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Wisconsin State Journal from Madison, Wisconsin • 2

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Madison, Wisconsin
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2
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THE WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL Wisconsin Wednesday, December 4, 1940 Madison a v.v Young Cattle Raisers Win Purebloods Bank Robber Stabs, Slays Fellow-Convict in Alcatraz ai rl I I TV-- ill; if I i L.n 1 -in" -ii 4 U. W. 's Ag Papers Win Fourth Straight Year in a "good risk" and that his policy was to lend government funds to good risks "when they need it for the proper Referring to the British, he added that "they say they need the money." Jones, who was one of the four cabinet members to participate in a significant conference at Mor-genthau office Tuesday, said he had "not discussed at great length the problem" of British financial however. Asked if such a question were discussed at all at the meeting, he replied that "you can use your own imagination." He added quickly that the secret meeting was given over chiefly to a "general discussion" at which the question of "our own war supplies" received considerable attention. Jones' remarks on the possibility of some form of monetary aid to Britain bore out increasing indications that the matter was one of the more pressing to crop up at Morgenthau's rence, which preceded an administration move to release to Britain as swiftly as possible all American merchant ships that can be spared.

As the secrecy surrounding the conference appeared to lift a little, various sources reported that the conferees had explored known facts about British financial resources in this country and had come to the ccnclusion that while -Mr- v- jii. 1 1 1 CHICAGO (U.R) Three young cattlemen who have proved themselves "good sports" and deserving of opportunity will be chosen today to receive the International Livestock exposition directors' future breeders awards three pure-blood heifers that some day may produce the grand champions of another International. This was the first year the award was given, but the directors planned to make the prize an an nual event. Jess C. Andrew, West Toint, one of the directors who contributed the regist calves, said the award was intended as an incentive to young cattle raisers who this year did not have as good an animal to develop for competition in the junior steer competition as the winner of the grand championship, but who nevertheless had proved themselves worthy of such an honor.

Andrew contributed an Aberdeen-Angus heifer; Thomas E. Wilson, Chicago, a shorthorn, and C. R. Musser, Muscatine, a Hereford. Each of the animals was considered capable of producing some of the world's finest beef cattle.

Royalty of the grain world attended the coronation ceremonies for the 1940 king of corn, Charles N. "Dutch" Fischer, Shelbyville, and his neighbor, Beverly Meal, Waldron, the corn princess. These were the top winners in the corn competition earlier this week. The grand champion of the steer show, Sargo, a Hereford shown by Evelyn Asay, Mt. Carroll, will be brought to the auction ring Thursday and the price was expected to be high.

Sargo also had won the junior steer competition and winners of the double blue ribbon at the Interna tional usually bring the best prices. Two years ago when Mercer was the wlnnei of both competitions, Irene Brown, Aledo, 111., received $3.35 a pound for the champion. The highest price ever paid was $8.25 in 1929 when Lucky Strike won. WEATHER WEDNESDAY, DEC. 1.

1940 CHICAGO AND VICINITY: Cloudy to partly cloudy and somewhat colder tonight iind Thursday; lowest temperature tonight about 15; moderate RhlflinK winds early tonight, becoming northerly. ILLINOIS: Cloudy to partly cloudy, warmer extreme south tonight; Thursday partly cloudy, colder north. UPPER MICHIGAN: Cloudy to partly cloudy, light snow north to-nlKht and Thursday; continued cold. WISCONSIN: Cloudy partly cloudy tonight and Thursday; colder south and centrtl tonight. IOWA: Partly cloudy, colder extreme north tonight; Thursday generally fair.

Minnesota: Partly cloudy and colder tonight; Thursday generally fair. STATES WEATHER BUREAU Temperature Precipitation i Robert L. Finn, Evansville Merchant 46 Years, Dies EVANSVILLE Robert L. Finn, 78, life-long resident of Green county and for 46 years an Evansville merchant, died at his home here today" after a two month illness. Mr.

Finn was in business in the Evansville Grange store for 46 years before his retirement three years ago. lie was a memoer oi the Congregational church and a charter member of the Modern Woodman of America. He was treasurer of that organization until his death. Funeral services will be held at n. m.

Friday at the Allen funeral hom here, with the Rev. Grant V. Clark, castor of the Congrega tional church, officiating. Burial will be in Maple Hill cemetery, Evansville. Mr.

Finn is survived by widow, a daughter, Mrs. William Preston, Monroe; a son, Leonard R. Finn, Evansville, and three grandchil dren. Helen Russell Helen Russell. 32.

Wyocena, died Tuesday in a Madison hospital after an illness. The body was taken to the Dyrud funeral home Morten J. Sever son Morten' J. Severson, 53, Bloom ing Grove, died at his home Tuesday after a long illness. He had been a resident of Dane county all his life and had lived in Bloom ing Grove six years.

He was a members of the Modern Woodmen of the World and of the Scandinavian American frater nity. Survivors include the widow; two daughters, Mrs. Dean Parker, Blooming Grove, and Caryl Mae, at home; the father, M. E. Severson; three sisters, Mrs.

Edward Bolstad, Madison; Mrs. Alvin Severson, New Auburn, and Mrs. George Jenson, Cottage throve; five brothers, Ernest, Stoughton; Edward, Cottage Grove, and Al fred, Henry, and Olaf, all of Mad ison, and two grandchildren. Funeral services will be neid at 1:30 d. m.

Friday at the Schroeder funeral home and at 2 at the Holy Cross Lutheran church, with the Rev. Erlmg Yl- visaker officiating. The pallbearers will be the five brothers and a nephew, Lester T.prkvipe. Burial will be in the Roselawn Memorial park. Eda Mac Arthur LAKE MILLS Eda MacArthur, 81, a native of Lake Mills and member of the first graduating class of the Lake Mills high school, died in the home of Mr, and Mrs.

William Duckert near London, Tuesday. Miss MacArthur was born Nov 9, 1859, the only child of the late Mr. and Mrs. Philemon MacAr thur. After graduation from the Whitewater Normal school she taught school for many years Later she entered Stout institute She then taught in a number of Wisconsin and Michigan schools.

Next she went to Columbia university, New York, and later taught in Long Island, N. Y. and Hayes, Kas. She was a member of the Lake Mills Women's club and of the women's organizations of the Congregational church. Two cousins, Julius and Edward Cooper, live in Madison.

Funeral services will be held from the Hoskins Funeral home Thursday at 2:30 p. m. with the Rev. A. H.

Schoenfeld officiating. Burial will be in Rock Lake cemetery. Savings and Satisfaction Triple Treated "Master" Srokercoal Try an Order of this Superb Fuel WEBER KELLY GO. Gifford 360 LAFF-A-DAY Is-l AaW Cope 190. King Pratvm SynoViti.

WorW "Of course I know PW0W i njVi McComb Rites i 0 LEW WALLACE McCOMB STOUGHTON Funeral services for Lew Wallace McComb, 49, who died at a Madison hospital Monday, will be held at 2 p. m. Thursday at the Kjolseth, funeral home, with the Rev. Frederick D. Butler, rector of the Grace Episcopal church, Madison, officiating.

Burial will be at Riverside cemetery. Eugene honey FENNIMORE Word has been received here by relatives-of the death of Eugene Loney, 10, in toe home of his daughter, Edith in San Francisco, Saturday. He was a resident of this city for many years and an employe of the Roach Bros, hardware store here for many years. He is survived by a son and four daughters, all residing in California, and two brothers here, Charles and Roy. Mrs.

Annie Hurd Mrs. Annie Hurd, 62, Union Grove, died Tuesday at a Madison hospital after an illness. Mrs. Sicily Galvin Mrs. Sicily Galvin, 84, sister of Mrs.

John Triggs, 1028 West Dayton Street, died Monday in Winona, Minn. Besides eight brothers and sisters she leaves three daughters; Sister M. Redempta, San Antonio, Alice Galvin, Des Moines, Iowa, and Mrs. Julia Schaefer, Winona, and two sons; Dennis Galvin, Des Moines, Iowa, and State Sen. Michael J.

Galvin, Minona. Other Madison relatives are three nephews; Fred, Claude, and William Triggs. A bner Rolo ANTIGO (U.R) Funeral services will be held Thursday for Abner Rolo, 88, veteran logger who had been engaged in woods operations in Langlade and nearby counties for 50 years. He died Monday. the Future? Tomorrow? Next year? Can you foresee future events? Our insurance policies will safeguard the future of your family against fire, accident, death.

Let us help you face the future safely. unL I a LERDAHL 105 Monona. Am. r. S300 rrrrwd what it is.

It's a COPT 14- iWjntni.ua. tt 'mmtrnnu 11 vis. I V1 SAN FRANCISCO (U.R) Rufus McCain, bank robber and kidnaper serving a 99-year term in Alcatraz federal prison, was stabbed to death by Harry Young, bank robber-convict, in a brief, vicious struggle at the island penitentiary Tuesday. McCain and Young, regarded as among the toughest of Alcatraz' prisoners, were co-conspirators in an unsuccessful attempt of five convicts to escape from the fortress-like penitentiary in 1938, and Warden James Johnston believed they had a "falling out" climaxed by Tuesday's attack on McCain. Using a prison-made "shiv." Young assaulted McCain while they were working in the prison clothing factory.

With a single, powerful jab. Young plunged the knife into McCain's abdomen. Guards rushed to the struggle and subdued Young as McCain collapsed. Taken to the prison hospital, physicians at first believed the five-inch wound jn McCain's stomach might not prove fatal. His condition, was reported "favorable" four hours after the stabbing.

In midafternoon McCain died. First word of the stabbing was received in San Francisco five hours after it occurred when War-; den Johnston telephoned the San Francisco coroner to send a hearse to the Fort Mason docks to pick up McCain's body. McCain was 37, Young 29. Mc Cain was serving 99 years for national bank robbery, violation of the Dyer act taking a stolen car across a state line and kidnaping. He was sentenced at Durant, in June, 1937.

Young is serving 20 years for robbery of a national bank, lie was sentenced at Spokane, in Dec, 1934, and transferred from McNeil Island penitentiary the same month. Previously he had served terms in Walla Walla state penitentiary and Deer Lodge penitentiary, Montana. McCain was a native of Okla homa and had served a term at the McAlester, prison and Arkansas state prison at Little Rock. He escaped from the Arkansas prison and subsequently was recaptured. Warden Johnston notified the U.

S. attorney in San Francisco and it was indicated Young would be held on a murder charge. Green County's 1940 Fair Shows $965 Profit MONROE The 86-year-oVd Green county fair, which finished in ttoe DiacK iuj auer Deing threatened with extinction because of its previous weak financial condition, showed a profit on its 1940 fair, it was reported at the annual stockholders meeting here Tuesday. The 1940 profit was Louis Wolleson, Monroe, a mem ber of the Green county board of supervisors and the fair's board of directors, was elected president of the fair to succeed Byron R. Bennett, who declined to run for reelection.

Roscoe Smith, Monroe, was elected vice president. Brooks Dunwiddie was reelected secre tary and William Brown was reelected treasurer. Russell Prien, Gilbert Hoesly, and C. A. Roderick were elected to the board of directors.

Roder ick. Charles A. Schindler, and Fred Kohli were named to the fair's auditing Monroe Cuts Rate $2 on Each $1,000 MONROE Taxpayers here will have a rate of $2 a $1,000 less in 1941 than it was in 1940, based on a city budget of $200,819.06 adopted by the common council Tuesday night. The 1941 rate will be $26 per $1,000 of assessed valuation. Economy in municipal operations, a lower school budget, and an increase in estimated receipts accounted for the reduction.

Dodgeville Agent Retires After 42 Years DODGEVILLE James Smith, Dodgeville agent for the Illinois Central railroad, has retired, after more than 42 years service with his company. All but eight years he spent in Dodgeville. Smith has accepted a pension. M. R.

Adkins, Kingston, 111., is serving as relief agent. Preston Man Loses Finger in Tractor FENNIMORE Fred Yclinek, a farmer living near Preston, east of here, lost a finger and injured two others when he caught his hand in the fan of his tractor Sunday. Harnden Camp to Meet Monday Gen. Henry Harnden Camp No. 2, Sons of Union Veterans, will meet at 8 p.

m. Monday at GAR Memorial hall, 118 Monona ave. Solvay Coke for Domestic Use Badger 144 CHICAGO (U.R) The University of Wisconsin today again was the winner of the Saddle and Sirloin club's silver cup in the contest for papers on agricultural topics. Wisconsin took nine of the first 20 places in the contest this year on the subject, "The Economic Significance of Grass in American Agriculture." Purdue University placed second. Last year Wisconsin won permanent possession of the silver cup by winning the contest the third successive year.

I he contest, which is held every year to encourage writing on agricultural subjects, is open to undergraduates in all agricultural colleges in the United States and Canada. It was inaugurated by the late Robert B. Ogilyie in 1912 and after a lapse of two years during the war, was resumed in 1921 under the supervision of Charles E. Snyder. The three best essays this year wrngs Too Cold, Georgians Cancel Trip Eugent Talmadge of Georgia and W.

T. Anderson, Ma con, newspaper publisher, were all set to buck Wisconsin's winter climate today. Three others of their party, however, didn't reckon they could take it, so the tour of the state's conservation system, planned in detail for them, was postponed until June. The Georgia group, which is mapping a conservation program similar to.Wiscpnsin's, was to have been taken today to the Madison fish hatchery, then to call on Gov. Heil, The rest of today and Thursday was to have been spent at the Poynette state, game farm, the forest nursery at Wisconsin Rapids, pine plantings near Stevens Point, forest headquarters on Trout lake, Vilas county, the Woodruff fisheries headquarters and forest protection headquarters at Tomahawk.

But Anderson telephoned Conservation Director H. W. Mac-Kenzie from Chicago Tuesday night. The party had flown from Georgia, as planned, and "nearly froze to death" on a tour of the stockyards. If it was 5 below zero in Chicago, wanted to know, what would it be in Wisconsin? At that moment the mercury registered 2 below, MacKenzie informed him, but the weather was moderating and preparations for the trip were complete.

But Anderson suggested, if everything was agreeable, that June might be better and intimated a bit of fishing at that time might not be a bad idea. Baroness, Racine City Treasurer Win Citizenship MILWAUKEE (U.R) The United States had as citizens to day a baroness who renounced her title and a city treasurer who voted in this country for 43 years and held office for 30 without knowing he was an alien. They were the Baroness Emma von Paumgartten, 74, Milwaukee, and August J. Eisenhut, 64, Racine city treasurer. Tuesday they were members of a group of 67 who stood before Judge F.

Ryan Duffy in U. S. district court here and took the oath of citizenship. lhe baroness now plain Mrs. Faumgarten was born at Milwaukee, daughter of the late Congressman V.

V. Deus-ter. However, she lost her citizenship and gained a title when she married Baron Teter von Paumgartten, an attache of the Austrian embassy at Washington, D. the baron died in 1929. A native, of.

Germany. Eisenhut learned only recently that he wa mistaken in believing that his father conferred citizenship upon mm Dy Decoming' naturalized be fore Eihenhut reached his voting majority. A brother discovered in an examination of old papers that the father achieved citizen ship himself only after the vet eran city treasurer had come of age. AMATEUR FilTE TOMORROW AT 9 P.M. ON STAGE CAPITOL $25 IN CASH PRIZES Judge C.

HENRY GORDON C. Henry Gordon, Movie Villain, Dies in Hollywood HOLLYWOOD (U.R) C. Henry Gordon, 56, veteran stage and screen character actor, died Tuesday in Hollywood hospital of thrombosis after a leg was ampu tated during the weekend in an attempt to save his life. A native of New York City, Gordon was educated in Switzerland and Germany, going on the stage while a youth. He appeared on Broadway with such famous performers as Ina Claire, Florence Reed, Mary Duncan and Walter Huston.

Gordon came to Hollywood in 1930 and remained in pictures un til his death. His most frequent characterizations were villains or orientals. He is survived by the widow and a sister, Joan Gordon of New York. Alt may er Rites GREEN BAY (U.R) Funeral services will be held Thursday for Fred A. Altmayer, 79, Green Bay and De Pere hotel operator.

Altmayer was treasurer of the Wisconsin Skat league for 14 years. He died Monday. Williams Rites SPRING GREEN Funeral services for George E. Williams, 61, who died here after several months illness, will be held at 2 p. m.

Thursday at the Advent Christian church, Arena. Burial will be in the Richland Center cemetery. Survivors include the widow; a son, Gifford, at home; a daugh ter, Mrs. Glen Wilson, Ithaca; two brothers, Harry Cazenovia, and Charles, Pleasant Ridge, and four sisters, Mrs. W.

J. Williams, Rock ford, Mrs. Alson Beeman, Boaz; Mrs. Lola Ballman, Los Angeles, and Mrs. Frank Kilby, Bloom City.

Burglars Take Coal, Tools, But Fail on Stamps Burglars Tuesday night went for the more material things, and got some of them. Someone broke into the town hall in Rutland, the sheriff's office reported, and took some coal and tools used by Work Projects Ad ministration workers there. Someone else was less success ful at the Brayton school, 301 Washington after breaking a window glass, unlocking the win dow, and using a stepladder to open a transom into the food stamp office there. Madison police were informed nothing was taken Even if the burglar or burglars had obtained stamps there would not have been much gained. The stamps, used by relief recipients to purchase surplus food commodities, have to be "checked" against identification cards by grocers be fore the food is given out.

Outlaw Voluntary Political Groups, Mrs. Hogue Asks MILWAUKEE (U.R) Demand for legislation outlawing "voluntary" political committees and returning all campaign functions to "legally constituted county and state statutory committees" was voiced here Tuesday night by Mrs. Blanche Hogue, member of the executive committee of the state Republican statutory committee. "Elimination of the so-called Voluntary committees and other such organizations by law must be accomplished if the party is to be rebuilt on solid foundations," Mrs. Hogue told members of the executive committee of the fourth district Republican organization.

Mrs. Hogue blamed "numerous committees and clubs operating under the name of the Republican party" for GOP defeats in Milwaukee county in the Nov. 5 elections. Grange Master Asks Deportation for Subversive Aliens ANTIGO (U.R) Neal Peck, Peshtigo master of the Wisconsin State grange holding its 69th annual convention here today, urged the organization to insist upon the deportation of aliens who "take part in anything tending to defame or overthrow democracy." a GIFT Fr Your Home WINKLER STOKER Trade in your old atoker. Liberal Allowance! MADISON WINKLER STOKER COMPANY 147 West Oilman Fairchild 33 2 sufficient funds are available now, something may have to be done in the future.

Both Berlin and Rome took the position that whatever American aid rsay be given Britain will come too late. Nazis reported that they were starting a new form "of underseas warfare in which about 100 U-boats will operate in packs, lurking off the main sea routs while scouting planes roam the sea and lead them to the British convoys. According to the German version, the U-boat fleets will stage an under-and-over the aeai "blitzkrieg" designed to break British sea resistance this inter and clamp down a starvation blockade on the British Isles. Rome newspapers carried many sensational reports of impending deals between the United States and Britain, including speculation on whether in return for war aid the British empire would cede bases in the Pacific as well as the Atlantic to the United States or grant a highway route through Canada from the United States to Alaska. Axis air raiders added their bit to the destruction of British productive facilities.

London, Southampton, Gloucester, Oxford, and Birmingham were among targets attacked by German bombers in the last 24 hours, according to Berlin and London, and Nazis claimed that many huge fire had been tarted by tons of heavy bombs. On the sea lanes, where the Germans Tuesday claimed to have sunk 15 to 18 British ships, Berlin said that one U-boat reported the sinking of six armed enemy merchant vessels totaling 31,500 tons on its latest voyage and that a long-range bomber had sunk a 4 900-ton merchantman in an attack Tuesday on a large convoy 250 miles off Ireland. The Italian communique reported torpedoing of a British destroyer In the Atlantic on Sunday and the air torpedoing of two British cruisers off Crete, important new British base In the Mediterranean. Landgraf Hits Rural School Board 'Laxity' MONROE Rural school boards don't meet often enough, and as a result the affairs of many school districts are handled inefficiently. G.

H. Landgraf, state elementary school supervisor, told 400 Green county rural school board mem bers at their annual convention here Tuesday. "Many rural school boards at present meet but once a year, said Landgraf. "As a result, the board members don't examine carefully enough, in many in stances, me Doaras poucies in hiring, purchasing, and other mat ters. "It also means that many school boards are not acting according to law.

In hiring a teacher, for ex ample, the board under the law must hire him or her when the school board is sitting as a school board. Instead, many boards hire their teachers without doing that In purchasing, he added, the boards could save hundreds of dollars yearly by running their affairs as a corporation does. Items purchased should be carefully scrutinized by the entire board, he declared. Instead of that, many boards have a policy of buying as the occasion demands, without studying the matter. Lawrence Holmes, landscape specialist of the University Wisconsin college of agriculture spoke on beautification of school grounds.

Mr. Alta Rouse, Green county superintendent of schools, presided. Palestine will make loans to farmers ho wish to rent tractors. HALLBACII FULLER were written by Eugene V. Stevenson of the University of Illinois, Elwin C.

Fuller of the University of Wisconsin, and Eugene Hallbach of the University of Wisconsin. scs BELLEVILLE, 111. (U.R) Circuit Judge Maurice V. Joyce issued a temporary injunction late Tuesday ordering shutdown of 2,000 Illinois handbooks and restraining race tracks and all major 'communications companies "from the unlawful dissemination of racing information." The sweeping order also enjoined" operation of slot and pin-ball machines in the state. Atty.

Gen. John E. Cassidy, who obtained the injunction, charged there was a "state-wide conspiracy" to disseminate horse racing information and hence Joyce had state-wide jurisdiction in the matter. The order listed as defendants 1,500 Chicago handbook ''operators, including several known gangsters, and 500 downstate handbook operators; publishers of scratch sheets, tips sheets and sheets used in handbook establishments, including those published by concerns formerly controlled by M. L.

Annen-berg, Philadelphia publisher. Also named were the Western Union Telegraph Postal Telegraph, American Telephone and Telegraph; Illinois Bell Telephone; Southwestern Bell Telephone The Illinois Telegraph co. and the race tracks themselves Arlington Park; Washington Park; National and Lincoln Fields Jockey clubs; Fairmount Park Jockey club; and the Chicago Business Men's Racing assn. The communications companies were banned by the order from using their facilities to distribute information to bookmakers. In addition the injunct ion named as operators of property used by bookmaking establish ments, the Illinois National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago (Marshall Field and George Rich ardson, trustees); The Chicago Title and Trust and the North ern Trust Chicago.

FDR Names McNutt U. S. Health Chief By JULIUS C. EDELSTEIN WASHINGTON (U.R) Presi dent Roosevelt Tuesday night placed Federal Security Adminis trator Paul V. McNutt in charge of the health, medical welfare nutrition and recreational aspects of the nation defense activities The move, one of the first marking integration of a perma nent federal agency with defense activities, was regarded as reaffirmation of the president's third term campaign pledge that, de spite the international emergency the New Deal's social gains will be preserved The White House announced Mr Roosevelt's approval of a national defense advisory commission where they were under the juris diction of Defense Commissioner Harriet Elliott, whose report on undernourishment of the nation's workers was an issue in the recent presidential campaign.

She will remain in charge of consumer welfare activities. McNutt is made responsible for the health of the nation, for the rehabilitation of selective service draftees rejected for physical disabilities, for recreational facilities for mobilized trainees, and for maintenance of the nutritional standards of American manpower. Some quarters pointed out that the federal security agency will acquire more prestige, in effect rewarding McNutt for his services both in the government and in the political field. McNutt is given authority to ap point "dollar-a-year" men, and Highest Lowest 24 Hrs Yesterday Last Nit to 7a.m. Atlanta 42 26 0 Boise 42 30 0 Boston 25 2 0 Calgary 45 29 0 Chicago ...23 6 0 Cheyenne ..57 41 0 Cincinnati.

25 13 0 Cleveland .17 8 0 Detroit 20 13 .01 Dodge City 39 32 0 Dubuque 26 11 0 Duluth 11 0 .08 Edmonton ..37 14 0 El Paso 66 41 0 Escanaba ..9 2 .18 Fairbanks .22 9 .05 Fargo 22 .16 .04 Ft. Worth ..83 45 0 Green Bay 16 1 .19 Havre 48 32 0 J'ksonvill .60 34 0 Juneau 44 39 .49 Kan. City 34 27 0 La Crosse .22 6 0 L. Angeles 86 '63 0 Madison ...20 -2 0 Mad. 21 0 0 Med.

Hat ..44 30 0 Memphis 33 26 0 Milwaukee 0 P. 26 12 0 Montreal 1 -24 0 N. Orleans 59 42 0 New York .27 12 0 Nome 16 10 0 N. Platte ..52 30 0 Okla. City .50 32 0 Omaha 34 25 0 Park Falls 11 1 .14 Phoenix 82 45 0 Pittsburgh .20 6 0 Pueblo 72 39 0 Raleigh 44 16 0 Rapid City 54 39 0 St.

Louis 29 20 0 Salt Lake 54 28 0 S. Antonio 67 42 0 S. Francisco 68 44 0 S. S. Marie 17 9 .10 Seattle 57 40 0 S.

Lookout -18 .08 Spokane 39 34 0 Tampa 66 43 0 The Pas ...4 -11 0 Wa.sirgton 29 15 0 Watisau ....10 1 .11 Williston 38 27 0 Winnipeg ..7 -4 .09 Yel. Park 43 32 0 Yuma 80 54 0 MADISON WEATHER Yes- Tern- Rela- Wind Clou-ter- pera- tive Hu- Velo- di-day tura midity city nesa Noon 62 9 10 7 p. m. ...3 69 9 100 Today: 7 a. m.

..20 81 10 100 Noon 27 90 5 100 Highest temperature yesterday: 17 at midnight. Lowest temperature last night: -2 at 6 p. m. Mean temperature yesterday: 1: WE GUARANTEE normal, 27. Total precipitation since Jan.

30.48 Jn. Normal, 30. 5B in. Sun rose at sets at 4:24. TODAY IN OTHER YEARS Warmest in 1916, 53.

Coldest in 1888, -15. Wettest in 1825. .80. many assistants as are necessary to carry out the program. He will continue also with his regular duties as supervisor over the social security board, the public health service, the office of education, the Civilian Conservation Corps, the food and drug administration, and the National Youth Administration.

INDIGESTION may affect the Heart Ou trapped In U. tomseh or gullet may act Ilk hsir.trigfer oa tlw heart. At tba nrat slcn of dtstrais mart men anil women depend on Bellanj Tablets to et free. No UxatlTa but made of the faateet- artlne. mrdtrfnee known for sr'd indttertlon.

If the as itue to sad double Money Back, jsc iailee'iwewnarfTr--'p" Milwaukee Manufactured Telephone CASTLE At the Sign of DOY the Flying Red Bird 4.

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