagement, wed- ding, dinner cluster, two and three stone rings, brooche: pins, earrings, combination lava- lieres and brooches, $25 and up. Cash or credit. Buy now for Xmas. James W. Marek, exclu- sive diamond dealer. 108 ee to “take up a Eeatieanl note issue carrying 7 per cent interest together with liberal stock bonus, Object extend- ed development, work and ma- chinery. For further information, Twin Gulch Mining Co., care J. O. 164 Gov't Way,, Coeur I .| FOR SALE—Fancy large solid cab- bage, one cent per Ib. Large dry onions, two cents per lb. Or- ders must be 100 Ibs. or more. Cash with order. Prices F. O, B. Washburn. Sacks ae Clarence FOR SALE—Brand new olive drab over-at, size 38, for $12.00; Dal- ton adding Machine with stand for $40.00; electric plate; beauti- ful oil lamp, set of flat irons, pic- ture ae: Inquire 502 Seventh FOR § SAL —Choice ‘Imported | Ger- man Rollers and Hartz Mountain, also native singers. Cages, seeds, treats, etc. Phone 115-J, Jacob FO A la with cement floor. Fourteenth street. ¢—<$________—_- | ‘Old Masters | ree And as in uffish thought he stood, The Jabberwock, with eyes of| ge Inquire at 519 flame Came whiffling through the tulgey wood, And burbled as it came! One two! One two! And through and through The vorpal blade went snack! He left it dead, and with its head He went galumphing back. “And hast thou slain the Jabber- wock ? Come ie my arms, my beamish joy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!” He chortled in his joy. ‘Twas brillig, and the slithy toves Did gyre and gimble in the wabe; All mimsy were the borogroves, And the mome raths outgrabe. —Lewis Garroll: Jabberwocky. if At the Movies ee eee CAPITOL THEATRE ! Dolores Del Rio and Victor Mc- Laglen, who triumphed so _signally’ in the Fox version of Lautenec Stalling’s stage play, “What Price Glory,” are conspicuous. again in “Loves of Carmen,” from the same studios, which opened , last, night at the Capitol theatre ‘for three days. snicker- fIFTLE JOE * to Indiana farm-|® rofitable. ers land winter if Sits ne ’ pedestrian in Southampton, Bigleld cari a horn which he when he ‘crosses the stroet. At last, a way of talking back! around | Wha nme recently bought an old-style Now we know what the new fenrod will be like, Earl ‘Carroll has been paroled from Atlanta penitentiary, the pa- pers say. We didn’t even know he was in jail. IG UP screens bracelets, | = Office at] - Ky A remarkable cast appears in support of the principals and the director, Raoul Walsh, has excelled his own fine record in producing a picture which is strong with real- ism and accurate as to the atmos- Phere of its many scenes, Don Al- varada plays the role of Jose. In the supporting cast are such well known. agate as Nancy Nash, Ra- fael Valverde, Nathilde Comont. Jack Bastian, Carmen Costello and Fred Kohler. rf Last ‘night’s audience evidenced exceptional satisfaction and there is every reason to assume that Fox. has scored another triumph. '|MOM’N POP You MUST BE TURN- ING OVER A NEW LEAF CHICK -WHY You HAVEN'T BEEN SAN, LYDIA— \S THE NEW STENOG HERE TO 60 TO TAKE DENTIST WHY DON'T YOU GET | IT PULLED OUT? IF IT WAS MINE 2D AANE [7 PULLED OUT OUR WAY WrY, YUH DANG » FOOLS WHUT YUH } WALHIN' wit YORE ‘EMES SHET FER ? " WHY You MIGHT HAVE ACCIDENT, WELLY’ KNOW UM SIPOSED TO BE AT WORK AT] E\GHT AN’ THERE’ NOTHIN’ LIKE: AN! MANE. IT paca ELTINGE THEATRE “Hula” playing at the Eltinge again today, Wednesday, briags| that lovable madcap of the screen, a Bow, back. As “Hula” pet of the Calhoun las Clara, is said to have best role: since “It.” She ap- pears as a carefree miss who, on the eve of her sixteenth birthday, falls madly in love with a handsome young English engineer, Clive Brook. Although he doesn’t say so at first, he teo, is Gad toward the magnetic girl. Figally, the in- evitable happeris. che ‘a forces him to admit his love but at the same e also learns that Brook is fee victim of an unhappy marriage. His wife, an unscrupulous fortune i hunter, refuses to grant him a di- ivorce. In_ addition to this, Clara finds another woman attempting to win Brook a’ How she emerges from her pr ament provides the star with plenty of opportunities for showing off her own peculiar talents. Arlette Marchal is the other womam® and Maude Truax, Brook’s wife. Arnold Kent enacts an Ha- waiian who is jealous of Brook be- cause of his love for Clara. Albert Gran is her dissolute father and Cheated OVER HALF HODR: BEIN’ YES, CHICKS BEEN GONE HE GOT DP WITH: OUT ME CALLING HIM— LT CAN'T UNDERSTAND IT Agostino Borgato. her uncle. By Taylor THE ANSWER'S SIMPLE~I HIRED ANEW STENOG YESTERDAY AN’ SHE ISN'T SO BAD ON THE LOOKS A =WHy, CAN \'BEAT IT? AWHOLE HOURS SLEEP SHOT / OW,NO-SHE WON'T BE IN TILE WELL! WHATS: TBE MATTER WIT YoU? TOOTMACHE 22 SOWOULD Z, IF IT WAS yours ! AH PAT. OFF. (©1927 GY NEA SERUICE tc, By Williams DAT SES WHY AW’GOT MAH EMES SHET MIST CULL, CAINT BEAR TER WITNESS A ACC\ DENT. BENS! CHARACTERS OF THE STORY youn NCE JOHN rx MAREHAM District Attorney of New York County ALVIN H. BENSON.......Well- known Wall Street broker and Hae about-town, who was mys- usly murdered in his home MAJOR NTHONY BENSON ., -Brother of the murdered man MRS. enuaeeand PLATZ : .. Housekeeper for Aivin MURIEL ST. CLAIR ise St. Clair LEANDER pRYEE Intimate of MRS. PAULA EGG A frierd of ELSIE HOFFMAN Secretary of the firm of Benson and Benson COLONEL BIGSBY OSTRANDER” tired army officer WILLIAL. 4 MORIARTY id sssseass Of the firm of Stitt ind MeCoy, Public Accountants MAURICE DINWIDDIE . ... Assistant District on ERNEST Bots r- geant of the Hoi BURKE, SNITKIN, EMERY ~ Detectives of Homicide Bureag BEN HANLON Command- ing Officer of Detectives as- signed to District Attorney’s office PHELPS, TRACY, SPRINGER, HIGGINBOTHAM os6 5) eeceeses +... Detectiver as- signed to District Attorney's office CAPTAIN eae HAGEDORN . neers expert , "Medical examiner FRANK Babi ta aa retary the District “Attorne CURRIE Vance's valet S. S. VAN DINE Tho Narrator THIS HAS HAPPENED Suspicion attaches in turn to Miss St Clair, Pfyfe and Lea- cock, Vance eliminates the girl, and when Pfyfe’s statements strengthen the case against Leacock he intervenes to keep Markham from arresting the captain, Miss Hoffman relates that Pfyfe and Benson had quar- reled and it is brought out that Pfyfe had forged Benson's name to a check, ‘Tracy makes an_ investigation into Pfyfe's affairs, NOW BEGIN THE STORY CHAPTER XXXVI “I found one other woman in the case,” Tracy said” “She lives in New York, and often tele tones to a drug store near Pfyf house, and leaves messages for him. He uses the same ’phone to call her by. He had made some deal with the proprietor, of course; but I was able to obtain her "phone number, “As soon as I came back to the city I got her name and address i id made a few a Mrs. Paula ig, a widow, and a little fast, I should say; and she lives in an apartment at 268 West Seventy- fifth street.” This exhausted Tracy's informa- tion; and when he went out, Mark- ham smiled broadly at. Vance. “He didn’ t supply you with very’ much fuel.” “My word! T think he did unbe- lievably well,” said Vance. “He un- earthed the very information we wanted.” “We wanted?” echoed Markham. “I have more important things | ,to think about than Pfyfe’s amours.” “And yet, y’ know, this particular amour of Pf¥fe’s is going to solve the prollem of Benson’s murder,” replied Vance; and would say no more. Markham, who hed an accumula- tion of other work awaiting him and numerous appointments for the afternoon, decided to have his lunch served in the office; so Vance and I took leave of him. We lunched at Elysee, dropped in, at Knoedler’s to see an ex- hibition of French Pointillism, and then went to Aeolian Hall where a s'ring quartette from San Fran- cisco was giving a program of Mo- zart. A little before half past five we were again at the district attor- ney’s office, which at that hour was deserted except for Markham. Shortly after our arrival Miss Hoffman came in, and told the rest of her story in direct, businesslike fashion, “I didn’t give you all the par- ticulars this morning,” she said, “and I wouldn’t care to do so now unless you are willing to regard them as confidential, for my telling you might cost me my position.” “I promise you,” Markham as- sured her, “that I will entirely te- spect your confidence.” She hesitated a moment, and then continued. “When I told Major Benson this morning about Mr. Pfyfe and his brother, he said at once that I should come with him to your office and tell you also. But on the way over, he suggested that I might omit a part of the story. He didn’t exact- ly tell me not to mention it; but he explained that it had nothing to do with the case and might only con- fuse you. I followed his suggestion; but after I got back to the office I began thinking’ it over, and know- ing, how serious a matter Mr. Ben- son’s death was, I decided to tell you anyway. “In case it did have some bearing on the situation, I didn’t want to be in the position of having with- held anything from you.” She seemed a little uncertain as to the wisdom of her decision, “TI do gope I haven’t been foolish. But tHe truth is, there was some- thing else besides that envelope, which Mr. Benson asked me to bring him from the safe the day he and Mr. Pfvfe had their da BY It was @ square heavy packace, like the envelope, was marked Die Personal.’ And it was a this | o package that Mr. Benson and Mr.| % Pfvfe seemed to be quarreling.” “Wes it in the safe this morning when you went to get the envelope} Andrew for the 2 Major?” asked Vance. “Oh, ate Mr. site Me t the package in the safe Mie with Whe envelope, DINE @ eves emai on’ to bring the interview to a closd when Vance spoke up. “It was very good of you, Miss Hoffman, to take this trouble to tell us about the package; and now that you are here, there are one or two questions I'd like to ask.... How did Mr. Alvin Benson and the Major Bet along together?” She looked at Vance with a curl- ot aa song vey wl ey long she said. “They were wo ditterent, ne Hee Benson Suse not a ef pleasant person, very hon- orable, I’m afrai You'd never aye thought they were brothers. ey were constantly horting about the business; and terribly suspicious of each “That's not unnatural,” comment- ed Vance, “seeing how incompatible their temp’raments were. . the bye, how did this suspicion show itself?” 2 ati “Well, for one ig, they some- sail spied, on a sae: You see, their offices were they would listen to each other through the door. I did the secre- tarial work for both of them, and I often saw them listening. Several times they tried to find out things from me about each other.” ; Vance smiled at her appreciative: y. ot a pleasant position for you.” fh, T didn’t mind it,” she smi back. “It amused me.” “When was the last time you caught either one of them listen- ing?” he ased. Te girl quickly became seriogs. “The very last day Mr, Alvin Ben- son was aliv> I saw the Major stand- ing by the door. Mr. Benson a caller—a lady—and the Major seemed very much interested. It was in the afternoon. “Mr. Benson went home early that day—only about half an hour after the lady had gone. She called at the office again later, but he wasn't there of course, and T told her he had already gone home.’ “Do you know who the lady wast” Vance asked her. “No, I don't,” she said. “She didn’t give her name.” Vance asked a few other — tions, after which we rode up in the subway with Miss Hattman, taking leave of her at Twenty-third street. Markham was silent and preoccu- pied during the trip. Nor did Vance make any comment until we were comfortably relaxed in the easy chairs of the Stuyvesant Club’s lounge-room. Then, lighting a cigaret lazily, he said: “You grasp the subtle mental proc: esses leading up to my about Miss Hoffman’s second com- ing—eh, what, Markham? Y?° see, 1 knew friend Alvin had not paid that forged check without security, and I also knew that the tiff must have been about the i Sas Pa for Pfyfe was not really worrying about being jailed by his alter -go. “I rather suspect Pfyfe was try- ing to get, the security back before paying oi* the note, and was told there was ‘nothing doing’. . . Moreover, Little Goldylocks may be a nice girl and all that; but it isn’t in the feminine temp’rament to sit next door to an altercation between two such rakes and not listen at- tentively. “TI shouldn’t care, y' know, to have | to decipher the typing she said she did during the episode. I was quite sure she heard more than she told; and I asked myself: Whv this cur- tail.aent? .The only logical answer was: Because the Major had sug- gested it. And since the Fraulein wes a forthright Germanic soul, with an inbred streak of self- ish and cautious honesty, I ven- tured the prognostication that as soon as she was out from benev’lent jurisdiction of her tutor, she would tell us the rest, in order to save her own skin if the matter should come up later, . . lot so cryptic when expalined, what?” “That's all very well,” conceded Markham petulantly. “But where does it get us?” “I shouldn’ say that the forward aerement was entirely inpereep- tible.” Vance smoked a while imoasateaty, “You realize, I trust,” he said, “that the mysterious package con- tained the security.” “One might form such a conelu- sion.” agreed Markham. “But the fact doesn’t dumbfound me—if that’s what you're hoping for.” “And, of course,” pursued Vance easily, “your legal mind, tra! in the technique of ratiocination, already identified it as the box of jewels that Mrs. Platz espied on Benson’s ae that fetal afternoon.” (To Be Continued) FATALLY INJURED IN CAR ACCIDENT Noonan—Orville Wick, 17, of Noonan was fatally inate 3 when an automobile in which he pod riding overturned as its seek caught in those of another car a highway about 10 miles = ot Crosby. | NOTICE TO IN_THE MATTER OF THE ATE OF Andrew Niva, De Notice is hereby given by the une dersigned, Emil i, the 24" id trator of the estate of Andrew Niva, late of the township of Lynam, . the County of Burle! State 01 Dakota, deceased, to the creditors 0! apa all persons Evins, claims ecenaee, exhibit wit aid tl ouchers, the after the, first leat Bi ce gh aia Eaten te Jasuthe tion ho ith 2 h hundred ron (i OY of rine ut elt oot orth a Burt frien county, at yu cf Jn Burl eigh ae i ou are that Hon, Bae Sour ounty, of By ite oe Bises for. claims cae But Mr. Benson took it home with] ,, Ain ae Thursday—the day he was ‘led. Markham was but mildly inter-| ,, ested in the recital, and was about |°