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North Dakota's Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1878 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 3 : : _- BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1980 ; The Weather Bnow tonight and Saturday. Colder Saturday, with cold wave, PRICE FIVE CENTS Five Hurt in Menoken Crash MERCURY DROP AND SNOW FORECAST FOR WEEK-END IN STATE Seven Deaths Due to Weather Are Reported Throughout Middle West MINNESOTA COLD . SEVERE Devils Lake, With Four Degrees Below Zero, Coldest in North Dakota TWO MURDER CASES SLATED FOR TRIAL IN DISTRICT COURT Lawrence Morck of Near San- born and John Holmes of Wing Are Defendants Czar of Movies Wed | DAMAGE ACTIONS LISTED Automobile Accidents and One Crossing Crash are Basis for Suits i t is HF ig above. the Atlantic coast sub-freez- prevailed. New York the coldest day of eight. Along GUESTS AT ANNUAL FIREMEN'S DANCE Thanksgiving Throng Uses New Memorial Building for JURY SAYS PIEPKORN) a: STABBINGDELIBERATE sn: John W. Holmes: implicated in Fatal Wounding of Wing Deputy Sheriff i [ ‘The inquest into the death of a TO COLD, MAY DIE Baldwin Man, Alone in House, Unable to Leave Bed to Build Fire H i bree i i | e E i | "| i j il Fa 2 4 Ey if tf Ef Rs i i Hi 5 ity A z i f EEE Es if ia i i i Se ry i : d =e < hae ee , E} F i 18 F [ ig é é i ie il i rn i re § | Nation Is Held in Wintr y Grip of Cold Wave New Rockford Murder Trial Is Nearing End) MO0ANScuD: [____ Win Nobet Peace Prizes DEFENDANT MOUNTS Prank B. Kellogg, St. Paul, Minn., former secretary of state, and Archbishop Nathan Soederblom of Sweden were named Nobel peace prize winners by & committee yesterday. Kellogg gets the Drize for 1929 and Soederblom that for 1930. The prizes amount to about $48,000 each. FLOOD OF LETTERS ASKS THAT SANTA CLAUS VISIT BISMARCK ALABAMA TO MEET WASHINGTON STATE IN ROSE BOWL GAME 2: Southern School Will Accept In- vitation to Play in Pasa+ dena January 7 Los Angeles, Nov, ‘University ef Alabama will accept an invitation to represent the east in the annual New Year’s football game at the Pasadena Rose Bowl. Earl Foster, graduate manager of Washington State college, the repre- sentative of the west, extended the invitation to the Crimson eleven. President George H. Denny, of the Dr. Denny said Jeft Coleman, ath- had been letic . no- tifled by telephone from Pasadena I that an invitation was being sent by |5! telegraph. The president had not received the Mail Man's Pack Looks Like That of Santa Himself; May Send Invitation Soon Claus has delegated to make a survey of the children living here, (Continuea leven) . ind Skeleton of Prehistoric Animal In Glacier Ice Near Cordova, Alaska A description of the creature, believed by reside:.'s to have lived eaeeee ge a5 WETNESS STAND 10 PRESENT HIS STORY Companion in Alleged Murder Supports Self-Defense Claim Made by Walsh SAY VICTIM FIRED FIRST Jamestown Man Says Slaying Culminated Argument Fol- lowing Auto Crash New Rockford, N. D., Nov. 28.—(#)— ‘Trial of Joseph V. Walsh and Gustave A. Ness on charges of second degree murder neared an end today as council for the two men prepared to complete the defense case. ‘The two men are being tried jointly in connection with the death of David vote, 23, on November 2. Vote ‘was shot following en automobile ac- cident four miles southe of here. The state rested its case Wednesday thorning, after which defense testi- mony began. Judge Fred Jansonius, Bismarck, who is presiding in the district court here, recessed court fense witnesses continuing their testi- “To Complete Testimony -Indications were that testimony and by Vote. The truck driver, according to ‘Walsh, refused to give his name, automobile license number or the | name of his employer, and attempted to make a getaway. Vote, however, was said to have been overtaken in a field a half mile from the scene of the accident, and reached for a gun when Walsh and Ness approached W. Lanier, Jamestown, of de- fense counsel, said he planned to con- clude the case today. New ’Phone Books To Be Distributed| *. 7 Throw away your old telephone directories. The new winter-spring) ai60, issue of the Northwestern Bell Tele- phone comphny will be delivered to- day and Saturday. “About 3,000 copies are being dis- tributed in Bismarck and sbout 1,000 tinued. by seven local high school boys. According to Mr. Waldo, the tele- made during the last six months. ing ‘The books were printed by The Tribune job department. Grant Tax Refund to Japanese Sufferers) Tokyo, Nov. 28.—(7)—The cabinet today epproved a tax remission to sufferers in this week’s earthquake on Izu Various measures for facilitating reconstruction also were Recovery was well under way in the zone. The re-building of homes was begun while the funeral incense still was burning for the more than 250 dead. Large shifts of workmen began clearing highways, using dynimte to Minor after -shocks continued on| the peninsule, SS Joins Caterpillars | >——_——_—_________+ NR on An attempt to break the junior transcontinental flight record ended Thursday for Gerald Nettleton, 20, when he leaped from his plane after ‘8 battle with rain and snow. Instead of making @ transcontinental record he made another. He is now the youngest member of the “caterpillar club,” composed of aviators who have saved their lives by leaping with a Parachute. CHRISTMAS SEAL STEELE PASTOR AND FAMILY INJURED AS Mrs. Herbert Brown Is in Hos- pital Here Suffering From Broken Bones HUSBAND SUSTAINS CUTS Three Children Badly Bruised{ Only One Escapes Acci- dent Unharmed Rev. and Mrs. Herbert Brown, of the Steele Methodist church, and three children are in a local hospital under treatment for injuries received in @ crash of cars on highway No. 10 east, of Menoken, about 11 o'clock Thanksgiving morning. Mr. and Mrs. Brown are severely injured, the wife having various fractures, but the children are not badly hurt. ‘The other car in the accident was that keds Dr. A. a Garner of Dickin- son, who was driving, accom} by Mrs, Garner. Their car, ike that of Rev. Brown, was wrecked. Garners made thelr way into Meno- ken and telephoned word of the ac- cident to Warden Claude . ‘They and brought them to here SALE IS OPENED} Forty Local Women Start Work of Canvassing Bismarck Business Houses Sale of Christmas seals, proceeds: from which are used for tuberculosis prevention and other health work. in| the state, got under way in the down~' town district this morning. ‘Under the leadership of Mrs, T. G. Plomasen a group of more than 40 women are making a canvass of the business places and offices. In the group are Mesdames George Shafer, B. K. Skeels, H. A. Brandes, Frayne Baker, G. F. Dullam, 8. W. Corwin, R. H. Waldschmidt, L. F. Bechtold, A. M. Bergeson, Gerald Richholt, E. T. Beatt, J. C. Oberg, Harvey Niles, F. C. Stucke, Burt Fin- ney, L, Rubin, John R. Fleck, Roy Kennelly, M. M. Ruder, Robert Ken- nedy, W. B. Pierce, H. M. Berg, C. C. Turner, H, C. Frahm, B. O. Ward, Robert’ Webb, M. B. Gilman, J. K. Blunt, Milton Rue, Philip R. Webb, Bernard Andrus, q 'W. Scott and Misses Maude Angliss, Jeanette Shipley, Cecil Ryan, Mary Houser, Ruth Pollard and Dorothy Blunt. Other committee chairman tq su- Pervise the various divisions of the sale were announced today by Mra. Jack Fleck, general chairman and Kelly Simonson, assistant gen- |. Taylor will arrange for pod individuals purchase sale in the public schools, with . B. in charge of the will be fully as large as last year in view of the greater need. A special appeal that business firms a: cent effective January 1, in accord- ‘ance with the recently announced duction of all government salaries. | they crashed, he said. Ruth Brown, 12, has an injured ankle; Lorene, 16, was shaken up, but not badly injured; Naomi, 7; has, cuts on the forehead and is bruised, but not seriously hurt; while Robert, a sixth member of the Brown fam- ‘Throug! Mr. Brown, who was driving his car, says he does not know how the ac- cident happened. It occurred on a curve east of Menoken. Wheh he approached the curve, which was Qimoured by tree, be drew to ly enough space other side of the road for a pass him, then all of a him th other car loomed up before Brown was hurled through the of his car and was stunned. He too dazed to answer the other drit i 8 sf age i i carried insurance, but Brown did not. -|FIND FARMER'S BODY INSTRAWPILE ASHES Foster County Man’s Death Presents Mystery to Offi- cials Who Launch Probe Carrington, N. D., Nov. 2.—(P}— Foster county authorities today were investigating the death of William Arneson, 40, a bachelor, whose body was found in the ashes of a burned straw pile on his farm near Kensal. 1 Blind Man Finishes | | Ohio-Florida Jaunt | Miami, Fla, Nov. 18—(?)—xt's & long, long trail and a winding from Akron, Ohio, to Miami To Cut Crime News Santiago, Chile, Nov. 28—(?)—The government ey, directed