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The Rhinelander Daily News from Rhinelander, Wisconsin • Page 2

Location:
Rhinelander, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE 2 Call Issued for Enlistments in Guard Company A call for enlistments was issued Iriday by Capt. William J. Hack, commander of the city's state guard crimpaciy. upon receipt of instructions from state headquarters to double the Rhinelander unit's strength to qualify it as an infantry company. All men between the of 21 nnd 55 who can pass a standard physical examination are eligible for membership in the company, Capt.

Hack declared. Enlistments will be taken in the officers' quarters in the Memorial building every evening this week, starling tonight at 7 p. m. To Double Strength. The present headquarters and service company has a complement of 30 enlisted men and two commissioned officers.

It is planned to increase the enlisted strength to 60 men, with five commissioned officers. That means. Hack said, that more than 30 new recruits will be needed. He urged men in the 21-55 age group, especially those with 3-A draft classifications, to apply for admission. five commissioned officers will include the present commander, Capt.

Hack; a second captain, who will be a medical officer: First Lteut. Fred V. Gates, and two second lieutenants, who will be men promoted the ranks of the present outfit. The present company has no second lieutenants. The new unit will "Tiave 11 instead of seven sergeants.

The headquarters company was mustered in during July, 1941. Since that time, Capt. Hack said, there have been numerous applications for enlistment, but it was impossible accept them because the organization was up to full strength for a headquarters unit. As a headquarters and service company the unit's responsibility was primarily that of doing office work, co-ordinating the flow of supplies, 'maintenance of communication and transportation and handling personnel matters in regimental headquarters. As an infantry unit the company will be a fighting organization, with four full platoons.

Training would lay more stress, Hack said, on "extended orders," deployment of troops for actual fighting. The guard's training program includes the school of the soldier, squad and company, interior guard duty, manual of arms, bayonet work, riot tactics, map-reading, sighting and aiming and indoor rifle practice. Drills Once Weekly. Drills are held once weekly on Monday nights, with a non-commissioned officers' school on Thursdays. A public announcement was made in Milwaukee on June 16 that the Rhinelander company was to be enlarged, but until this week-end no instructions to proceed had been received by the company commander.

The instructions came from Col. Scott A. Cairy, Wisconsin state guard executive officer. His letter to Capt. Hack said, in part: "You can proceed to enlist the necessary personnel to bring your unit up to 60 men, and you are further authorized to add two second lieutenants and one medical officer, a captain.

When you have completed the job, you will then be assigned to a battalion and a regiment. "I fully appreciate that you will experience no difficulty in accomplishing your mission in the reorganization of your unit. I want you to know that I further appreciate the fine service you have rendered as commanding officer of your headquarters and service company. You are doing a very splendid job." NYA Trainees Are Given Praise Ten Rhinelander youths, and other young men from Wisconsin trained by the NYA centers throughput the state and sent to Seattle to be placed in war work, have been complimented on their excellent work and decorum, said a letter to the NYA center here from. Richard F.

Gorman, youth personnel officer, Seattle, Wash. Beqing Aircraft company and the Bremerton navy yard are actually competing for the privilege of employing NYA trained men, the letter said. "Our shop foremen and instructors have been highly complimentary in their comments on your boys," the letter declared. The Seattle NYA found the men from Wisconsin conforming to all living and training rules which," in some instances, were quite strict because of the large numbers of men involved. The NYA program is one which tries to fit the men to their jobs, orient them to the strange locality.

show them the importance of war work, as well as provide them with food and recreation. "Your boys, and boys from other States are the kind of Americans that react favorably to such a pro- ei'ara," the letter pointed out. No Gas In lost, Put Price Goes Up NEW YORK. June 29 The price of gasoline went up cents a gallon along the eastern seaboard today (Monday), but there were lew stations open where you could buy it at any figure. More and more dealers, their supplies exhausted, were forced to turu away motorists by the hun- 4reds of thousands over the weekend as gas-drought became acufes.

THE ftttlNELAMt)ER (WfS.) DAILY NEWS 500 Expected to Register Tuesday Men 18 to 20 Enroll for Draff Heads State Bar About 500 young men between 18 and 20 years of age are expected to enroll in the fifth selective service registration here tomorrow, Oneida county draft board officials estimated. The estimate, it was said, is based on a stale selective service head- 1 quarters prediction that the. num- i ber would be 40 or 50 per cent of the third registration. About 1.100 men were registered in the third registration last February. Tomorrow's enrollment will be performed at only two registration stations: 1.

The Community room of the Merchants State bank building; and 2. The office of the draft board on the second floor of the Hildebrand Furniture store building. 38-A South Brown street. From 7 A. M.

to 9 P. M. Registration hours will be from 7 a. m. to 9 p.

m. Oscar Kolden, a member of the county draft board, will be chief registrar at the selective service office, where about four registrars will be on duty. Atty. Earl Korth, county selective service appeal agent, will be chief registrar at the Community room, where at least 10 registrars will be working. In charge of making arrange- 100,000 Expected to Register in State MILWAUKEE, June 29 An estimated 100,000 youths in Wisconsin who are 18 and 19 years old or have become 20 since Dec.

31 will register for seleclive service tomorrow in the fifth national registration of manpower. One board in Milwaukee county began accepting registrations today. ments for the entire registration is Albert Clausen, draft board chairman. Required to register are all men who attained their eighteenth or nineteenth birthdays on or before June 30, 1942, or their twentieth birthdays after Dec. 31, 1941, or on or before June 30, 1942.

It has been estimated that about 3,062,000 youngsters will be enrolled throughout the United States. The Tuesday listing will give 'the gov- ATTY. A. J. O'MELIA Rubber Collection In County Now At 100-Ton Mark Rubber collections in Oneida county reached 100 tons at noon Saturday, George Makholm, county rubber salvage chairman, announced today.

This amounts to 11.8 pounds per person, figured on the 1940 census. One week ago the county had collected 5.3 pounds per person. Woodruff and Minocqua contributed 28 tons, and. Three Lakes collected nine tons. The rest of the rubber came from Rhinelander and rural areas.

Makholm said the rubber salvage committee feels the drive is proceeding "quite successfully" but that much rubber in rural areas is still uncollected. He also urged resort owners to sell the rubber which serves as buffers on their boat docks. All conversation wardens, game wardens, and town chairmen are asked to remind anyone with scrap rubber about their homes or farms to take it to a filling station or call an oil company to send a truck for it. Every person in the county is requested to look over his basement, Atty. A.

J. O'Melia President of State Bar Association Atty. A. J. O'Melia, of Rhinelander.

senior partner in the law firm of O'Melia and Kaye, is president of the State Bar Association of Wisconsin. He takes office now, although he was elected last year under revised association by-laws which permit the election of a president one year in advance. He succeeds Walter W. Hammond, of Kenosha. Richard T.

Reinholdt, of Stevens Point, was elected president for the 1943-44 term during the association's annual convention which ended in Madison Saturday. The election was by mail ballot. A. W. Kopp, of Platteville, William E.

Fischer, of Stevens Point, and Frank T. Boesel, of Milwaukee, were elected to the committee on rules, practice and procedure, and Gilson G. Glasier, of Madison, was re-elected secretary. Atty. O'Melia, who was chairman of the association's civil rights committee, gave a report on the activities of his group at the convention's Saturday morning session.

Atty. Leonard F. Schmitt, of Merrill, was named to the board of governors of the Sixteenth judicial circuit, of which Oneida county is a part. JUNE 29, 1042 War Bond Quotas FOR JULY and May War Bond Scoreboard 38 States Top Quota; 10 States and District Columbia Fall Shott (J ane Sales to be published soon) Slnle Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Moy I Quota Above or Jclow May Quoin Dist. Columb a 6,260,000 Florida Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachuse Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada N.

Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico 7.881,000 5,285,000 3,787,000 0 nnn 2,945,000 5,079,000 61,687,000 6,840,000 26,534,000 2,657,000 9,842,000 9,797,000 3,375,000 84,925,000 18,800,000 15,000,000 8,073,000 9,504,000 8,623,000 6,364,000 13,535,000 46,144,000 39,466,000 19,580,000 5,343,000 27,827,000 3,222,000 7,235,000 1,038,000 3,260,000 35,247,000 1,771,000 1,966,000 3,556,000 41,225,000 4,327,000 16,518000 1,649,000 5,958,000 6,716,000 6,439,000 2,208,000 52,227,000 14,910,000 13,870,000 5,290,000 6,177,000 5,875,000 4,146,000 8,392,000 28,738,000 26,240,000 12,574,000 3,698,000 18,713,000 2,166,000 4,590,000 692,000 2,168,000 22,889000 1,186000 3.6 5.9 1,358,000 2,682,000 40,011,000 3.0 4,086,000 13,228,000. 1,861,000 6,179,000 5,794,000 5,365,000 1,451,000 49,300,000 10,926,000 9,000,000 4,617,000 5,558,000 4,944,000 3,295,000 9,079,000 28,771,000 21,647,000 11,657,000 2,905,000 17,075,000 2,785,000 3,286,000 581,000 1,896,000 26,727,000 1,055,000 7.6 .1 7.9 9,6 New York No. Carolina North Dakota Ohio i Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Utah Vermont Virginia Washington W. Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Alaska Canal Zone Hawaii Puerto Rico 1,000 12,153,000 3,112,000 55,151,000 8,855,000 8,865,000 81,050,000 6,936,000 4,320,000 2,464,000 33,677,000 2,879,000 2,188,000 12,698,000 13,415,000 6,111,000 19,265,000 1,519,000 738,000 321,000 8,439,000 296,000 Mar Snles May! Quoin 8,190,000 2,059,000 35,899,000 5,919,000 5,676,000 53,514,000 4,404,000 3,097,000 1,731,000 6,484,000 22,479,000 2,057,000 1,449,000 9,092,000 11,082,000 4,062,000 12,280,000 984,000 492,000 Above or Jelaw Mny (Juotn 5,889,000 1,393,000 31,789,000 5,389,000 9,8 000 1.2 53,814,000 .6 5,352,000 2,453,000 1,239,000 5,141,000 18,594,000 1,201,000 1,205,000 8,965,000 7,581,000 4,106,000 1.1 11,977,000 2.5 1,003,000 1.9 Virgin Islands 16,000 (No Report) Unallocated distributed by States. Total 198,000 (No Report) 5,985,000.

992,000 183,000 214,000. 9,000 Paragraphs ernment a record of every man be-1 attic, arid garage once more to make tween 18 and 65 years of age, a total certain that no scrap rubber is over- of abojut 43,000,000 persons. Not Liable for Service. Under amendments to the original selective service act, the army may call'in those in the 20-year-old The 18- "and 19-year-olds, however, are not presently liable for service; although it might be necessary to call them later. President Roosevelt has indicated that he will decide in a few months whetfcer to recommend that congress again amend the draft law to allow induction of the youngest group.

Those registering tomorrow will be asked the same questions as their elders: Name, place of residence and mailing address; telephone number; age in years and date of birth; place of birth, name and address of person who will always know the registrant's whereabouts, employer's name and address and place of employment and business. The 20-year-olds will not figure in a lottery to determine their order of classification. Instead, local boards will segregate their cards by dates of birth and call the oldest first. Man Fined for Being Drunk and Disorderly Adolph Sampson, of Rhinelander, was fined $10 and costs when he pleaded guilty in county court this morning to a charge of being drunk and disorderly on city streets yesterday. When first arraigned Sampson requested permission to consult an The campaign's to end July 1, Makholm said" Rhinelander bulk plants would not be shipping rubber from here until about one week later.

Any person with scrap rubber to sell after July 1 may still bring it to the bulk plant where the regular one-cent per pound will be paid. Usable rubber overshoes and boots, single or in pairs, are not to be sold or given for scrap rubber, according to word received by Marvin Beltz, county salvage chairman, from W. E. Simons, secretary of the Wisconsin salvage committee. Permanent exchanges will be set up shortly for pooling such useful articles of clothing in line with the established policy of conserving usable goods.

Lending Libraries Get Swift Service Did you ever wonder where your favorite rental library gets the book you want just 'as soon as you read the review in a magazine? Books in the rental library are sometimes so new that they can't l)e rented out until a certain release date comes from the publisher. The books in Rhinelander's rental libraries are loaned to them by the American Lending library, a nation-wide concern with outlets- in every state in the union. The reason one of the libraries auorney To 4 entering a plea A in Rhinela receives the books short time later however aftel prom is becau of ar- 3v rangement with tf concern which guilly pica nernuts the consulting a was made. The complaint against him was signed by city police. Also filed this morning by police were complaints of traffic violations against two Rhinelander Radtke and Norman Ehlke.

Both were charged with overtime parking restricted districts on June 26. Neither appeared this morning but signified that they would appear later. permits the publishers to send books here directly if an order is placed for it. Average Four Days. All lending libraries in Rhinelander agreed that the average time books are kept out are four days.

When a book lies on the shelf for a few months without being To Academy Jack Meyers, 15 South Pelham street, left last night for Culver Military academy, Culver, Ind. He is enrolled in the academy's summer cavalry school. Muskies Harold Seligmiller, Milwaukee, Harry Holder and Otis Soule each caught 15-pound mus- kies over the week-end. Seligmiller caught his on Bass lake, while the latter two caught them on Lake George. BlacTc Anderson and Roy Wyocky caught 14 black bass yesterday.

The fish were on display in front of the Sport shop. Grocers Chamber of Commerce grocery committee has called a meeting of all grocers who operate a delivery service at 1:30 p. m. The meeting will be to decide upon the number of deliveries per -day. Stores Retail committee of the Chamber of Commerce recommends that stores close on July 4, but remain open on Friday night as usual.

Store Gullickson's music store 'is opening a new branch in Antigo, it was learned today. Visiting "Lefty" Finnerman, formerly a pitcher with the Rhinelander Green Sox of 1923, and 1924, is visiting relatives and' friends in Rhinelander. Lashua, of Rhinelander, known as "the yodeling cowboy," is back on the air waves again. He sings each weekday from 7:15 to 7:30 a. m.

from radio station KDAL, Duluth, Minn. 610 on your dial. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Truman Lashua, Boyce drive.

City members of the city band were requested to be present at a rehearsal in the Memorial building at 7:30 o'clock this evening. The band will give its first summer concert in Pioneer park at 8 p. m. on Thursday. Edward Farber Dies in Chicago Word was received here today of the death in Chicago yesterday of Edward Farber, former second baseman with the Rhinelander Green Sox of 1923 and 1924.

Farber led the Green Sox in hitting both years and had an unusually high fielding average, baseball fans recalled. Greece proved by its stand that no price is too high to pay for human freedom and international George of Greece. sales by quota total May $634,356,000 $600,000,000 1U Secretary of the Treasury, today made public the official War Bond Quotas bv States Kii VJ 8 nation on a Billion-dollar-a-month, basis to aid in meetirur the War bove tablfe a so gives May War Bond sales in the various states in comparison to theMay Quotas! flSne in man' to 22eVerceS be Percentage of qSotas range from7U percent above 6 erc nt 10 the quota in Montana, but-puts the nation as a whole above the lfioo.nnn.nnn AhSi $600,000,000 U.S. 'treasury Department rented, it sent back to the company. By watching the shelves daily, the books which do not move are easily spotted, said one of the libraries.

The consensus of opinion was the books do not lend faster during the tourist season. One reason given was that local residents stop reading during the summer, while another was that tourists read more magazines than books. To keep you from waiting for months for an especially popular book, one of the libraries orders as many as eight or nine A. J. Croniri's "Keys to the Kingdom," has seven copies circulating.

BUYTHEFOXDEIUXE ECONOMY QUART The Famous ENSENADA SLACK SUITS and PLAY DRESSES For Women $2-45 UP Smqrt styles in washable royon, gabardine, cotton. You'll want one for the Fourth. Make your selection now! DeByle Inc. State Week-End Death Toll Rises By the Associated Press Twelve persons lost their lives in Wisconsin accidents from Friday night through Sunday. Five were drowned as warm weather arrived and sent thousands to lakes and beaches for relief.

The dead, not previously reported, were: Mrs. Hazel Pfeffer, 37, Kenosha. Mrs. Alma Hanson, 42, Manitowoc. Infant daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Henry Martinson, Ashland. William Hukkanen, Oulu. Pvt. Elmore O.

Wendland, Appleton. Walter Kaminski, 19, Milwaukee. Reinhold Sunnight, 12, Waterloo Virgil Race, 45, Western Springs, Mrs. Pfeiffer was killed near Kenosha Saturday in an autpmotile accident that resulted in injuries to five other persons. Mrs.

Hanson drowned in Lake Michigan off Manitowoc Sunday when the outboard in which she was riding with her husband, and Miss May Surfas, overturned. Her companions were saved. The five-months old daughter of the Martinsons lost her life when the automobile in which she was riding with her parents plunged off a highway near Washburn into a creek. Hukkanen drowned in Lake Millicent near Iron River when a rowboat in which he.and three others were fishing capsized. Wendland, on furlough from Camp Polk, drowned in the Fox river near Kaijka.una while swimming.

Kaminske slipped into Okauchee lake while walking along the shore and drowned. The Sunnight boy was injured fatally near his home in a collision between his bicycle and an automobile. Race was killed and seven others injured in a two-car collision near West Bend. Traffic deaths reported Saturday included Cornell Cort, 25, of Neopit; Bernard M. Sees, 40, of Racine; Betty Jane Thompson, 18, of Racine, and Jesus Romano, 40, of Sturtevant.

Hack President of Clerk's Association William J. Hack, Oneida county clerk of court, was elected president of the Wisconsin Clerks of Court association at the organization's first convention business session in Eagle River Saturday. Hack last year served as vice president. The association chose Milwaukee as the situ of its 1943 meeting. We are confronted with the most cruel and brutal nations that have ever joined in H.

La- Guardia, mayor of New York City. Belgians, Dutch Reject Nazi Plans LONDON, June 29 an uprising in the event of an Allied invasion of the continent, the German government has been attempting to set up new and stable governments in the Netherlands and Belgium, but has been rebuffed by King Leopold of the Belgians and by Dutch leaders, Belgian government sources said today. Last Minute Rush Expected For Auto Stamps A rush for those $5 motor vehicle tax stamps which are required for the fiscal year beginning Wednes- da post, offices in 'On 61 da today and tomorrow. Up to Saturday, Acting Postmaster Lester M. Byrns reported, only about 240 of the stamps, or $1,200 worth, had been sold.

A majority of persons here, in other words, have left the purchase of the stickers until just before the deadline, although they have been on sale since June 10. The stamps are slightly different than those which have been issued since Feb. 1. All are serially numbered and have spaces on their backs for recording the make, model, serial number and state license number of the vehicle for which they are issued. Gummed on Face.

The stamp is gummed on its face The bureau of internal revenue has suggested that, to guard against loss or theft, the owner, when affixing the stamp, should dampen the windshield rather than the adhesive side of the stamp. This method is recommended to keep the stamp intact. As an additional precaution, it has been suggested also that each motor vehicle owner should make a record of the serial number which appears on the use tax stamp in order that there may be some means of identification in connection with gasoline rationing in the event the stamp should become lost. The bureau pointed out that in the issuance and use of gasoline rationing books, an important identification will be the serial number on the use tax stamp. In areas where gasoline is rationed possession of the stamp will provide one of the necessary mean of identifying the coupon book with the vehicle in obtaining gasoline.

The stamps are on sale at all postoffices in the county during the month of July, but thereafter will be available in this county only at the Rhinelander office. The new stamp will decline in cost 42 cents per month, stamps of new face beins; placed on sale on the first clay of the month. NOTICE Our Many Customers! Beginning July 1,1942 We Will Make ONE DELIVERY ONLY Each Day, Call Your Orders In Between 7:30 and 11 A. Please call in your order as early as possible so we can deliver them between 2 and 4 M. Lader's Store 815 ftiver Street Phone McNary Stops Quick Army Funds Action WASHINGTON, June 29 Asserting that members of the senate were being "pushed around" by demands for unduly hasty consideration of war measures, Minority Leader McNary (R-Ore.) objected today to immediate senate action on a supply bill.

$42,820,000,000 army McNary told his colleagues he was informed that the war department had $35,779,000,000 in appro- iDriations at the present time that had not been committed in any way and remarked that no harm could come from permitting senators to read a'hd study the lengthy bill over night. Sen. Thomas floor manager for the measure, said he urged that the measure be passed before midnight tomorrow, when the fiscal year ends. Quick senate of the legislation; house, had 1 In the meantime President Roosevelt's aid was sought to save the Civilian Conservation Corps as congress worked on several important appropriations bills due to be sent to the White House before the fiscal year ends at midnight tomorrow. The fund of $76,529,000 for the CCC has been the center of recent controversy.

Severe Storms Cause Damage in State NEW HOLSTEIN, June 29 (fP) storms in scattered sections of Wisconsin caused two train derailments and were responsible for heavy damage to highways and farm crops. Eighteen cars of a Green Bay and Western freight train were derailed early today when the road's ti-acks washed out near Manawa. The engine and first five cars crossed the wash out, but the others capsized. A washout of the Milwaukee Road tracks near here yesterday caused the derailment of an engine and 15 freight cars and resulted in serious injuries to Engineer George Button and Fireman Henry Bushev, both of Green Bay. Severe rains and windstorms were reported at several other sections TONIGHT Fresh Smelt 10c Delicious Roast Beef Sandwiches 10c Warren's Rathskeller Bells, Whistles To Signal Opening Of'Whiteouf' Church bells and mill whistles officially will usher in the Retail- ers for Victory 15-minute "whiteout" program to sell war bonds and stamps on July 1 between 12 noon and 12:15 p.

m. The white-out will' begin a month-long program'all over the U. S. to sell billion dollars worth of bonds asked for by Secretary of the 'Treasury -Morgen- thau. All places of business will suspend work for 15 minutes- and devote the time to selling bonds and stamps, announced Lloyd Gullickson, chairman of the Rhinelander Chamber of Commerce retail committee.

Committee members are Herbert Schauder, Norman Banner, Mrs. A. Kop'pa, Joseph die Haugsby, Robert Murphy, Albert Onson, Walter Yankee, and Henry Decker. Gullickson had instructions and with his committee he will distribute them to each merchant informing him of his part in the bond-selling program. Also 'mimeographed by the Chamber of Commerce are announcements to be given to purchasers in all stores asking them' to lake part of their change in stamps.

"The Star Spangled Banner" will be played at noon, but the plan to halt traffic at the corner of Brown and Davenport streets was given up, said Gullickson, because congestion would result. City Manager T. M. Wardwell was still ill -today and could not be contacted for his endorsement of the of Retailers for Victory. of the state.

More than four inches of rain fell here. A dam at Cenlerville in Manitd- woc county gave way under the pressure of rising waters and the Pigeon river north of Sheboygan rose so suddenly it broke up a church picnic and temporarily marooned 30 automobiles of picnickers. Tracks of the Green Bay and Western railroad west of Independence were washed out by the heavy rain and four feet of water over a bridge approach on Highway 53 north of Whitehall forced closing of the road. A portion of the Highway 57 bridge in Chilton was washed out and the road was closed also near Greenleaf by four feet of water. Damage to pea and grain crops in the vicinity was said to be extremely heavy.

SHOWS TAKE TIME OUT FROM YOUR TROUBLES! And Live, Laugh and a some Hilch-Hiker on the Road to Romance! JOEL McCREA VERONICA LAKE Current News NOVELTY "There Ain't No Such Animal" CARTOON "JV-'try picnic" BREVITY "PoHU of the Jungle" J. HAVEJP Wm. DEMAREST EiicBLORE Porter HAIL WiitUn DincUd by Prtilon STURCES Children under 12, IJc Jr. Students, 29c I Adults Incl. Tax Loans That Are Easy to Pay Fort jf.

Some loans are easier to pay for than others if. because interest rates are lower. Come in now discuss your loan problems with us. We'll prob- 4jt ably be able to show you how to solve your culties at lowest cost, with maximum ease. PICK OUT THE LOAN NEED YOU CAN SEE WHAT YOUR PAYMENTS WILL BE JJ i 25 50 75 100 125 150 200 250 300 2 paymenti 12.97 25.94 38.91 51.88 64.79 77.70 103.51 129.01 154.51 4 Payments 6.65 13.29 19.94 26.58 33.20 39.79 52.97 65.98 78.93 6 Jaymettts 4.54 9.08 13.62 18.15 22.67 27.16 36.J3 44,97 53.75 8 Payments 3.49 6.97 10.46 13.95 17.41 20.85 27.72 34.47 41.15 10 payments 2.86 5.71 8.5? 11.43 14.26 17.07 22.68 28.18 33.60 12 payments 2.44 4.87 7.31 9-75 12.16 14.56 19.33 23.99 28.57 Rhinelander Finance "Let Home Folks Be Your Loan Folks" South Stevens Street to Postolfice.

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About The Rhinelander Daily News Archive

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