The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 31, 1928, Page 7

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4 | ; 9:9 colt . '19:65—Villa Venice TUESDAY, JANUARY 81, 1998 _._.. = PHONE 82 MALE HELP WANTED = 7 Clasetked Advertising Rates Ng ag tc ra iy, Bl le Effective J 1 1 gy wives work. Our systematic trainii fits you for best positions, Cate: log and full particulars free. Mol- under .......... $15 €, ceed ‘ile. Butte Monts 2 veh words es » N. LT. under Oreeeeeese J VANTED—First class nic bb scgahnng 25 words ee ieee sate under s......0., 1 Ford. Dealership fall,” Gegeaan || 2 Week, 28 words or Glen Ullin, N. Dak. tional per word —Enginecr at aj CLASSIFIED DISPLAY School. RATES 90 Cents Per Inch FEMALE HELP WANTED WANTED—Midele woman who is willing to keep house on farm for one man and two “children. py ees . ree ceived 9 ocl by G vend to insure Steady positi ind wages for right arty. Write Tribune THE ~ __Ad. No, 89. BISMARCK TRIBUNE WANTED—Housekeeper. Must be PHONE 32 clean and neat, and one who can take interest in three children. Phone 737-M for appointment or feall at 606 West Rosser. J. S. Johnson. INSTRUCTION DO YOU DRIVE A CAR? _U. 5. Carrier ER of mid-| {> aye $1 $178 momen, “Hi NORWEGIAN WIDOWER of mid- pays $141-$175 month. “How dle age wants hoasebeepets “1 i qualify” mailed FREE. Write, children, live in Norwegian settie- | Instruction Bureau, 33-P Arcade ment. Good home for right party. idg., St. Louis, Mo. __H. Sterk, Braddock, N. 5. WANTED—Competent maid for general housework, modern home, three in family. Write Tribune ___ PERSONAL. | PALMIST and Phrenblogist, Mad- am Lattimorelle here at 318 Man- WANTED--Gompet it girl Sand to 10. cnt tint ; a /om| en! girl or . general housework, Phone 129-W.| articles. her tovey. esti RADIO PROGRAMS | FEATURES ON THE AIR Wesneetay, Feb. 1 8:00e-Kolster Hours and Vocal Ls Ua DR Rg ite en a RE $:00—Ipana, badours; ions—" WRC W’' JAR WT. ewan, CAE, wTAN, ues Wat WHE Ke owes "HO WOW WDAF 8 WS WEB 8:30-—~Goodrich Fr WIAR WT, WCAB WT, ‘ws W! ‘WOR 0) AT Bet Woe von ama AR ean i we Spe atch Wehr lad MOE wah tans wae WA WERE 10 ERE VT LSB Wand Wad WAR WER ST AE WP * WEDNESDAY, FEB. 1° S.S—WCOA Penscco!a—2290 By The Associated Press,’ _ sae pasitage Programs in Central Standard time. 49; ine - eee eT eae a Tete et cell ZI=WAVA Fic: letters, kilocycles on it. 272.6—WPG Atlantic City—1109 5—Organ Recital ‘ Sn Cone : estudio Program 280.0-WBAL Baltimers--2-) ae —Bridge Lessor Mass Meetin:s CENTRAL i Tpana ‘froubatours «3isb—Goodtich Orchestra 461.3-—WNAC Beston—640 5:36—Orchestra 8:00—Kolater Hour . lumbia Pho! $20:10—-Dance Music '302.8—WGR Buftalo—200 zoom Same as ) Hp re feo from New York 0: Siomarok u Hour 10:00—Van gurdam's Orchestre. 545.1—WMAK Buffale—660 7:00—Remington Band late :00—Columbia, Phonograph Hour 10:05—Dance Orchestre S35.4—-WTIC Hartford—S60 Air Frolic 0—ipana Troubadours rick Hour i Tribune Classified ‘Advertisements Rebuilt Automobiles A Used Car Is Dealer Made It. \ WE are very particular about the character of the used sell because the good name of this business is worth more to us than would be the used car profits of a hundred bards of shifty deal- iS i And this knowledge should befworth something to you, “Rebuilt Cars With a Rerutation” Lahr Motor Sales Co. APARTMENTS ENT—Modern apartment, clean and warm, with piano, electrical conveniences such as Sashise machine, vacuum cleaner, frigidaire. Always hot ater. 807 Fourth stre wi FOR RENT—Two large apartments newly painted, _pri- vate entrance, on ground _ floor. Phone 543-W or call at 924 Fourth PE SRE ee FOR RENT—Furnished apartment with private bath. Guaranteed ood and warm, Call at 930 ___Bourth street. te. he | FOR RENT—Four room apartment, heat and water furnished, strict- ly_modern. Phone _1228. FOR RENT—An unfurnished apart- ment at the Woodmansce Apart- ished __ments. Phone 1188. FOR RENT—Four room apt. in Varney , Apts. - Feb. Ist. Phone FURNITURE FOR S. PRICED FOR QUICK SALE- tie househc'd furniture, dishes, coking utensils and canned goods. Party leaving city and must sell at once, House is for rent or cor sale. Has been run as a rooming and boarding house, may continue so if desired. Eva Kramer. Call a: 401 Ninth street. Phone_618-W. FOR SALE—Small gas range in excellent condition. Priced for quick sale. Call at 216 Main Ave. Phone 356. ‘ FOR SALE—Edison phonograph and 75 records. Phone 639. a —___HOME LAUNDRY __ SEND those new shirts to Mar- guerit Bulten’s Home Laundry and wear them several years. No chemicals uscd. Repairs made if desired. Our customers arg sat- isfied. Ask your friends. We call and deliver. Tel. 1017, 203 Ave. A West. __.__ ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Completely furnished living room, dining room, bed- room, bath and kitchen, ulso heat. Occupancy at once, $35 a month. raneat 615 Tenth street. Phone ROOMS FOR RENT—One room suitable for two and one single room, with or without board. Will Iso take outside boarders. Call at 613 Third street’ or phone 1150. FOR RENT—One furnished room, also two or three unfurnished rooms for light housekeeping. Call after 4:00 p.m. at 418 —Fighth street_or phone 104: FOR RENT—Two warm furnished or partly furnished light house- keeping rooms with garage. Close i Price reasonable. Phone comfortable 9:30—National Grand Opera 422.3—WOR ewark—710 eofandin neval Orchestre, ssions Chimes ambi Ph Heur cf ‘History 8: 9: jal MRI—WCK-WIR Detroit—600 a Ff Girle 38.7—WW Detrelt—e80 q in History 45S—WFICWLIT Philedeiphia—740 $3 s 5 Orchestra ——-490,7=—WBAP Fort Werth—000 6: sateen tees, hing * SOUTHERN’ MO.G—WWNC Ashevillo—1012 00—-Dinner yon Large room suitabl. for two. Hot wa- ter heat and always hot water. en at 522 Second street. Phone FOR RENT—Two charmingly fur- nished rooms. Heat, light, water and use of Maytag washer. Phone 667-R or call at 401 ‘ street. FOR RENT—Attractive warm room, bath adjoining, in modern home, furnished, $12 per month. 1110 Thayer. Phone 1132-W. _ FOR RENT- nc sleeping room in strictly mcdern home. Gentlemen preferred. Phone 599 or call at 709 Third stréct. ; Americanism, welcomed. No Better Than the | cars we! THE .FAMOUS PEACE RIVER COUNTRY WHERE the world’s) oe id gad oats are ; e last Grea! West, ‘Aorricas caged jucs- | tions relocations, ete, answered personally. Not by circular. Fif- teen. years experience. O. $1.00. For convenience, please | number your questions. 5 La Riviere, Box 20, _McLenna! Peace River District, Alberta. | a WORK WANTED LADIES—Let me do that spring sewing now, dressmaking, altera- tions, coats. relined and _ ladies coats and suits tailored. Let me make son a suit from dad’s «old one. .Nelli. Enyder, 311 First street. Phon2 241-W. WORK WANTED—An experienced lady desires housework or: clean- ing. Call at 320 Third street. a a Lost —Blad Pee ce Second and Ninth street, Ave. A, i be verrid five dollar check, five | dollar bill and some change. er notify Henry W. Jonas, phone 376-W._ Reward. LOST—Saturday evening in down town sectio ; erstrap. Finder notify 777-J and receive reward. BOARD ANDROOM plenty of heat and hot water. Close in. Reasonable. Phone 966-M. _____ HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—House of 6 rooms and bath, all modern, hot water heat, full basement, partitioned built in features, 50 foot lot. $3,500 down, the rest in monthly payments. No inte: est. Inquire at 1013 Rosser Ave. , FOR RENT—Six modern house with garage not far out. Also two stall garage and one furnished room. Inquire at A. E. Shipp. : | FOR RENT—Strictiy modern 5 room lower duplex, garage at Jot O. W. Roberts, Weath yu + to FARM FOR RENT, on ‘river, 20 miles 8. E. Bismarck. Buildings, pasturs, 200 acres cultivated, more breaking. 1-2 crop _ plan. Give bank references. rat, | Sheldon, N.D. LARGE list of improved and un- improved farms and ranches. Ad- dress Isabel Land and Implement Co., Isabel, So. Di FOR SA SIX ROOM house, east front, fur- ; hace, bath, $3200.00. | SIX ROOM bungalow, east front, { furnace, bath, 60 foot lot, $3300. SIX ROOM modern house, complete, Riverview, $6500,00. FIVE ROOM cottage, bath no fur- nace, $2850,00, . FOUR ROOM bungalow, brand new, absolutely best built houso of kind in city, $4000.00. INSURANCE; Fire, tornado, auto- mobile; in good, old reliable com- panies with prompt service as- sured. BUILDING LOTS: Foreseeing that the next real growth of the city will be to the éast I have secured the agency of fully 1000 lots in that part of the city, ninety per cent of which can be sold on easy: monthly payments. FARM,LANDS: This part of North Dakota is today the most pros- country. Buy your real state from the only man in Bismarck who has consistently advertised the Missouri Slope to outsiders and who is probably spending more than the rest of Bismarck together in such ad sing. F. E. YOUNG. MISCELLANEOUS ‘NATIONAL CASH REGISTERS— New and second hand. Over 500 styles and .izes. We have one to fit your business. W. E. Btitzel,, representative. Patterson Hotel, _ Bismarck, N. Do FOR SALE—Choice imported Ger- man Rollers and Hartz Mountain, also sative singers. Cages, 8, treats, etc. one 115-J, Jacob Bull, Dickinson, N. D.. Box 728. OR RENT—Furnished room in HOF ate home. Call at 607 Sixth treet. Phone 782. FOR RENT—Three nice rooms over FOR SALE—Big type Duroc Jer- sey bred gilts. se are good smooth sows, weighing from 200 240 inds. Nagel and Strutz, Knowles Jewelry store. Apply to F. A. Knowles. to Bismarck, N. D. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Send M.. § jocketbook between Find- & a lady’s small white § gold wrist watch with black leath- 3 BOARD and room in modern home, E ‘ast front, ona & perous farming region of the “ ie. , CHARACTERS PUILO VANCE JOHN FX. MARKHAM, District Attorney of New York Count; MARGARET ODELL (us “CANARY? CHARLES CLEAVER, a mas- about iJ KEN: SFOTSWOODE, « mane. facturer * LOUIS MANNIX, am ten ler. vi LINDQUIST, - prt gl bey a aa je neurolont A SKEEL, a professional bur- WILLIAM ELMER JESSUP, tele- id Bd bar PIVELY, telephone ep- e ERNEST. HEATH, Sergeant of the Homicide Bureau eee THD STORY THUS FAR old Markham jyoue the cireamatances ibility of the bet ° CHAPTER XIV seyour Long Island Don Juan has certainly not supplied you, with any footprints in the snow,” said Vance. “Anyway. hfs coming forwarg at this time closes one line of in-. quiry over which we might bave wasted considerable time.” “If many more lines of taquiry are closed,” remarked Vance, drily. “you'll be in a distressin’ dilemma don’t y’ know.” “There are enough still open to keep me busy.” sald Markham. pushing back his plate and calling for the check. He rose; then paus. ing, regarded Vance meditatingly “Are you sufficiently interested to want to come along?” “Eh, what?) My word! . . Charmed, I'm sure. But. I say, sit down just @ moment—there's a good fellow!—till 1 finish my coffee.” 1 was considerably astonished at Vance's ready acceptance, careless and bantering though it was, for there was an exhibition of old Chineso prints at the Montross Galleries that afternoon, which be had planned to attend. A Riokal and a Moyeki, said to be very fine examples of Sung painting, were to be shown; and Vance was par. ticularly eager to acquire them for Lis collection. We rode with Markham to the Criminal Courts building and, en tering by the Franklin Street door. took the private elevator to the dis. trict attorney's spacious but dingy office which overlooked the, cray stone ramparts of the Tombs. Vance seated himself im one of the heavy leather-upholstered chairs near the carved oak: table on the right of the desk, and lighted a cigaret with an air of cynicat amusement. “I await with antictpat'ry delight she grinding of the wheels of jus tice,” he confided, leaning back lazily, “You are doomed not to hear the ~ first turn of those wheels,” retorted Markham. “The initial revolution + wlll take place outside of this of. fice.” - And he disappeared through ® awinging door which led to the judges’ chambers, Five minutes later be returned, Qnd eat down in the high-backed swivel chair at bis desk, with bis \ back to the four tall narrow win. dows in the south wall of the of fice, “I just saw Judge Redfern,” he explained--“it happened to be the RHA gn eT RTT A RT meat and grocery. Sa edi 106 1-2 Main, Mandan, WANTED TO BUY—A good sec- ond hand stock table, about 7 or 8 feet long. Phone 547-J. WANTED—To buy for cash, dia- monds, old gold and silver. F. A. WANTED—A_ good location for | Knowles, Jeweler. ie “The case was pried open, with @ spccially made cold chiset such as only a professional durglar would know how to use.” midday recess—and he verified Spotswoode’s statement in regard to the poker game, The judge met him outside of the club at ten minutes before midnight, and was with bim until three in the morn- -|ing. He noted the time because be had promised his guests to be back at halt past eleven, and was twenty minutes late.” “Why all this substantiation of an obviously unimportant fact?” asked Vance, “A matter of routine,” Markham told him, slightly impatient. “In @ case of this kind every factor, however seemingly remote to the main issue, must be checked.” “Really, y' know, Markbam"— Vance laid his head back on the hi nd gazed dreamily at the celling—“one would think that this eternal routine, which you lawyer chaps worsbip so devoutly, actually got one somewhere occasionally; whereas it never gets one any: where, Remember the Red Queen in ‘Through the Looking-Glass—’* “I'm too busy ut present to de bate the question of routine versus inspiration,” Markham answered brusquely, essing @ button bo neath the edge of his desk. Swacker, his youthful and ener: getic secretary, appeared at th door which communicated with aarrow inner chamber between the district attorney's office aud the main. waiting-room. “Yes, Chief?” The secretary's eyes sleamed expectantly behind his enormous horn-rimmed glasses. “Tell Ben to send me in @ man at once."° Swacker went out through the corridor dovr, and a minute or two later a suave, rotund man, dressed 4 maculately and wearing a prince nez, entered, and stood before Mark- ham with an ingratiating emile “Morning, Tracy.” Markham’s tone was pi--<-~* but curt. . “Here's list of four witnesses in copnec- Write H. G.| DIAMONDS which represent the utmost in values sent to any bank for free examination. Fine qualities. Latest style mount- ings. All-transactions confiden- tial. Your unwanted diamond taken in as Dp cash on pur- chase. Qur diamond rings at $25 to $100 will please you. Cash or payments as low as $1 per week. tion with the‘ ‘ case that I want brought down hero at once—the two phone operators, the maid. and the jaintor. You'll find them at 384 West ist Strect: Sergeant Heath is holding them there.” “Right, sir.” Tracy took the memorandum, and with a prig- sish, but by no means inelegant. bow went out. During the next hour Markham plunged into the general work that had accumulated during the fore noon, and I was amazed at the man’s tremendous vitality and ef- ficiency. Ho disposed of as many important matters as would bave occupied the ordinary business man for an entire day. Swacker bobbed in and out with electric energy, and various clerks appeared at the touch of a buzzer, took their orders, and were gone with breathless rapidity. Vance, who bad sought diversion in a tome ‘of famous arson trials, looked up ad- mirlogly from time to time, and shook his head in mild reproach at such spirited activity. It was just balf past two when Swacker announced tho retura of Tracy with the four witnesses; and for two hours Markham ques. tioned and cross-questioned them with a thoroughness and an insight that even I as a lawyer had rarely en equaled. His interrogation of the two phone operators was quite diferent from his casual question: ing of them earlier in the day; and if there had been a single relevant omission in their former testimony. it would certainly have been caught now by Markham’s gruelling cate chigm. But when, at last, they were told they could go, no new information had been brought to light. Their stories now stood firmly grounded: no one—with tho exception of the girl herself and her escort, and the disappointed visitor at half past | ! aine—had entered tho front door James W. Marek, Exclusive mond Dealer. street, of Prince Hotel. Vicar at Darwen, England, foreed to summon police during r crudescence of demonstratio against his Anglo-Catholicism; po- lice escort him from church. Charles Scribner's Sons. and passed down the hall to the Odell apartment from seven o'clock. on; and no ono bad passed out that way, The janitor reiterated stubborn ly that ho had bolted the sido door a little after siz and no amount of wheedling or aggression could shake his dogged certainty on that point, Amy Gibson. the maid, could add nothing to her former testi mony. Markbam’s intensive exam- ination of her produced only repe titions of what she bad already told him, Not one new possibility—not one new suggestion—was brought out, In fact, the two hours’ {interlocu- tory proceedings resulted only in closing up every loophole in a seem- ingly incredible situation. When, at half past four, Markham sat back in his chair with a weary sigh, the chance of uncarthing a prom- ising means of approach to the as tonishing problem seemed more re mote than ever. Vance closed his treatise on ar son, and throw away his cigaret, “I tell you, Markham, old chap,” he grinned, “this caso requires con templation, mot routine. Why not call in an Egyptian seeress with a fair for crystal-gazing?” “If this sort of thing goes on much longer,” returned Markham, dispiritedly, “I'll be tempted to take your advice.” Just then Swacker looked in through the door to say that In- spector Brenner was on the wire. Markham picked up the telephone receiver, and as ho lstened he jotted down some notes on a pad. When the call had ended, he turned to Vance. “You sccmed disturbed over the condition of the steel jewel-case we found in tho bedroom. Well, the expert on burglar tools just called up; and ho verifies his opinion of this morning. Tho case was pried open with a specially made cold chisel such as only a professional burglar would carry or would know how to use. It bad an inch-and- threeelghths bevelcd bit and a one-inch flat handic, It was an old instrument—there was a pecul- jar nick in tho bladeo—and is the, same one that was used in a suce cessful house-break on upper Park Avenuo early last summer. . . « Does that highly exciting informa- tion ameliorate your auxicty?” “Can't say that it does.” Vance had again become serious and per- plexed. “In fact it makes the sit- uation still moro fantastic. . . ~ 1 could seo a glimmer of light— eerie and unearthly, perhaps, but still a perceptible illumination—in all this murkiness if it wasn’t for tha vel-case and the steel chisel.” Markham was about to answer when Swacker again looked in and informed him that Sergeant Heath had arrived and wanted to see him, Heath's manner was far less de pressed than when wo had taken leave of him that-morning. Heac cepted the cigar Markham offered him, and seating himself at the conference tablo in front of the district attorney's desk, drew out a battered note-book. “We've had a little good luck,” ho begat. “Burke and Emery— two of the men I put on the case— got a lino on Qdell at the first place they mado inquiries. From what they learned, she didn’t run around with many men—limited herself to a few live wires, and played tho game with what you'd call finesse. . . . Tho principal one—the man who's been seen most with her—is Charles Cleaver,” (TO BE CONTINUED) “Ben” was Colonel Benjamin Hane fice: Office 108 Third | Sismarck, N. D, South om Detective Div District Attor COU CU $e A Thought | ? If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunning.— Psalms 13735. | a Oh, if in being forgotten we could only forget!—Lew Wallace, MOM’N POP Putting Punch Into It ; "By Taylor [Freckles and His Friends _ Out of a Clear Sky! By Blosser | Wy! IT'S FROM MY BROTMER HARRY! WELL, OF ALL TKKG SURPRISES! TUS IS THE FIRST SIGN IS THis BILL GERRICK'S CLANE? ER- AHeNEX! HAT’S IT LIGTEN.Bo-vcanr | surr PALM THAT STUFF ON ME @ROTHI aa : soe OF IT— WELL, SINCE YOU'RE SO REAL AND HELMS LWANT EM!

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