Waukesha Daily Freeman (Newspaper) - September 17, 1946, Waukesha, Wisconsin STATS tt 8 I DAILY FREEMAN SUPPORTER OF WAUKESHA PROGRESS FOR NEARLY A CENTURY 269 TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 17, 1946 Eight Pages THREE CENTS Expect Wallace to Submit Texts on Policy Talks Acting Secretary of State William L. Clayton said Tuesday he assumed all future policy speeches by tary of Commerce Henry Wallace would be cleared with the State department before Wallace Monday that he would continue to discuss S. foreign policy in future The statement climaxed the con- over his speech last which ident Truman first apparently en- then subsequently ed. Wallace is scheduled to see Mr. Truman Clayton con- ferred with the president His assumption that future lace speeches would be cleared the State department apparently was based on assurances from Mr. Clayton said statement ed any future speech by Wallace on foreign Wallace's next speech is scheduled here next Monday he if the speech cUd not conform to U. S. foreign there was nothing the State department could do to prevent its AH it Clayton would be to point put those points on which the speech did not pond to established Hasn't Talked with Wallace Clayton was asked at his news conference whether Wallace had expressed willingness to clear his speeches with the He replied that he had not asked the commerce secretary nor had he spoken to him since his speech of last Thursday which a policy counter to that De- by Secretary of State James F. If Wallace goes through with his plan to oppose state department foreign a campaign year ex- plosion which would rock the ad- ministration seemed Wallace said in a terse statement Monday that he was standing pat on his controversial speech last He also said he would continue his public speaking against a Eussia Mr. in disavowing speech as a statement of basic U. S. approved Wallace's right to what he did Discusses Problem Postmaster General Robert E chairman of the national discussed Wallace's activities at length with Mr. Both men are presumed to be ed Wallace's invasion of the field of foreign affairs will accepted without protest by tary of State The White House calling list showed that Hannegan was uled to confer again with Mr. man Wallace was not White House Secretary LADY PROSPECTOR NOTES A an but nonetheless an eager Helen Osborne inspects claim staked by H. Shapiro on his property near Crescent where a was causing this little village a lot of Civic officials were skeptical about the importance of the Giesselbrecht Resigns as Public Welfare Director Only Eggs Available Survey Shows By United Press The housewife searching for substitutes will find plenty of fish and eggs but little luncheon a survey showed Poultry is available now but ages are the survey and probably will become scarce by The department 6f agriculture said at Washington that poultry stores had reported record ber but it predicted try production would drop seriously by the end of the Poultry stores had pounds raore poultry Sept. 1 than on Sept. 1, 1944, when the previous record The department said the future was because August chick duction reached a new 1946 low of This compared with in 1945. At spokesmen for the fishing industry said there was more fish in cold storage than ever Gloucester fishermen Battle Averted as MPs Clash Prices Are Tripled by Russian Orders Prices of most rationed goods were tripled Tuesday by order of the council of As announcement said who next few months several more i 13 years has been joined the group and Charles G. Ross announced that would confer later with Mr. Truman Wednesday after- Ross said Mr. Truman has had no direct word from Byrnes since the Wallace It is understood that Wallace will stand pat on his proposal that the ed States go along with Soviet Russia's expansion of influence in the But after his White House Wallace ly will explain in all future public discussions that he is speaking only for himself and that Mr. man and Byrnes arc the men who determine our foreign Unless Wallace so qualifies his foreign policy It is more likely than not the Byrnes protest against the program of addresses arranged for Wallace has taken at face value Mr. Truman's statement that he approved the public expression of opinion by cabinet officers In disagreement with administration Set Own Restrictions Wallace's own understanding of party discipline had its own con- fuzing angles TJnder the rules as he has stated them it might seem that the tary of commerce deliberately was reading himself out of the cratic party and out of the On March 19 he told a luncheon of the Women's Democratic club that Democrats who failed to port vital administration tion should be denied party port in their political He said he would not suggest disciplinary action for bolts on mi- nor But he said there were certain proposition which any president must regard as One of the fundamental issues C. H. more than ector of the of public submitted his ignation Monday at a ing of the executive In asking for his tive Jan. 1, a for- mer Presbyterian believe I have fulfilled my try as director of the welfare He took the ition June 1, 1933, on an gency and continued until relief cases in the ing 16 have reached ati said that after leaving his welfare post he is not going to retire but plans to do something less He is Two Case Workers Left From a which at its height employed 33 staff bers and the the welfare i organization now has two easel workers a- said relief cases and cases now number only HO for the entire whereas when he took over his duties in 19S3 there were 855 families in sba alone on The load never went above that figure he with state and federal aid met the relief Nineteen units in joined and all are members of the group still except Wales and Big Bend Since its formation the group has handled millions of dollars worth of relief in many ly food and Before becoming welfare tor Rev. Giesselbrecht was for 12 years executive secretary of the administrative council of the Wisconsin Presbyterian synod and prior to that tinse was a pastor in North Restaurants in Waukesha restaurants may close in protest against the OPA back of price ceiling's to the June 30 It was revealed Tuesday by restaurant owners who said it is impossible to operate under the w c f j C II although the entire group local restaurant owner quoted had many more cases than j president of the Wisconsin accepted trie resignation last night Morgan for- mer mayor James Members of the executive board Restaurant association as saying R. L. and Robert The first three named have been on the committee since its Units Organized The relief department as it is now constituted was formed in 1933, when five ties organized to meet the ing problem of relief caused by the After the county board rejected a county relief the city of WaukeSha joined with the town of New Berlin and the villages of ind Butler and organized the pub. lie welfare In thei that the group will order all its members throughout the state to close unless is named by Wallace was foreign re- especially as they relate to the Soviet Union and Great Brit- address Jast day was a direct challenge to ad- ministration policy toward Russia and Wallace Praised and Truman Is Denounced MIAMI Sen. Claude day endorsed the stand of tary of Commerce Henry Wallace oo American foreign and he joined President A. F. Whitney of the Brotherhood of men in a stinging rebuke of ident Truman's handling of Pepper praised Wallace as American In an address to the BRT convention after Whitney had called on labor to fight back against Mr. Truman's with all Its The New Deal stalwart tf ITurn to N o. 1. Damage in Fire at Sussex Fire razed the barn and two ad- joining buildings on the Jake Stzel farm south of Sussex Monday causing damages estimated at Lost iti the blaze which not abate until Tuesday were the a a milk many tons of bushels of wheat and some new farm The three buildings col- lapsed less than an hour after the fire was discovered about 3' but the hay continued to all Chief Claude Kaderabek eaid the Sussex volunteer fire department nearly had the blaze under control when the fire ran out of Reserve were rushed in by farmers who hauled water in buckets and milk cans and by a fleet of trucks and tanks from the Mammoth Springs Canning The auxiliary water which obtained water from the canning company a mile and a half arrived a few minutes too the chief The farm is being operated by Ruben who was away with his family when the fire It is located on Highway one mile south of Kaderabek said the fire probably was caused by He advised farmed to be cautious about the wiring in baras and said that cobwebs chaff which col- lect around light bulbs and wires sometimes cause The estimated loss was a rough he because he did not know how much hay was in the It was filled to the eaves with and the granary contained about worth of A new corn planter anS a disc were as well 1300 worth gl freshly put obtained from the price rollback which the OPA ordered The association will fight against what it termed an the president was ed as Local cafe and restaurant ators were unanimous in their dissatisfaction with the return old price They said it is impossible to sell at the old prices because their wages and wholesale food costs have risen sharply in the last 10 just sick about said one do they ex- us to go to the old prices when the prices of ter and other products have gone up so Another declared that gin of profit already was small un- der the old but now that tint costs have gone we will have to stay open for Another owner warned that the rollback would wipe several snore items off already meager is a bad meat shortage right now and our meat selection is small I wonder if the fellow who eats in a restaurant will be able to find any meat after Another said he will hate to see customers approach restaurant for two the first we won't have anything to give and second we'll lose money on what we do t infection of Fooif is Fatal to Child Here An infection In his which was caused from the rub of a new pair of resulted in the death Monday night of Arthur Glenn 3-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. George 231 Miller's Court He was ill only two besides his parents are two Wesley and five Emily and all at Funeral cervices will be held Thursday at 2 from the Er- ling Larsen funeral home with the Metropolitan church In In- terment will be in the Prairie Home Friends may call at the funeral home after 8 the increases would TeUs for the end of next year at which the government hoped the pric scale of rationed goods woul climb to the level of 4 Released on Bonds in Milk Strike eastern Wisconsin police and forces were alerted Tuesday to prevent further violence in con- with the strike of an AFL union against the land Cooperative association at Wis. Four mee free on bond of each Tuesday after being charged with running a carrying pounds of milk off a road north of here and forcing the driver to drain pounds of milk from the The all members of local 43, AFL chauffeurs and Common were William D. 40, union James 42, business J. H. 37, S. T. 36. AH are frora were laying over for five days be tween fishing trips to permit th fish from previous catches to b shipped from the Nationwide storage of fish o Aug. 1 was estimated at of which wat stored in New This was 58 per cent above last year's stor age and 39 per cent above the na lion's five year In the Pacific how the salmon run was reporte and canned salmon was ex to remain Meat industry spokesmen sai that only about 10 to 20 per cen of the normal supply of meat was reaching the consumer They predicted that the suppl would drop even Sugar Rationing Due to Continue for Year Govern ment experts warned Tuesday tha the sugar shortage plagu housewives well into 1948 and tha rationing probably will have to con for another They feel it will bo next at the earliest before home and In users can even hope fo larger The present acute there is not enough sugar to honor all valid ration resulted primarily from World wa It's disruption of world production Strikes at home and abroad added to the Sugar experts of the OPA look to the Philippines for the fina They hope its exports to this country can be boasted soon to bring an early end to rationing World sugar output this yeas skidded to the lowest level since 1523-24 with only Hawaii end the western sugar beet fields of the United States operating on a basis that could be described Formosa Java are in the same boat with the needing more time to get their crops OB normal Until they Cuba will divert much of her crop to European and Asiatic leaving less to sell to the United Coffon Prices Restaurants Reduce OPA hung higher price tags on types of cotton goods and clothing Tuesday while the decontrol board Beared a decision on restoring price ings oh butter and OPA said about half of the ton merchandise produced in the country would go up one to two- per cent Wednesday as result of a five cents an hour wage increases recently approved for It will bo passed on to The boost will be one cent on cents on cotton bed table napkins and blanket The decontrol board is scheduled to Wednesday whether ceilings butter or other dairy products should be restored in view of rising Drop Restaurant Prices OPA completed its first rollback action under the new Weather Forecast WISCONSIN fair partly cloudy continued Minimum midnight 71 91. litre 84; 92. Temperature here 44. Local price control It ordered es on meat dishes served in pushed back by 10 per cent 30 At Fort practically Earlier Police were attempting to learn whether the same men were in- volved in a running chase in which three bullets were fired into the truck just south Of the Illinois near Leonard driver of the toid authorities he started south out of on Sunday to take the milk from the plants there to the state he three or four in a ored car started at the truck i from the He decided to try to outrun and reached where he reported j the incident to Assistant Chief of Police John i stopped a car I Pierce said WHS the one from 1 which the shots were ter said he found no weapons in j the but one of the men ted he was the business agent for a Pierce to file and the men released after The truck turned back toward Was Forced Road Pierce was near La about ten miles north of another ear ran the truck Report Breaks in Two Milwaukee Hit United Press A break came in the national maritime strike Tuesday while of the eastern trucking strike appeared More Detroit auto workers weni back to work and ending of the long strikes seemed the National tion of Telephone Workers began asking for higher as a strike broke out in Ind. In the 13-day-old shipping AFL longshoremen and seamen in New York began working ships under contract to Ths CIO co-operated with the AFL by dering its men to picketing at Manhattan piers where AFL contracts ships were The CIO order does not i n c 1 u d e ships under contract to the Sailors Union of the Pacific and presumably will not fect tee west coast maritime members of the of Teamsters union accepted a wage proposal Tuesday which brought a partial solution to trucking strike In New York City which had stifled ness and industry for 17 One Detroit Strike Ends In United bile Workers returned to jobs at the Axle CIO pickets kept workers from en- ering the Dodge plant of Chrysler bringing a charge that the union had over the Electrical Workers at the Pittsburgh co. plant to return to work y CIO Farm Equipment at agreed to take a final membership vote on a proposed There signs that the protracted strikes at the company's five er plants might end In the executive of the Telephone Worker's union announced it will meet in off the road as It crept up a hish I three weeks to consider 25 Four rnen were in the They threatened Pierce with an iron he and forced him to open the tank The men drove off after half the milk had been Pierce came back to horn and notified the sheriff's of- The four men free on bond were arrested shortly afterwards at After there and at the Jefferson county they brought and charged with injurious tampering with a motor T. manager of the said the strike against the association in- volved seeking ion for their local 434 of he AFL Chauffeurs and Common He said he iad never heard of the men under arrest and that they had not been by the demands it expects to make on a nationwide basis of American ephone and Telegraph a strike of 50 union members in ed long distance service in the town of Crows Strike In forestry and city hall workers struck day in action to protest a on wage Albion business sentative for the CIO United Public Workers said the city's common council had denied the employes a hearing on wage de- He said city water ers would not be called on strike immediately but that the move was being Guns Waved in Berlin Argument over Prisoners American intelligence officials day revealed that American and Russian troop detachments got in- to an waving row Saturday night in which at one point a Soviet lieutenant ed to call a Red army company fight it with a V. S. military Rips Up Jail Cell After Arrest Carl 1054 Baxter is only a medium sized but he has the strength of His muscles got him in trouble here The 24-year-old ex-serviceman fejt in night after having a few drinks in a local tavern down use ting all those muscles go to Helgested thought as he picked arguments first with one police detachment and then The third The row arose over custody of although reluctant to it a Pole and a Ukrainian woman agreed to step who had been arrested by In the short fracas which can and Russian military police waa just acting in warmed up when he loosed a hard j American officials characterized right uppercut that missed the other man's chin and crashed through a window at the sha That's when the police At the city Helgested was He threatened to tear the tried in vain to move the steel Mustering all his he kicked and jerked the bowl from its moorings in cell No. feat which amazed the threw it against tho That satisfied and he went to In municipal court Tuesday faced Scott Lowry on charges of drunk and Bail was fixed at was continued to y conduct and the case Friday Authorities transferred him to he county where the bars are of thicker barbershop Quartet Charter Is Promised There will be a meeting of the Waukesha chapter of the Tuesday night at at the hall on Delafield it was announced Tuesday morning by William temporary Plans will be at ng for a delegation of the local vocalists to attend a barter presentation program at leaver Dam for the Waukesha The charter meeting will e held 2t An open invitation has been ex- ended by Zimmerman for all local interested in this type f singing to attend the meeting i Beioit Man Is Killed In Beioit man was killed and er seriously injured Monday nigh when their light plane crashed two miles south of According to Police Chief John Dega of Leonard Mar of South was killed when the plane shortly after Injured was H. oi After receiving emergency treatment at er ho was taken to a Madison He suffered a possible skul Witnesses said they saw the plane lose altitude and then crash on the John Stone only about a mile from where it had taken off. According to the pair were headed back to the Beloit airport at the of the They had been on a trip to Whooping Cough Cases increasing An Increase the number of cases prompted city medical authorities to issue a warning Tuesday against possible epidemic and ask for cooperation in fighting the con- Dr. V. M. city health and Nurse Normann said the number of CE has risen so sharply that there Is some danger of an In the last six 24 whooping cough cases have been 'n as compared with only three cases for the same iod The private citizen can do much to help prevent the spread of this Dr. Scheele and Miss by watching ully for new Early oms of whooping cough are a cad cold for about two by the beginning of the If there la any cough at tho case should be viewed with according to the health Whooping cough is usually more than Several weeks Committee Unable to Get Options on Parking Lots every restaurant in that city of was closed Tuesday in test against the OPA order to roll back meat meal The decision came Monday night at a turbulent meeting at- tended by 60 cafe owners and an The group 4 to 1, in favor of a Eating Boor will be doted until Thursday at a. at which time further plans will be Lyle who presided at the said cafes which do not close will he to No. 2, e Flans for a municipal parking ct were stymied Tuesday when a committee reported to r Edwin H. Honeyager that it ailed to obtain a single option or sale price from home owners in two proposed The appointed last month to options and speed action on municipal re- ported that property owners were more concerned about the the committee were opposed to the idea of disposing of their property for a parking The two downtown areas were proposed as municipal parking lots by an Association of merce committee headed by Carl president of the Waukesha State and representatives downtown merchants in their tO One is east of the Five extending from Barstow street to Martin street and from the Dale Chevrolet garage to tha alley South of Main The other area is bounded by Wisconsin Clinton street and Main Committee Members Besides Taylor and the members of the option committee arc Vince Conboy end William C. real estate and Alderman Frank Their report will be presented to the common council Tuesday Ten of the 12 property owners in the area were bat the committee was unsuccessful In obtaining er an option or a price for their it was contacting property In the avenue uncomfortable they a baby was in grave danger from ing cough and was to only In an oxygen Scheele and Misa issued tho following set of rules which people must observe ing whooping Cases muet be reported within 24 hours after discovery by the physician or responsible head of the The patient's home must be and the placard will re- main at least weeks and not less than six weeks after the first signs of the Patients with whooping cough are not allowed to leave the ises while the house is under Children from other families not enter or remain on the arded Well children in the family may attend Children who were exposed to cough and who developed must be kept on tho premises pending Sussex Farmer Loses Foot in Ensilage Cutter Arthur 35, a Sussex had his leg amputated above the ankle as the re- sult of Injuries sustained Monday his foot became caught in a silo He is at St. Joseph's Mehringer was helping his the row aa most serious between Americas and Soviet which has At one point troops covered the American with their The Americans ed by calling in- an armored and ing them around the MP with guns trained on the The fight started over Michael a and his law Benia a who had been arrested by a joint patrol of American and Soviet military police in the U. sector of Red Major Demanded Couple The was taken to American MP station near airdrome where Russian Major demanded that tho couple be turned over to him on grounds they were who had spent the in The Americans refused this de- mand and called up a Russian MP headed by a Lieutenant and hia five man detachment de- manded that they be allowed to guaid the prisoners in the can the Americans angry and are unworthy of allies of the Russian ar- Me Instructed his patrol to take the couple by the Americans The Russian patrol then covered the headed by Lieut. Col. Robert M. San with their Cheal who was a was liberated by the Red army charged that Morosov was acting in Trained Guns on Russians Capt. A. an American MP called up a group of seven riflemen and an armored car and a platoon of and surrounded the MP training their guno on the At this point tho Americans Morosov threatened to np a company of army troops and with the the Berlin Morosov ta take his men away and the ans left the MP on a Soviet request sent through routine the woman was turned over to the Russians after joint to No. Page Synod Leaders Will Come Here The 25th anniversary celebration Of St. Luke's Lutheran church will begin Sunday with the Rev. R. H. D. president of the Synod of the North as speaker at both the ing The Rev. Charles E. D. first pastor of St. but now pastor of Ebenezer Lutheran S. will be the speaker at p. Sunday afternoon at the reunion of the 25 classes which have been confirmed since the beginning of the A reception will At the vesper service the chancel and senior numbering ISO will present their fall speaker for this service will be the Rev. Prof. Paul H. D. president and professor of theology of the ern Lutheran Theological The 16 of the church fill the silo at his farm sharc ln the anniversary two west of Marcy Monday morning when the machine became As he walked on top of the machine to inspect the he apparently slipped and his foot be- came caught in the He was taken to the hospital by lis FIRST STEP BAB PORT Druggist Harry hooting pool in room n the second floor of the back to line up a difficult felt 20 feet down the cut his broke his and chipped two vices on Monday evening at 8pm. The W. C. organizer and now pastor of Reformation Lutheran and the Rev. I. R. former local pastor and now pastor of the Resurrection Lutheran Green will be the The 25th anniversary banquet will be held at the Avalon hotel on Tuesday at p. m. The Edwin will ex- tend greetings and the speaker wlH be tho A. A. pastor of the church of The Redeemer and of tha board of American of tho United Lutheran church in