Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
IS ‘oases O's “> MALE HELP WANTED WANTED—Ambitious young man to learn the newspaper business. Must have his own au- tomobile. lor’ in the first letter. ‘A fen men, week- ly while learning aviation, auto- mobile’ and electrical engineering, radio, bricklaying. Complete shops.’ 4 No experience, | See or write Mr. Sommars, Room 11, Magill Block, § Fargo, N. D. 25 MEN WANTED at once to learn { Barber trade. Easy work, easy to learn, good wages. Free cata-| log. Moler Barber College, Fargo, A IS SERA nee ee WANTED—Man and wife for farm & = ‘ = —== PHONE THE following are some of our good used cars which we have for sale now at reasonable Prices, They are all in first. class shay Small payment down he balance can be Paid in monthly payments. Come in and see these cars if ’ i are ig for a real uy. 1—1926 Oldsmobile Coach, 1—1925 Dodge Coupe. 1—1925 Hudson Coach, 1—1926 Jewett Coach, 1—1923 Paige Touring car. bei Chevrolet Touring ar. 2~1923 Chevrolet Touring Cars, 1—New 1928 Pontiac Coach. Phone 925 OLSON'S GARAGE Rebuilt Automobiles Satisfaction guaranteed. Sevenday trial. figures, THE satisfaction of the purchaser car department a large and important part of our te name goes uw car We sell—so we sell only cars tha’ we can con- has made our used business. with ever; scientiously recommend, “Rebuilt Cars With a Rerutation” Lahr Motor Sales Co. ROOM AND BOARD FOR RENT —Room with Call at 311 Fourth board. street. a ____ FURNITURE FOR SALE FOR SALE—Very reasonable, one Kimball organ like new and one high grade mandolin. At 820 _ Broadway, Bismarck. FOR SALE—Mahogany davenport Practically new, $15.00. table. Phone 1086-W. HOME LAUNDRY THE BEST sddress for was ur blankets, bed s; Ss, ily and finished rk gy guerit ‘a Hom- ae to fabric, No chemic: u air, Men’s shirts a call and deliver. Call 4 W. or Phone 1017. ——— WORK WANTED Each car priced in plain Laundry. dried 4 an specialty. We at 203 Ave. ‘AMBITIOUS young man wants work of any kind in town. Call at Frank’s Place. a FOUND of Bismarck. Unkenholz, dan, N. D. MISCELLANEOUS _ R. F. D. work without children. ne BLE 1-F-2. FEMALE HELP WANTED _ LADIES WANTED—To paint hand- Mc- kerchiefs. We furnish silks, pat- lg terns, instructions free. Excellent pay. \ Write for particulars and samples. Beautext Co., 2225 Irv- ing St., San Francisco. Spe- THOROUGHLY experienced salea- i lady wants work in either city or over~ small town store. Experienced ale y 13 w so as waitress or cashier in res- ipset ie Saab Loraine Snyder, Mercer, ‘WANTED—Competent girl for gen- na » eral housework. Apply bateean| ed 9 a. m. to 12 and 6 p, m. to 7 p. for \ m. Call at 406 Sixth street or : (1 ie el shed ANTED—Competent maid for hem general house work. Mra. S. xtra Cameron, 614 Fifth street. Phone 8 ay ‘ED—Competent girl for gen- the eral house work. Call 924 Fourth m in street. Phone_543-W. uy WANTED—Two girls for general na a housework at Fort Lincoln. Write ra i ‘Tribune Ad. No. 43. for t WANTED—Competent maid for and ‘ ._&eneral housework. Phone 189. field i WANTE! =xperienced waitress at Mc- \ _ a ame ‘* IS OPPORTUNITY roomy, f & ‘a man in every county in for? i akota who can lanirove able his position and insure himself a out- 4 permanent income representing us ‘y in his home territory, It will re- fott 2 Rive quire some selling experience. one ~ Pe Repeat business certain. No com- the ie Up sakaee Write Tribune Ad. No. — _—____ ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT ‘One cozy sleeping room $10 a month. Also large 3 newly decorated partly furnished housekeeping apartment $18.00. ion For sale: tube radio cheap. : Cal th street. rooms on ground floor, quiet, centrally lo- cated, furnished or partly fur- me nished. Write Tribune Ad. No. rsi- 40, ie os TW) partly furnished room3 with vill private bath, suitable for light} ’ neg housekeeping, ‘close in, heat” and’ light included $35, Phone 999-M. will 2 a ey. mR RENT—Sleeping room sui ate able for young couple in all m nia ern home. Call at 111 Rosser Ave. rs phone 1127-LJ after 7:00 p. m. cas ENT. nicely furnished room dinner if re Breakfast and Phone 6' ed room! new modern housg, hot water heat, suitable for one or’two. Close in. 16 Thayer Ave. modern home to. refined young yee employed. Write Tribune FOR RENT—Sleeping room suitable for.one or two ladies. Bath in cognection. Phone 496-W or 230 W. Main. R RENT—Nicely furnished room in strictly modern home. Call at __816 Main Ave. or phone 919-R. TWO SLEEPING rooms with priv- ate lavatory, will rent single or double. 608 Fifth street. —Warm furnished room, private entrance. Call at 314 W. __Rosser. Phone 525-R. FOR RENT—Furnished room in steam-heated modern house, 623 Sixth street. : ond street, Phone 905 after 5:00 ‘OR SA rams and ewe! tered polled bulls. miles north of Bismarck. & Strutz, N. D. Box DIAMONDS ‘set in very latest n ingagement, —wed- | ding, dinner cluster, two and three! stone rings, brooches, bracelets, pins, earrings, combination lava-; Reoocbes, $25 and up. Cash on ie now a james W. Marek, oxclic| or G—WEBH.WJID Chienee 820 street. Bismarck, N. D. 6:00—Palmer House Symphony mountings. lieres and Xmas, sive diamond dealer. 108. FOUND--A sack of flour on streets Owner may have same by identifying. Write H. G. No. 3, Man- HOUSES AND FLATS FOR RENT—Strictly modern 5 8:30—General Motors it. 6:30—Roxy and His Ga: HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 405-2—-WCCO St. Paul—740 6:30—Curtis ter ‘Orchestra 30—University of Minn, Hour 00—Vodvil im. ng “Party” room Duplex with garage. Finest] 9:30—Moon Magic * :00—Casa Lopez Orchestra bthosy Phone 151 or 751. O. W. ro rat Cy ge FOR RENT—Seven room house with bath $80.00 per month. The upstairs is rented for $15.00. Also two strictly modern city heated apartments, two bed rooms in each. Phone 906 after 5:00 /p. m. FOR RENT—Modern house with full basement and built in fea- tures. Very warm and convenient. Good location. Also household furnjture for sale. Call at 223 SUC aE FOR RENT—Unfurnished half of seven roor house. Modern. Phi 884, Mrs. Erlenmeyer. Call 423 Third street, Bismarck, N. D.| , FOR RENT—J arge nine room house with full basement large barn at 323 South Eighth street. In- quire of O'Hare, Cox & Cox. FO" SALE—Five room modern bungalow, corner lot, 50 foot east’ front. location. Inquire Depositors’ Holding Co. FOR RENT—Six room _ niodern house, party furnished. First class shape. 413 Raymond street. Phone 942-R. _ a FOR RENT—Seven room modern home, $35.00 per month, Inquire 715 Sixth street. FARMLANDS FOR SALE—One half section of ex- cellent improved land. Wouli‘con- sider small Propet’ eee. is part payment. y terms. C. B. Anderson, Box 134, Baldwin, N. ak. — OFFICE ROOM FOR RENT. OFFICES FOR RENT—Suite of two desirable office room in Hoskins Block. See S. A. Floren at Busi ness Service Co FOR RENT—Office rooms upstairs tds our store. S. E. Bergeson & mn. 9:00—Sel FI Los An; MOM’N POP SALESMEN WANTED- Three salesmen to sell specialties, C. C. Larsen, 206) Broadway. PERSONAL _ ate PALMIST and Phrenologist, Madam Lattimorelle here, 318 Mandan street. Reading hours: 2 to 5 and 7 to 10. Helps find lost articles. See her today. ERSONAL 468.5—K' 8:30—Gamut Male Quarte' ver—920 7:30—Brown Palace Hotel Music PORE Aad Progtam juerman’s Orchestra 9:15—Choir, Calvary Baptist Church veel HA! A SPECIAL DELIVERY, REGISTERED LETTER ~ LET'S V4 HOPE IT'S A IG ORDER FROM ON 9:00—Jean Johnston's Music Box] Open unto the fields, and to the sky; 10:00—Grand Opera, “Ernani” i itteri: 11:00—Endi Newton, piano Ae bide ar earl fel Never did sun more beautifully ; Old Masters | steep i _—_—__—$$ | In his first splendor, valley, rock, or hill; Earth has not anything to show more fair: Ne’er saw I, never felt, a calm so leep! ete Ny edt cit ADEN river glideth at his own aweet A sight so touching in its majesty:| pear God! the very houses seem This city doth, like a garment, ‘wear The beauty of the morning; silent still! are, —William Wordsworth: Sonnet Ships, towers, domes, theatres|composed upon Westmihster bridge, ‘and temples lic Sept. 3, 1802, ae And all that mighty heart is lying We'll Say, By Taylor STRANGE! HERE'S A NOTE FROM SOME ATTORNEY ENCLOSING A LETTER WRITTEN BY MY OLD BOYHOOD CHUM, BILL GERRICK, y SHORTLY BEFORE HE DIED. GOODNIGHT? TLL SAY THIS IS A BIG ORDER! REG. U.8. PAT. OFF. bot 1 GERMAN speaking physician at the present location 8 years would like to make a change in some small town. Please write full description of town and surround- ings. Write Tribune Ad. No. 45. MONDAY, NOV. 7 i Programs in central standard time. All hours are p. m. unless otherwise istered Oxford ll of good size, well boned and dense fleece, pa- pers furnished. Duroc Jersey boars and gilts, long and heavy boned, papers furnished, Regis- milking shorthorn These are of good milking Come and see them, three wage », 6:30—Roxy and His Gang FOR SALE—$5, stock of gener- al Petey very ae Pros) us iness, no pone i eee stock six times yea:ly, postoffice in connec- tion about $75 monthly. for sale or rent at right Price, Buil Price. rite P. J. Walsh, Canna, N. Dak. WANTED—On shares. Four or five hundred fifty head et good yen ttle, cat be plenty of ‘and the best Address A. P. Rauch, Wing, N. D. mark), $25 ard for “a }» $25 rew: mation resulting in ted NAL cash id |ATIO} rag pe ieee | your W. E. Stitzel, represen- tative, Patterson Hotel, Bismarck, hand. Over 500 sizes. ‘We have one to business. Meabe ty re yg and Harts Moutain tresta, ete- Phone, LIES? Secok N. D., Box 728. Bull, infor- of in- indicated. Wave lengths on left of call letters, kilocycles on right. 315.6—K DKA Pittsburgh—950 5:00—Little Symphony Orchestra 8:00—Orchestra, Vaughn de Leath 384.4—KTHS Hot Springs—780 8:40—Ross Graham, 9:00—Chas. Dornberger Orchestra 461.3—WHAS Louisville—650 7:30—A. Lombardi, tenor 8:00—Royal Peacock Orchestra. 8:30—General Motors “Party” 516.9—WMC Memphis—580 8:00—Farm Talk : 8:30-—Canova Concert 340.7—WSM Nashville—880 6:30—Roxy and His Gang 8:00—Jackson Hotel Orchestra ! 8:30—General Motors “Party” 526—KYW Chicago—570 | 6:30—Congress Hotel Orchestra AMONG TODAY'S FEATURES Monday, November 7 6:30 P. M.—Roxy and His Gang. WJZ and eleven sta- tions. 7:30 P. M—A. & P. Gypsies. WEAF and fourteen stations. 8:00 P. M.—Vaughn de Leath, orchestra, WJZ. 8:00 P. M.—Orchestra, musi- cal album. WOR and Columbia 9:00 P. M.—“Big Ford and Little Glen." WJR-WCX, “Ernani” KGO, KGW, KPO and KFOA. : 7 305.9—WGN Chicago—980 LZ 6:35—Drake Ensemble haremmads 3 Meee 70 inn |AQ-WQJ Chicago—670 eee Recital 6:40—Colle, 475—WMA 30—Jack CI 's Orchestra ti—830 used high grade piano, easy terms. | 1 Geet coveieer, 0 Write Box { .9:30-—Power .& 11:45—Night Hawk Frolic Yigal FOR THE LAST Time ~ ARE Freckles and His Friends IFICAAN 6NE TUS | RADIO PROGRAMS |) | °=x22z'*s- Sounds Like Aspirin to Oscar WHY, THAT MEANS BENS J A BREATA~SUPERIOR ELEVATING OR EX- AINT.L SMART, ALA? WORD IS ASPIRATIONS! tDoso!! mars \NHAT AXY AAOAK USES: FoR MEADACHES DOWN TH. STREET MA JISS ZACK LIKE THis —Ti4d SPARRER AN TH!’ OSTRICH. TH KiDS ALL CALL: HIM | “AIGH PochiTs. CUT HIS LEGS OFF AN' HE'D sTILL BE s1X FOOT: oe “4 Trwilans |: 8. WVAN CHARACTERS OF THE STORY PHILO VANC! JOHN F.-X: MARKHAM District Attorney of New York County, ALVIN H. BENSON.......Well- known Wall Street broker and BENS sreany deel a Si iously on is home MAJOR ANTHONY BENSON .. -. Brother of the murdered man MRS. ANNA PLATZ ...... .. He kee} Al MiRIEL St) CLAIE A . esseee. A friend of w ibe firm or Danson ca irm COLONEL BIGSBY ‘OSTRANDER WiiitAil i) MORIARTY... Va? alderman the firm of Stitt and McCoy, Public Accountants MAURICE DINWIDDIE " + Ser- eant of the Homicide Bureau B ieee SNITKIN, EMERY .... tectives of Homicide Bureaa|— “Yes—sir.” BEN HANLON ...... Command- signed to District Atoroey's off signe rney’s PHELPS, TRACY, SPRINGER. HIGGIN! ean . se eeseeecseees ts signed to District Attorne ice CAPTAIN CARL HAGEDORN .. ‘irearms expert DR DOREMUS seal cages PRANK SWAGHER "Oe retary to the District Attorné: CURRIE +. Vance’s valet 8S. VAN DIN The Narrator THIS HAS HAPPENED Vance prevents Markham from arresting Leacock when Pfyfe’s story implicates the captain. It is brought out that Pfyfe had been in Alvin Benson’s power because of a forged check. Leacock confesses to the murder, but Vance exposes the confession as a lie to shield Miss St. Clair, who had been with Ben- son the evening of the murder. NOW BEGIN THE STORY eee CHAPTER XLVI Vance sighed. “Don’t you want to be of any hel at all in this case?” he asked sadly. “what good did it do you to make "1 ass of me in front of that wom- :n?” spluttered Markham. “I can’t see that you got anywhere, with all your tomfoolery.” “What!” Vance registered utter amazement. “The testimony you've heard today is going to help im- measurably in convicting the cul- prit. Furthermore, we now know about the gloves and hand-bag, and who the lady was that called at Benson’s office, and what Miss St. Clair did between 12 and 1, and why she dined alone with Al and why she first had tea with him, and how the jewels came to be there, and why the Captain took her his gun and then threw it away, and why he confessed. . . . My word! “Doesn’t all this knowledge soothe you? It rids the situation of so much debris.” He stopped and lit a cigaret “The really important thing the “| lady told us was that her friends knew she invariably departed at midnight when she went out of an evening Don’t overlook or belittle that point, old dear; it’s most pert’- nent. I told you long ago that the person who shot Benson knew she was dining with him that night.” “You'll be telling me next you know who killed him,” Markham scoffed, Vance sent a ring of smoke cir- cling upward. “I’ve known al! along who shot the blighter.” Markham snorted derisively. “Indeed! And when did this rev- elation burst upon you?” “Oh, not more than five minutes after I entered Benson’s house that first morning,” replied Vance, “Well, well! fid me. and avoid all these trying activities?” uite impossible,” Vance explain- patiently by the hand out of the vorions dark forests and morasses into which you insisted upon stra: ing. a nativ don’t y’ know.” A ta hailed it, “Eighty-seven West Forty-eighth! glory.—Prov. 16: street,” he directed. Then he took Markham’s arm con- fidingly. z “Now for a brief chat with Mrs. Platz. Why didn’t you con- ed jocularly. “You were not ready to receive my apocryphal knowledge. It was first necess’ry to lead you You're so dev’lishly unim-|| ab was passing, and he MURDER CASE DINE @ aa» ene on’ He fold me they lived together once.” “No-one else?” ‘Again she frowned thoughtfully. ia lo,” she said, after several utes. “What about the tradespeople?” esc} was very eee about se 8 oe st she added.” “Whea be used tc ait fa here in hot weather he always Relea the shade window.” nearest the hallway. in if Seles a “Im gl ‘ou brought up point,” said Vance. “And standing on the the window or “Oh, yes, sir—eagily. I did it aa vm Adena went on an errand and forgot my key.’ “It's quite Tixely, don’t think, that the person who shot Br. Ben- son obtained admittance that way?” “Yes, sir.” She grasped eagerly at the suggestion, “The person would have had to know Mr. Benson pretty well to tap on the window in of ringing the bell. Don’t you agree with me, Mrs. Platz?” Her tone was doubt. ful: evidently the point was ‘a little *rAfT a ‘tranger had tapped on the te! a on window woul Mr. Benson have ad- mitted him without his toupee?” “Oh, no—he wouldn’t have let a stranger in.” “You are sure the bell didn’t ring that night?” “Positive, sir.” The answer was very emphatic. “Is there a light on the front steps?” “No, sir.” “If Mr. Benson had looked out of the window to see who was tapping, could he have recognized the person at night?” The woman hes:.ated. ? “I don’t know—I don’t think so.” “Is there any way you can see through the front door who is oute side, without 0} it?” “No, sir. metimes I wished there was.” “Then, if the person knocked on the window, Mr. Benson must have recognized “he voice?” “It looks that way, sir.” “And yoffre no one could have got in without a key?” = ithe ees they? The door locks y_ itself.” “It’s the regulation spring-lock, isn’t it?” “Yes, sir.” | “Then it must have a catch you can turn off so that the door will open from either side though it’s latched.” : “It did have a catch like that,” she explained, “but Mr. Benson had it oe so’s it b pocents ie ieee said it was too Tous, —| ieee and leave the house un- locked.” Vance stepped into the hallway, }and I heard him opening and shut- ting the front door. “You're right, Mrs. Platz,” he ob- served, when he came back. “Now tell me: are you quite sure no one had a key?” “Yes, sir. No one but me and Mr, Benson had a key.” Vance nodded his acceptance of her statement. “You said you left your bedroom ht Mr. Benson generally door open on the night was shot. . . . Do you leave it open?” .- “No,I ’most always shut it, | But it was terrible close that night. “Then it was merely an accident sere it pl ra “As you might say.’ “It aa door had been closed as usual, could you have heard the shot, do you think?”. “If I'd been awake, Not if I was sleeping, They got, heavy nel in ‘these houses, sir, “And they’re beautiful, too,” com- mented Vance. He looked admirit at the mas- sive mahogany oe door that int be opene "fo Be Continued) ——————-,q \ Justajingle | “U .” said “Til bet rm a a It woke his wife. You'd be sure prised At what the poor guy got. A Thought The Sears heed la 9 crown of . ° No wise man ever wished to be younger.—Swift. And then—then I shall pour into your ear all my maidenly se- cret :.” (Wednesday, June 19; 5:30 p. m.) The visid that afternoon with housekeeper regarded our . “i irked uneasiness. Though she was a large powerful woman, her body seemed to have lost some of its strength, and her face showed signs of pro- longed anxiety. Snitkin informed us, when we en- tered, that she had carefully read every newsprper account of the case, and had ques- Foned, ‘him interminably on the sub- entered the living-room with, searcely an acknowledgment of o1 presence, and took the chair Vance laced for her like 8 woman gl is When Vance looked at her keenly, she gave him a frightened ares had’ hecself te a dreadci evirable ordeal. and turned her face away, as the second their eyes met, she read his knowledge of some she had been jealously guarding. Vance began his questioning with- Mr. Benson very his toupee—that is, friends prelude or Pi rs. Platz, was icular sbout dhe baie west, his --ut having it on The woman appeared relieved. “Oh, no, sir—never.” “Think out “ gs Mrs, Plats. Hes Mr. your