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Wausau Daily Herald from Wausau, Wisconsin • 2
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Wausau Daily Herald du lieu suivant : Wausau, Wisconsin • 2

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Wausau, Wisconsin
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2
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WAUSAU DAILY RECORD-HERALD, WAUSAU, WISCONSIN WEDNESDAY EVENING, MARCH 19, 1952 PAGE TWO Northern 'Fair Deal' Bloc Is Aim WASHINGTON President Truman's withdrawal from the California primary today spurred a move by Sen. Humphrey of Minnesota to organize a Northern "Fair Deal" bloc for the Democratic National Convention. An abrupt telegram from National Chairman Frank E. McKinney, visiting the President at his Key West, vacation spot, plunged a coalition of California Democrats into confusion last night. Dixie Candidate McKinney wired them obviously on direct orders of the President--to Truman's name out of that primary.

Sen. Kefauver of Tennessee now is the only Democrat entered there but Sen. Russell of Georgia told a reporter he is considering making it a contestussell candidate is the for South's the anti party's Tru: man nomination. Kefauver, who defeated the President in the New Hampshire, administration strongly supporters and by many Russell backers. McKinney's precipitate California action strengthened the belief in many quarters here that Truing man has finally decided he does not choose to run again.

Humphrey, who declared he is convinced the President won't seek another term, said he is helping weld a Northern state voting bloc to back some candidate at the July Chicago convention who will carry on the "Fair Deal" program. He disclaimed any personal presidential ambition. Tells Hopes Humphrey said he hopes North and South Dakota Democrats, as well as those from some other Northern states, will join with the 26-vote Minnesota delegation that went to him as a favorite son in yesterday's Minnesota primary election. Truman's sudden withdrawal left California Democratic leaders puzzling today over which way Should they put up a favorite, son candidate to protect 68 convention votes for the pro-Truman faction? Switch allegiance to Sen. Estes Kefauver of Tennessee or some other name Democrat? Or not do anythingand in effect concede the big delegation to Kefauver? The Truman campaign committee has been summoned here tomorrow to try to answer those questions.

Kefauver supporters were elated. He is the only Democratic candidate in California's June 3 primary. state's Democratic high command, almost solidly behind Truman, was left with a slate of delegates and campaign forces organized-but no candidate. It had gone ahead without any word as to whether the President would seek re-election. Boiling Ocean Volcano Shoves Up Rock Mass MANILA (R--A submarine volcano, coming to life after a 90- year sleep, pushed a moving mass of volcanic rock 250 feet above the surface of the Pacific Ocean today 315 miles north of Manila.

The turbulent pile of rocks encompassed an area of at least five acres. For 15 acres around it the ocean boiled and bubbled like a witch's brew. A column of smoke and sulphrous steam towered. Huge black boulders, some of them five stories high, were tumbled about. Off to one side of the growing, crater-shaped needlepointed black rock stuck up starkly.

The rock and the island both appeared to be surrounded by breaking surf. But as a C-47 plane circled to within 200 feet of the surface it became apparent the white water was the ocean boiling from contact with the hot rocks. The new volcano island is apearing at almost the identical spot where almost a century ago an undersea eruption created Didicas rocks and pushed them 700 feet above the surface. That eruption lasted four years, ending 92 years ago. BIRTHS To Mr.

and Mrs. Lawrence Wolfe, Schofield, today at St. Mary's Hospital, a son. Mr. and Mrs.

Hugo Heeren Schofield Route 1, this morning at Memorial Hospital, a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs. James Jonas, Wausau Route 4, this morning at Memorial Hospital, a son. To Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Guenther, Sixth today at St. Mary's Hospital, son. To Mr. and Mrs.

Bruno Swiderski, Mosinee, today at St. Mary's Hospital, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. Roland Pukall, Wittenberg Route 2, today at St.

Mary's Hospital, a son. EARLY INHABITANT Folsom Man is known to have inhabited North America about 000 years ago, and it is possible the continent was inhabited long before that time, CALENDAR TODAY Movies at the Wausau, Grand, Hollywood and Midway Theaters. Roller skating, Rothschild Park, 7:30 p.m. Forest Lodge, AM, Masonic Temple, 7 p.m. Wausau Benevolent Society, WBS Hall.

ERA, Wausau Assembly, Eagles Hall, 8 p.m. Paper Makers Local, 319,: Labor Temple, 7 p.m. Carpenters Local, 460, Labor Temple, 7:30 p.m. Operating Engineers Local, 310, Labor Temple. TOMORROW no Pre-school hour, Public Library, 10:30 a.m.

Card party, Labor Temple, 2:15 p.m. WEATHER Clearing and colder tonight; partly cloudy and warmer Thursday. Temperatures Highest yesterday 35; lowest last night 32; at 8 a.m. today 33; Precipitation last 24 hours to 8 a.m. to- SHORT NEWS ITEMS FOR TREATMENT Sheldon Fry, 1404 Second entered St.

Mary's Hospital Monday for observation and treatment. PNEUMONIA Mrs. Carl Iverson, 1124 N. Eighth is receivtreatment for pneumonia at St. Mary's Hospital, which she entered Monday.

OPERATION Mrs. Ralph Princl, 805 Dunbar who had an operation last Friday at St. Mary's Hospital, is getting along satisfactorily. APPENDECTOMY Phillip, 16- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.

Harold Saindon, 708 Jackson getting along satisfactorily "at Mary's Hospital after an emergency appendectomy Monday afternoon. IN HOSPITAL Lyle Champine, 14, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Champine, Schofield Route 1, is in Memorial Hospital for observation for a head injury sustained in a motor-bicycle mishap last Sunday. FINED Harvey Sawicky, Stratford Route 1, charged with causing a disturbance at a dance in the Town of McMillan early yesterday, pleaded guilty before County Judge F.

G. Loeffler yesterday afternoon and was fined $35. IN HOSPITAL Miss Mary Warosh, 909 S. Third who entered the County Isolation Hospital last Thursday for treatment of a virus infection, is getting along nicely. She expects to be there for some time.

LEAVES FOR CAMP Sgt. Gerald J. Rogalla, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert 1216 S.

Eighth who recently returned from service in Korea, left yesterday for Camp McCoy for reassignment after spending a 30 day leave here: at his home. PROMOTED Mr. and Mrs. Henry King, Wausau Route 3, have received word that their son, Donald, who has been serving with a U.S. Tank Division in Germany the past eight months, has been promoted to the rank of sergeant.

He in service 15 months. AIR RESERVE Capt. Martin B.a Singhofer will discuss "New Concepts of Written Expression" at the meeting of Flight 9663rd Volunteer Air Reserve Training Squadron, tomorrow at 7:30 o'clock in the ArRevering mory. ELKS ELECTION. Officers to serve Wausau Elks Lodge No.

248 the coming year will 1 be elected at al meeting tomorrow night in the Elks Club. Candidates were nominated at a recent meeting, when Charles M. Schneider was nominated for exalted ruler to succeed Robert C. Altman, FINISHES COURSE Pvt. Eugene Allen, 22, son of Mrs.

William Gumz, 918 Broadway, who has finished his Army finance course at Ft. Benjamin Harrison, arrived here Friday to visit at home. He will report April 1 at Camp Kilmer, to be reassigned to the U. S. Army command in Europe.

PROMOTED Pfc. Dennis R. Bauman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry A.

Bauman, Edgar Route 4, has been promoted to corporal, according to word received the parents from their son, who is now stationed in Japan. Cpl. Bauman had been in Korea since August, 1951, before his recent transfer to Japan. William E. Zella, Mr.

COMPLETES COURSE, Sgt. Mrs. James F. Zbella, 610 Humboldt was recently graduated from the Advanced Aviation Electronics Technician School at the U. S.

Naval Air Technical Training Zbella Center near Memphis, Tenn. Sgt. has been in the Marine Corps since January, 1943. TO INFANTRY SCHOOLM Sgt. Donald Lunt, 1120 S.

12th left last night for Ft. Benning, to enroll in a 14-week infantry school. A platoon sergeant in Company 426th Infantry Regiment, the local National Guard unit, Sgt. Lunt is a World War II veteran. He is the son of Ernest Lunt, 1120 S.

12th Ave. MARINE HONORED Pic. James R. Gertschen, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Clarence Gertschen, 120 N. Sixth was among the 28 picked enlisted men to attend Achterberg, Winfield Holmes, ence Hussong and Anton Gorski were honorary pallbearers. Mrs. Charles Frome Mrs. Charles Frome, about 80, Manitowoc, died yesterday morn-: ing at her home.

A former resident of Colby, the body will arrive at the Lulloff Funeral Home there tomorrow noon and funeral services will be in St. Mary's Catholic Church, Colby, Friday morning at 9:30 o'clock. Interment will be in the Colby Cemetery. Among the Mrs. survivors are two daughters, Gary Spiering, Manitowoc, and Mrs.

Laona Johnson, Kenosha; three grandchildren, and a great-grandchild. Joas Funeral Graveside funeral services for Henry Joas, 69, Stockbridge, a former Birnamwood resident who died in a Menasha hospital last Saturday, were conducted by the R. W. Hietpas in St. Philomene's Catholic Cemetery, Birnamwood, yesterday.

Funeral services were held in St. Mary's Catholic Church at Stockbridge, where Mr. Joas resided since leaving Birnamwood in 1934. Furmanek Funeral The Rev. John Krasowski conducted funeral services this mornling in the family residence and in (St.

Ladislaus Catholic Church, Bevent, for Mrs. Stella Furmanek, 74, Town of Reid, who died Sunday. Interment was in the church cemetery. Serving as pallbearers were Ben and Peter Gorski, Ernest Rozmarynowski, Theodore Grulkowski, Joseph Literski and Julius Lewandowski. Powell Funeral Funeral services were held this morning in the Hildensperger Kostuck Funeral Home and in St.

Anne's Catholic Church for Mrs. Dorothy Powell, 52, Town of Maine, who died Sunday. The body will be AUTHORED 'MR. PRESIDENT' William Hillman (above), radio commentator and former newspaperman, is author of "Mr. President," a book out about President Truman.

The book stirs anew a 1935 row involving Truman's views on capitol architecture, a "pinhead congressman" and newspaper "propaganda." AP Wirephoto) NORTHERN to Worth, tomorrow for interment in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Viegut Funeral Charles Frank was a pallbearer at funeral services Monday for Walter Viegut, 1025 S. Sixth who Thursday, His name was incorrectly, reported to the Record-Herald Monday. Winter to Bow Out Gracefully AP ROADSIDE ATTRACTION -With his mind: more on comfort than convention, Pfc. Ted C.

Spaknuolo, Detroit, takes a bath in a wooden tub somewhere in Korea. With his helmet, gun and boots nearby, Spagnuolo soaps up and pays no attention to the traffic on the road behind him. He is serving with the 279th Infantry regiment of the 45th Division. (U. S.

Army photo via AP Wirephoto) four week air intelligence course at the U. S. Naval Air Station, Alameda, the Navy announced today. This specialized knowledge will result in the men being made assistants to air intelligence officers charged with briefing pilots before flying to target area, it was reported. OBITUARIES Willis Hafemann Willis Hafemann, S.

a former resident died yesterday morning at 10:30 o'clock of a sudden heart attack in Pierre, Funeral services will be held there morning, Mr. and Mrs. Saturday, Hafemann, Colby, parents of the deceased, left today to attend the rites. Born in Colby Sept. 8, 1913, Mr.

Hafemann attended Trinity Lutheran School in Unity and the Colby elementary and high schools, graduating from the latter in 1932. He was married in Marshfield Feb. 12, 1944, to Miss Alice Finley, Pierre: The couple resided in Marshfield until four years ago, when they went to Pierre. Surviving are the widow; parents; three brothers, Harold Hafemann, Chicago, Sgt. Lyle Hafemann, who is in the Army, and Calvin Hafemann, Sturgeon Bay, and four sisters, Mrs.

Elmer Holl and Mrs. Harold Couve, Milwaukee, Mrs. Gladys Rogney, Sturgeon Bay, and Mrs. Raymond Haefs, Green Bay. Daniel Theodore Martens Daniel Theodore Martens, 60, Town of Unity, Clark County, died at home last night after five years' illness.

Funeral services will be held Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock at St. John's Lutheran Church in the Town of Brighton. The Rev. Richard Scholz will officiate. The body is at the Swarthout Funeral Partly cloudy skies and warmer weather predicted for tomorrow, when ears, spring arrives at 10:14 a.m.

However, for the last night of the winter season the weatherman predicts clearing and colder temperatures. The mercury never fell below 32 degrees here last night, down only 3 degrees from yesterday's high. Wet snow continued to fall here this morning atop the .18 of an inch of precipitation recorded here in the 24 hours ending at 8 a.m. today. It was 35 degrees this afternoon at 1 o'clock.

Snow, Drizzle, Rain Skies were overcast in the state today with reports of snow, drizzle, rain and fog. The fog was in the southeastern area and the heaviest inches--was reported at Beloit. Last night's state low was 29 at Park Falls. The high yesterday was 42 recorded in the Beloit area. Main highways and rail lines between California and Nevada were closed as another blizzard hit the Sierra Nevada.

Four persons were reported dead in the storm and 125 others are snowbound, the Associated Press reported. Snow covered areas of North Dakota, Nebraska, Eastern Kansas, Southeastern on, Northwestern Nevada and Idaho. The Army sent in equipment to help clear hugh snow drifts in Southwestern North Dakota. An estimated 130 ranch homes are iso- lated. Snow in Some Areas Light snow fell today in the Northern Great Lakes region, the Plateau states the Northern Rockies.

Strong northerly winds sent temperatures down over most of the Great Plains states and colder weather was in prospect for most of the north-central region. Tornadoes hit areas in Missouri and Southern Illinois yesterday, SUTTON CONSULTS HIS Actor) Sutton (left) consults ton Hertz. Sutton is on trial in for a $63,942 bank robbery. causing heavy property damage. Three persons were reported injured.

Pig Hatchery Set Up ROCK ISLAND, Ill. (-Robert C. Walters, a 26-year-old farmer near Cameron, has set up a pig hatchery to furnish feeders with growing stock. The purpose of the pig hatchery is to furnish farmers with 8-weekold pigs weighing about 40 pounds and ready to be fed for market. When in full operation, Walters expects have 20 sows farrowing every four weeks, with an average litter eight pigs.

PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kofford and daughter, Barbara, 1 have returned to their home in Park Falls after a day's visit with Mrs. Kofford's sister, Mrs. Otto Roll.

They came here en route from Phoenix, where they had visited the William Ruggie family and Mrs. Kofford's nieces, Miss Marion Roll and Miss Jane Strehlow, and the Williams Air Force Base at Chandler with Mrs. Kofford's brother, S-Sgt. Bernard Scholz. Rice, Milwaukee, Wis.

PAID ADVERTISEMENT Written, authorized and paid for by Richard The Public is Invited to Hear CALIFORNIA'S GOVERNOR EARL WARREN Republican Presidential Candidate Speak at the YOUTH BUILDING Thursday Evening, March 20 at 8:00 P.M. Remember: Thursday, March 20 MATTRESS CO. I Home in Spencer and burial will be in the parish cemetery. Mr. Martens was born Jan.

17, 1892, in Town of Unity and married Edna Rein Feb. 12, 1918, in Plymouth. They lived on the present farm the past 34 years. Surviving are the widow; two daughters, Mrs. Clifford Grove, Stevens Point, and two Raymond Martens, ApMrs.

LaVerne Olson, Two Rivers; pleton, and Roy Martens, at home and a brother and two sisters, John Martens and Mrs. Ervin Burnett, Spencer, and Mrs. Roy Hoover, Marshfield. Mrs. Antonia Chalupnieck Mrs.

Antonia Chalupnieck, 74, Chicago, died yesterday morning in that city, She was formerly of the Town of Harrison. Funeral services were tentatively set for 10 o'clock Friday in Antigo. The body is at the Muttart-Conrad Funeral Home in that city and will be buried in the National Stengl Cemetery at Antigo. Mrs. Chalupnieck was born Nov.

17, 1877, in Czechoslovakia. Her husband, Frank Chalupnieck, died March 14, 1941. Surviving are three daughters and two sons, Mrs. Lillian Blaha, Mrs. Helen Ptak, Mrs.

Rose Novak and Frank and Jerry Chalupnieck, all of Chicago; eight grandchildren, and two greatgrandchildren. Heil Funeral Funeral services for Henry Heil, 49, Schofield, who died day, were held this morning in the Ritter Deutsch Funeral Home and in St. Theresa's Catholic Church of Schofield and Rothschild, with the Rev: Joseph F. Kundinger officiating. Interment was in St.

Joseph Cemetery. Active ers included Herman Russ, Harvey Kamke, Louis Augustine, Edward Sattler, Leonard Zank and John Dominski. George Messerknecht, Edward Winters, William WANTED! 100 USED ICE BOXES AND REFRIGERATORS FOR OUR RESORT AND CABIN TRADE TO GET THEM NORTHERN MATTRESS WILL ALLOW FROM $30 UP TO FOR YOUR OLD ICE BOX OR USED ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR NEW CIBSON REFRICERATOR ON THE PURCHASE OF ANY 100 SELECT A NEW 7 CU. FT. FULL LENGTH DOOR ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR FOR AS LITTLE AS $109 AND YOUR OLD REFRIGERATOR IN WISCONSIN MON.

WED. FRI. FREE DELIVERY NORTHERN MATTRESS CO. OPEN TO 9 P.M. 719-21 N.

THIRD AVE. I WAUSAU'S BUSIEST FURNITURE STORE THERE'S A REASON I -Bank bandit Willie (The his attorney, George Washing- County court in New York Telephoto) BEAT LINCOLN The Lincoln-Douglas debates were held in 1858. They were contending for United States senatorship from Illinois. Douglas was elected to the office. In the fossilized remains of animals, teeth usually are the best preserved of the organs.

Don't Make a Move without GRAEBEL Moving Storage Hearing Aid By makers of world-famous Zenith Radios, FM, Television Sets. Highest quality, only $75-why pay morel $75 "ROYAL" ZENITH COLBY'S RADIO Opposite Central School 518 Scott Street Phone 4440 Rod Reel Repairing! Have Your Work Done Now! Inspect Our Full Stock of Fishing Tackle NORTH A LAND SPORTING GOODS CO. COMPLETE SPORTS OUTFITTERS POPULAR PRICES.

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