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Janesville Daily Gazette from Janesville, Wisconsin • Page 2

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Janesville, Wisconsin
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2
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PAGE TWO. JAiNhJSVILLE DAILY DECEMBER 7, 1954. WIS. Worker Injured lOBITTTARIES by Bale of Steel jWrs. H.

A. Kellberg Footville Crash $75 Burglary iWestlund to Direct Massed Choir of Lewis W. Wisby, '19, of 404 Lawrence escaped without' serious injury Monday afternoon' when he was pinned between a bale of steel and rear of a truck while he was working in the Cohen Brothers Kalz salvage warehouse near McKinley and S. River streets. Wisby was taken to Mercy Hospital in the city and mained there overnight for observation.

It was reported today that revealed no bone fractures and he was expected to leave the hospital sometime today. It was reported that Wisby was helping to unload bales of steel when one bale weighing pounds pinned him against truck. 1,500 the Drivers Collide as They Watch Disabled Truck Watching activity around a dis- jburg. Franklin and Ralph, both ofj Edgerton. The funeral will be at 2 p.m.

in the Cummings-Edi' son-Olson Funeral Home, the Rev. James Saunders officiating. Burial will be in the Cooksville Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home. Dispute to lury at La Grange Brings Term 1,000 Voices in Carol Concert Here The puzzle of unraveling the blame for an accident on a rural' road near Footville Feb.

1952 in which a half-dozen per.sons were ELKHORN Raymond J. Gla- injured wiU be a Circuitizewski, 18, Chicago who pleaded Court jury soon. Trial of cases in-jgu'lty to breaking and entering Mrs. Mathia Bjomstad EDGERTON Mrs. Mathia Bjornstad, 94, who lived with her daughter, Mrs.

Anna Smithback, Rte. 2, Deerfield, died in Stoughtonijuiy Hospital Monday. Bom in Norway Sept. 2, 1860 she i road. volving Arthur W.

and Agnes Flynn and Mr. and Mrs. Norval Lund and their three children was started Tuesday morninf before Judge Harry S. Fox. In preliminary statements to the Mrs.

Flynn was accused jdriving on the wrong side of the and Lund was accused of and larceny Nov. 26, was sentenced to Green Bay Reformatory by Judge Roscoe Luce in Walworth County Court Monday. He wiU serve one to three years on the first count and. one month to one year on the second, the sentence to run concurrently. Glazewski was captured after a WILLIAMS BAY Mrs.

H. A. Kellberg, 89, died Monday in her home on Geneva street following a long illness. abled truck, a Clinton driver to the United States in 1888 to see a slow moving car in front of him Monday evening and rammed into the rear of it. Cecil Shockley, 55, Rte.

3, Clin spent most of her life in the area of Utica. Her husband preceded her in death. Surviving are three sons, Olaf, of Rte. 4, Madison, William, of Edgerton and Carl, of Stoughton; four daughters, Hilda Dawe and Nora Rue, both of Madison, Clara Strand, Rte. 3, Cambridge and Anna Smithback, Rte.

2, Deerfield; several grandchildren and grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m. A native of Hydv, Sweden, shelfrWay West Koshkonong Lu' theran Church, the Henry Thompson officiating. BUfial will in the church cemetery. use of liquor prior to the manhunt which ended in dent in which the Flynn and Lund cars collided.

Roy Berg and Louis Gage are appearing for the Flynns and Ernest P. Agnew for Lund and his The accident happened on the Valley road as Lund drove his car over a hilltop and encountered the Flynn car. Mrs. Agnes Flynn, 28, first witness of the day, testified that she Williams Bay and winters in St. Petersburg, excspt for the past six years, when they have lived here.

Mr. and Mrs. celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary last January. Surviving are her'husband; three of Plainfield, N. Her- ton, told deputies that he was trying to figure out what was going on at the Highway 14-City 14 traffic east of Janesville and failed to see the car driven by Herman G.

Hass, 51, Rte. 1, Janesville. Hass, traveling north of Highway 14, was also watching the activity, he said. The object of their attention was a large semi-tank trailer which had come unhooked from the tractor that was pulling it. Flashing red lights on squad cars parked nearby and red flares on the roadway caught the attention of both car drivers.

The squads had been sent out to direct traffic around the disabled morning, truck. The tractor that had been pulling the tanker broke down and another was sent from Janesville, but as the driver started up it was found that a fifth wheel which couples the trailer to the tractor had not been fastened and the front of the trailer dropped down to the highway. A heavy wrecker was needed to couple the two units. living in was married to H. A.

Kellberg on Jan- 26, i 1889, and they lived In Oak "ends may call at the Ruben Tel- untii his retirement from business. Funeral Home after 7 this Later they spent their summers Omroy Isaac Former Edgerton resident, Omroy Isaac, 65, World War I veteran, died Sunday at his home In Truth or Consequences, N. Mr. Isaac moved to New Mexico 20 years ago. Born in Wisconsin Dec.

13, 1888, man, of Oak Park, 111., and married Effie La Fleur in 1920. of Maywood, 111., and a daughter, Surviving are his wife; two sis- Mrs. Allen Hintz, Williams Bay. Iters, Mrs. Mary Chamberlain, Har- The funeral will be at 2 p.m.lvard.

111., and Mrs. Gertrude Net- Wednesday in the North Freedom; one brother. rick Funeral Home, Lake Geneva, with burial in East Delavan Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight and on Kohler Co. Moves lo Delete Part oi Complaint KOHLER, Wis.

struck Kohler Co. said today it had filed a motion to strike out portions of an amended complaint against the firm by the National Labor Rela-' tions Board. Lyman C. Conger, attorney for the company where Local 833 of the tFEW-CIO has been on strike since April 5, declared the amendments were "vague and all-inclu- cwiclusions couched in inflammatory terms." The original NLRB complaint accused the firm of failure to bargain in good faith. The amended complaint said the company was "engaging in a course of surface bargaining," was unreasonably delaying and interrupting negotiations and was "demonstrating an irrevocable purpose to frustrate and defeat the statutory goals of collective bargaining." The company said today the allegations are mere conclusions with no facts stated to support them.

Mrs.IohnPohl John Pohl. 80, a resident of the Richmond Whitewater area most of her life, died Monday evening in the Delavan Rest Home where she had been a patient since Friday. She had been in failing health for five years. Mrs. Pohl, the former Anna Wendorf, was born in Germany July 26, 1874, the daughter of August and Bertha Wendorf.

She came to the United States with her parents at 10 years of age, the family settling in the Richmond-Whitewater area. For 52 years following her marriage to John Pohl she lived on the Pohl homestead farm in Richmond which she and her husband piirchased. Mr. Pohl died in 1948. Surviving are two sons, Vem and Ernest, both of Delavan; grandchildren; one sister, Mrs.

Edward Bellman, Whitewater; two brothers, Edward Wendorf, Richmond, and Fred Wendorf, Milton. One daughter died in infancy. Mrs. PoJjI was a member of the English Lutheran Church of Delavan and a charter member of its Ladies Aid Society. The funeral will be at 1:30 p.m.

Thursday in the English Lutheran Church here, the Rev. O. C. Thusi- us officiating. Burial will be in Richmond Cemetery.

Friends may call at the O'Brien and Betzer Funeral Home from 2 to 9 p.m. Wednesday. Gordon Isaac, Edgerton. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Friday in Edgerton Methodist Church, the Rev.

Paul Smith officiating. American Legion and VFW posts will conduct the graveside service in Fassett Cemetery. Friends may call at the Reuben Tellefson Funeral Home Friday morning. a corn field near Whitewater. In a statement given to Walworth County authorities, Glazewski admitted burglarizing a La Grange service station of J75 in merchandise and change on Nov.

24. He also told officers that since August he had stolen 35 cars and broken into 25 others. While the FBI reported no previous record of convictions, charges tell her husband, who was at work in a field, that she was on her way to Footville. Agnew told the jury that he would prove that she had driven onto the wrong side of the road to talk to her husband, and was attempting to get back in the right lane of travel when the collision happened. Mrs.

and Mrs. Lund and three of their six children claim injuries in the accident. Both sides are suing each other, alleging negligence, and their cases have been combined for trial purposes. On the Jury jre Mildred Hiller, 1326 Highland Margaret Oliver. 937 Blaine Ruth Waldman, 302 S.

Second Carl Redenius, 902 Reilly, 1418 Magnolia Harry Mullen, 1145 Milton Janesville; Ronald Dougan, Martin Kongberg, John Stanton, Beloit; Bemice Olsbye, Milton Junction, Nancy Kidder, Milton; and Eugene Reilly, Rte. 4, Janesville. ty and in Illinois on transporting stolen cars. His 15-year-old companion, captured in Woodstock, is still being held in Illinois. Prof.

Bernhardt H. Westlund, head of the Milton College School of Music and well known area choral director, will direct the 33 choirs participating in the program of traditional Christmas music to be presented in Janesville Sunday evening, according to an announcement made today by the local Junior Chamber of Commerce, sponsor of the event. Organized by the Jaycees and area churches to promote the theme "Keep Christ in Christmas, the public singing by the huge chorus of almost 1,000 voices will take place at 8 p.m. in front of the Janesville Public Library opposite Courthouse Park. Richard Rosenberg, chairman of ithe program committee, said the massed singing will be preceded by carolling by individual choirs.

Each participating group has been! assigned an area of the city "Beautifiil Saviour, it will carol from 7:15 p.m. to, 7:45 We Have Heard on High," PROF. B. H. WESTLUND p.m.

The program of singing in front 'of the library will include: Come, All Ye Faithful," "The First Noel," Little Silent Night," Cbme. Oome Immanueli" and "Away in a Manger. Janesville groups participating in the event are: Junior and senior choirs of First Lutheran Church, Congregational Church, Assembly of God Church, St. William's Roman Catholic Church, choir of the Mercy Hospital School of Nursing, First Christian Church, Presbyterian Church, High School Chorus, High School Girls' Glee Club, Seventh Grade Choir, senior and junior choir of St. Mary's Roman Catholic church, St.

John's Lutheran church. Church of Christ and Parker Pen Co. Chorus; Evangelical United Brethren Church, junior and senior choirs of. First Baptist Church, Wisconsin School for the Visually Handicapped, Mt. Calvary Lutheran Church, Shrine and Eastern Star choire, St.

Patrick's Roman Catholic Church, and Barbershop Quartet Chorus. Area groups participating in massed singing are: Seventh Day Adventist Church, Milton Junction; Milton Junction Methodist Church; McFarland Lutheran Church, McFarland, Afton Community Church; members of the Evansville High School jChorus, and Rock Prairie United Church. Dystrophy Drive Exceeds lUKX) Janesville firemen have collected more than $1,000 for the Muscular Dystrophy Fund, it was announced today by Merritt Brown, Husband Material Is More Plentiful in North, Gals MINNEAPOUS m- girls are looking for husbands in Wisconsin, they would da well to go as far from Milwaukee as possible. Dr. A.

F. Wileden, rural soci- uuuuucu luuay uy lYnriiiii professor at the University local chairman. All details of thejof Wisconsin, offered the advice in drive will be concluded Wednes-a talk at the annual meeting of day, he announced. Midland- Cooperatives, Inc. Most spectacular of the Dr.

Wileden said that in Wiscon- woicott ADiga raising methods employed by i sin's-Bayfield county there are 134 Klaenolia firemen in this drive was the boys'to every 100 girls. He said service offered Saturday at county shows 206 youths Mrs. Marvin Edgar BRODHEAD Mrs. Marvin Edgar, 48, died suddenly Monday night in her home here. The former Frances Smith, daughter, of Mr.

and Mrs. Frank Smith, was born May 23, 1906, in Janesville. She was married to Arthur DeVoe, who died. She was married to Marvin Edgar Oct. 4, 1934.

Surviving are her husband; four sons, George DeVoe, Brodhead, Brodhead, Sanford DeVoe, Beloit, Gerald and Thomas Edgar, at home; two sisters, Mrs. Harold Chamberlin, Boyd. and Mrs. Mauerman, Beloit, and a brother. CUfford Smith.

The funeral will be at 3:15 p.m. Thursday in the Newcomer Funeral Home, the Rev. J. C. Robertson officiating.

Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Wednesday evening. Girl Dies in Home Fire AUGUSTA iB-X small rural home seven miles northwest of this Eau Claire county community went up in flames early today bringing death to a Jjyear-old girl. Virginia Naus, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Alfred Naus, was the state's third young fire victim in less than 24 Her parents and three other children escaped from the unexplained blaze. Firemen were exploring the ashes today for the remains of the missing girl. Two-year-old Richard Masko and his sister, Carol Jean 1, lost their Mrs. Theo. J.

Daleiden Mrs. Theodore J. Daleiden, 66, the former Clara Keegan, died at 5:25 p.m. Sunday in Holy Cross Hospital, CJiicago, following a heart attack suffered on Nov. 26.

She had been in failing health for the past year. Mrs. Daleiden was a frequent visitor to Janesville, having many relatives and friends in the Janesville and Beloit areas. Mr. Daleiden died April 14, 1949.

Surviving are two sons, Francis Villa Park, Stanley Chicago; six grandchildren and a brother John Morton Grove, 111. Services will be held at 11:30 a.m. Thursday in St. Mel's Catholic Church, 4300 W. Washington Mrs.

Augtista Fredericks LAKE GENEVA Funeral services were held today in the Habecker-Derrick Funeral Home for Mrs. Augusta W. Fredericks, 75, who died Monday in the Silver Lake Rest Home. The Rev. George Bishop officiated.

The body was removed to Milwaukee for cremation. Mrs. Fredricks was born Jan. 25. 1871, in New Jersey.

Surviving are tvro sons, Edward of Houston, and H. W. Fredericks, Hinsdale, a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Kreutter Denver, 13 grandchildren and 7 great-grandchildren. lives Monday when fire destroyed Chicago.

Burial will be in Mount their home in the town of Hines Carmel Cemetery. Friends may in Douglas county. Iranian Royalty in U. S. for Visit NEW YORK (ffi Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi of Iran and his queen are in the United States for an "informal visit" scheduled to last until Feb.

9. They arrived by plane yesterday. Queen Soraya said the Shah plans to have "a medical checkup and possibly to undergo some medical treatment." 5308 W. Belmont Chicago. Ward Graves EVANSVILLE Ward Graves, 80, died last night in Stoughton Community Hospital.

The son of Alfred and Elizabeth (Continued from Page 1) was about to assume the post of, prime minister, the occupation purged him from public life. Yoshida took over for a short term. Dr.Sheppard Crushed by Loss, Claim CLEVELAND im Dr. Samuel Sheppard collapsed in tears when told that his wife was dead, his brother. Dr.

Richard Sheppard, testified today. The witness said he was one of the first to arrive at his brother's home on the morning of the murder, July 4. Trial of Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard on a charge of committing that murder is in its eighth week.

Dr. Richard said he hurried to the bedroom, thinking the victim, Marilyn Sheppard, might still be alive. However, he quickly determined that she had been killed. Returning to the den downstairs, Dr. Richard told the jury, he found his brother sitting in a red leather chair.

He said he asked Dr. Sam about his injuries and then said: "Marily is gone. There is nothing I can do." With these words, he said, "Sam slumped on the floor on his face and began to cry, and he was moaning 'Oh, no, my God, Dr. Richard also testified about his brother's son. Chip, now 7.

He said he had great difficulty rousing the boy, and that he was "very, very groggy" when members of the family took him from the house. The defense presented Dr. Richard as the third witness in its attempt to 'discredit the state's charge that Dr. Samuel Sheppard's motive for murder arose from his relations wth other women. Birmingham Burkheimer Shell station.

Off duty firemen operated the station all day and collected all the profits for the fund. They washed 58 automobiles and with sales of gasoline and other services collected about $280, Brown announced. He said some motorists made open donations, others; paid as much as $1 a galloln for gasoline while some customers were very liberal in tipping for services. One customers ran out of gasoline at the edge of the city and had to be pushed to the sta-1 tion, where he had the empty tank filled to capacity. Firemen reported that approximately $100 in donations was re-j ceived at the fire station, about $145 was collected at booths in downtown stores and the porch- light campaign last Wednesday and Thursday nights produced about $550.

Donations will l)e accepted at the fire station through Wednesday to complete the drive, Brown announced. George S. Malsch LYONS Funeral services were held this afternoon for George Malsch, 85, who died Saturday tO LlOSe Lakeland Hospital. Burial was Hudson Cemetery here. Mr.

Malsch was born on the family farm south of Lyons Dec. 28, 1868, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Malsch. He married Carla Von der Heide, Feb.

1, 1908 and they farmed near here for many years. Surviving are a son, Gordon, and call at the Mueller Funeral Sara, both at home; a brother, Rudolph, Lake Geneva, and three granddaughters. Half-Day Due to Curriculum Parley Janesville public schools will be closed Wednesday forenoon while teachers attend the second curriculum conference of the school Regular afternoon classes will be held, however. Teachers of grades from kindergarten through 6th will meet Washington School and will continue their work in grade group Harold D. Campbell SOUTH services were held in Belvidere this afternoon for Harold D.

Campbell, Appleby Graves, he was born'35. South Beloit, who died March 17, 1874, in Evansville. Heyday in the Winnebago County Hos-lboth of Belvidere. was married to Maude Clough Nov. pital.

He had been ill a week with 15, 1896. She died several years polio. ago. I A native of Beloit, he was edu- Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. cated in the Clinton schools and Edith Dunker, Muscatine, Iowa; married at Capron in 1951 to years of age per 100 girls.

In Milwaukee county, things go into reverse, with only 89 potential husbands for every 100 girls. Dr. Wileden said both young men and women are quitting farms for the urban areas, but girls are far ahead of the boys in migrating. Dr. Wileden said it was no longer possible to recognize farm folk by dress or the way they talk be- Icause they the city residents shop in the same stores, read the same newspapers and magazines and watch the same radio and television programs.

Kimmel also is critical of investigations which opened his and conduct to questitNi. The congressional probe, he argues, was controlled by Democrats, de- a confused picture and stifled testimony "damaging to the administration." The admiral says among witnesses he was prevented from calling was Adm. WiUiam F. Halsey. He cites a letter in, which Halsey describes him and Short as the country'! "greatest military martyrs" and hits their treatment as "outrageous." Rotary Governor Invites Applicants for Scholarship Applicants are being sought for the Paul Harris scholarship, offered to an outstanding Wisconsin stu- dent, according Rotary 's district luade-'' Public fmprovemenis Ptogiam Is Proposed CHICAGO city en-' gineering board of review has proposed a five -year public improvements program totaling more than 260 million dollars.

Streets, superhighways, sewers; street lighting and traffic signals would account for most of the improvements. About 65 million dollars ii planned to be spent in 1955. (Continued from Page 1) were kept from him, Kimmel says. Had he been properly alerted, he adds, he might have been able to ambush the Japanese ttrikingi force en route to Hawaii. "I would have gone to sea with the fleet and endeavored to keep it in an intercepting position at sea," he says.

governor, Robert MacMaster, Beloit, who talked to the local Rotary Club Monday. The local club was one of the first to support the fund for foreign study, which now totals almost $2,000,000. MacMaster outlined the influence of Rotary's intematiinal program through the annual scholarships under which students from abroad' have been brought to Wisconsin for a year's study and Wisconsin students have been provided with funds for study in other countries. Applications for both scholarships close Dec. 31, 1954, MacMaster said.

"Dick Olson, liow studying in Stockholm, Sweden, Is creating friends for the United States," he T. -J Kansas Gty, Doctor's Speaking of Rotary commumty invention for reducible rupture is service, MacMaster related how he proving so successful, an offer is had called upon a hoy who had' been in trouble here and who now is serving a sentence in a Missouri reformatory. "Instead of putting meetings to plan how to improve language experiences in the ele- mentaiy schools. The program is under the general direction of Miss Margaret Chenoweth, with the following erving in leadership roles: Kindgergarten, Mrs. Gertrude lowing serving in leadership roles: Krueger and Miss Phyllis Vesperman; first grade, Mrs.

Mary Saenger and Mrs. Kathryn Hudek; second. Miss Helen Forbes and Mrs. Alice Shade; third. Miss Clarice Bergerson and Miss Ruth Vigerust; fourth.

Miss Lucilc Haberman and Miss Nordis Soley; fifth. Miss Adelaide Hewitt and Miss Edna Anderson; sixth, Mrs. Margaret Reuss and Miss Delilah Pember. The teachers for grades 7 through 12 will meet in work sessions at the high school. They will continue their planning for the 1955-56 school year, when the present junior-senior high school will house grades 7, 8 and 9, and the new senior high school will house the upper grades.

the city, died Monday at his home. Dr. Reihl mantained an office in his home and was active until his death. He was a licensed pharmacist for more than 65 years. Early in his career he operated a drug store and while in business there he attended and graduated from Milwaukee Medical College.

What a Buy! N0R6E TIME-UNE AUTOMATIC WASHEI Wanted 1000 Ruptured Men to Hake This Test $23500 Oaly tow DOWN PAVMINT-IASY mm him in a training school under supervision, he is serving a 5 -year sentence in a heavy security institution," he said. "When I was there he had been in solitary confinement for a minor infraction of rules. That boy needs help and we would be giving it to him in He told how Rotary's youth program was helping young people and how the international program is increasing vinderstanding, 72 new clubs organized since last July, bringing the total to $8,381. Howard Gage Jr. was introduced as the new Boy of the Month.

Members of the club plan to attend the installation of the new Rotary club at Lake Mills Tuesday night. how being made to give everyonel Years-ahead features: jwho will test it a Truss at no' Time-Line Automatic cost. This Invention has no leg thorough wave-action washinf: straps, no elastic belts, or leather bank It holds rupture up and in Is comfortable and easy to wear Come ml See it demonstrated! easy After using it many report entire satisfaction. Any reader of this paper may test the Doctor's Invention for 30 and receive the separate $3.50 Titiss at no cost If you are not entirely satisfied with the it, but be sure to keep the $3.50 Truss for your trouble. If you are ruptured just write the Physician's Appliance 7698 Koch 2906 Main Kansas City, for their trial offer.

SETZER ELECTRIC IS N. Academy Si Ph. 4080 Active Physician Dies at Age oi 84 MILWAUKEE iB-Dr. Fred W. Riehl, 84, a practicing physician here for more than 50 years and the oldest licensed pharmacist ir ton; and three sisters, Mrs.

Elna Lynd, Whitewater, Mrs. Wanda Adamson and Mrs. Audrey Perkins, son, James, of Muscatine; three grandchildren and a sister, Mrs. Robert Spencer, Riverton, Wyo. The funeral will be at 2 p.m.

Thursday in the Allen Funeral Virginia Van Voorhees, who survives. Others surviving are his parents, Floyd and Josephine 'son, Duane, a stepson, Danny, and stepped aside for a Hill Cemetery. Friends may and then was named again at the funeral home. October 1948. The diminutive, ci-, gai leader has run Japan Home, the Rev.

W. S. daughter, Kathleen, all at home; Magnolia Advent Christian Church, I brothers. Garth and Ronald officiating. Burial will be in Ma-'of Belvidere, and Frank of Clin- ever since.

But he made many enemies. His fellow conservatives call him a dictator who refuses to consult them on his policies. The Socialists call him reactionary. (Continued from Page 1) fact been following the policies advocated by your predecessor subcommittees that as stated in the Douglas report of January 1950 in language reaffirmed in the Patman report of June 1952 'appropriate lames Young STOUGHTON-James Young. 49, farmer in Union Township, died suddenly Monday at his home.

The son of Thomas and Emily Young, he was born in the Town of Porter. He attended Edgerton High School and served in World War n. He was formerly a member of the Stoughton National Guard. He was married to Mary Chambliss Jan. 17, 1947, at Evansville.

Surviving are his wife; two sons, James Jr. and William, at home; Recreation Calendar (All in Hiph Srhool unJesa otherwise staled) Taettdfty. 7:30 p.m.—Camera 7:30 p.m.—BaskelbaU—WUson Dec. 3:30 p. 3:45 p.

Valley, 3:45 p. 7:30 p. m. 7:30 p. GRAIN ChiraKo rawh Grain CHICAGO (TV-Whoat: Nunc Corn: No.

1 yellDiv 1.53n-56'4; No. 3, 1.53-54'-.; No. 4. 1.42i,i-47: No. 5.

3.4ii?i: sample grade 1.20. Oats: No. 1 while Barley nominal: Mailing choice 1.30-52; teed 1.1019. Semi vigorous, and coordinated daughters. Phyllis and Shirley, tary, credit and fiscal policies''at home; two sisters.

Mrs. Bert should 'constitute the government's Benson, Stoughton. and Mrs. C. I.

primary and principal method' of Beloit: five brothers, promoting full employment and Harold, of Stoughton, Charles, of economic instability." Cambridge; Lawrence, of Ost- pneumatic tires TRICYCLE 18 INCH $1795 WHEEL I HARHl! 30'2 River St. Dial 7087 PRACTICAL CHRISTMAS PRESENTS I Shine Kits Shoe Trees Shine Racks Shoe BagH Shower Sandals We Have SchoU'g Copeg Shoes WEBER'S Rapid Shoe Repair 15 S. ST. RATS ARE DANGEROUS! fhU menace Arwell's proven metti- ods will rid your buildings and surrounding property of destructive, disease-carrying rats and mice. Every type of property treated inexpensively! You can't afford to for Quick, Efflcitnt Service, Telephone Today! PHONE 2.4954 IR EG 0 by DM nimrion l-f -WriOor WMial for WMy 9 Jlidini cirf pttmanwl wjilf Hion iwviet tywythini 4m iit tXiMDl, trwiMtfroo pocktt I500 Mplt lor fms, uiAmdptntgi.

ptfnumnl lou. InMmlHiM'tCM house koys. HAMLIN'S Cameras and Luggage On Hie Milwaukee St. Bridge.

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About Janesville Daily Gazette Archive

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