The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 1, 1925, Page 8

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EIGH CANCER GERM SPECIALIST | IS RETICENT Dr. William F. Gye of London} Dodges Publicity in Refer- ence BY MILTON BRONNER NEA Service Correspondent. London, Aug. 1.~Elusive as the dread cancer germ which they pur ued tlessly for two solid years ure its modest. English discoverers | the doctor, William Ewart Gye, nd the hatter, J. arnard H he cancer germs until recently elnued all known filters and all mag: | nifying glasses, The discoverers, t assorted and unassuming r n be foun? in all the his-! tory seiect, have dodged — pub-j licity and earnestly fled from lauda tion. i Credit for their discovery they} give to an American, Dr.” Pe Rous of Roc! ller Institute, York. Dr. told me “AIL my work was made possible) by discoveries of Dr. Rous n-| ing tumors in fowls j entists were splendid all] the information they lated, especially Dr. Rous And when volunteers pressed for-| ward to submit themselves for tests] with the newly isolated germs, the; discoverers announced “We are very much obliged, but ity is utterly unnecessary. If we want to experiment, we shall do it first on oursel then our laboratory as sistants and then on our collegues.” | Dr. Gye, as medical scientists go, is quite young. He is 40, He is the son of a railway laborer in Der- byshire, and himself © worked as a lway porter to earn money for his Jucation in Edinburgh. During the war he wa swith the British medical] corps in France and Italy, He lives! in # London suburb. Almost from the start he devoted himself to research work st of his service has been with ional Institute for Medical Research on it modest salary, Several years ago he made a noteworthy discovery in dis- eases of the nervous system, A little later he again into notice b researches into the poisonous effect of various kinds of dust. Two 5 zo he set himself to neer research. Dr, Rous in Amer- had discovered the recurrence of n kind of sarcoma in fowls evolved a theory of sarcoma vinced that the American had shown the path to success. Ard that is where in, The latter runs and owns jonable men’s hat shop in Jermy street. This shopis his meal ticket Rut for 30 years the big interest in his life was microscopy. ‘The ar-old business man had — made himself one of the foremost microso- pists in the world. His distinction 8 by the fact that he be- mn ent of the roscopical So and received the blue ribbon of si c tinction—the Feilow- ship of the Royal Societ has spent thou: upon microscopy PRISON HEL!, HOLES OF 20 2 YEARS anarked © second of Bruce Blaine Th when a seri wast s th re 1 Iw of articles } re who Was doing 2 | | ate of the North Dakota |years for train robbery, His name| py nitentiary, who recounts the | was Jim Johnson, an cutlaw of the| SJornson and Dr. Martin, local vet, experiences of a life of 40 years J James They put him! al Bek oie statement of crime. Blai © {in the shop to work,| Warning local stock owners to report underworld us | Johnson stood six feet, weighed 180, ally prominent in police [and was a. picture figure in th shop. About 300 men labored in this s shop. The prison population at that BY MISSOURI BOB time was 2,200, , : in four prisons, An|_ For some minor infraction of th in this country were hell: Tales he was p aced in solitary. an are aoe rere tha. left for 90 days on bread and water. ee ee nee ane oui | After he served his time in solitar: the Missouri” he was sent hack to the saddle-tree yn City WaT) shop. In those days the officers te will) carried guns inside the prison. the man who have always considered this prac tice the height of folly. | "One day Johnson knocked down Sing Sing. nd took his gun and fired th When Twas in Jefferson City) Ruan and | pe A prison, it was all contract labor and,| 9yq The oe worth ane ent helieve on prison contractors in| O00. ie blaze: Sprend te .eCrers sections of the prison, jeopardizin, beings.) the lives of inmate those days were not human They gave vou a « suing Gut ude aolitary 609 : At the time, the prison orsenal hid’ Fenained 48 TheGe nated boasted a Gatling gun. Guard: food, an order would ce down to| dragged it out on a veranda ani fear ae icn tn prepare n hig pan of| threatened to tum it loose on th caine hiahe. mo prisoners while they herded the me ating, Nash. | to another part of the prison, whic! Negro Runner l escaped the fire. Johnson and The instructions were to Toad it| n for it, and tried ti heavily with onions. Then a negro| seale the prison walls, Guards shot convict runner assigned to the depu a few other prisoners, publi 9 ty warden would carry that pan of| but they didn't kill the train robber, | & later publication, ‘Hyseri: to the place where you were! When he recovered . from hi hash din was shot in the leg + tried him and foun’ wound—he prison officia two t seems t of Missouri offic state. prison| him guilty of incorrigibility. They | Up further analytical research work, fot this system of punishment from| sentenced him to solitary confine- but his personal relations with Freud the midd ment for li After 16 years in|continued unmarred. ” If you ever been stranded| solitary he died. I firmly believe,| Danzig Wealthy in Real Estate and broke i strange town, and| had he received more humane treat- —— ravenously hungry, an sed the} ment in the saddle-tree shop, he, Danzig—(@)—This city boasts of aroma of frying beefst J on-| would never have set fire to the! being one of the wealthiest on the ions, you may get som of how| ploce continent. Its wealth does not con- it fee! ‘or two It only goes to show that human! sist so much in money and goods as days without t and] nature con stand a good deal of im- does in real estate. Two-thirds have a big colored convict hold a pan} provement. of the whole ground upon which of food under your nose, then walk| Once I had a judge tell me T was| Danzig is built is the property of the away and grin, Then the deputy trickster. How foolish of that; municipality, warden would step in and ask if you} j He should have told me, were ready to work. | you're a fool.” That iudre | Impression ! "t ‘seen life. He lived at the appened in Jeffer-| top of the human story, and the prison, and no incident in| man who lives at the top of the hu- my life made a more profound im-{ man. story doesn’t’ understand hu-| pression on my mind ity. been spent at th stitute that Dr. To help Gye, he kind of microscope, No mi before known was able to oo certain kinds of germs enough tot «phe funeral of Mrs. Thomas Rit- make them visible. Scientists know | chje who died Thursday afternoo Lp tere Chaat ‘ ett at a local hospital w Tae estan this | day afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at th Fein eo welet then veven better re-| Eresbyterian church in Steele, Rev. sults ‘are obtained Burns will be in charge of the ser- Barnard — perfected a method Eat eta Arnie A whereby a powerful camera looks and Mrs. . Miller wil furnish special music. Pall bearers have from the Knights through an equally powerful micro- B upon subjects illuminated by iolet and other rays. He thus got a camera which could register what the human eye could not see. It was able to photograph germs that had cluded all other efforts to identyf them. | Barnard’s part of the partnership had been accomplsih- ed. Then came the long tedious tests. It was one thing to photograph germ supposed to he a cancer germ. It quite another to prove that it There fol- been __ selecte of Pythias an and include Peter Dellenberg, Mar! gins, Woodmen. Ohio, in 1882. The family has mad their home in North Dakota for th past two years. She is survived b: her husband, her parents, Mr. ani Mrs. Herman Heinze; ers, four sisters, did bring about cancer. and six children a% the AGO DESCRIBED BY STATE CONVICT n in that. prison; .- | psycho-analysts, died recently at the! RITCHIE FUNERAL WILL BE SUNDAY 1 be held Sun- ICE CREAM ti|{ Sunday Specials Modern Woodmen of America lodges Holt and Ed. Hustad, K. of P.;' Hollis Porter, J. P. Boucher and Ed. Scrog- Mrs. Ritchie was born at Marion, threee broth- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ANTHRAX HITS VALLEY CITY Valley City, N. D., Aug. 1—()—A scourge of anthrax among stock in this territory has been discovered by Dr. B. K. Bjornson of the state live- ‘0 stock Sanitary Board, Bismarck. Dr. jall cases of stock dying under sus- picious circumstances, and advising | | vaccination as a safe preventative. Anthrax is transmissible to human | beings and Dr. Martin has advised ¢|anyone having boils or other infec- | ‘i|tions to consult a physician at once. y! Eminent Psycho-Analyst, ; Co-worker of Feud, Dies el | a| Vienna—(@)—Dr. ej one Joseph Breuer, of the most widely noted of | age of 83. As early as 1882 he was! gicredited with curing with the aid of} \ a pronounced case of hy-| @ woman. | this epoch making cure 3! which is said to have led Dr. Sig-j d{mund Freud, 14 years younger than | Dr. Breuer, to build up a psycho-an- | n{alytic system of his own, Subse-/ h| quently, both scientists collaborated It was alin setting down their experiences on| his subject Psychic Mechanism of Hysterical Problems,” published in 1893, and in o| i Peche Cardinal k in a book called “The| 3 Dr. Breuer did’ not entirely ap-| prove of the theories which Freud | continued to advante and soon gave | CHRYSLER ANNOUNCES PRICE DROP Models Show Engineer- ing Improvement; New Lines for Body Walter P. Chrysler, president of the Chrysler Corporation, last week announced new and lower prices on the Chrysler Six, as well as a num- ber of improvements and refine- ments in engineering design which raise this car to new performance peaks. ° The new price range is from $1395 for the new Phaeton model to $2095 for the Crown Imperial, f. 0. b. Detroit. Most important of the new engi- neering features, Mr. Chrysler points out, are the improvements in the power plant. The latest Chrysler Six has a cylinder bore of 3% inch- es. This increase in piston displace- ment delivers nearly ten per cent greater power, enabling the new Six to attain its top range of 70 miles per hour with greater ease. It also gives swifter acceleration and get away with a proved record of 5 to 25 Ice Cream (Yellow) le ‘| PURITY DAIRY and has ne epted a penny for| lowed u year's experimentation. It] at living at home. "|| Mandan, N. Dak. his services, not even during the war| is now believed that Gye has proved f when he gave all his time to the| the malignity of the infinitesimally FES TER government. Much of his time has| tiny thing Barnard’s camera READ TRIBUNE WANT ADDS improvements an = . AND MANY OTHER DISTINCTIVE FEATURES WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD THEM Buick has built a better Automobile ae See it today at the Buick showroom FLECK MOTOR SALES Bismarck, No. Dak. ed samebrinrrenrr npr rd si ee Tee ee DeLuxe Sedan miles an hour in 7 pulling power up steep grades and through mud or sand. The body design which has been so characteristically Chrysler is un- changed save for the minor details. The smartness of the roadster type, which Chrysler has done much to restore to popularity, has been enhanced in many details. New bul- let-type head ‘lamps, a top bow finished in walnut to match the stering wheel and instrument board panel, fitting into a nickel-plated thimble, automatic windshield wiper, wider doors permitting greater ease in getting behind the steering wheel, side hinges on the golf compartment door, and top of uncoated and rub- berized material, are a few of the new feature Mormon Museum Draws Thousands of Tourists Salt Lake City, Utah, August.—(#) —Mummies of ancient Southern Utah cliff dwellers, weapons, agricultural implements and other relics, de- clared by some archeologists to be among the finest specimens in ex- istence, are housed in the small mu- seum of the Mormon Church, located on Temple Block here. The tauseum. visited annually by thousands of tourists, also contains many relics of Mormon pioneer days such as spinning wheels and household im- plements. | What jis declared to be the first house built in Utah—it is nearly 190 years old—stands just outside the main museum building. Price Reductions Important If there be an epidemic of price-cutting in the industry, Overland is not. con- cerned with it. For never will Overland be a party to any policy that involves the cutting of prices to a figure necessi- tating a proportionate cut in quality. G The reason—and the ONLY reason because we are selling of these fine cars we had planned. QThis means huge savings in our pur- chases, huge savings in manufacturing. Smaill Down Payment — 52 Weeks to Pay. twice the number Q Therefore, to keep our sales-volume at this satisfactory level, these-econo- mies are now passed on to you. @ Before you buy any car in this price class, don’t be stampeded. @ Shop carefully around. against this big Overland Six. G As an experienced owner you must then admit that never before, for as little as $895, have you been offered 80 much of qual- ity and of value in any automobile. SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1925 DODGE BEGINS HUGE ADDITION Commence $8,000,000 .Build- ing Program at Detroit Central Factory the new facilities are available. It is estimated that fully 1,000 men will be employed the rest of the year in the expansion project now under way. gan operations late in 1914, it con- sisted of a few buildings with a total floor area of some 20 acres. Today it consists of 110 acres and the addi- tion of the five new buildings will increase it to 130. It will make Dodge Brothers one of the largest factories in the world. “The reputation of Dodge Brothers motor car and the character of Dodge Brothers dealer organization, Daily production of 1,100 automo-| plus our determination to make a biles a day at Dodge Brothers’ De-| good car continually ‘better, leaves troit factories has failed to meet the| No possible doubt as to our future 1925 demand for Dodge products and| market,” President Haynes declared the largest expansion program in the| at Detroit recently. “Our only fear history of the Dodge organization| is that even 1,500 cars a day will be is now jin progress, it was stated| insufficient for the requirements of here today by M. B. Gilman, local] 1926.” Dodge sales representative. Lem Cost of the new additions Xs ceed eight million dollars, was stated. The firm of Hjelmseth and Kidd of Mandan were successful bidders Five large new buildings are al- ready under construction and three for the contract to build a $14,000 mission house at Cannon Ball. The others will begin immediately, it is announced by Dodge officials. The total floor area of the eight new buildings will exceed % of a million square feet and will afford employment for several thousand additional men. contract was awarded by Arch-Den-/ When the present construction| con Harrington Fargo of the Epis- Program is completed, on January 1, 1926, Dodge Brothers, Inc., will have a capacity of 1,500 cars a day. The present intention is to go into full production on this basis the moment copal church in North Dako’ Score of Mandan’ people are plan- ning to attend the Heart River roundup to be staged at Flasher by Max Thiele today and tomorrow. ‘Prices F.0.B. Toledo Investigate ali moderate- Pa ‘When Dodge Brothers’ factory be- 1095

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