The Post-Crescent from Appleton, Wisconsin (2024)

-l Page 16 Thursday Evening October 11, 1945 TH2 AFFLOTON FOST-CnSSCaJT i munity hospital as the result ef an automobile accident at about 12:39 that afternoon. Foreign Visitor Surprised Clamor to Disarm' America devote a half day to visit the "Drive," was announced this week by Dave Ellis, president of Clinton-ville Association of Commerce. A committee of- five appointed by Mr, Ellis is headed by Julius Spear braker, and includes Earl Siebert, Gecrge Graff, Joe Dahm and Max Stieg. who are to arrange for a date for the half -day Inspection tour to Clintonville's largest. Industry and alsQ to, make arrangement- forthe event, The idea for this half-day holiday came as the result of an.

invitation from Robert A. Olen, general manager of the Four Wheel Drive Auto company, to the officers and directors of the association of commerce. The Invitation, Mr. Olen stated? was given in order that" business and professional people this city might learn first-band of the extensive modernization of the FWD factory, new organization setup, the postwar FWD products, and the plans of the company to carry on a production program three times greater than during any other peace time year 1 Plans Mapped For? WD Da Commerce Group's Chief Announces Half-Dgy Program CllntonTiUe Flans fo? an "FWD day to which all business and pro essioaal men and women would Rites Saturday for Accident Victim Clintonville Funeral services for Mrs. George Long, C3, will be held Saturday morning, the cortese forming at 8:30 at the Heuer Funeral Home, at 9 o'clock at St Rose Catholic church, with the Rev.

Nicholas Diedrich'in charge of the services. Burial will be in St. Rose cemetery. Mrs. Long died at 4 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at ClintonVUle Com the armies of occupation.

While he was too polite to put it In so many words, I could tell that this 'HIGHEST AWARD Pfc Our luxurious "Calvert" BIS gp'BDKI 1- rim ST rw" ASasaas'J MtAf-Mttlm- Matchless value in deep equipment of the better sort! A high-quality mattress or box spring, built for real comfort by a leading factory. Covered in heavy, woven-stripe ticking. Mattreuitdeep' Jy tufted and built with shape-retaining side wail. Note this offer applies with any of our stylish new bedroom suites. TWIN OR HAS STEEL COILS FLEXIBLE SIDE vjitfEa 1u I it a ww jw CUY VICTORY.

COT '03 Volgt's Drag Store 131 E. CoL Ave. Ms4l A4-A WITH AMY EEDR00M SUITE SOUGHT HERE V3 7 UTILITY STOOLS CEILING PRICE noi7 BY S1ABQUIS CHILD Washington When Robert Burns wrote his immortal lines about the gift of seeing ourselves as others see us, he was writing about individual men and women in their day to day relationships. But if nations could be endowed with this same rare gift, it might help to avoid the kind of International 111 will that leads tr war. lo look at ourselves without the flattering distortion that Mi results from na Child tlonal pride is perhaps impossible, we are too much a part of our time to view dis passionately our own role in that time.

The other day I lunched with a distinguished foreign Journalist who is the political editor of a conserva tive newspaper in a democracy tha remained neutral throughout the war. He knows this country well from previous trips, and so his im pressions during his present visit are not those of a casual tourist, As he talked, politely but frankly, I had the impression of looking for a moment into a mirror that did not distort the image of America at this crossroads in history. It was not a flattering image. First, my friend was astonished at the extent of the clamor to disarm America immediately by disbanding Appleton Man Is Homecoming Head at Hilltop Ralph J. Chmurski, executive secretary of the Marquette University Alumni association, announced today in Milwaukee the appointment of Richard Mahony of the Appleton Coated Pape'r company as local chairman for Marquette's 1945 homecoming program on Saturday, Nov.

3. Mr. Mahony was graduated from the Marquette college of business administration in 1922, and has long been active and prominent in alumni circles. He will be in charge of arranging local attendance at the old grad festivities in Milwaukee next month. The 1945 -homecoming will be highlighted by a football game between Coach Tom Stidham's Hill-toppers and the Titans of the University of Detroit in the Marquette stadium at 2 p.

m. on Nov. 3. Alumni of the university who gave their lives in the war will be honored in a between-the -halves ceremony, and tribute also will be paid members of the 1920 varsity football team which will observe its silver anniversary. Memorial Mass Opening the one-day program will be a memorial Mass in honor of deceased alumni in the University chapel at 9 a.

m. It will be celebrated by the Rev. Peter A. Brooks, S. president of Marquette.

Open house will be conducted on the campus throughout the remainder of the morning. The day will be climaxed with an informal dinner-dance in the Fern room of the Pfister hotel at 0 p. m. Co-chairmen in charge are Sylvester H. Dretzka, Pharmacy '14, and Lawrence Kenney, Engineering '24.

Reservations for the game and dinner may be made with the local chairman, or at Marquette alumni headquarters, 1533 W. Wisconsin avenue, Milwaukee 3. Sprinkle a ZD by Svriifa sesesw ed to him as a new phase of Amer lea's old, backward-looking isola tionism. He had talked with several con' gressmen about the demand to "bring the boys back What they had said was rather dismaying; and particularly one. congressman who had made this reply; "Well, you must understand that this is a democracy.

In a democracy we have to do whatever the people want. If they want to get American boys back home and that's what every mail shows then we've got to do it- That did cot jibe with my friend's concept of democracy. Weren't law makers, he inquired, under obligation to supply some leadership? Was there not some responsibility to educate the Electorate? the domestic side, the visiting foreigner was troubled by signs that pressure groups were bent on tearing the country apart, lie found a kind of bitterness that seemed alien to the America he had known; All or Nothing On both sides of the industrial gulf was an attitude of do or die, all or nothing. He asked a conservative senator for his' opinion on the 30 1 per cent wage demand being made by CIO unions. "It is the beginning of the red revolution," the senator said with almost apoplectic violence.

So violent was the tone of the re ply that my friend at first thought he must have misunderstood. When he said he did not quite understand, the reply was rapped out with a sharp edge of anger. Another phenomenon disturbed this visitor who has always held America in high regard. That is the tone of the attacks on the late Presi dent Roosevelt and the members of his family. To one who has come to regard Rooosevelt as a great na tional figure, looming large in the history of the world, they seemed scurrilous and shocking.

"At home," my friend said, "we have always thought of the New Deal as a very mild reformism. My paper is a conservative paper, I suppose one of the most conservative papers in Europe, but we never found very much to quarrel with in Roosevelt's program." The picture this man will take back home with him is not a pretty one. It is of a nation frittering away its power and prestige in angry bickering and savage recrimination. It is of a powerful giant succumbing to the old familiar palsy of iso lation and surly suspicion. If that is the picture the world is to get.

then we should not be surprised if our voice has less and less authority in world affairs. For it will become apparent that while we have the power to destroy, we do not have the power to create. 80 Attend Meeting Of Dramatic Club More than 80 students at Apple- ton High school indicated their interest in Curtain Call, dramatic so ciety of the school, at the preliminary meeting at which tryouts for the acting group were explained by Miss Ruth McKennan, coach of the society and head of the speech de partment. Tryouts have been scheduled for next week under the direction of Miss 'McKennan. Curtain Call has four distinct groups, acting, lighting, stage and make-up, which work together on each dramatic production at the school.

New members of the acting group will be announced after all Jryouts have been held. little Swift's Cleanser ii aw hwe from an exceWenf fecfon of suites in all of the popular woods and finishes, today's best voues. flUIIDrtEDS SOLD AT $2995 A stondard $29.95 mttrtss froai aat twa stock. Great voIm st Sec our virtdovj! 59.95 VALUES $5330 PUD its rem. 1 li I 31 H.

Lucas, 17, is the youngest man in the Navy, Marine Corps or Coast Guard to receive-the medal honor during World War-IU Missionary Society Gives Program at -Church at Seymour Seymour Members of the Evangelical Womens Missionary so ciety met Tuesday evening In the church parlors. Mrs. Edwin-Mielke gave the meditation, Mrs. Otto Sachs, the scripture reading and the Rev. B.

J. Piekvoss, the prayer. The topic, "Christianity Where You Live, was subdivided to include Rural Pastors to School," pre sented by Rev. Diekvoss; "Fivefold Plan and a College on Wheels," by Mrs. Edwin Mielke, and "Coop erative Villages-Education, Ethics and Economics," by Mrs.

Irvin Schmidt Mrs. Kenneth Kollath discussed the Mission Band's sixtieth anniversary. Members of the society have sent six boxes to European refugees. Twenty members of the Women's Society of Christian Service met Tuesday afternoon in the Methodist church parlors. Mrs.

C. W. Lomas, Green Bay, gave the devotions and sang a solo. Mrs. Flora Blanshan read a paper on "War Comes to the Church in the Philippines.

It was announced that a potluck family day dinner and rally would be held on Sunday, Oct 14, follow ing the morning service. Mrs. George Witthuhn and Mrs. Tom Delemater are in charge of arrange ments. The Rev.

George A. Kiefer- Oneida, spoke to Kiwanis Tuesday. evening on the subject of "Delin quent Children." It was decided to again sponsor a clothing drive in January for foreign relief. The un derpnvileged children's committee was in charge of the program, with Henry Hauch as chairman. ANY NEVER SUSPECT CAUSE OF BACKACHES This Old Treatment Of tan Bring Happy Relief Many nSem relieve Baretng backset qwciuy, once iney discover mat tue real cause) of their trouble may be tired kidnera.

The kidneys are Nature' chief way of tak ing the excess acidi and waste cm of the blood. They help most peoplepass about 8 pints a day. When disorder of kidney function permits poisonous matter to remain in your blood, it may eause nagging backache, rheumatia pains, leg pains, loss of pep and energy, get ting up mgma, evening, puffiness under the eyes, headaches and diirrinesa. Frequent or scanty passages with smarting and burning sometimes shows there is sonie thing wrong; with your kidneys or bladder. Don't wait! Ask your druggist for Doan's Fills, a stimulant diuretic, used successfully by millions for over 40 years.

Doan's give happy relief and will help the IS miles of kidney tubes flush out poisonous wsste (rom juui bjuoo. ucs jjoan rua. Mutator IM ai GALA GREER BONNY BIDE your color schema L- it sNV sf WAX XX A aw a a. ft way -i po 1 Drastic reduction on a large selection of dinette and breakfast sets. Variety of patterns dnd finishes included, in a Complete range of prices.

Choose a set now for Christmas giving, on our "Lay-away" plan. ALUMINUM 69.95 S1A63 VALUES Very sturdy, light-as-a-fealher, and streamlined in style I Kitchen or utility stools of genuine aluminum in a limited-time offer. None sold at this price before or after Saturday. Sold knocked down, easily Qgorapany 1. 1 1 T7 cash mcmY on a mirror your bathroom mirror, for instance Wet your finger and rub the cleanser over the mirror.

YouH actually feel the tiny, fine particle dissolve tinder your finger to form a smooth pasta. Rinse the mirror with water and see how completely Swift's Cleanser washes off, leaving no cloudy, powdery sediment at all! You'd never dream a rUnr could do so perfect a polishing job! Yon simpl cannot scratch the glass. 1. IT CUTS GREASE I a.rr purifies i 2. ITS SPEEDY-SAFEI 4.

AND IT POUSHES AS IT CLEANS I Use Ltoih's "Lay-Away" plan to maka-Chrlftmas selections now. You'll hav botfor choice to seJoct from and you'll bo suro of RIDIAUT REIT packages match delivery whonyouVo ready for If. The Appleton Post Office Is Opposite Oar Store 120 Superior St, Appleton Phone 266.

The Post-Crescent from Appleton, Wisconsin (2024)

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