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Janesville Daily Gazette from Janesville, Wisconsin • Page 18

Location:
Janesville, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
18
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Daily Gazette, Tuesday, December 20, 1966 MADISON CAROLERS ON of the Madison diocese will be in Janesville Thursday to sing to the sick. They are, 1st row from left, Clarence Koch, Waunakee; Mike Doro, Princeton; Vernon Dahman, Janesville, John Reinardy, Janesville; Ed Bruni, Janesville; Tom Kuehn, Madison; Charles Molitor, Middleton; Tom Gillespie, Beloit. Second row, Mike Flaherty, Milwaukee; Tom Marr, Mineral Point; Tom Coyle, Pine Bluff; Don Lange, Kieler; Gene Hollfelder. Cross Plains; Rev. Dennis Ganshert, Gratiot; Rev.

Roy Mateljan, Milwaukee; Joe Stafford, La Crosse; James Uppena, Cobb. Back row, Neil Zinthefer, Milwaukee; Joe Meyer, Milwaukee; Don Becker, Two Rivers; Larry Grimm, Milwaukee; Rev. John Hefter, Milwaukee; Rev. Robert Richter, Fond du Lac; Rev. Cy Weisensel, Fort Atkinson; Mike Uselmann, Madison; Dave Cooper, Sheboygan; Jan Cerkas, Manitowoc.

Not pictured are Bob Kihslinger, Milwaukee; Gene Neuman, Ixonia; Jim Laures, Milwaukee; Richard Fueger, Janesville; Mike Trainor, Beloit. 'ony and Taining School, 3:30, Seminarians Will ot Joys ot Christmas Sing happy Yuletide tradition man, 1104 E. Delavan Drive, Edward BruDi, son of Mr. and Mrs. Pat Bruni, 1421 N.

Vista Ave. All are in the A will be repeated in Janesville this year when the young men who are studying for the priesthood at St. Francis college, majoring in philosophy. Milwaukee, come here to sing Reinardy is accompanist of the to the sick of the joys of Christmas. The Madison Carolers, now in theu" fourth year of existence, will be at Rock County Hospital and Pmehurt Sanatorium at 4 p.m.

Thursday and at Mercy Hospital at 4:45 p.m. as they tour county homes and hospitals ifl the diocese of Madison. The 35 seminarians, who are giving up the fu-st two days of their Christmas vacation ot make their rounds, have been practicing twice a week ever since September. "Our payment for the hours of preparing for the tour is the joy that it brings to the sick," said Richard Fueger, 806 N. Osborne a second year theology student.

Fueger is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Boman Fueger. Other Carolers from Janesville John Remardy, son of Dr. and Mrs.

Arthur Reinardy, 414 Garfield Vem Dahman, group; the Rev. John Hefter, Milwaukee, who will be ordained in May, is president of the Carolers. Many favorites are included p.m., and St. Martin Interracial Center, 6:45 p.m. Oregon Firm Says ilMC Stole Design PORTLAND, Ore.

(AP) A Portland firm says in a lawsuit that it showed a project design for the Rambler Rogue to American Motors Corp. and that the auto firm used it without getting consent. The suit for $592,000 was filed by Jay Bruce, Portland, in the numbers the Carolers will! Monday in U.S. District Court. sing.

Among them are "Drummer Boy," "White Christmas," "Blessing of St. Francis," "Do You Hear What I "Rock'm," "Mary Had a Baby," "0 Tannenbaum" and others. Carolers will start their tour at 2 p.m. Thusday at St. Coletta School, Jefferson.

After smg- ing in Janeffwlle, they will go to Madison to be in Mendota State Jay-Bruce also alleged that American Motors and a subsidiary, American Motors Sales took away the advertising campaign for the car by conspiring to restrain Jay-Bruce from carrying the account of Puget Sound Rambler Dealers Advertising Association of Seattle. Jay Bruce said the car design and campaign were de- Hospital geriatric wards at 7:451 veloped when it represented the p.m., and Goodland Hall at 8:15 p.m. They will smg at Dane County Home at Verona, at 9 a.m. Friday; Dane County Hospital, Verona, at 10 a.m.; Veterans Administration Hospital, Madison, 10:45 a.m.; St. Mary's Hospital, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Chris Dah-'Madison, 1:30 p.m.; Central Col- Portland Rambler Dealers Association in December, 1964. YOU'LL BE GLAD you placed your hjexpensive "For Rent" CLASSIFIED AD when the RE- LUBLE TENANTS you want start knocking on your door. Turks Welcome Kosygin Coolly ANKARA, Turkey (AP) Alexei N. Kosygm arrived today for the first visit by a Soviet premier to Tiu-key, a member of the North Atlantic alliance.

He received a polite but somewhat cool welcome. Only half a dozen Soviet flags were flying at Ankara's snow- covered airport, one more was on the outskirts and another was the center of the Turki.sh capital. Members of Premier Suleyman Demirel's generally pro- Western and anti-Soviet Justice party were reported divided! over Kosygin's visit. Newspaper comment also was divided, with leftist papers enthusiastic and conservative papers wary. Kosygin is returning a visit Premier Suat HajTi Urgupluj made to Moscow in 1965.

Thej absence of Foreign Mmister Andrei A. Gromyko from the party indicated that the talks during the week-long visit will center mainly on commercial and economic relations between the two neighboring countries. Williams Bay Receives Lakelront Land OHer WILLIAMS BAY The Williams Bay Village Board last night received an offer of a triangular section of lakefront land near the former railroad turntable from the Wisconsin Southern Gas Co. The firm proposes to sell to the village, at a cost of $700, a section 245 by 61.3 by 252 feet adjacent to the Spruce property. The village board referred the proposal to the finance committee for consideration.

Fogle Construction Co. was awarded a contract to provide two warming sheds, one at the hockey rink and one at the skat- mg rink, both located near the fieldhouse. The sheds, to be three-sided and measure 6 by 12 feet, are to cost $470. Board members directed that a bulletin board to contain official notices be placed in front of tlie post office near the letter drop box. The village will then comply with state regulations requiring three public bulletin boards.

Others are presently located at the village hall and at the foot of the old post office building. Board members received the first copies of the newly codified and revised village ordinances. The buildmg code and land subdivision ordinances have yet to be completed. Plans were approved for the installation of service laterals along the Cherry-Vemon street sanitary sewer. Costs are to be paid Uirough special assessments of property owners.

Payment in full vrill be due Feb. 1, 1967, or may be charged against the tax rolls for five years tha-eafter with a charge Fort Hospital of 6 per cent per year. Ordinance 186, providing a 50 per cent increase salaries of village trustees, was approved. Raises are to become effective at the beginnmg of the next term of the respective offices and call for the board president to receive $750 per year and members to get $450 annually. Members will be paid $4.50 for each special or adjourned meeting.

Traffic Court FORT were bom in the Fort Atkinson Memorial Hospital to Mrs. Thomas Jewell, Mrs. Virgil Lamb, Fort Atkinson; a daughter was bom to Mrs. Gary Mitchell, Whitewater. Admitted: Mrs.

Walter Raasch, Fort Atkinson; Harley Khtzkie, Jefferson; Kevin Madson, Whitewater; Roy Shook Palmyra; Mrs. Joseph Seeber, Johnson Creek; David Unisken, Helenville. Dismissed: Dawn Reimer, Mrs. Gerhard Rieger, Sandra Haller, Brian Ostrander. Fort' Atkinson; Frederick Frey, i Deert'ield.

"OF COURSE rM JUST TOLD ME NOTHING REACHES FARTHER THAN LOW-COST GAZETTE WANT-ADS Too bad she's talcing Tt so hard but it is a fact! Gazette Classified Ads reach thousands of people (nearly 90,000) every day.That's one of the big reasons they get such amazing And besides that, they're so easy and Low-Cost to use. Here's all you do to put them to work for you. Go through your home. Make a list of every worthwhile thing you find that isn't being used or enjoyed. Your children's good, but outgrown toys, clothing and furniture; the musical instrument no one plays any more; the sports equipment that stays in the closet; thft chair that doesn't match anything; appliances, skates, skis, toboggan, sled you name it! All these things and the others you find are worth good hard cash to some other family and all you have to do to quickly get in touch with your buyers is dial PL 4 -33 I I.

The friendly Ad Writer who answers helps you word your ad to bring faster results schedule your ad on our "Special 9 Day Rate" which is subject to your cancellation at any time, and you pay only for the days your ad actually So put the far-reaching power of Gazette "Low-Cost" Classified Ads to work for you today. It's the smart, easy way to have more of the things you've been wonf'ing for yourself and your family. Where Buyer and Seller Get Together" GAZETTE CLASSIFIED ADS Give you the tar-zeacbing power that means fast results 200 E. Milwaukee St. Janesville, Wis.

TO PLACE YOUR WANT AD CALL 754-3311 Just Soy "Charge It" Please No valid license Ronald Skrede, 21, Rte. 4, $50; George E. Minerd, 73, of 12 S. Academy $25. Driving before reinstatement B.

Fletcher, 64, of 715 Glen $55. Driving too fast for J. Adams, 24, Milton, $38. Failure to yield right of way- Clara K. Rabuck, 67, of 1043 Terrace Curtis T.

Wall, 65, of 519 Locust $23. Violation of temporary in- stnicllon J. Cox, 22, of 310 Dodge $25. Improper E. Knox, 18, of 1630 Beloit $13.

Arterial violation Sonja J. Pann, 21, Orfordville, Bert F. Brookens, 37, of 1631 S. Marion $8. Stop light violations Joseph E.

LemoreaiLx, 18, of 1211 Conde William C. Klusmeyer, 58, Footville, Frank R. Ortolen, 77, of 606 Pearl $13. Rimning stop J. Randies, 25, of 714 McKinley St.

$23. Inattentive Fulton, 24, of 1415 Linden James P. Stapleton, 27, Jlilton, $23. Wrong wav on one-way street -John M. Sharkey, 34, of 423 WiUiams $13.

Speeding Thomas J. Reed, 25, Edgerton, $33; Alan Rihol- te, 24, of 915 W. Van Buren Wayne N. Dahl, 25, of 402 N. High Donald D.

Jewell, 33, MUton Junction, $18. Roger Lee Peake, 18, of 1021 Jerome John M. Johnson, 20, Edgerton, Max A. Loveland, 46, of 1416 S. Grant Robert Statz, 44, of 1519 James H.

Krakofsky, 35. Rte. 5: John E. Ave. 41, Brodhead, Donna L.

Choate. 20, of 1102 E. Milwaukee Arlene G. Brost, 37, of 418 Park Ave; $13. Dennis M.

Vechinsky. 27, of 537 Muir William L. Hemming, 58, of 193 S. Hancock Lane, Esther L. Buehl, 58, of 220 Forest Park Jctn D.

Thurow, 29, of 721 N. Church LueUa F. Black, 56 of 320 S. Franklin Janet F. Tollefson, 27, of 1020 Bouchard Barbara A.

LeClair, 18, of 1711 Randolph Road, Thomas J. Hutchinson, 18, of 602 Chestnut Robert D. Emery, 26, of 209 Cherry Maitland E. Palmer, 77, of 69 S. Atwood $13.

Doris L. Hoerler, 35, Footville, Edwin V. Zaiewski, 43, of 1312 Kmg Daniel W. Juckert, 18, of 1551 OakhiU Joy Garlock, 37, of 2810 Hyacinth Donald W. Scott, 20, Darien, Gerald Olson, 27, of CY BflRREH SAYS Figures of Working Women Must Include Cost of Taxes DEAR CY: I have not worked outside the home for ID years, but see an opportunity to get an office job, doing the kind of work in which I am experienced.

A girl friend says, "You'll be crazy, Helen, to take it. With all those expenses every working mother faces, and the way you love clothes, you won't make a nickel." I appreciate the cost of a sitter for our two children must be figured actual earnings, but am confused. How can I add up how much money will be free and clear after putting ui a year's work? HELEN DEAR HELEN: Let's say your weekly salary will be $90... for working purposes. From this you must deduct the federal income tax, state mcome tax, state disability, social security, costs for group life and group health insurance.

Figured roughly (verj' rough), this could leave you about $70 a week. That is, until we give your expenses a chance to gnaw away at the earnings. You will have to pay for transportation, lunches, child care, clothing for the job, groommg aids, office contributions. My guesstimate is they will total about $25 a week, leaving you $45 or $2,340 a year. Just how your income tax affects your net will have to be figured in conjunction with your husband's income.

You must realize the additional family income tax, due to wife employment, is one of the main costs for women who hold jobs. In one case, a husband was somewhat contentedly making $6,000 a year. His wife began working and the federal and state tax jumped from $1,185 to $2,442 a year. You may find the job is well worth added e.xpen£es, Helen, as have so many mil- Uons of American women. Nothing matches the satisfaction which comes from using one's talents to do a job well and obtaining tion as a top worker.

with all women, your net earnings may be substantially les-s than my estimate. One woman relates, "I have been netting about 35 cents a week, but believe me; it is worth it to get away from the house and wear some nice things." During a week of foul weather, she may not get around to the shops much at noon, and can net as much as half a dollar. I am sending you a free copy of "Guide For Women Returning To The Job World." Take a pencil ia hand and it will arrange your finances in apple pie order, clothes budget included. That is, unless you are racing to get on ahead of Phyllis DiUer. DEAR CY: What should I do? Last week, I started to work at a new job, my first, as a junior executive.

When I sit down at my desk to think and with secretaries passmg by, I blush. JUNIOR EXEC DEAR JUNIOR EXEC: Think about something else. CY DEAR CY: My fortune got fouled up in the makuig. I learned the expensive way that a book cannot be copyrighted after it is printed and distributed. Now, upon developing a new product with a unique trade mark, a friend tells me it must be distributed before registration is allowed.

Please unravel the paradox. Also, do I need a lawyer to register my trade mark? MACKEE DE.AR MACKEE: The voice of the U.S. copyright office rumbles, "If copies (of a book) are published without the required notice, the right to secure copyright is lost and cannot be restored." The "notice" must contain three elements: the word "copyright" or symbol, name of the copyright owner and the year of publication. It must be printed neatly on the title page or page immediately following. Trademarks travel under somewhat reverse circumstances as your friend suggests.

According to the U.S. patent office, "In order to be eligible for registration, a mark must be used in commerce which may lawfully be regulated by Congress." Trademarks have often become of inestimable value in this country and the Green Giant's suit or Betty Crocker's smile could be worth more than Arnold Palmer. I suggest you obtain all the protection allowed you by law. Write the U.S. Department of Commerce for a copy of the free book on trademarks.

In filing an application for registration, you do not need to be represented by an attorney, however. In fact, you could probably remove your own appendix without a specialist, but I don't strongly advise it. Knowning how this works, the patent office states, "An attorney may be appointed for the purpose." Fine! I don't want anyone opening me up like a trunk who hasn't got some sort of a license. CY For answers to your Personal Business Questions, write Cy Barrett care of the Janesville Gazette. Include stamped, self-addressed return envelope.

letter son County Suit Asks $228,636 Damages JEFFERSON One of the the suit that the death of his largest personal injury suits wife, AUne J. Whitlow, on Feb.just and equitable. medical and funeral expenses; $20,000 for the pain and suffering ing undergone by the deceased and also asks for other damages such as loss ot wages and babysitting services in such sum as the court may deem ever filed in the Jefferson County Clerk of Circuit Court office was entered yesterday. The $228,636.94 action was filed by Burton Whitlow, mdi- vidually and as special administrator of the estate of Aline J. Whitlow, deceased, against Len J.

Polaszewski and the Allstate Insurance Co. Whitlow, 311 Hillcrest Drive, Surviving Mrs. Whitlow are her husband and several chil- 6, 1965, was the result of an automobile collision which oc- curred in November of 1964 at' dren. a Milwaukee intersection. Whitlow claims his wife was RntViered driving southwest on W.

Forest DOmeiea Home Avenue when her cari ITncof was struck by a car driven by, DY UpSei OlOmdCn Poslaszewski travelling west on DALLAS, Tex. (AP) Jack sick W. Howard Avenue. The suit further states treubled by a Palmyra, who's occupation was Poslaszewski was driving at an; stomach as he took more drugs listed'as a laborer, charges in excess speed, failed to stop for; in a fight against cancer. stop signs and was driving' anving; 55, killed Lee Harvey 806 J.W.Davis, influence of an in- Oswald two days after Presi- of 473 N.

Wadiington Vernon L. Peterson, 26, ot 337 N. Jackson Robert E. White, 44, Avalon, Ernest Bohlman, 45, of 546 S. River Warren E.

Janisch, 27, Sharon, Harold L. Hill, 61, of 22 S. Blackhawk $13. Classified Display ClassHied Display i dent John F. Kennedy was as- Whitlow is seeking $25,000 sassinated Nov.

22, 1963. The pecuniary loss and loss of so- Warren Co.mmission named Os- ciety and companionship; $3,500 'wald as the assassin, Classilied Display Classilied Display I ISA BELL'S 1 1 ANNUAL CHRISTMAS DANCE i WEDNESDAY. DEC. 21 5 PIECE BAND, CALLED "THE NEW BLUES" Plan to Spend New Year's With Us jj IT'S SMART TO "TAVERNIZE" ISABELL'S Magnolia Avenue (County Trunk A) Just Past the Country Club, Janesville, Wis. CHRISTMAS at HWY, 12, ELKHORN, WIS.

CALL 723-4040 FOR RESERVATIONS APPETIZERS Cranberry juice, tomato juice or chicken soup SALAD 24-hour or tossed with choice of dressing ENTREES Sugar Cured Premiunri Ham $3.20 Roast Young Tom Turkey with dressing French Fried Shrimp $3.50 Seafood Platter $3.75 U.S. Choice Tenderloin $3.75 Rock Cornish Game Hen $3.95 U.S. Prime Rib of Beef (thick cut) $4.50 U.S. Choice Strip Steak $4,75 Mashed or Baked Potato, Vegetable DESSERTS Hot mince pie, ice cream or plum pudding WONDERFUL LAST MINUTE GIFT Mustang MOTORIZED MOD Fresh shipment just arrived of these completely authentic Mustang Car Models for a pleasing gift. Lights, steering, motorized, etc.

Fully assembled and ready to go. HURRY, NOW '5' rl MILTON AVE. V- IJ At Dime Store Prices RENT -a -CAR PER MILE All gas, maintenance and insurance (iiabUity with $100 deductible) included in above prices. 1966 Fords, full size CALL 754-5511 for Reservationa and Information RENT AGAR 1309 MILTON AVE. CALL 754.55M.

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About Janesville Daily Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
261,548
Years Available:
1845-1970