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The Rhinelander Daily News from Rhinelander, Wisconsin • Page 7

Location:
Rhinelander, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

NOVEMBER 'THE RHINELAN0ER (WB.) BAltV NEWS EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM FOR CAMPS OPENS Advices from Washington veal Plans to Be Carried on inCCCWork, Nov. 20 A prehehsive educational program will be starteff "Wisconsin emergency conservation work camps this month according" 't6 "advices received from HaHibrecht, director of education, will recelvfe 'aipplliyilbhs for the portion of damp. 'Forttf. Gedr ETHEL three advisers wilt be' selected from men who have the required educational and leadership qualifications. The salary for each adviser will be $166 per month without maintenance or $160 with maintenance.

The camp educational program Is being 1 planned by a committee composed of Hambrecht, chairman; ttean C. L. Chrlstensen. of the "Wisconsin college of. agriculture, and Chester Allen, dean of the extension division.

E. G. Dolidna, secretary 1 of the board of normal regents; Col. N. M.

Schantz, assistant adjutant general and M. Q. Little, assistant dean of the extension division, are the committee's advisers. "In helping the men to utilize their leisure time profitably," Hambrecht said, "it is the hope of the committee that they will be provided with activities that develop powers of self-erpresslon, sell-entertainment and self -culture in 'after years. The adviser can do much to encourage habits of health and development, and can assist Jp promoting an understanding of conservation work activities.

The program will be centered largely around the group Interests of the enrolled men. Hence, ablK ity to analyze these interests and to. seize upon the best methods of satis-. fying group needs Will be of paramount. importance." DISCONTENTED IN SEARCH FOR NEW WEAPONS (Continued from Page 1.) conference be held.

From the -first at De.s Moines strong representations made to Washington. The farmers proposed that the middle western governors gather to try to work out a program of ag- rlculural relief which meet objections at Washington. The truce was called despite the fact that the post card poll organized farmers showed 10,608 in favor of carrying on the strike and' only. 4,209 opposed. Returns still to be tabulated will be favorable.to the strike In about the same proportion, strike leaders said.

The ratio of demanding crecall of numerous public officials who placed obstacles in the way of the strike is greater. than the 'proportion which favored carrying on. But pool and holiday leaders took no action to start recall petitions. In a resolution, however, they paid their respects to officials, to' "protective law and order leagues" and to the Farm Bureau federation. Attacks Officials.

"We condemn these organizations, together with foreclosure lawyers, fee hunting sheriffs and auctioneer and swashbuckling district attorneys as the most detrimental forces toward an American standard, of living for all the American.people," tha resol litjon' stated. Several hundred farmers cony out tf DOSE-GOAT BEtOW, ATsTHE- TAILORED IN BEIGE BfcOADOTH WITH COILAR AND 'CUFFS, TfjrBflttONS ARE PEARL. CENTER, 'ROSS VELVET FORMS A LUXURIOUS NIGHTGOWN WITH TlM RUBLES OF 5ATIN lLK AND KABBITS WOOL TO MAKE THE PAJAMAS AT THE RKSHT.THey ARE IN PALE BLUE TRIMMED WITH DEBTS, CLAIM OF U.S., RUSSIA S1TJDIEDTODAY LUvinoff Enters New enees in Washington Today. Amerlietut M. KtfsS- tinski, acting, cothmisaar of foreign affairs, said too that the move "would reduce tha possibility of conflict In the far As It was learned that w'liffarh C.

Bullitt, as American ambassador to Moscow had been formally Approved by the Soviet government, word Went out that tfte nairie 6f the Soviet ambassador to Washington had been submitted to the American state department. Flashes of Life of the strike to find theft markets gone. At Marshfleld the Borden company manufacturnig plant, closed at the insistence of strikers, will remain closed indefinitely, it was said by P. T. Lertimel, Madison, district manager.

Ira Jones, manager of the Marsh- fleld'Borden'plant, estimated It will require six months to develop enough new outlets to warrant reopening. He said a $250,000 a year milk business has been lost for the time being, throwing 29 employes out of work. Refuse Milk Shipment. In Milwaukee, where from the outset the Milwaukee Co-operative Milk Producers' association opposed the strike, dairies are refusing- to buy milk from about 100 farmers who participated in the strike. Singler said the farmers in the Milwaukee milk shed will not suffer because they followed his leadership.

He said three courses are open. The farmers may ship to the Producers- Consumers Co-operative dairy, operated by the pool; the pool may establish a new dairy, or it may "flood Milwaukee with free milk until the dairies come to terms." Charles Goodyear made his accidental discovery of vulcanizing of rubber in 1839. The fat-tailed sheep has no heavy a tail that it drags on the ground. WAXEY GOKDEN FACES FEDERAL TAX INQUIRY 'Last of Big Beer Barons Charged with Income Tax Ul NEW YORK, Nov. 20 The state federal finger that was shaken under the nose of Al Capone in Chi two years ago was pointed to day at Waxey Gordon, sometimes dubbed the last of the big beer barons.

Gordon, called for trial In federa court today, is charged with the eva sipn of income taxes on reputed an nual incomes in excess of a million dollars in 1930 and 1931. The government contends that Gordon hac 'a net Income in 1930 of and a net Income the following year of $1,026,000, the income accruing from the sale of "beverages." MILWAUKEE OFFICERS PUZZLED OVER DEATH MILWAUKEE, Nov. 20 liam Johnnsen, 41, died yesterday af ter he was found, bleeding and un conscious, on a south side street Police were unable to tell whether he had been struck by an automobile or had injured In falling. CLASP HANDS ON SUCCESS OF U. PARLEY Happy suooessftuj'sfionclusion of negotiations for recognition of Soviet Russia, William C.

Bullitt, left, and President Roosevelt clasp hands at the Union station in Washington, as the president prepares to board bis special train to leave for bis Thanksgiving vacation in Warm Springs, Ga. Bullitt, named U. Sv ambas- $ador to Russia, is the first to hold that poft after a breajji iu diplomatic relations. WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 Eastern and were today issues of majof concern in, ftew i Russo-Atnerican accot 1 as Maxim t-itvlnoii entered on debts and claims.

Moscow's appointment and state department approval Alexander Antonovich Trovanovsky as the first Soviet ambassador immedtatly stressed two factors: Trovanovsky is conservant with the Japanese situation In Man 1 churia, having completed a five-year ambassadorship to Tokyo only last January. He Is trained in Russia's commercial needs through service as president of the board of directors of the; State Trading corporation and as a member of the collegium of the pie's commissariat for foreign trade. Litvinog returned today to work remaining before his departure. Debts, claims and counter-claims were scheduled for discussion at the state department, but turther conferences were expected between Litvinoff and Acting Secretary Henry Morganthau, of the'treasury on trade relations. Trovanovsky's Intimacy with such subjects prompted the impression in some quarters that detailed talks may be left for him and the Amtorg Trading corporation afteY Litvinoft has reviewed important policies.

Will Aid In MOSCOW, Nov. 20 Etablish- ment of normal relations. between the United States and Russia, the newspaper Izvesta taid today, "Will stregnthen peace and help decide many urgent problems." It added, however, that "relations between the U. S. S.

R. and the U. S. A. will develop on a basis of mutual interest and esteem, without'I interference in each other's domes-' tic affairs by either country and on a basis of independent policy by both sides." Although high Soviet officials have refused to comment at length on 1 (By the Associated Press) JOLIET, After lookirig for his father for 34 years, Arthur Flscn- baka, a high school teacher, fou'nd him living one block away.

The father, Philip Wt. Msch- backer, an engineer, came to Jollet to superintend the reconstruction of a brewery. OMAHA, saving and penny-saving Is the Invention of Stephen H. Ayer, local high school journalistic Ayer has designed a postcard- check with which he pays his bills. On the message side, is a check form.

He merely fills In the amount, sticks a one-cent stamp on the back and throws the "check" in the nearest mailbox. One of the orchids is said to produce 74,000,000 seeds from the plant considered as a whole. Practically a.U the peanut crop of United States comes from the southern states. CAR ACCIDENT LEADS TO ALCOHOL SEIZURE WISCONSIN RAPIDS, Nov. 20 Seventy-five gallons of Illicit alcohol found In a car driven by John Sullivan, Mansion, which was -involved in.

an automobile accident Saturday night was being held at police headquarters here today for federal prohibition agents. Sullivan, according to police, was driving south on State Trunk Highway at the southern edge of the. city when he drove into the rear end of a car driven by Howard James, this city. Sullivan sustained! a bftd cut on his cheek and was 1 bruised about the head. His car was, badjjf' damaged.

Federal agents from Watfsau were expected to confiscate the liquor. I IS KICKED BY INJURIES ARE FATAL MADISON, Nov. 20 received when kicked by a horse while working on a farm near Mar- tinsvllle resulted In death for Felix Statz, 10, Waunakee, In a hospital here yesterday. The horse kicked him in the abdomen. OPEN A3 TAMAQUA, NOV.

20 Seven thousand hard coal employed by the LeHIgh Navigation COR! company who struck for ft ond tifVfe'last week in a dispute over wages, returned to work today. Seven collieries resumed ROAD HOUSE EMPLOYE STRUCK BY CAR; DIES RACINE, Nov. 20 Siekicrski, 47, employe of the Motor Inn on Highway 41 near Racine, was mortally injured by an automobile as he strolled near the road house yesterday. He was struck by an automobile driven by Solomon Simon Of Roxbury, Mass. RACINE, Nov.

20 P. L. Simmons, 74, a veterinary surgeon and a lifelong resident of Racine, was fatally injured today when the automobile which he was driving was struck by a North Shore train at the road crossing near here. Look! Shaped to Fit! Free Turkeys? at the Eagles' Club Rhinelander MONDAY NIGHT November 20 Come on Down for a Big Time FREE DUTCH LUNCH ALL EVENING ARROW MITOGA Newest idea in Shirts Have you seen the new shirt MITOGA? A shirt shaped to to your figure. A shirt that drapes in at the to the with the arms.

MITOGA is made possible by Arrow's Sanforizing makes this shirt stay form-fitting it keep its right size through a lifetime of launderings. $2.00 Try one. Note the difference. Follow the Arrow and You Follow the. Style.

ice p.l HOW much ice does your ice box eat when the thermometer nudgea ninety? Did the milk ever sour last summer? Remember when the leftover hamburger spoiled? your warped and worn old box belongs in a mu- seum! They learned a lot about ice boxes since you bought yours, The modern ones are so well built and insulated that they need icing only half as often as they used to! Mechanical refrigerators, of course, make their own, ice. And all types pay for themselves by saving the money that now melts away. But these last four years, while refrigerators grew better and better, the wages of the men who made them grew less and less, It was the pinch of Depression, driving down the value of refrigerators as it did of all other commodities, until employers lost nioney and employ- ees lost jobs. Now your government is fighting to restore all make men's time and men's pro- ducts worth something again. The refrigerator industry was one of the first to feel the stim- ulus.

Its NRA code raised pay rolls helped raise materials, too, such as insulating and electrical parts. Steel is up and non- ferrous metals are up Increased manufacturing costs have forced up the retail prices of practically all refriger- ators. More will follow, inevitably. But for the present, at least, you can buy efficient, economical refrigerators at prices that may never be repeated I If ever you've envied the tinkling drinks and frozen desserls, your friends if ever you've wished for the spacious storage and constant cold that permit bulk buying at better prices. in a modern refrigerator right away.

You'll wonder how you ever lived without it. It's one frozen asset that really pays dividends! What's true of refrigerators is true of tires, furniture, shoes, hats, lingerie, lawn of almost every human want. Far-sighted men and women are shopping now for everything they need. Not as a patriotic gesture, but because it means dollars in their pockets! Now is the time to buy! UPTURN ITEM NO. 11 August department store sales in 2 14 lead- ing cities of the country were ahead of sales in August last year.

The advertisements in this paper bring you of the best bargains in town, Read them reg- ularly, carefully. And act now to take advantage of present favorable prices!.

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About The Rhinelander Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
81,467
Years Available:
1925-1960