Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ay + SATURDAY, FEBRUARY II, 1928 Tribune _.._ MALE HELP WANTED ADVERT! unique feature to newspapers 2 per cent commission. Then re- sell space for papers to local vertisers. Big money. Constant employment. HUEBINGER, Peoria, Ill. WANTED AT ONCE— learn barber trade. log tree, Moles Barber Call log free. Moler Barber le, Butte, Mont.; Fargo, N. D. whi WANTED—Farmer or farmer's son Se toad & travel in county. ay ly_work, be Ice CONNON & Site C262, Winona, Minn. Se <-FEMALE HELP WANTED ___ WOMAN WANTED FOR TRAV- ELING POSITI Open Feb. 10th, Not married, entirely un- incumbered, with high school ed- ucation between 25 and 40. Sal- ary, bonus and transportation. Give full information. F. E. COMPTON & CO., 1002 N. Dear- born, Chicago. WOMEN—Inexperienced wanted by manufacturer who can earn $2 weekly spare time sewing aprons. Materials cut, no selling; stamped envelope _ brings particulars. Morning Glory Apron Co., Mt. Ve N.Y. men to Systematic itions, Cata- LADIES—Earn up to $18 per doz- en embroidering. Experience un- necessary. Materials-instructions furnished. Addressed envelope brings particulars. Cameo Linen Co., 182 West 43 Street, New York City. ME: mn mon ing | aprons. Absolutely no selling. Experience unnecessary. Mater- ials el valopa’ betas Sertion: Stam} envelope pai \- lars. Art Dress Co. Stamford, Conn. ‘OMEN—Earn $17 dozen sewing aprons. Experience unnecessary; no selling. Easy, steady work, materials cut. Addressed en- velope brings _ details. _Dress, Goshen, N. Y. LAD! smocks home. Experience un- necessary, nc_ selling, materi: cut, addressed envelope brings in- structions, World Garment, 346- _ 6th Ave. N. Y. ADDRESS ENVELOPES at home. Spare time. Experience unneces-| sary. Dignified work. $15-§25) weekly easy. Send 2c stamp for! particulars. Mazelle, Gary, Indiana. ADDRESS ENVELOPES—$25.00- $35.00 weekly in your spare time. Everything furnished. Stamp for particulars. Junell Co., lam- mond, India: Goshen! ieFy Classilted Advertising Rates Effective Ji 19: iia wet or under . $45 2 insertions, rds seecee 8S 1.00 sf ie 1 4 Ads over 25 words, 3c addi- l per word CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES 90 Cents Per Inch All classified ads are cash in advance. Copy should be re- lived by ® o'clock to ins insertion’ came day.” oT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 382 Rebuilt Automobiles eat re lane Befter Than the ONE of the advantages of buying a used attomobile is that there are so many makes and models to choose from. You can nearly al- ways find exactly what you want. And every car we offer is in- spected, tested, and worthy of your confidence in every way. ‘Rebuilt Cars With a Rerutation’ Lahr Motor Sales Co. ogr Position. Have had two years’ experience in law office. Good recommendation. Write Ad. 1D lady wishes a place as companion or housekeeper for a lady. Tribune Ad. No. 92. WORK WANTED LET ACK’S Radiator Shop clean cio Md Ds a vented or clogged radiator. work guar- anteed and price’ reasonable. WANTED—School girl and boy want work after school or Sat- urdays. Phone 554-W. HOUSES AND FLATS FOR RENT—By March 1, 5 room strictly modern bungalow, garage attached, near school, on pave- ment. Rosser Ave. W. : AGENTS \GENTS—Can use a few more representatives in southern Dako- ta territory. Good income selling established line of first class merchandise. Prefer men and women in position to finance themselves. New compact display outfit for 1928. Consumers Mer- chandise Association, 410 Cedar Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn, NG HOME THE BACON! Seil- ing Christy’s Tee Cloth. Polishes all metals ina nk to demonstrate. Every Unusually — handsome Write for free sample. Inc. 5797 B’way, Newarky __York. AGENTS—We start you in busi- ness. No capital or experience needed to earn $50 to $100 week- ly selling shirts direct to wearer. Spare or full time. Write for Free Samples, Madison Shirts, 562 Broadway, New, Yorh. STRIBUTOR for 100 store route this county. unneces- sary. No selling, distribute and collect. Should net $70.00 wekly. __PERIS MFG. CO., z WANTED—Men to canvass farm- ers. $160.00 monthly salary and| caren ees: aie or sonteatt and full particulars. Bigler Co., F534, Springfield, Il. ____ __ APARTMENTS © FOR RENT—Exceptionally well furnished modern apartment ground floor, with piano, tiga: e, electric washing machine, icuum clearer, always hot wa ter, Porches a..d garden space 807 Fourth street. ‘OR RENT—Modern two. room apartment partly furnished’ for light housekeeping on\first floor. private entrance, apt down town. Call at 118 First street, _Tear. FOR RENT—Furnished two room apartment in modern home, Close in, Call at 400 Fourth street. Phone _ 1052 yA furnit aj nt for) adults coy. ‘Woodmansee Apts. Phone 1188, : POR BENE Erbe or yatere nished modern apa at Varney Flats. nett SS __ FURNITURE FOR SALE FOR SALE—One mahogany BOTS and writer desk and chair, one any standing desk 6 ft. one 8 ft. long. Phone 220-W. 103 1-2 Fourth street. City Insurance ney. FOR SALE—Two beds complete and a practically new gas range. Call _at 614 Raymond, — BARGAINS in used furniture, Ken- nelly Furniture Company. Phone 138-M, Manfan. oe BY CHICK ‘BABY CHICKS—Sena no money, for State accredited chicks. Pay . Leghorns $11; Rocks, ; ns, Minorcas, $18; livery; post- in Hatchery, Bowling BUY BABY Chicks for results. Beals chicks grow into producers. Eosy pay plan, carly order: dis- counts, coe RS; PS encod D. Pes ie" keries, ‘argo, N..D. id ames GENTLEME. iN! only keep your shirts for to sired. We call_ond ave. A Woot, Phone 10lTe TLOsi—My yel low Persian kitten. Will finter please esll 2337 Billie Mills, Jr. : Zz piso yuu paste ei oa) y| FOR RENT—A lar FOR RENT—One four room. flat | partly modern, partly furnished in my buil ee 118 Sixth street. Phone 239. H. L. Reade. FOR RENT—Five room house. In-, quire 214 Fifth street. ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Very pleasant large furnished room on first floor next to bath, suitable for two. Very convenient to*cither or down town. Very reasonable. Meals if desired. Phbne 1131-M. comfortable sleeping room, close in, with board if desired. Outside board- ers also desired. Phone 1093-M. Nice lot with garden. ad Classified Advertisements PHONE 82 =—— BOARD AND ROOM in modern home. Plenty of heat and hot wa- ter. 966-M or call at 323 First street. FOUND FOUND—3-x4.95 Firestone Balloon casing and rim. Owner can have same by paying advertising charges. J. S. Johnson. DIAMONDS” which” rep 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 part cash on pur- chase. Our diamoyd rings at $25 to $100 will please ycu. Cash or payments as low as $1 per week. james W. Marek, Exclusive Di mond Dealer. Office 108 Third street, ‘ismarck, N. D. of Prince Hotel. FOR SALE OR TRADE. at Bismarck. country club, acres land, room hous-, barn 30x64, granary 12x:°, garage 12x16, hen house 14x24, write Reinbold Hasz, Forbes, N. Route 2. OR SALE: case, especially made for center of store, has sliding doors on both sides. A good display case for dies, novelties, stationery, B. Smith, 416 - Broadway, marck. te Ms NATIONAL CASH REGISTERS— New and second hand. Over 500 styles and izes. We have one to fit your business. W. E. Stitzel, representative. Patterson Ho! Bismarck, N.D. OR SALE—Choice Importe man Rollers and Hartz Mountain, also aative singers. Cage treats, etc. Bull, Dickins; : OR RENT—One story brick build- et Bis- Suitable for storage or M. W. Neff. FOR SALE—% tons good clean hay. ‘Also 10 high grade toms garage. Close in. Reasonable. Phone| South |‘ six |] For further information, | nes a ie 10 ft. floor show hats, caps, shirts, millinery, can-!¢ seeds, | j) Phone_115-J Jacob ‘ ing in rear of 112 Fourth street.|? and hen turke . Adolph Giovan- oni. Phone, 1-F-120 or.write R. 1, i Menpkan. Also six turkeys and two cows. Inquire at 328 Eighth street south. Priced for quick FOR SALE—Big t; Pe, Duroc Ji s¢y bred gilts. ese are good smooth sows, weighing from 200 to 240 vga! Nagel and Struts, Bismarck, N. D. FOR SALE—Alfalfa hay, 3 miles from Memorial bridge, near pave- pent. Inquire E. P. an, FOR SALE—Buckeye Incubator, 65 egg capacity, $10.00. Call at 1016 Ave. C oF phone 1046. FOR SALE—Maynard piano. Ex- cellent condition. Price $100.00. Phone 689-R. NOTICE PERIOD OF REDEMPTION OV D SOLD TO THE COUNTY AT TAX SALB A. C. Isaminger, County Auditor leigh County, do hereby give notice that the parcels of real estate inafter described were sold fi not been re- are still the S mption shall be made from said tax sales within ninety days from the di will become the this County nwhers the and othe i he losed and de- rights of re- tax the period of redemp> ‘ed. ite description of: real ppears the name of the record r thereof ax it appears by. also opp ch tract appears the amount wh di hh will quired to re- fs tax ding the amount for d penalty thereon, subsequent de- qa taxes prior to thoxe of the 379.99, seal of Burleigh my hand and th Auditor or of Burleigh h Dakota, 1) MOM’N:POP COON, NOW~ TELL ME WHAT Noy DID WiTA THE MONEY TNTE AND L GAVE You Call at 405 Fifth street: FOR RENT—Nice warm sleeping room in modern home. in. Plenty of hit waar Also gar- age for rent. Phone 9: or call at 507 Third street. Moun single room by, tbe. wight, one 8i room ie week or ‘month, at ait Ave. A. ROOM FOR RENT in modern new home, cléan 4nd warm, always hot water. Gentlemen preferred. Phone 120-R or call at 503 Fourth ‘ street. FOR RENT—One front room, good Ais ae ana tetas one f° TOOM. Fifth street. Phone 273. FOR RENT—Four room partly modern house, including two bed YT'S NO USE, CAPTAIN - LCAN'T DO A “THING WITH HIM—HE’S TOO SUCK FoR ME rooms, close in, immediate posses- gion. _ieo. M. Register. FOR RENT—Two or three light housekee ping. rooms. Cheap. hed if desired. Call at 42] Ninth street. FOR & furni sleep- ing room in modern home. Ladies eotecred. Close to court house. jone a FOR RENT—Two pleasant com fortable sleeping rooms in mod ern home. Call at 819 Fifth furnished street. FOR RENT—Nicel; sleeping room, $12.60 per month. oe at 113 Washington. Phone FOR RE ‘Two unfurnished rooms for light housekeeping in modern home. Phone 1068. ” Knowles Jewelry store. A) iy to F. A. Knowles, sida FOR SALE OMPARATIVELY new bungalow “fn genet ition, near school attached, for quick on terms. SEVEN ROOM modern house, in has 3 bed room oA den, hard attached, south front, very’ dest able location near schools, for ROOM moder incl SIX RO rn house, lud- ie 3 bed sms, full basemen ent, ine] Porch joo}s, for ooo piv Aeciclon i e rm » two bed ft aca cone FIVE ig cottage, 3 bad rooms, eas! CS for $2,500, on very ibetal terms. GEO. M. REGISTER. : WA! Tu W. —l mn must have three bed rooms, water heat preferred. Give vied vl Tribune pee: jo, 91, INSTRUCTION DO YOU DRIVE A CAR? U. 8. - Chauffeur-Carri¢: a Bureau, 38-P Arcade ey Hot| ite ) Bide. St. Louis. Mo, 21928, BY NEA service, WELL, THAT You Can’t Blame Pop YOU GAVE ME? G'WAN! YOURE LOONEY —1F YOU HAD GIVEN ME ANY MONEY THEY’D HAVE FOUND IT ON ME — BLT THEY PUTS US IN A PECULIAR SITOATION — RoAD OF EXPIRATION OF THB} y and that un- | Tose this notice, the same | 1, and penalties and interest ja —YOU'LL HAVE TO DIG UP SOME SOLID EVIDENCE IF You EXPECT TO SEND HIM_OVER THE NOTIC PR! TA. C. Isaminger, of Burleigh County,’ do County on December 9th, that such sales have not deemed from and they are roperty of this County, and mption shall . bi sales within ninety days date of this notice, the same me the absolute property in and the former owners thereof and all lien holders and other persons interested pnersin fee of this County will barred of any and all righ be forever foreclosed of demption, or other rights in or to Following is a list state sold at such hich the period of redemp- such real estate. on w has expired. Opposite ca: title owner thereof as it apt Ption including the amount for which the said land was sold, interest alty thereon, subsequent de- thore of the 18, and penalties and interest | taxes prior Description and Name Part of 1 t Wty 81, A Magen . Burleigh ith day of January, iE, r of Burleigh Dak ta. 8 erested therein 3 ao notice that hereinafter taxes at the County on De that at said mber 14th, atl has from and t property of this Count piration of the period of | s will become the of this County f and nd foreclosed ny and hich the pes xpired. int ister of Decds hereby notice that the parcels of real est hereinafter described were sold taxes at the annual tax wars oe this 1919, that at said sale said parcels of real estate were sold to this County, and description of real estate appears the name of the peara b; the records, in the office of the Reg- ister of Deeds of such County and also opposite each tract appears the hich will be required to r m the effects of such Amount 14-139- < Teal estate were sold for nual tax sale of this 1920, -and Is of real the former UW lien holders ns interested therein and. de- | yights of re- ONG! IF L SOLD: | You ANY SfocK PRODUCE THE CERTIFICATES—. HA:—YOu LAM IN WHAT BECOMES OF SAY- UM MORE INTERESTED IN | WHATS BECOME OF MY MONEN. THAN ; Freckles and His Friends CERTAINLY! 7UAT IS, PRNIDING YouR WELL--WEVE DECIDED THAT WE COULDNT SUCK A WO. SE You NL. OPPOR= , AND... IT Wu ae ie caeare 1B j deem from the effects of poe sale at tho expiration | redemption including ¢! which the said land wa and penalty thereon, linquent taxes prior to those o! Year 1919, and penalties and interest ite for | thereo!. Description and 0 ft. x 183 f a 5 y 721.00 n_under m: a and the seal of the County Auditor of Burleigh County, this’ 15th day of January, 1928. A. C. ISAMINGER, (Seal) ~~ County Auditor of Burleigh come North Dakota, (1/38—3/) ) "Seaton Ga 16x. OF THE LAND SOLD TO THE COUNTY AT TAX SALE I, A. C. Isaminger, County of Burleigh County, do her notice that the parcels of rei inafter described were sold for taxes at the annual tax sale of this County on December 13th, 192 id that at said sale sald parcels of real estate were sold to this County, and that such sales have not been re- deemed from and they still the roperty of this County, and that un- lens redemption shall be made from said tax sales within ninety days from the date of this notice, the same will become the absolute property in of this County and the former owners thereof and all Hen holders and other persona interested therein will be forever forecton id de- barred of any and all hts of re- demption, or other rights in or to such real estate. Following is a list of the real estate sold at tax sale on which the period of redemp- tion ha ired. ‘ach deseription of real "8 the name of the record hereof as it appears by . in the office of the Reg: County and ite each tract appears the i b quired to re- deem from the effects of such tax the expiration of the period of mB including the amount for which the said land was sold, interest and penalty thereon, subsequent de- linquent taxes prior to those of the 0, and penalties and interest d Name Lucy Dunca ‘ Isabel 770.91 Amount my hand and the s y Auditor of Burtei 15th *. ISAM Al of the Cou County, th 1928, S Rr, (Seal) ditor of Burleigh i The world’s largest spider is ound in Sumatra; its body is nine inches in cireumference, and its legs spread 17 inches. CHARACTERS PHILO VANCE JOHN F.-X. MARKHAM, District Atteracy of New York Count; MARGARET ODELL (THE “CANARY”) CHARLES CLEAVER, a mane about-town KENNETH SPOTSWOODE, a manue facturer LOUIS MANNIX, an importer RK. AMBROISE LINDQUIST, a fashionable neurologist SKEEL, a professional bur- w AM ELMER JESSUP, phone operator 4. SPIVELY, telee telephone op- HEATH. Sergeant of the Homicide Bureau eve TRE STORY THUS FAR fa “Canal apartment when the “peg ge ed. Marke e CHAPTER XXIV ue KNOW, Markham,” Vance began, in his emotion- less drawl, “every genuine work of art has a quality which the critics call clan—namely, enthusiasm and spontaneity. A copy, or imitation, lacks the distinguishing character istic; it’s too perfect, too carefully done, too exact. “Even enlightened scions of the law, I fancy, are awaro that there fs bad drawing in Botticelli and disproportions in Rubens, what? In an original, d’ ye see, such flaws don’t matter. But an imitator a puts ‘em in: he doesn’t dare aes too intent on getting all the details correct. The imitator works with a self-consciousness and @ meticulous care which the artist, in the throes of creative labor, never exhibits. “And here's the point: there's no way of ‘imitating that enthusiasm and spontaneity—that elen—which an original painting possesses, However closely a copy may re semble an original, there’s a vast peycholo: difference between them, The copy breathes an air of insincerity, of ultra-perfection, of conscious effort. . . . You follow me, eh?” “Most instructive, my dear Rus- kin.” Vance meekly bowed his appre- ciation, and proceeded pleasantly. low, let us consider the Odell murder. You and Heath are @greed that it is a commonplace, brutal, sordid, unimaginative crime, Bat, unlike you two bloodhounds on the trail, t have ignored its mere appearances, and have ana- lyzed its various factors— “I have looked at it psychologic- ally, so to speak. And I have dis- covered that it is not # genuine and sincere crime—tbat is to say, by a ial I grant you it is correct and typical detail. But there is where 't y’ kuow. Its technic its craftsmanship too ensemble, as it were, F ra HE E Ly NOTICE PERIOD OF REDEMPTION OF} THE COUNTY AT TAX SALE 1, A. C. Iaaminger, County Auditot County, hereby gi the parcels of real estat einafter describ He kes at the mber 9th ty on Di at said sale said pa: mption ales within ninety days iy KE! tees the sa 7 ecom he absolute pri t fee of this fie former 140. 9-140-80 30141-76 $-141-76 9 ft. Ww n and the sea tiv y ha County, this 15th’ day (SEAL) 1—28; 2—4, 11. OF EXPIRATION PS sad County and the former ere thereof and all lien holders other persons interested thercin ot January, will be. forever foreclosed and. 4 barred of any and all,rights of Fe- demption, or: other rights :in of. to such real éstate. Following is a Het fof the 1 eatate sold at such tax le on which the period of redemp- ¢| tion has expired. Opposite cach description, of real estate appears the name of the record title owner thereof as it appears by tho records, in the office of the ister of Deeds of such County also opposite each tract appears the amount which will be required to re- deem from the effects of such tax sale at the expiration of the period of redemption including the amount for which the sald land was sold, interest nfund penalty thereon, subsequent de- taxes prior to those of the 3, and penalties and interest Hoerr alof the County 1928, A. ©. ISAMINGER, County Auditor of Burleigh County, North Dakota, EEX od IE AuTHOR .of THE BENSON MURDER CASE’; “Every human action, d’ ye see,) conveys unconsciously an impres- sion either of genuineness or of spuriousness—of sincerity or cal- culation, For example, two men at table eat in a similar way, handle their knives and forks in the same | fashion, and apparently do the identical things, Although the sen- sitive spectator cannot put his finger on the points of difference. he none the less senses at once which man’s breeding is genuine and in- stinctive and which man’s is imi- tative and self-conscious.” He blew a wreath of smoke toward the ceiling, and settled more deeply into his chair. “Now, Markham, just what are the univereally recognized features of a sordid crime of robbery and murder? . . . Brutality, disorder, haste, ransacked drawers, cluttered desks, broken jewel-cases, rings stripped from the victim’s fingers, severed pendant chains, torn cloth- ing, tipped-over chairs, upset lamps, broken vases, twisted draperies, strewn floors, and so forth. Such are the accepted immemorial indi- cations—eh, what? “But—consider s moment, old chap. Outside of fiction and the drama, in how many crimes do they ail appear—all in perfect or- dination, and without a single ele- ment to contradict the general ef- fect? That is to say, how many actual crimes are technically per- fect in their settings? . . . None! And why? Simply because nothing actual in this life—nothing that is spontaneous and genuine—runs to accepted form in every detail. The law of chance and fallibility in- variably steps in.” He made a slight indicative ges- ture. “But regard this particular crime: look at it closely, What do you find? You will perceive that its mise-en-scene has been staged, and its drama enacted, down to every minute detail—like a Zola novel. It is almost mathematically per- fect. And therein, d’ ye see, lics the irresistible inference of its having been carefully premeditated and planned. “To use an art term, it is a tickledup crime. Therefore, its conception was not spontaneous. + + « And yet, don’t y’ know, I can’t Point out any specific flaw; for its great flaw lies in its being flawless. And nothing flawless, my dear fel- low, is natural or genuine.” Markbam was silent for a while. “You deny even the remote pos- sibility of @ common thief having murdered the girl?” ho asked at length; and now there was no bint of sarcasm in his voice. “If @ common thief did it,” con- tended Vance, “then there's no scl- ence of psychology, there are no philosophic truths, and there are no laws of art. If it was a genuine crime of robbery, then, by the same token, there is uo difference what- ever between an old master and a clever technician's copy.” “You'd entirely eliminate robbery as the motive, I take it.” “The robbery,” Vance affirmed, “was only @ manufactured detail. The fact that the crime was com- mitted by a highly astute person indicates unquestionably that there was & far more potent motive be- hind it. “Apy man capable of so ingenious gnd clever a piece of deception is s of education he chose the murder as the lesser.” Markham did not speak at once? he seemed lost in reflection. But. presently he turned and, fixing Vance with a dubious stare, said: What about that chiseled jewel box? A_ professional burglar’s jimmy, wielded by an experienced hand, doesn’t fit into your esthetic hypothesis—it is, in fact, dia+ metrically opposed to such a the ory.” “I know it only too well.” Vance nodded slowly. “And I’ve been harried and hectored by that steel chisel ever since I beheld the evidence of its work that first morning. . . . Markham, that chisel is the one genuine note in an otherwise spurious performance, It’s as if the real artist had come along at the moment the copyist had finished his faked picture, and painted in a single small object with the hand of a master.” “But doesn’t that bring us back inevitably to Skeel?” “Skecl—ak, yes, That's the expla- nation, no doubt; but not the way you conceive it. “Skeel ripped the box open—I don’t question that; but deuce take it!—it’s the only thing he did do; it's the only thing that wad left for him to do. That’s why he got ones ring which La Belle Mare Guerite was not wearing that night All her other baubles—to wit, those that adorned her—had been en npee: from her and were gone.” “Why are you so positiv this point?” $ es Bess “The poker, man—the poker! Don’t you see? That amateuris! assault upon the jewel-case with a cast-iron coal-prodder couldn't have been made after the case had been pried open—it would have had to be made before, “And that scemingly insane at- tempt to break steel with caste fron was part of the stage-setting. The real culprit didn’t care if he Sot the case open or not, He mere- ly wanted ft to look as if he had tried to get it open; so he used the poker and then left it lying beside the dinted box.” “I see what you mean.” This point, I think, impressed Markham more strongly than any other Vance had raised; for the presenco of the poker on the dressing-table had not been explained away either by Heath or Inspector Brenner. . . . “Is that the reason you questioned Skecl as if he might have been Present when your other visitor was there?” “Exactly. By the evidence of the Jewelcase I knew he either was in the apartment when the bogus crime of robbery was being staged, or clse bad come upon the scene when it was over and the stage- director had cleared out. o From his reactions to my questions I rather fancy he was present.” “Hiding in the closet?” “Yes. That would account for the closet not having been dis. turbed. “As I sce it, it wasn’t ransac! for the simple and rather pod tesque reason that the elegant Skeel was locked within. “How else could that one clothes» press have escaped the rifling ac tivities of the pseudo-burglar? He wouldn’t have omitted it deliber- ately, and he was far too going to have overlooked it acct. - dentally.-Then there are the finger-prints on the knob. . . .” eee ey tapped on the arm