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\ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1927 Tribune Classified Advertisements —=PHONDE 832=— : MALE HELP WANTED ITED — Ambitious, 4 itrious troduce and the to in — supply he 26 MEN WANTED at once to learn Barber trade. Easy work, easy to learn, good wages. Free cata- log. Moler Barber College, Fargo, (rn FEMALE HELP WANTED _ WANTED—Young lady of good ap- pearance to calljon private homes with music library, can earn ten dollars a day. Preference to Tmusician. See H. Frank, Hotel Patterson. ADDRESSING, pen or typewriter, spare time; good pay; inclose stamped addressed envelope. Ad- Vertiser, 1271 California st, San Francisco. _ WANTED—Girl_or woman to do housework in vba 4 will not object to one child. Steady work a &@ good warm room. Phone WANTED—Girl for general house- work with references. Phone 1208-W or call at 500 Ave. A. ~__ Apt 12. 'ANTED—Competent maid for general housework. Phone 189. Sn ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Ground floor bed- room next to bath. Private en- trance. For one or two gentle- men or married couple. Reason- able. Phone 1198, 601 Second Street and Ave. B. s FOR RENT—A nicely furnished room with or without light house- keeping rivileges, Also for sale, » an electric stove at $28.00. Phone 1093-R or call at 409 Fifth street. FOR RENT—Two clean modern light housekeeping rooms with built in features on ground floor. Iso one sleeping room and gar- age. Call at 223 Thayer street. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in @ new modern home, very con- venient, call at 307 Tenth street, opposite the new St. Alexius lurses Home, phone 921. ‘—Furnished room in new modern house, hot water heat, suitable for one or two. Close in, Call at 116 Thayer Ave. West. FOR RENT—Large furnished front recom on first floor, suitable for ea . a sete iat “lt at 81 lain Ave. or phone 919-R. pee At FOR RENT—Room in modern home, close in. Ladies preferred. Call at 309 Seventh street or _-phone 844-M. FOR RENT—Large furnished room in modern house, suitable for two men. Phone 782 or call at 607 _Sixth street, ss arene FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Gas for cooking. Phone 442-M.____ FOR RENT—Room in all modern home, also garage. Phone 459-W. FURNITURE FOR SALE c— » C, Smith type- writer in good condition. White Rotary sewing machine, day bed, Detroit Vapor stove, ice box, 3 complete beds, dresser; chairs, 2 library tubles. window shades and other household articles. Inquire at 517 Seventh street or phone 363. FOR SALE—Packard Baby Grand! piano, B-flat cornet, violin, 100 ‘piece set, Haviiand China, C. F. loody, 414 Second street. OFFICE ROOM FOR RENT _ R RENT—Office rooms upstairs Meret our store. S. Ej Hergeaon & Saturday 249.9—KFYR Bismarck—1200 12:30 to 1:00 p. m.—Musical pro- gram. 1:00 to 1:15 p..m.—Weather, mar- ket reports and late news items, 1:15 to 1:30 ri m.—Aunt Sammy, under a » bureau of home 6:0 to 7:80 p, m,—Joint re-ital, Marian Santiin, soprano; Ramona Boepple, contralto; Madame Scheffer, at the grand. ; 2:30 to 7:45 p..m.—Weather, mar- ket reports, and late news items. 7:45 to 8:00 p. m.—Studio trio. the Associated Press) pene in Central Standard time. All time is P."M. unless other- indicated. Wave lengths on iat of call letters, kilocycles on 3$15.6—KDKA Pittsburgh—950 5:00—Westinghouse Band 6:30—Concert 8:00—Philco Hour 461.3—WHAS Louisville—650 7:30—Old Time Music 8:00—Philco Hour 516.9—WMC Memphis—580 8:00—Phileo Hour 9:00—Memphis Plectrum Orchestra ’ _340.7—W8SM Nashville—880 jackson Hi Program lusical Program ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 1 insertion, 25 words or Under .....cecceceees 2 insertions, 25 words or Under ......csceseeee 3 insertions, 25 Is - or under ............6 675 1 week, 25 words or PY es fap ashen aes is over 25 w - tional per word “CLASSIFIED _ DISPLAY RATES 65 Cents Per Inch All. classified ads are cash in advance. Copy should be re- ceived by 13 o'clock to insure insertion same day. THE , BISMARCK TRIBUNE 50 Rebuilt Automobiles Satisfaction guaranteed. Sevenday trial, Each car priced in plain figures. THIS HOUSE is proud of the fact ¢hat it does an ever-increasing business in used automobiles. We have many customers who have bought several used cars from us. They know that we value their good will more than the profit alone. That, after all, is your best guarantee of satisfaction in the purchase of a used car, “Rebuilt Cars With a Rcrutation” Lahr Motor Sales Co. FOR SALE; TEN ROO! rooming house, close in, modern, immediate possession, good condition, well located, only $5,250.00. FIVE ROOM bungalow, close in, A-1 condition, modern, $4,500.00. FOUR ROOM _ bungalow, stucco, many built in features, brand new, never lived in, spick and} span condition, at less than cost, $4,000.00. FOUR “OOM Cottage, well built, good condition, only $1,800.00. THESE are only samples of dozens houses I will be glad to show} you. | \ BUILDING LOTS—hundreds of them at all sorts of prices and terms and in all parts of the city. a FIRE INSURANCE—in good, old, reliable companies with prompt service guaranteed. FARM LANDS-It is a real crime to even speak of some of the prices I can quote you from the biggest and best lists of lands I have ever had. I have started five sales the past few days. The Missouri Slope is in the best con- dition of any farming community in the country. BUY NOW from the only man in Bismatck who is really advertising this part of the state. F. E. YOUNG APARTMENTS __ ‘ FOR RENT—Four room modern apartment, heat and water fur- nished. Also a garage for rent, $2.50 per month. Call at 222 Sec- ond street, Phone 905 after 5:00 me Ds SEES 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—A two and a three room apartment. The Laurain ) Ar's. Phone 303. AUTOMOBILES "| FOR SALE—1927 Model Chevrolet Cabriolet in fine condition. Has ‘ run 15,000 miles. Must be sold at once, as party is leaving state. $500.00 cash. Write Tribune No. 51, ¢ | | WORK WANTED SERVICE—Let me haul your ashes during the winter months, Will call for them twice a week. Serv- ice very reasonable. Phone 734-R. Joe Eisele. HOME LAUNDRY THE BEST Address for™ finished washes at competing rates is Marguerit Bulten’s Home Laun- dry. Men’s shirts a specialty. Repairs if desired. Call 1017 — 203 Ave A West. (ene HOUSES AND FLATS FOR RENT—Modern six room one story bungalow. Close in. Im- mediate pos.ession. Price Owens, Eltinge Block. Phone 421. Bg fn FO” SALE—Five room modern bungalow, corner lot, 50 foot cast front. Good location. Inquire _Depositors’ Holding Co, FOR SALE—New modern home, five room and sun parlor and one ae room modern house for val ‘Four room modern house with full basement. Phone 246 after 6 P.M. Theo. Ander- son. FOR RENT—Modern five room bungalow, 609 Eleventh street. Harvey Harris & Co. FOR RE!MT—Strictly modern home furnished at 813 Thayer. Inquire _W. S. Casselman. Mee FOR RENT—New five room house. Just finished. Phone 288-R. tae MISCELLANEOUS DIAMONDS—Mounted in rings of the latest design sent to any bank for free examination. Fine qual- ities and extra good values at $25, $35, $50, $65, $75, $100 and up. Easy payments if desired. Absolute privacy in all transac- tions. Your unwanted diamond taken in as part purchase price. Buy now for Xmas. James W. Marek, exclusive diamond deal- er. Office at_108 Third street, Bismarck. N. D. FOR SALE—Registered Oxford rams and ewes all of good size, well boned and dense fleece, pa- ers furnished. Duroc Jersey oars 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. Nagel & Strutz, Bismarck, N, D. Box 21. FOR SALE—Famous Ferris single comb White Leghorns, clean healthy stock. Yearling hens, $1.00; pullets, 80 cents. Buff Op- pington cockerels, $2.00 each. Mrs. Carl? Schulz, Bismarck, N. _D., Route 1. eoleee FOR SALE—Dalton Adding Ma- chine, $50; brand new army over- coat, size 38, $12; 12 ‘boxes car- bon paper, beautiful oil reading lamp, picture frames. Inquire 502 Seventh street. 3 NATIONAL CASH REGISTERS— New and second hand. Over 500 styles and .izes. We have one to fit your business. W. E. Stitzel, representative. Patterson Hotel, Bismarck, N. D. cis WANTED ON SHARES—Four or five hundred good breeding ewes, fifty head f good young cattlé, plenty of feed and the best of range, Address A. P. Rauch, Wing, N. D. FOR SALE—Choice Imported Ger- nan Rollers and Hartz Mountain, also aative singers. Cages, seeds, Yreats, ete. Phone 115-J, Jacob Bull, Dickinson, N. D., Box 728. WANTED—Skunks, also jack rab- bit skins, cow hides, horse hides and all kinds of junk. Northern __Hide & Fur Co.. Bismarck, N. D. WANTED—A two or three chair barber. shop in small town. Price reasonable, Write Tribune No. 53. FOR RENT—Garage at 417 First street. Phone 241-R. FOR RENT—Garage, 412° Sixth Street. Phone 710. 447.5—WMAQ-WQJ Chicago—670 6:30—“On With the Dance” 7:30—Mills & Sons Program 8:30—Chicago Theatre Review 10:00—Stevens Hotel Orchestra TOMORROW'S FEATURES SATURDAY, NOV. 19 5:00 P. M.—Waldorf-Astoria Orchestra. WEAF afd three stations. 7:00 P. M.—Damrosch and Orchestra, WJZ and 21 sta- tions. ‘ 7:30 P, M.—The High Jink- ers. WEAF and four stations. 300 P, M.—Phileo Hour. WJZ and 22 stations, 8:00 P. M.—Old Gold on Broadway. WEAF and eight stations, 9:00 P. M—The Wandering Minstrels. WTAM. a 9:00 P. M.—Municipal Band of Baltimore. -WBAL, 11:30 P, M.—National Barn Dance; three orchestras: WLS. 11:45 P. M—Nighthawk Frolic. WDAF. ¥ 12:00 _P. M.—Surprise Recep- tion, KFWI. - - 428.3—WLW, Cincinnati—700 7:30—Instrumental Trio 10:00—Henry Theis’ Orchestra 399.8—WTAM Cleveland—750 7:00—Blue. Flash Indians. 8:00—Willard Cavaliers 9:00—-Wandering Minstrels 10:00-—-Far East Restaurant Orch. 374.8—-WOC Davenpert—800 7:00—R.C.A, Program (Damrosch) 8:00—Philco Hour : 440.9—WCX-WIR 7:00—R.C.A. Pro; 8:00—Phileo , 9:30—McKinney’s Cotton Pickers -]10:00—Pontiac Jesters ~ 499.7—WBAP Fort Worth—600 8:00—Philco Hour 6 1:00—Doe 31'30—National Barn Dance 508.2—WOW Omaha—i90 6:30—Tracy Brown’s Orchestra 7:00—R.C.A. Program (Damrosch) 8:00—Philvo Hour 545.1I—KSD St. Louis—550 7:00—R.C.A, Program (Damrosch) 8:00—Phileo Hour : 9:00—Palais d’Or Orchestra “ 10:00—Park Central Orchestra 3 348.6—KVOO Tulsa—s60 8:00—Philco Hour 8:30—-Gustav Brandborg, baritone 9:00—Theodore Pittenger, violin 468.5—KFI Los Angeles—640 10:00—Saturday Night Revue 11:00—N.B.C. Program (2 hrs.) 1:00a—Midnight Frolic ° ogg ee ee ee |’ At the Movies | | oe ee) ELTINGE THEATRE Human and rollicking in places, grimly affecting in others, blend- ing finaly all the essences of love, struggle, bravery, humor, pathos and death, “The Rough Riders” at its opening yesterday won high ap- precia‘ion of the audience at the Eltinge theatre, for today and Saturday, , To cttempt to follow the drama in a brief review is useless. It is too swift, too. breath-taking, too replete with movements of subtlety and too flooding in its emotional character. One cc.’ say that it is a story that breathes . the idealism Theodore Roosevelt, one greatest’ of Americans; pote recounts his nature and his exploits in the Cuban regime of. hate, war and fever, with an amaz- ing spirit of faithfulness; that a love theme wi Mary A Charles Farell’ and Charles vy winds ee 3 the It blowing up of Th> Maine, the cring of the, Rough Pre waces ae tribute to art ai a perf; it as s . Roosevelt ‘where it remains|” day Whose heart trembles in. the balance of a love sought by les Farrell and Charles Emmet Mack. Farrell cd Mack distinguish them- selves by their superb acting. CAPITOL THEATRE ’ Buck Jones has chosen one of the most picturesque spots in Califor- nia for. filming exteriors of his lat-| est production for Fox Films, “Black Jack.” Lone Pine is the place in the heart of the High Sierras. i < This town was notorious during the early gold rush ‘in California and, later, during the times of old ranches and cattle rustling. Today, hundreds of tourists pass there in MOM’N POP EH? PRESS TH’ FLESH OL'TIMER = WHERE'S TH’ BRASS BAND? AS THOLGH HE HAD A JR.-WELL' WELL! SUCH A BIG HUSKY FELLA- JOST LIKE the summer to see the old build- ings, ‘he relics of the days of '49. Buck took his entire campany to Lone Pine to. get genttine atmos- phere. Orville: Dull directed the pate in which Barbara Bennett as the feminine lead. It is to have a shoving at the Capitol theatre commencing tomorrow. {Old Masters (a Ye ons of freedom, wake to glory Hark! hark! you rise! y children, wives, and grand- s hoary, what myriads bid Bill’s Here BILL, THIS \S MRS GUNN JUMP IN AN WE'LLDRINE LOT TO LEARN- BOT EeeeER THATS ALL RIGHT-— 2S L CAN TEACH HIM WAY THATS STUFF GOT IN THAT OANIALELGS TA ZALIN' FEED TOTME TURKEY! YES-/ME FOUNDA TICKET ON THE SIDEWALZ THE OTHER DAY AN I7 WAS JAE LUCKY AUMBER AT OTT'S MARKET FOR A BiG 7TURKEy!! Behold their tears and hear their| mischief a ruffian band, Affright and desvlate the land, liberty cries! Shall}: teful breeding, With hireting tyrants, hosts, While peace and bleeding? To arn to arms! ye brave! The avenging sword unsheathe; march on all hearts March on! resolved On victory or death, —Adapted from the French of {| Rouget de Lisle: from the Marseil- A flea can jump 200 times the length of its body. WHY HOLLY GEE L THOUGHT IT WAS YOOR DAUGHTER - HEH -HEH - L THINK UM GONNA ENJOY IT AT WOUR PLACE AFTER ALL So THIS 1S THE FAMILY HACK, EH? NOT HALF BAD AT THAT — OH,S0 YOURE GONNA DRIVE?7-WHAT'S TH'MATTER-1S THIS TH’ CHAUFFEUR'S DAY OBE? SAN I7 FIRST AN’ WUZ A DUMBELL JOT 70 Pick, IT UP MYSE raat ATS ALL T WANNA AST YOU “THOUT @tty A SPOUTY ANSWER HIN J EVER BE A LEADER MONGST MEN WiTH A LOAD O' BALLAST LiKe ~ OU ? "FOLLER -TH’ -f# LEADER~BLUAH ! stor, Em-}-: By Taylor Y Your SPOUSE? G'WAN WN THIS HAS HAPPENED After preventing the arrest of several suspected persons, Vance promises to solve the mystery on a certain date, He has Markham ready to belive that Mrs. Platz or Ostrander had committed - the murder when he suggests they go to Major Benson's apartment. There Vance finds a Colt .45 and the box of jewels that had been taken from Alvin Benson's house the night of the murder. NOW BEGIN THE STORY CHAPTER LVII Markham sat thinking for several minutes. At last he lifted his head. “You've about convinced me of his guilt,” he admitted. “But, damn it, man! I’ve got to prove it; and there’s not much actual legal evi- dence.” 7 Vance gave a slight shrug. “I’m not int'rested in your stupid courts and your silly rules of evi- dence. But, since I’ve convinced you, you can’t charge me with not having met your challenge, don't y’ know.” “I supose not,” Markham assent- ed eee Slowly the muscles about his mouth tightened. “You've done your share, Vance, I'll carry on.” Heath and Captain Hagedorn were. waiting when we arrived at the of- fice, and Markham greeted them in his customary reserved, matter-of- fact way. By now he had himself well in hand, and he went about the task before him with the sombre forcefulness that characterized him in the discharge of all his duties. “T think we at last have man, Sergeant,” he s: and I'll go over the ter with you in a moment. There are one or two things I want to attend to first.” He handed Major Benson's pistol to the firearms expert, “Look that gun over, Captain, and tell me if there’s any way of iden- tifying it as the weapon that killed nson.” Hagedorn moved ponderously to the window. Laying the pistol on the sill, he took ‘several tools from the pockets of his voluminous coat, and placed them beside the weapon. Then, adjusting a jeweler’s magnify- ing glass to his eye, he began what seemed an interminable series of tinkerings. He opened the plates of the stock, and drawing back the sear, took out the firing pin. He removed the slide, unscrewed the link, and extracted the recoil spring. I thought he was going to take the weapon entirely apart, but appar- ently he merely wanted to let light into the barrel; for presently he held lie “g ——— MURDER CASE VAN DINE @ was conn on! {his eyes fixed on the wall opposite, Another straw at which fe ? grai in his instinctive denial of r’s guilt, had been snat The telephone rang. Slowly he. took up the receiver, and as he listened, I saw a look of complete © resignation come into his eyes. He leaned. back in his chair, like a man exhausted. ~N “It was Hagedorn,” he said. “That was the right gun.” — Then he drew himself up, and turned to Heath, “The owner of that gun, Sergeant, } was Major Benson.” The detective whistled softly, and his eyes opened slightly with aston- ishment. But gradually his face | assumed its habitual stolidity of ex- pression, iH “Well, it don’t surprise me any,” he said. Markham rang for Swacker, _ “Get Major Benson on the wire, and tell him—tell him I’m about to make an arrest, and would appre- ciate his coming here immediately.” 4 His deputizing of the telephone call | to Swacker was understood by all of us, I think. > Markham then summarized, for Heath's benefit, the case against the Major. When he had finished, he rose and rearranged the chairs at ¥ the table in front of his desk, { “When Major Benson comes, Ser- | geant,” he said, “I am going to seat - him here.” He indicated a chair directly facing his own. “I want you to sit at his right; and you'd better get Phelps—or one of the other men, if he isn’t in—to sit at his left, But ites not to make any move until give the signal. Then you can ars rest him.” When Heath had returned with Phelps and they had taken ‘their seats at the table, Vance said: | “I'd advise you, Sergeant, to be on your guard. The minute the Ma- jor knows he’s in for it, he'll go bald- heade’ 7 r you.” 4 Heath smiled with heavy Gotie tempt. a “This isn’t the first man I’ve ate rested, Mr. Vance—with many thanks for your advice. And what’s more, the Major isn’t that kind; he’s too nervy.” “Have it your own way,” replied Vance indifferently, “But I’ve warned you. “The Major is cool-headed; he'd take big chances, and he could lose his last dollar without: turning a hair. But when he is finally cor- nered, and sees ultimate defeat, all his repressions of a lifetime, having had no safety-valve, will explode physically. , When @ man lives without pas- sions or emotions or enthusiasms, the gun to the window and placed his eye at the muzzle. He peered in- to the barrel for nearly five min- utes, moving it slightly back and forth to catch the reflection of the sun on different points of the in- terior. At last, without a word, he slowly and painstakingly went through the operation of assembling the weapon. en he lumbered back to his chair, and sat blinking heavily for several moments. “I'll tell you,” he said, thrusting his head forward and gazing at Markham over the teps of his steel- rimmed spectacles. “This, now may be the nght gun. 1! wouldn‘t say for sure. But when I saw the bullet the other morning I noticed sone pecu- liar rifling marks on it; and the rifling in this gun here looks to me as though it would match up with the marks on the bullet. I’m not certain. I'd like to look at this bar- rel through my helixometer.”* “But you believe it’s the gun?” insisted Markham. but I think so. I “I couldn’t sa; might be wrong.’ Very good, Captain. Take it along, and call me the minute you've in- spected it thoroughly.” “It’s the gun, all right,” asserted Heath, when Hagedorn had gone. “I know that bird. He wouldn't said as much as he did if he hadn’t been sure.... Whose gun is it, sir?” “Tl a er you presently.” Mark- ham was still battling against the truth—withholding, even from him- self, his pronouncement of the Ma- jor’s, guilt until every loophole of doubt should be closed. “I want to hear from Stitt before I say any- thing. 1 sent him to look over Ben- son and Benson's books. He'll be here any moment.” After a wait of a quarter of an hour, durin - which time Markham attempted to busy himself with other matters, Stitt came in. He said a sombre good morning to the district attorney and Heath; then, catching sight of Vance, smiled appreciative- a ; ° ‘That was a good tip you gave me. You had the dope. If you'd kept Major Benson away longer, 1 could have done more. While he was there he was watching me ev- ery minute.” “I did the best I could, sighed Vance. He turned to Markham: “Y' know, I was wondering all through lunch yesterday how I could remove there’s bound to be an outlet some time. Some men explode, and some commit suicide—the ‘principle is the same: it’s a matter ‘of psychological reaction. The Major isn’t the self- destructive type—that’s why I say he’ll blow up.” Heath snorted. “We may be short on psychology down here,” he rejoined, “but we know human nature pretty well.” Vance stifled a yawn, and careless- ly lit @ cigaret. I noticed, however, that he pushed his chair back a little from the end of the table where he and I were sitting. A I *A helixometer, I learned later, i: an instrument that makes it possible to examine every portion of the in- side of a gun's barrel through a microscope. (To be continued) Slope Country Oats : Are Best For Seed © Farmers in eastern North Dakota will be able to obtain a fair grade of seed oats for 1928 seeding from the “slope country,” according to E. G. Booth, field agent in agronomy, North Dakota agricultural college. A survey among county agents and elevator men throughout the state indicates that the “slope country” oat crop this past fall was compara. tively free from rust. This condi- tion resulted in a better filled out oat, and one better adapted to seed purposes, More complete data will be as- sembled later on the seed oats sit- uaticn, according to Mr. Booth, and will be published, —_—_——— CCS I Justajingle ~ | He found that last year’s overcoat Would never make the grade, Because cae wind blew through the holes ‘The little moths had made, BOOK REVIEW FOR FREEDOM. ” By Arthur Huff Fauset. Franklin Publishing and Supply company, Philadelphia, © Publishers. A biographical story of of the American negro—of "his racial heroes, who are. yet national the Major from his office during Mr. Stitt’s investigation; and when we learned of Leacock’s confession, it gave me just the excuse I needed. I really didn't want the Major here— I simply wished to give Mr. Stitt a free hand.” “What did you find out?” Mark- ham asked the accountant. “Plenty!” was the laconic reply. He took a sheet of paper from his pocket, and placed it on the desk. “There’s a brief report. . . . I fol- a ition, and record ind | characters.” heroes, rather than racial; of .the~ new negro, the cultured man—his hopes, his struggles, his aspira- tions, his accomplishm: his abiding faith in future. The author gives a life, a pers each character that is quite o the ordinary. Mr.. Fauset, himself a “new negro,” tells his story simply, yet attractively “in the spirit young folk, because they, more than of us perhaps, are able to relive ! the lives and struggles of heroic But it is still, as he says, “everybody's story.” %