Kingston Tribune, The (Newspaper) - February 14, 1946, Kingston, Wisconsin THE KINGSTON TRIBUNE A Home Owned Newspaper to the Interest of the Home Folki VOLUME 64 PUBLISHED KINGSTON WISCONSIN THURSDAY FEBRUARY 14 PRICE A YEAR NUMBER 17 IN THIS COLUMN By E W W To my mind the beat and most faultless character his who is as ready to pardon the rest of mankind as though he daily transgressed himself and at the same time as cautious to avoid a fault as if he never for- gave Times continually change and as they change styles and modes of living change with them and there is usually nothing we can do about it Some changes are for the good others for th bad While Old Father Time brings about many changes that are against our liking he is the greatest healer No matter how badly you feel today how much grief is tossed your way how black the future looks in another day a week a month or a year the picture is usually entirely different Time will en erase the gravest sorrow ed by death or sickness On the other hand time has wrought some changes that are definitely a hindrance in maintaining the highest moral standard among all people Take for example the way young people entertain themselves today compared with a few years ago Skating and sleighride parties skiing jaunts long hikes and m the summer horseshoe baseball Softball nics and so forth are now only occasional indulgences The younger set seem to favor juke box joints dance halls and houses over the great outdoors and they don t know what they're missing Yet it seems to be the inevitable trend of the times There are no angels on earth and not one of us however good we may think we are a few bad features Keeping our young folks in the beet with the best company and viding the best in healthful en- are not just idle possible moral in the world qf today and tomorrow These are things that must be continually worked hard at re- of the times t The Council on Foods and of the American Medical Association concludes that fortified margarine is equal in digestibility and energy value to other food fats and that it can be substituted for butter in the diet without any nutritional disadvantage after that well take butter any old time Plan Program County Sheepmen By W C lU Una luIR will be interested in a Sheep and Wool Day program to be given Monday February 18 at the village in Green Lake The program will begin at 9 45 a m At noon a fret lunch will be served and the afternoon program will continue until 3 45 p m In addition to talks by minent specialists there will be movies exhibits and a general discussion Attendance prizes also be given Five The meeting is sponsored by the Wisconsin Co-operative Wool Growers Association in ation with the extension service of the College of Agriculture the Wisconsin State Department of Agriculture and the and Central Co-operatives minute discussions ol all ot production agement and marketing will be given by James J Lacey and I F Hall of the College of culture R E Fisher of the State Department of Agriculture and representatives of Equity or Central as well as one of the di- rectors of the Wool Growers sociation and Its manager Several Topics Topics which will be ed Better Returns from by Prof James J Lacey Diversification with by Prof I F Hall Looking Ahead with by R E Fisher Feeding and Marketing by a representative of Equity Our Wool by R E and A Growers by Gavin Kerrow a director of the Wool Growers Association A cordial invitation is ed to all sheep breeders and ers interested in raising sheep Adopt Different Style State Deer Conditions Under Investigation Madison Deer conditions are under investigation by the Con- servation Department this r ag nf 71 nf Wisconsin leaving 23 counties where deer are not sufficiently numerous to warrant a study the department said today Wardens Conduct Study The deer study in each county is carried on by the regularly signed Conservation w a r de n with additional field men ed to help wherever such help is deemed The gators have the aid of the De- Deer Study Committee Much of the fort is directed toward the 28 northern and central counties where the following number of field men are at work Douglas three Bayfield three Burnett one Washburn one Polk one Barren one Sawyer five Rusk two Iron three Ashland two Price two Taylor one pewa one Eau Claire one Clark two Jackson two Wood one Monroe one Adams one Juneau four Vilas four ence one Oneida four Forest four Marmette two Lincoln o 1 two Ar Stady There are 20 agricultural counties now under study by wardens and these counties ply a great part of the annual volume of farm complaints about crop damage by deer counties are St Croix Dunn Pierce Buffalo eau LaCrosse Grant Rich land Iowa Sauk Columbia Keeping pace with a gram to improve the ity of this newspaper and yet make the setting of the type as ensy as possible a different style headline has been ed for The Tribune and will be used from on Formerly the drop line headline a deck of two or more lines characterized by a slant to the right was used With this issue this type of headline is discontinued and the flush left head ed The latter is a deek of one or more lines with each line shorter than the full width of the column and set against the left margin The lines ably are of unequal length It's a matter of opinion which headline the drop line or the flush looks the best Set properly the latter is ly in the case of The Tribune it saves time in writing and setting the headline and more can be said with less tive effort I Portage Waupaca Marathon Shawano and Door The department dedans that m one way or another become a problem in all lections of with the exception of the extreme put of the SUte and populous area fronting on Lake Michigan Egg Production In 1945 Almost Reached Record Output of 1944 While unusually high sin egg production during the past year fell short of the 1944 record by four per cent ing to the Crop Reporting vice of the Wisconsin and United States Departments of ture Fewer Layers The decrease in egg production for 1945 was the result of a i mailer number of layers as the rate of laving per 100 birds was higher than in the previous year About 2 eggs were produced on Wisconsin farms during 1945 While the second 1 production on record for the State egg production last vear was 96000000 eggs below the prev year Monthly I mates of egg production that more eggs were produced in December 1845 than in De- 1944 but the monthly totals for the rest of the show a smaller production Prices Throughout the year the i her of layers on farms during 1 lois thin wan 1 in the monthly estimates If or 1944 Favorable prices for eggs and good feed supplies throughout the year encouraged a high rate of laying Egg duction per layen in continued to average higher than for the corresponding months of Winter Harvest Is Started Jack Moore Former Dalton Boy Discharged Pfc Jack Moore son of Mr and Mrs William Moore of ton visited friends in Kingston Friday having been honorably discharged from the Army Air Force the previous Wednesday at Camp Atturbury Indiana His discharge last week rounded out three years and 23 days of Vice in various camps in the States He was last stationed at Baer Field Fort Wayne Indiana of Sioux City Iowa Joined him at where they are spending a brief visit They expect to return to Sioux City sometime next week Their future residence depends o n what part of the midwest Mr Moore s Sioux City firm nates as his sales territory WILDE SELLS FARM TO MARLAND LOHRY In a transaction closed last Monday Elmer Wilde R R Markesan sold his farm to land Lohry a neighbor The ter and a brother Russell Lohry plan to operate the two farms gether The Wildes as yet haven t any definite plans for the future In the same neighborhood a deal was closed some time ago whereby Rudolph Frederick chased the John Welk farm The Fredericks expect to move by 3 but operate their farm where they now re- side Mrs S F Former Resident Passed Away Word reached here last week that Mrs S F Kien 48 of waukee the former Grossman of Kingston died denly February 5 at the kee Emergency Hospital after suffering a cerebral Last rites were conducted Friday at the Frantz Funeral Home waukee at 1 30 p m with al at Pilgrim's Beat Tame To In Mrs Kien daughter of John and Lucy Harmer was born February 7 1897 in the I Town of Springvale Fond du Lac County In 1915 she moved with j her parents ind family to ton Green Lake County where she resided until her marriage on March 23 1924 to Stephen F Kien of Milwaukee She later lived in Detroit Mi- and Fond du Lac Wis For the past four years the ily has resided at Milwaukee She is survived by her band two children Harriet of Kingston and Clemens of waukee two grandchildren Ro- bert and Audrey one sister Mrs Harriet Lamartine and five brothers Wayne of dorado John of Oakfield and Frank Dean and Lynn all of Kingston Pallbearers were Milo cher Eugene Miller Richard Ear W U- ban and Roman Peterson Few words big results little Tribune Want ads Experiment show that alfalfa as a rule is not the first choice of bees as a tource of pollen Pardee Five Drops Second Game Markesan Now Leads TEAMS MAT MEET AT RIO TOURNAMENT NEXT WEEK The Pardeeville High School basketball team lost its second conference game of the season last Thursday night when dolph upset them on the former champs home flour This drops them to second place in the Dual County Conference with Markesan in the lead The count now stands Markesan won 12 and lost one Pardeeville won 11 and lost two Green Lakers Upset Markesan Five Tuesday In a non conference game last Tuesday nigh Coach McMahon's Markesan five lost to Goldie Eggleston s ecn Lakers Earlier in thi season the Green Lake were also the victors in a ime played on their home floor nd Markesan was out to the defeat The loss of Don Rief due to a sprained ankle at the Poynette game plus I some hard uck and a pretty Mrs Holloway Among Brides On Queen Mary Among the many war brides fiom Europe who arrived in New York harbor last Sunday aboard the British liner Queen Mary was one who will make her home in this vicinity May S Holloway and Carol eight months wife and daughter of Stanley way R R had a reunion this week at the Clifford Holloway home near Kingston the U S Army in England ley married his bnde on February 10 1944 nt England He has been home and discharged from the service sinn last August but Mrs Hollow was not able to obtain passage until this month Another locally well-known John Reamer of kofih who also married while overseas was reunited this week with his wife Elsie May Reamer and sons John Arthur 21 months and James David six months They also made the trip from England aboard the Queen Mary This is their first reunion since John Reamer left England last May Frances A Volkmann Home Will Get Release Lt g Frances A arrived n day evening having been given terminal leave from the Navy Nurses Corps earlier in the week She expects to be released from service by the end of this month On active duty since ber 1943 Lt Volkmann has ed at the Naval hospitals at San Leandro and Long Beach fornia She enlisted in the PU f in Volkmann is the daughter of Mr and Mrs Henry Volkmann local Only Eight Attend Village Caucus Friday Night With very little business in the offing and only one village office terminating not much in- terest was shown at the annual cam us here last night Five voters besides the caucus committee were m attendance The caucus committee man George Helmer conducted the meeting In both the al and formal ballots which were cast to nominate a trustee in place of J D Kilmer whose term expired Kilmer received six votes and Leo Burke two These are the two names which will appear on the village ballot in the April election A law passed at the last sion of the Legislature at son extended the terms of all village officers to two yvars in- stead of one As one trustees j is mandatory that an election be held for the one trustee School Will Open Again Monday The school board of the ton State Graded School an- this week that classes will again be resumed next day February 18 The school had been ordered closed February 5 because of an epidemic o f mumps which was on the page here Nearly half of the school's 64 pupils have or have had the dis- ease Classes were not in Cession on Monday February 4 of a teacher s convention but the school was not ordered tc remain closed until the following day Local Fire Department To Meet February 22 of the Kingston Fire De- wtM bf field the Village Hall As the last in the month falls on that date the meeting will be held a week earlier thin The meeting last month was cancelled because of bid ther and to avoid was net held at all All and anyone else interested are urged to be present KINGSTON FIRE DEPT Darrell Wilde Through OCS Is Now Lieutenant On Monday 2nd It F Wilde arrived at the home of his parents Mr and Mrs Flmer tide R R to spend a furlough after having ed from s Candidate at run Lt Wilde was commissioned last Friday at exercises held at the school He will report for duty again at Fort BraRK N C on 23 where he expects ot spend from six to eight weeks After completing training there he will be overseas The Markesan fue maintained I good Green team fir list by ert trimming Poynette at the The boyt experienced more High School gym i tough luck w ith free throws and Markesan both play though the t me was mostly nip their last league game Friday and tuck Green Lake had a night the former at Cambria and slight edge and maintained a Markesan at Fall River If lead throughout the latter loses this last game and three Bender with his wins metis it would one-hand lor -i shots ana again tie the two teams for first hey under he basket dumped in the Dual Conference If them in as usual A slick one- both teams win Markesan wins hander by n in the last the pennant I few of the last quarter H the team brightened According unofficial for the tournament will be held at san but it too late Rio February I Leaea Toe These reports also indicate that In a somewhat crappy con- Markesan will play in the upper test the Green Lake High School bracket of the tilt Pardee- j team beat the in the lower If both teams B Mm by a margin of win they may be matched again Dalton Still In Pacific Was Promoted In a letter dated February 2 and received earlier in the week by Mr and Mrs Kenneth ton of Dalton their son Billy of the U S Navy states that he is still on his Pacific Isle where the temperature in m the 90s all the time His unit is building a hospital which is nearly completed and as the island has been taken c- bj P-r American Lines he expects to leave soon The letter further stated that he had recently been promoted to Ship's Cook Seaman Class said he hoped to get batk to the States for a leave in the near future but it was nit definite Regarding his work he gets up at 4 30 morning but don t mind it so much now that I'm used to it Also he ed letters from dene and Jim and ted to catch up on letter writing soon Another note of was that an atomic bomb toM wat to be executed Mar then m BIH I hope to be mowed by HIM be- Recent Trends Change Hybrid Corn Outlook Two factors may serve to tighten the supply of hybrid seed corn available in Wisconsin for the coming spring season information received by the State Department of Agriculture during the past two weeks cates The first is an increasing out- demand for Wi grown seed according to Henry in charge of the ment s Seed and Weed tory The other is an indication that there may be more seed rorn of low tio i than had been earlier in the season If much more than the usual amount of sped corn is shipped out of the State Lunz said it may materially affect the availability of in stocks are limited Lunz said Wisconsin seed corn producers are receiving an unusual number of inquiries from out-of-state buyers He again urged farmers to I der and take deliveries of hybrid seed corn as early as possible in order that an even distribution of available stocks throughout the State might be secured Last Services On Sunday For Mrs Alien Markesan Funeral services were held afternoon in the kesan Church for Mrs Allen 75 who passed aw ly at noon on the previous Thursday at her home n Markesan The rues were m charge of the Rev M J danier local pastor Interment was m the fimily lot in the Cemetery Lived In Kingston Years Afo L Daitt w is born March 15 1870 ti Mr and Mrs Edward Dartt of Wilton Wisconsin mg her cirly childhood the ily moved to the State of raska She wai united in marriage to Henry L Allen on March 16 1899 at Blackbird Nebraska Dunns the first few years of m i i r j their home In Minneapolis Minn From they moved to ston Wisconsin ami about 33 veors ago came ti For many she hid boon a faithful of the dM They tin Clients children Fred L of sha Maude RK hards Maria who died at the ase of five years Ralph E of kegan Illinois Floyd H of kesan and Mrs Bessie Han on of Milwaukee Mr Allen ed her in death April 21 1943 Besides the five she is survived by one sister Mrs Maude Fuller of O Niel ka seven grandchildren and many moie distant relatives Jerome Plath Willard Enlist In Air Force at Lac Jerome Romie Plath son of Mi and Mrs Richard Plath and Willard son of Mr ni I I ir 11 rt R went to Fond du Lac oik Wednesday of last week where they enlisted in the Air Corps On Wednesday 27 they nil ot the Induction nt Milwaukee for examination ind induction into the s rv ice AAA Mailed Blanks for Milk Subsidy Payments According to word from the county Triple A Office tions for milk subsidy payments for October November and De- ember hwn milled to the fanners of Green Lake County If you failed to your plication AAA officials ask that you mail your statements for the above three months to the ty office at once as the deadline date for making payments is 28 cause that's pretty powerful to HMM around with Former Buffalo Girl Runs Famous Canary Hatchery in Beaver Dam Editoi s Note The following taken from a Benver Dam paper is of interest to readers in this vicinity because Mrs Giese was formerly Misi Dixon t rr t t r Mrs Martin Farrell Tribune correspondent from that dis- Beaver Giese ary hatchery operated as a com- project by Mr and Mrs Giese for the past 12 years is the 1 of its kind in the United States according to a representative of the Birds Association of America who re- visited the hatchery Mrs Giese the active member of the firm has set four large rooms m her home for this purpose and during the summer months uses a large garige ing the past season 1 200 birds i PKC 1 V ery state in the Union Ohio Penitentiary is a large Several birds are at the hatchery The bulk of the birds go from Giese to dealers in he largest cities In the United States year approximately birds are purchased for laboratories and other mental work The year previous to the outbreak of the war 144 nan vfr from Germany People from all parts of the nation have come to Beaver Dam to inspect the Giese ery which is open most after- noons If New Call Kingston