Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Monroe Evening Times from Monroe, Wisconsin • Page 6

Location:
Monroe, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

MONROE EVENING TIMES, MONROE, WISCONSIN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 1945 PAGE SIX Daily Record Angust 25. 1945 The Weather Wisconsin: Fair and quite cool tonight with light frost in cranberry bogs and lowlands of northern, Wisconsin. Sunday fair and warmer except increasing cloudiness northwest portion. HOURLY TEMPERATURE ON TIMES THERMOMETER 3 p. m.

Friday to 3 p. m. Saturday. In. 3 a.

m. m. a. m. m.

p. m. a. m. p.

m. in. m. n. m.

p. 9 a. m. 10 p. m.

10 at, 30. 11 p. IN. a. 1..

Midulght Noou 1 d. In. 30. 2 a. m.

IN. 111. Since yesterday 3 p. Highest 75: lowest 49. Year ago today: Highest 77; lowest 56.

Precipitation since yesterday; .03. Barometer reading today 3 a. m. 29.55: 3 p. 29.72.

Warmest place in U. S. yesterday, Yuma, 110; coldest. Madison, 44. Almanac, Auk.

$5, 1945. Sunrise 6:13 a. sunset 7:43 p. m. Your Ration Deadline Red Stamps (Book 4)-Used with purchase of rationed meats, butter, cheese, evaporated milk, lard, shortening, cooking oils, valid as follows: Q-2 through U-2 valid through Aug.

through Z-2 valid through Sept. 30. A-1 through E-1 good through Oct. 31. F-1 throuh K-1 good Aug.

1, through Nov. 30. Used Fats Two red meat points given for one pound andwaste fat. Sugar-Stamp 36 valid through 31. Shoes--Airplane stamps 1, 2, 3, 4 3 each good for one pair for indefinite period.

Tires Certificates now may be given save -card drivers for new tires. Real Estate Transfers H. Otto Elmer et al to John W. Elmer, land in sec. 23, town 4, range 7, Green county.

Gerald Disch to Lucille Disch, land in lot 5, blk. 3, village of New Glarus, Green county. Jacob S. Disch to Lucille Disch, land in sec. 14, town 4, range 7, Green county.

Lucille Disch to Jacob Disch. et al, co-partners in the Disch Hardcompany, land in lot 5, Green bik. 3, ware village of New Glarus, county. Justice Cases Victor McGrath paid a fine of $3 and costs in justice court of F. Earl Lamboley on charges of drunkenness.

Marriage Licenses Cecil Henry Pandow, Brodhead, and Minnie Alfreda Downer, Brodhead. Births St. Clare Hospital Mr. and Mrs. Clarence H.

Parkin, Belleville, a son, Aug. 24. Mrs. Gilford Nybroten, Monticello, a son, Aug. 25.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wenger, Browntown, a daughter, Aug. 25. St.

Clare Hospital Surgical: Mrs. Chester Jones, Albany, Mrs. Ann Devercaux, Chicago. Medical: Mrs. Harlow Larson, Argyle, James Forbes, 1414 34th street, Mrs.

Edward Bregenzer, 814 19th avenue. Accident: Harold A. Halverson, 1410 13th avenue. Dismissals: Mrs. Clinton Montgomery, Mrs.

Cecil Jones and Eldaughter, Mrs. Milton Frank, sie Frey and Diane Geil. Miss Augusta M. Kittelson, 71, Near Albany, Dies Albany--(Times Special Kittelson, Serv- 71, ice)--Miss Albany township, died at 4:55 p. m.

yesterday in Mercy hospital, Janesville, where she had been ill for weeks. Miss Kittelson suffered a stroke weeks after she had entered the hospital for eye treatments. Born Sept. 3, 1873, daughter of Randena Anderson and Ole Kittelson, Miss Kittelson spent her whole life on the Kittelson stead, 6 miles north of Albany. She attended the local schools and was a member of the Lutheran church of the Norwegian settlement.

She was very active in its aid society. Miss Kittelson's immediate vivors are one brother, Ingelbert Stevens Point, and four nephews, Rodney, Washington, D. Elwin, Maynard and Kenneth, in and near Albany. She was ceded in death by her parents, three sisters and four brothers. The funeral will be held at 1:30 p.

m. Monday at the Shirer funeral home and at 2 p.m. at the Lutheran church the Norwegian settlement with Rev. L. J.

S. Reque, 'Luther Valley church, officiating. Burial will be in the Norwegian cemetery, four miles north of Albany. County Finance Committee Members of the Green county finance committee met today with County Clerk Clarence W. Lengacher at the court house to discuss the financial report and plan for postwar activities of the county.

Members of the committee are Harry C. Young, F. F. Hartwig and Percy Lichtenwalner. Gl to Rub Elbows With Hated Enemy By Fred Hampson San Francisco (AP) next few days the American doughboy will rub elbows with more of his so-recently hated enemies than he ever saw before.

This will be interesting because your GI has a horrible time hating anybody he knows a little bit. It was fairly easy to hate the Japanese in the Pacific. Except on the battlefield you hardly ever saw one. Now we'll see lots of them. The kids will be pathetic, and cute; the girls will turn out to be "not so bad at.

that, the heavy loads carried by the old men and old women will have to be eased. The GI has a Boy Scout complex which certainly baffled the over-burdened old women of the Philippines. The GI will be embarrassed about the disappearance of that hatred he felt on Iwo Jima, Luzon, Attu, Bougainville and other points east, south and north. Low Boiling Point The hatred of the battlefield comes easy, having a very, low at all to hate a guy who shoots boiling point. At first at you, or drops bombs on you or pitches mortar shells among your foxholes.

But even in combat it doesn't last too well. When the GI pulled back into rest camp he put his hate in cold storage until the next fight, then found that he couldn't generate the same old temperature. After a while he became an impersonal fighter and you can say what you want about hatred and fury and desire for revenge making a good soldier-our who best soldiers were kids fought with method, skill and caution, and figured that the best way to get killed was to get mad. I remember an episode on an airfield at Noemfoer off Dutch New Guinea. Four prisoners were awaiting transportation to the intelligence section at Hollandia for questioning and imprisonment.

A around bunch of and dough- the boys gathered heckling started over protests of the guards. Amiable Prisoners "Hirohito is a louse," said one dogface. The Japs turned toward him, smiled amiably. and bowed from the waist. Everybody laughed.

"I said Hirohito is a louse," repeated the soldier to whom the bows were as meaningless as were his words to the Japs. "Tojo is a tramp. The Japs are monkeys without tails." He received another round of bows. He shrugged and gave up. Resentment gave way to amused curiosity and indifference, as it always did.A Japanese aviator prisoner at Guadalcanal got to be quite a favorite with fliers on one fighter field because of his enormous ad.

miration for the P-38. He wanted to fly the Lightning so much that he offered to join the American air force and go to Europe. The boys said they were sorry but it couldn't be done. He countered by suggesting they disarm a plane and put only 50 gallons of gasoline in. This would give him only a few minutes in the air and he'd have to land on the same field.

The because boys pracapologized they couldn't arrange it. Then Give Cigaret Once on Leyte a sniper crept close to a command post, blazed away, was quickly surrounded and captured. They brought him into the camp within three minutes. That gang, boiling with the quick anger that follows sudden fright, was ready to tear him limb from limb-until they actually got their hands on him. But all they did was give him cigaret.

News Paragraphs Here for Funeral Among those from out-of-town who were here for the funeral of John A. Van Wagenen yesterday were Mr. and Mrs. Louis Eley, Mr. and Mrs.

William Eley, Madison, George D. Van Wagenen, Minneapolis, Miss Bessie Lake, Brodhead, Mrs. Robert Montgomery, LaGrange, 11. Enjoy Reunion Mr. and Mrs.

Charles H. Dietz have been enjoying a reunion of five daughters, three of whom are joining the two, who live here. Mrs. Ralph Davison, here from Biloxi, left for her home today and also here were Mrs. Vincent Anderson and Mrs.

Kenneth Bogue, Fond du Lac. Mrs. Dano Jackley, Baltimore, the sixth daughter did not wish to travel with 5-year-old son this year but plans to come next year. Mrs. John A.

Becker and Mrs. Ralph J. Kundert are the two who reside here. Daughter Named The daughter born to Mr. and Mrs.

Cecil E. Jones on Aug. 17, has been named Carolyn Sue. Mrs. Jones and daughter were dismissed from St.

Clare hospital Friday and went to their home near Juda. Bank Window Boxes Lending, the gaity new to window the shopping boxes completed with blooming red geraniums which were put up this morning on ledges at the Commercial and Savings bank building. New Bus Schedules Effective Sept. 2, southbound buses for the Badger Bus Lines, will leave Monroe at 9:10 2:15 p. m.

and 7 p. and the only change in northbound buses will be the morning, bus which leaves at 8:20 other two northbound buses will continue to leave at 11:40 a. m. and 6:20 p. m.

Got something to sell? Why not try a want ad. Personal Mention Plumbing. Niles. 252-Adv. Miss Ardith York was here today.

Mrs. Earl Stichter, Clarno, was here today. Mrs. Discher, Clarno, was here yesterday. Miss Olga Voelkli is visiting at Lake Chetek.

Mrs. Ted Schultz is vacationing in northern Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. David' Menzies, Chicago.

are visiting here." Miss Phoebe Lindsay is spendting the weekend at Lake Wisconsin. Albert Stocker, West Allis, formerly of Monroe, is visiting here. Mrs. Arthur Anderson, Brodhead, is spending the weekend here. Mrs.

Elsie Kester' entertained 10 friends at a brush party last night. Mr. and Mrs. Max Rhinehart, Browntown, were in Monroe yesterday. Earl Holcomb and Miss Carol Holcomb spent the day Freeport.

Mrs. Luella Brace is visiting her mother, Mrs. Elmer Olson, Brodhead. Mrs. Harry Ammon and daughter Yvonne, Clarno, were here Mrs.

Jacob Heim and yesterday. son, Lorenz, Madison, were in Monroe today, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Heinzelmann and family, Sturgeon Bay, are visiting here. Mrs.

Harriett Zerbucher is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Sharer, Verona. Miss Pearl Guggisberg is spending the weekend with her parents in Mrs.

Werner Koller, Dakota, has been visiting her mother, Mrs. Selma Ladner. Honorable Discharge emblem flags just arrived. Get yours at Times office. Mrs.

John J. Burkhard returned yesterday from Chicago with her niece, Georgianna Jenzen. Mr. and Mrs. Ray, Rockey, Shorewood, were overnight guests Mrs.

Will Geigel. Mr. and Mrs. Harris Henning and family, Richmond, are visiting Mrs. Sena Engstad, Janesville.

Sheriff and Mrs. Evan Chambers and son, Victor, are spending the weekend with relatives in Sparta. Miss Verna Yoff has returned to the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Christ Yoff, Wisconsin Rapids.

Misses Dorothy Vogel, Doris Miller and Alice. Faeser will leave Sunday morning for a week's outing at Lake Geneva. Mrs. Arthur Schultz, 1915 17th avenue, has returned to her home from Madison where she was a patient at the Madison general hospital. Mr.

and Mrs. Herman Fritz and daughter; Barbara, and Miss Alice Signer have returned from a 2- week vacation in northern Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Penniston, Argyle are visiting their daughter, Mary Lou, who is ill at the home of Mr.

and Mrs. Leslie Harker, Chicago. Miss Frances Schroeder, Clarno, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A.

E. Schroeder, will study voice at the Chicago Musical college. She enters school Sept. 10. Sgt.

and Mrs. William Musebeck, ElCentro, are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rudi Regez, and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

George Goetz. Isaac Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Jess Goodman have gone to Mt. Pleasant, to visit their son and daughter, Mr.

and Mrs. Ernest Miller, and family. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Johnson and children, Lois Ann and Chester, have returned from a week with her parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Walter E. Bradford, Onakama, Mich. Mrs. Kathryn Hefty, Verona; Fred Ott, Peter Ott, K.

F. Miller and, Edward Zwickey, of New Glarus, were here for the funeral of Mrs. Anton Jenny yesterday afternoon. Mrs. H.

W. Riffle, Kenosha, will be accompanied home tonight by Mr. Riffle, new advertising manager of The Times, for the weekend. He expects to move his family to Monroe by mid-September. Mr.

and Mrs. Stephen Miller and daughters, Caryl Ann and Martha Dearborn, are expected this vacation evening to spend parents, a week's with his Mrs. H. B. Miller, Monroe, and Mrs.

relatives George J. Ryan, Janesville, in Madison. is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dannerbeck while the Dannerbecks are vacationing in northern Wisconsin, Mrs.

Ryan and the Dannerbeck children, John and Peter, are spending the weekend with the children's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Dannerbeck, Janesville. Meier Cow Makes Record Nancy Dean of Meadow Green an 8-year-old registered Brown Swiss cow owned by Alfred Meier, Monroe, produced 11,525.2 pounds milk and 447.05 pounds butterfat the past year on herd test, according to a report received from Fred Idtse, secretary of the National Brown Swiss Breeders' association, loit. I de' MEN AND VOMEN IN SERVICE Paul Affolter has been awarded the Bronze Star for meritorious service in the European theater of operations.

As chief of his line crew, he showed initiative and stellar performance in his assigned missions from Jan. 1 to April 30, 1945, the citation read. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Affolter, 525 22nd avenue.

Beck-First Lt. Ralph A. Beck has been redeployed at Grant sent to Drew field, Tampa, after spending day leave at his home near Twin Grove. Pilot on a B-17 with the Eighth Air force, Lieutenant Beck flew 19 combat missions over Germany. In the course carried of his 3- year service, he also food to Holland and prisoners from Linz, Austria.

Beck- Charles J. Beck arrived at Camp Shanks, N. and will be home in a few days thanks to the announcement of peace. On his way to the Pacific in the Hawaii Clipper, Sergeant Beck learned that his ship had been rerouted nd that he was to return from Panama city. In service five years, he was in Italy with the 12th air force.

Butts Discharged under the point system, Pfc. Charles C. Butts was released from armed service at Ft. Sheridan and has arrived at his home in South Wayne to visit his and friends. Chapman-Pfc.

Robert Chapman has returned to Camp Beale, after visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Chapman, South Wayne.

He expects to go overseas soon. Another son, Charles, is in Germany. Davis -Ens. Allen C. Davis, pilot of a dive bomber in.

the naval air corps, wrote the letter quoted below from a rest camp on Aug. 10. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen N.

Davis. "I am now about 1,400 miles from where I last wrote you. I am at place. a rest I will camp be now, leaving Very here nice in a few days for my ship which is about 1,500 miles from I was shot down up in Japan waters on July 24. I spent four days and nights in a raft.

I finally was picked up by a flying boat. Boy was I happy to see it, We got sunburn and very thirsty but were O. K. Jap planes and boats gave. us some scares but never saw rode storm out one night.

which was' really rough. Antiaircraft is what my oil line. Landed in the water about two miles off shore. "We could see land on all sides of' us all the time. I guess the good Lord was with Erickson-Pfc.

Laverne C. Mrs. Erickson, son Mr. and Charles Erickson, Argyle, has been awarded the Good Conduct medal for conduct, efficiency and fidelity. Private Erickson is a member of Maj' Gen.

Paul J. Muelter's 81st infantry in the Caroline islands. Ellefson Receiving initial naval indoctrination at Great Lakes, is William M. Ellefson, 18, son Mr. and Mrs.

Marion A. Ellefson, 619 21st street, who enlisted in the naval service a short time ago. Fox GM Elmer P. Fox is on leave at the Raymond Fox home, Browntown. Frautschy James Frautschy, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Arthur C. naval Frautschy, boot training Monroe, at has the Great Lakes naval training station. Young Frautschy, a 1945 graduate of Monroe High school, enlisted in the navy shortly, after graduation. Geigel SOM Clifford Geigel is spending a 30-day leave with his parents, Mr.

and Glen Geigel, and friends in Roanoke, Va. He served in the south Pacific for 20 months. Givney -Sgt. Cleo R. Givney, 18th avenue, with the Wac, has 1 received a discharge at.

Ft. Sheridan and has arrived at her home here, She is a sister of Mrs. Elsie Richert and aunt of the county home agent, Miss Marlys Richert. Johnson Mr. and Mrs.

William Johnson, Wiota, have learned that their son, Pvt. Herbert W. Johnson is stationed with an amphibious tractor battallion on Luzon. Judd AMMI Marjory Judd is spending an 11-day leave with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Frank Judd. She has been stationed at Quonset R. and will go to Pensacola, Fla. Kilday Honorably discharged at Ft. Sheridan, is Pfc.

I Frederick L. Kilday, Brodhead, It's Good Weather. TO SPRAY METAL ROOFS AT THIS TIME. We have on hand either red or green metal roof paint. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Brennan Decorating Co.

Phone 935-G who has been overseas for many months. He has arrived at his home to spend some time with his family, before making further Klarer HA Marie Klarer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Christ Klarer, is spending a 7-day leave here after training at a hospital school, Bethesda, Md. She will report to Pensacola, Fla.

Lueck Mr. and Mrs. George Lueck, Cadiz, have received word that their son, Awlat, veteran of 5-year service, has been transferred from England to Marseille. Another son Ralph' stationed in Burma, writes, "We heard the news of peace and were so happy but there wasn't much we could do so we got busy and tore each others shirts off. But then we settled down and I've gone to church every night for a week.

That news surely was great." Robinson Cpl. William Robinson is spending a 35-day furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Robinson, Brodhead. He served with the glider infantry in France.

Schultz--Harold Schultz, son of Arthur Schultz, 1915 17th who has completed basic training at Sheppard field, is home on a 20-day furlough with his family. Schindler Cpl. George J. Schindler arrived last evening after seven months with the air force in Italy and Corsica to spend a 30-day furlough with his mother, Mrs. Bertha Schindler.

He wears the ETO ribbon with two battle stars, the Good Conduct ribbon, and the Presidential unit citation and cluster. He will report to Fresno, for reassignment. Stair Mrs. Norabelle Stair, Brodhead, has learned that her husband, Cpl. Sidney Stair embarked from Italy for the United Aug.

16, after 13-month service. Trumpy Norman Trumpy and Leroy Andres returned yesterday to Oregon where their ships are stationed after spending 30-day leaves with their wives and families here, Number 1 (Continued from page 1) which is still scarce, The WPB also promised more toilet paper, facial tissue, paper towels and napkins, paper straws, wax paper, and window shades. Manufacturers were told to go the limit on those items. Pencillin- last controls. on "wonder drug" will.

be lifted Tuesday. Plenty for civilians soon. 'so one isn't encouraging. The WPB is considering the lifting of bans on the sale of civilian ammunition, but fears such a step might deprive farmers, ranchers, and policemen of the shells they need to fight off the crows, wolves and burglars. A decision is expected next week.

army snipped in half floth requirements for cotton, rayon, and nylon for the rest of the year. That puts 'millions of square 'yards of those on the backs and legs of civilianseventually. Washing machines weren't the only things that stirred up arguments over prices. Underwear Makers of lightweight underwear said some mills would to shut down unless they received more for their product. Price Administrator Chester Bowles was determined to keep the cost of living from going up, but it was plain he would have some tough decisions to make.

As for the FHA and its home mortgage insurance, here's how it works: The actual lending is done by banks, and other financial institubuilding and loan associations, tions. The FHA insures the loan. If the home-owner can't pay it back, the FHA takes the loss. FHA insurance means el home-owner gets easy terms, low monthly payments. The financial institution can't charge more than per cent interest.

In addition the FHA takes per cent a year as its insurance fee. During the war, FHA has insured loans for war housing. That Social CWO Hugo Voelkli Speaks to Aid at Universalist Church Chief Warrant Officer Hugo H. Voelkli, 37, member of the home guard since his youth and serving with the original Co. in Australia, brought the story of the Pacific participation in the war by the now scattered Monroe company, when he spoke to the Ladies' aid society of the Universalist church yesterday afternoon, much the same as he did when he appeared before the G.

G. women's auxiliary the evening home previous. after 29 months in active service in the Pacific with orders to report at Camp McCoy Sept. 3 without information except that there is further need for seasoned men in his department. Voelkli wears the United States Army Silver Star for lantry in action in New Guinea and has had long army experienct in the 32nd division since he left with Co.

in 1941 as sergeant to win various promotions and attain the new army warrant officer rank with title of chief. He has service credits of 117 points. He gave his neighbors intimate picture of army life of their home soldiers in the Pacific theater and was given the closest attention. He answered questions which served to further enlighten his hearers. Officer Voelkli told of his intimate acquaintance with, Maj.

Richard Bong and related instances of his action 'in air combat in praise of his daring exploits. He said he saw the air bombing ace make his first Zero kill. Warrant Officer Veelkli, home visiting his. mother, Mrs Henry Voelkli, went to Madison today to visit Truax Field. Hassli-Beattie Brodhead -(Times Service)- Miss Rose Theresa Hussli, daughter of Mrs.

Theresa Hussli, and Alan married Charles June Beattie, 27 Brodhead, were in St. Peter's Theodore church, Beaver Dam, with Rev. Rohner officiating. The bride was attended by Miss Catherine Hussli and Mrs. Anne Franke.

Alfred Weber and Benton Tuel attended the groom. A reception for 50 guests followed the ceremony at the home of Mrs. Anna Franke. The couple will make their home at Beaver Dam. Nuptial Vows Sunday Nuptial vows to be read at 8:30 p.

m. Sunday in the St. John's Evangelical and Reformed church will unite Miss Margaret Krahenbuhl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Christ Krahenbuhl, Monroe route 1, in marriage with Duane thorne, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Earl L. Hawthorne, Monroe Rev. Paul C. Kehle will officiate at the ceremony.

is finished. FHA also insures loans for repairs, and for program buying homes. As for construction of new for civilians -not war workers not much in of wartime. this has been permitted WPB controls on new construction are still on, and materials are hard to get. All that will soon be changed.

A wave of homebuilding expected. Raymond M. Foley, federal housing commissioner, said 1 he looks for "an early expansion in all normal peacetime operations" of the FHA. Under the FHA program, if you build a home costing less than 000 you have to put up at least 10 per cent down payment, and can borrow the rest. If the home costs between $6,000 and $10,000, you put up 10 per cent of the first $6,000 plus 20 per of the amount exceeding 000.

If the cost is over $10,000, you have to put up 20 per cent of the whole amount. Also on the reconversion front today: The government told girls 16 and 17 years old working in plants under contract with the government to get out and back to school. The AFL and CIO pushed back-to-school movements, too. And-oh, yes--The OPA said you those can gasoline go and fuel oil ration ahead and destroy coupons. You won't need them any more.

For Men Who Want Only the Best ASK FOR MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHES Suits Topcoats Overcoats Sport Coats Trousers Aur New Fall All- Wool Fabrics Are Here For Your Selection. Garments Delivered in 3 Weeks LOUIS H. KOHLI ONE DOOR NORTH OF COMMERCIAL BANK Two Credit Plans Opened to British Pre-college Reunion Eleven members of Monroe high school's class of 1945 met last night for a potluck dinner and charades at the home of Patricia Ransdell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Randell.

Assisting Miss Randell were Misses Barbara Wagner and Jean Marie Rabequests included Misses Barbara Bauman, Mary Burmeister, Jean Anne Johnson, Jane Marty, Dolores Meythaler, Carolyn der, Jean Marie Rabehl, Jean Stauffacher, Faith Trumpy and Barbara Wagner, Misses Lois Davis and Charlotte Stuessy were unable to attend. This affair was planned as a last gathering before. the girls will leave for their respective colleges, as follows: Miss Bauman and Miss Johnson, University of Wisconsin; Miss Burmeister, Stephens college; Miss Marty, Beloit college; Miss Meythaler, business college in Madison; Miss Ostrander, Cornell college; Miss Rabehl and Miss Stauffacher, North Central college; Miss Randell, University of Illinois; Miss Stuessy, Platteville Teachers college; Miss Wagner, Whitewater Teachers college; and Miss Davis, Lawrence college. Bischoff-Lienhardt New Glarus St. Andrew's church, Madison, Miss Grace Bischoff, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Adolph Bischoff, Madison route 2, became the bride of Sgt. Wilbert A. Lienhardt, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Alfred Lienhardt, New Glarus, at 11 a. m. Tuesday. Rev. Edward Sabin officiated.

The bride wore a white wool suit with brown accessories and an orchid corsage. Her only attendant was her sister, Miss Olive Bischoff, who wore a powder blue suit with navy accessories and a gardenia corsage. Capt. Alfred Lienhardt attended his brother and Delbert Bischoff, brother of the bride, ushered. Eighteen guests were served at the wedding dinner in the Wooden Bowl and guests were received at the reception in Kennedy Manor.

After his furlough, Sergeant Lienhardt will report to San Antonio, in the air corps. Lewis-Borwardt Albany-(Times Special Servof Miss Albert Lewis, Albany, and ice) Myrtle Lewis, Francis Borwardt, Janesville, were married at 10 a. July 16 at the Methodist church, Janesville. Rev. Ira Schlagenhauf performed the ceremony.

Mr. and Mrs. Claude Brunner, Janesville, attended. Mrs. Borwaldt has been employed in Janesville.

Her band is a mechanic with the Cardinal Bus Lines. They will make their home in Janesville. Mrs. Quinn Hostess Mrs. Maurice Quinn was hostess to 1942 and 1943 graduates of the Green county normal school an informal tea in her home, 16th avenue, after the Green county teachers institute Eriday afternoon Browntown W.

S. C. S. Mrs. O.

L. Vincent entertained the Browntown W. S. C. S.

at her home yesterday afternoon. A picnic lunch was served and the afternoon spent socially. Washington (AP) Two avenues of credit in the United States are open to Great Britain to obtain continued supplies on termination of the wartime lendlease arrangement, One is the expanded ExportImport bank. other lies in a proviso of the lend-lease act allowing nations, including Britain, to continue receiving goods contracted for after V-J day on pledges to pay for them within 30 years at per cent interest. Congress earlier this year voted to expand the lending powers of the bank from 700 million dollars 3 billion 500 million dollars.

Foreign Economic Administrator Leo Crowley called attention to these, two available sources for Britain in commenting on the declaration of Prime Minister Attlee that the sudden end of lend-lease will leave Britain in a "very serious financial Crowley said lend-lease stops when V-J day is proclaimed by President Truman. The financial delegation headed by Ambassador Lord Halifax, coming to the United States soon to "work probably will discover Britain must choose either the Export-Import bank or the 30-year provision in the lend-lease for future aid. London Debate London (AP) The end of lend-lease stirred sharp debate throughout Britain today. The government stifled official comment that might complicate States for credits to replace the negotiations with the United wartime aid, but there, was no such prohibition upon the press and public. Nearly every newspaper printed long editorials.

The question was taken up in the pubs, in the clubs and on street corners. The conservative Daily Express commented that the United States did only what "it was entitled to and this was, echoed. by many individuals they realized "it had to end some time." The Financial News, however, protested editorially that Britain "has had a pretty raw deal." Funerals George T. Rolph Funeral services for George T. Rolph, New Glarus.

who died Thursday of injuries received in a threshing accident, will be held at 2 p. m. in the Swiss Evangelical and Reformed church with Rev. W. J.

Stuckev officiating. The body will be taken from the Zweifel funeral home at noon. Burial will be in old Monticello cer etery. CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC M. J.

GONSTEAD When Sick of Being Sick -See "THE CHIROPRACTOR" -Ray and Neurocalometer Phone 373, Res. 101 Monroe ATTENTION ALL MERCHANTS AND BUSINESS MEN OF MONROE invited to attend an open discussion relative are to retail matters at the EUGENE HOTEL, MONDAY EVENING, AUGUST 27th, 8 O'Clock Sharp. Forum to be conducted by out-of-town guests. MONROE MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION 5 Brother Bob is the "eatinest" boy you ever laid eyes on when it happens to be I ICE CREAM SHURTLEFF ICE CREAM COMPANY Janesville, Wisconsin Makers of Superior QUALITY Ice Cream Products.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Monroe Evening Times Archive

Pages Available:
11,678
Years Available:
1945-1960