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North: Dakota's : Oldest Newspaper THE BISM. ESTABLISHED 1878 . ALASKA BIDS LAST FAREWELL .. FIGHT WITH POLICE] = TOTS ARCTIC FLYING HEROES Retired! Millionaire Bootlegger||Spurns Fiance ||Ben Eielson and Earl Borland’s " Felled by Fists, Then Shot: Last, Cold Flight Ends With Machine Gun at Fairbanks COPS PURSUE GANGSTERS FATHER MEETS AIR CORTEGE Gunmen Fleeing in Stolen Car Bodies of Siberian Crash Vic- -« Knock Down Three Children tims Transferred to Train Standing in the Street for Seward Trip Fairbanks, Alaska, Mar. 8.—(?)— Alaska bade faréwell today to Carl Ben Eielson, the man who abandoned & prospective banking career and be- came the flying hero of the arctic. ‘The bodies of the famous flyer and his Earl Borland, borne in *Justice Sanford Dies Hoboken, N. J., Mar. 8—(?)—Police today blamed a feud enge! his beer running days for the of Frankie Dunn, retired beer baron of North Jersey. Dunn was set upon in the lobby of his office building by three men. After two of them felled him with a blow of their fists, the third turned @ submachine gun on him. ‘Two bullets passed through his body. «He died in @ hospital a few hours later. The machine gun owner, later * indentified as Frank Dugan of New : : i Z iE i Ht &s i it i z &F 2 S & s i: & i E i & g [ ig i i [ i i through the front entrance. Policemen Give Chase In the alley he was joined by other man who carried a pistol. policeman chased them, firing as he ran. As the fugitives reached @ limousine parked nearby Patrolman John O'Toole joined the fight, and while tried to start the car machine i s, i g d H E gs i i | i ; i i ? 3 i I ref ul Ffse fle ell of Mysterious Ailment Ram- pant in Oklahoma | : if & 3 Dugan stairway of the apartment house, pur- Bismarck. Attorney Announges His Candidacy as Leaders Convene in Fargo ! tt i H E i g g H kr | t z i TOWNLEY LECTURES INSTEAD OF DEBATE ‘Wo Extra Dry Appears to Take Platform With North Da- kota’s Wringing Wet Stanley, N. D., Mar. 8—()—After es debate here Friday ; : ih | ify i i i ; a i E : E if Hf of and five aigers Ss) sabgais in She Next eenacal Immediately afterward one of the committee members predicted that the ° liberalization would result in “a spirited controversy ry the congregation.” committee's views on’ the northern branch of the EF g eek Lie E [ i} E 2 2 ee gr E Oklahoma City, Okia., Mar. 8—(P) —Federal authorities today joined | Ham city officials im efforts to combat a HH Hel .CK TRI i ’~ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1930 Hoover Predicts Better | Cornered Beer Baron’s Assassin Kills Self Supreme Court Justice E. T. Sanford Dies STRICKEN SUDDENLY WITH HEART ATTACK WHILE AT DENTIST'S Came as* Colleagues Gathered in Court Chambers to Con- gratulate Holmes NAMED BY HARDING IN 1923 Tennessee Born, Brilliant Jurist Rose Steadily in Federal Judicial Offices F ie : i Fy a i S colleagues on the supreme bench had gathered in the court con- LF; i i i ai H é i A i ie Gg I ‘ Fad in i E g iH i : 3 g as | H iH ga i é i i : i ee i > of F i EB Hl i i [ i F [ i B |GARRISON BUTTERFLY’S WINGS FOLDED FOREVER BY MURDER, ‘Bobby’ Hegardt Kelly Chose Life on Primrose Path That Led to the Grave SHOT DEAD IN APARTMENT Nick Jancu, Montana Pool Hall Owner, Now on Trial as Crime Perpetrator Helena, Mont., Mar. 8.—(?)}—How a former North Dakota girl chose the life of a butterfly among social out- casts and finally ended the victim of bullets from the pistol of a jealous lover is being unfolded in district court here, ‘The girl, Marguerite Kelly, was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hegardt and was born at Garrisor., N. D. Later the Hegardts moved to Marmarth and then to a homestead in Garfield county, Montana. The girl was sent to school at Denver and while there married a Gaines Kelly. But’ the romance was short-lived and the couple had not been living to- gether for sometime before her death. Her parents are separated and the father now lives at Lakefield, Minn., Finally Signs Statement Finally she signed a statement that it was Jancu but told| the officers she would not appear! against him if he would pay her hos- MILITARY OFFICERS | HERE DUE SCHOOL ard Heads Going to Grand Forks Monday; Score of Units Represented re | ‘Ye Ed.’ -- 1930 Grand Forks. There is said to plant. of the University of North “ BIHARCK TO MEET TURTLE LAKE TEAM to 13 as Turtles Take Measure of Wilton Bismarck will meet Turtle Lake for the championship of the sixth bas- ketball district at the Bismarck high school gymnasium at 8:30 o'clock to- night. The Demons went ints the finals by drubbing Coleharbor, 44 to 13, in the semifinals this morning while Turtle Lake earned its way by defeat- ing Wilton, 21 to 16, in the other bracket. Wilton and Coleharbor will battle for third place in the tournament at 1:30 o'clock tonight. With the giant Ted Meinhover scor- ins 10 field goals and two free throws, for 22 points, Bismarck smothered the small visitors in this morning’s con- test. Harold Tait, John Spriggs, and Captain John O'Hare ompleted the scoring with 22 points between them. Donald Saldin and Fuglie looked the best for the losers, each scoring five points, and the former playing a fast floor game. After trailing almost three quarters, Bertha Turner, 20, is the new editor of the Red River Valley “Citizen” ie little trouble in getting printers tof stay on the job around the “Citizen” She is a journalism graduate Dakota. FOR DISTRICT TITLE Demons Trounce Coleharbor 44 The Weatie Troe ocainees Oeer Sanaa PRICE FIVE CENTS, Times. PRESIDENT BELIEVES SERIOUS EFFECTS OF Unemployment Conditions Def- initely on Men He Sees in Economic Survey SPRING BRINGING NORMALCY Nation-Wide Response to Re- quest for Construction Is Credited With Reaction Washington, Mar. 8.—(?}—A thor- ough study of the present economic situation has convinced President Hoover that within a month or two the more serious effects of last fall's stock market crash will be passed with unemployment conditions def- saved on the mend. the increased out-of-doors construction work that comes each year as the weather grows warmer and to the expanded building pro- grams of the railroads, public util- ities and private industries the chiet = looks to bring about this Mr. Hoover's views on the situation -| Were summarized in a statement, is- sued to Washington newspapermen late yesterday, based on a statistical study made by interested depart- ments and consultation with the bus- “All the evidences indicate,” the chief executive said, “that the worst effects of the (stock market) crash upon employment will have been Passed during the next 60 days with ie wpe taste of seasonal unem- Ployment, the if other forces, snd the eatin om { Unemployment, he said, is serious in but 12 states and hardly more than seasonal the remaining 36. He | added that the low points of business jand employment were passed in De- cember and that a gradual improve- ment had been noted since that tim and utilities, the advance of spring oo @ return to normal pros- NVE RESOLUTION FOR PROBE IS POSTPONED Turtle Lake rallied in the third and and fourth quarters to triumph over Wilton in the other semifinal. Wilton led 6 to 2 and 10 to 7 at the end of the first and second quarters res- pectively but the Turtles went into the lead during the third canto and never relinquished it. A. Berg and Holton were the most effective for (Continued on page fifceen) WING SO SNOWED IN FARM MEET FAILS Week; Big Attendance at Sterling and Driscoll Proposed Inquiry May Not Get Under Way Until Disposal of Tariff Bill The early meeting ate to aa and there STOCK GRASH PASSED