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The Rhinelander Daily News from Rhinelander, Wisconsin • Page 6

Location:
Rhinelander, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

tes dumped showers find tfftmderslswns en scattered areas ifiday. 'The heaviest rainfall was con titrated In ttte western part of state with Mather, in Juneau "tSbWttty, reporting Itt inches In tjlft 24.houf period ending at today. La Crosse had lJ7. ifthes, Grafvmow 1.02 aftd West SMem l-inch. Slack River Pails rleorde4 -70 of 'wch and Eau (tiaire lOthet amounts: ttelaffeld .70, Grantsburi .54, Sheboygan .60, Shilton Lone Rock .31, fin .27, Waiisau .26, Kenosha Qreen Bay .05 and Milwaukee .28.

Rhinelander had only .03 of ah Hich of fain early Wednesday before the sun came out bright and the mercury up to a high of degrees in the early afternoon, then the mercury started falling tfnd touched 76 at p.m. 'before Kitting an overnight low of 49 today. Rain early this morning measured nearly half an inch fiy 8 o'clock and more than an ftich was recorded before noon today. district ranger station here Said the heaviest rainfall in the frea during the early morning Sours was 1.02 inches at Kofck: falls fire tower, midway between. Merrill and Tomahawk.

Other fiainfall at 8 a.m. today included .86 of an inch at Tomahawk, .60 It Merrill, .26 at Crandon, .23. at £ake Tomahawk, .74 at $re towfcr northwest of Toniaftawk find .79 at Frbrrim tower in South-. Lincoln county. early today ringed from a low of 45 Phil-, lips to 63 at Lake Geneva and Eewaukee, the Associated Press said.

Maximum temperatures Wednesday were in the 70s and 80s o'r near the normals for 1 season. Lone Rock topped the fegs with 84. Park Falls and Phillips were the coolest communities with 73. munion Patrick'! fHB flifWBLANOBH (WTS.) MBWS Iflf fftaJfe ttwi 1 fifsi fltelr StrtWfay at ff.m. the Rhineionder News THE NEW NORTH Published-by the Rhlnelrtidtr Pnb- hbig Company, Jlhlnelander, dally except Sun- Jidayi and -legal Volldayt -at gander, Wla.

Entered as second-class 1 elaffder. Wts. Act rcii Sf March 1, Member of The, Associated Press. fress is entitled Delusively to the Use I6r' repubUcatloh all-the-local 'this "as well as all 'Associated 'Preir newi 'Member of the Inland Daily Prest -Association and the Wisconsin Daib League. Subscription Rates: By carrier, 40 "cents per week; by mail in Oneida, Iron, Lincoln, Laiig- and Price Counties $9 per year, six.months, $2.50 three months; by rnall; $18 per year, $9.25 -sU $4.75 three months; by ''mall ouislde rates on application.

National Advertising tives: Scheerer. and Company, 'cago, and the Northwest Daily Press -Association, Minneapolis. Cliff fftttifKt Sf. and his CWff Jf. and Jackie, Sliver Springs, arrived Sunday to visit his daughter aftd family, the Glen HandriftkS, Cliff Jr.

will remain wrre tot the entire summer. Ftobert. is a patient at Lakeland Memorial Hospital lowing an appendectomy. Accident Count is Month fhe city's traffic accident count for June stands at five today as the result 'a two-Car mishap Wednesday afternoon. The total of accidents is tho lowest for live first half of any month this year.

According 10 police, a car driven by Lawrence M. Wilson, Chicago, struck the open door of a car driv en by FelikvBaudhuin, 834 Thayer in accident at 4:15 p.m. on Thayer St. a i had parked and did not see Wilson approaching from behind Mm when he bpentfd the left front police said. Wilson told police he was unable to turn out far enough to avoid hitting tire open door.

The right front fender of Wilson's car arid the left front door of Baudhuin's were Death Takes Florence Man Louis Sternhagen, 74, resident, for many years, died Tuesday afternoon in the' Crystal Falls Municipal hospl'iaf, following an illness of four days, Mr. Sterhhagen was born Jan, in Germany. He was a retired woods worker. wife, Pho brothers, William and Carl, and Frederick and Henry, of.Florencei two sisters, Charlotte Lindgren, of Kingsford; Mrs. Elizabeth 'Stevens of -Englewood, N.J.

Services will be held at 2 Friday afternoon at the home. The Rev. Henry Juroff be in JFlorence Woodlawh Watch For NORTHLAND TIRE SERVICE At- 1021 Lincoln St. Ride On Qoodyear Tires Other Kind" Two Divorces Granted Here the upper brBnch of Cminty C6tirt here Wednesday afterhoon by Judge Geoffe A. ftfchnrtfs, tiffs charged "cruel aftd inhurtian treatfflont" in both cases, VJctof C.

fevensofi, WootJAiff, won a divorce ffofft Mafy Joy Ev cnson, 80, now Ilviftg In Wauiau. Custody of two ymififBf childl-en, 11 and 12, was awarded to the mother, but two older children, 16 and 20, will live with the father. Evensbn will pay $40 per, month for support of each of the two younger children and $25 per month alimony, fho tJmipIe was married Sept. 29 lit Elkn'tar, Ifl. flnd separated In February, 1960.

Mrs. Alma Ulrlch Van Valken- biirg; 65, won a divorce irom Vornejle Vflft Vnlkett' burg, 50, of Madtson; and was awarded $5 per month alimony, couple was married June 27, 1659, in Ontlda county arid separated in Sludent Affidavit 4 Repealer Is Voted The Senate has voted to repeal a' requirement for nonsubverslve affidavits from college students receiving loans or grants under the 1958 Defense Education Act. Instead, it substituted criminal penalties ranging up to five years Imprisonment. and $10,000, fine for anyone who applies for or receives any payment under the act while he is a member of a subversive organization. Past membership within five years also must be disclosed.

Left unchanged was the law's requirement that any student seeking to qualify must take an oath Of allegiance to this country. The law provides scholarship and fellowship aid to college students. Action on the long-disputed repeal measure came suddenly night as the Senate accepted a compromise amendment by Sen. Winston L. PrOuty The original bill by Sen.

John Kennedy (D-Mass) and others would merely have repealed the affidavit provision. After hours of sharp debate, the sponsors' decision to accept the amendment came so hastily that many senators out of the chamber and missed the voice' vote passing the measure. Sen. Spessard L. Holland (D- Fla), one.

of these, said he wanted to study the revised Version overnight and entered a motion to reconsider. This blocked the bill from going to. the House, Kennedy said he would have preferred the straight repealer, but would go along with the compromise, particularly because he believed it might have a better chance of winning House amon ftgg Services hetf this after ftftn in Mferrtll tffr Hans Lar fi, wfts dfed Sufrdsy at wit home of dmtghtet ift Raelfte A Mfttc of peiMtUfft, he sel ift Meitni ift ISM, werfcin tor the Great NorUiern and the Anson and Oilkey Co. He is letif daujh WrsjMrs. OiarSftee 4 Set af Rivfft Mrs, A.

(Afin Wanish of HScine, (geW CrewtSy ot Iron River flftd Mfs; C. B. (Myttfe Le 2 of Milwaukee; thre tt, Ltttttm of lter of Merrill and filtofi Wausau, a ferpther, 14 grandehll drert and 18 great-grandchildren Budget (or State Colleges Approved MADISON budget for Wisconsin's state col legfes was approved Wednesdaj by" the Board of State College Re gents in a move to meet an esti mated record enrollment of students in September, The funds Were included in the budget approved "by the regent for the year beginning July 1. I includes $9,494,810 in tax fund and is $1,934,000 higher than budget for this year. Eugene- McPhee, director of thi regents' office in Madison, sale the enrollment estimate for 16, 000 students in September com pares with 14,200 enrolled at the colleges during the past year.

The plan also includes $22,655 in faculty salary increases and $409, 500 to cover the cost of hiring 7C additional teachers to meet the larger enrollment. La Crosse is expected to sur pass the mark for the first time. It had 1,805 the past year. Other estimated 'enrollments arc Oshkosh," Eau Claire, 1,879 Platteville, River Falls Stevens Point, Stout Superior, 1,392 White water 1,911. Plane Crash Study Continues Today Investigation of the plane crash which killed two Butler, Wis.

businessmen in Oneida county was being concluded here today by J. Griggs, Chicago, an air safety investigator for the CAB (Civi Aeronautics Board). Griggs visited the spot where the plane Was found Tuesday afternoon after it had been report ed missing since last Friday evening. He also talked with officers of the area who were first on the scene. The crash killed James E.

Wright, 41, and Harland Sanders, 28, who had been enrbute to Eagle River on a fishing trip at the time of the mishap. Griggs' investigation is expected to help determine th'e cause of the crash, Air nude to 1 for all-weather comfort. Get a demdnitratlonl See the Chevy Mystery Show in color Sundays. the Pat Bobne'Chevy Showroom weekly, ABC-TV. why shoultfrtlt yomenjoy THE FEATURES THAT MAKE CHEVY i i It's a cinch to see why Chevrolet is America's biggest seller for 1960, Look at all the fine features you won't find in any other car of the leading low-priced three: FULL COIL SUSPENSION that cushions your ride with coil springs at the rear as well as up the only automatic transmission in Chevy's field that eliminates even a hint of a up to nearly 3,1 inches more entrance height, three inches more front seat width in that ROOMIER BODY BY an EASIER LOADING TRUNK'with a new lower sill and a deck lid that's as much as a foot and a naif wider, Interested? See your dealer soon for a carload of reasons why YOU CAN'T BUY ANY CAR FOR LESS UNLESS IT'S A LOT LESS CARI If we your authorized CheyroUt dealer.

CHEVROLET COMPANY, Inc. Hhinflanilfr tOnst 8-64M Mrs.AlvinSachse Dies Thi; Morning Atvlfl fAttftft Be, 1894 Eagle died at a.m. In St. Mary's Hospital, She, was 55 yeafS did. AflBtoiifh sfle Suffered a heatt eoiHiftjoft fof'B itunVbii- of years, hei- oeatft Was tmeSfjSccfed.

She tfe'as admftteid to the about a.m. today. Mrs. Saehse was betn May 4, 1S05, at Chelsea, Wis, She waS married 'to Alvlft Saohse Oct. 17, 1922, at Medford.

They moved to Rhinelander In 1927. Surviving Ire her three daughters, Mrs. Harold ola) Morey of Rhinelander, Mrs. Leonard (Myrtle) Olson of filK Point, S.t)., attd Mrs. Robert ores) Seidseltlflg, Vista, Calif, i four sons, Ottsta'vo of San Diego, Laurence, Harold and erl of Rhinelander; her mother, Mrs.

Ida Relnke, Rhinelander; six brothers, Albert, ter, Harvey, Paul and Herman Relttke, all of Rhinelander; six sisters, Mrs. Michael (Minerva) Abbate, Mrs. 1 Edward (Bettyj Sartori and Mrs. Tillio (Marie) Araco, all of New York City; Mrs. Albert (Alene) Schmittfranz of Chelsea, Mrs.

Joseph (ttorothy) Miller of Rhinelander and Mrs. Gilbert (Florence) Vosswlnkel of Milwaukee, 29 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Monday in the Carlson Funeral Home, with Dr. W.

H. Wiese officiating. Burial will be in Forest Home Cemetery. body will lie in state from Sunday afternoon until the time of services. Guard Makes Use Of Ideal Weather CAMP MCCOY of Wisconsin's 32nd National Guard Division took advantage of ideal training weather Wednesday afternoon with intensified range firing and field problems.

Brisk winds of the early morning took rain out of the camp area The 13th Evacuation Hospital a separate unit under the com mand of Col. Charles Crumption of Madison, set up a full hospita in the field, complete with opera ting roam. And to keep things moving, the artillery obliged with a supply of simulated patients fo doctors, nurses and medics to process. Meanwhile, squad leaders in command of their small units usec the afternoon for instruction in in filtration tactics linked with sud den strike actions. Brig.

Gen. John.Dunlop of Mil waukee, commander of the divi sion artillery, announced that 'the unit will hold the first forma Ceremony of the summer encampment tonight with a parade and a review. The ceremony opens a weekend display of the Red Arrow divi- ion's training. Legislators and employers of the guardsmen will visit the camp Friday and Gov. "aylord Nelson, the commandei in chief of the division, will review troops in a parade Saturday morning.

Vent rilofititit Fret Sf range Voleci End Market Reports Final New York Stocks. NEW YORK The stock market hustled and bustled without getting anywhere in particu- ar early this afternoon, Selected specialty issues in the spotlight recently continued to gain ground foi; the most part, but slight declines among most of the more conservative stocks left the market irregularly lower on average. Trading was active. Not even the postponement of fresidont Eisenhower's planned rip to Japan seemed to have much effect. Business news capable of spur- ing or depressing the market was absent.

News that industrial Droduction rose last month for Uva irst time since January apparently had been discounted in ad- ance. Some specialty issues slipped jejow their best levels of the day, were ahead 2 and 3 points. 'he overall list showed fractional hanges in bc-th directions, how- ver. Standard Coil, most active stock or two straight days, again Hanged hands frequently with lie price up about 2 points. Electronics had Litton Indus- ries up than 3, Beckman early 2 and General Instrument more than 1.

DuPont, Eastman Kodak, Union 'arbide and American Cyanamid were down better than one. Potatoes, CHICAGO PO- atoes arrivals 157; on track 344; otal U.S. shipments 670; old-r-sup- lies insufficient to quote; -apply moderate; demand slow; market dull to slightly weaker; arlot track sales: California long whites 4.00-4.60; California round eds 3.75; Alabama round reds Butter, CHICAGO Chicago Mer antile Butter steady; eceipts wholesale buy- ng prices unchanged; 93 score AA 92 A 90 56; 89 55Mj; ars 90 89 56. Eggs steady; receipts buying prices un- haoged; 60 per cent or better rade A whites mixed 30Vfe) lediums 27; standards 29; dirties checks Kfin, gs in the doi cateKef's have stopped taming aw strange voiced heafd county Jail. Several days aga dog CfttcHef Oeftrge Helms radioed that heard voices undef the hood of his truck, from the dog pen in the rear and from the sidewalks about town.

Police Chief Ralph Smith said prisoners continually hsard voices calling to them from outside tne dells. The mysterious voices peared when Martin Dwyer, 42, of Soyre, was released after working out a fine- for drunkenness by helping the dog catcher. Police learned Wednesday Dwy er was ventriloquist. Hiawatha Delayed By Bomb Scare MILWAUKEE 'AP)-The Milwaukee Road's Hiawatha passenger train arrived in Milwaukee about "two hours behind schedule from Chicago early today following a bomb scare telephoned to local police. City police officers and Milwaukee and Northwestern Rail- vimy police investigated but found no bomb.

"I have a tip for you," a young voice, apparently male, told the police telephone operator at the Safety at 9:30 a.m. "Some juveniles are planning to ekplode a bomb" along the tracks at Chase Avenue. 1 don't know where. This is just a tip for you." The caller refused to identify himself. Police werp dispatched to the Chase Avenue overpass on Milwaukee's South Side but could find nothing amiss.

The Hiawatha, Train No. 1, was scheduled to leave Chicago at 11 p.m. and arrive in Milwaukee at 12:25 a.m. However, it left about one half hour late and arrived here about two hours behind schedule. Proxmire Raps Funds for Carriers WASHINGTON William Proxmire aircraft carriers for the Navy have been obsolete for blocked plans for quick Senate a.ction on a 40 billion dollar defense money bill.

"It's ridiculous to spend all these millions on a conventional carrier when these became obsolete years ago," Proxmire said Wednesday. "The House knocked out these funds and I think the Senate should do the same." Proxmire's action torpedoed a request by. Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson limit debate the military appropriation, the biggest annual money bill. Without a Party Stuart Symington said Gov.

Nelson A. has beedme "A a party" because of criticism frum his low Republicans. In an address prepared for a luncheon of the Women's Nation' ai Democratic- Glufy Symington a caTfdidftie for tlte presidential ndminatlon said: "Those of us whd have beetl trying to shbw the pe-ople the true course of events under the rent Republican leadership, were joined last week by a new and powerful voifre, "Like a well-placed scalpel, Gov. Rockefeller's statement opened up this administration and laid bare its policies of weakness, of drift, or economic stagnation, of neglect for the aged and the iwdiftiffnee toward fc Tne cfllmoffs we Old Guard flred a volley rf the srVSSte 6feifW, tne erner Ms left ift die of the field, discouraged, a man without a party." The tfew yorft in cent statements, jiart of the Eisenhower admmistralfoft's' program a.nd asked Vice Ffesij dent Richard Nixon spell out his views on key issues. Nixon, in turn, defended the Eisenhower program and stated he had fined his views more clearly than Rockefeller or any of the Demo-' cratic presidential hopefuls.

AfttLfiffe'S f'4'L liquid for 3 ta.8 daVl, Watch iftlff rotate (he MfMtfon. .71 not with JnslaAi.dfVliJI bach from any druggist. Nolei especially for severe FOOT POWDER tie, Roethlnl NOW at beti Drug Company. HERE ARE SOME GIFTS THAT WILL DO IT! Roll King Deluxe, Reg. 23.95, 12" Spoke Wheel, Collapsible, Knee Action Coif Cart 18' 5 Alt Shakespeare Fishing Reels.

OFF Beafn Flasher .95 Large Size, Reg. 2.50 Landing 1" $7.95 Ship Wheel Mahogany Special Airguidc Illuminated Auto 95 Pants, Jacket and Plastic Ram Suits 79 RAPING POS RHINELANDER, WIS. A. BRANDWEIN CO SOFA BEDS MANY STYLES COLORS ARMLESS COVERED ARMS Choose From Liveliest Styles Colors At Only In Attractive Naugahyde (Also Headrest in Naugahyde) 59 95 79 95 Make Hodag Furniture Your Bedding Headuartm! FURNITURE CO. FO Qpu Emy Nlgbt Until ft P- TERMS for just a little less VQU Gtf A 141?.

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About The Rhinelander Daily News Archive

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