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Monroe Evening Times from Monroe, Wisconsin • Page 6

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Monroe, Wisconsin
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Page:
6
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PAGE SIX MONROE EVENING TIMES, MONROE, WISCONSIN, MONDAY, MAY 23, 1955 ILYRECORD May 23, 1955 Cloudy with occasional showers and thunderstorms tonight and in west this afternoon. Thunderstorms locally severe. Cooler northwest and turning cooler southeast tonight. Tuesday partly cloudy and cooler. Low tonight 42-48 northwest, 50-55 southeast.

High Tuesday 55-62 north, 62-68 south. Personal Mention HOURLY TEMPERATURE ON TIMES THERMOMETER 1 p. m. Saturday to 1 p. m.

Sunday 1 in SI -S3 (i k. in 77 7 1 it 10 Mill 1 1 i 2 I 3 1 4 in Kit in .74 71 in (i!) in (IS in jC7 illilit (id in. 05 in (i in (1 in (1 in (tt in (Kl 7 in ft. 11 a. in 12 Xoon 7 1 in 7 a a a A a 7 a 10 m.

Sunday to 1 in .75 m. ....74 73 in 71 5 n. 70 (i p. m. .70 1 p.

m. p. Ki p. in 05 10 p. .111 (iii 11 p.

Ill (13 Miitninlit 1 n. 01 in. Monday 2 a. m. 0 3 a.

in 0 a. in 0 a. in (i 0 n. in C. 7 a.

in 8 a. in 71 a. 7. 10 a. in.

71 11 a. in 12 Xoon .8 1 p. in Last week: Highest 83, lowest 41 Since Saturday 1 p. highes' 83, lowest 51. Year ago today, highest 79, lowest 58.

Precipitation since Saturday: .01 inch. Barometer reading 1 a. m. 29.29; 1 p. m.

29.34. Warmest place in U. Blythe, 103; coldest, Seattle, Wash. 44. Sunrise sunset 7:15.

Marriage Licenses Glenn Eugene Gordee, Argyle, and Cordelia Berthina Holmen, Argyle, both over 21. Deaths Otto Ringhand, 63, Albany. Mrs. Henry Voegeli, 85, Monticello. Mrs.

Archie T. Riese, 49, Wisconsin Dells. Miss Carrie Greenwald, 93, Racine. Births Mr. and Mrs.

William O'Connor, Belleville, daughter, May 23. Dr. and Mrs. Robert G. Zach, 2045 9th street, son.

May 23. Dr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Ganshert, 1616 17th street, daughter, May 22.

Rev. and Mrs. Harold Humbert, Juda, son. May 22. Mr.

and Mrs. John Hoesly, Brodhead, son, May 22. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Boeck, Route 3, daughter.

May 22. Mr. and Mrs. Stanton P. Steuri, Albany, son, May 22.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Green, Beloit, daughter, May 21. St. Clare Hospital Mr.

and Mrs. H. A. Gothie, Janesville, called in Monroe today. Mr.

and Mrs. Robert A. McCarthy, Beloit, called in Monroe over the weeftend. A. Sweeney and Novie Roy, both of DeKalb, 111., were callers in Monroe yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Goshriarn Battle Creek, were weekene visitors in Monroe. Miss Donna Ott, Madison, spenl the. weekend with her parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Wilbert Ott. Rev. -Richard F. Hulburt was in Platteville today to attend a west convocation clergy meeting.

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Beckage, Madison, spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Ott.

Mrs. Beckage is the former Marilyn Ott. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Templeton, Evansville, and Mr.

and Mrs. Duane M. Babler and son, Terry, New Glarus, were Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. G.

L. Babler. Mr. and Mrs. Gottfried Neuenschwander, Tacoma, former Monroe residents, are visiting at the home of their son and family, Mr.

and Mrs. Paul Neuenschwander, Orfordville, for two weeks. Dr. and Mrs. Albert J.

Miller, John and Susan, Pueblo, spent with Mrs. Walter Miller. Dr. Miller also attended the 10th anniversary of the graduating class of the University of Wisconsin medical school, Madison, Friday. Mrs.

Walter Kubly Installed by Sorority Mrs. Walter J. Kubly was installed as president of the Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority at the 10th annual state convention in Green 3ay Saturday and Sunday. Others from Monroe installed were Miss Evelyn Drake, editor, and Miss Dorothy Johnson, corresponding secretary. Miss Lois Miller, Monroe, was appointed by the new president as state xfinancial workshop chairman.

Attending from Monroe were Mrs. Kubly, Misses Drake, Johnson, Erma Klassy, Bernice Holsapple, and Thelma Gamm. Mrs. 'eggy Shaw, Bright, inter- NAMED BY MOOSE named atyesterday's First the Moose, held in Monroe, included (left to right) Arnold Wikum Showers, Madison, noble north Moose; Daniel Q'Connell, Madison, Monroe, west Moose. (Evening Times photo) District meeting of the Legion of Edgerton, south Moose; Charles treasurer, and T.

O. Stauffacher, national guest. representative, was a Bounty Officers Report )ne Weekend Mishap Only one mishap was reported to fficers over the two- ar collision at 5:15 p. m. Saturday Highway 104 near the Clark arm north of Brodhead and County deputies said cars driven Gerold Leo Nooman, Brodhead, nd Royce Walmer, Brodhead, involved in the mishap.

The ront fender, tire, headlight, frame nd grill of the Nooman vehicle nd a wheel on a trailer being pulled behind the Walmer car were amaged. Walmer told officers he tried to void hitting a tractor and collided nth the Nooman vehicle as he at- empted to pass. Medical: Mrs. Hansina Bondele, Gratiot; Otto Meier, Warren; Mrs. Ben Meichtry, 2232 street; Will Worley, Juda; Frank M.

Daily, La Crosse; Emma Huffman, 1817 10th street; Charles Wells, Footville; John P. Stuessy, New Gary Sveom, Beloit; Delores M. Schwerin, Janesville; Fritz Trachsel, Brodhead; Tova Petersen, Juda, and Clarence Elmer Monticello. Surgical: Mrs. Harlan Rinehardt, Witte, Monticello; Freeport; Mrs.

Fred Mrs. Robert Neuenschwander, Evansville; Mrs. Ambrose J. Olsen, Janesville; Mrs. Cyrus Seffrood, Route Christine Monz, Route and Milo Pederson, Darlington.

Dismissals: Paul Voegeli, Orrin Book, Clarence Snider, Susan Beinema, Mrs. Jay Eaton, Cynthia Babler, Doreen Guptill, Mrs. Reuben Pinch, Gladys Sager, Mrs: Orville Anderson, Effie Boyce, Mrs. Earl Holcomb and son, Mrs. Hubert Kepner, Mrs.

Carl Wenger Randy Albright, Amos Johnson, Jessie Jerry Kochel, Richard Helgeson, James Hanson, Mrs. Laura Nettie Bartelt, Mrs. Paul Macke, Mrs. Charles Lund and son. Dress Revue Judging Will Be Held July 19 The county 4-H dress revue judging will be held July 19 in the Monticello high school, with the dress revue proper scheduled July 21 in Turner hall.

Miss Thelma Baierl, Sauk County home agent, will judge the dress giving comments on choice of fabrics, patterns, accessories and actual construction. The theme for this year's revue proper, which will start at 8 p.m. July 21, is being arranged by Nan' cy Dickson and Dorothy Wald. GANSHERTS NAME INFANT Dr. and Mrs.

Joseph R. Ganshert, 1616 17th street, have chosen the name Janet Lynn for their daughter, born Sunday in St. Clare hospital. Grandmothers are Mrs. J.

W. Ganshert and Mrs. O. L. Vincent, both of Monroe.

The Gansherts have two other children, Michael, 4, and Cynthia, 3. Going To BUILD? News Paragraphs TRACTOR MEET TONIGHT A meeting for all 4-H members enrolled in the tractor project will be held tonight in the agriculture room of Monticello high school. Plans will be made for the tractor operators contest next month, winner of which will represent the county in the state contest. RECEIVES AWARD Mrs. "Pauline Boss, New Glarus, was awarded the Bess Tyrrell Burns Memorial award at the 35th University of Wisconsin Senior Swingout Saturday afternoon.

MEMBERS OF STAR CLUB Joe E. Miller, 602 15th avenue, and James J. Quinn, 2703 18th street, have qualified as members of the Star Club of the New York Life Insurance Co. Mr. and Mrs.

Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Quinn, Gayle and Gary, will attend the education conference in Chicago Wednesday through Sunday. Mr. and Mrs.

Eugene Quinn, Rockford, son and daughter-in-law of the James Quinns, also will accompany the group. DEARTH INFANT NAMED Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Dearth, 609 21st avenue, have named their son, born Thursday in St.

Clare hospital, Nicholas Jay. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Kuenzi, Beaver Dam and Mrs. Nellie Dearth, Monroe.

Mrs. Tillie Muhle, Beaver Dam, is the great- grandmother. The Dearths have three other children, Kathy, 6, Patricia, 5, and Fred 3. CONFIRMED BY BISHOP John Schindler, Monroe, and Mrs. D.

H. Partridge and her mother, Mrs. McManus, Albany, were confirmed by Bishop Donald H. Y. Hallock, Milwaukee, yesterday in St.

Andrew's Episcopal church. A reception for Bishop Hallock and the confirmands was held at the J. H. Schwaiger home following the morning service. The earth normally has a negative electrical charge.

TRACTOR UMBRELLA Rust Proof Metal Pole and Staves 8.50 Also Brackets Ace Hardware Phone 242 Middle-aged Man Avoids the Ruts By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK of pavement Plato: Youth is a dream, but the grea dreamers of this world aren't th young. They are the middle-aged This is particularly true today vhen the generations seem to hay reversed their traditional order ii he pattern of life. In the past was the young: man who was regarded as idealistic, impractical and emotionally immature. The middle-aped man was supposed to be a solid, sober, quiet head of the family, practical in outlook and the real balance wheel civilization. He might be in a rut in botl a business and social sense, bu he enjoyed his rut to a consider able extent.

It was at least bette than having no rut at all to protec him from the winds of adversity And he had to remember, afte all, he had reached age The young man today is th planner, the schemer, the one who wants to tie all the loose ends his life in a neat little package He often isn't trying to avoid a rut he is looking for a nice soft one he can burrow into and become a settled citizen. His goals are quite a safe and secure job, a safe wife a good car, a sound house in i sound neighborhood. It is the middle-aged man now whose dreams are in technicolor and are played on a wide vision screen. He is the great adolescen of our time. He wants to be young in the way youth used to be young The less secure a human being feels the more he turns to his dreams, and the wilder grow his fantasies.

Look inside the skull of a middle- aged man (or, a slightly lesser degree, a middle aged woman) and you discover a great big confused, overgrown problem child. Security, which seem a possibility to a young man, is a Ios1 impossible dream to a middle aged man. He has weathered too njany financial depressions and world wars to put complete trust in either the durabiliy of money or peace. Medicine may eventually slow the ravages of time in others, but he looks in the mirror and sees any such scientific victory will come too late to benefit him much. It is the middle-aged people today who are trying to "live it up" who fight the rutted road they lavel, who seek impossible escapes from the prison of reality, who try to do new things they can't and seek to become what they cannot be.

FOUR LOST IN CRASH CARACAS, Venezuela iff! One person was known dead and three were missing today in the crash of a Venezuelan airliner in the Caribbean Sea near Barcelona. The DC-3, carrying 13 passengers and three crewmen, crashed Saturday. Cemetery VASES Double Wall Cylinder Type Set Flush with Top of the Ground Last for Years Will Not Tip or Blow Over Adjustable for Flower Length Are.Cheaper in the Long Run. 1.10 ea. Also Cone Shape All Metal Type 29c The Service Record ADDRESSES RECEIVED The addresses of Ronald L.

an Gary B. Wunschel have been re ceived. The address of Ronald i SA 4-710-205, US Naval school TE Class Class no. 21-55, US Nav Training Center, San Diego 33 Calif. The address of Airman Class Gary is AF 16-488-382, 33991 Stu.

Sqdn. Box 54, Keesler AFB Miss. ENDS BASIC TRAINING To be given a leave after com pleting his basic training at Fl Leonard Wood, is Pvt. Joh Teuscher son of John Teusch er, 1506 llth street, and Mrs. Ne lie Teuscher, Darlington.

Orangeville Services Held for Barber Boy Services for James Clifford Bar ber, 3-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs George Barber, Orangeville, wb was drowned when he fell into Fox River at Elgin, 111., last Thurs day, were held in the Burington Cramer funeral home in Orange ville Saturday afternoon. Rev. Paul Olson officiated burial was in the Orangevill cemetery. The child leaves his parents am a sister, Patricia Ann.

Firm To Draw Sketches Fq.r Monticello Project MONTICELLO (Times Special The Village Board of Monti cello held a special meeting Friday night to interview engineers in regard to the new sewage disposa plant. The Woodman and Baxer Engi neering Firm, Crystal Lake, HI. were hired to submit preliminary sketches for the plant. The same firm are in the process of installing a similar disposal plant in New Glarus. George Shook Rites Scheduled Tomorrow Services for George W.

Shook 58, who died Friday night at Prairie du Sac, will be held Wednesday at 9 a. m. in the Stuessy funeral home and at 9:30 in St. Victor's church Rev. E.

C. McCollow officiating. Burial, with military graveside rites, will be in Calvary cemetery A rosary service will be helc tomorrow at 8 p. m. in the funera home.

WIFE SLAYS OFFICER RENO, Nev. UP! William Me- Kenzie, second in command of the Nevada highway patrol, was sho to death yesterday by his wife, who then took her own life, Coroner William Beemer reported. Try Times Want Ads. GUEST TOWELS Lovely pastel and white KITCHEN TOWELS Linen and cotton colorful print. BRIDGE SETS Floral and plain linen PILLOW CASES White and colored embroidery TABLECLOTHS Hand blocked linen 52x52 and 52x73 inches.

Also solid brown TABLECLOTHS with matching napkins RENT A Punch Bowl or Wedding Coke Knife Klassy Shop Eugene Hole! Bldg. Dairy Comeback Seen, Wiley Told MADISON (Special) Rising butter sales and increased milk consumption point to strong recovery for the dairy industry members of the Wisconsin Farm Bureau board told U. S. Senator Wiley last week. There should be no consideration of returning to inflexible price supports, which hurt sales and caused dairy surpluses to pile up, the directors told the senator.

Wiley asked their advice on a bill, which has passed the House Representatives, continuing 90 per cent of parity price supports on corn, wheat and other "basic" commodities. The directors told the senator that other commodities should follow dairy products to flexible price support basis. Dairy products have been under flexible price supports since April 1, 1954. "Let us work off the surplus, and in two years dairying will be the most prosperous branch of agriculture," Percy Hardiman, Hartland dairyman, told the senator. Gore Takes New Job On Juneau Weeklies MAUSTON UP) Leroy Gore, leader of the unsuccessful drive to secure a recall election for Wisconsin's Republican Sen.

Joseph McCarthy, has joined the staff of two weekly newspapers published here. A news article in the Maustnn Star announced that Gore will work on the editorial staff of both the Star and Juneau County Chronicle which are under the same ownership. The Star did not say what post he will fill. Gore sold his Sun-Prairie Star earlier this year. PLANES SCATTER REBELS PARIS planes "annihilated" a band of 60 rebels, the French News Agency reported today, after a violent battle in the Khenchela area of Algeria.

The account said nationalist guerrillas attacked the post of Kheirane Saturday night. KENOSHA TAVERN BOMBED KENOSHA blast from a lomemade bomb tore a yard square hole in the side of a concrete block tavern building here early today and smashed windows the American Motors Corp. across the street and damaged several autos. Firm Transfers Laverne Galliiz Laverne C. Gallitz, 525 20th avenue, retail representative here for the Socony Mobil Oil Co.

the past 10 years, has been transferred to a similar position in Dubuque effective July 1. in announcing the transfer today, said no successor has been named. He, his wife and their two children will move to Dubuque as soon after July 1 as housing can be arranged. During his 10 years in Monroe, allitz was very active in community affairs. He was president of Kiwanis Club last year and has served as president of the county Shrine club, president of the Immanuel church brotherhood, a director of the county polio chapter, a director of the Chamber of Commerce and its retail division and was program chairman for Masonic Blue lodge and chief ambassador for Zor Shrine temple.

Gallitz also has served as chairman for the Oil Industry Information committee in Grant, Green, towa and Lafayette Counties and currently is county chairman for American Petroleum Industry. FIRES 1,848 STRIKERS CALUMET, Miflh. Calumet Division of the Calumet and Hecla Copper has fired 1,848 employes who have been on strike since May 2 in a wage dispute. The company said the strike was llegal because the Local 4312 of the CIO United Steelworkers failed notify the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. Amazing bargains in The Timer classified, check them daily.

TONIGHT and TUESDAY Open 6:45, Show starts at Dusk A Story of the GREAT $2,500,000 BRINKS ROBBERY! ALSO GOFT7 Tonight UVLli. Thu. thru Thurs. WOW! Here's A i 1 to 10 Hundreds of Your neighbors will at the long, low, luxurious lines of your ultra-smart new Mercury. You'll whistle at the low price! Drive, home in a Mercury today! END of MONTH CLEARANCE Odds and Ends Floor of a Kind Discontinued Pieces Savings Up to and More $49.50 Innerspring Mattress $33.95 Box Spring to Match $33.95 $24.50 Jenny Lind Bed, full size $17.95 $89.50 5 pc.

Chrome Dineife $58.50 $79.50 Lounge Chair Green Plastic $49.50 $5.95 81 in. Chromespun Curtains $4.50 $2.50 42 in. 35 in. Tier Pon $13.95 52 in. 90 in, Fibre Glass Prisciilas $9.95, $12.50 47x90 in.

Double Life Curtains $8.95 $8.95 to $11.95 Pair 90 in. Length One and two pair of a kind PRINTED DRAPERIES $5.95 pr. $254.50 Bed, Chest, Double $244.50 2 pc. Living Room Suite $179.50 $98.50 Swing King Reclining Chair $77.50 $134.50 Drop Leaf Table 3 Pedestal Mahogany $259.50 2 pc. Living Room Suite $189.50 $149.50 Rattan 3 Pc.

Sectional Sofa S98.50 $49.50 Matching Chair $36.75 $389.50 Bed, Cfcest, Triple Walnut $54.50 Platform Rocker $42.50 $57.50 Platform $47.50 $59.75 Innerspring Mattress $42.95 One Only Full Size $259.50 Four Piece Limed Oak BEDROOM GROUP Bookcase Bed, Chest, Double Dresser, Nite Table 189.50 $129.50 5 pc. Chrome Dinette Exceptional Values in 12 ft. Wall to Wall Carpet. That Offers Real Value If Your Rooms Aren't Too Large. These ore remaining balances of rolls that will da a job requiring 25 to 30 sq.

yds. Reg. 12.95Jo 15.95 Now $9.85 sfl yd. SNYDER and MARKWARDT "DRAPERY HOUSE FURNITURE DRAPES CARPETS Southwest Corner of the Square Ii.

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About Monroe Evening Times Archive

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