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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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lANESVnXE DAILY GAZETTE TUESDAY, WAY 1, 1WJ DDD tor 3 More Cities, 4 Villages OBITUARIES Mrs. H. W. Stark Mrs. Hubbard W.

Stark. 73. Pinecrcst Court. Huntington. W.

a former Janesville resident, died Monday following a long ness. She had lived in Virginia for I eight years. The former Jennie Kirknatrick, Wisconsin Telephone Co. today: au te ro' William and Janet announced plana to provide Crooks Kirkpatnck. was born tionwide direct distance dialing; Grove July-3, 1888 She (DDD) for the Watertown, White- in Rock County schools and water and Fort Atkinson graded school Prom This service will become ef -j 93 sh X'Tr fective with the coming conver- Ra Ltm aAbstract nfd at Watertown and Whirewa-! 1933 was the stc Tnn.

8 Milwaukee orphanage. She 1 1 left Rock County in 1944 and did The DDD network presently ties, a( ni i strat ve work at th8 Uni- together 45 million telephones Thursday at the Westin Funeral Home, the Rev. A. G. Gaurke officiating.

Burial will be in Rock Lake Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home starting Wednesday noon. $50,000 Loss in Farm Fires 45 million coast-to-coast and Canada. Wisconsin, 240 exchanges arc 'able to receive DDD calls. DDD is possible only with station-to-station calls.

This means the calling party is willing to talk to anyone who answers at the receiving end. Person-to-person calls, credit card calls and calls made from coin telephones will continue to be handled by the operator. There will be no contact with the operator on DDD calls for one and two-party customers in Watertown. Tn conjunction with the direct distance dialing facilities, automatic number identification CANI) will be provided for these customers. With it, the calling number is automatically recognized and recorded, without the aid of an operator.

Toll facilities and equipment being installed at Watertown will serve the DDD needs of Watertown, Whitewater and Fort Atkin- abn, along with the communities of Palmyra, Johnson Creek, Reeseville and Mapleton. Ruling Reversed in Schwanke Case The Supreme Court Tuesday reversed a Circuit Court ruling here in the case of Harold Schwanke vs. Glenn Reid on an appeal taken by Donald Kaatz, Madison lawyer, representing Reid. The assault case brought by Schwanke was appealed from a municipal court to the Circuit Court. appeal to the high court was on questions arising out of the change from the lower court to the Circuit Court.

It had been placed on the jury trial calendar, after which an affidavit of prejudice was filed against the judge. Theodore Bidwell, attorney for Schwanke in the assault case later moved for dismissal of the appeal ten months after the calendar was called, alleging that the appellant had failed to set date lor hearing or submit an order for a new judge. One question was whether or not the original judge properly signed an order dismissing the appeal. I versity of Kentucky and the Uni- I versity of Louisville. She was married to Hubbard W.

Stark in Rock County. He died in 1925. Surviving are one son, W. H. Stark, Huntington; two brothers, Walter Kirkpatnck, Beloit and James Kirkpatrick.

Conway, two sisters, Mrs. A. J. Chubbuck. Albany, California and Mrs.

Will Zick, Beloit; two grandchildren; and an uncle, Hugh Hemmingway, Janesville. Services will be at 2 p.m. Thursday in the Overton Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs.

Carson Peacock EVANSVILLE -Mrs. Carson Peacock, 61, Fennimore, died Sunday morning in a Madison hospital after a short illness. She had been transferred there from a Dubuque hospital a week before. The former Ruth Fess was born in Madison, attended the University of Wisconsin and lived there until after her marriage. She was a resident of Evansville a short time in 1928 and 1939.

Survivors are her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Thomas W. Mooney, Dubuque; one son, Carson Peacock Mason City, Iowa; three grandchildren; and one sister, Mrs. L. L.

Thompson, Evansville. Funeral services will be held in Fennimore. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two farm fires, with a combined loss of $50,000, and several damaged homes were left in the wake of thunder and lightning storms that pounded portions of Wisconsin Monday. Some of the storms hit while the section of the state south of a line from Milwaukee to the southwest corner of Wisconsin was under a tornado warning. One of the storms centered at Fond du Lac where at least three homes were hit by lightning and power and telephone service knocked out.

Lightning struck the barn on the William Boettcher farm, six -I miles southwest of CKntonville in Waupaca County. Lost were 39 i head of cattle, farm machinery, i feed and grain. Boettcher esti- 1 mated the loss at $20,000. Damage was counted by Orvilfe Johann at $30,000 after his bam burned. He farms a mile south east of Appleton.

Livestock was led to safety, but it took firemen two hours to bring the fire under control. Richard Assaf of Fond du Lac was knocked out of his chair when lightning struck, damaging the roof and surrounding walks. Assaf was not hurt. Pieces of plaster fell on the crib of 18-month-oId Kevin Murray when the home of his par- jents was hit by lightning. The boy was not hurt.

Beloit Tavern Operator Fined Erma Dixon, Beloit tavern operator, was fined $50 and costs In County Court Branch 2 Monday. She entered a no-contest plea to a charge of purchasing within 30 days, additional liquor stocks while indebted on a prior purchase. U. S. to (Continued from Page 1) nications over an area extending 2,000 miles.

Distortion of the earth's magnetic field by atomic particles from the test explosion was blamed for the side effects. The Pentagon spokesman said two of the high-altitude blasts in the Johnston Island area will be equivalent to fewer than a million tons of TNT. He said one of these shots will be at an altitude measured in tens of kilometers, the other at hundreds of kilometers. A kilometer is five-eighths of a mile. The third shot will be in the megaton-yield range, and will be fired at hundreds of kilometers, the spokesman said.

Carl G. Olson George Olson, 59, Rte. 3, Delavan, died suddenly at his home Monday. He was born Jan. 28.

1903 in Elkhorn. the son of Hans and Mary Peterson Olson. He lived in Walworth County all his life and was a member of the Delavan Inlet fire department. Survivors include one brother, Harold Olson, Lake Geneva; and four sisters, Mrs. Maita Mentr, Darien, Mrs.

Harry Boniface, Allen Grove, Mrs. Clifford McDonough, and Mrs. Violet Lambdin, Elkhorn. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Sugar Creek Lutheran Church, the Rev.

Eugene Englestad officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at the Wolf Funeral Home and at the church from noon until time of services Wednesday. Alfred Schumacher Schumacher, 60, Rte.

Lake Mills, died at 10:15 p.m. Monday in Fort Atkinson Memorial Hospital after a long illness. He was born Dec. 14, 1901, in Farmington, the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Paul Schumacher. On Sept. 24, 1924 he married Rose Medick of Jefferson, He operated the Riv erside Inn at Milford for 17 years. He was a member of the Tavern League of Wisconsin. Survivors are his wife; one daughter, Mrs.

Russell Roehl, at home; and one sister, Mrs. Archie Lezotte, Jefferson. One daughter preceded him in death. Funeral services will be at 2:15 p.m. Thursday in the Minshall Funeral Home, the Rev.

R. W. Mueller officiating. Burial will be in Union Cemetery. Friends may call from Wednesday noon until time of services.

Charge Dismissed, Another Filed A charge of littering the highway, filed against Floyd T. Schconover, 21, 603 Williams was dismissed after trial Tuesday morning before Judge John J. Boyle in County Court Branch 2. Immediately after the dismissal action, a warrant was served charging that Schconover gave false information with intent to mislead a police officer. The new charge was filed by Dist.

Atty. Mark Farnum as result of a reversal in Schoonover's story given at the time of his arrest and that which he related while on the stand Tuesday. Schconover was driver of a car fractions to 2 or 3 points, stopped by State Patrolman Don- Man utilities leaders took steep I losses and there was no immedi- Jate development in the news to I account for it. Stocks Down Sharply in Heavy Selling NEW YORK (AP) Another selling squall drove stock market prices down sharply early this afternoon in heavy trading. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was down 2.20 to 243.70 with industrials off 3.00, rails off .10 and utilities down 2.10.

Losses of key stocks went from photo HONOR FORMER than 200 friends and fellow lawmen turned out Monday evening to pay tribute to retiring Walworth County Undersheriff Joseph A. Dorr at a testimonial dinner at Sterlingworth Hotel. Dorr, sheriff for eight years, and his wife, Irene, look over an engraved gift watch as Secretary of State Robert Zimmerman, standing left, and Sheriff Emmett Pat Welch look on. Dorr Paid High Tribute on Retirement Alter 41 Years as Law Officer aid Jones on Highway 26 near Holiday Inn at 1:05 a.m. March 24.

Jones related that he stopped the car to warn the driver about his speed. The officer said he noticed several bottles of beer inside the car and then saw one partially full lying at the side of the road. The driver and his passenger denied any knowledge of the bottle along the highway. However Schoonover a short time later admitted he had thrown the bottle out of the car. On the stand this morning, Schconover said he had not told the officer the truth when he said he threw the bottle out.

After Judge Boyle dismissed the littering charge after finding that the state had failed to prove its case the riew charge was filed. The case was continued to May 14 and bond was set at $50. Cleland Fisher represented Schoonover. Moravian Pastors Convene Tonight IBM, after steadying at the start, fell two dozen points to another new low of 430 for the year. It plummeted ZlVi points Monday.

After reaching the new low, IBM recovered a few points. Steels, motors and rails resisted the selling onslaught pretty well, presenting a mixed picture. Chemicals, aerospace issues, rubbers, nonferrous metals, oils, building materials, drugs and electrical equipments joined in the retreat. GOP Pyramiding Plans Expanded Mrs. Fred Libby EVANSVILLE Funeral services for Mrs.

Fred Libby, 83, who died Sunday night, have been changed from the Allen Funeral home to the Congregational Church. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday. Burial will be in the Bethel Cemetery, Center Township. Friends may call at the funeral home this evening.

John Kisow LAKE MILLS John Samual Kisow, 79, a retired employe of the Creamery Package Manufacturing died in his home Monday. He was born Dec. 24, 1882 in town of Waterloo. He was a member of the Evangelical United Brethren Church. Survivors are one sister, Mrs.

Annette Mueller, Lake Mills, nieces and nephews. His wife died May 2, 1959. Funeral services will be 2 p.m. MADISON The "Pyramiding for '62" Committee of the Wisconsin Federation of Republican Women, headed by Mrs. Rudolph Lange, Delavan, met here Monday to develop plans for expanding the GOP Women's fund-raising project.

Committee members represent, ing 30 counties attended a lunch- LAKE MILLS-Ministers from e0 meeting and afternoon busi 40 Moravian parishes in the Mid- ness session. Mrs. Lange, state west and Western Canada fire chairman of the special commit- meetmg in Lake Mills for a three- 1 tee, reported that plans were de- day conference, which will start I veloped for expanding participa- this evening with a dinner and doses at noon Friday. Dr. John S.

Groenfeldt, Bethlehem, general secretary of the Denominational Board of Christian Education, will direct the conference. Featured speakers are Dr. James J. Heller, dean of Moravian College, Bethlehem, and Dr. Rachel Henderlite, Richmond, Va.

Eugene Hooper, lay member of the Lake Mills Moravian Church has been in charge of arrangements for the conference. Meals will be served by the women of the church. None of the sessions is open to the public. tion to raise additional funds for the 1962 election campaign. "Pyramiding For '62" is a fundraising contest, sponsored by the GOP Women's organization.

Each contestant is loaned $1 by the Women's Division of the Republican National Committee. Objective of the contest is for each participant to pyramid the dollar i into as large a sum as possible by whatever means their initiative and enterprise can devise. ELKHORN The traditional "standing room only" sign was out Monday night as friends of Joseph A. Dorr, former sheriff, gathered at Sterlingworth Hotel to honor him on his retirement from 41 years of law enforcement work, 34 of them in Walworth County. More than 200 persons were on hand for the testimonial dinner, which saw humor mixed with heartfelt gratitude as 13 speakers paid tribute to Dorr and his wife on the eve of his retirement May 1, "When I got up this morning, I thought this would be the saddest day of my life," Undersheriff Dorr told the group, "but it hasn't turned out that way.

I am very humble, and very proud. Thank you all." Dorr began his career in 1922 with the Treasury Department and left that service in 1928 after having served as one of the "Untouchables" made famous in recent years by the TV series about the Treasury Department's prohibition era activities. He joined the Walworth County department in 1928. Shortly thereafter Dorr visited his brother, Phillip, who had formed the Pennsylvania State Police, and borrowed old uniforms from him to outfit the sheriffs department. A long letter from Phillip was read during the dinner, recalling many funny incidents of years gone by, During the ensuing years he served eight years as sheriff, from 1936 to 1940 and from 1956 to 1960.

Cummings Is M.C. County Juvenile Officer William Cummings served as master of ceremonies for the dinner. Ray Morrissy, chairman of the sheriffs committee of the county board, paid tribute to Dorr's progressive plans for the department through the years. "Joe Dorr gave me excellent advice for a young politician," Assemblyman George Borg Jr. told the group.

"When I got to Madison I found we have the finest, most progressive department in the state." "Joe Dorr and I have fought many batties together," O. R. Rice, former assemblyman, said. "Fortunately, we have always been on the same side." Mrs. Chester Barnes, widow of Sheriff Chet Barnes, recalled Dorr's first term, and the growth of the department since then.

Kenneth Wolfgram Our many friends find comfort in knowing that their personal wishes are always respected by us. WOLFGRAM FUNERAL HOME 220 S. Academy St. PL 2-1562 FIRE SCARE Firemen responded to a call Monday afternoon at the George Kuehne residence, 1326 Putnam Ave. A motor apparently shorted on a gas dryer.

There was no fire loss. SWALLOWS POLISH BELOIT Christine Ruthe, 1, Clinton, was treated and released from Municipal Hospital here over the weekend after swallowing furniture polish. Thursday News Conference Off WASHINGTON (AP) The White House has canceled a presidential news conference scheduled for Thursday morning. White House press secretary Pierre Salinger said technical problems caused the cancellation. President Kennedy usually holds his conferences in the State Department Auditorium, but it has been committed to other uses Thursday and a switch to another location would have involved widespread shifting of communications systems.

Former State Senator William Trinke said, "We all know the tribulations of a sheriff and a deputy. Joe has served well, with honor and honesty. He did a good job." County Judge Erwin Zastrow, district attorney for a number of years before becoming judge, called Dorr "the elder statesman of law enforcement," "It was because of Joe Dorr, I think, and the men like him, that I chose the profession of law," said the judge. "I recall, as a boy in Genoa City, talking with Sheriff Dorr many times as he sat on his mttorcycle, or in a squad car." Dist. Atty.

William Seymour recalled "words of advice and counsel which have made my job much easier." "It would have been easier for Joe, many times, to just 'not bother' about things, but he always did." County Judge Jack Watts said. i Circuit Court Judge M. Eugene Baker recalled the friendliess and assistance given him by Dorr when the judge first arrived to take up his duties at Elkhorn. "Let our very presence here tonight say "thank you, Joe, for a job well done," the judge said. Zimmerman Is Present Sheriff Pat Welch traced the department back to 1839, three years after the county was founded.

He pointed out that Dorr was the 37th and 42nd sheriff, in addition to serving 26 years as a deputy. James Mason, who was sheriff when Joe first started, recalled that Dorr was one of the first uniformed officers on the department. Secretary of State Robert Zimmerman saluted Dorr and his wife, adding that he and his wife were honored to have been asked to attend and pay their tributes. Mrs. Dorr briefly thanked the crowd, adding that she was overwhelmed.

Cummings wound up the program with the presentation of an engraved wrist watch to Dorr and the reading of a number of letters received by the dinner committee, all adding their tribute. An elaborate badg bearing the dates of Dorr's terms as sheriff did not arrive in time for the dinner, but the inscriptions were read by Cummings. Kummer Quiz Recessed; May Be Resumed Later (Continued from Page 1) I the ticket! some from the missing from them, or whether Janesville office made out by there are errors in the tiaMfties shown. He said that "some things don't look right," but could not, be specific. "Do you think you could help in correcting it, or throw some light on It?" Wictohem asked him.

"ft would be possible," Kummer said. He said that he signed an Inventory in mid-1941 but that Knutson had prepared it and that he did not know whether or not it accurate. "Did you have any suspicion the figures by Knutson were not accurate?" "The inventory figures were probably accurate." "Were there any other figures by Knutson not accurate?" "Yes, that happened many times." "In your opinion Is Knutson a reasombly accurate bookkeeper?" he was asked. "I would say fair," Kummer said after long hesitation. "Did you ever report to the board that he was only fair and that it ought not rely on Knutson's figures?" "They knew It just as well as I did." Kummer said that Knutson had been an employe for 30 yeirs, and "I did not feel it was my job" to replace him.

He said that his authority was limited, even though his contract gave him authority to hire and fire. "There were many rimes when a branch manager was hired I had to go to the board." he said. It was developed that in January of this year, the Milwaukee firm of Mohr-Holstem loaned $60,000 to the Farm Bureau, against shipments of corn which were to be made. Similar smaller loans had been made previously and paid off. An effort was made to get Kummer to admit that he told the co-op president on a trip to Milwaukee to pick up the check that the money was in payment for corn previously delivered.

Then on Jan. 23. the Milwaukee firm wrote Kummer demanding repayment of $60,000 in cash by the next day. By telephone, Kummer said he got them to agree to cut this demand to $30,000. By that time, he said, he was able to resume shipping com, and 'he loan never was paid off in cash.

Details of transactions with truckers buying corn directly were also sought. Kummer said that his own records of how much corn farmers delivered and how much they were paid on account were recorded on scale tickets. As to shipments of corn, he said, the records he used were railroad bills of lading. He thought there might have been other records kept, but did not know what they were. During the Monday afternoon session, Kummer was quizzed about alleged dummy accounts showing money due the coop and a $32,000 receivable from the Milwaukee commission company which has not materialized.

Examined by Psychiatrist Approximately $97,000 worth of sales tickets made out by Kummer to persons he didn't know and has never heard of since were itemized Monday afternoon. Kummer, and some from branches in Edgerton, Beloit and Orfordville made out by the manager! there under his direction. Kummer said they were made out on the basis of a letter from Farmco in Madison which, he said, requested that the Janesville warehouse bill these people for such items as fertilizer and steer pellets. Some of the names had addresses, some did not. In vnstigators have been unable to find them.

Kummer, when reading from the sales tickets, could not decide on the correct spelling of some of the names. All tickets were made out either on Dec. 29 or Dec. 30, 1961. Thus the $97,000 showed on the Farm Bureau books as accounts receivable (assets) for the end of the year.

No goods were delivered from the bureau's inventory. Plane Sold in Molina Kummer was unable to produce the letter from Farmco, which he said no one else has seen. He said ii had been in his files, but he has not been permitted to look at his files since his apprehension March 9, so he did not know if it was still there. Kummer was unable to recall much of what Wickhem asked. Wickhem started out asking Kummer about an entry in the accounts receivable ledger of $32,481.68 for Mohr-Holstein, a Milwaukee grain commission.

It was to this firm that Kummer has admitted to selling Farm Bureau com and pocketing the money, later buying an airplane with it. He said Monday that the plane was later sold to Aeroline Flight Sen-ice, Moline, III. He bought it early in 1961 and sold it at a loss of $4,000 this spring after owning it about 15 months. He said that the $32,481.68 entry must have followed a letter or a telephone call from a Mr. Witt, identified as an officer of the Milwaukee house.

He then said he mast have instructed the bookkeeper to make the entry from a sales ticket he must have made out, but didn't remember. No sales ticket for this amount has been uncovered. Other sales tickets were itemized. These were the ones to persons Kummer said lived in this It's May Day, Says Calendar May Day in Southern Wiaonuln is a far cry from the day of tun- shine, flowers and dances around the May pole that is supposed to be traditional and seldom occurs. It will be more like It tomorrow, a sunny, wanner day.

But citizens had one thing to dance and sing about. The threat of tornadoes and serious electrical storms failed to materialize and Janesville had only a few hailstones in some parte of the city along with a little rain. Most of the rain fell this morning, the .23 of an inch between 3:30 and 10:30 a.m. A new wave of cold May weather entered the state after the mercury soared to 82 Monday, the last day of April. Temperature! dropped through the night with the high for the day 59 at 1 a.m., and the low 52 at 9 a.m.

It wat 54 here at noon. May Day in past yean has brought Janesville far more inclement weather, however. Just last year the temperature dropped to 30 and in 1940 snow fell most of the day on this date. Tonight will be clearing and cool, the low 37-44. and Wednesday will be mostly sunny and warmer, the high 65-75, the forecast promises.

WSC Concert Choir Acclaimed by Large Audience WHITEWATER From the exultant "Let My Soul Rise in Song" to the tender "All Through the Night," sung as an encore, the Whitewater State College concert choir's spring program Sunday was a well-balanced performance which won applause from a large audience in the college auditorium. The 73-voice choir, under the direction of Dr. Raymond E. Light, opened with a group of sacred numbers including selections from motet, "Jesu, Priceless Treasure." Theodore Petersen's arrangement of "150th Psalm," an a cappella arrangement of "Te Deum Laudamus" and an expressive and beautifully sung "Alleluia." Soprano soloist Mary Lou Ifase's poignant "Till There Wai You" from "The Music Man," paired with a plaintive Italian provided an intermis- 1 love song, area, although some did not have sion change of pace, addresses. She was followed by a male He maintained that this was not duet.

Robert Wurtz and John Lay, an unusual occurrence, that Madi- wn presented two fluid novelty son often asked him to bill per- numbers, backed by guitar ac- sons here, but he did agree that the high amount was unusual. Brodhead's First Eagle Scout Since 1949-Rolf Kletzien BRODHEAD Rolf Kletzien, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kletzien, became the first Eagle Scout ed the program. companiment.

The choir returned to the platform for the second half of the program, a montage of secular and Negro spiritual-type selections, leading off with Gretehan- inov's "Autumn." Marsha Moth took the soprano solo for "Lament" and a chanting "God's Gonna Build Up Zion 's Wall" and "Carlottown" conclud- in Brodhead since 1949 when he wis presented the award at a court of honor held in the grade school gym. The court was held by Boy Scout Troop 108. John Doming, former ega Separation Is Barbara West was accompanist. The choir recently returned from a four-concert tour of central and eastern Wisconsin. scoutmaster, presented the Eagle Scout award, after which Kletzien The proceedings in the Circuit iai 1 6 'three of Brodhead Eagles.

Thi: Clings to Cliff for Three Days HIGHLANDS, N. J. (AP)-A 54-year-old man was plucked from the face of a cliff where he apparently had been for three on a charge of furnishing days 200 feet over Sandy Hook i beer to He is Burlington Man Begins Jail Term ELKHORN William Chambers, 21, Burlington, was fined $100 and costs or 25 days in jail when he appeared before Judge Erwin Zastrow in County Court Ike Present for Library Dedication in Abilene ABILENE, Kan. (AP)-Top political figures of the 1950s meet today to dedicate the new Eisenhower Presidential Library. Former President Dwight D.

Eisenhower, accompanied by Mrs. Eisenhower, arrived early today in a private railroad car. His three brothers and five Cabinet members from his administration also came to Abilene, Eisenhower's boyhood home. After the ceremonies the Eisenhower railroad car was to be hooked to a special train going to Kansas City. From there, he and Mrs.

Eisenhower will continue to their home at Gettysburg, Pa.j They have been vacationing in California. Former Cabinet membere here included Herbert Brownell Jr. and William P. Rogers, attorney general; Neil McElroy, secretary of defense; Fred Seaton, interior, and Robert B. Anderson, Treasury.

Mrs. Mabel McKay, widow of former Secretary of Interior Douglas McKay, also was here. Eisenhower's brothers arrived Monday and toured the library. They are Dr. Milton S.

Eisenhower, president of Johns Hopkins University; Edgar Eisenhower, Tacoma, attorney; and Earl Eisenhower, publisher from LaGrange, III. The library is on a large tract including the old Eisenhower family home and the Eisenhower museum. The. museum is operated by the private Eisenhower foundation. Bay.

The man, semiconscious and suffering from exposure, was saved from a fatal plunge by a clump of brush about 75 feet down the face of the cliff, police said. A policeman on partol heard moaning and found him Monday. Rescuers, lowered by rope in a basket down the face of the cliff, took him off the perilous perch. He was identified as Preston Kumpel of Red Bank, who had disappeared Friday. Officials at the hospital said he was in fair condition.

JEFFERSON LICENSES JEFFERSON Marriage license applications have been filed with County Clerk Forrest Striegl by: Wesley Gary Kehl, Ixonia, and Judith Marie Hotlatz, Oconomowoc; Anthony Gene Milbrath end Jania Carol Kenning, both of HelenviMe; Robert Emery Arndt, Mineral Point, and Carolyn Esther Klein, Fort Atkinson; Robert Raymond Haumschild and Julie Ann Kopiness, both of Johnson Creek; Edmund Francis Lomper- iki and Eleanor Lucille Gerstner, both of Cambridge, confined to jail. Judge Zastrow fined Gerald Kails, 20, Beloit, $150 and costs on a theft charge. Two men appeared on nonsupport charges. Donald Travis, 40, DeYivan, was ordered to pay $15 a week for the support of his family and Richard Nokes, 34, Sharon, $35 a week. Court hearing room followed an unsuccessful attempt by Agnew, defense counsel, to have the hearing continued for 30 days while Kummer submitted to psychiatric testing.

The request for the delay came on the basis of a letter from Dr. Hertha Tarrasch, JanesviHij psychiatrist. In the letter she said that she had examined Kummer and found him an "irrational person, a man emotionally disturbed, who acted on irresistible impulses when he isn't rational or responsible." Continuing reading the letter Agnew said, "After a thorough psychiatric examination on April 30, I wish to state Edwin Kummer suffers from serious emotional any statements he might make are determined by inner pressures and forces." Credit Buyers Missing Wickhem, attorney for the Farm Bureau directors, objected on the grounds that the plea for such a continuation should go through the Circuit Court to be determined, Court Commissioner Grimm overruled the plea for delay and the hearing began. The bulk of the hearing was taken up with verification of acid INDKB tion? MINERS CALL STRIKE SALISBURY, Southern Rhodesia than 20,000 African mine workers in Northern Rhodesia's copper belt have called a strike for Wednesday demanding more a shift-and vacation with full pay. the South African Press It hard to teU when Acid Upset Association reported Monday.

Thu why it pays to keep TUMS on hand for relief from indigestion, heartburn or gaa. Buy the 3-roll pack for only 301; keep one roll at in the car glove one where you work. No matter Ruptured? TRUSSES lack tad abdominal alutle koaltry, kacacapi, ankltti, crutchtf and euti, Adults and Children $6.00 UP PEOPLES DRUG CO. II I. MUwaokM ft.

Dial PL s-lMT IS emblem had been carried through i day the Korean War. Kletzien was cited for regular church attendance, president of his school class for four years, and being an honor student, in addition to the necessary 21 merit badges. As a scout he has assisted as a patrol leader, assistant senior patrol leader, senior patrol leader, librarian, instructor and junior assistant scoutmaster. Senior patrol leader Lennie Speth conducted the court. Merit badges were presented to John Zasserihaus, Robbie Wyss, Lee Stein, Sandy Peterson, Leonard Long, Kletzien, Tim Janes, Keith Church and Gregg Condon.

Other awards went to Gregg Anderson, David Edwards, Richard Jolinson, Michael Gibson, Zassenhaus, Sandy Peterson, Janes and Lee Stein. Filed in Lein Case I-egal separation is sought in a Circuit Court action filed Tues- by Mrs. Loretta Lein, 801 Prairie against Guilford Lein. She has been awarded $35 per week temporary alimony pending hearing of the case. The riage took place in Janesville Nov.

19. 1960. RADIOS AND TV See the 1962 Models at Schoenrock RADIO ft TV Phone PL 2-4904 1218 Mathcson St. ACE COUPON SPECIAL POLY FOAM SPONGES EXTRA DISCOUNT PRICE when Add Upset strikes-TUMI will strike back! WITH THIS COUPON S8c Value (One coupon offer to customer) 12 or more giant sponges In each bag. Assorted gay colors.

Additional sponges available without coupon at sale price of 59c a bag. I OPEN EVERY WEEKDAY MORNING AT 8 A.M. ACE HARDWARE FREE PARKING 200 S. River St. PL 4-7087.

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About Janesville Daily Gazette Archive

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