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Marshfield News-Herald from Marshfield, Wisconsin • 3

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Marshfield, Wisconsin
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3
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MARSHFIELD NEWS-HERALD. MARSHFIELD. WISCONSIN THREE SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 25, 1933 SE RVfGES HELD FQR TAYLOR COUNTY MAN HURT CHOPPING WOOD iv1-oJ Vr i WOODIN'S BUSINESS EXPERIENCE IS WIDE Head of American Car and Foundry Company New York, Feb. 23 William H. Woodin, new.

secretary of the is an industrialist, manufacturer, of railroad equipment, banker, composer' of symphonies and collector of Cruikshan-kia. "V- He lists himself as a republican. Since 1916 he has been, president of the American Car and Foundry company. He rose to that position in 16 years, starting district I v- i 'vVj jfj Peace or War Responsibility is Theirs With Tokio's newspapers reporting a decision already reached whereby Japan' will secede from the League of Nations and will renew her conquest of Jehol, the world Is watching these men who must decide Japan's future and the peace of the world. This latest portrait of the Japanese cabinet shows the venerable premier, Viscount Makato Saito, center, presiding over a formal session.

Other members, left to right, are: standing, Ichiro Hatoyam, education; Lieut-Gen. Sadao Araki, army; Ryutaro Nagai, overseas affairs; Baron Kumakichi Nakajima, commerce; Matsukichi Koyama, Justice; Fumlo Goto, agriculture. Seated are Chuzo Mitsuchi. railways; Count Yasuya Uchida, foreign affairs; Premier Saito: Baron Tat- euo Yamamoto, home affairs; Hiroshi V. J.

Hirsch Receives Gash in Forehead (By News-Herald Correspondent) Medford, Feb. S5 V. J. Hirsch; prominent town of Little. Black farmer, was severely cut on the fore head yesterday morning when ha was chopping wood at his farm home.

He was brought to the Medford hospital for treatment. Tne accident happened when the axe which Mr. Hirsch was using be came caught in a clothesline causing him to lose his grip on the handle. The axe bounded, back, and struck -him on his head. Taylor county received its school loan of $30,000 yesterday morning from By noon, yesterday, all the checks to the various school treasurers in the county were out and in the mails.

Arthur J. Latton, county superintended of schools, was the principal speaker at a P. T. A. meeting in Victory school.

Deer Creek, last evening. The county normal school orchestra also appeared on the program. Dave Bruce, Park Falls, visited at the Carl P. Nelson home In the town of Holway from Tuesday until Thursday. Norman Urquhart, who attended the meeting of the Wisconsin grand chapter of Royal Arch Masons in Milwaukee, returned home Thurs- day morning.

William Milne addressed mem- bers of the P. T. A. in Dorchester at its monthly meeting held at the high school. Medford's affirmative debate team won from the negative team of Shawano here yesterday afternoon in the high school auditorium.

MARRIAGE LICENSE Henry Behling, Browning. Evelyn Lewandowskl, Goodrich. There were 17 divorces to every 100 marriages in the United States during 1930. NEW AND USED ADDING MACHINES AND TYPEWRITERS Ribbons, Carbon Paper and supplies. EDW.

J. RIPLJNGER "Everything for Your Office never see' the girl again. DOROTHY DIX'S LETTER BOX When Mother Was a Child, Did young to marry anybody. Your tastes are unformed and you dont know what sort of husband you will want when you are a grown-up woman. The man you would pick out now would be no more likely to come up to your taste then would a hat that you would buy today.

Then you havent had your playtime and about two or three years from now, when you were a dragged out, settled-down woman with a husband and perhaps a baby on your hands, you would begin to envy the boys and girls of your own age who had had sense enough to stay single and who were playing around and enjoying themselves. "Always JJo as She Was Told?" Seventeen! Risks Whole Future Happiness In Marrying Man With Two Children Answer: It depends on how much you love the girl and hew much she cares for you. If she loves you she will be willing to wait for you. Also, I think your decision should depend upon how much you need the technical training in your business. A college degree doesn't nesessaray opeil success in any line Of effort.

Very often actual experience is more important than any theory taught in school. DOROTHY DIX. Marathon County News Transfers of L. G. Schnug and Merkel and wife, pt.

Title wife to J. F. SE; pt. SE-9-26-4. Clarence Guenther to Guenther.

ENE-6-30-10. Anton Oney E. Kirby and wife to Walter Schlei SE-18-30-9. C. A.

Barwig to Bertha Barwig, SW; Wtt SE-5-27-8. Marriage Licenses Lesly Teske, Wausau. Rose Punke, Edgar. Frederick Pruin, Birnamwood. Gertrude Bultman, Birnamwood.

Anton Gallistel, Medford. Elizabeth Dermath, Medford. John Valentine, Wausau. Dorothy Hill, Wausau. Martin Starzinski, Wausau.

Evelyn McCormick, Wausau. Alfred Peters, Helen Koppa, Marathon. Mosinee. Ernest Traska, Wausau. Hazel Hildebrandt, Wausau.

Elmer H. Bergs, Edgar. Therese Golla, Wausau. It's Time Now to let us look over your car. Free inspection! Boulevard Motor Co.

Quality and Service Always 520 N. Central Phono 139 In Line for Post Baltimore engineer and gas com pany executive, with wide expert ence in port and public utility affairs, Howard Bruce, above, is expected to be named by the Roosevelt administration to a high post in the incoming government. DORCHESTER P.T.A. HEARS WM. MILNE Head of Taylor County Normal Speaks Thursday (By New3-Herald CorresptMiuent) Dorchester, Feb.

25 The following program was presented at the regular meeting of the Parent-Teachers association held on Thursday even ing school: Selections, "Moment Musical," "Vleue Blueu," "Pizzcato," "Inter mezzo, and La Zanne," primary rhythm band under the direction of Miss Rachel Crocker and R. Wayne Hugoboom, accompanist on the pi ano. Talk, "Attacks on Education," by William Milne, Medford, principal of the Taylor County Normal. Trombone solo, "Shanty in Old Stanty Town, Gilbert Copeland. The committee in charge of the program was Mrs.

"George Purvis, Harry Nelson and Charles Schiebe. The refreshment committee was: Mrs. William Monroe, Mrs. N. Mc-Carron, Mrs.

Conrad Kramer, Mrs. Gust Liepke, Mrs. Clara Decker, and Mrs. William Malchow. Station men help yon Service! wiuumjimiiii i.

.1 Right i iu nnm iim.mnujuuL.-i i piuujai manager of a plant at Berwick, Pa. tie was Dorn in Berwick, in lisea. He graduated from Columbia university school of mines in 1890. Two years later he was general superintendent of the Jackson and Woodin. manufacturing company at Berwick.

He left that firm as pre sident to go with the American Car and Foundry company in 1899. In less than a year he was called to New York to be assistant to the first vice-president. In another year he was assistant to the president and 1902, in little over two years after joining the company, he became director. With his rise to the presidency he collected other important industrial posts. He is now chairman of the board and member of the executive committee oi the American Locomotive company; chairman of the board of.

the American Car and Foundry Motors company; chairman of the board of the Railway Steel Spring company; president of American car and Foundry Export company; President of the American Car and Foundry Securities company and director of the Federal Reserve bank of New York. He is a member of the board of directors of the Remington Arms company, the Super Heater company, the Montreal Locomotive works, the Cuba company, the Cuba Railway company, Compania Cub-ana Consolidated Railroads of Cuba and the American Ship and Commerce comDany. Mr. Woodin has composed five symphonies, a children's book of songs and numerous popular pieces. The Berlin philharmonic orchestra recently played his "Oriental Suite." To get his melodies he props himself in bed at night with a guitar.

He calls it restings. One other thing that will take his mind momentarily from business is a tip that he can find a book with drawings by Cruikshank in it. He collects them. He is active in the American Numismatic association. He also belongs to the Union league; Racquet and Tennis, Railroad, Metropolitan, Union, Lawyers, Lotos ana warn House clubs.

He lives in Manhattan. He was married in 1889 to Annie Jessup of Montrose, Pa. They had four children, William H. Mary, Anne ind Elizabeth. LUXURY TRAIN A train ODerating between Mos- enm and Tiflis.

a journey taking seventy-six hours, has radios, telephones, a library and a special car for "culture and rest" as attractions. E-X-T-R-A! FLAGG AND QUIRT ARE BACK AGAIN IN HOT PEPPER, EDMUND LOWE VICTOR McLACLEM WMWUZ aiRCMKL TA HUE. WED. THURS. Uc DU ALBERT J.

SCHULTZ Rev. G. F. Hahn Conducts Rites at Dorchester Church Thursday (B Nw-He-M Orraiionaem Dorchester, Feb. 25 The funeral for Albert J.

Schultz, 50 was held Thursday at the Evangelical Peace church and burial was made at Memorial cemetary, with the Rev. G- F. Hahn. officiating. Mr, Schultz died at his home in the town of Holton on Feb.

20 of heart disease. Deceased was born July 5, 1882, at Auburnaaie, ana lived In that community until 16 years ago, when he settled southeast of Dorchester on a farm where he lived until h-'s death. He was. married April 12, 1906, at Auburndale. Surviving are his widow, six children, Mrs.

Helen Auberson, Marsh-field; Mrs. Myrtle Seidel, Medford; Mrs.Verna Schelba, Abbotsford; Elmer, and Earl, at home; four William and Fred, Auburndale; Frank, Milwaukee; Walter, Chicago: six sisters, Mrs. Ida Berdan, Auburndale; Mrs. Otto Schultz, Milwaukee; Mrs. Eric Anderson, Wausau; Mrs.

Albert Teske, Lugerville; Mrs. Ernest Wunrow, Marshfield: Mrs- Augusta Stoll, and six grandchildren. "Beautiful Isle of Somewhere" and "Does Jesus Care" were sung by Misses Irene Laack and Jane Hugo-boom, with Mrs. William Copeland accompanying on the organ. Pall bearers were Ed Scheibe, John Kadonsky, Loys Buell, Fred Leonhardt, Nick Decker, and Joseph Mohan.

In charge of flowers were Viola and Edna Severt Idella Kayhart, and Mabel Lueddecke. Relatives from out of town attending the rites included: Mr. and Mrs. Otto Schultz, Milwaukee; Mr. and Mrs.

William Schultz, Mrs. Ida Berdan, Fred Schultz, Mr. and Mrs. Emil Schultz and son, Clarence, August Severt, Melvin, Martin and Edna Severt, all of Auburndale; Mr. and Mrs.

Albert Teske, son Howard, daughter Delores, Lugerville; Mr. and Mrs. Otto Severt, Arpin; August Hocfs. and Mr- and Mrs. Edward Hoefs, Stratford; Mr.

and Mrs. John Cauger, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Huet-ter, Mr. and Mrs.

William Popp and son, William Miss Viola Ssvert, Mr. and Mrs. William Gauger, son, William and daughter, Dorothy, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Zeidler, Mr.

and Mrs. Ernest Gauger, and Mr. and Mrs. J. Harp, all of Marshfield.

Cary Bluff Mrs. Hawley Smith, Dexterville, spent the past week at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Carl Christensen. C. F.

Shreve has received word of the death on Feb. 18 of his sister, Mrs. Amanda Swinson, at Mobila, Ala. Mrs. Hawley Smith, Dexterville, was a Thursday visitor at the A.

R. Jossie home. LaFae Burt, who has been ill with whooping cough is now ill with bronchitis. The A. R.

Jossie home is under quarantine for whooping cough. Their daughter, Elaine, is ill. SNIP-SNAP Crazy Cutouts for Picture Puzzle Fans She's the best known and most highly respected lady of America, although she resides in splendid Isolation. Answer Monday. A good investment for yoa.

Oar Co-operative Plan The Marshfield Brewing Co. fit ft -tfH I 1 I jini riiteMMi Inin in Minim Then twenty years is too much difference in age between a husband and wife unless they are both past middle age. Do a little figuring. The difference between 17 and 37 may not seem so much now, but it will mean a lot when you are 40 and still feeling like a debutante and he is 60, and it will be worse still when you are 50 and he is 70. Besides, a man of 37 has had his fling.

He has seen the world and he is tired of it and wants to settle down, but at 17 you are Just entering the door for a look-see at life and the whole show is still before you. You want to go out and dance and make whoopee, which is perfectly right and natural at your time cf life, but you wont be able to do it if you marry a man twenty years older than yourself. Then there are the two little children to consider. Being a stepmother is one of the most difficult and arduous jobs on earth and the one that requires the most tact and patience and self-control, and ho girl of 17 is fitted to undertake it. You are nothing but a child yourself and you wouldn't even know how to go about rearing youngsters nearly as old as yourself.

So, for pity's sake and your own sake and for the sake of the children, dont undertake a ready-made family. Dear Miss Dix I am a young man in my early 20s making an-ordinary salary, and I earnestly wish to know whether it is better for me to continue my education by going a-way to college or to marry a girl whom I love very much. If I go to the technical school as I have planned, there will be ninety-nine chances out of a hundred that I will Mlnamt, communications. She Really never late, never idled, but was always the industrious apprentice. He never even did anything foolish.

He never got into debt or went on a wild party or drove old Dobbin out of a walk or skylarked a-round with the girls or got Into a scrape of any kind whatever. And mother was equally beyond reproach in her youth. She also was a wonderful scholar and mother's little helper, and she always just wanted tu do what mother wanted her to do and wear the clothes mother bought for her, and she never went anywhere without a chaperon, and when boys came to see her they sat on one side of the room and she sat on the other and they discussed what Mr. Browning thought he meant in certain of his poems. Now, I ask you, how is puur John, who is always tumbling from one difficulty into another, going to tell father who never made a mistake in his own youth, about how he has overdrawn his allowance and has got into trouble over his pranks at college or has got balled up in an engagement with a girl who took his near-lovemaking seriously? And how is Sadie going to confide in mamma, whose own youth was so austere and prim, that she thinks she is falling in love with some boy and was just thrilled when he kissed her? The answer is they cant.

And so both John and Sadie miss v.n v.o nf. wn0 didnt pretend to be plaster saints, but admitted to having been regular human beings and having done the foolish things that all oir- and bOV do Sq perhaps, Bertie, if your mother will just come down off her high horse and confess that she used to be "sassy" to her mother and that her mother disapproved of the way she did her hair and the boys who came to see her, Just as your mother does about your affairs, why you might get along on a pleasant, confidential basis that would make both of you happier. Dear Dorothy Dix I am in love with a man of 37 but I am only 17. He is a widower with two children. Do you think I should marry him? Answer: Good gracious no.

A thousand times no. leant think of a more unsuitable match nor one that is calculated to bring more misery on more people. To begin with, at 17 you are too even with I El CHILDREN like Rexall Orderlies for their candy flavor. Youll like them for their gentle sess their natural, non-griping, corrective action. And they are safer for everyone at any time.

Try them todayl box of 60 ORDERLIES 50c SEXTON-DEMGEN DRUG CO. Phone 276 fs" net Now Needs Attention Let DEAR MISS DIX I am a young girl in my teens and very unhappy at home. My mother and I dont get along together at all and she disapproves of everything I do, al though I do nothing wrong. One of the things that gets my goat is that she is al ways setting her self up as an ex ample, and that makes me mad through and through. She says that when she was a girl she never did anything of which her parents disapproved nor ever "sass-ed" them.

Do you think that in the twenty-one years she lived at home she never said an unthought-ful or unkind word or disobeyed her father's and mother's wishes? I don't. Anyway, nojj for me. Well, Bertie, I am inclined to agree with you and surmise that perhaps your mother wasn't quite the pin-feathered angel when she was a girl that she represents herself to be. But when she describes herself as a paragon, she really doesn't mean it to be taken literally. She is merely holding an ideal up to you of what she would like you to be and also she is trying to fix a picture of mother perfection in your mind.

Something for you to revere and kow-tow before. One of the most nathetic things in the world is the passionate de- sire that parents have for their I children's admiration. Above every- tiling else they long for then- chil- uicu iu luvja. up uieiu wu uiuui .1 1 1 A I M1C111 UtbiC bill UUd, U1C W1CI, strongest, the most wonderful people on earth. That is why father swells up and becomes oracular and dictatorial in the home circle, and the phrase "mother knows best" is always on mother's lips.

And this Is why, when the children differ with their father and mother on any subject or venture any criticism of anything they do, father and mother consider them impertinent and punish them because they have committed the crime of lese majesty. They have questioned the Infallible, and the poor parents who see their godhead slipping away from them are hurt and offended. Personally, I think it is a great mistake for parents to put themselves upon a pedestal and hand out children feel that they have noth-story of their youthful perfections because it creates a barrier between them that the youngsters have not the courage even to try to surmount. It makes the parents so good that they cease to be human, and the children feel that thev nothing in common with these superior beings. According to father's, own account of his impeccable youth, he was always a model boy who was a gallant knight to his mother and kind and attentive to his little sisters, no matter what pests they were.

At school he was a diligent student who took all the prizes and caused the teachers no annoyance. When he went to work he was THE FIRST "HOT" MUSIC Nero is said to have calmly played on his fiddle while Rome was in flames, bat if your home was burning you'd do Middling" of a different sort! Fire departments are active and efficient, bat they pay no losses the only way to assure prompt payment of Fire Losses Is to be adequately protected by oar reliable Mutual Companies. WE CAN SAVE YOU FROM 10 TO 30 ON ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE. FROELKE RADTKE INSURANCE AGENCY Ford Garage Bid. Marshfield Phone S3S Engine' oil is likely to be thinned with gasoline from hard starting' on below zero days.

Condensation has left water in the crankcase. It will pay you to let us drain and refill with of principal is the first consideration in investing, the funds of this Bank We Invite 100 Pennsylvania A Beware of thin oils during this weather. Veedol motor oil will start quickly; lubricate instantly and efficiently protect the motor at all heats and speeds. with prompt, courteous 1 MOTOR OIL THOROUGH VEEDOL CHASSIS LUBRICATION is at your command at all of our conveniently located stations. It's necessary right now with all.

the slush and rapid temperature changes. Come In LLOYD L. FELKER COMPANY Distributors Clnl2S Since 1892 Pvn PHONE 468 When your car won't start well call for and deliver batteries or cars for servicing. YDOL-IVE ED STATIONS.

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Pages Available:
616,851
Years Available:
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