Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Capital Times from Madison, Wisconsin • 16
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Capital Times from Madison, Wisconsin • 16

Publication:
The Capital Timesi
Location:
Madison, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A 20 ITome Ormed Home Edited Home Read MADISON HE CAPITAL TIMES WISCONSIN iunday Morning1, September 29, 1935 Warn Merchants A ot to Cash Stolen Orders' 9 Taste, and Not Moncv. Hriiius 0 Home Charm yi CHICAGO. OP) Walter Johnson, In charge of Chicago postal inspectors, Saturday warned merchants against cashing postal money order numbered 78,683 to 78,800, inclusive. The forms, Johnson said, were stolen from the Racine, port office. Several forged money orders of the series have been cashed In Chicago, he said, by two men and a woman, who used them in payment for articles of less value than the money orders, and took change.

Coif Will IVot Delrnnine Hr nil READ CAIMTAL TIMES WANT ADS Raul Reynolds Cabin pUr.rur icd ar- nr.r.i bm and cents are thf cf the tstrf2)r-faimihed tit in ta. AXVicjS KKKe jt of rrtwe fcntw lr.n:r.er.5 thin other. IS ii to ipfrd pure fartar-e to? firaKai And end up titii a room tut a Kjhtiritf end i ur pnv to Achieie a cbinr.inj effect thwiS the fircwt.tirt of Rich llwith. hit liti rr.r.ry. "la fact." rcnrtirt to Rocce R.

Rax txrru.ie of the National Fjrc.I.ire awociatson. Jre wrk kep h-hi tn touch with pUm tor thiorU of home. the c-t of a hit fe tr.tn a home, la 1 tssetf. has to do .:.1 fjx.fhirg reoit-. ImpreviTe mtfffr require thctijht ta execution.

do a to the taut ddii. ORtwa er-se. Ra i pointed out. what a needed mwt. At the he continu'd.

If herr to buy '1 furniture r'n thtu-fj rj t'i feoer ttoa ta ta up jrjf hoxe tsii haie nothin? pM, the fatarite style today for upholstered furniture Li the London club type chair and davenport, of which then ewr prue U5- the too illustrated aboie are typical example. The low, wide arms, tailored line and generally comfortable appear- ty-f-rruhed heme. core. -i-jr arrang'd. ma to appeal equally to men and to women an unusual combination.

The occasional pieces are also 8 be xrry and then Bti.h. Although the panelled walls provide an Ideal setting, such furniture appears to advantage in almost any p.f ray bf ailed later ex Mnd room ohra the budget the aiii- Leiuff Ceoeral Ideal Room Impossible i one. the furtu'ure evecute P.nv4 cut. css the -idea I 7 rva lf.e If I'YirOG if I DrTPfKPfl ea that aa fpp one fact-j A 5 1 1 JUl 1IIU tUUi dy jwin't even err.e ri -e Cim Makes This e-zn-rl rf the rest eil the and the National Wholesale Furniture MONROE, Wis. Special) Forty thousand Swiss and limburger cheese sandwiches and 30,000 half pints of milk will be served free Wednesday The Ac'ic Department of Honor Bilt Furniture QUALITY GUARANTEED SECOND FLOOR Sears Roebuck Company 311-13 State St.

On a small point Juttmg out into Lake Michigan, and commanding view of both the surrounding woods and lake is a log cabin built 14 years ago by Mr. and tyrs. Paul Reynolds of Madison. The hand hewn Jogs used In building the cottage were originally part of a house built in 1865. The rustic window boxes under each window are made of split logs and filled with gay colored petunias that dance in the wind.

The fishing village ot Jacksonport tucked in the bay mile or so away, can be seen from the large screen porch facing the lake. A heavy woden door opens from the porch into a charming living room with a beam ceiling, white wails, blue window ledges, and gay yellow flowered curtains. On each side of the stone fireplace are wooden benches and above the mantel sheif is a blue and yellow Indian print. A round tilt top table stacked with books and magazines stands next to a cross corner cupboard filled witft interesting pieces of old china and glass Brightly painted furniture arranged in an inviting fashion adds to the attractive room. A stairway opposite the fireplace divides part of the room, with a comfortable bedroom on one side and a cozy kitchen on the other.

A small bedroom opens off the porch or may be reached by an outside door of Its own. Corded wood stacked In long piles behind the cabin suggests occasional chilly days and nights at this summer cottage even in July or August. Presidential Campaign Is A1 ready On Roosevelt Speeches, G. O. P.

Blasts Are Opening Guns BY EDWARD J. DL'FFY (Associated Press Staff Writer)) WASHINGTON OP) The 1936 presidential campaign actively began Saturday over a year ahead of the elections. Getting down to cases, Pres. Roosevelt in the Nebraska speech showed clearly his main reliance on the AAA to hold the farming west. A quick follow up on the power question Boulder Dam on Monday would not surprise his aides.

Whether Republicans would hit back at once, or await the broader exposition of the new deal expected in the California addresses Tuesday and Wednesday, was a qquestion last night. In view of increasing G. P. militaure, rejoinders were considered only a matter of time. Has Opposition Divided Those concerning the AAA will be studied especially.

When Roosevelt opened up with that, he touched 1 problem that admittedly has the op position divided. Harrison E. Spangler, Iowa commit teemtn for the Republicans, last Thursday bespoke the party's need for heavy western as well as eastern support to win next year. Of the AAA, he said only it is being considered and the people can be assured by next June we ill have something to place before them. Even as the president talked, Sen Capper (R, again warned his party from Topeka lest its platform oppose the agricultural adjustment program and leave, little chance of winning the farm belt back.

If he has his way, the AAA will not be made an issue between the parties. Hint at Future Tactics Aside from mentioning dollars in their own pocketbooks to the ers, Roosevelt also evidenced new deal tactics against charges that it would sabotage the constitution. Administration farm and monetary policies were depicted as within the constitution to promote the general welfare and as concrete expressions of the human rights fought for at Concord. Much anti-new deal argument has been based on contentions diametrically opposite. Sen.

Borah of Idaho and Col. Frank Knox of Chicago, among the foremost possibilities for Republican presidential nomination, both have pressed the constitutionalism arguments. Borah, Friday, endorsed moves by Frank E. Gannett, the publisher, to- from the Dyrud funeral home to Wau-saukee, Wis. Salesmens association.

The Steinway PIANO noon to persons attending Cheese day festivities here. About 2,000 loaves of bread, 30 200-pound wheels of Swiss cheese and seven 100-pound boxes of limburger cheese will be used in the sandwiches. first Time to Refurnish Homes A-nt. The hAS.rx as a ef e'h group eta! be tak-a tr.s One whether there are rh.ltren and What and hr ether space in the a the hse. ward giving the party a program of vigorous economic progress within the fundamental principles of constitutional government.

Letters Cause Comment And Knox was endorsed by organized Illinois Republicans for nomination as a champion for restoration of safe, sound, sane and practical policies under the constitution. Untold numbers of white house requests for advice from clergymen aroused both praise for the motive and charges of politics. Similarity of the form letter with ones dispatched to Wisconsin churchmen in March by Gov. La Follette was remarked, but the significance if any could only be guessed. The American home still the tA'a's most important Institution step Grieg Male Chorus to Launch Rehearsals Hurry Thaw Much Ilct ter; Leaves Hospital Qt'L'RCC.

Harry K. Thaw was discharged from a hospital late Saturday where he was taken Thursday suffering from a severe attack of grippe. He left Immediately for Montreal. where it waa believed he would take a train for New York. Thaw, who shot and killed Stanford White in New York in 1906, waa transferred from an ocean liner to the hospital Thursday.

i I1) il The Best You Can Own! Your old Piano will be accepted in trade Exclusive Agents In Dane, Rock, Sauk, Richland, Iowa, Columbia, and Green counties. -Fr he i. v-s mr hare a tordrta f.r dcLcate. gracti-1 te.iAe and. on to? cf that, a nes -r vne ar.d ether accessories.

If joj hate a smlt heme. rwa set a.d a a m. ani j-i hate y-TArc chddrea. drat Indi'ce that fancy. The k.d murt hare a place tv pay and if the hv.rg roota ad Iraii ava.Ui'.e keep that ta mind.

Then jo-a oral hare be farm; every few m.niite si into the fpotheht In the week of September 3d to October 5 when India and the rest of the Un.ted States ob-erve Furniture week, dedicated to the 25 000,000 home In which are centered the activities of the nation' famil.es. of all kinds fresh from the industry's factories are ready fir the fall season, when America, after a rammer of outdoor recreation, returns home for the winter months. 1 From the basement to the attic, from The Grieg Male chorus will begin rehearsals Tuesday night at 7:30 at the Vocational school. John Mael Is the director. Athelstone Man Dies at Local Hospital The surface of the human body approximately 16 square feet.

'A Ward-Brodt ftlusic 208 State St. Gerald Sotzen, 20, of Athelstane, died yesterday in a Madison hospital after a long illness. He is survived by his parents and one brother. The body has been removed Pretty Misses Also Sing rtsa Living Km Setup I irt A gN'd system ta planning a living the hvir.g room to the kitchen for rocm. aecordmg to Rax la to rat rat the farm home and the Park avenue ptfce cf cardboard, on a scale penthouse for the two-room kltch-e! cne-ciarter-inrh to the foot, repre- enette and the forty-room mansion sen'irg aT cf the rnsjor piece ta go nothing has been overlooked.

reoax Then draw a d.s cf th r-sn. ta the ms scale, showing the dverx ir fireplace, etc. Arrange the cardboards in this space cn'il the d-ured reilt is obtained. This is much eaiter than mrrir.g the -And esse word cf advice." he -National Furn.lure week has only one purpose." it was averted in headquarters at Chicago, "and that is to lorn attention everywhere on the importance of the American home and its furnishing." Furniture Factories Buy with the four national append-d. "i da'l be afraid ta be furniture associations, are thousands cr r.r.aL Read all jur l.ke about in- 0f factories producing literally tens of trrvT decoraien adapt what thousand of items that go into the Dont Let Improper Light Damage Them I read to your own enor.ahty.

A room drv.rd by or. rf the movie sar ter enre likely by a decorator explored fr the pirpcue'i tray be a perfect tor th atirro, but the world's worst sett.r.? tor How to Make Living Room More Livable my child more advan a parent today. Yet one priceless advantage that most of us can give, is often overlooked unimpai red eyesight And eyesight ean he easily injured permanently impaired by the wrong kind of light. These bright eyes will soon he looking at things closely and that is the dangerous age for eye furn.sh.ms of the modern home and the furniture and department store of the nation, bringing these new creations to every city and town In the country. "If you reed new furniture, buy It now.

but whether you Invest a cent new furnishing, devote some thought ta your home this week." the home makers of the nation were advised. Attend the arranged by furniture dealers. You'll find new ideas in decoration on view new wars to make your home more comfortable and more livable. Rearrange the rooms you haven't touched for year freshen them with newr idea, new furniture, or both. Make America's home this fall better places In which to Lve and in which to rear Americans of the future." Is the word, Price for furniture ar.d related lines i have rlen little from the depression 1 low.

It wa pointed out. thus affording an opportunity to accomplish much, at relatively small east, that may not be repeated. By next January, accord-Irg to forecasts by authorities in the lnd istry. price will be 10 per cent higher, due to stead Jy Increasing cost for raw materials and the eontmua- sight. VjS ml Dangerous because his eyes will he working hard for the first time focusing sharply on letters and words and pictures, instead of looking vaguely at things far away.

And this will he done indoors by eyes that were made for outdoor vision. A7 wonder twenty children in every hundredlcave grade school with defective II 0 believe that every parent should know these common-sense rules for sight-saving. The Lv.rj room the most Important rm tn the home. And from the stand po.r.t cf Lcht.r? tor decoration it priviirs the widest range for original tda. T.vere are three types of lighting eii tn the living rwm: red.

rig f.vtur i. wad track-', and fiver and table lamp. AH three of these type of ean be employed. Il has teen said that the ee t.r.g fixture is a thing cf the part. There Is nothin? further from the truth.

Ceding fixture are highly desirable as there are many lures when It is d- the lnds- 7 try. of LRA wage ar.d hours. jd to fiooi the entire living room with radAr.t Cluir.iratien. Tv ir.ry i Mle Change In Year Ji room rN ipl eedirg fix- I Ti.t last few years have brought lure are Lk'ly to take on the appear- changes In the home furnish- arce a lamp shop when maximum "ire field, leaders have pointed out. tv desired.

i The well-fumbhed home. 1935 model. Itowmrr nary eed.rg firture to-1 bears as little resemblance tn its prede-dsy are dewafTJi tn the red-, tenr of ten years ago as do the ern er.e but e-it-mMcd evravagar'es mod-ra motor cars compared to 1926 ef the past. If such a fixture pm- model. While certain general style, tided and earn'd be replaced, tt i favorites for generations, continue In is many tims pwitl tn remove some vogue, as always, there have been ef the iinr.eee'Mary ornaments which 1 counties improvements and modiftca-maae tt out-of-date.

It ts also tior. making furniture more useful. many tunes, after str.pr'-" m.ore beautiful. these ft stare, to add more modern! The man who has never driven shades ar.d achieve glare lev, modern modern motor ear doernt know i what he is missing." It was said at! Cumisatirn. These three pretty misses will appear on the Orpheum staire Tuesdav.

Wednesday and Thursday in the musical revue. fioinjj Places. They are the Lorraine Sisters and are NIC favorites in sontr and harmonv. On the screen John Boles and Dixie Lee will he shown in Bedheads on Parade. 3.

Provide him with a good reading lamp, and see that he does all of his evening reading under it. A new lamp has been especially developed by the Illuminating Engineering Society in the interest of better sight. It is called the I. E. S.

Study and Reading Lamp and you can identify it by the I. E. S. approval tag which each lamp carries. 1.

Have your child's eyes examined regularly during school years. Defective vision in early childhood may often be overcome if diagnosed in time. 2. Never permit a child to read in poor light. Twilight, the light from a distant fixture, the light on the floor, the child's own shadow all these are unsafe conditions for close seeing.

Teach him to read with head upright and with plenty of light coming over his BETTER LIGHT BETTER SIGHT Cbi'cRerina Ir.disnapolis Furniture Week hrad-' quarter, "and. In the same way. the man er woman who hasn't even been inside furniture store or furniture i section since the depression cant real- i tm what a tart differenre there la In the r.r Co-opera! mg In presenting National 1 Furniture Week Ihroughout the nation are the Na's-mal R-taii Furniture axso- 1 nation, the National Association rf Furniture Manufacturers, the Southern Furniture Manufacturer axsoeiation. T.v- mrtttorn reil.irg fixture ts available in a wile vr.cy ef dc-igns. As pr.

sr-uly they employ la Ewt every eme tndxect cr scx.i-ui-d-'ect l.ir..'g. TP'- fixtures are mly d-cnM? tn tsrwlm but dice tllisinjiipa which 411 subr 'tartuilly to th- cf the rrcrrt crsticn. Tb: rri p-cra cf reilir? thvt pmv.ft by b-ult-in cot- ry par el Isht.rg. Tb.i Iighiin? ewa be r-irfilci ta a panel arvurvt the mnld.ng. er it ean be a decorated frosted chu rri b.ilt-m er u-Prded from th rer.er ef the cril.r.g.

Ji ts tvpe provide novel ar.d dfl.ght-f IzT.tmz effect. Kxtllierine kelson Kiles oil Tuetlav' LET THE SrGIIT METER HELP YOU ff you suspect that the lighting in your home is not right, send for our home lighting expert. She will bring a Sight Meter with her. With the aid of the Sight Meter she will give you sound counsel on your lighting problems. This service is absolutely free.

Take steps today to safeguard the eyesight of your family. Write or phone this company for this free expert service. Or better still, see for yourself a demon-' stration of right and wrong lighting, and the displays of reasonably priced, handsome lamps, scientifically designed to protect and preserve that precious faculty, good eyesight. Surely you dont administer medicines nor guess about your teeth. You trust to science, and skill of the physician and dentist.

WHY NOT TRUST TO SCIENCE CONCERNING YOUR LIGHTINC? Have You Seen a "Sight Meter?" The Sight Meter measures light. It is an application of the almost magical electric eye. And it shows the amount of light you get from any lamp as simply as a thermometer shows how hot or cold it Is. It will show the amount of light your lamps give in any part of your home. To get a FREE Sight Meter test of the light In your home, call Badger 4400.

Lowest price in 20 years s69 5 CRAFTSMEN who learned the secret of its perfection from their grandfathers employ their century old knowledge in ihe making of every Chickering. The structural details snd consummate workmanship, always inseparable from the Chickering, are bringing it even greater beauty today. Unmatched in its lusciousness of tone. EASY TERMS Trades Accepted KETTKR LIGHT! niiVVlill SIGHT! TuneinWIBU Sunday 10:30 A. M.

Tee Picatlon of LIGHT and EYESIGHT Beginning Monday. Sept. 31st. la Better Light Better Sight Week! B. W.

Joseph, Opt. D. OPTOMETRIST Msdnsn, Wisconsin Madosiro Co, Fweater Ce-ident Died Wed nesday at Lang Beach. Calif. Funeral service tor Mj Kstfcerir Nelc.

water Mad-ssa and ulrr cf J1L Nejen. cf 133 EL Gilman at- who Wednesday in Ijnr.g F-arh. CaLf. will be held here at 9 Tuesday ta St. Fr i's chircn.

The Rev. A- V. Grace will off te. irial be in cemetery. her Mi Nf r.

i rtrvued by one s-ter. Mrs. M. V. Hoi.

Lore Reach: two r.ees. Mr. 3f. Madi-on; Mr. David Cant cd.

Lit jUitlti. Forbes-Meagher MUSIC COMPANY 27 W. Main St. 100 N. FAIRCHILD ST.

PHONE BADGER 4400 QUALITY II A 1) I AT A A I. I I 1 rvss-raaPTtv rngjogswruast.

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

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Capital Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Capital Times Archive

Pages Available:
1,147,580
Years Available:
1917-2024