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The Capital Times from Madison, Wisconsin • 3

Publication:
The Capital Timesi
Location:
Madison, Wisconsin
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3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I tn. jbt as. -J-fevr-SL wr AAKwAI'bc -2 SsJcrJCf 3Ls5fcLL-v. Home Owned Home Edited Home Read 3 Satuiday Afternoon, May 8, 1937 THE CAPITAL TIMES MADISON WISCONSIN Edward Farley, Ex-Madison Man, Saw Zep Crash U.S. Probes Zep Explosion; Toll Rises to 35 Dudley Turns Down Civic Theater Helm Neiv York Day by Day By O.

O. SIcINTYRE i On the alien ground of New Jersey, the proud German airliner, Hindenburg, lies a twisted mass of scrap steel. An explosion followed by fire as she was about to land at the Lakehurst naval air station, converted the huge airliner into a charred skeleton of twisted metal and snuffed out the lives of many of its passengers and crew. The completeness of the destruction which overtook the great ship is shown In this aerial view of the wreckage. Football Star Is Winner of Oratory Meet (Continued from Page 1) Robert M.

La Follettes winning of the Inter-State Oratorical contest at Iowa in 1879, Prof. R. R. Aurner, contest chairman, pointed out. Adelman was recently voted the outstanding senior athlete at Northwestern.

He warned that football is a conspiracy against youth, just like war, and the adulation in which it results often mikys the player unfit for later life. He urged that the game be aeflated, rr.d charged that it menaced education. At the same time he credited the game with building physical and mental courage, men with strong hearts, who must know co-operation. Fcotball menaces education when it becomes tin; be-all and end-all of college life and academic work is relegated to the limbo of forgotten things, the football star charged. Make the highly paid coaches let all the students use the stadium instead of a handful.

Keep the men mertiy players, not autematoms, who respond to the wills and whims of a coach. He said football stars were open to moral temptations such as other university students did not have to face. You're a star in the eyes of i every co-ed on the campus, and the pressure of adulation is often over-I powering, he said. There is glory in the game, but there is irony in the aftermath. When you go out into the world looking for a job, your employer will view you not from a seat on the stadium ring, but as a worker.

To be termed an ex-football star at 21 or 22 often spells tragedy in the lives of young men. The last goal is not the end of the world. The player must go out and win in a world entirely different from that found college. The players should give more attention to the afterwards of college life and less to the present glories, found on the football gridiron A Roman Holiday Because football contains all the elements of emotions. It has been transformed into Roman holidajs of gladitorial contests for the edification of 20,000,000 people in this nation, Adelman asserted.

The toll of social disease was tabulated in Mr. Holmes oration, The Eleventh Plague. He said that one out of eveiy seven deaths the United States is attributable to venereal disease of some nature. He said that action must be forthcoming to make the nations conscious of the great havoc wrought by thus plague, and called syphilis the king of killers. An appeal to arouse the middle class man to do something for his country was contained in Mr.

Mmtzs An Editorial. He said the common man must be A vital, dynamic, molding man in the social scene. 1 Last nights first prize won for Northwestern top rank among schools of the oratorical league, with 15 first places won since 1910. During that time, the university here has won five firsts and 14 second places. Doubts Students Took Overdose of Benzedrine 1 TVTEW YORK Nothing relieves the J.

tedium of insomnia like making up rhymes of all sorts stag, dove and kid. Trifling triolets such as this caper into mind: Said Courtney Ry ley Cooper To Dudley Field Malone, You old political trooper Said Courtney Ry-ley Cooper As a gay society hopper You ce a i 1 stand alone. Said Courtney Ry-ley Cooper To Dudley Field Malone. Then there is no rest until one has played a return engagement which may run some thing like this: Said Dudley Field Malone To Courtney Ry-ley Cooper What morbid o. O.

McIntyre taste u'v show Said Dudley Field Malone Your gangster tales disown You hardened criminal snooper. Said Dudley Field Malone To Courtney Rjley Cooper. Next to the mechanical museum in the Rockefeller Center, a Boy's Paradise is found in the immense -hew room of the Lionel Co, toy makeia and repairers in Union Squaie. The building should be haunted by spans of the old Century conti lbutois Richard Watson Gilder. Mary Mapes Dodge and The Lady or the Tiger has anv story made such talk as Frank Stockton's Theie aie electnc railways all over the place.

Hills and streams and bridges and ev- 1 erv kind of locomotive imaginable. All opeiated by switches. Everything about a lailroad is here. And in the repair department what a pile of injured locos the little Willies have brought being investigated by skilled mechanics, probably as little interested as a llujler sales gnl in can-My. But what small boy wouldnt have A his highest ambition the job of the young man who tests each repaired loco on a circular track? Think of being paid for that! A gentleman who knows tells me radio executives aie knitting blows and drumming desk tops over the weakness of sketches and especialiv of comedians gags The high figured comedians won't spilt with gag mci even when pioved their skits aie going blah Buffoons may get $3 000 or so a night and pay $40 for gags, i When told the laborer with the tjpe- i iter is woith his hire, they ay, give him a grand But they won't take it out of their pay, not they, though they pensh and are dialed out by millions of listeners.

Edward P. Farley, formerly of Madison. relative of several Madison residents, and president of the American Zeppelin was one of the few to witness the crash of the mammoth Zeppim Hindenburg at Lakehurst, N. Thursday night. Mr.

Farley, with other Zeppelin officials, was watching the maneveurs of the huge ship from a vantage point on the field at the time of the crash. Mr. Farley, a former chairman of the U. S. shipping board, and a high official in several other large transportation companies, Was bom in Madison.

He was graduated from the old Madison high school and attended the University of Wisconsin with the class of 1909. He left here a number of years ago. Madison relatives of Mr. Farley include three brothers, Thomas and James Farley, 412 N. Lake and Donald Farley, 1922 Jefferson st.

Ducc Bans All But 3 British Newspapers (Continued from Page I) weeks because their liberal policy is considered hostile to the Fascist state. However, a general ban on almost the entire Engl sh press is regarded as a particularly drastic step Which might lead to seriously embittered relations beweeri the two countries. Even before the official order, several Italian newspapers which had planned to send correspondents to the coronation had cancelled the arrangements. British liberal rewspapers were loud in their jeers when Italians fighting w.tii Spanish insurgents northeast of Madrid were routed in March. Now, evei the Italian press has proclaimed that Italian volurteers fighting on the Tilbao front in northwestern Spam mast not fad.

Ignored in London LONDON. uP Italy's action in banning all but three Engrsh news-pap is and recalling Italian correspondents now in London was officiary ignored heie today. One person in authonty sad: Really now, the British empire will be able to wuthstand tie horrible Some sources said they felt the Ron announcem nt was tin ed to co-lncioe with the usual long week-end of British offic.aldom during which no official con iteration 1 be given to the bar, and no retaliation might be expecrea MRS. MRY BRIGH4M Funeral sei vices for Mrs. Mary Brigham, 84, of 2105 Winnebago who died Thursday, were held today in the Gunderson funeral home, with the Rev.

Edwin Kennedy, of Christ Presbyterian church, officiating. Burial was in Forest Hill cemetery. Pallbearers were A. H. Jacobson, Albeit Gundlach, Charles Rem-dahl, E.

W. Ellefson, Carl Sachtjen, Madison; C. V. Kennyon, Stoughton. WALTER L.

REIF Funeral services for Watler L. Reif, 25, of 2522 Norwood pi, who died Thursday, were held today in the Fitch-Law rence funeral home, with the Rev. Harry C. Kuhnert, of Westminster Presbyterian church, officiating. Bunal was in Forest Hill cemetery.

MRS. THEODORA SCIIRENK Funeral services for Mrs. Theodora Schrenk, 86, rt. 1, who died Thursday, weie held today in Holy Redeemer church, with the Rev. Joseph Gabriels, pastor, officiating.

Burial was in Holy Cioss cemetery. The Bible has been translated, in whole or in part, into 991 languages and dialects. (Continued from Tage 1) commandant at the Lakehuist station and, one of the few to talk with Lehmann after the disaster, said the fire could not have occurred if helium instead of hydrogen had been used in the Hmdenburg's many gas compartments. Rosendahl, wjitle emphasizing no one can know the cause of the accident at present, mentioned the possibility that static might have formed front id the huge envelope during its fligh. in an electric storm before attempting to land.

The explosion, he said, might have been caused when cable lines from the airshiu touched the wet ground, completing a circuit to the static. Although several witnesses said an engim of the d'tigible r. eemed to backfire, Schr.u1 the engineer, said he was sure that no sparks flew from the rear motors. Gill Robb Wilson, New Jersey state aviaton director, who will serve as technical advisor to the department of commerce inrrry board open hearings amplified his statement after the crash that "something strange caused that tragedy. I was referrng to the accident, not the cause, ho said.

Nmody can say what the cause was until investigations have bpen held All anybody can do is guess, end hat would be a very foolish thing. Private Utility Line Extensions O.K.d Refused Orders for extensions of prviate utility lines in rural areas of several counties were issued by the state public rural service commission today. In some cases permission to extend the lines was refused, because of op-postion by rural electnc co-operathes. Robert Noj Yuba, who senes a dozen customers in Yuba wiht a generator run by a gas engine, was denied permission to build a 15 mile line to Hillsboro to get wholesale service from a Wisconsin Power and Light Co. and serve 59 rural customers.

A co-operative in Vernon county objected to part of the extension, and the commission decided that Novy would have no use for any of the line, without this pa't. The Pouer and Light Co. was also given permission to service 68 customers in the towns of Buena Vista, Ithaca, and Willow, Richland county, ar.d Bear Creek and Washington, Sauk county. In another order, the Wisconsin Power ana Light Co. was authorized to build 21 5 miles of line for 43 customers, in the towns of Mineral Point and Walwick, Iowa county, and Willow Spnngs and Fayette, LafaveUe county.

The cost of $790 a mile includes customer meteis, tiansformeis, and sen ic 3 diops, and is made enti.oly from company funds. Part of the extension Willow Spring was denied, after objections the co-oojrative Mrs. Machacek, 87, Sim Prairie, Dead Village Resident 41 Years Passes Away Friday at Home SlN PRAIRIE Mrs. Anna Macha-cek, 87, Sun Prairie resident for 41 years, died last night at her home here following a long illness. She formerly lived at Token Creek.

Her husband, Jaxeph, died many years ago. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. Mary Slimson, Mrs. Anna Fieeman, Madison; one son, Joseph, Sun Prame. Funeral services vvil be held here at 9 Monday in the Krebs funeral home, and at 9:30 in Sacred Heart church, with the Rev.

George Haeus-ler, pastor, officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery. SATURDAYl May 8th Ollier Officers Elected To Rehearse in City Council Rooms John E. Dudley today declined to accept the past of president of the Madison Civic Theater association to which he was elected last night at the associations final meeting at its playhouse, 15 E. Dayton st.

Because the association must relinquish its present playhouse, arrangements have been made to carry on rehearsals in the city hall council rooms, and to produce plays at Madison high schools. Seek New Quarters A committee of five has been at work attempting to secure new and permanent quarters for the organization. Elected to offices with Mr. Dudley last night were Mrs. Volney G.

Barnes, vice president; H. H. Blakely, treasurer and Mrs. Donald Brin-ton. secretary.

The association voted to increase its board of directors by five and added the following to membership: Mrs. Barnes, Mr. Blakely, Mrs. Richard Church, George Kroncke and Leo Levenick. They will serve with the old board made up of Ernest Pett, Dr.

A. W. Mryan, Mrs. Brm-ton and Mr. Dudley.

Membership at 520 In the secretarys report last night, it was shown that membership in the Civic theater had grown to 520 during the past year. The association has produced seven major productions and 11 one-act plays during the past season in which 106 persons portiayed parts of 175 characters. Receipts from plays and membership totalled nearly $1,350 Mrs. Brin-ton reported. The board will meet later this month to pass upon resignation of Mr.

Dudley. Help Youth to Earn Honest Living, Is Plea (Continued from Page out of enme. Stanza cited recent statistics of the Federal Bureau of Investigation showing that jouths under 21 years of age comnutt one-foui th of the nations robberies, one-third of the buiglaries and neatly one-half of the auto tnefts. "We cannot solve the crime problem bv throwing these boys into reformatories, he said, "because 72 to 83 per cent of the boys discharged from re-foimatoiies return to a life of crime. Three out of four boys who land behind the bars continue their careers in crime after their release.

Regretfully have we found that penitentiaries do not make men penitent, nor do refoi matoi ies refeiir. The only wav we can help these bovs is to see that eav of them is given a fair chance to earn an honest living. A highlight of the convention todav was to be the junior oratorical lonte.st at the conventions uoon luncheon. Two youths in their teens, James Chi-avo. 16, Madison, and Lester Sentz, 15, Milwaukee, weie to compete for first place in the dislnct contest.

Both bojs have won sectional contests and the winner will represent the district in the National oratorical contest at Cincinnati, June 21 and 22. tonvo Opened by Myeis The di.sM.ct convention opei.id this morning when Samuel P. Myeis, Racine, disrict governor, called the a-semblj together. The Rev. F.

Butler, pastor c.f Grate Fpiscopal chuieh, Madison, gave the invocation. Mayor James La.1,-, Madison, and E. Kalle-vang, president of Madison Optimist club, welcomed the delegates. Archie Hirst, idison, led in of Optimist songs. Following a roll call and response to the welcome by Alvin G.

Keyes, Cedar Rapids, the convention broke lip into sectional meetings. Harold O. Noer, Madison, chairman of the boys woik In the district, presided at a boys w'ork session. Presides at Luncheon R. J.

Sutherland, Madison, past president of Optimist International, presided at the noon luncheon meeting. David W. Onan, Minneapolis, another past president of Optimist International, introduced Mr. Stanza. Although many organizations are aiding underprivileged youths, Stanza said, it has been estimated that all the agencies combined are reaching only about 23 per cent of our hoys.

Stanza explained that Optimist clubs throughout the nation are free to adopt whatever form of boys woik best fits the needs of the paiticular communities. These pursuits take the form of the development of hobbies, recreation, summer camps, health centers, athletics and libraries. Mrs. Amos Steicart, 17, Dies at City Hospital Mrs. Amos Stewart, 47, of 740 W.

Washington ave died yesterday at a local haspital following an opeiation. Local Students Win 50 lsts At Music Tourney (Continued from Page 1) streets at 4 30 p. m. This event which bandsmen of nearly 30 schools are to take a part was expected to be the exhibition which would swell the festival attendance to 10 000. The bands were to be spaced two for each block.

West, Central To Lead The Madison West high school band was to lead the parade, and Central high school was to be second in the column. Everett Hyatt, leader of Madison Wests trimly uniformed band, won one of the most amusing of yesterdays festival contests when he placed first in the baton swinging, A class. The event proved to be one of the sessions most popular, and hundieds crowded around an open air space to see the leaders perfoim. Ivan Kind-schi, Prairie du Sac, finished with a number one lating in class. An interesting feature of the festival is the tuning room in the basement of the Wisconsin Dells high school where musicians get instruments in shape for the contests.

The city has been divided into musical headquarters for the visiting musicians as events are held simultaneously throughout the city. Complete lists of festival winners will be made tonight at high school gym following a concert by bands from Madison Central, Columbus, Portage and Baraboo. List Local Winners Madison winneis in yesterday's session were: Brass and woodwind Sam Dana, Class Madi'on West, baritone. Brass quartet Madison Central, Class B. Members were Ralph Wieg, Lyle Dams, Grant Kittle, and Herbert H.

Giller. Madison West. Class Gladys Carlson, Alfred Ingersoll, Robert Morris, and Harry Schlintz. Violin solo Catherine Odenhal, Madison Cential, Class A. Monte Ap-plebaum.

Madison West, Class B. Jack Geiger, Madison West, Class C. Cello solos J. Chapman. Madison West.

Class A. Jane Phillips, Madison Central, Class B. Instrumental 1 nsembles Madison West, string quartet, Class B. Members of quartet were Monte Apple-baum, Susan Blake, Jean Rhodes and Rosalie Von Grueninger. Clarinet Nick Margetis, Madison Central, Class David Perlman, Madison West, Class John Parker, Madison West, Class A.

Bassoon Lowell Cunningham, Madison West, Class B. Oboe June Buechette, Madison Central, Class Vernon Kirkpatrick, Madison Central, Class B. Piccolo Wilma Morris, Madison West, Class B. Saxophone Glenn Lyans, Madison Wes. Class Lawrence Bornstein, Madison West, Class Josephine Barbarto, Madison Central, Class Jack Lounsbury, Madison West, Class B.

Snare drums Herbert Morhoff, Madison West, Class Rodney Buergin, Madison West, Class James Hill, Madison West, Class C. Vocal Solos Soprano Helen Dinxmcre, Madison West: Lola Hard rg, Madison Central. Alto Helfn Sn 11, Madison West. Tenor John O'Neil, Mad.son Central Baritone Theodore Me Nelly, Madison West; Hugh Rundell, Madison West, Peter Grene, idison Central. Brass or Woodwind Solo- Trombone Robert Kaetrer, Madison West, Class Richard Oetking, Maciuon Central, Class B.

Popular stars on the down coast may be heartened by the news from London about Btbe Daniels and her husband Ben Lyons. They had had their glorious day on the screen and the studios were beginning to be in confeienee when they diopped around to see what was what. So more for their reeieation they saihd for England For a time they took small radio bit parts and today in less than a years time they have bc-rome two of the most popular entei-tainers on the wireless. Top salary, a big town house, a special table in the Savoy gull and all that. This column has burst out in a rash of poetry today.

Even this one gevseied up like a hiccup: Im sure I have the heebie jee-bies If I lived a life like Lucius Beebes And my future would be somewhat darker If I had to crack wise like Dorothy Paiker. 2 Naval Fliers Killed At Pacific Maneuvers ABOARD B4TTLESIIIP PENNSYLVANIA IN MIDPACIFIC Ml- I NEUVERS UP) Two naval airmen were killed when their plane crashed and sank the Pacific ocean during the United States fleets war games, naval officers reported today. Victims of the crash were Lieut. Comm. John Francis Gillon, 40, pilot of the plane and Glen M.

Beal, radio man, first class. Their plane crashed Friday off 1 Hawaii while Gillon, commanding scouting squadron 2B, was returning to the aircraft carrier Saratoga where other planes of his squadron were landing on the deck. Gillons plane suddenly went Into a power dive and plunged Into the choppy seas. SUNDAY! May 9th Leiser Silent On Retirement Protest at 4Y Kroms Nothin" of Labor Protests, He Declares Todav F. O.

Leiser, general secretary of the Madison Y. M. C. yesterday denied any knowledge of labor protests against a decision of the Y. M.

C. A. board of directors to discharge all eirploves at the age of 60 and indicated that the protests would be unheeded by duectois of the oigani-zation. I dont know anything about it, Leiser said. 1 know of no protests.

Why should they? Leiser demanded when asked if the directors might hold a special meeting to reconsider the retirement plan. Teiming the policy as unfair, a vigoious complaint has been lodged with directors of the company, it was learned yesterday. Copies of the complaint were sent to newspapers and the Madison Federation of Labor. The employes have no retirement system and are excluded from benefits of government old age peni-ions, the complaint states in asking the directors to give the employes a Christian deal. According to resideni.s of the the first victim of the new polity would be a maid, whose employment will end May 15.

A petition asking that the maid, who has been an employe of the for 16 years, be retained has been circulated by 5th floor residents at the and was given to Leiser yesterday morning. The petition was signed by all but two residents of the floor. Leiser yesterday denied he had received such a signed petition. By petition do you mean anonymous letter? he asked, and then said: I wont say anything about anonymous letters. Car Driver Is Blamed For Keifs Death (Continued from Page 1) Sunday night when Smith and Reif left the tavern, and because Smith had been drinking.

But Smith had only one high ball at the tavern, according to Dresser, Wagner and Riley -who is a bar tender at the tavern. Dresser admitted he called to Smith as the latter left, Ill see your name in the newspapers tomorrow', but he claimed he was making only a joking remark that had r.o special meaning. E. W. Kelzenberg, county traffic officer, presented pictures and measurements taken at the crash scene and Dr.

J. Holoen Robbins testified Reif died of a skull fracture. Sapiro Is Disbarred On Contempt Charge NEW YORK (P) Federal Judge John C. Knox Friday held Aaron Sapiro, nationally known attorney, in contempt of court in connection with attempts to contact jurors in a mail fraud trial and disbarred him from practice in the U. S.

district court for southern New York. READ CAPITAL TIMES WANT ADS Wednesday asked Pres. Clarence A. Dykstra to investigate the Card case. The regents, however, did not irfer the case of Miss Bartlett to the president, on the ground that' an appeal should first have been taken to the administrative head of the department.

Miss Bartlett is now on leave of absence, and her dismissal docs not take effect until the end of nexs year. The Card case. Prof. Lenoard said, Is a feud between the department and the teachers union. A good number of the executive committee were in the teachers union at the time the Card case was considered.

I personally feel that the Card case is one problem and the Bartlett case is another. But the Bartlett case is also not concerned with the teachers union. The teachers union furnished the machinery for the presentation of the eases. If University of Wisconsin students are using overdoses of benzedrine, a drug primarily Intended for respiratory infections, as a pep pill to keep them awake for study, as was charged this week in Time magazine, no cases have jet come to the attention of physicians in charge of the students. Dr.

Llewellyn Col-', head of the student health clinic, said todav. In its May 10 issue, Time asserted that cases of overdosage had been found at the universities of Minnesota, Wisconsin, ar.d Chicago. Taken as a pill or inhaled as a gas, benzedrine at first quickens the heart and shaipens the wits, Tune declared. Small doses may maintain the.e effects, but overdoses, such uninfoimed college students seem to be taking, bring on dangerous after effects. It must be kept in mind that benzedrine is a strong drug, Dr.

Cole said. It must be Used judiciously and with caution. So far as I have been able to determine, no cases of ovei dosage of this drug have come to the attention of any members of the student health depaitment staff. Dr. Cole pointed out that a commercial form of benzedrine inhalator is used my many students, but he declared that bail effects are unlikely if the preparation is used accoiding to duections.

Th first action of benzedrine is to shrink the mucuous mebranes. It also raises the blood pressure, quickens the heait and sharpens the wits. Reich Rushes Construction of New Zeppelin (Continued from Page 1) Graf as a substitute for the Hindenburg for carrying coronation pictuies to New York, he said, nor will the Graf cruise to youth America again until the Hindenburg investigation is completed. News of the d.saster reached Eck-pner in Austria. Stunned by the first reports, he rushed at onee to Bei lin where he held long conferences with officials.

He told the nation In a radio broadcast that while the theory of passible sabotage would have to be investigated, there la small likelihood in favor of such a theory because of American security precautions. Nation in Sorrow Far more likely is the theory that electrical phenomenon, probably connected somehow with weather conditions, played a role In this disaster, he declared. Widespread sorrow was expressed throughout Germany, with many theatres closed in mourning while newspapers appeared with black borders. Berlm churches planned to hold memorial services tomorrow for the victims. Federal Prisoner Is Taken to Louisville Bernard Coy, who has been held in the Dane county jail for the last two weeks on federal charges of robbing the New Haven, bank of $2,175 on Mar.

25, Was taken to TouisviJle, last night by U. S. Marshal Jonn Comeford to face trial. Coy was arrested at Cashton, Wis. Dr.

McCain pbell, Ex-Um Instructor, Dead Dr. Eugene F. MeCampbell, 57, an assistant in bacteriology at the university here in 1905-06, died today at Columbus, after several months illness. He was a prominent physician, president of the Columbus Academy of Medicine, and a former University of Chicago faculty member. READ CAPITAL TIMES WANT ADS Call Badger 2109 John Gallagher 305 S.

Bedford Street if Venetian Blinds -Tents if Covers Curtains Gelett Burgess has oodles of fun With what he calls his Nonsense Machine, No. 9. The pioblem is, with only spools, elastics, hair pins, cigar boxes and such things as come to hand to create three motions rotation, oscillation and reciprocal motion in the three planes XY, YZ at XZ. The appai atus operating on the three planes is colored red, green and jellow and when its opeiating by electric motor it does dozens of queer things and is so complicated you give up thinking and lest your mind which is the big idea. Altogether psychological.

If it accomplished anything like operating a lathe or tup hammer one would glow tired of it in a jiffy. The appeal is solely in the utter futility suggesting mankind in its present state. Whirling, whirring and twirling but accomplishing nothing. Nobody has more fun with lifes ironies than Bugress. Mrs.

Anna Glimme Dies Today at 70 Jewelers Widow Passes Away at E. Johnson St. Home Mrs. Anna Glimme, 70, widow of O. K.

Glimme, Madison jeweler, died today at her home, 931 E. Johnson st following a short illness. Mrs. Glimme had been a Madison resident for many jears, coming here from Whitew ater. For a long time, her husband operated a jewelry store at 314 E.

Wilson st. He died in 1927. Survivors are two sisters. Miss Julia Anderson, Madison; Mrs. William Hanchett, Sparta: two brothers, AI-mont and Elmer Anderson, Willow Lake, S.

D. Packard Signs Pact With Auto Winkers DETROIT. (A')' The Packard Motor Cpp Cc. and tre United Automobile Woikers of signed an agreement late yesterday after several ,2 weeks of negotiations. Its terms will not be announced until the pact is submitted to a meeting of workers for their ratification Leonard Denies Union Activity Involved' in Instructor Ousters George Slolten of Dodgeville, Dead Former Pr imrose Resident Passes Away at Home Today DODGEVIELE George Slotten, early resident of Primrose, died at his home here today following a stroke.

Funeral services will be held at 2 Monday from the Dodgeville Baptist church. Vi f- i ITTy WODRlHOmr Sees No Feud Between English Department and Union Pi of. William Ellery Leonard of the University English department, denied today that teachers union activities had anything to do with the rights and wrongs of the Card case. Prof. Leonard is a member of the English department executive committee which decided against renewal of the con-t'act of William Card, an English in-stiuctor.

Leonard also declared that the pending dismissal of Phyllis Bartlett, another English instructor, had no connection with union activities, nor was it similar to the Card case, he said. At the request of 4he university teachers union, the board of regents This is our way of thanking thousands of old customers and seeing hundreds of new Here Is a chance to enjoy Madison's most famous quality fee cream "Imitated But Not Duplicated" at a special once a year price! Offer good on any of our 20 flavors, only while supply of packaged quarts lasts each day. Stores open at 9 a. m. Limit: One quart to a customer.

2115 Atwood Ave. 909 University Ave. 424 S. Park St. L'j A -st? rt C'v 1 1, 4 A If 1 rVC' 'trff lV.

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