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The Capital Times from Madison, Wisconsin • 8
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The Capital Times from Madison, Wisconsin • 8

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

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Wednesday Afternoon, May 13, 1912 MADISON THE CAPITAL TIMES ISCONS1N Home Owned -Home. Edited Home Read Powder Plant Medical Unit Plans Told SayEvaporated Milk Producers To Get 'Policy 15 Teachers At Mineral Pt. Brothers Serve Reedsburg Sailor Missing in Fall of Bataan, Report Oregon Sign New Contracts ft' rtt- -4- --r- r- r-. Granted Salary Raises; 2 Faculty Members Not Reliired Report Encouraging Response from Washington Parley Staff of 6 Doctors, 2 0 Nurses to Be Used at Ordnance Works OREGON, AVis. Fifteen of the 17 members of the Oregon public school faculty have.

signed contracts for the 1942-43 academic year. The names of the two teachers whose contracts have not been renewed were not disclosed by the board of education. The board announced that the new contracts provided salary raises for all 15 rehired teachers. Members of the present high school faculty are Edwin A. Kozlovsky, Oregon, principal and mathematics teachers; T.

P. Kezel, Oregon, music and social science; Tony Ellis, Oregon, athletic coach and science; Beatrice Boos, Jefferson, commercial subjects; Mrs. Mary Anderson, Oregon, English and library; Mary Baxter, Beloit, Latin and social sciences; Harold Morrissey, Oregon, agriculture, and Agnes Anderson, Owen, homemaking. Graded school faculty members are Bertha Bertrand, Madison, kindergarten; Mrs. Bernadine Doyle, Spring Greenj 1st grade; Jeanette Lacktorin, Elm City, 2nd grade; Mrs.

Marjorie Roberts, Dane, 3rd grade; Naomi Grimsrud, Westby, 4th grade; Ruth Burrill, Fond du Lac, 5th grade; Marie Paulson, Holcombe, 6th grade; Helen Shaw, Madison, 7th grade, and Hulda Swedburg, Stockholm, 8th grade. Evansville Group Elects Mrs. Ballard EVANSVILLE, Wis. Mrs. Floyd Ballard was elected president to succeed Mrs.

W. O. Cain at the May meeting of the Congregational Womans league. Mrs. Grant Clark was named vice president and Miss Hattie Axtell, secretary and treasurer.

The nominating committee was comprised of Mrs. J. B. Baldwin, Mrs. Harry Roderick and Mrs.

C. E. Willoughy. The groups final meeting before the summer vacation will be a picnic June 4 at the home of Mrs. L.

F. Hubbard and Mrs. C. E. Willoughby.

Fennimore Couple Is Wed 62 Years FENNIMORE, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fischer, residents of the 4th ward, will observe their 62nd wedding anniversary on Thursday, May I4th. Mr.

Fischer is 85 and Mrs. Fischer is 82. They were married in Germany in 1880 and came to Amer ica and to Fennimore in 1882. They farmed for many years and have been residents of the city for many years. Their living children are Charles, Frank, Fred and Emil and daughters, Mmes.

William Riddiough and Frank Riddiough and William Maso. Sow 900 Acres of Peas at Evansville EVANSVILLE, AAis. The sowing of 900 acres of peas in this locality to be canned by the Evansville branch of the Columbus Food was completed this week. The packing season will open about June 15. About 175 men and women will be employed.

Of the 900 acres under cultivation here 550 acres are of the early variety. Fennimore Baby Barely Makes Sugar Rationing FENNIMORE, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E.

Roethe are the parents of son, Richard Owen, born May 7. at Grace Maternity home here. The baby was the youngest person in the city to be registered for sugar ration, as that evening sugar rationing was closed. Lucky F3I cu )R more customers Harry Wagner REEDSBURG, AVis. Harry Wagner, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Albert Wagner living north of the city, has been reported missing in action after the fall of Bataan. Wagner, who is a 1939 graduate of Reedsburg high school, was stationed in the Philippines as an aviation machinist's mate, 3d class. He enlisted in the navy in November, 1939. He was sent to Pearl Harbor and later transferred to Cavite.

He was on Bataan when it fell to the Japanese, it is believed. Mr. and Mrs. Wagner received a telegram Sunday from the navy department telling them that their son was among the missing. Monday they received a letter from their son.

The letter had been written Mar. 5. In the letter, their son said that he had been slightly wounded. Potosi Soldier Cables to Mother POTOSI, AVis. Mrs.

Helmut Fritz received a cablegram Mothers day from her son. Pvt. Allen A. Fritz. The cablegram, which was the first word since last December, stated that Pvt.

Fritz is in Great Britain. Mrs. Donald Pluemer has received word that her husband. Pvt. Donald Pluemer, has been transferred from Missouri to Drew Field, Tampa, a U.

S. army signal corps school. Elect JFaupun Pastor Officer of Seminary HOLLAND, Mich. (A3) The Rev, Edward H. Tanis, Waupun, last night was elected vice-president of the Western Theological Seminary here.

The Rev. Abraham Rynbrandt, Kalamazoo, was elected president to succeed Dr. Jacob Vander Meulen, who is retiring. Madagascar, the worlds fourth largest island, is larger than France and almost as large as Texas. WEHRMANNS TO HELP HIM WIN THE WAR! Specials for Selective Service $1 to $10 Monogrammed In Gold WEHRMANN'S T- .3 ri BARABOO, Wis.

A medical unit staffed with six doctors and 20 or more nurses, technicians, and orderlies will be established at the Badger Ordnance works, Hercules Powder Co. announced today. A laboratory, operating room, dispensary, reception room, physiotherapy room, and wards with a capacity of 14 beds will be installed to safeguard the health of the ordnance plant workmen. We will have complete equipment for routine physical examinations, for first aid treatment, and for minor surgical operations, Dr. L.

C. McGee, Wilmington, medical director of the Hecules company, said. Dr. Howard L. Reed, Baraboo, medical director of the Badger Ordnance works, will be directly in charge of medical facilities of the plant.

Blood Tests for All The medical laboratory will make blood counts, urinalyses, and special studies for particular types of employment. Through the co-operation of the serological laboratory of the Wisconsin Psychiatric institute. University of Wisconsin, blood tests for venereal and other diseases will be made on everyone employed at the plant. An x-ray machine which will be used to examine chests for tuberculosis and other pulmonary diseases and to detect broken arms, legs, or ribs. An electrocardiograph, an i ment which electrically records heart beats, will assist the doctors in diagnosing heart irregularities.

Plan Operating Room The dispensary, comparable to the out-patient-clinic in a metropolitan hospital, will be able to handle 125 patients daily. An operating room will be equipped for minor operations and emergency major operations. Hercules Powder Co. employes, who will operate the plant, will receive a thorough physical examination before employment, Dr. McGee said.

Physical defects will not necessarily bar a man from employment but the examination, for example, will steer a one-eyed man or a color-blind man away from a truck driver's job into a place more suitable for him. Employes will be re-examined at least once a year; cafeteria employes will be examined at least every three months. The dispensary will give first aid treatment, even for injuries sustained outside of regular employment. The employe who reports sick will be given any laboratory tests needed, sent home, and advised to call his family doctor if further medical attention is needed. To CJso Lab Reports "In making his diagnosis, the local doctor or family physician will then have the benefit of the laboratory report which he could not obtain otherwise except by sending the patient or his blood sample to a hospital laboratory.

For instance, a blood count will have determined whether a stomachache is simply indigestion or a dangerous case of appendicitis. Dr. McGee said the company will make periodic checks on drinking water, toilet facilities, disposal of garbage, and any other possible sources of infection. It is anticipated that less than 2 per cent of the applicants for work will have syphilis, a percentage slightly lower than the general average for the country as a whole. These men and women will be given employment where the infection will not unfit them for the task, provided they are not in the infectious stage and provided also they take treatment which prevents them from infecting fellow-workmen.

This compulsory treatment will reduce the number of venereal cases in the vicinity of the plant. Protective Measure "The medical examination before employment will protect those already on the job from infectious diseases, because invariably a few men will apply for work with walking cases of measles, chicken-pox, smallpox, or other infectious disease. The Never Closed sign might well be hung on the hospital for a nurse or doctor will be on duty around the clock as long as operations are on three shifts. With the supply of man-power so important in these critical days, the conservation of the health of our ordnance plant employes becomes a vital part of the war effort, Dr. McGee said.

Experience at other Hercules-operated ordnance plants, where similar facilities have been provided, shows a reduction in days last from non-occupational illnesses and diseases, more prompt recovery from injureis by virtue of immediate and complete treatment, and a general improvement in the health of the workmen achieved by close attention to plant sanitation and hygienic education. Install Tanks for Evansville Fires EVANSVILLE, AA'is. To assist in extinguishing rural fires in this locality, the Union Mutual Fire Insurance Co. has purchased three tanks, each with a capacity of 500 gallons, and placed them on standards near the Water and Light department buildings. It takes but one minute to fill each of the tanks which will be rolled onto trucks to be transported to the scene of the fire.

668 in Orfordville Sugar Registration ORFORDVILLE, AVis. A total of 668 persons registered for sugar rationing here last week. Of these, 609 pprsons received war ration books. The registration was in charge of L. AV.

Amborn, principal of Orfordville schools FOND DU LAC, AVis. William O. Perdue, general manager of the Pure Milks Products co-operative, said here today on his return from Washington that representatives of evaporated milk producers who called on department of agriculture officials to back the coops request for a statement of policy as to future needs and a floor on prices, received an encouraging response. The co-op, with a membership of 11,000, declared that it laid the groundwork for the Washington trip and obtained a representative group to lay- the problem before department of agriculture officials. Perdue said these officials promised to bend every effort to arrive at some definite safeguard for the milk producer.

The committee pointed out that milk producers are essential to the war effort just as are industrial plants and that they are equally entitled to some financial guarantee to protect their investments. The committee was composed to M. K. Swanton, executive secretary of the Wisconsin Council of Agriculture; W. L.

Witte of the state department of agriculture; Bernie Beach of the Michigan Producers Dairy H. D. Alle-bach, field representative for the National Producers Committee of Evaporated Milk; Fred Huntzicker, Green-Wood, of the Wisconsin Cheese Producers federation; Thomas OConnor of Pure Milk Products co-operative and also a member of the National Producers committee, and Perdue. Gary Cooper in Baptism Class REEDSBURG, AA'is. Gary Cooper was baptized with eight other children by the Rev.

G. S. Joslin in the Methodist church Sunday morning. Gary is the young son of Mr. and Mrs.

Cyril Cooper, who chose Thomas as the childs middle name. Others baptized are Margaret Ann and Phyllis Kathryn, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. T. R.

Lathrope; James Earl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Fish; Patricia Anne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kelley; David Edward, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Richard Brimmer; Wallace William, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Strickert; Harold Hubert, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Hartzell Mortimer; Rosemary Elaine, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Merriwell Huebing. Start Inquest in Richland Death RICHLAND CENTER, AVis. The inquest into the traffic death of Mrs.

Everett Pease, who died Monday in a local hospital, opened Tuesday when a coroners jury visited the scene of the accident and viewed the cars involved. Mrs. Pease, wife of the former mayor and prominent local merchant, died as a result of injuries sustained in a collision between cars driven by her husband and Jens Anderson, Cabel, Wis. The jury impanelled by Coroner B. Hoskins will continue its investigation May 22.

Arena Graduation To Be On Friday ARENA, AAis. Following is the program of the Arena high school commencement exercises, to be held Friday night at 8 in Community building Processional, Mrs. R. L. Southard; invocation.

Rev. W. E. Gray; salutatory, Address of Welcome, Thelma Thompson; clarinet trio, Dorothy An-ding, Doris Bryant, and Doris Ley; valedictory, Victory, Robert Southard; presentation of gift, Harvey Bryant; cornet duet, Robert Southard and Thelma Thompsqn, Mrs. Southard accompanist; address, Roy L.

Matson, editor of the Wisconsin State Journal; presentation of diplomas; benediction. Rev. Mr. Gray. PORTAGE, AAis.

Capt. Robert Caldwell, son of Mrs. Marion Caldwell, sent a cablegram to his mother this week announcing his safe arrival in Australia. The Rev. Fr.

William F. Chamber-lain is the new pastor of St. John's Episcopal church of this city. He succeeds the Rev. Fr.

Wayne M. Wagen-seller who left Portage for Pennsylvania last fall. The Wauona high school annual appeared Tuesday with an attractive cover in red and white. Editor of tthe outstanding publication which has attained national recognition in the past is Anna May Snyder. Business manager is Frank Rhyme.

Pearl Cooper was staff artist. Other members of the staff are: Senior Editors Ruth Stegman, Betty OBrien, Norene Townley, Shirley Johnson. Typists Merna Schultz and Myrtle Lauterbach. Activities Pearl Cooper, Herb Walsh and Nelda Raimer. School Life Maribeth McMahon, and Marjy Lou Shanks.

Pictures Pat Jackson, Jim Church, Noreen Loomans, and Rosemary McMahon. Copy Margaret Jevens and Florence Roecker. Athletics Roy Blystone and Dick Niemer. Business Staff Business Staff Bernard Samuels, Harold Grothman, James Burton, Don Cadman, Bill Mohr. Dr.

William C. Sheehan, Stevens Point, formerly of Portage, has been assigned to duty at a naval base hospital at San Diego, Calif. William Hamele is recovering from an operation at St. Savior's hospital. Mr.

and Mrs. Harold Dietscher, 331 W. Carroll st. are moving to Madison. Arnold AVilliam county community, who has four sons in the army.

The sons are Pvts. Arthur, Edward and William and Corp. Arnold Rettammel. Refuse 4,500 to Save 13 Acres of Virgin Timber SOLON SPRINGS, AA'is. (A5) When it comes to spending $4,500 to preserve the aesthetic value of 13 acres of virgin timber, the citizens of this community cant see it.

They so expressed themselves Tuesday in a special election when they voted, 55 to 19, against the purchase of the tract from the Havela Mining and Timber of Duluth, Minn. As a result axes soon may ring, leveling the huge Norway pine trees bordering Highway 53 in this village along the shores of Lake St. Croix, 75 miles south of Superior. The company offered to sell the tract to the village for $4,500 adding that if the offer was refused the timber would be cut. The village board, unable to spend more than $2,500 without approval of the people but eager to save the virgin stand, called the special election.

Mrs. Kate Kinnear, village clerk, who announced the election results, said she didnt know whether the decision of the 74 persons who exercised their rights as voters, meant the end of the trees. She said the board would meet later and might be able to do something about it, I dont know for' sure. She said the voting turnout was small, "but most of the men are working. The village population is about 300.

The same tract of timber was saved from the axe about 15 years ago when a property owner purchased the acreage. He sold it about a year ago to the lumber company. 17 Graduates at Green Co. Normal MONROE, AA'is. A class of IT girls will be graduated from the Green county normal school June 4.

Mauree Applegate, former Rock county superintendent of schools, will give the address. Graduating class members are: Esther Brecklin, Monroe; Eunie Buss, Clinton; Helen Mae Butts, Belleville; Lela Duerst and Inga Furrer, Monroe; Bernadine Gibson, Brodhead; Dorothy Golaxson, Woodford; Dorothy Heitz, Monroe; Mabel' Lawver, Brown town; Alice Lehnherr, Monroe; Betty Loudden, Edgerton; Evelyn Marean, Juda; Elinore McCabe, Rock county: Kathryn Stauffer, Monticello; Nada Thorp, Monroe; Loraine Wells, Monroe; Thelma Oakley. The Rev. Paul C. Kehle will preach the baccalaureate sermon at St.

John's Evangelical church in Monroe, of which he is pastor. The service will be held Sunday evening. May 31. 280 Richland Co. Rural Graduates RICHLAND CENTER, Wis.

Richland county rural grade schools will graduate 280 pupils at a mass commencement program to be held May 22 in the local high school gymnasium. Paul L. Kaiser, Dodge county superintendent of schools, will deliver the address. The American Legion auxiliary will present scholarship awards. Music is to be furnished by the Richland county normal school sextet and the Rev.

Oscar Hoveland wall deliver the invocation and benediction. A'ISIT IN MADISON POTOSI, Wis. Betty Duve and Maxine Schroeder spent the past weekend in Madison as guests at the Jerry Skolaski home. Iceland has the oldest parliamentary body in the world. Ed.

Phillips a Also Arthur Edward LYNDON STATION, AVis. The Emblem of Honor association. New York, has awarded a four-star pin to Mrs. August Rettammel of this Juneau Punish Pupils At Baraboo In Walkout BARABOO, AVis. About 100 Baraboo high school pupils will clean city school buildings and grounds and write 2,500 word themes during the next few days as punishment for participating in a walkout Friday.

The pupils were given a choice of doing the work or being failed in one required subject. The work service and theme must be completed by Monday. The punishment Is in accordance with rulings adopted by the local board of education to deal with walkouts, according to Gordon L. Willson, superintendent of schools. Under a' ruling adopted by the board three years ago, the superintendent was ordered to bar pupils participating in walkouts from final examinations in two required courses.

The penalty was reduced to failure in one required subject this year. The board Monday night voted to permit the students to do the volunteer work and write the themes as punishment for the Friday offense. Warns of Liquor Sales to Indians BARABOO, AA'is. Sauk county tavernkeepers were warned today by Dist. Atty.

John H. Rouse not to sell liquor, beer or wine to any Indian unless fully acquainted with the Indian and his federal status. Several tavernkeepers had asked for an interpretation of federal laws, because of the number of Indians living or working near here. Rouse said federal law provides $500 fine or year in jail for the first offense, and $2,000 or five years for each succeeding offense in selling, giving or otherwise disposing of any liquor, beer or wine to an Indian while either he or his tribe is in any manner under the supervision or control of the federal government. In enforcing the statute, federal courts go a long way in holding that Indians come within the statute, and in holding that ignorance or lack of intent to violate the law is no defense.

Rouse said. Kallioefer Trial Seen at Viroqua RICHLAND CENTER, AVis. Adolph Kalhoefer, Richland Center, charged with negligent homicide in the auto deaths of two Ithaca boys, LaVerne, 14, and Francis Crapser, 10, will probably be tried at Viroqua in August before Circuit Judge Robert S. Cowie, court officials here indicated today. Kalhoefer filed an affidavit of prejudice against Circuit Judge Sherman E.

Smalley at the opening of the current term of circuit court here. Kalhoefers car struck and killed the two boys in Ithaca Nov. 24, as they were crossing the highway after a basketball game. Dane Homemakers To Plan Program The 1942-43 Dane county homemakers program will be planned at a meeting next Tuesday at 1:30 p. in room 116 of the university horticulture building.

The meeting has been called by Blanche Lee, state leader of home economics extension, and Violet Blodau, Dane county home agent. Presidents and secretaries of clubs as well as other representatives of organized groups are urged to participate, according to Miss Blodau. Name Lake Mills PromRoyalConple LAKE MILLS, AA'is. Perry Benthie-mer will be king and Elaine Hills will be queen of the Lake Mills high school prom here Friday night. Lake Mills Man Is At Air Training School Capt.

Edward S. Dodge, Lake Mills, former salesman and drainage engineer, is attending the new air corps officer training school, Miami Beach, it was was announced by army authorities today. Upon completion of the course he will be assigned to direct vital administrative and supply operations of the expanding air corps ground forces. MOST VOLCANOES More volcanoes which have been, active within historic times are located in the Central American republic of Salvador than in any other country. W.

Joseph Opt. D. EYES EXAMINED Most Reasonable Charge. Hours 8 to 4:30 Open Tues. Fri.

Eves, by Appointment Fairchild 4510 231 State SL Gordon L. ert Hannah, who is stationed at Wendover field, Wendover, Utah, and Pvt. Gordon L. Hannah, who is at Camp Wallace, Tex. The father is a World war veteran and registered recently.

Diplomas Given 14 Potosi High School Seniors POTOSI, Wis. Fourteen seniors of the Potosi high school received diplomas at commencement exercises here Friday night. They are Bernadette Reuter, Dorothy and Doris Grosser, Helen Harris, Shirley and Marcella Turner, Ralph Krepfle, Fred Koeller, Paul Leeser, Keith Cardey, Ethel Brouillard, Walter Koehler, Robert Gelbach and June Graham. See Mystery in Up-State Deaths WISCONSIN RAPIDS, Wis. (JP) Discovery that Alvin Zemlo, 44, had been shot in the back of the head and not in the mouth presented a puzzle Tuesday to Wood county authorities investigating the deaths of Zemlo, his wife and son.

Previously, Dr. Rogers E. Garrison, coroner, and Sheriff William F. Sanger had expressed the opinion that Zemlo had killed his 40-year-old wife, Ruth, and their son, Harris Edward, 19. and then taken Iris own life.

Mrs. Zemlo was beaten and choked. Her body was found late Monday in a farmhouse Zemlo had purchased recently. The bodies of the son, bearing two shotgun wounds, and Zelmo were found in the familys cottage on Wauzeecha lake, near here. A shotgun lay near Zemlo's body.

After an examination had revealed the nature of Zemlos wound, the cor oner ordered an inquest, but set no date for taking testimony. Mrs. Eddy, 90, of Cuba Citv. Dead CUBA CITY, AVis. Mrs.

Katherine Eddy, 90, died at the home of a son, James Eddy, here Monday. A native of Hazel Green, Mrs. Eddy lived near Dickeyville for many years and was a resident of Cuba City for the past 27 years. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Edward Hoffman, Dickeyville; a son, James, Cuba City; three sisters, Mrs.

Hannah Wilson. Lima, Mrs. Emma Nelson, Missouri Valley, and Mrs. Setha McPherson, Hawarden, and a brother. Grant Wills, Platteville, 8 Orfordville Seniors ere.

Graduated in 1921 ORFORDVILLE, AVis. Eight seniors received diplomas when the first Orfordville high school class was graduated in 1921. The class included Mabel Bamum Schuricht, now of Wauwatosa; Grace DeVoe Knudson, now of Footville; Orville Keesey, now of Los Angeles; Martha Wainstock Nelson, now of Detroit; Ira Wells, now of South Bend, and Eva Ham-blett Penkert, Finley Larmer and Myrtle Rossiter Johnson, all of Orfordville. 4 Marriage Licenses In Richland County RICHLAND CENTER, AVis. Marriage licenses were granted in Richland county last week to Ben Starkey, Richland Center, and Mabel McMillin, town of Marshall; Charles Connerman, Hartley, and Josephine I.

Rausch, town of Eagle; Ernest Novy, Hillsboro, and Iva Snorek, Yuba; Linford Looker, town of Bloom, and Laura Brown, Sylvan. Guist Is Assistant to Soldiers Grove Marshal SOLDIERS GROVE, AVis. Clyde Guist has been named as assistant to Marshal and Street Commissioner Grant Hill at a monthly salary of $80. All tavern licenses in the village were renewed. The applicants were Mike Young, Melvin Olson, Sever Fortney, Harris George, Hiram Turmire, and Irvin Larson.

The longest weldea pipeline in the world is now pouring oil into North Carolina from the Gulf, doing the work of 10 tankers. State Deaths Chippewa Falls Phillip M. Johnson, 21. Kenosha Edward Conrad, 62; Harry Hinners, 54. La Crosse William F.

Gordon, 69. Marinette Peter A. Bergman, 70. Menominee Mrs. Howard Frederick, 38.

Oshkcsh Robert H. Downes, 63. Racine Mrs. Mabel Hanneman, 36; Carl Christiansep, 77; Roy C. Johnson, 47.

Sheboygan Mrs. Anna Hoffmann, 78; Harry Black, 85. Superior Hunter Briscoe, 72; Joseph Dahl; John G. Heisel, 59. AA.

Robert John MINERAL POINT, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hannah, Mineral Point, have three sons now serving with the United States armed forces. They are John W.

Hannah, who is aboard the battleship North Carolina; Sgt. Rob Hold Janesville Woman in Fire Death of Mate JANESVILLE, Wis. (JP) Accused of causing the death of her husband, Mrs. Cena Jacobson, 57, was arraigned in municipal court Tuesday on a charge of fourth degree manslaughter. She pleaded innocent and was plac ed under $1,500 bond pending a pre liminary hearing Friday.

The arraignment followed an inquest into the death of Alfred Jacob son, 62, who died May 2 of burns suffered the night before. Mrs. Lidia D. Lawrence, 62, who lived at the Jacobson home, told the coroners jury that Jacobson threw a bottle or lamp at his wife and that the latter threw a lighted lamp at Jacobson. The house caught fire.

Girls Monticello Honor Students MONTICELLO, Wis. Two girls will share valedictory honors at the Monticello high school commencement exercises in the Zwingli Evangelical and Reformed church May 22. Ruth Moritz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Moritz, and Dorothy Ann Jordan, daughter of and Mrs.

Cecil Jordan, finished their four-year high school courses with identical scholastic averages. In the graduating class that is the smallest in size for many years at Monticello, the situation is especially unique. Only 16 students will receive diplomas May 22, of which 11 are girls. Mary Walters will be salutatorian with other hlgrh ranking students being Florence Isely, Bertha Buehl, Helen Elmer and Wallace Feldt. Other members of the graduating class are Helen Baehler, Beatrice Voegeli, Anna Mae Hefty, Erma Schnek, Joy Elmer, Chester Disch, Karl Freitag, Vernus Walden and Calvin Stauffer.

489 Tons of Scrap Collected hv Sauk BARABOO, Wis. A total of 489 tons of scrap metal and other materials were contributed by Sauk county to the state's salvage drive total of 31,511 tons. Defense stamps were offered at Lo-ganville to the boy or girl and also to the adult bringing in the biggest collection of metal and other salvage materials in the drive conducted there. Donald Fuller took first place in the children's contest with 42,800 pounds, Danny Wiedenfeld placed second and John Wahlmeyer, third. Clarence Fuller took first for adults, Mrs.

Ed. Kohlmeyer, second, and Dan Blodeau third. Gels Record from Son in Australia REEDSBURG, AAis. A Mothers day gift, in the form of a record, arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs.

Alfred Bemien Sunday, from their son, Eldor, who is now stationed in Australia. Eldors recording assured them that he was well and enjoying his working with a materiel squadron, and was filled with personal messages The most valuable pearls are produced in tropical waters. Baraboo BARABOO, AAis. Ordered to return to active duty with the United States armed forces, Lieut. C.

M. LaMar, Baraboo, is to leave May 25 for Camp Williams, Utah. He received his instruction in a telegram from the adjutant general at Washington. A reserve officer for years, he has held the rank of lieutenant colonel for past 12 years. He is a veteran of the first World war.

Taken to the Madison General hospital Monday for treatment of a fractured leg, was Leonard Lueck, 22, an employe of Mason Hanger at the Badger Ordnance Works. He has been residing at a Madison hotel. Silas J. Knudsen, real estate project manager of the Badger Ordnance works, left Tuesday on a four-day business trip to St. Louis.

He will confer with E. J. Ellingson, regional real estate director. Agnes Marx has been transferred to the Gopher Ordnance works near St. Paul.

She had been employed in the land acquisition office of the Badger Ordnance works. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Elsing, Sauk City, are the parents of a son bom Sunday at St. Marys-Ringling hospital.

Mrs. Reginald TerwiUiger of this city underwent a tonsillectomy Monday at St. Marys-Ringling A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hurley, Wisconsin Dells, Tuesday at St.

Mary's-Ringling hospital. mm than 25 years both old and new have been delighted with the results obtained by the use of Lucky Tiger, many acclaiming it the "Tops of all hair preparations And recommend it to their friends To allay that annoying scalp itching To relieve simple scalp irritations To remove loose dandruff scales, dirt, grease and grime, and To beautify the hair, readv for the next "permanent. Made With Oil for dry, unruly hair Regular for normal hair. Available at most good druggists or barbers. TESTED UNO APPROVED FOR MORE THUN TWENTY-FIVE YEARS Tiger for Hair and Scalp! BRAND jl Celebrate with KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY CHEERFUL AS ITS NAME Any cheerful occasion can be made even more so by the addition of this fine whiskey.

Even a drink of Old Sunny Brook itself is cause for celebration, when you realize that all its mellow goodness and fine flavor cost you so little. 86.8 Proof available In Bottled-in-Bond, 100 Proof Sons Exclusive Distruibutors Madison, Wis..

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