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4 we § it i $ ‘ ¢ v i } x 4 ‘ i) ra ‘ ‘ | ' , y » | y - wy q ys x MYSTERY MAN ELUDES CROWD | ON HIS TRAIL Mr. Tribune Was Four Hours Making One Purchase Yesterday Today is Mr. Tribune's last day in Bismarck. Hundreds of persons watched Mr. Tribune slecp in the Webb Brothers furniture store window last evening. Many were hot on his trail at the A. W. Lucas company store Friday afternoon, but he succeeded in mak- ing his two purchases, as he prom- ised in Thursday's issuc. “I have not had as hard a chase for many months,” said Mr. Tribune, “I was four hours trying to make one purchase in the afternoon. Mrs. C. W. Schoregge seemed to bother me the most. Every time .I was. about ready to buy, she would ap-| pear on the scene and queer the whole works. Mrs. J, M. Stahl sold me two bath towels and a wash cloth. H. D. Wilds sold me one set of Walk Strate heel pads.” Mr. Tribune will have to get caught four times today to lose his $150 savings deposit at the First National Bank of Bismarck. This bank has served the people of Bis- marck for nearly 50 years, and the safety an ‘otection of its depos- itors is al 's its first considera- tion. This’ is evidenced by the size of the capital, surplus and reserves and the unusually large proportion of its resources always available as cash, He will have to get caught three times to lose the $100 worth of ™usical merchandise that he of- fered at the Music Shop, 508 Broad- way. Mr. Tribune has driven a Chevro- let during his visit in Bismarck that he chose from the Capital Chevrolet company. This was a fully equipped and fully placarded car, which he parked in the block in which he was making his calls. “I chose this car for real service,” said Mr. Tribune. “I found Wonder Bread wrappers in most all the homes I called on Thursday, but I caught them off their guard and they came to the door without the wrapper. Wonder bread is baked by the Barker Baking and Candy company.” The Times watch that Mr. Tribune offered Friday to the first person who would get him, he saved by making his calls early in the morn- ing when they were not looking for him, The Simmons mattress that he slept on Friday evening at the Webb Brothers furniture store was saved in the same way. Mr. Tribune Calls Early Mr. Tribune put one over this ne by making his calls about 330. “I figured that if they had mem- orized the magic words of greeting well enough to say them in their sleep, they would forget some of the words early in the morning before they had time to say them a few times,” This morning he saved the $50 which he offered in credit on a Frigidaire from the B. K. Skeels Electric company, and the duebill of $50 to the Olympia Confection- ery, where they make all their own candy and also all of their ice cream. The lounging robe and pajamas that Mr. Tribune used Friday eve- ning were furnished him by The Wedge Fashion Shop for Men, where they handle a line of the smartest wearing apparel for men. Mr. Tribune dines at the Prince Hotel cafe. It is convenient, friendly, quiet, and serves excellent food, a hotel distinctive for its charm and high standard of service. Many tickets have been passed out to the Capitol theatre, and the same number of cigars have been iven with the compliments of tge Shunk, proprietor of the Service Drug. “Lee tires arc real tires,” says Mr. Tribune. “Ask Ludvig Quanrud, he knows. Texaco is my choice of gasoline, Texaco and Golden Motor Oil for service,” says Mr. Tribune. “You will find that complete service SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1928 for each order is executed with the utmost skill at the Capital Steam Laundry.” Mr. Tribune Has Enjoyed His Visit ‘ish to say that I have enjoyed every moment of my visit in Bis- marck, and I hope that everyone has gotten as big a kick out of it derful class of people in Bismarck, and will always have a warm spot in my heart for your city. Some day I hope I may return. I find the Bismarck stores and business places up to date, much more so than many cities three times the size. I have found very few empty houses, and very few. people out of work, and that surely speaks well for your home town. Throughout the states you will find thousands out of work and willing to work for ;any wage. Don’t let any one kid about. I wish all the Bismarck people a happy, successful future. T got smiles, and many of them, dur- ing my engagement here. You know, folks, I get those same smiles. from coast to coast, and still some folks say this is a cruel old world. Well, Mr. Tribune can not sec it that way.” . Did you every think what a little smile meant? And it cost you nothing, why, no, not a cent. If some heart is broken and life don’t seem worth while, Now what is more healing than just one little smile? { 16 Homes Visited Saturday Mr. Tribune visited the following sen, Mr. Smith, C. Larso: son, F. John- Mrs. Cooper, B. K. Skeels, T. Quanrud. J. I. Armond, W. McGraw, G. W. Hektner, O. Burkenrich, H. Schomert, CLES OA SETI IPERS EAT PO | "Additional Markets | aE enEeeeEnneeemenen ‘2 WHEAT BULGES IN SHORT SESSION Minneapolis, Sept. 22.—(®)— Wheat had another strong bulge to new highs for recent weeks carly in today’s short session. Profit tak- ing and increased hedge selling set in on the advance and gains were lost. The gain was 1 3-4 to 2 cents. Oats were firm early and mildly easy late, with trade quite. Rye was slow to follow strength in wheat and futures finished easy, Barley futures lost part of apt ahre d four cent bulge, but cash prices were higher. Flaxseed futures re: downwards on profit taking. Cash wheat offerings were moder- ate and demand was good. Dry medium to high protein spring wheat, was firm to stronger in spots, top protein higher. ‘inter wheat was in good demand with offerings moderate. Durum was weak except for mill- ing quality. Corn offerings were light and de- mand was quiet to slow. Oats were fair to good demand and basis was better. Rye was firm to 1 cent better for choice selling quality. Barley offerings were light and demand was brisk. Prices were 1 to, 2 cents higher at 57 to 69 cents. Flaxseed was in larger supply and demand lacked snap. Basis was easy. BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, Sept. 22 jo. 1 dark northern . . 1 northern .... No. 1 amber durum No. 1 mixed durum No. 1 red durum No. 1 flax No. 2 flax . No. 1 rye . Barley .. Speltz, ‘per ‘owt. {Hard winter wheat | Dark hard winter wh A CRASH ALL RIGHT! Ogdensburg, N. Y., Sept. 22.- (AP)—Dale Ccedes was sure there was an airplane crash hereabouts. A piece of machinery came hurtling through the air and smashed his chimney. The town got excited. It leveloped that a flywhel operating a buzz saw three-quarters of a mile away went to pieces. 16 PHOTOS FOR To make it worth while for photos made EARLY, we THE PRICE OF 12 you to have your Christmas make you this special offer —good for the balance of this month. You are especially invited to bring the children. Phone 249 for Appointment The Butler Studio - WEBB | $50R | formation leading to shooting pheasants The Pheasant committee of the Izaak Wal- ton League will pay a reward of $50 for in- BLOCK eward conviction of anyone. in Burleigh County. as Ihave. I have found a most won- | New York Team Stages Rally you, for I know what I am talking | 22. GIANTS BEAT | CARDS, 8 70 6 ‘Lucky Seventh’ Break Tie in to | Polo Grounds, New York, Sept.j 22.—(7)—The New York Giants tightened the National league race today by beating the St. Louis Car. dinals 8 to 5 before a roaring crowd of 40,000. The victory cut the Car- dinals’ lead to ingle game. / Polo Grounds, New York, Sept. .—(AP)—The New York Giants and St. Louis Cardinals fought in the last ditch today in their cam- paign for the National League championship. Sixty thousand ex- cited fans saw the struggle in which a defeat for the Giants meant that their pennant hopes would be about an end while St. Louis could lay its belated plans for a world series. The Cardinals pinned their faith on Clarence Mitchell, a portside flinger with imp delivery to stop the Giants, while McGraw sent out his knuckle ball artist, Fred Fitz- simmons, to hold St. Louis in check. The Giants crashed into a two run lead in the first inning when| Reese hit a home run into the left field stands segring Welsh, who had singled, ahi of him. The Card- inals had been retired in order. Welsh, the first man up for the Giants started the fireworks. Hogan gled but was left on base as the side was retired. The Cards tied the count in the second on Bottomley’s three base hit, Hafey’s double, and Wilson’s single, before Fitzsimmons was able to get them under temporary con- trol and retire the side. The Giants retired one, two, three, when Cohen, Fitzsimmons and Terry all obliging- ly flied out. After the Cards had gone out i order in the third the Giants again took the lead when Welsh, who had walked and gone to third on Reese's single, ie home on Mann’s sacri- | fice fly. Lindstrom doubled but was left on base. The fourth inning brought out the fighting spirit of the Cards’ and itzsimmons again ran into trouble; as St. Louis tied the score With; one down, Hafey doubled, Harper walked and the bases were loaded} when Wilson scratched a single. Hafey scored on Maranville’s grounder which bounced off Fitz- simmons’ glove to Jackson and threw him out at first. Mitchell flied out to end the rally. Cohen improved his batting rage with a single in the Giants’ half of the fourth but was left on base when | rally and went to secot j one base clout. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. Both teams scored two runs in the fifth, keeying the game tied up. Fitzsimmons got into trouble right away with the Cards and walked Douthit and Frisch and allowed High to single before Manager McGraw interfered and sent. in Hubbell. Bottomley greeted the newcomer with a rahe scoring Douthit and lafey fam and Harper hit into a double pla: Welsh singled to start the Giant nd on Reese’s Mitchell joined Fitzsimmons in the showers at this point in rt of Sherdel. Mann went out at first, but Welsh scored on Lindstrom’s single. Reese scored when Frisch threw out Hogan. Neither team scored in the sixth. The Cardinals had two singles, by Wilson and Maranville, to their credit at the start but Sherdel popped out trying to bunt and Dou- ended filling 18 seats, the other 212 seats having been filled last Sunday. The new chamber will be composed of 73 conservatives, 90 Social four Liberals, 28 Liberal Prohfbition- tl Stockholm, Sweden, Sept. 22.) —The Socialists have seats in the second chamber of par- liament while the gained gained eight and the A; *for with four. The ballotin; yesterday 16 SEATS LOST Communists have ‘The conservatives ; Hla nine, munists. Nebraska ‘han any other state. ists, 27 Agrarians, and eight Com- Premier Carl G. Ekman, a liberal rohibitioni: Pl nist, was reelected. For- eign M r J, Eliel Loefgren, lead- er of the Liberal party, lost his seat. ‘as more river imilcage | weights but 300 pounds and has an { engine of only 18 horsepower. Hungarian airman. The SMALLEST PLANE Vienna, Sept. 22.—What is be- lieved to be the smallest airplane in the world was recently flown for nine and one-half hours by Kaszala,| tattooed plane st sixteen the deputies de Stockholm mocrats, thit hit into a double play. Hub- béll tried to start things for the | Giants with a single but nothing gre ie “lucky seventh” belongs to the | Giants. The New Yorkers scored two more runs to take the lead again after the Cards had filed out in order at the start of the inning. Reese started it with his fourth hit of the game, a single. Mann/| popped out but Lindstrom singled into center and when the ball went through Douthit’s legs, both Lind- strom and Reese scored. Jackson doubled but Hogan and Terry failed to be of any assistance as the inning | ended. Hafey opened the eighth with a single and Manager McKechnie called on pinch hitters to retrieve the fading fortunes of the Cardinals, but Holm, who batted for Harper, flied out to Mann, and Blades, bat- ting for Maranville, hoisted to Jackson. The its added another run to their string in their half of the eighth when Cohen, the first man up parked one in the left field stands for a home run. After two were out in the ninth High singled to right and went to second unmolested, but Frisch flied out to Reese to end the game. Bruins Shut Out; Cubs Eliminated Brooklyn, Sept. 22.— (/)—The Robins practically eliminated the Cubs from the 1928 pennant race by shutting out the Bruins here today by 4to 0. It was the second straight victory for Brooklyn over the third. placers. Doug McWeeny outpitched Charlie Root and Perce Malone. MECHANICAL SPIDER Los Angeles, Sept. 22—A me- chanical spider, which manufac- tures cobwebs faster than any real spider, is used in a movie studio here. A device spurts a jet of liquid rubber and a fan blows the Mitchell’s spitball proved effective. liquid into a million tiny strands, Theatre Last Time Tonight FRED A thrilling romance of the early West. thrills from the scenes of “Jesse James,” wait until you see the sensational wagon race in this picture. You'll join the kids in the cheering. MONDAY Gene Stratton Porter’s “The Harvester” If News and Comedy elsewhere. you got CH With BUICK Six Cylinder Engine 1% Ton throughout the A TRUCK f On the streets and highways powered General Motors Trucks are setting a new standard of per- formance. Speedy, but safe. Easy to handle in traffic. Covering a wider territory profitably. With a rugged stamina and long life that make for amazing economy! ... Investigate these great values—typical of our completeGeneral Motors Truckline! MOTORS HAS BEFORE YOL BLY ‘GENERAL MOTORS TRUCKS — 3 Great Series world these Buick- Powered by the PONTIAC Siz Cylinder Engine Heavy Duty Engine 556 gage ao 18 sone goeneion $3690 to $5820 Bismarck, N. D. VERY PURSE AND b. Pentiec, Fleck Motor Sales, Inc. URPOSE IN Arena Electric Lit on - 2 Performances Daily at2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Cuarvstzr makes it plain, even to the eye, that the price of a Chrysler buys infinitely more than it could This was never more brilliantly exem- plified than in these exquisite cars—the new Chrysler “75” and the ‘65.” They are more emphatically stamped with smartness and style. New Chrysler “ $1535; a-passenger Coupe (with rumble seat), $15354 Roadster (with rumble sec ‘own Sedan, $1635. (6-ply full-bi 'S” Prices— Royal Sedan, $1555; tires.) bodies with In short, from every angle, they for comparison with cars far, far above them in price—cars costing hundreds, yes, even a thousand dollars more. ou instantly see Your Dollar buys infinitely more with CHRYSLER They are more dashing in every big and little detail of performance. They are richer than anything in their class ever has been — longer, roomier uipment and metal-ware of exclusive Chrysler pattern. New Chrysler “65” Prices — Business Coupe, $1040; Roadster (with rumble seat), $1065: 2+ door Sedan, $1065; Touring Car, $1075; 4-door Sedan, $1145; Coupe (with rumble seat), $1145. AU prices f. 0. 6. Detroit. (Wire wheels extra.) RYS LER Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. Bismarck, N. D. The COACH $585 or neeanet 495 Coupe-..*.- $ Al prggs 0.6. Pint Capital Chevrolet Company Phone 4382 Track Week after week and month after month the Bigger and Better Chevrolet has swept on to greater and greater heights of popularity—until to- day it stands acknowledged everywhere as first choice of the nation for 1928! Never has any Chevrolet en- joyed such overwhelming ublic acceptance—for never Re any low-priced car pro- vided such an outstanding combination of distinctive beauty, thrilling ce and amazing economy! Its beautiful bodies by Fisher— long, lowand racy,and finished in colors that reveal to-day’s mode for smartness and indi- viduality—are far in advance of accepted standards in the field of low-priced cars. Inside AY coving the Year’ Greatest Success —because of Distinctive Beauty - and out they prove anew that Fisher craftsmanship is a thing apart. But Chevrolet performance is no less impressive than Chev- rolet beauty and style. Never before was a low-priced car so easy to handle—for the steer- ing mechanism is fitted with ball bearings throughout... the clutch and gear-shift lever respond to the slightest touch --eand big non-locking 4- wheel brakes give a measure of braking control that is more than equal to every occasion. Come in and see the car that has won the approval of more than three-quarters ofa million buyers since January Ist. Learn for yourself why it is scoring the greatest success of this great automotive year! Shop Service That Satisfies BISMAKCK, N. D. 210 Broadway ASSOCIATE DEALERS: - Jacob Braun, Jr., Mercer C. E. Sheeran, Underweed Renfrow Chevrolet Co. Turtle Lake Schels Motor Co, Washbara F. A. Vogel, Coleharber in Front of | The only arena of this kind in where you can get. a close int