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The Capital Times from Madison, Wisconsin • Page 8

Publication:
The Capital Timesi
Location:
Madison, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

8 Home Owned 1 Local, 5 Area Men to be Ordained Into Priesthood Fr. Donald Lins Fr. E. G. One Madison and five area men Will be amons 10 to hp nrHainoH iuu ine auionc priesthood May 31 and June 3 by Bishop William son Catholic Diocese.

Four, including the Madisonian, will be ordained May 31 at St. Raphael's Cathedral here and two will be ordained June 3 at St. Luke's Church, Plain. The Madison man to be ordained here is Fr. Roman A.

Wiedholz, son of Mrs. N. M. Wiedholz, 1107 E. Gorham of Holy Redeemer Parish.

Area men to be ordained here are Fr. Henry G. McMurrough, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J.

McMurrough, Mineral Point; Ft. Ed mund G. Salzmann, son of Mr. and Mrs. Adolph J.

Salzmann, Dickeyville; and Fr. George O. Wire, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otto A.

Wirz, Monroe. Those to be elevated to the priesthood at Plain are Fr. Lawrence N. Korback, son of Mr. and rs.

Nick Korback, Spring Green, and Fr. Donald Lins, son of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Lins, Route 2, Spring Green.

Father Wiedholz will say his first solemn mass June 1, at 10 a. at Holy Redeemer Church here. A reception in his honor will be held in the Parish Hall from 3 to 5 p. m. He will off i ciate at benediction in the Church' during the reception period.

Fr. Wiedholz attended Holy Redeemer1 PlayOffs at Three City Schools Announce Locations for Jump Rope Semi Finals Saturday Some 170 Madison school eirls. winners in elimination rounds of tne Laoa capital Times Jump Ropi Contest, will take Dart in semi final play offs Saturday beginning it d.in. ai wasmngion, ivnavaie, and Marquette Schools. Hermine Sauthoff, Contest Director, said The finals of the JumD RoDe Contest will be held May 24 at! vvasnington school and 25 winners will split prizes worth $125 donated by The Capital Times.

Sites of the semi final rounds ana scnoois participating toilow: At Washington School St." Raphael's, Washington, Holy Redeemer, Franklin, Longfellow. St, James, St. Joseph's, Lapham, Lin com, and St. Patrick's. At Marquette School Emer son, Madison Lutheran, Sherman, Marquette, Lowell, and St.

Bernard's. At Midvale School Blessed Sacrament, Queen of Peace, Mid vale, Dudgeon, Nakoma, Randall, ana iagewater. County Checks 351 Cars on Thursday Dane County and State Traffic Patrol officers examined 351 Thursday in the fourth day of safety campaign. The countv ca paign will close tonight, according to Russell W. Klitzman, County irainc airector.

In their checks Thursday, ficers reported finding 10 with headlight defects; C7 with otner lighting system and 36 with defective Seven irregularities in licenses and one in car tion were discovered. defects; brakes, drivers' registra JNinety five persons i notices to their cars repaired within live days but no arrests Totals for the campaign to date inciuae i.is cars checked; 45 regularities found in drivers' 1 censes and seven in car regis uduuns; 'is cars witn defective headlights; 228 with other lighting eiocts; ius witn detective brakes; 305 five day warnings issued; and nine arrests made. Hold La Crosse Man i Big Fraud LA CROSSE UP) John F. Wall jasper pleaded innocent today ir Circuit Court to rharcroc nf om. bezzling more than $25,000 while he was an officer of the Community Walljasaer was arrested1 Thursday, aDDeared in fVmntv rmii and was bound over to the Circuit Court.

The exact charge is that Wall jdsper emoezzieu "in excess of" $25,000, but Dist. Atty. John Bess hard told the court that a check of financial records showed that the amount taken was around $250,000. Milton T. Murray, Milwaukee, attorney for Walljasper, asked the court for a reduction iium xo in the de fendants bond.

Judge Lincoln Neprul approved the lesser amount. Walljasper's trial will be scheduled for some time in the fall, the court said 1 Home Edited Home Salzmann Fr. H. G. McMurrough School.

He is a graduate of St. Francis Minor and Major Seminaries, Milwaukee. Father McMurrough will offer his first solemn mass June 2, at 10 a. m. at St.

Paul's 'Church Mineral Point. Holy Ghost Church, Dickeyville, will be the scene of Fr. Salzman's first solemn mass June 3, at 10 a. m. A reception in the new priest's honor will be held in the Parish Hall from 2 to 4:30 p.

m. Fr. Wirz's first solemn mass will be offered June 1, at 10:30 a. at St. Victor's Church, Monroe.

Fr. Wirz has one sister in religion, Sister Joan, of the Sisters of St. Agnes, Fond du Lac. Fr. Korback will offer his first solemn high mass at St.

John's Church, Spring Green, June 8, at 10 a. m. He will officiate at benediction at 4 p. following a reception to open at 2 p. m.

The first solemn mass by Fr. Lins will be offered at St. Luke's Church, Plain, June 5 at 10 a m. The oldest of 14 children, Fr. Lins has two sisters in religion, Sister M.

Elizabeth, Racine and Sister M. Donald, O. Chicago. In addition, four nfhpr mor. be ordained by Bishop O'Connor at St.

Raphael's on May 31. They are Fr. Dennis W. Crowley, Mil waukee; xt. josepn DoStefano, Altoona, Fr.

Francis Dominic. Philadelphia; and Fr. Robert F. Peter Anderson Dies at Lodi Home LODI. Wis.

PaW 87, former rural resident of Poy nette and Lodi Townships, died Thursday at his home here. The ooay was taken to the Hamre Fu neral Home, where friends may call. Surviving are two sons Oscar, Chicago, and Maurice, Madison; three daughters, Mrs. Neil Mundahl, a i fax, Mrs. Marston Barthol omew, Lodi, and Mr.

'Anderson Mrs. David Horg. Kinssbure. one brother, George, Sleepy Jameson, Lodi. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 1:30 in the funeral home and at 2 in the First Luth eran unuren nere.

The Rev. L. Mathre, pastor, will officiate. Ex TB Patients At Milwaukee'Meet Three former tuberculosis pa i ici1Lo ix um mauison took part in discussions Thursday at the 44th annual meeting of the Wisconsin Anu iuDercuiosis Association Milwaukee. They were Bj'arne Romnes, chief of community services, Division of Children and Youth in the State Joyce Hoeltine and Howard Nagel, both of the Universitv ouuuul oi ouciai wont.

Miss Hoeit is me newiy appointed rehabilitation counselor at Wisconsin State Sanatorium at Walps. Romnes said that. TR na.ionts sheltered for a long time need to build confidence in getting back into daily living. Social workers should not be a "crutch" to the patient, Miss Hoelting said. Patients should participate in pro uiai pauenis entering sanatoriums need better knowledge of "what.

tney are in ior." Ban Tree' Label In Book Club Ads WASHINGTON (UP1 A little word "free" threatened to stir a Dig ruckus the courts. The Federal Trade Commission touched off the controversy in a ruling on "when free is not free" advertisements. In a 3 to 1 decision, the commis ruled Thursday nieht that the Book of the Month Club could no longer use the word "free" to de scrioe the gift" books it offers jw members. The FTC said the books were not really "free" because a new member had to pay for them if he failed to purchase the required number of book selections within a year. It said, therefore, that, th club's ad vertising was "false, misleading and Read Ohio Chemical Adds 200 MoVe Parking Spaces Firm Enlarges Lots At Two Plants to Solve Street Problem A Madison firm which believes self help when it comes to meeting parking problems has lust completed an ambitious program wuicii auus suu more otf street spaces for the cars of its emnlnves By dint of careful planning, including lease arrangements and Ohio Chemical and Surelpal F.miin.

ment Company has made sure that workers at its two plants won't contribute to the City's tangled Following an 0 the concern date a total of 450 vehicles in suveii company owned lots rounding both its nlanf.sm the 1400 block of E. Washington avenue ana me otner the 1900 block of E. Johnson Street. "We've always heen imn with the seriousness of the parking problem," A. 'J.

Sauer, the firm's personnel manager, ex plained todav. "and ia timA wnen we ever grow more we'll pro vide additional spaces." Before embarking on its parking plan the company could takP rai of only about 250 of its workers ars, oauer said. By a recent lease the firm has acquired the use of nrnnertv rm from the main plant, at the corner of S. Dickenson and E. Main Streets, which will take care of i io extra cars.

The lot has been graded and otherwise equipped to handle the vehicles. In addition, a lot across the street and in front of the E. Washington Avenue dant has hpPn m. larged to where.it will handle 130 vehicles. A lot at the rear of the building also has been made larger to uaiiuie a total oi 7U cars.

Including another lease arrant. ment with the North Western xvamoan at me Johnson Street plant, and land purchase there, the company now has seven lots to provide the 450 car stalls Sauer All in all the firm has insured itself against clogging local streets with parked vehicles in the vicin ity oi its two plants. Brodwater Rites Are On Saturday BLACK EARTH, Wis. Funeral rites for Lee E. Brodwater, 64, former Preston, resident! wno died Tuesday at Richland Center where he had lived since last November, will be held Saturday at 2 in the Plant V.ri iweuiuaisc tjnurcn, rather than to ly in tne schanel Funeral Home previously reported.

To officiate at th services saf. urday will be the Rev. Frank Kirt ley, pastor of the Methodist Church, and burial will be in Oak Hill cemeterv Mr. PmHwafor'c body will arrive at the funeral uume nere tnis afternoon. Verona Prom Will Be Held Saturday VERONA.

Wis. The Vernna High School' Prom will be held at me ceiievine High School Saturday night, with Mavnarrt Feller son of Mrs. Rosa Feller, as king, and Vera Kahl, daughter of Mr. ana ivirs. vernon Kahl, as queen.

The Verona High School gymnasium is undergoing repairs which will not be completed by Members of the Court nf TTnnnr will be Maynard Feller, Darrell Wittwer, Janice Bruni, Bob Bor chert, Jean Wittwer, Harland Er furth, Nona Moore, Al Hefty, and New Glariis History students to Tour Area NEW GLARUS. Wis. mn embers of the New filarns Hmh oLiiuui junior Historian Club will go on tne group's annual tour Sat Leaders will he Marty and Russell Mnnmo Th club will visit the State Historical Museum at Madison, the Octagon House at Watertown, Holy Hill Hartford, the State Game at poynette, and historical at Beaver Dam. RITES ON MONDAY Dr. Corliss S.

Toay retired Sto ghton dentist who died Thursday in his Lake Kegonsa home, will be held Monday at 2 in Mineral Point, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Martin. Officiating will be the Rev. Earl Remaly, pastor of the First Congregational Church, Mineral Point.

Dr. Toay had. practiced dentistry in Stoughton for 40 years before he retired six years ago. Friends may call at the Cum mings Edison Olson Funeral Home, Stou'ghton. untill 10 d.

m. Satur day. The body will be taken to the jon Sunday, Madison THE CAPITAL Capt. hie Capt; Robert E. Blue, Univer sity of Wisconsin Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps commandant and a 30 year navy man, was honored Thursday night at a banquet marking his retirement from the Navy and the University.

Shown above during presentation of a gift are (left 'to right) Lawrence J. Fitzpatrick, president of the Madison Council of the Navy League; Capt. Blue; Capt. L. K.

Pollard, of the Navy League, and John G. Jamieson, Madison, vice president of the Wisconsin State Navy League Council. Capt. Blue, 54, was acclaimed as a "fine American and an exemplary naval officer" before Lifetime Member of Plumber Group Business Associates Won't Let Robert Barnwell, 73, Retire Robert Barnwell, 73, of 3925 mineral iJoint we 1 kni cal plumber and i ant ior tne city and state Health Departments over the Dast 37 years, found out Thursday night won't let him retire. Barnwell, a charter member of the Madison Association nf Mas ter Plumbers, and its presidentl for the past two years, resigned that post recently when failing causea mm to quit Thursday night Barnwell given a plaque making him a time member of both the Madison and State Association of Master! Plumbers in recognition of his Ihe plaque contained a formal resolution passed at a recent state I convention oi the plumbers ir Milwaukee praising Barnwell foi his work as "an outstanding au thority on nhimbinir and sanita.

The plaaue o.iterl Ramwoii't work in originating an apprentice and his role as an advisor to both Madison and the State Health Departments. Barnwell, who also was nlumb ing teacher at the Madison Vocational and Adult School, was given the award by E. R. Stege, Madi executive secretarv of the at the Ace of Clubs restaur ant. "This is of the happiest days Barnwell said in ac plaque.

"Here I of my life, cepting tl thought I au wasned up andj then I am remembered derail manner." The "un retired" umber. Madison resident for the past 37 years, is planning to visit relatives uzona, ana wm return to Maa next month. Middleton Flower Show On 2 Days MIDDLETON, Wis. The Mid dleton Garden Club will present an Airican violet ana gloxinia show from 2 to 9 Saturday and from 11 to 4:30 Sunday at the Village Hall. The show will include a horti culture division, flower arrangements, children's exhibit, and an educational exhibit of African vio lets presented by Mrs.

A. L. Tatum, Madison. Ribbon awards will be made in the different classes. Judges will be Mrs.

Leo Roets, Oconomo Mrs. C. Faean. Madison. and Mrs.

O. F. Isenberg, Bara The committees include Mrs. A Dahmen, club president; Mrs. Sakrison, general show chairman: Mrs.

C. Sakrison, Mrs, M. Schwab, Mrs. M. A.

Davis, staging; Mrs. W. Chandler, Mrs. J. Rupp, Mrs.

H. Skott, Mrs. T. Daniels, Mrs. A.

Dahmen, publicity; Mrs. M. Schwab, Mrs. William Zurflus, Mrs. Sakrison, Mrs.

I. Barkhahn, schedule; Mrs. C. W. Thielke.

Mrs. L. Wil liamson, entries; Mrs. I. Barkhan, Mrs.

I. Bell, Mrs. J. Brum, plant sale; Mrs. R.

Hulder, Mrs. Hans Skott, Mrs. F. J. Zevnik, flower arrangement.

Arthur Krause Services To Be On Saturday DE FOREST, Wis. Funeral rvices for Arthur R. Krause. 61. De Forest, who died Wednesday in a Madison hospital, will be held.

Saturday at 2 in the Norway Grove Lutheran Church. The Rev. Axel; Anderson will officiate. The body is at the Gunderson Funeral Home, Madison, where friends may call. Mr.

Krause was retired larmer. and had lived the past 35 years with a Mrs. Manna weichmann, De For 3t. Also surviving are another ster. Mrs.

Edith Schuch. South Beloit, 111., and brothers, wiuiam, August, and Theodore, all of Sun Prairie. Another brother. Charles 79. Sun Prairie, died a week ago Thursday, and funeral services were held in Sun Prairie last Sat urday.

Is Honored more than 100 navy officers, graduating naal BOTC students and friends at the dinner in the Memorial Union. The event was given by the Madison Council of the Navy League. The veteran naval officer will retire from his service to the state school and the military service at the end of the school term. A 1922 graduate of the Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md Blue served in the Pacific during World War II as a commander of a submarine tender and later as commander of the heavy cruiser, Helena. The captain introduced Robert Korbitz, Medford, to the dinner guests as the outstanding member of the current graduating Naval ROTC class.

Robert Barnwell Sun Prairie High rrogram Sunday SUN PRAIRIE, Wis. Baccalau eate services for graduatins of Prairie High School will be held at 8 Sunday in the gymnasium, with the Rev. Eu gene J. Graham, of Sacred Hearts auioiic rarisn, speaking on Light One Candle." The Rev. Mr.

Graham will also give the invocation and benedic nun. inea cappeiia cnoir will sine wo numbers. The processional and recessional will be tlavei hv Mrs R. F. Schiller, who also will direct Alma Tiedt is chairman of the nior student committee planning Dallas Johnson, Lewiston, Is Dead PORTAGE, Wis.

Dallas John proprietor of Johnson's Tav in the Town of Lewistnn. anri president of the Columbia County lavein league, cued xnursday a) St. Joseph's Hospital in Chippewa Falls. He was attending a meeting of the association. Funeral arrangements are pend AT PRAIRIE DU SAC Trautmann Walker PRAIRIE DU SAC, Wig.

Cath ine Walker, daughter of Mi and rs. George Walker, has been named valedictorian of the senior class of the Prairie du San Hieh School. Philip Trautman, son of ur. ana Mrs. Milton Trautmann as elected to be salutorian.

Commencement execises will he held May 27, according to Principal Gus C. Boll. 191 Wisconsin List Activities At Community enter Here Schedule or a through June 2 Is Announced Activities at the Madison Com munity Center, 16 E. Doty for the period Tuesday through June 2, follow: Tuesday Madison Education Association, 4 p.m.; Theater Guild, 7:30 p.m.; Older Adult Klub Variety Show, 8 p.m. Wednesday Young.

Adult Club, 7 p.m., with dance from 8:30 to Duplicate Bridge Club. 7:30 p.m. inursaay Afternoon Recrea tion jvjuo, Jst. Patrick's Commit tee, 1.30 p.m.; Chess Club, Photo graphic Club, 7:30. p.m.; Older auuu jhud cara party, 7:45 Friday Loft.

"3 with dance from 8 to 11. Saturday, May 24 Drum Corps, 8:30 a.m.; Square Dance, 1:30 p.m.; Loft, 7 p.m., with dance from 8 Monday, May 26 Handicapped 7:30 n.m. Tuesday, May 37 Retardation Council, 7:30 p.m.; Older Adult uance, a p.m. Wednesday, May 28 Better Radio Listening, 1:30 p.m.; Young Adult Club, 7 p.m., with dance trom 8:30 to Dupli Bridge Club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 29 Afternoon itecreauon iuud, 1:30 p.m.; Photo graphic Club; Chess Club, 7:30 P.m.; Older Adult Klub Card Club, 7:30 p.m., Square Dance, 8 p.m.

Friday, May 30 Closed. Memorial Dav. Saturday, May 31 Drum Corps, 8:30 a.m.: Square Dance. 1:30 n.m Loft, 7 p.m., with dance from 8 to 11. Monday, Junu 2 Handicapped CUNA Supply Co op Officers Are Re elected 'reappointed managing director of the Credit Union National Association (CUNA) Supply Co operative, rectors of the co op Thursday conference which is scheduled to uu unui ounaay.

i c. a. BeaJes, co op, and C. G. Hyland, Madison, ters, Filene House, is located here.

women employes of CUNA. will a luu" a i oaiuraay niornine session at fh T.nrai Hotel. Members of the chorus are Kay Thoma, June Nesberg, Leon'a Has Gifford, Lydia Vivian; Gladys Hall, Darlene Ott, Beverly Shepard, Clara Diloretto, Lo retta Sullivan, Madonna Remick, Armella Ring, Elaine Richgels, Lillian Theis, Margaret Manthei, Deloris Walsvick, Jeanne Buech ner. Marcella Sturgis, Virginia Vogel, Gloria Pribbenow and Isabel Juster. Trio In LaValle Robbery Penalized BARABOO.

Wis. Two ville brothers and their uncle were found guilty of armed robbery by Sauk County Judge Henry Bonn Thursday after they pleaded no contest to the charge. xvennem xracy, 31, Janesville. uncle, and Albert Tracv. 22.

the older nephew, were sentenced to 3 vears in WauDUn State Prison for the armed robbery of $86 from the Malone Grocery, in LaValle Jan. 2. Raymond Tracy, the other nepnew, was placed on probation for 3 years. in otner trials William Quante, was placed on Drobation for 1 year for bringing a saw into the Sauk County jail to aid an attempted jail break; Reuben Nemitz lined $50 for procuring beer a minor; Charles Kunz. Bara boo, was fined $15 for permitting nors to toner on premises where uor is soia; and u.

Schoen Spring Green. fined $25 for dispensing wi to a minor ano permitting a premises where liquor i Friday Afternoon, May 16, 1952 MAUTZ FIRM HOLDS SALES CONFERENCE More than 40 Midwest representatives of the Mautz Paint and Varnish Company gathered in Madison recently for the annual Spring sales conference and awards dinner. Among those attending were, left to right, Edward Hasbrook, Green Bay; William Dunn, Glenview, Henry Behnkc, Mautz general manager; Bernhard Mautz company president; Alfie Ladd, Prairie du Sac; and Axel Bergstedt, Minneapolis. Union Officer Answers Employers Denies Truck Drivers Do Not Know About Proposed Contract ators that truck drivers know the details of a proposed union contract, was made today by Fred Siewert, secretary treasurer of Truck Drivers Local 442. blewert said the Union members Know wnat is in the contract" because it was read to them and tney voted approval of it.

drivers did not know the contents of the contract and that state officials of the union refused to talk any terms out those in the pro posed contract, except possibly uianging tne term of the contract troi 'i ee years (o om year. The contract presented hv thi Union is for over the road freight haulers, not for local haulers, according to the employers' statement. The employers said they are willint? to negotiate a rnntrarf similar to one signed recently be tween the Union and local fuel ano cuiiaing material dealers. Siewert countered with the dee. laratiqn that "the take home pay of coal and building material men is more than these fellows (the cartage and warehouse workers) win get even alter a 16 cents He added that fuel and buildine iiiateiia! unveis gee overtime pay after 40 hours of work in anv nns week, while cartage employes do not start on overtime rates until they have worked 48 hours.

Siewert reported that one local iirm, tne Capital City Truck Line, has agreed to sicn the Union contract'. Paul Koerth. manager of the uck iirm, agreed witn siewert's statement, but said the line is ar over the road one, not a local haul and that onlv one emnlove it affected. MGE Employes Reject Wage Offer Production workers of the Mad Dn Gas and Electric Comnanv voted unanimously Thursday night 10 reject a wage increase ot 4 per cent offered by management, according to John A. Lawton, attorney for Gas Workers Local Union ubzu.

ihe company offered a 1 per cent cost of living no an additional raise oi 3 per The Union has asked for ai rease of 25 cents an hour the board. A negotiating meeting for Union id employer representatives have een scnediuea lor Wednesday, Lawton reported. Reuss Sees Moral Victory In Korea "We're winning a moral victory" Korea despite the current stale late. Attv. Henrv Reuss.

spekinef uie uemocrauc nomination ior sen tor, aeciarea xnursdav nie it. Reuss. addressing the Milwaukee County CIO PAC, stated that the uin couia nave a permanent truce right now on the 38th parallel but; it to avoid returning thousands of Chinese and Korean pris oners "to certain Communist murder and torture." Reuss said "it is tragic to delay truce for anv reason. Rut it would be more tragic to give up our moral position as defender of Human rights." mmm WISCONSIN BLUEPRINT COMPANY Architects' Supplies. Engineers' Supplier Blue Printing 17 W.

Dayton Dial 5 2266 12 At Central Installed In Honor Society Dr. Curreri Is Speaker as 9 Seniors, 3 Juniors Are Inducted Nine seniors and three juniors school auditorium today at 2:40 p.m. Dr. Anthony Curreri was speaker. Presiding at the ceremony were the Society in their junior year, Joan and two gradu jates, Arona Siev and Sharon Ald bf the new initiates: Seniors Oswald Farrell, Don aid Gothard, Thomas Johnson, Thurman, Jane Wheeler: Juniors Donna Feggestad, John Fisher, and Kent Siegel.

Brown Heads State Utility Association Theron Bro president id general sunerintenripnf nf tha Madison Gas and Electric Com pany, Decamc president of the Wisconsin Utili 1 Association i in installa tion i Thursday night Milwaukee. Srown. a native of Spring Green, was elected by mail ballot. He succeeds E. H.

Cotton, Northern Power Company, a Claire. Brown entered the utility busi Brown ness as a part time employe of MGE while a student at the Uni sity. He was graduated in 1923 a degree in electrical en gineering after serving in the navy, during World War I. Many animals can be classified skeletons; the lower invertebrates nemg tnose which have exterior skeletons. COMPLETES COURSE Pvt.

Carroll Cresswell has pleted a technical al i course at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, and is spending a 16 a furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Cresswell, Arena. He will report to Camp Stoneman, i g. 1 South Pinckney StfUt 905 University Avenut We make low cost loans against tlie cash value of your life insurance, or refinance your present loan at lower rates.

No service charge. You set repayment terms and you retain policy benefits. Interest rates as low as 4 on loans of $1,000 or more; 3 on loans over $5,000..

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