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Green Bay Press-Gazette from Green Bay, Wisconsin • Page 3

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Green Bay, Wisconsin
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3
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THE GREEN BAY PRESS-GAZETTE TEN WILL JOIN 3,000 PRESENT AT POLITICAL MEETING Oconto County Progressives Picnic Sunday. U. S. FLEET IN PARADE OFF PACIFIC COAST STITEFARK Monday Evening, August 26, 1 935 I SWEDISH OFFICER AIDS SELASSIE ill I 'r Ceremony to Be Held De Pere Wednesday. Tugwell Asked to Help Drouth Area Victims.

(Special to Press-Gazette) GILLETT, Wis. Oconto county Progressives had Governor Philip La Follette as the principal speak er at their annual picnic here yesterday. One of the largest crowds, about 3,000 people, ever to attend such a picnic, listened to the governor speak on the Progressive system of taxation in the stale and the administration of relief. The farm relief program was also praised by the governor and he encouraged the farmers about future farm conditions. Representatives of the Progressive party in Shawano, Sunns, Oconto Falls, Oconto, Green Bay and Marinette attended the picnic.

In the afternoon a Land O' Lakes Iqpgue game between Gillett ar.d Cecil was played and a dance was given in the evening, with musio by Eddie Schmidt and his orchestra, Green Bay. Concessions also furnished amusement for tha picnickers. General Eric Virgin, known in Addis Ababa as "Ethiopia's White Ruler" because of his work in building up the native army, has been granted permission by the Swedish government to remain in Africa until possible hostilities with Italy begin. He is shown with Emperor Haile Selassie. (Associated Press Photo) dren.

The Pennsylvania is shown heading the mighty procession of dreadnaughts. (Associated Press Photo) Led by the V. S. S. Pennsylvania, flagship of the United States fleet, the combined power of the navy's sea and air forces was paraded off San Diego, in honor of the nation's chil mobile Rebuilders, 11 a.

m. Arthur J. Frisque vs. Toasted Sandwich Shop, 1:30 a. m.

W. A. Peters vs. C. A.

Lawton company, 2:30 p. m. Fair Enough By Westbrook Pegler ilil Pegler Comes to Bat for the White House Lobbyist, with a Word of Praise for His Social Attributes to Offset an Embarrassing Situation. II-" llll I Jl si II kMI III WASHINGTON The resettlement administration was asked today by Progressives in congress to rescue farmers in the 1934 drouth area of Wisconsin from an "extremely acute" mortgage problem. Asserting thousands of farmers were facing eviction and foreclosure because of inability to meet mortgage terms, the delegation appealed by letter to Rex- ford G.

Tugwell, resettlement di rector, to "step in" where farm credit agencies have left off. Signed by La Follette The letter was signed by Sena tor La Follette and the seven house Progressives. As a dairy state, Tugwell was told, Wisconsin has enjoyed little improvement in farm prices and still is suffering from four years of drouth. The farm credit ad ministration has been unable, the letter said, to refinance a large number of farm mortgages and stay within prescribed loan lim itations. Assuming a farmer's debt is $10,000, on which he can get $8, 000 from the federal land, bank and the farm loan commissioner, could not the resettlement admin istration supply the remaining the letter asks.

May Consent to Reduction "It is altogether possible, in a case like this, that the mortgagee might consent to a reduction," the delegation wrote. "It would then become the responsibility of the rural resettlement admimstra tion to provide supplemental em plovment for this farmer to li quidate this $1,500 to $2,000 obli gation. There are many jobs to be done, such as farm to market road building, local erosion control, reforestation, and so forth." Such a program would be justi fied. the group contended, since foreclosure would throw the farm er and his family on relief, where it would not take long to spend $1,500 or $2,000 for maintenance With the northwest area back in full production, a feed abundance is imminent, with a resultant re duction in dairy prices, the ap peal said. COLEMAN' NEWS NOTES (Special to Press-Gazette) COLEMAN, Wis.

Miss Caroline Boville has returned to her home here after spending the past week with friends and relatives in Marinette. Mr. and Mrs. John Will and son returned to Wausau after visiting with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Charles Will. The annual festival of Trinity not a damn thing said. He is the press-agent of the White House road show when the troupe goes on tour and the standoff man when pests come around demanding to see Mr. Big right away. He can snap himself into a right-angled bow from the waist to a lady who is knee-deep in her forties and make her think her wrinkles are dimples and her white hairs premature.

He wouldn't outweigh a straw hat with an anvil in each hand and he could hang himself with a piece of string but he has been known to put heavyweights to bed and to hustle up canned tomatoes, aspirin and other restoratives for them in the morning. If it is a full investigation that they are having in Washington, they should not fail to ask what Mr. Robinson was doing in the company of Mr. Intyre because, more likely than the contrary, it was Mr. Mclntyre who sold a bill of goods to the lobbyist for Big-Hearted Howard Hopson, the widow-and-orphan lover.

That would be a great outrage, the White House lobbyist using his social wiles to defeat, in diplomatic intrigue, the, man who made with his family and partner in seven years, defending the savings of the widows and France has had compulsory social insurance since 1930. 204 Wash. Lutheran church held here on Sunday was very well patronized with a large number attending the dinner and supper prepared and served by the ladies of the church. Threatening weather in the forenoon made it necessary to abandon their plans to hold the affair in Nelson's grove and instead was held in Legion hall. Services were held in the afternoon in the church instead of in the grove as scheduled.

Radio Programs Monday 6:30 p. m. Margaret Speaks. NBC including stations WTMJ, WEBC, WIBA, WLW. 7 p.

m. Great Minstrels. NBC including stations WLS, KSTP, WEBC, WTMJ, WLW, WIBA, WMT. 8 p. m.

Contented program. NBC including station WMAQ. 8:30 p. m. March of Time.

CBS including stations WABC, WBBM, KMOX, WCCO. 10 p. m. Bert Block's orchestra. CBS including stations WABC, WBBM, KMOX, WCCO, WOC, WISN.

10:30 p. m. Dell Coon's orchestra. CBS including stations WABC, WBBM, KMOX, WISN, WCCO, WOC. Tuesday 6 p.

m. Lavender and Old Lace. CBS including stations WBBM, KMOX, WABC. 6:30 p. m.

Dramatic Interlude. CBS including stations WBBM, KMOX, WCCO, WABC. 7 p. m. N.

T. G. and his Girls. NBC including stations WLS, WMT. 7:30 p.

m. Fred Waring's Penn- i sylvanians. CBS including sta- tions WISN, WABC, WBBM, KM- ox, weco, woc. 7:30 p. m.

Eddie Duchiivs or- chestra. NBC including stations WMAQ, KSTP, WTMJ, WIBA, I WLW, WEBC. I 9:15 p. m. Tony and Gus.

NBC including stations WMT, WTMJ, WIBA, KSTP, WEBC. COMPENSATION HEARINGS TO BE HELD WEDNESDAY A one-day hearing of cases com ing under the workmen's compen sation act will be conducted Wednesday by the Industrial commission of Wisconsin in the city hall council chamber. The hearing was originally scheduled for the court house but was transferred to the city hall because of a county board meeting. The cases are: Harold Voeks vs. Leyse Alum inum company, 9 a.

m. John Kuske vs. United Con struction company, 10 a. m. Ben Hoefs vs.

Kihlberg Auto- vflfc at Ten young men will receive the white habit of the Norbertine order Wednesday morning during solemn high mass to be celebrated by the abbot, the Rt. Rev. 13. H. Pennings, at St.

Joseph's church In De Pere. In the group will be one De Pere youth, Edward L. Guyon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward L.

Guyon, 622 Fairview avenue. Others are Joseph La Mai and Harvey Toon-en, Green Bay; Joseph Rohlinger, Kaukauna; Francis Mulhall, Prior Lake, John Boelhower, Kimberly; Raymond Demerath, Appleton; Joseph McIIugh, Philadelphia; William Rcilly, Arch-mere academy, Claymond, all of whom will study for the priesthood; and Edward Atkinson, Philadelphia, who will be a candidate for the lay brotherhood. Mass at 10 a. m. The mass, marking the reception and vesture of the candidates, and profession of vows of fraters who are in the order, will be celebrated at 10 o'clock by Abbot Pennings.

Priests of the Norbertine abbey will assist the prelate in the celebration of muss. Solemn vows will be professed during the morning by the following fraters: Alphonse Diedricli. Alexis Linde, Giles Fox, Dona'd Vanderhciden, Roman Bauer, Henry Zelinske, Timothy Werner, Claude Barnard and Bon if arc Spellman. Those who will take simple vows are Fraters Julian Reach, George Feider, Blaize Peters, Fabian Jolicouer, and Brother Siard Ryan. Will Tronounce Vows The ceremony of reception investiture and profession will follow the customary Norbertine ritual.

It consists of receiving ami vesting those joining the order, the pronouncing of simple, triennial vows by fraters who have completed their two-year novitiate; and pronouncing of solemn vows by those whose simple vows have expired. i DR. SILAS EVANS IS ASSEMBLY SPEAKER 500 Persons Take Part Joint Service. In FOREST JUNCTION, Wis. Wayside Ministry," was the theme of Dr.

Silas B. Evans, pres ident of Ripon college, in address ing the Sunday afternoon session of a ten-day Evangelical church assembly, which opened here day evening. The session was conducted under the auspices of the Albright Brotherhood of the Appleton dis trict, with Ben D. Scharpf, Osh kosh, district president, as chairman. Ray Saiberlich, Appleton, and Robert Haese, Forest Junc tion, district officials, and John Trautmann, Appleton, and C.

Edward Johnson, Oshkosh, officers of the state organization, also as sisted with the meeting. About 500 persons took part in the joint communion service for the Brillion, Forest Junction, Mor rison, and Reedsville fields Sun day forenoon, conducted by the Rev. W. G. Raddatz, district su perintendent.

The assembly continues throughout the week with daily iftrenoon, afternoon, and evening services. Bishop C. H. Stauf-facher of the denominational southwestern area, Kansas City, as guest speaker, is scheduled to arrive at the camp Tuesday REAL ESTATETRANSFERS Included in 45 papers filed at Tthe office of Rigney L. Dwyer, -register of deeds, Friday were the following real estate transfers: Marion Theresa Klaus, Thomas Francis Clabots and Henrietta Clabots, his wife, and Marion Theresa Klaus as trustee for the trust estate of Frank Clabots, to Mrs.

Charles Clabots, lot number 2, block 40, in the original plat of the city of De Pere. W. E. Bishop and Catherine Bishop, his wife, to Mae Hooker, property in the 1000 block on Lincoln street and at 231 Allard avenue. Mae Hooker to W.

E. Bishop and Cathrine Bishop, his wife, property in the 1000 block on Lincoln street and at 231 Allard avenue. Mrs. Caroline Clabots to Marion Theresa Klaus, a part of the silfcthwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 3 in township 22 north, of range 20 east; the southeast quarter of the south-cast quarter of section 4 in township 22 north, of range 20 east; the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of 9 in township 22 north, of range 20 east. Raymond Lison and Grace J.

Lison, his wife, to John L. Has-law and Mabel Haslaw, his wife, lots number 6 and 45 in the second addition of Shore Acres plat, town of Green Bay. Mustos Seroogy to Hannah NSW YORK-Mclntyre, Marvin (Skinny) President Roose velt's secretary in charge of social drinking and staying up till all hours of the night with the boys, has caught his tail in a crack in the course of the current lobby investigation which, like all other lobby investigation 9 will mean about two pounds less than nothing whatever when the bills are paid and the printed matter is dumped away in some dusty catch-all to run un stor- age charges un- Westbrook Pegler til that day when someone summons the initiative to burn it up. Mr. Mclntyre is a lobbyist for Mr.

Roosevelt and, in the course of his getting around, on a recent evening, he was caught in the company of a lobbyist for the utilities interests of big-hearted Howard Hopson, the widow-and-orphan lover who made, with his family and his partner, about $29,000,000 out of utilities and holding-companies in seven years. Senate lobby committee had posses out searching for Big-Hearted Howard and one detachment crashed into a suite where they found Mr. Mclntyre gnawing away at a noggin of stimulant in the company of Chip Robert, of Georgia, who holds a harmless job in the treasury department, and Bernard Robinson, the Hopson lobbyist. It was reported that they were gnawing on cocktails and this may have been true as to the rest of them but you may take your correspondent's word for it that Mr. Mclntyre was doing his teething on nothing but five fingers, all thumbs of 17-year-old bourbon, suh, undiluted by ginger-ale or water and un-cluttereed by orange juice, pineapple hunks, parsley, cabbage leaves or any of the barber-waters or garden truck which contaminate good, nutritious whiskey in the modern cocktail.

Your correspondent has chafed his buttons along the bar with Mr. Mclntyre, at Hangover Hall in Poughkeep-sie, in Florida and elsewhere with the White House road-show and Jias always made a good mark in the book opposite his name in consideration of his reverence for the purity of good drinking-whiskey. It is also to be noted that Mr. FALL SILK JkV (FROCKS jA 5) roir ADVANCE FASHION IDEAS Mclntyre' never has been found absent or looking at the pictures on the wall when it came his time to haul out a sheet of money and take his turn at bat. Therefore, if he was caught baring his fangs at a dram of Mr.

Robinson's hospitality in the private quarters of the utility man, as the guest, indirectly, of Big-Hearted Howard Hopson, you may feel confident that he was fixing to buy him drink-for-drink before the night was over. Case of Two Lobbyists Out-Lobbying Each Other It is only fair to Mr. Roosevelt's lobbyist to state these virtues in the present rather embarrassing situation and to point out that the case was one in which two lobbyists were trying to out-lobby each other which is a good deal as though two men in a crowd each reached for the other's watch at the same time. They were both working the same side of the street and the result was bound to be no worse than a stand-off for Mr. Roosevelt's man and a waste of artistic effort, although it must have been a dashing display.

Mr. Robert, of Georgia and the treasury department, is just one of those deserving Democrats who had to be fixed up when Mr. Roosevelt took over. He has been a bit of a problem child to the president and James A. Farley ever since.

He is noted as a story teller but there are more than a scattered few people who don't like his stories and then, too, the tax-payers might not be any too frantic to shower down a genteel salary for a public servant whose value consists chiefly in stories beginning, "it seems there was an old colored man named Mose even if the stories were good. If Mr. Robert could be kept under cover, just drawing his pay and enjoying his status as a patriot serving his country in his peculiar way, like so many others of the same general category, that would be fine. But he likes to go around places at night and tell those stories of his and people are always asking "what does Chip Robert do for his salary?" It is not a complete answer to a malignant Republican, for example, to say, "Do? Well, he is Chip Robert." That doesn't cover the ground. Mclntyre Is Just Old Member of Family But Mr.

Mclntyre is different. He is a member of the old original Roosevelt official family. A casual man who can talk loydown and confidential and end up with DARLING, ILL BET SIX AT AN EXTREMELY LOW PRICEI Such forward looking ideas as the glint of metal the flare of low posed pleats interesting new flares deep arm holes husre buckles. Travel Prints Oatmeal Prints Dark Sheers New Fall Crepes. The above sketch will give you an idea of the prophetic nature of the new arrivals.

Sizes 14 to 20 and 38 to 44 Maine Lawyer and politician the only chief executive of Maine to be reelected since the Civil war Governor Louis J. Brann possesses two essentials for success in public life pleasing personality and oratorical ability. Often he is referred to as the best-dressed man in Maine. Always his executive office door is open, even to the humblest of his constituents. Much of his gubernatorial success is attributed to his ability to "get alon';" with a Republican executive council.

For many years he was a successful criminal lawyer, He was mayor of Lewiston for several terms. When first elected governor in 1932 he was credited with driving the opening wedge of the Democratic landslide of that year. He has not disclosed what office, if any, he will seek when his term expires January 6, 1937. He is married and has three daughters Daley, property in the 100 block on N. Broadway street.

HENRY KLEINESCHMIDT IS BURIED SATURDAY (Special to Press-Gazette) COLEMAN, Wis. Funeral services were held in St. Leo's Catho lic church in Pound Saturday morning Henry M. Kleine-schmidt, 17, son of Joseph Kleine-schmidt, farmer residing south west of this village. The casket was borne bv Joseph Weber, Harold Thomson, Joseph Steffens, Edward Pociape, George Weber and Bernard Gadinac.

The many floral offerings were in charge of Mary Stella, Anna Dudek, Minnie Glass, Elizabeth Tomaszewski and Bernice Blochoweak. Burial was in the church cemetery at Pound. Death was attributed to dia betes. Surviving the deceased are the father and one brother, George, both of Coleman. Winds are really produced by the sun's light, which is turned into heat where it falls on land or sea, and so causes air currents.

8Se Will clean your watch or replace a main-spring or a jewel. WHAT A LOVELY BRIDE SHE MADE I AND HOW PROUD AND HAPPY HE LOOKS I THE KNOWN HER FROM A BABY. AND 1 HELPED MAKE THAT MATCH. MONTHS EARUER HEP BEEN TAKING HER THEN HE SEEMED TO LOSE INTEREST. SHE WAS BECAUSE I LOVED HER, I WAS FRANK WARNED HER ABOUT THAT DISTRESSING FAULT," B.0...

SUGGESTED STEWART SX what? ii'y I IT'S TIME FOR imc wmulc v.nuK.n DEAREST, I WAS JUST ANOTHER LIFEBUOY BRIDE WAS ADMIRING YOUR COMPLEXION B.O.GON glorious netvst rr WASNT LONG BEFORE THEY CAME TO TELL ME THEY WERE ENGAGED. AND WITH HER ARMS ABOUT MY NECK, SHE OWE MY HAPPINESS TO YOUAND LIFEBUOY! Wal oil Ntepairing When you ujr "a Lifebuoy yon cover tvtrything! Freshness. Clearness. Radiant health. Lifebuoy's rich, searching lather cleanses duply to rid pores of clogged impurities, yet gently.

"Patch" teats on the skins of hundreds of women show it is- mote than 20 fe milder than many so-called "beauty No wonder complexions thrive! To brides Keep fresh and dainty for bim! Guard against hint of (body summer and winter. Bathe We'll bet your first answer is wrong Because you recognize the clock? Don't be too sure of your answer But it's time for an important announcement on an important subject That announcement will be made in less than a week. We are experts on Grnen, Bulova, Elgin, Illinois, Hamilton and All Swiss Makes often with Lifebuoy. In hardest water it gives abundant lather that purifies and deodorizes pores fnttctt. Its own dean scent rinses away.

All Work Done in Oar Own Shops by Expert Watchmakers. Satisfaction Guaranteed WATCH CRYSTALS Any Sise Work Done or Shape Fitted to Tour Watch While You Wait 4t. Other Jewelry Repaired at Low Cost EIK.EXE WAIJI 223 N. Washington St Jeweler and Optician Green Bay, Wis. Ctti tiimtk-pni Bi 3.

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