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The Rhinelander Daily News from Rhinelander, Wisconsin • Page 5

Location:
Rhinelander, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

UJCUST NBW THE RHWIfcANDEft (WIS.) DAILY NEWS Wednesday, Aug. 27. Committee meeting, 7:46 p. the home of Mrs. Oeorge Ellis.

Thursday, Aug-. 28. lernal Reserve, association, field Fellows' Lutheran bodies' Aid, 2:30 p. church parlors. Immanuel Luther league, 7:45 p.

at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Carlson, town of Pelican. Friday, AUR. 29.

Missionary lecture, 7:45 p. m. Two members of the G. A. college will give an illustrated lecture on China.

Refreshments, will be served by the AJission society. Tmmanuel Lutheran ETHEL PAGE I W. ('. O. F.

Meeting. A meeting of the Women's Catholic Order of Foresters will bo held at the home of Mrs. George Roller, Messer street, at 2:30 o'clock Friday afternoon. Entertains at Tea. Mrs.

Charles Lyman was hostess a tea at the layman cottap-e, Old Colony, Monday afternoon. Garden flowers were prettily arranged to de- corn Ie tlie cottage. jNews Arrives Rogers has arrived from Tucson, and San Francisco, to spend two weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Rogers.

Harold acted as In- struclor of a boys truck school south of Tucson for eight months until he went to Kan Francisco. Tie will return to Arizona, in two weeks lo spend tho winter. Picnic Postponed The picnic tho Methodist Missionary society had planned to hold at Moons park this afternoon has been postponed indefinitely, Mrs. Roy Hancy announced Tuesday. I'lans for commercial displays al.

the. Oneida Jhnmly fair liavo been made by the W'mirka Hardware company, and Willis, incorporated, and the B. LjTilorr Culvert company, which will eiJFiibil machinery, the Chevrolet garage, which will show automobiles and accessories, and the Haugsby Appliance company, Sinclair Oil Products company, Oneida Retail Yards, and North Wisconsin Agency, which will have booths in tho main exhibit building. Baby and Mrs. Fred OIol.se, 323 Mercer street, are the parents of a daughter born at St.

Mary's hospital on Friday, AUK- 22 Pelican Pelican Woman's club will meet Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. AMola Petta, with Mrs. 13d Carlson as associate hostess. Football city football players and prospective players will meet tonight at 8 o'clock at the rooms of the Merchants State bank "7 oof of rf Qtf ouT -tfle. Personals DOUGHBOYS PARADE AT WISCONSIN FAIR Women in Professions Mr.

and Mrs. Dan Noble me attending the Wisconsin state fair at Milwaukee this week. The Misses Vera and Vivian Lashua have returned from Oak Park, where the latter underwent an operation at the West Suburban hospital. Mr. an(l Mrs.

Charles Landberg infantry of Oshkosh. iind Mr. and Mrs. Guy spent I opening day attend- Sunday at the Dells of the lOatt lance record toppled yesterday whe.i Claire river. (12,970 persons trooped M1I.WAPKKIO, Aug.

2fi doughhoys wi-nt on today in Ameri( an Legion rlay maneuvers at the State fair. T'eglnn bunds nnd drum corps from stole were on hand for con-j certs iind exhibitions. feature! (Concert will be given by the iL'Tth! "turnsiilr VOU LOVE. ULU YOU OJ-P GO 1 MlP UDVlhGUY 'PAT YOUF? OI.P COFf REQUESTS AID COUN1YTO' LOCATE CHILD Rhinelander Woman Asks Police to Aid Serach for Son. Ii Fearing that her son David, 12 years of age, has met with some serious harm, Mrs.

Amy Kohler of Rhinelander last night appealed to city and county officers to aid her. far as Sheriff Hans Rodd could learn lar.t. night the boy has not been en since Monday, Aug. IS. On that mte he loft Middle Inlet, by bus for Pembine where he intended to catch a Soo train due here at 1:30 m.

Tuesday. When he disqppeared he was wearing a tan knicker and a light brown cap and carrying a large' black suitcase. The boy had made the trip before from Middle Inlet to Rhinelander so it is not believed that he became lost. However, Sheriff Rodd last night asked a Pembine liole.1 owner to question bus drivers )oday determine if the boy was delivered at the Pembine station la-st week. A Rhine-lander taxi driver recall.s a 12-year-old boy of stocky build arrived from the east last Tuesday morning but he did not notice what o'f the boy.

few weeks ago the lad featured u. court case in which it was -fHL G-OOp OkP HA.T r.NP TOO Dr. and Mrs. F. A.

Miehalski, of Hie Milwaukee, arc spending the sum-j rp hll(1 ''i mer at the Spengler cottages on the i 8 1 111 for 'nsha. and bands nnd three professional gallons sviive programs. They come hero i VOICE. CAU.T HONEY-DON'T i CHICKEN THIEF HE1D IN MANITOWOC JAIL she wrote several letters to Middle Inlet but has received no reply. Yesterday she telegraphed another rela- tive who is the railroad agent there and through him learned that the boy started home over a week ago.

Sheriff Ro'dd intended to meet the'! MANITOWOf. Autr. 2(5 a Soo train this morning: and question freight train hadn't blocked a cross- members of the crew who formed the 1 lle lpro I'olice probably never crew that, operated the 'train on i wo have learned the identity of a which here. David should have arrived Indian Is Sentenced. Paul AVinos, an Indian, was sep- tenced to serve 10 days in jail on a drunk and disorderly charge yesterday when he was arragined in county court.

He was arrested over the week-end by Sheriff Rodd who caught' him at night before an open window at the log cabin road house. AVinos denied that he was attempting to beak Into tho place and said he was merely looking; inside through a window- he found open, man who stole 25 chickens from the Ij'ndner farm In the town of Bril- Han, Calumet county. On his way home from tho county fair, Reuben Madenwald was forced to stop behind another car as a train held up traffic early this morning. He noticed a number of live chickens in the car ahead, took the license number, and notified authorities. Today, Isador Rotisse, 33, Two Rivers, confessed the theft and implicated Lawrence Bastian, 21, Two Rivers.

Wisconsin river, every summer. Mr. and Mrs. H. Weimer, who were guests at the R.

S. Roardon' home, East Davenport street, for a week-, returned to their home In Milwaukee Tuesday. Their daughter, Jane, will remain in Rhlnelander for the rest of the week. II. A.

Wallace of Pittsburgh, spent the week-end at the home of Mrs. J. .1. Reardon. Atlantic street.

Airs. Wallace, daughter of Mrs. Reardon, has been visiting here for several weeks. Charles McCarthy, of Chicago, nephew of Mrs. Reardon, visited at h'er home Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. 10. J3illmeyer and children, of Clintonville, visited Mr. Billmeyer's brother, Victor, in Rhinelander Sunday.

The former is manager of the J. c. Penney store at Clintonville. Mr. and Mrs.

AValter Morritl and son, Rarl, Mrs. Mel Sweet of this city and Mrs. M. M. Cams, Minneapolis, spent Sunday at An- tlgo.

Mrs. Mel Sweet and her sister, Mrs. M. M. Cams, who is visiting here from Minneapolis, will spend today at tho Charles Morrill cottage on the Wisconsin river.

Mr. and Mrs. Sever Swenseji and Mr. and Mrs. Axel Rusk spent the fore part of the week at the I'M Swensen cottage.

Pine Lake. R. Caldwell, of Oshkosh, is spending several days in this city on business. Mr. Caldwell is with the Fraternal Reserve association.

S. .1. Owldt was a business caller in Forest county yesterday. i Mr. and Mrs.

Kuehn and Mr. and Mrs. C. II. Roepeke were visit' ors in Phillips yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Kd Swensen are spending a two weeks vacation at their cottage, Pine Lake. Lloyd Bohm has returned from a I week's motor trip through southern Wisconsin. Mr.

and Mrs. Patrick Landberg hii-e returned from a nix week's mi or trip through Wisconsin and IP Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kuehn have returned from a visit at the Kan Claire dells. Miss Margaret Nelson leaves tonight, for Poy Sippi, to spend a week's vacation with relatives.

Miss Gertrude Rousseau has returned from AVausan, where she spent the week-end. Mrs. John Barnes, who spent the summer in Rhinelande.r at the home of her sister, Mrs. Jminie. K.

Dean, returned to her home in Madison Tuesday night. Mrs. Helen C. Perry, Madison, who visited at the home, of her daughter, Mrs. Bradley Tiiylor, for three weeks, will leave today for Superior, where she will spend a week before returning to Madison.

number, 2S.314 a Kpecial them. The Man- school organi- Atllomobile race; ness events on the i displaced liar- fair's curd lodav. ASKS INVESTIGATION OF PRESENT PRIMARY MADISON, AUK. 2fi man Robert A. Nixon.

Washhurn, member of the legislative interim committee on campaign expenditures, today, made public letter he wrote to Sen. George W. nianchard, Kdger-! committee chairman. In which: be denvmded an investigation of the! present primary campaign. I Tho assemblyman declared that i his proposal for an investigation had been made before and that it had beqn ignored by the committee chairman.

According to Nixon, his county (llnyneld) Is being "Hooded with banners, literature. post-era and bilge lithographs distributed by workers sent in from the outside." "Fair Sex" Holds Local Monopoly In Beauty Shops us would bo expected, manage Hhinelander's four beauty shops. Mrs. Dovey, Mrs. I'earl Norah Dalton nnd Mrs.

C. II. comprise the coterie of proprietors nnd managers, being made more and more strict to beiiig made move nnd more strict to (nit the profession of beauty culture en a standard equal to that of nurHim: was related by Mrs. Kd Dovey. who conducts the Powder Box beauty shop.

operator must attend beatitv cultnre school for six months, must serve IS-monlhs apprenticeship under licensed manager, and must satisfactorily pass the state board of health examination to receive liconscf Advises lltisiness Training. her shop In Rhlnelandor in Airs. Dnlton Here LoriRcst. Mrs. Norah Dalton is the 'pioneer' among the local beauty shop operators.

Although she has owned the Comfort Beauty shop for only the last five years, she served as operator in the shop for several years before buying il from Mrs. Delia Fitzgerald, who now lives in Marine)te Mich. Patrons, she has observed, become accustomed to certain operators and ask for them when making appointments. specializes In marcelling, treating tho scalp, and massaging, and employs an operator to give per- nanon! and finger waves. The evidence, according to the assembly, points to a more lavish expenditure or campaign funds than during the primary campaign two years) ago when, it is charged, more than Slim.OOl) was spent on behalf of (lie of one slate candidate.

Assemblyman i each member of tho campaign committee be permilted to make public Mrs. Dovey advises that one should go into the work without 'business training. Although the pro- i fession is an exacting one. especially because of its irregular hours, thr Powder Hox proprietor has found al' phases of it interesting. I The study, of the human body made by operators compares to that made by wompn preparing to be I nurses, she said.

-A knowledge of I electricity is essential so that equip. i ment may he used safely and effi. Assemblyman i lpntlv Favors Bobbed Hair. The newest in hair dressing modes and in beauty parlor equipment was exhibited at the national convention of the 1 turned into a towering torch, Ins a blue flame high In the air and scattering; dubrift over ft Iflrjfe aren. It was impossible tu effect ft of the two men and members of their families living nearby stood In" the crowd below as firemen sought to extinguish the blaze which'did damage of $100,000.

One body, which could not be identified had been found at noon, search continued tor the second. The dead: Philip Olson, 32. Harold Rarnett, 2.1. When the explosion occurred tho two men had almost completed their first shift on new assignments n.i machine operators. The cause of the explosion was not definitely determined but wa-s believed to have resulted either from spontaneous combustion or as a result of a small fire originating In the machinery.

EXPLOSION CLAIMS LIVES OF WORKERS An interesting exhibit of the German hygiene museum in Dresden IH a huge wax model of the human ear. It" shows every organ involved in tho of hearing. drain Elevator Blast Kills Two; i Does Damage Estimated at $100,000. MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 20 in an old grain elevator Hanchett' Weather Report Tnereasinp cloudiness, followed by showers anil cooler U'ednesdayi'Thnrsdiiy showiprs, cooler.

which Mrs. Pearl Tygrad, proprietor of Pearl's beauty shop, attended in Chicago last week. Styles displayed at the convention indicate that bob- lied hair has eoiiie to stay, Mrs. Ty- grad reported. New methods in permanent wav- Nlxon has asked that i Ing particularly interested her because she has found permanent waving so important in her work in this city.

She was a. beauty culluri- operator in Chicago five, yeas before his aland on the proposal to gate the present campaign. Everything Fresh Today! Peaches, box $1.19 Plums, Ib. lOc; 3 Ibs. 25c Bartlett Pears, doz.

28c IIIHIIIIiiilt'lllllHillKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII SPECIAL Dan ce Sugar Camp Wednesday, Aug. 27 Geo. Abernathy and his Royal Knights he hottest combination of Radio Entertainers, Singers and Musicians on tour this season. Don't fail to see and hear this orchestra. Regular Admission ('rim The boat that was the fonder German yacht, Prins being used as an aquarium in Miami.

Fla. nl InV. alleged he was mistreated by a Ilhine- lander man. Officers investigated the case, and tho man was subjected to a mental examnallon after which pro- feedings against him were dropped. Mrs.

Kohler then allowed the lad to go Middle Inlet for a visit with a relative. Two weeks ago she wrote asking that her son be sent back to 'Uiinelander lo.prepare for the optai- ng of school. When he did not eofte DANCE WAVERLY BEACH Wednesday, Aug. 27 Music by Rug's and His Entertaining Band SPECIAL DANCE Labor Day, Sept. 1 HOLD SERVICES WEDNESDAY MILWAUKEE, 2C services for E.

Kraseman, 43, general traffic manager of liic company, who died after an operation for anpemlici-' tis, will he Wednesday. iminals Are Criminals are mado, not born, in the opinion of captain Clayton, Governor of Dartmoor Prison, who thinks that the state is responsible for most criminals. "I am strons-ly of the opinion," he says, "That most criminals are tnred by the state. There would be i very few criminals if only we could fi-et the surroundings of the pooix-r i to, such a standard that the I children were cared for properly. And Now A pure silk Chiffon full fashioned hose with the ultra smart French Heel in the following shades.

Biege Claire Manon Plage Rendezvous Grebe PER PAIR Pure Silk full fashioned hose in service weight with the French Heel in the following shades: Ivoire Beige Claire White Grebe Duskee Sun Brown Florida Plage Rendezvous Dream Pink Muscadine This hose has always sold at but from now on it will be here at 1 per pair. 1,15 sold Follow the Arrow and You Follow the Style YOU REALIZE IN JUST A FEW DAYS THIS SALE WILL END THAT In a few days it will all be over and the lights will go put on this great August Wind Up Sale. Many people will be rejoicing when they figure out how much money they have saved on all their needs. Of course there will be some who will not heed this warning, and in a few days when they will be forced to a pay the higher prices for their merchandise, they'll say, "Why didn't I buy and save at Goldstone's August Sale." So corne the remainder of this week and buy at prices that mean savings to you. Bleached Muslin 36 inches wide.

Here's a value that you've wanted for a long time. This quality muslin now on sale during the last few days at, yard 9c Corticelli Silks The new printed fall patterns now on sale during last few days. Just think of it, new fall patterns! Beautiful designs. Make your new frock from this new group of materials at sale prices. Yard $1.95 Unbleached Muslin 36 inches wide.

Buy your needed supply now during the last few days of our August Wind Up sale at, only, yard 8c New Fall Prints And they're guaranteed fast color. Make dresses for the school girl from this wonderful selection. These regular 25c quality patterns now on sale for last few days at, yard 19c Pequpt Sheeting 72 inches wide unbleached sheeting. A good quality material. During last few days of August Wind Up sale, yard, only 39c Hundreds of other equally as good values as those mentioned above.

Come in our store and look around and buy merchandise you need at lowest possible prices. DSTONE'S Rhinelander's Leading Dry Goods Store i iV.

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About The Rhinelander Daily News Archive

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