The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 5, 1934, Page 1

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===| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1878 Helen Gillis Secretl Naval FEAR PLANE SUNK | IN SBA ARTER GAS GAVE OUT TURSDAY Submarines, Coast Guard Ves- sels, Fishing Sampans, Seaplanes Scour Area EXACT LOCATION UNKNOWN Search Will Be Continued Wed- nesday Over Wide Area Around Islands Honolulu, Dec. 5.—(#)—Into a dark Griszling dawn 27 planes took off from Wheeler Field Wednesday to re- sume search for Flight Lt. C. T. P, Ulm and his two companions, with only a “bare chance” they could find the Australian fliers who were forced down at sea Tuesday in their flight One aviator doubted that, except by accident, the searchers would Craft | Conscious After Baffling 33-Month Sleep | se % PATRICIA MAGUIRE ‘Sleeping Beauty’A wakens ‘\After Three-Year Sleep t-!Contour of Canadian Side of Will Be Purchased Out of Real Estate Interest Fund To- taling $12,000,000 Niagara Changes Second Time in Five Months than iat it appeaned Jo. she Damen Gopher Commission Hears Bank Charges St. Paul, Dec. 5.—(#)—The First Bank Stock corporation sold 4,000 shares of stock to s Great Falls, Mont., banker, $22.50 s share lower than it was being offered the pub- Ue, according to testimony given late Tuesday before the Minnesota Com- commission. merce The commission, which is investi- gating sale of stock by the corpora. tion, resumed its hearings at 2 p. m. After C. T. Jaffray of Minneapolis, head of the corporation, completed testimony, iE it i fl F BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1934 see fl Tetror Written in Girl’s Eyes as She Makes First. Con- scious Response ) Chicago, Dec. 5.—(#)—Wild amaze- ment, almost terror, shows from the eyes of Patricia Maguire as she strug- gles to awaken from her long “sleep” of two years, nine months and 22 BOOTLEGGER STILL MENACE ON FIRST REPEAL BIRTHDAY Demands Being Made for Tax Slash With View of Reduc- ducing Illicit Trade REVENUE SHORT OF MARK Federal Agents Seize 10,947 Stills, Arrest 21,622 Since Dec. 5, 1933 Wwe . 5.—)—On re- peal’s first anniversary Wednesday the bootlegger remains such a men- ace to government revenues and the legal trade that Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau is reported to be preparing a radio appeal to con- slashed are being prepared-on the theory this would hamper boot: legger. So far Secretary Morgenthau has Preferred to give the legal campaign the illicit trade more of a trial before urging lower taxes. Since repeal became effective on the eve- ning of Dec, 5, 1933, federal agents for stiffer law enforce- have drunk 42, spirits and 35,000,000 barrels’ r. ily rid GET NEW EVIDENCE the Hear U. S. Arms Makers Brush = Aside Treaties to Sell to Germany, China day they had new evidence that American arms manufacturers brush- ed aside treaties and embargoes to ship their Pig snc, of war into Members of the investigating com- i a arrears l Fraternity Songs Make Gus Vicious" Chicago, Dec. 5.—(#)—Either Gus has got.to change his ways or Aipha Delta Phi has to get a new fraternity song. Gus, police dog at the chapter | house on the University of Chi- cago campus, apparently de- veloped a strong distaste for the song the brothers sing ag a ritual at fraternity dinners. He runs about nipping the brothers on the legs as they sing. Chief problem is that Robert Maynard Hutchins, president of the University of Chicago, being an alumnus of the chapter, is Ukely to drop in while the brothers are singing and they can’t run the risk of having his legs nipped. G. 0. P. TRYING 0 RESTORE HARMONY WITHIN OWN RANKS Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., Asks Party to Build as ‘Con- structive Liberals’ ‘Washington, Dec. 5.- Attempts were under way We to restore peace-mak- ing, though it was penned before the Borah-Cousens clash. In a letter published by the Na- tional Republican Club Review, son of the famous °T. R.” said a platform. recent attacks on parts of the New Deal because. he didn’t offer substi- tutes. WHEAT WHIRLS UP ALMOST FIVE CENTS Of Heavy. Snowstorm St. Paul, Dec. 5.—(#)—M. R. Hovde, my Tuesday partment drew the ing” from Senator Vandenberg (R- um), who was conducting the in- One of the letters plainly said No- bel could have brought pressure the British government to stop viola- tion of the peace pact, by German manufacturers in 1926 but did not do of its German connec- z, x |Suit Against Kindred Bank Directors Opens as pegged suit is for $305,000. Some Options of Oats, Rye and Corn Sell at New High Is for Season Of Holding Companies Washington, Dec. 5.—(#)—The fed- ‘commission posed the oom. on its six- utilities, it thout doubt, one of the most important objectives of the financial phase of this investigation is to de- termine whether there is economic existence of whose func- Making another report pee tome ne Public ‘said: justification for the those holding to congress for regulating companies. injury to. the defendant. ‘The duties of the canvassing board 1 Vd saichigen, though candidate.” independents. ‘Tuesday noted counter attack on the contest charges. CANVASSING BOARD ALLOWED TO COUNT GOVERNOR BALLOTS Judge Jansonius Modifies Or- der But Still Restrains Is- suance of Certificate OLSON WOULD STAY ON JOB Opinion Holds Present Acting Governor Would Continue If Action Succeeds The state canvassing board, now in » was permitted to canvass and certify the vote for gov- ernor in the general election under an order signed by District Judge Fred Jansonius, modifying his previous re- straining order. election and their certificate to the ‘of state. Grounds fer Request The request was made on the that: o | | Surrenders to U. S. wce|WHEN FIRE SWEEPS U. 8. District Attorney P. W. Lan- elect. John Nystul, chairman of utive committee of the faction of the regardless of the fact his term expires on that date, and indicated.that Wal- not legally assume the office. Puller in a letter to Nystul said in “I would say that Gov. Olson's right the office after Jan. 1, 1935, as- suming that the governor-elect is not qualified to take office, now is quite as) the executive powers and/their exercise hold the office of governor at this Query Economic Value |, qualified (that is, where a person qualified has been elected) and 4 HOLLYWOOD The Weather eel tonight and Thursday; no cided change in temperature. PRICE FIVE CEN’ y Held Fail in Hunt for Ulm Fliers ] RUMOR CIRCULATES THAT HAMILTON IS ALSO HELD BY U.S. Government Manhunters Re- fuse to Comment on De- velopments of Search QUIZ WIDOW EXTENSIVELY Probably Surren: Because of Stern Order to Show No Quarter Chicago, Dec. 5.—(?)—Mrs. Helen Gillis, widow of George (Baby Face) Nelson, soon will be in a federal pris- on, probably at Alderson, W. Va., H. ‘H. Clegg, in charge of the local de- partment of justice bureau, announced ‘Wednesday. Mrs. Gillis will be taken back to Madison, Wis., to be re-sentenced to a year and a day for violating her pa- role, he said. After Mrs. Gillis was sentenced at Madison on @ charge of harboring John Dillinger following her capture with three other women in the raid last spring on the Dillinger gang at Little Bohemia Lodge in northern ‘Wisconsin, she was ordered to report monthly to probation officers at Madison. ‘She made only one such report, and now is automatically subject to the Possibility that John Hamilton, ace day following revelation that Mrs. Helen Gillis, widow of “Baby Face” Nelson, has been held by federal agents for several days. Refuse to Comment Government man-hunters, seeking Hamilton as the accomplice of Nel- son in the slaying of Department of Justice Operatives Samuel Cowley and Herman E. Hollis, refused to com- Ment or to indicate if Hamilton's trail had been picked up. A veil of secrecy likewise was main- tained. concerning circumstances of Mrs, Gillis’ arrest in Chicago Thanks- Damage to Warner Brothers- le First National Lot Esti- injuring. 15 persons and doing dam- died at s first ald station of heart failure which doctors said was in- Rudolph Hoop, an actor, and Nick 75 extras, the fire, then just a wisp of , Was by the time the reached the Barred From Contest i §F i A i i [ constitution and (Continued on*Page Three) rSBETRoER? ve fhelt k R g DISCOVER SERUM KILL CANCER CELLS Scientist Declares Discovery Can Be Used Without Harm to Human Tissues _ London, Dec, 5.—(®)—Discovery of @ serum which kills cancer cells after they have been removed from the human body, and does no injury to healthy human tissue so removed, was announced here Wednesday by Dr. Thomas Lumsden, director of the London cancer research laboratories. Lumsden, one of the best known ‘among conservative cancer scientists, said the serum cannot at present be used on human beings. He reported his discovery to the court of gover- nors of the London hospital. The scientist, emphasizing strongly that the serum “is only in the ex- perimental stage and has not reached the point where it can be tried on human beings,” nevertheless said a stage had been reached in which the serum will kill cancer cells removed from the human body without dam- age to normal cells similarly treated. =| Former Capital City Woman Dies Saturday Last rites for Mrs. M. J. Cullen, Hensler, former Bismarck resident who died Saturday, were conducted at Hensler at 10:30 o'clock Tuesday morning with Rev. N. E. Elsworth, pastor of the local St. George’s Epis- copal church, officiating. Mrs. Cullen pee away Saturday after a long e885. Bismarck friends of the Cullen fam- it| ly who: attended the funeral includ- ed Mrs. Arthur A. Jones, Mr. and Mrs C. B. Nupen, Mrs. F. N. Orchard and Mrs, Oscar Erickson. Mrs. Cullen’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vogel, her brother and her sister, Mrs. Ingrum, all residents of Minneapolis and St. Paul, also were there. Mrs. Cuilen leaves her husband and two sons, Ross and Clair. According to a wish expressed before she died, burial was made at the cemetery near the family’s large ranch home at Hensler. ‘The late Mrs. Cullen was a life-long member of the Episcopal church and during dence here. She formerly was affili- ated with Bismarck Chapter No. 11 Order of the Esftern Star. bas

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