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The Oshkosh Northwestern from Oshkosh, Wisconsin • Page 2

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

Oklahoma Senate Race May Top Presidential Vote almttebagnlattli leafy Daily Nofthwisttw 2- Oct. 22, 196 Pays to Advertise ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) Albuquerque Radio Station KDEF uses the slogan, "Albuquerque's Leading Ear Specialist," in promoting the station. As a result, a woman came to the station and asked for a set of batteries for her hearing aid. Candidates Today By United Press International Goldwater: Attends Hoover funeral in New York City; flies to Los Angeles, Calif.

Johnson: Attends Hoover funeral; returns to Washington. DC. MILLER: Attends Hoover funeral; goes to Camden, N.J. Humphrey: Attends Hoover funeral; speaks in Rochester, N.Y., and Boston, Mass. Only the Tiny MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Only skinny skindivers will be able to pursue the chilly sport of diving under the ice in Minneapolis lakes.

The Park Board, alarmed over four and six-foot holes cut by divers, set a new limit of 10 inches on hole cutting. Officials said larger holes don't freeze over and endanger fishermen and vehicles. Paralyzed Girl Points To Attacker DUNCAN, Okla. (AP) Four different times Wednesday the partly paralyzed young girl strained when she pointed to a 16-year-old schoolmate in a police lineup as fhe boy she said stabbed her almost 50 times last January. Miss Tama Hallmark, an attractive 18-year-old, was attacked after she left Duncan High School Jan.

6. She talks brokenly but is coherent. Five times police marched Bert Michael Lana, dressed differently on each occasion, in the lineup. Miss Hallmark did not identify Lana the first time. Earl Goerke, State Crime Bureau director, said Miss Hallmark may not have made identification the first time because of a possible lack of communication with her or because she was under intense emotional stress.

She told officers she was not a personal friend of young Lana who was charged Wednesday with attempting to kill her. At the time of the attack, on a lonely road at the end of the school day, Lana was a sophomore and she a senior. Months after the attack, Miss Hallmark was in a condition in which she had no response to questions except tears and silence. Just a few days ago she was able to make identification from a school yearbook. powerful political organization built by Kerr.

Wilkinson's campaign is not tied in with the state GOP organization. But other Republican candidates are seeking to identify themselves with the former coach. (HMD OOQRG) Oshkosh Gay lord P. Simpson Gaylord P. Simpson, 54, formerly of Oshkosh, died today at 6:30 a.m.

at St. Mary Hospital. Milwaukee. He was born in Oshkosh on Aug. 14, 1910, and was associated with the National Tea Co.

in Milwaukee. Services have been tentatively set for Saturday at Konrad Funeral Home. Nemh-Menasha Peter Seidl MENASHA Peter Seidl. 66, 517 Seventh Menasha, died at 5:45 a.m. today at Theda Clark Hospital following an ill-ness of one year.

Born Sept. 5, 1898, in Chippewa Falls, he had lived in Menasha for the past 30 years. He was a veteran of World War I and had been employed by the Whiting Paper Co. Survivors are his widow, Martha; one daughter, Mrs. Lester Arndt, Menasha; two brothers, Wolfgang, Chippewa Falls, and Roman, Stanley; foui sisters, Mrs.

Anna Fortin, Gil-man; Mrs. Margaret Jenneman. Chippewa Falls; Sister Mariette, Litchfield, and Mrs. Mary Stop it fight owoy with TUMS ntaeid tablet. Today's food tatting TUMS or fortifiod-ipead soothing, high potency raliaf ntutrolizo all excess acid raieasa you from tho grip of an acid-irritated stomach -completely, gantly, on the spot wouldn't you like that! Quickly effective, high potency relief Srellpack-Mt Carpeting We are outlet for three of Amerke's tartott milk nil hr tlifbriy perfect.

Yo ni to I off roanlr price. CARPET SECONDS 601 N. Morrison Street APPLETON HOURSt WeO. M. to Tkrt Sot.

to r- HAVE YOU NOTICED Raith, Kalamazoo, two grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren. Funeral services will be held at the Laemmrich Funeral Home at 8:30 a.m. Saturday, and at 9 at St. Mary Catholic Church, Menasha. Burial will be in St.

Mary Cemetery. Friends may call after 3 p.m. Friday at the funeral home where the rosary will be prayed at I p.m. Wmnebajohnd Mrs. Arthur Rodencal REDGRANITE Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m.

Friday at Trinity Lutheran Church, Redgranite, for Mrs. Arthur Rodencal. 61, of Rt. 3. Berlin, who died at Berlin Memorial Hospital at 11 a.m.

Tuesday. The Rev. Donald Johnson will officiate, with burial in Welsh Cemetery, Berlin. Friends may call at Hempel Funeral Home, Redgranite, after today. Mrs.

Rodencal was born Feb. 27, 1903 in the Town of Bloom-field. She was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Albert Handrich and was married to Arthur Rodencal, Oct.

7, 1928. Survivors include three daughters, Mrs. Neville Jones, Redgranite, Mrs. James Williams, Wild Rose, and Mrs. Neil Davis, Mill City, one son, George, Rt.

3, Berlin, three brothers, Oswald, Poy Sippi, Alfred, Milwaukee, and Alvin, Manawa; two sisters, Mrs. Laura Frazier, Manawa, and Mrs. Lona Zuege, Wild Rose, and 10 grandchildren. Miss Regina Minskey WAUTOMA Miss Regina Helen Louise Minskey, 71, Wau-toma, former school teacher, died Tuesday at Wautoma Community Hospital after a short illness. She was born May 18, 1893 in Berlin and was a member of the Wautoma American Legon Auxiliary.

Survivors include three brothers. Stephen, Berlin, and Leo steady drift to more and more big government control over our lives." At the start of his campaign, Harris said "I will run neither as a liberal nor a conservative. I will campaign on good old Oklahoma common sense." Wilkinson, 48 and a native of Minnesota, changed his political affiliation from Democrat to Republican before entering the Senate race. Wilkinson looks more like an English professor he holds a master's degree in English education than the nation's top college football coach. Tall and trim, ht has silver gray hair and dresses in conservative gray or blue suits.

Harris, born and reared on a southern Oklahoma farm, worked his way through the University of Oklahoma as a printer for the campus paper. He obtained degrees in government, history and law and earned a Phi Beta Kappa key. A stocky 185-pounder, Harris parts his thick black hair down the middle and is a conservative dresser. They are waging surprisingly similar campaigns both leaning heavily on personal contact. The candidates are being aided in campaign chores by their wives, Mary Wilkinson and Ladonna Harris.

The Wilkinsons have two sons, one in medical school and the other studying for the ministry. Ladonna Harris and the three Harris children, ages 2, 6 and 14, are enrolled members of the Comanche Indian tribe. Wilkinson's sharpest attacks have been directed at Harris' attendance record in the state Senate, where Wilkinson said he ranked 41st of 44 senators last session in answering roll call votes. "Elect me and I'll put Oklahoma first, not 41st," Wilkinson often says. Harris replies that Wilkinson is attempting "to divert attention from the fact he has a total and life-long absenteeism from participation in public affairs." In stressing his experience in politics and government, Harris says "a candidate for U.S.

Senate, like a doctor or coach, ought to be prepared for the job." He sometimes adds that university of Oklahoma regents, when searching for Wilkinson's successor, didn't consider hiring a politician as coach. Wiliknson devotes much of his campaign to wooing Democratic voters, since Democrats outnumber Republicans in Oklahoma about 4-1 a million Democrats, Republicans. Harris' campaign is being coordinated by state Democratic headquarters and some of his top aids were part of the OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. AP) Once upon a time, Ok-lahomans spent each autumn talking about football. This year it's different.

Oklahoma's football fortunes are sagging the Sooners lost to Teaxs again and conversation now skims over such tragedies and centers instead on politics. Republican Bud Wilkinson, former University of Oklahoma football coach, is running against Democrat Fred Harris, a 33-year-old state senator, in a nip-and-tuck general election campaign for U.S. Senate. Statewide polls show the race is close. Veteran observers say interest in the Wilkinson-Harris match is so intense the total vote on the Senate race could top that on the presidential race.

This is the first plunge into politics for Wilkinson, who gained national fame during his 17 years as football coach and while serving three years as head of the President's Council on Physical Fitness. Harris has served eight years in the state Senate and ran unsuccessfully for governor two years ago. The winner of the Nov. 3 election will serve until January 1967, completing the six-year term to which Democrat Sen. Robert S.

Kerr was elected in 1960. Kerr died on Jan. 1, 1963, and a few days later Democrat J. Howard Edmondson resigned as Oklahoma governor and was appointed to fill the vacancy until the next general election. Harris defeated Edmundson in a primary election runoff last spring while Wilkinson swamped two Republican opponents to win the GOP nomination without a runoff.

Both Wilkinson and Harris have aligned themselves with their party's presidential ticket. When Sen. Barry Goldwater carried his campaign to Oklahoma, a beaming Wilkinson was on hand to introduce and praise the nominee at a Tulsa rally. Goldwater in turn plugged for Wilkinson's election. Former President Dwight D.

Eisenhower also will visit the state in Wilkinson's behalf. Harris calls in each of his speeches for the election of President Johnson and his roadside billboards proclaim: "Har-ris-LBJ, Democratic all the way." During a recent "nonpoliti-cal" visit to Oklahoma, Johnson said "Send me Fred Harris and we'll bring home the bacon and tack the coonskin to the wall." He added: "Fred and 1 will charge hell with a buckef of water." Both Wilkinson and Harris shun liberal or conservative labels, but Wilkinson clearly is the more conservative of the two, calling for an end "of the 76 YEARS IN St ram bo's New EVERYDA Lov Prices? and Arnold, both of Wautoma; and two sisters, Mrs. Margaret Nickodem, Princeton, and Mrs. Lorraine Hoffman, Wautoma. Services will be held at 9 a.m.

Friday at St. Joseph Catholic Church with burial in the parish cemetery. The Rev. George Weix will officiate, The rosary will be prayed Thursday at 8 p.m. at Goult-Patterson-Hardell Funeral Home, Wautoma, where friends may call today.

Freamont C. Stratton WAUPACA A former resident of the Grand Army Home for Veterans, Freamont C. Stratton, 77, died at the Veterans' Hospital, Wood. Wednesday. He had been hospitalized since September.

Mr. Stratton was born in the Town of Dayton Aug. 27, 1887, and served in World War I. He was a retired laborer and lived at Bethany Home before moving to King in July. Services will be at Holly Funeral Home here Friday at 1:30 p.m., the Rev.

James Saunders of First Methodist Church officiating. Burial will be in Crystal Lake Cemetery, Town of Dayton. Friends may call at the funeral home today. Survivors are a brother, Frank, and a sister, Mrs. Mah-Ion Wilson, both of Waupaca.

Births Oshkosh (Mercy Hospital) Leon Polishinski 546 Wau- goo boy. Lawrence Eckstein, Rt. 1, Pickett, boy. Leonard Wesner, 1215 Ontario girl. Ripon Du Wayne Krueger, 623 Wood-side boy, Oct.

19. Neenah-Menasha (Theda Clark) Chester Swiecichowski, 5054 De Pere Menasha, girl. Appleton (Appleton Memorial) Thomas Finn, 231 E. Pershing Appleton, boy. Clifford Brockman, 609 Pierce Little Chute, boy.

LaVerne F. Kohl, 1346 W. Second Appleton, boy. Indian Guide Meeting Tonight An open meeting of fathers and sons in the Indian Guide program of the Oshkosh Community YMCA will be held this evening at 6:30 o'clock. Others interested have been invited to attend.

The Indian Guide program is open to youngsters from 6 years of age and up, and meetings are held twice a month in the homes of members. A sample of how the Indian Guide program works will be given this evening by the Ojib-wa tribe, which has Charles Wagner as chief. A forum for questions and answers will follow. Marriage License Keith C. Haider, Rt.

1, Winne-conne; Kathleen D. Gunderson, 1319 Catherine Oshkosh. SHIPMENT KIDS HI! I'm Archy McDonald I'VE GOT A FREE GIFT FOR i. J' If Jr" 1 i i if 'YOU! 448 N. Main St.

231-1880 OSHKOSH 20-Gal. Garbage Can $2.33 12-Qt. Galv. Pail 77c Wire Lawn Broom 57c Paint Roller Set 77c 16-0z. Spray Enamel 99c Sponge Mops 99c 508 N.

Main Street s2 McDonalds 7 -iHfG irigtHtttjMli cwUIiUf ASTRO-SONIC Stereo High Fidelity NO TUBES space-age solid state circuitry (so dependable, it's guaranteed 5 years); eliminates vacuum tubes and JUST RECEIVED A NEW A Archy's FREE Just take this ad to McDonald's and ask for Trick or Treat bag. It's waiting for you right now! component-damaging chassis heat! A big Halloween Trick-or-Treat bag is waiting for you at your McDonald's! There's nothing to buy. Your Favorite Brand Names Sizes 4 to 11 e'Jtl only $29850 The Contemporary, Astro-Sonia model 1-ST631 in Walnut finish. ZZome of America's favorite hamburgers MORE THAN 1 BILLION SOLD! SEAMLESS NYLONS 1 2100 ON BUDGET PLAN $12.00 PER MONTH 'it ONCE YOU HEAR THIS FABULOUS YOU'LL KNOW WHY TUBE SETS ARE OBSOLETE! Ttn time's the efficiency of tube sets: Six speakert Include two 12 Bass Woofers, 15-Watts undistorted music power, Stereo FM plus Monaural FMAM Radio, exclusive Micromatic Player that lets records last lifetime are just a few of its magnificent features. Yet, it costs ess than most ordinary tube sets todayl TT7Tn Only from Mtgnavox-because the exclusive Micromatic Record Player banishes discernible, record and stylus wear -the Diamond Stylus guaranteed 10 years.

M. t.M. U.1 P.t Oft. McDerwtri Cor. Phone 231-2268 1863 N.

Jackson 4 P5M 0 iliHJ If! tCi, i W. MURDOCK AVE. 3 A.

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About The Oshkosh Northwestern Archive

Pages Available:
1,063,770
Years Available:
1875-2024