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12-1-1969
Winona Daily News
Winona Daily News
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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1969). Winona Daily News. 976. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/976
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Scientists Minneapolis More come forward begin tests of ex-GI tells of murders' MINNEAPOLIS (AP)—Bruce in My Lai incident moon samples Branigan, 24, is a former soldier By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS tioned at Ft. Dix , N.J,, said : SPACE CENTER , Houston who served with distinction in (AP) Vietnam. Sgt. Michael Bernhardt , who "The people who ordered it — Scientists begin tests to- was at My Lai, says "it was probably didn day on rocks and other moon The Minneapolis man was 't think it would awarded an Army Commenda- point-blank murder." He said he look so bad .- .. ._ • It . y/as point- samples brought back by the told officers : "The hell with Apollo 12 tion Medal with Combat "V", an blank murder. Onry a few re- . astronauts. They hope this, I'm not doing it." fused. I just told them the hell the material will unlock more of oak leaf cluster in lieu of a sec- ond medal, and an Air Medal An Army lieutenant has been with this , I'm not doing it. I the moon's mysteries. 't The astronauts for 25 combat missions in a hel- charged with the premeditated didn think this was a lawful collected two ' ' • order ." . boxes of rocks, dust and sam- icopter. ; . • murder of 109 South Vietnamese men, women and children dur- Spec. 5 John Kinch , still on ples gathered by boring into the Branigan and .'another former lunar surface. ing an Army operation in the duty in Vietnam , said he had soldier related incidents which hamlet of My Lai in March 1968. been point for the heavy they called "murder" in an in- man The Apollo 12 crewmen — weapons:.platoon. ' . Charles Conrad Jr., Alan 1. terview Sunday. Bernhardt and some veterans Bean and Richard F. Gordon Jr. Branigan said his rifle compa- recall their experiences at My "Captain Medina was right in —have nothing scheduled today. ny in the 3rd Battalion, 60th In- Lai in the current issue of Life front of us," Kinch said. "Col. A formal debriefing on their fantry, was given ^orders during magazine. Barker, the task, force com- mission is to start Tuesday. ' the 1968 Tet offensive "to shoot Sgt. Charles West, a squad mander, was overhead in his All three astronauts had visits anything that moves, and we leader at, My Lai , said a brief- helicopter. He came through on from their families Sunday as •were told it would be covered ing before the opera tion "put the radio saying he had got they relaxed in the quarantine up." fear into a lot of our hearts. We word from the medevac (medi- His unit, Branigan said, was ) quarters at the . Lunar Receiving thought we'd run into heavy re- cal evacuation chopper there Laboratory. Conrad also told "to shoot when startled." sistance." were bodies lying, everywhere spent The Minneapolis man served in some time putting together a ra- Capt. Ernest L. Medina , com- and what was going on. I heard SNIPER VICTIM . . . A wounded South snipers during an operation around the the southernmost ' section of Vi- ' '¦' dio kit, and Gordon and Bean . . pany commander at My Lai, Capt. Medina tell him ; 'I don't . MY LAI HERO ... Chief Vietnamese, infantryman is carried in a y Bu Prang special forces camp, about 110 etnam, operating out of Tarn know what they are doing; The Warrant Officer Hugh C. watched footbaD on television. Dong in the Mekong River Del- "didn't give us an order to go in Quarantine of the astronauts poncho by friends towards a first aid station. miles northeast of Saigon. (AP Photofax) ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ and kill women or children,' first platoon's in the lead . I am Thompson Jr.. of Decatur, 'W : ' . ¦ " ' f tX L 'ft -' is to end Dec. 10, if they develop He was hit by fire from North Vietnamese . 'West said. . "Nobody told us trying to stop it.' Ga., who won the Distin- no illnesses that can be traced He said, "After dark every- about handling civilians, be- "Just after that," Kinch con- guished Flying Cross for to a moon microbe. thing was considered fair game, cause at the time I don't think tinued , "he called the first pla- the rescue of 16 children at: even your own men." any of us were aware of the fact toon and said, 'That's enough Scientists ready to pnt the My Lai on March 16, 1968 Branigan said officers looked that we'd run into civilians." shooting for today.' Colonel —• the same date on which moon material through further the other way when GIs stole Barker called down for a body . tests in an adjoining part of the US. militafy strength and played killing games, Medina, West continued, "was count and Medina got back on the Army claims the My Lai laboratory already have noted The former GI said soldiers telling us here was the enemy, the horn and said: 'I have a massacre of over 100 Viet- major differences between the were "free to loot and take what the enemy that had been killing body count of 310.'" : namese civilians took place. Apollo 12 samples and those re- you wish" and in another pla- our partners. This was going . to Pentagon sources said it turned ln July from the first in Vietnam still dropping toon he was near, soldiers play- be our first real live battle, and Former Army photographer was Thompson's complaint moon-landing expedition, Apollo ed "kill games" in which "they we made up our minds we were Sgt.. Ron Haeberle and Spec, 5 which touched off the" al- 11, ;: SAIGON (AP) — American Viet Cong sappers moving be- the northern edge of the Mekong had a specific count for every- going to go in and with whatev- lay Roberts, assigned to write leged massacre. (AP Photo- Dr. Jeff Warner, a geologist thing from (water ) buffalo to er means possible wipe them ahcut the incident for the bri- military strength in Vietnam hind a mortar barrage blasted Delta, the allied commands re- 1 ¦ ¦¦;¦ fax ) ' -;. for the National Aeronautics has dropped below 480,000 men their way into the compound of ported , while the Viet Cong humans. ' out. " v . f t y f tft. . - gade newspaper, recounted and Space Administration, said F. these episodes at My Lai : for the first time in two years, a U.S. Army combat support made two small attacks on the In June 1968. Branigan said he Meanwhile^attorney Lee the rocks from Apollo 12 have continuing a five-month trend unit eight miles north of the big government pacification pro- Bailey said he had been re- —A group of soldiers tried to R. Resor showed similar pic* almost no breccias, or con- witnessed the killing of a wom- tures to congressional commit- downward that began with the American supply base at Cam gram deeper in the Delta. an and a baby by a man in an- tained by Medina , who is sta - disrobe a teen-age girl. Wben glomerates fused from a varie- first troop withdrawals last Ranh bay. One South Vietnamese soldier tioned at Ft. Benning, Ga. He her mother tried to intervene, tees last week. ty of minerals. Almost half, of other platoon while on a clear- Sen George S. McGovern. I>- summer, the U.S. Command an- Security forces and helicopter was reported killed and three ing mission in the Mekong, has not been charged in the both were placed in a group of . tie Apollo 11 rocks were brec- gunships attacked the Viet Cong other women and shot. S.D.y said Sunday he thought a "¦ ¦ ' :¦' nounced today. wounded in the clash between Pe said a man, a woman and case. Lt. William L. Galley Jr., cias. ¦&. . There was increased specula- commandos, and they withdrew the Viet Cong and militiamen in ^ leader of the first platoon in —A black GP shot himself in sense of national guilt ; might This, he sala, is the biggest the child were on a sampan and punishment for tion that President Nixon before within an hour. Headquarters a rice paddy in Long An prov- were asked to identif y them- Medina 's company, awaits the foot with a pistol to get lead to harsh mystery of Apollo 12 and indi- the end of the year will an- said three Americans were ince, 24 miles southwest of Sai- court-martial for the alleged evacuated after saying he men convicted of murdering cates the moon may . selves. As the family approach- be more nounce more withdrawals be- wounded. Material damage was gon. The militiamen killed 27 of ed the shoreline, a U.S. soldier murder of 109 civilians. couldn't stomach it. Vietnamese civilians. complex than previously "I think it is more than just yond the 60,000:men reduction reported light There was no re- the enemy, and then American jumped up and gunned the wo- A military judge has ordered —Soldiers stood around shoot- thought. ordered so far this year. port of enemy casualties. man and child down. ing and slabbing cows and pigs. Lt. William L. Galley involved Both of the artillery killed 13 more as they potential witnesses in the case moon landings Militiamen and U.S. artillery were withdrawing, allied com- Later that night, Branigan One chased a duck down a trail , here," McGovern said. "I think were made in maria areas, the The U,S. Command said that to withhold public statements the national policy is on trial." kilhi 40 Viet Cong Sunday on muniques said. said, fellow members of the pla^ until the court martial. Bailey , waving a knife. wide, flat plains of the moon. as of last Thursday there were toon beat up the man who did He said he would seek a spe- Yet, the rocks are different. 479,500 American troops in the reached by telephone in Colum- Life did not give home towns cial Senate committee to ' 'look the killing for being a " woman bus , Ohio, said he would ask "From all our pre-guesses," country, a drop of 4,900 men killer." of the GIs interviewed, or list into the whole historical, he said, the two rock samplings during the previous week and President Nixon to remove the where those still in the service congressional and constitutional "should have been pretty close 4, The incident almost caused an restrictions so. Medina could of- were stationed: ' 500 under the maximum of Expect Humphrey process of how we became in- to the same." . '• '• . 484,000 Nixon set for Dec. 15, "intra-platoon firefight ," ac- fer a televised version of his re- Life also printed eight color Vietnam. collection of the incident volved" in Space agency geologists also American troop strength in cording to Branigan, who said . photographs by Haeberle, now a He appeared on the CBS pro- said the Apollo 12 rocks have Vietnam was 485,600 two years no action was taken by military The Senate and House Armed Cleveland . businessman/ which gram "Face the Nation." less titanium than the Apollo 11 ago and rose to a high of 543,400 political comeback authorities against the man to Services Committees have or- were printed in the Cleveland House Republican Leader rocks, but more feldspar. his knowledge. last April. WASHINGTON (AP) _ Hu- Senate nomination in Ohio with- dered investigations, as has . the Plain Dealer last week. NBC Gerald R. Ford , in an Associat- Rocks from both missions, Meanwhile, enemy attacks "There is no othsr word for News showed the pictures on its ed Press interview, said the in- bert H. Humphrey is expected out- major challenge. Until re- this but murder," Branigan Army. The White House has ex- however, apparently are prod- across South Vietnam were re- pressed concern over the case. 11 p.m. report. cident "was certainly a trage- to begin his political comeback cently a soft drink company ex- said. In Vietnam, he added , "it ucts of molten material, they ported at a low level, but allied , Bernhardt , currently sta- Secretary of the Army Stanley dy," v said. ecutive in New York Glenn has is a common thing — happens spokesman said this was part of in next year's Senate elections, returned to his home state. ev^ry day. The Apollo 12 mission ended which also may feature the can- " the cyclic pattern that has pre- Tint Dieffenbacher, 23, said Nov. 24. vailed in the past year. didacy of a space hero and a his group quest by Robert Taft Jr. for the had a basic policy not to take prisoners because "kill- job his father once held. ing the enemy was the most ex- Those races and two others Wallace says peditious manner of taking care were thrown wide open by an- of them." nouncements the four men now Nixon-Congress holding the Senate seats would Currently on disability be- not run for re-election. The Nixon faking cause of "war nightmares", Di- openings are in Minnesota , effenbacher said a close friend Ohio, Delaware and Florida. of his who was later killed told relations strained him that he had seen prisoners WASHINGTON (AP ) - Presi- tion next week, (.he President's Three senators — Steplicn his position thrown out of a helicopter from dent Nixon's relations with decision to scrap the present Young, D-Ohio, John J. Wil- 5,000 feet after refusing to talk. liams, R-Del., and Spessard L WASHINGTON (AP) - congressional Republicans, al- law that affects only Deep South . states in favor of one having na- Holland, D-Fia.—announced re- George Wallace says he wishes ready damaged in the Senate by tionwide application has caused tirement for reasons of age or he had copyrighted his speeches Reader the Haynsrworth Supreme Court health; the fourth , Eugene Mc- widespread distress among when he ran for president in David Hartman heard a nomination, are under further Northern Republicans. Carthy, D-Mdnn., acted on mo- tives less evident, announcing 1068 because te Nixon adminis- man explain to his young strain in two coming House The Iwo votes come at a bad son the importance of edu- votes. time for Nixon who was handed he intends to remain politically tration "is sayihg- and taking active but not saying how. the same position we took in cation : "You wanna grow The administration 's position a bitter defeat several days ago up stupid , and not be able on antipoverty and voting rights in his effort to name Judge Cle- A total of 34 Senate terms— 1968." those of nine Republicans and 25 If he had copyrighted his to read the labels on beer legislation has sharply divded ment F. Ilaynsworth to the Su- bottles?" . . . Christmas , House Republicans and put the preme Court. Democrats—expire iu 1071. The speeches, Wallace added , "I other incumbents have given no would be drawing immense roy- claims the cynic, is bdeom- GOP leadership in a difficult po- Although the Haynsworth and ing a race to see whether sition in trying-to line up voles. voting rights issues underscore hint they might retire voluntari- alties from Mr. Nixon and espe- ly. cially Mr. Agnew," your feet or your money So split are Republicans on long standing ideological differ- give out first . . . Phyllis the antpoverty bill , the leader- ences within the Republican Humphrey, former vice presi- dent and unsuccessful Demo- Wallace appeared Sunday on Dillcr denies she's as sloppy ship had been unable to lay party, Nixon 's problems on anti- NBC's "Meet the Press" pro- a housekeeper as reported : down a party position lo guide poverty are a direct result of cratic presidential candidate last year, has not yet announced gram and discussed his recently "Every month , whether it the members -whe n il comes up bungling in White House rela- completed tour of South Viet- needs it or not, I take all for a vote later this week. tions with Congress. his political intentions. But lu* has a hefty lead in the only nam nncl other Asian countries. the food out of the refrig- Nixon 's request for a straight Ever since former President Tho former Alabama gover- erator and dust it off. " AMERICA' S FIRST PEACETIME years Monday night , From left are Presi- two-year extension of the exist- Lyndon B. Johnson began his Minnesota poll published so far, could get the Senate nomination nor said there will be a longer DRAFT LOTTERY . . . Secretary of Wnr dent Franklin D. Roosevelt , who announced ing Economic Opportunity Act War on Poverty in lOfin , antipov- war nnd ultimately greater loss Maj. Ed- simply by asking nnd appears Henry Stimson, blindfolded , Is shown hold- the first number — 58 — drawn; has only minimal support erty programs have been under of life if U.S. troops withdraw £OAL (jrfilADtL ing out the first capsule drawn Oct , 20, 1940, ward S. Shnttuck , who rend other numbers; among Republicans and lillie or heavy attack by certain lo run. Republicans , from South Vietnam without in Washington , D.C in Ihe nation 's first Stimson; and Lieut . Col . Chnrles R. Morris , no chance of being approved. including Nixon in his presiden- (For ' , Former astronaut John Glenn , winning a clear military victo- moro laughs seo peacetime draft lottery. The United Slates who blindfolded Stimson. (AP Photofax) On voting rights, due for ac- tial campaign last. yenr. 4R , hopes to get tho Democratic ry. Earl ' Wilson ' on Pagtf 4A) holds its firs t military draft lotldr v in 27 Young men will be watching numbers game closely tonight R y STAN BENJAMIN ice's jammed conference room needed , too, and there wns no symbolized the past , a spi.kr.s- Tnnigli l , those capsules will he withdraw a capsule , open il , nnd In less lhan two liours, nil .1(5*1 he matched Associated Press Writer where the drawing takes plnco point, to a lottery any more , II man explains. He wanted n new flumped into the new jar. Some- rend the date contained inside. numbers should , and the half million will be a glass ease in Ihe lobby, was ' abandoned , even during one. how—Ihe draft people were still Then he will peel off n protec- with dales WASHINGTON (AP) - To- containing a souvenir from tho the, low-draft peacetime years , deriding how—the capsules will draft -eligible, men who weren't glue night tlio nntion holds Its first, past . unlil President Nixon revived On Nov. 21 , two days n/ler hr» "randomized. " tive backing to exjw.se the going to j oin the Arnly if they Congress approved Nixon 's military draft lottery in 27 It's a large glass jar—somo the lottery—calling It "random They may simply be stirred in and paste the date next, lo tho could hel p it. will have sorno years, with Ihe fate of half a selection "—last Wednesday hy plan , Selective Service ordered the jar , like cooking noodles. number "001" on lhe big board. idea where they stand willi the " kind of laboratory jar—the ono a new , bigger laboratory jar , million men at. stake. signing n lnw, an executive or- "We bave a sort of dairy-typo anrl the dato draft . big board wllh used for the first draft lotteries measuring lfi inches in diam- The number , There will he a der , nnrl n proclamation of to- pi.ddlo , " a spokesman ex- next to it will be announce d Another , smaller drawing, will numbers antl dates being posted in World Wnr I nnd again in night' s drawing. eter with sides Iwo feet, high plained. a hot glare of and walls a half inch thick. It once more , and the next, capsulo follow , but. it' s only to provide a ono by one ; World Wnr ll. llie next lights; ' standing men and wom- Even before Nixnn signed llin lists for $ll!i . Hershey Is cxpi'decl to open will be drawn by >oulh way of deciding who goes first advisory and he stuck alongside en , intjcnlly jottin g clown every In llio lottery drawings of lottery into lnw , Ll. Gen. I/'V.is The. next day, n colonel drove the lottery ceremony al I! p.m. when men in the same draft 00() il, the next, number , announcement and handing the World War II this jar held 10, R. Hershey, draft, director since up to the lab supply donlor in and close around 10 p.m. if it board' s pool share the same noles to scurrying messengers. little capsules containing draft new jar , runs on schedule , Where a man 's birthday ap- 1041 , had ordered a Jersey, fo pick it It. mny look more like a hot day registration numbers. The old one held 10,000 cap- northern New The actual drawing is In bn pears on lhal. list will determin e birthday. i, ). lhat , , the letters of tho in the stock exchange thnn a Sample capsules are still in sules and could easily hnve , done by fi'! young people , mem- how fast his draft , board will get In one December night at Selective served again tonight , when only Today, another colonel and a bers of the Selective Service around (o him . Men with birth - alphabet , will he loaded into 26 the jar; green and pink plastic. their drawing will Service. Willi metal heads, liko little Tip- ." . or. capsules—one for each day Navy captain planned lp write Youth Advisory Groups from days next lo Ihe low nam hers capsules nnd WTO ; establish an order which draft The numbers and dalTS will st ick tubes , for 1040 and 194 1 , of the year , with «in extra day all ihe dnys of lhe year , from ' (lie 50 stales , lli e District of Co- can expect a draft call in bluo. ones for 10<12, mnde entire- for Leap Year—will be mixed Jan. l through Dec. :_ l , on lumbia , New York City (a sep- those next lo high numbers will boards can follow, by matching be birthdays— each ono telling the letters with the initials of hundreds, or thousands , of men ly of plastic—every bit of metal and drawn, gummed dickers , roll them up anile draft region I and Puerto probably nnl be drafted; t hose the country their was being saved liy then for war Rui Hershey, 7fi years old and wiih the writin g inside, and R ieii . in the middle range face a year the men involved, throughout or 11 p.m. it should bb chances of being drafted in l!)70. pi 'i'liiclion , hcing removed from his post a.s pack thom into inch-long plastic Whoever reaches into tlie jar of uncertainly, wailing To see if liy 10 Just outside Selective Serv- Soon every available ) man was of next Feb. lfi , felt the old jar capsules. — almost to (he. shoulder—will Ihe draft reaches them or not. over , in Crosse; Ms mother, Mrs. Mar- until he" became disabled Monrovia; Ca- 1960. garet Reichwein, April 5, 1900, Du- He was born lif .; one brother, Edward, in Houston County to Jens and The weather buque, Iowa; and three sisters, Mathilda Sundby Jensen and Dubuque, life. ft§ _¦ Mrs Luella Sloam, lived in this area all his I »___.__ *¦ a uii ___»_¦___¦___. ___.! •_»___ > _____¦ ¦_*_¦_¦ I . ^ ^ Iowa; Mrs. Alvin ( Lucille) He attended the Rushford Mabel-Canton Even, San Antonio, Tex., and school and was a member of Mrs. Jack -(Mathilda) Mosbach- Rushford Lutheran Church. He er, Monrovia, Calif. married Nora Amanda Grinds school head dies Funeral services will be at Sept. 26, 1932, at Rushford. • MABEL, Minn. (Special) — 10 a.m. Tuesday at Our Lady Survivors are: His wife; one Gilman Russell Halvorson , 60, of Perpetual Help Catholio daughter, Mrs. Robert (Cor- the Rev. John N. Mauel two superintendent of the Mabel- Church, rine) Hager, Lanesboro; officiating. Burial will -be in the grandsons, Blaise and Beryl : Canton schools here since 1967, St. Stanislaus Cemetery. Hager, Lanesboro; and one died suddenly of a heart attack Friends may call at the Kil- brother, Kenneth, Vern dale, at his home here at 12:30 a.m. lian Funeral Home after 3 p.m. Minn. One brother has died. today. There will be a wake Sunday. He had no history of Funeral services will be Tues- service at 8, and the Rosary at Rushford Lu- heart trouble. will be said at 8:30 p.m. day at 2 p.m. theran Church , the Rev. John He ciame to Mabel from Chat- John I;. Benson B, Rockne officiating. Burial field where he was superintend- HOUSTON, Minn. (Special) - will be in Rushford Lutheran ent of the Chosen Valley schools. Houston Cemetery. WEATHER FORECAST . . . Showers are forecast to- John E. Benson, 87, , m, at the the area. Snow is Previous to that he was super- died Sunday at 11 p. Friends may call at day in the Northeast and the Great Lakes Valley View Nursing Home fol- 11 a.m. Tuesday Lakes area. intendent at Atwater, Battle church from also expected : in the Northeast and the Great lowing a long illness, fie had to time of services. (AP Photo* Lake and Lake Wilson, Minn. ColdeV ¦ temperatures are predicted in the East. been a resident there two years; in charge ' ' ' ' He was born Sept. 25, 1909, at Arrangements are fax) A retired carpenter , he was of Duane Cook, Rushford. Fergus Falls, Minn., to George born Aug. 2, 1882, in Houston and Pearl Heald Halvorson. He County to Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Two-state funerals Local readings graduated from Fergus Falls Benson. He attended Houston High School and Park Region public schools and the Univer- Raymond D. Liferski Readings for the 24 hours end- precipitation, trace. mar- Junior College there. He receiv- sity of Minnesota and was MINNESOTA CITY, Minn. - ing at noon today: Normal temperature range for ried Feb. 5, 1921, in Money Funeral services for Raymond Maximum temperature 52, this date 33 to 19. Record high ed his bachelor degree at St. Creek. He formerly served a D. Literski, salesman at Quality minimum 22, noon 34. no precipi- 60 in 1962, record low 12 below Cloud State College and his number of years on the Hous- Chevrolet Co., Winona, who died tation. . in 1893. master's at the University of ton school board and village of a heart attack Saturday at ago today: Sun rises tomorrow at 7:22, A year Minnesota. He taught at Royal- council. his home, will be held Tuesday High 46, low 33, noon 36, sets at 4:29. Survivors are: A son, J. How- Fu- ton, Dawson and Pipestone, at 9:15 a.m. at Watkowski ard, Houston; a daughter, Mrs. neral Home, Winona, and at 10 Minn.; before taking his first po- Merle (Amy) Houge, Minneapo- a.m. at Holy Trinity Catholic sition as superintendent. He lis ; one grandchild; two broth- Church, Rollingstone, the Rev. married Beverly Johnson Jan. ers, Clarence and Charles, Leland Smith officiating. Burial il, 1939. Houston, and two sisters, Mrs. will be in Sacred Heart Ceme- Emma land and Mrs. Ella tery, Pine Creek, Wis. He was a member of the Wheaton, Houston. His wife, Friends may call at the fu- American and Minnesota Asso- three brothers and three sisters neral home today after 2 p.m. 1st Qtr. Full Last Qtr. New ciations of School Administra- have died. A Christian wake service will Dec. 15 Dec. 23 Dec. 26 Dec. 9 tors; the Minnesota Education Funeral services vwill be Wed- be held at 8:30. Association; Mabel First Lu- nesday at 2 p.m. at Houston Elsewhere theran Church; Mabel . lions Baptist Church, the Rev. Forecasts Adrian Sundberg officiating. Powell in hospital The Weather Elsewhere Club, and the Masonic Lodge at Burial will be in Swede Bottom (AP) Rep. Minnesota By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Fergus Falls. NEW YORK - Cemetery. Adam Clayton Powell, D-N.Y., High Low Pr. Survivors are: His wife * five Friends may call at .Hill Fu- Forecasts sons, Herbert is being hospitalized for treat- Albany, snow ...... 35 29 .06 , attending the neral Home Tuesday afternoon prolif- Variable cloudiness in the ' university at Charlotteville, ment of what he called " Albuquerque, clear . 49 20 ... . and evening and at the church glands." northeast and mostly fair Va.; Dr. David, St. Louis, Mo.; Wednesday after p.m. erating diseased lymph to partly cloudy In the west Atlanta, clear . _ .... 53 36 .. l Dr. Aaron Wells, Powell's Duane, who is attending school ¦ ¦ ¦¦ and south through Tuesday. Bismarck, clear .... 55 21 .. in Winona; James Bernard Bruening '¦• " physician,' refused Sunday to , student at Pointing slide openings are the same; A voter who Continued mild although a Boise, clear ...... 40 19 . ... Mankato State College, and HOW TO WRITE IN VOTE ... CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) say how sick Powell was or how little cooler Taesday. Low city voting machine a wishes to write in a vote for councilman at , but esti- Boston, cloudy ..... 43 34 .. Jack, student at the Univer- to two areas on a — Bernard Bruening, 71, Free- he would be treated tonight 18-30 north,. 28-35 city office worker shows how writein voids large must open Slide* No. 4. A voter who burg, died Sunday at 1:30 p.m. mated that treatment would Buffalo, snow ...... 33 26 .34 sity of Minnesota; two grand- ¦outh. Highs Tuesday 30-40 sons, and one brother, Harvey, are accomplished. Each office listed for vot- wishes to write in a vote for his ward council- at: his home; take three weeks. north, 38-48 south. Charlotte, clear, ..,':;.. 50 29 Miami, Fla. His parents and ing carries a number of the ballot strip man must open Slide No. 7. The slide closes He was born Sept. 28, 1898, Advertisement Chicago, cloudy ... . 51 35 T one brother have died. office. For each office there is automatically when the large lever below at Calmar, Iowa, to Henry and ' opposite the Wisconsin Cincinnati, cloudy . . 43 32 .. Funeral services will be Tues- a correspondingly numbered slide opening at the panel is pushed to open the curtains. Mary Bruening. He married the Ruptured Men Cleveland snow ... 37 31 T v Fair southwest, partly , day at 2 p.m. at Mabel First ¦ . To vote for one of the candidates listed form* Mary Lanners Jan. 16, Denver, clear ...... 62 26 • • ,. - .' . the left side. 1923 cloudy northeast tonight, Lutheran Church , : the Rev. voter pushes on the ballot, the voter needs merely to push , at lona, Minn., and they Get $4.95 Gift Des Moines, clear ..56 27 .. Clayton Engan To cast a writein vote, the farmed in the colder northeast half. Lows officiating. Bur- panel, down the voting lever opposite the name. Freebwg area; Detroit, clear ...... 43 25 .. ial will be in the chrome button at the top of the slide Survivors are; His for Trying This tonight 18-28. Partly sunny Mabel Cem- : election judges for instruc- wife; one Fort Wofth , clear ..65 34 .. etery. as shown, and opens the slide for the proper Voters may ask son, Francis, Freeburg; one Tuesday, warmer north and Helena, clear ..... 38 11 provided so the vote can tions and help at any time. (Sunday News east. Highs Tuesday 38-47 .. Friends may call at the Men- office". A pencil is daughter, Mrs. Joseph (Cecilia) Honolulu, rain ..... 85 75 .29 gis Funeral slide opening. photo) Kansas City, Mo.—Here is an northeast, 45-54 southwest. Home here from be Written on paper in the Becker, Brownsville; 20 grand- improved means of holding rup- Indianapolis, cloudy 44 30 this afternoon. In all wards and , precincts the proper children; two brothers, Albert, clear . 59 39 . ture that has benefitted thousands S.E. Minnesota Jacksonville, No school will be held in the Calmar, and Charles, Creseo, of ruptured men and women in Juneau, cloudy 47 36 .08 Ma bel-Canton District Tuesday Iowa. One brother and two sis- the last, year. Kansas City, clear . 66 32 . .... irurespect to . Supt. Halvorson. ters have died. Mostly fair tonight and MONDAY Tuesday; continued mild Los Angeles, cloudy . 70 -. .. Funeral services will be Wed- Inconspicuous,. w it h o ti t leg . y .. 50 36 DECEMBER 1. 1969 although a little colder Louisville, cloud FIRE CALLS nesday at 10 a.m. at Steffen straps, elastic belts, body encircl- Memphis, clear ...... 54 . 39 The da ily record ing springs or harsh pads, it has Tuesday; high today 48-60; ' ' Funeral Home and at 10:30 at low tonight 30-36. Outlook Miami, clear .... . 72 50 .. Sunday St. Nicholas Catholic Church, caused many to say, "I don't see . Milwaukee, clear v. 59 26 .. 1:30 a.m.—10th and Chatfield Fredburg, the Rt. Rev. Msgr how it holds so easy. I would not Wednesday: Temperatures At Community Municipal Court Two-state deaths . , " a little above normal with Mpls.-St.P., cjfear .. 47 26 .. streets, grass fire, along rail- Richard Speltz officiating. Bur- have believed had I not tried it. New Orleans, clear 59 34 road. little or no precipitation. Memorial Hospital WINONA Dr. M. F. Eusterman ial will be in the church ceme- easy, to New York, cloudy .. 42 35 7:59 a.m. — Broadway and Donald W; Schmanski, Glen LEWISTON, Minn. — Funeral ; ' So comfortable — eo Maternity patiantt: J to . 1:30 ind I t*> tery. you the Okla. City, clear ... 67 32 .. Franklin, flush Mary, pleaded guilty today to held Friday for wear — it could show River gas off street 8:30 p.m. (Adults only.) services were Friends may call at the fu- way to joyous freedom from your Omaha, clear ...... 58 32 at accident scene. Visitors to a patient llmHtd t*» Iwo a charge of disobeying a traffic Dr, Matthew F. Eusterman, 74, neral home after 2 p.m. Tues- Philadelphia, cloudy 44 32 .02 It one. time. rupture trouble. DAILY RIVEIl BULLETIN 12:22 p.m.—503 Center St., Visaing hours: Medical and aurgleal signal, causing an accident. Rochester, native of Lewiston, day. Rosary will be said at 8. • Flood Stage Phoenix, cloudy .... 72 50 Universal Studios, leaves burn- pallenti: 2 to 4 and 7 to 1:30 p.m. (no Judge John D. MoGill fined him at St. John's Catholic Church, You can't lose by trying, It is Pittsburgh children under. 12.) Stage Today , snow .,. 35 31 .04 ing in window well. $50. Schmanski was arrested at Rochester, the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Clarence G. Jensen sent to you on 30 days trial. You Ptlnd, Me., snow ... 40 29 .09 7:11 p.m.—700 E. Broadway, 8 a.m. Sunday at West Broad- Raymond Jansen officiating. RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) receive a separate $4.95 truss as Red Wing 14 2.3 ' SATURDAY Ptlnd, Ore., clear .. 45 27 • . . Ed Cieminski home/ malfunc- ADMISSION way and Franklin Street. A Burial was in Calvary Cemetery. — Clarence Gilbert Jensen, 69, a gift just for trying the inven- Lake City .. 6.1 Rapid City, driving without a li- Wabasha ...... 12 6.9 . clear .. 65 30 .. tioning oil furnace. Charles Giammona Jr., charge of He died Tuesday at Rochester died early Sunday morning at tion. Richmond, cloudy .. 46 27 v.. Today Homer, Minn. cense in possession against Methodist Hospital of a stroke. his home in Rushford. He suf- Alma Dam, T.W 4.2 St Louis, clear ..;. 61 32 ¦; Schmanski was dismissed upon Write for descriptive circular, v Whitman Dam ...... 2.5 . .. 7:13 a.m.—9 miles south . of DISCHARGES He was ill for a month. fered with rheumatoid arthri- San Fran , fog .;... 61 50 .. Winona , road construction site Mrs. Bvron Randall, Lanes- proof of license ownership. He was born Nov. 5, 1895, at tis many ydars and was bed- It's free. Just address Physicians Winona Dam, T.W. .. .. 3.4 Seattle, clear ...... 49 34 .. Appliance Company, 2227 Koch WINONA ...... >. - ... ' 13. 5.6 at Wilson, wood frames and boro, Minn. FORFEITURES : Lewiston. He was graduated ridden the last 4% years. He ' . Tampa, cloudy ..... 61 55 den- Bldg., 515 W. 75th St., Kansas Trempealeau Pool ... . 10.1 " ¦ ' ..' canvas burning. Mrs. Roland Hansen and Robert W. Byrne, Galesville from Marquette University farmed in Highland Prairie a City, Mo. 64114. Washington, cloudy 45 34 . . ¦, 11:34 a.m.—Chicago & North baby, 1290 Parkview. Rt. l Wis., $50, disobeying traf- tal school, Milwaukee, in 1919 number of years and when he Trempealeau Dam .. .. 4.1 . , Winnipeg, clear 43 21 .. Western railroad yards, Huff BIRTH fic signal causing an accident, and was a resident in dentistry moved to Rushford was em- But do it today before you losa Dakota 7.3 (M—Missing;- T—Trace) School from Dresbach Pool .. 9.4 ¦ and 2nd streets, boxcar burn- Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Livering- 11:45 a.m. Saturday, West at Mayo Graduate ployed at the Holger Feed Mill the address. Dresbach Dam .. 2.0 ing. housc, 1629 W. King St., a son. Broadway and Junction Street. then until 1921, when he opened IMPOUNDED DOGS SUNDAY William L. Hitesman, Deco- a practice in Rochester. He re- La Crosse ...... 12 4,9 driving without Tributary Streams ADMISSIONS rah, Iowa, $15, tired in 1966. No. 182 — German Shepherd John Neyers, Winona Rt. 3. motorcycle endorsement on li- During his dental career he Chippewa at Durand ...... 11.6 and black Labrador pup, avail- Mrs. Helen Krahn, 667 W. 3rd cense, 9:37 p.m. Sunday , East edited five major scientific pa- NOTICE OF BID SALE Zumbro at Theilrnan 28.6 able. Last month's St. Howard and Laird streets. pers in his field. He was a Trempealeau at Dodge ... 2.5 Nos. 205-206 — Two tan fe- Robert Moore, 315 E. 3rd St. Thomas W. Sehmldtknecht , member of the American and Black at Galesville ,...,... 1.5 male pups, available. Debbie Blattner, Winon a Rt. Cochrane Wis., $15, disobeying Minnesota dental associations PLEASE TAKE NOTICE thaMhe Board of Common La Crosse at W. Salem .... 4.1 No. 218 — Large mate, black, 3. . . • ' traffic signal, 9:30 p.m. Friday, and the Rochester Dcnta! Soci- School District No. 2606 will take sealod bid* for the Boot at Houston 5,2 brown and white/ part Beagle, precipitation Becky Blattner , Winona Rt. 3. West Broadway and Huff Street. ety . purchase of tha following described premises fn Wi- RIVER FORECAST available. Ronald Tofstad , 478 E. How- Interested in horses, he was nona County, Minnesota: (From Hastings to Guttcnberg) No. 220 — Small tan female ard St. active many years in the former pup, available. DISCHARGES Rochester Riders and Drivers That part of Lot Five (5), Plat of Subdivision of Tues. Wed. Thurs. No. 221 — Male, black long- Section Twenty (20), Townshi One Hundred Red Wing 2.4 2.5 2.5 down a bit Mrs. James Sovereign and Car carrying 9 Club. He was past grand knight p haired terrier, available. of the Knights of Columbus and Seven (107), Range Seven (7), West, described Winona 5.5 5.6 B.6 No. 223 Small tan male pup A November that was a lillie baby, 460 E. Sarnia St. — Mrs. Joe Moldenhauer and faithful navigator of the 4th de- as follows, to-wit: La Crosse 4.8 ¦ 4.7 4.8 with red collar, available. drier than normal has left Wi- ¦ ¦ gree knights. He was on the No. 226 — Small, blaek fe- nona with slightly less than nor- baby, Winona Rt. 3. youths wrecked Commencing al the center of said Section Women of Socotra , largest is- Mrs. John Esser and baby, city board of public health and male, part cocker, available. mal precipitation for the first ll HOMER , Minn. — Nine juve- welfare from 1956 to 1960. In Twenty (20), running thenco West on the East and land In the Indian Ocean, are No. 228 — Small male, months of this year. 322V.. Cummings St. niles, ages 9 to 17, were in- especially fond of jewelry. As Mrs. James Everson and May he received a citation from Wast quarter line of said Section a distance of , white, long-haired terrier , avail- Precipitation for the month volved in a one-car accident the state dental association for many as nine earrings hang able. baby, 717 Wilson St. Saturday at 11:45 p.m. on Ho- 594 feet to the point of intersection of said quar- just ended amounted to 1.21 Mrs. Charles McNally and dedicated service. ter line and the Northerly line of the right of from nine holes in each ear. A No. 229 — Large male, brown, inches, compared with a nor- mer Ridge, two miles south of He married Pearl Brazze! hand may support five rings, an part German shepherd and gold- baby, 470 W. 4th St. County 12. Four of thom were way of the Chicago Great Western Railroad, mal yield of 1,61 , and brought Charles Giammona Jr., Feb. 25, 1922, at Luverne, She ankle two bangles, en retriever, available. the to-date precipitation total injured. died Oct. 10, 1961. thence northwesterl y along the Northerly line Homer, Minn. Jolm Nycrs, 9, Homer , was daughters of said right of way a distance of 539.2 feet, to 29,84, compared with a nor- Mrs. James Martin , Cochrane, Survivors are: five , reported in good condition this Mrs. John (Phyllis) Ambrusko, thence north 00° 56' East, a distance of 865.63 mal January-November precipi- Wis. morning at Community Memo- tation Buffalo , N.Y.; Mrs , Walter feet to the point of beginning of the parcel of of 30.01.¦o BIRTH rial Hospital. Winona With a Mr. and Mrs. Mark Prltzl (MnrylynY King and Mrs. Owen land to be described; thence continuing north In years , Tho record shows November , fractured right shoulder. Threo (Cynthia) Doyle, Greensboro, gone by O0° was a mild month with the Rollingstone , Minn., a daughter, others were treated in the emer- Roy (Patricia) 56' East, a distance of 428.82 feet; thence mean temperature of slight- N.C.; Mrs. south 54° East 36.3 gency room for multiple contu- White, Baton Rouge. La,, and , a distance of 230.4 feet; thence Ten years ago . . . 1959 ly above the normal mean for BIRTHS ELSEWHERE sions and abrasions and re- BLAIR , Wis. (Special) - Mr. Mrs. Leo (Grctchen) Delaney, south a distance of 428.82 feet, thence north 54° The Soviet Union joined the United States and 10 other that month of 35.1, leased. Purchase, N.Y. ; 23 grandchil- West, a distance of 230.4 feet to the point of and Mrs. Sigurd Einarson, The driver of the car, owned nations today in banning war bases, nuclear explosions and The temperature range for Blair , a son , Bruce Stanley, by dren , and two sisters, Mrs. V. r beginning, and missile sites forever from the Antarctic, the month went from a high of by J. O. Younker , Stockton , is P. Diedrich , Owatonna , and adoption. He was born Oct. 9, not known at this time, said December , usuall y nn extremely cold monlh in Winona , fin to a low of 7. Miss Cccefia , Milbrae , Calif. Lot One (1), Block Eight (8) of Davis' subdivision Sheriff George Fort. According Three brothers hnve died. in the Village of Goodview; came in ns mild as a March lamb. to the report the driver was located upon and Donald J. Itaciti , , forming a part of the Nash's, was elected chairman of the going cast on CSA 15 in a 1961 Theodore H. Reichwein Northwest quartor (NW'/«) Merchants Bureau of Winona Chamber of Commerce this two-door sedan when he lost (Special) of Section Twenty (20), Township One Hundred morning, succeeding Russell B. ARCADIA, Wis. - Price. November: drier control of tbe vehicle, skidded Theodore H, Reichwein , 63, Ar- Seven (107) North of Range Seven (7) West of W>9 110 feet on the roadway, .went cadia, died at his home at 3 the Fifth Principal Meridian. Twenty-five years ago . . . 1944 —¦Temperature— Precipitation off the roadway on tlie right p.m. Saturday of an apparent Degrco Inches side of a hill for an approximate heart attack. Said bids will be received at the home of the Lt. A, J. Kickbufidi , just recovered from wound** suffered Mux. lVlln. Mean Normal Days Total Normal 70 feet and then into a culvert. The son of Daniel and Mar- Clerk of said School District, Frank Tuttle at 860 40th in tlie early stages of tho buttle for France, left a hospital ln A1F were thrown from the car: Novi-inher .,, (IS 7 30,3 35.1 Kli i 1.12 1.61 garet Theisen Reichwein , he In Ihe Village of Goodview, Minnesota England to rdjoin bis company. .10 Linda Nyers 14 nnd Robert was born at Belleview, Iown , , on or be- A October 115 lit 4<> .3 Wl!) 3.116 2.49 pproval for development from a class one to n class September .... 114 !(> (.2 Nycrs, 1(5 , Homer; Donna Bol- June 23, 1906. Ho married Mary fore 6:00 o'clock P.M., December 16, 1969. All two airport was given by the Civil Aeronautics administration. . .3 62.5 75 1.55 3,76 August 92 55 72. 1 69 .5 ... 1.57 3.60 stad, 14, and Edward Bolstnd , Heinemann at Dell Rapids, S,D „ bids must bo accompanied by a certified chock , bank 17; John Finnerud 13; Owen July .1)4 411 71.7 75.4 ... • 5,11 3.70 , Aug. 20, 1935, The couple moved money order Fifty years ago . . . 1919 Kulchara, 14 ; Wayne Polus, 13 to Arcndin in 1947, At lho time , or cash in the amount of five per cent Juuo (17 40 fil.B (>» .« 11)2 fi,3 4 .70 (5%) of the May 112 :il 60.7 56.5 and Douglas Polus, 14 . all of of his denth he wns employed total bid a* a security bond to secure In spite of three days of below zero weather the Mis- i:i:i 2.H9 4.06 Winona. They were taken to , April 76 29 50.5 47.7 4;|5 2,31 by Click Distributors, La Crosse performance of said bid. sissippi River nt this point has failed to close. 1.55 the hospital by Praxel AmhUl: ..-Survivors include his-wife; March 50 -5 25.H5** 32,.2 1 ,211 Villi 1.62 . imce Service. one son, Roger, at home; one Terms of sale shall be cash upon delivery of a Seventy-five years ago . . . 1894 February 42 -14 1'1,'i 111.9 . 1 ,270 .011 .97 The car was a total loss. daughter , Miss Donna , La January . :.!. -17 11, H , 17,3 1 ,64!) .VJ2 1.17 warranty deed evidencing good titlo to the property The shod stores now keep open in lhe evening and the UK I.IKES DOUGH no later than December 30, 1969, jewelry stores will adopt tha same program next week , Totals for I'll..) (i ,;ur> 2.I.H I 3(1.01 WATERTOWN , N.Y. (AP) - A stone walk is being laid on the west sido of F, H. Pitt- 19IIK Ono doctor in Watertown appar- IRREGULAR? The Board reserves tho right to reject any or man a drugstore , DUE TO LACK OF FOOD " ' December 61 -17 19 ,0 21 .25 1,407 3.119 \,l\ ently likes the feeling of dough ¦ all bids. November ... . 72 19 :in, 74 35,1 .Wli ,H7 1.61 Dr . John E. Scanlon , nn oculist, BULK IN YOUR DIET October tin 27 so n 4«.;i -lio 3 49 won blue ribbons in white nnd TH One-Hundred Yea rs Ago . . . 1869 . .21 2. BRAN Frank Turtle , Clerk September .. . Hi) ;t7 60.2 (12.5 lit 5.112 3,76 whole wheat bread baking re. Z/ ^ , X The eold snap of last night has filled the river with icd August 911 44 7(1.4 (..1 .5 2.46 3,62 cently ut the Jefferson County y (mvppjBUDS Common School District No. 2606 of a pretty solid character. Totuls for ail of 19(18 fl, «!)'J HAD 31,01 Fair. Implied consent case is under advisement Judge Loren W. Torgerson today took under advisement the case of Darrel W. Peter- man, 38, Minnesota City, Minp., at the conclusion of an implied consent hearing in municipal court this morning. Peterrnan was charged with drunken . driv- ing ' early in the morning of Sept. 21 and subsequently al- legedly refused to submit a FATAL ACCIDENT ...Robert Sveum, car driven by David L. Thrune, 16, 184 N. test to determine the alcoholic 13, son of Mrs. Elna Sveum, 928% W. Bth Baker St. left Shive Road and landed on its content of his blood. Such re- St. was drowned Saturday night when this top in a drainage ditch. (Daily News Photo) fusal, under the 1961 implied consent law is grounds for six months license revocation. •The arresting office, Police Sergeant Lyle Lattman, said that about 2:35 a.m. Sept. 21, Boy 13, drowns when as he was northbound in his > ' ' NAMED AMBASSADOR . .. . . Max Conrad, second from Cong. Donald Clausen, California , and former Cong. Charles squad car on the Interstate right, receives certificate from Robert McQueen appointing Kefrsten , Milwaukee, a cousin of Conrad. The group attended Bridge, he met a truck that him an honorary member of Chamber of Commerce Ambas- a Saturday night testimonial banquet. (Daily News photo) later turned out to be driven sadors. McQueen is chamber president. Looking on are, left, by Peterrnan coming toward car overturns in ditch him in the middle of the road- A 13-year-old Winona boy would have taken them at least year ago. way. He said he quickly backed drowned Saturday night after ten ininutes to get there. He Two persons^died in a single southward from the bridge as the car in which he -was riding and patrolman Roger Garrison car accident^soutnwest of Albert the pickup came toward him. left Shive Road on Winona's arrived on the scene two or Lea " Sunday morning. Authori- At the bottom of the bridge, east side and flipped : into the three minutes later he said, and ties identified the victims as Conrad lea continued Lattman, the truck Lake Winona outlet ditch. found the car on its top three Judith Nelson, 21, Albert Lea, struck a traffic sign, turned Police said Robert Sveum, quarters submerged in the ditch. and Ronald J. McNamara, 23, left on 4th Street and then son of Mrs. Elna Sveum, 928% He estimated it to be eight feet Glenville. right at Washington Street, W. 5th St., was a passenger in deep. He said the car "appar- Officers said their> car "went where Lattman stopped him. the front seat of a 1956 model ently took one flip" as it went out of control while rounding a world-cirGlihg solo f light Lattman said that after watch- sedan driven by David L. over the embankment. curvie on a county road. ing Peterrnan walk and upon By AL DAVIS Thrune, 16, 184 N. Baker St. After a wrecker retrieved the A head-on collision on High- smelling alcohol on Peterman's The car went out Assistant News Editor of control on car from the ditch, the Winona way 61 south of Long Prairie breath he arrested him at the a lefthand curve .8 mile east night' of County coroner, Dr. Robert Saturday took the lives of About 350 persons jammed scene for drunken driving. . Mankato Avenue and apparent- Tweedy, pronounced Sveum John Steinert, 67, Long Prairie, Winona's air terminal, Max At police headquarters, Latt- ly overturned as it went over and Lawrence Oilman, 58, Wa- dead at the scene. Dr. Tweedy ' ' ¦ ¦ ' ¦ Conrad Field, Sunday after- man said, Peterrnan was ad- a 10-foot embankment at the said cause of death was drown- dena. : „ ' noon to bid farewell and God- vised of his rights and refused top of the curve. It landed on ing and that the only mark on Inez Oilman, identified by speed to Max Conrad, the "Fly- to submit to the urine test of- its top and broke through ice the body was a small bump on the Highway Patrol as the wife ing Grandfather," on his at- fered. covering the ditch. . the head. " . yf tf t of Lawrence Oltman, was hospi- Former Winona patrolman The police accident report talized in critical condition at tempt to fly solo around the Chief of Police James Mc- John Kiekbusch, wno assisted said the car was northbound Long Prairie. : world by way. of the North and Cabe said today that Thrune Lattman at the scene, corrob- into the curve when it skidded An eighth grader at Winona South Poles. told police he was not speed- orated Lattman's testimony 54 feet north on the roadway Junior High School, he was born Promptly at 2:58 p.m., two ing when the went into the that Peterrnan refused to sub- and then 47 feet west just off here April 27 .1956, to Harvey minutes ahead of schedule, the curve, but that something went * mit to the test. the roadway along tbe lip of the and Elna Heller Sveum. He had heavily-laden "St. Louis Wom- wrong with the car's steering. " a twin-engine Piper Aztec Peterrnan admitted that he embankment before going into attended St. Martin's Lutheran an, , the ditch. McCabe said police are still in- lifted off the runway and head- struck the sign at the south School from kindergarten Thrune and a passenger in vestigating ed west on the first leg of a pro- end of the bridge but said he through seventh grade and was the back seat, Clifford P. Mur- Sveum's death was thie sev- jected 34,000 mile globe-circling was not aware that he was un- in the junior confirmation class ray , 17, 1221 W. 4th St., escaped enth due to traffic accidents in adventure. der arrest at the scene. He at St. Martin's Lutheran said he was not aware that he from the car without injury. the city this year. Church. He was active in school Investigating policeman Mar- SATURDAY NIGHT, about was charged with drunken driv- Four more Minnesotans were sports. > vin Niemeyer said the youths 150 persons gathered at the ing until after he refused the killed oh state roads late Satur- Survivors are: His mother; who escaped must have gotten Park Plaza for a testimonial blood content test. Peterrnan day , and Sunday, raising the bwo brothers, Darryl and Ran- banquet to pay tribute to the said he asked for a lawyer at out of the car just before it Thanksgiving weekend toll to 12 sank through the ice. dal, Winona; a sister, Mrs. Jon veteran flyer. Robert McQueen, police headquarters but that and the count for the year to He said the ¦ ' ¦ " ' (Lavonne) Bitu , Goodview, and president of the Winona area nothing was done about it un- two called police 891. ., from Peerless Chain Co. to paternal grandparents, Mr. and Chamber of Commerce, who til after he had refused to sub- re- That figure compares with port the accident and that it 964 killed through Dec. la Mrs. Glen Brown, Osseo, Wis. wa« master of ceremonies at >READY FOR TAKEOFF ... With an takeoff tor his solo attempt to fly around the mit to the test. His father has died. the affair, read a telegram from estimated 350 people on hand for the" send- ¦world on a polar route. (Daily News photo) Attorney Dennis A. Challeen Funeral services will bt President Richard M. Nixon off , Max Conrad'i plane moves toward the appeared for Peterrnan and Tuesday at 2 p.m. at St. Mar- who was at his home In Key Lawrence T. Collins, special as- tin 's Church, the Rev. A. U. Biscayne, Fla. sistant' to the Minnesota attor- a lot better prepared arid have Car leaves road; Deye officiating. Burial will be "You have my very best ney general, appeared for the in Woodlawn Cemetery a lot better program now." wishes as you begin a flight state. Friends' may call at Breltlow- around the world over the Mayor Norman Indall spoke Minnesota City sets Mabel woman dies Martin Funeral Home this eve- poles," the telegram read. "As briefly at the Chamber-spon- ning after 7 and at the church long-range solo flyer, you have MABEL, Minn. (Special) Grove sored affair and the Rt. IWv. — A , the Rev. Emil Martin- Tuesday after I p.m. A devo- long devoted great skill and 24-year-old rural Mabel house- son officiating. Burial will be in tional service will be held this courage; as a flying grandfa- Msgr. Harold J. Dittman gave Banker is likely wife was dead on arrival at another road meeting the church cemetery, v . evening at 8:45 at the funeral ther, you have demonstrated the invocation and benediction. Winneshiek County Memorial . MINNESOTA CITY, Minn. - lage council was held Monday Friends may call at the Men- home. that the spirit of adventure Hospital, Decorah, Iowa, Sun- Also attending was Charles gis Funeral Home Mabel knows no barrier of age. You A general meeting concerning on an alternate west entrance fo be elected day morning after receiving a , , from A memorial is being ar- Kerstan, Milwaukee, a former 2 p.m. Tuesday. have my hopes for a successful the proposed alternate west en- as proposed by the state High- severe head injury in a car ac- ranged. ' and record-breaking trip." congressman who is also a first trance from relocated Highway way Department Nov. 19 to cident at 1:15 a.m. cousin of Conrad. 61 at Minnesota City will be held treasurer again County sheriff's officers said AMONG telegrams of good consider and comment on each In the two-month trip which Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the they believed Mrs. David Pe- wishes received were those from route of entrance. Twenty-one FOUNTAIN, Minn.-Hiram began Sunday afternoon, Con- village hall. The public is in- Johnson 81 in the banking terson was dead at the scene. former vice-president Hubert H, attended. , , rad will stop at Wichita Kan., vited . Her husband, 25, was driving Humphrey, Sen. Eugene J . Mc- , business 63 years and with the and Prescott beford arriving in A special meeting of the vil- CYRUS ANDERSON, owner First State Bank' of Fountain north on the Newhouse-Locust Carthy, Gov. Harold LeVander blacktop toward their home east ~v San Francisco on Tuesday. of a parcel of property affect- since 1909, may be elected treas- AtK^^^^BSjftm and Rep. Albert Quie. of Hesper, Iowa. He lost control Speaker of the evening was He is scheduled to leave Wed- urer of this village again Tues- ed, is opposed to cofistruction day, even though he like the on 'a sweeping right curve, Win- Rep. Don H. Clausen, San Fran- nesday for Honolulu, then will , be off for Tarawa in the Gil- of a new strdet from the high- other incumbents whose terms neshiek County Sheriff Eugene cisco, congressman from Cali- Street collision v ' ¦¦ 1 * *' run out, didn't file, Simenson said, veered into the > $_Kk, M JrStoZZ' '?¦' ' "'''- .^^^HflHtt^ti; fornia's 1st District. Clausen is bert Islands and on to Bris- way to Mill Street, according His wife is the former Mary right ditch, traveled 300 feet out president of the Congressional bane, Australia, where he has to the minutes, and presented a Truesdell of Taylors Falls. He of control and struck a tree. Aviation Association , a group of a daughter with two grand- injures 1 person sketch of what he considered met her 57 years ago when he The vehicle turned over and congressional aviation enthusi- children he has never seen. One person was slightly in- the proper route. was on the school board. Need- was demolished. asts. He is a former Navy pilot Conrad then will fly to Christ jured in an accident Sunday Robert Dunn , also a property ing a teacher he wrote to a Peterson received facial and and still active in aviation. Church, New Zealand, where he , holder involved, expressed op- Winona friend who recommend- head lacerations and was in Clausen paid tribute to Con- will prepare for the trip to mornyrtg which was investigated position to the new street, al- ed her for the position. great pain Sunday. X-rays were rad as having had a "tremen- Antarctica. His stops on Ant- by police. though admitting it would not Johnson left school after to be taken this morning at the dous impact, on aviation ." The arctica will be at McMurdo Gary Pankratz, 18, 616 Hamil- create a major inconvenience. eighth grade and worked in his Decorah hospital. congressman told of California 's Sound, where hd will put skis ton St,, was treated for head He suggested that if an alter- father's lumber yard and hard- The former Marilyn Ann Ran- present program of teaching on his plane; South Pole . Sta- lacerations and released from nate suitable to a majority of ware store. He didn't like it zenberger was born Dec. 23 flight and air mechanic train- tion , a Navy base where he Community Memorial Hospita l , property holders is not avail- and left for Nora Springs Iowa 1944, at Caledonia to' Rudolph ing in the high schools and vo- hopes to spend Christmas week, Sunday. The 1966 model jeep, , , able!, elimination of a west en- to work in a bank , He return- and Selma Olson Ranzenberger. cational sch and pointed out arid Byrd Station, where he will driven by ponald W. Schman- ools trance be considered. That did ed to the bank here in 1909. She graduated frorn Caledonia that more Flying Grandfathers takd the skis off his plane. ski, 18, Glen Mary Road, in not meet with favorable re- It bad opened in 1901. High School in 1962. She attend- were needed fo infor- From there, tho Flying whicli Pankratz was riding, col- . provide sponse. Now the bank has assets of ed Central Technical Institute, mation and experience for this Grandfather will be off for lided with a 1961 model station Punta Arenas, Chile. His other wagon driven by Alois W. Glenn Alleman, "with no pro- $3,322,0(55. His son, Charles, Kansas City, Mo., was employed program. perty connections suggested for a time at South American stops will be Schneider, 44, 3O3 E. 2nd St. , head of the Root River bank the Navy Depart- the entrance bd constructed ment in Washington yCUCLCCAL CONRAD was introduced to a at Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro at Broadway and Franklin at Chatfield and executive , D. C, and along tho south limits of St. by National standing Ovation which he ac- and Recife, Brazil. Street at 7:55 a.m. president and managing officer Airlines in New Paul's rectory as far as the of his father 's bank says he York City. She was married in knowledged with a shy smile Conrad then will take off Police said the car was north- , f II S PM (he east limits of the present street always helped youngsters get Germany March 9, 1%5. and a wav.c of hand. "I on the* 3,000-milo flight across bound on Franklin Street and separating the Anderson and n start and that's how he de- Survivors are : Her husband ; guess I can't back down now," the South Atlantic to Avagon, the jeep westbound on Broad- , he said. church properties, then south veloped First State Bank of two sons, Todd , 4, and Tracy, 2; CTAT^N. the capital of Ivory Coast. He way. The jeep flipped onto its to the! present village Front Fountain to its present status her parents and one sister, / Conrad , who will be 67 years fl there across the right side upon impact. will y from Street, terminating there if in a village with less than 400 Dawn , Caledonia , and one broth- old in January, snid there was Sahara Desert to Casablanca , one unusual aspect, nbouf his Schmanski admitted to police necessary. residents and trade territory er , Wayne, Waukesha , Wis. Morocco. feelings before taking off Run- he wont through a redt light. Mrs. Raymond Barlz , speak- hemmed in by Chatfield , Lanes- Funeral services will be Wed- Very often you Iif ar people sanctimoniously talking . He pleaded guilt to the charge day, "I' m ready for the first HIS NEXT stops will be y ing as a properly holder , ap- boro, Preston and Wykoff . nesday at 2 p.m. at, Highland about "Houses ol God." And they're right! and was fined $50 in municipal peared to favor Iow a Street Lulheran Church rural Spring time , and I don 't know it that's Pans, London and Oxford , Johnson said he bns "loved , Because that' s just what these places are—houses.) good or bad , " he joked . where he will give his airplane court this morning. Damage as an alternate but council every minute" of his career. NATIONAL ANIMAL Buildings. And they are no more "holy" than The former Winonan , who an inspection before continuing was $500 to the front of the car members said this would not. He still is president of the NEW DELHI (AP) who use them. now lives at. Prescott , . Ariz,, his flight over the* North Pole, and $fi00 to the jeep. be considered by the highway Fountain bank. , - lhe. the outside acts of the people Gir lion of said lie had not. be<.n sure, he From Oxford , he will fly to department because of proxi- western Gujarat In fact It might be a lot better if we thought of ouf si.al.fi , found in the well known , would be able to undertake the Tromso, Norway. Then begins mity to school , After much dis- Gir game preserve church or synagogue as a spi ritual "fillingstation" 34,000-rnile trip until late Wed- the longest leg of the trip, 3, 100 Loaded gun in cussion, no definite recommend- , has been se- None hurt in lected as India ' —a place not sheltering us from the world,' nesday because of some static miles across the North Pole ation was made for the Iowa s national ani- m*i l by the India n Board (or but giving us t he fuel to go out into the world. from the U.S. Navy. to Point Barrow, Alaska. boat brings fine Street route. Two property hold- car roll-over government, tourism "I don 't really think the Conrad's final stops will be ers along the projected now magazine. This week , in your church or synagogue, don't WHITEHALL , Wis. (Special) Wild Life, according Navy is too anxious for me to at Anchorage, Alaska; .Calgary, Ktrcck-^alternate wero absent, MINNEISKA , Minn . — Four to Yatri , a — In criminal court, before 'jusl sit there , Think about how far you can go duringi come," he snid 'with a smile, Alberta , Can., and Minneapolis youths escaped injury in a one- , Trempealeau County Judge A. MRS. ANN Rchtaman, owner Ihe week on the spiritual fuel you're taking in. "but. (hdy made mo promise where he will clda r U.S. cus- ear, roll-over accident at. 2:51 went another 105 feet in the L. Twesme Broneslaus J. Ci- of property at. the east, limit that. I would take briefings toms. The (ri p will end with n.m. Sunday on CSAH nl , 2Vz ditch and 09 feet across lhe Could you right a wrong? Coul d you be strong enough seivski paid .$-12 on a charge of of ihe new street, replied that miles southwest of Highway fil from them and do what, they the short hop from the Twin road , struck a hank on the right to take a stand nn a moral issue where tho " popular" unlawfully transporting a load- it made no difference to her. and 2-/.i miles west of here in side of the roadway and rolled loll me to do and now I'm Cities back to Winona. thing would be to remain silent? ed gun in a motor boat. He was Regarding alternate No. 1, the Whitewater Township, over, The vehicle came lo rest ready to take off. " "Hopefully," Conrad said at arrested by a conservation Front Strdct route , no comment Sheriff George Fort said on ils top. art of kindness with no hope Conrad, who expects to re- Ihe airport. Sunday, "I'll ho Cnuld you do a simple warden. wan heard from property own- Charles Heins , 17, Kellogg, was His . passengers were : .John lin n lr» Winona Jan. 29, said of return , for the nin-vt unloved person you know? back on .Ian. 29. But, it might ers directly affected hul. com- driving a lfffifl sednn south on Schemer , Ifl , ,St . Paul; Peggy thoughl it was important, for just take n little longer. " George Qiiackcnbush paid $32 This week , don 't let your faith idle, Step on the gas. he ments from others indicated op- CSAH 31 when Ihe vehicle trav- Costello , 17, Winona , anrl The* ¦ni American lo complete the on a disorderly conduct charge. position because .-mother resi- eled 105 feet on the left side of resn Lnmey, IR , Minneiska , I irsl. round-the-world solo flight ELEPHANTS RAMPAGE The state's case against dence would be eliminated , ac- Ihe roadway and into the ditch , The car was a total loss. of Ihis type ovCr the poles. He SHILLONG, India (AP) - George C. Jacobson , charged cording to present plans. The said he wns " proud to he able Wild elephants on a rampage with causing the death of an- in Dekiajul , a small tea town in other with a high degree of neg- council also opposes Ihis route ^BHHHiiHHHBHOTHHHHHHH ^ to undertake the flight. " A _ Wlnoni loii(jt No, 11 A.F. ft AM- Darrang district, reportedly ate ligence in handling a vehicle, for the same reason, Modifica- I IK attempted a similar flight a major portion of this year's wns adjourned lo the spring tion according lo earlier sugges- I A ELECTION OF OFFICERS , PuMhhnriim n% i* public, iarvlr. it last ye.ir but was turned back sugar cane crop and badly dam- term of county courl. It will lie tions would be considered ¦ , Roli ion In American UU liy bad weather nea r the South aged fta gerdens CfW TUESDAY , DEC. 2 —7:30 P.M. In coopeinlion wllh The Ailvertliln*; Council g ,\ and bctelnut on fhe jury calendar. Ile was i fM nd Tha Interhatlonal N*_w «>|)apor Advertising Executive* Polo , "'I pulled some hondrs frees. The reason \y\ Din,iar Club ~~ 6:15 • for the ram- arrested by Steve Hanson , In 1845 the popu lation of Bos- 1I '/ Apron Presentation Walter A. Dopke, W.M. last yo.-ir , " he anid , "but I'm page wns not known. Strum, counl y traffic officer. ton was about lis.noo . ' : ' ' MARK-TRAiL ' By Bd Dodd Television review QLha ^^ ^ pecials 7W/\ one-//ner cf/es Excellent s shown at same time By CYNTHIA LOWRY choreographed. Miss Fleming, but lm^ NEW YORK (AP) - One ice now a professional, is as grace- show, Inevitably, is pretty much ful ana easy today as in her By EARL WILSON like another ice show-they are Olympic days. NEW YORK — A lot of laughter went out of the world when not, after all, television rarities. great comedian Jack Waldron , "Mr. One-Lincr," died the other And, to some segments of the "Sadbird ,'' the "CBS Play- day at 76, and all of us on B'way mourn the face that launched viewing public, one singing house'' original to be broadcast a million quips. group with a guitar sounds a lot tonight is that rare thing in a He went from Brooklyn to Al Capone 's Chicago gangland luce another. dramatic series, a comedy. It And became "clown prince for the hoods." That was the place But an ice show starring Peg- pits rebellious youth against the you went to be funny then. He used to say, "The boss stabs gy Fleming who as an amateur establishment—and the estab- " Business was often dead—as was many a captured an Olympic gold med- lishment for a change, seems to you goodnight. ' ¦ customer . . . IT was "an electric chair with music." If U.S. exhibit al, is a viewing treat. And the :win. . ¦:;•' ' the laughs didn't corner"! know you 're out there, I can hear 1970 license fees for first hour-long TV concert by Si- The victory presumably is you breathing . . . Is tins mute mon and Garfunkel, the talented playwright George Bellak's on the bum or this bum on happily married Mrs. Hilly El- young team of singers-compos- great joke in his comedy. It is the mike?" . - " Woodward' in Moscow ers, surely comes under the the story of a free soul, leader kins) . ..f t. -Joanne s same heading. Unfortunately, Entertainers were supposed been , rehearsing on upper B-way of an antiseptic colony of well- to lose their salaries gambling sharply their special programs were scrubbed hippies (no drugs but for the film "They Might Be campers go up scheduled on NBC CBS re- with the bosses. f t '.. Godfrey Cambridge and all the other trimmings). His in- Giants" . . ' spectively at the same hour volvement with a syndicate shy- "What's your best game?" took off another 15 lbs. ( 185 in By GERRY NELSON license tag costing about $20. tered the same as a passenger is 'lively him directly one The new fee will'be around $40. car, with a top fee of $78.75. De- Sunday night .: lock forces him into employ- one boss asked 1 ali i and decided to take a rest. Associated Press Writer MOSCOW (AP) — Russian- f t night - . .. ./ . . - 'Football , ' said pending on the weight, such rigs ment by a toy company as an Mia . Farrow's ma, Maureen ST. PAUL (AP ) — Owners of Under the law , the license speaking Americans have Several years ago Thomas industrial spy. Our long-haired Jack. O'Sullivan, will become a na- may pay less tax, but it will re- turned a potentially dull U.S. Moore, then president cf ABC- "Talk about juvenile delin- camping trailers and old school plate fee for recreational ve- main constant rather than step- hero then finds he likes the but- tional director . of "Wediquette," buses converted to campers are nicles is based solely on weight. education exhibit into one of TV, suggested setting up a three toned-down world , computers, quency, I came from such a a franchising bridal consultant ping down every three years as Moscow's liveliest outings. network registration bureau of ' tough school in Chicago , we finding an unpleasant surprise There is no age factor, such as do passenger car plates. competition, caviar, martinis service . . .-;- . Mrs. Robert Shaw "We jet off the subject very specials so these unfortunate and even money, only celebrated one holiday — when they open 1970 license ap^ in the fee schedule for cars and Sponsors of the 1989 law were collisions could be avoided: The . (Mary UreV flew to London to plications. trucks. fast here," says Irene Murray, Dillinger's birthday. have yher baby. (And just in Sens. Jerome Blatz, Blooming- other networks would not con- Robert Foxworth , beneath his In most cases, it'll cost them Thus, an old bus or. trailer an attractive guide irom Gulf- tousled curls, is an attractive v- "I remember my best friend' s thine "-.— airlines won't carry ton ; Jerome Hughes,; Maple- port, Miss. sider it. wedding in Vegas. The minis- more money. pays just as much as a new one wood , and Henry Harren , Al- One result was that large newcomer and almost convinces pregnant galsMpr 5 weeks be- of the same weight. that he has really found himself ter said , 'I now make you one fore the birUiJ/ >".. . Producer The change results from a lit- bany . . . "Our talks usually start with numbers of viewers on Sunday the hard way'. ... . I had a girl A lawsuit challenging tbe law education, but they turn person- night missed some happy , some and his own true love in a world Fred Brisson "decided ; There'll tle-noticed law adopted by the The law defines recreational de- always breaking dates . She has been filed in Ramsey Coun- equipment as "house trailers, al, political or anything else as moving moments. he had renounced and be no glamorous premier party 1969 legislature creating a new ty District Court , but. has hot nounced. The (M ininufaes is load- stood me up more times than for "Coco . . . . Woody Allen 's class called "recreational equip- including those which telescope soon as the ice is broken." The Simon and Garfunkel ' "The Star Spangled Banner. * yet come to trial. " ~ Miss Murray is one of 21 hour was an unusual and com- ed with sharp corriment on the hoping his replacement "in . ''' 'Play ment." br fold down, chassis mounted , tribal rites of both worlds. - , - ' -. In vaudeville, I was as Sam 2,000 to campers, house cars, motor guides, most of them young and pelling treatment of their mu- . . It Again, " will bd tommy A lightweight camping trailer, Howes said there are sym- busy as a mustard paddle in Smothers (who 'll see it this homes, tent trailers slip in all of them fluent in Russian, sic, their Ideas and their emo- Jack Albertson gives a ¦ ' for example,.used to get by for 3,000 old buses in Minnesota * pathetic performance as thi the Stage Delicatessen . - . . I week). which have beert converted for campers, converted buses and who have traveled with the U.S. tions. It was handled partly by almost got. killed in the Auto- $1 a year in license plate cost. Information . their singing of their own music honorable it naive toy company Ringo Starr s coming to N.Y. It now costs $5 a year. camping and recreational uses. converted vans." .Agency—sponsored mat. I was: eating a piece of pie . exhibit frorn Kiev to Leningrad against a montage of film and owner and Jack Weston has a for the Feb. 3 premiere of his "We've, gotten quite a few Owners of these rigs are re- An additional definition says funny cameo role as the syndi- and the little door fell 'down "Magic Christian" film , . . weighed in and finally to Moscow. . --- .,- TV clips, some old, some new. telephone calls," says W. E. quired to have them the law applies to vehicles not When they talked, it was the cate's muscle man. and hit me on the neck . . • I Andy Warhol .makes his movie order to determine the tax. used as a residence but used : as * The questions the Russians was invited to Hollywood by a Howes, head of the. state motor single voice of today's young— It is an amusing, if occasion- debut in "The Telephone¦ Book ," vehicle division in the secretary The weight and tax categories living quarters by persons "en- ask reflect a determination to ally overdone, effort. film producer, but was so ¦. ' ¦ find out who is ' against violence and war, of eating popcorn . ... . Armando of state's office. range - fro $5 a year for a light gaged in recreational or vaca- right—-the Soviet emptiness and a loss of direc- broke I wired him, 'I can make Met welcomes women in pants rig weighing up to 1,500 pounds, tion activities." press or the Voice of America. it as far west as Newark.' " tion. But it was their bittersweet suits to his Iperbole restau- Howes said the change came to $126 a year for a bus or van In the case of campers moun- and nostalgic music heard Waldron, who became . a big rant . . . He asks, "If you bar from the legislature and was not "Is it true that most young . weighing between .21,000 and ted on pickup trucks, an owner people take dope in Am- against a visual background of cafe and stage name back in women with pants suits what requested by his office. , has a choice. He can register — 27 000 pounds. erica?" one crew-cut young mountains and towns, cornfields Hollywood and Miami Beach, do you do about men with dress Among the biggest Increases Howes said that owners of the entire rig as a recreational was credited with creating the man asked. and superhighways that was INEMA suits?" ... The newlywed Bob will be in license plates for bus- custom made motor homes may vehicle or as a truck. If the EVENINGSC ONCE AT 7:41 , most effective. lines, "I wouldn't give this spot (Ali MacGraw) "No but it's a growing prob- , Evans bought es used for camping. get by more cheaply under the camper is removed inv the off- It was an Interesting attempt .00.$1.5O-$1.00 to a leopard," and "I got more tickets to the Rolling Stones con- '• lem,'' Miss Murray replied *2 A 1952 bus weighingvi2,000 new law. season, however, the truck must calmly. to do something different in a NO PASSES laughs changing a tire in the cert, v pounds got by this year for a A motor home is now regis- carry a truck license. v Holland " "Do they teach Marxism-Len- musical form. Tunnel. A werld-famed comic showed Peggy Fleming and the ice Jack's death of a massive up at Luchow's with two of his inism in American universi- ENDS TUESDAY ties?" follies vvas a big, sleek and col- heart attack ; followed a sched- comedy writers. ' 'Why," some- Business mirror another visitor asked. orful skating extravaganza, lav- ule of overwork — free shows one wondered , "would he come Ask Judd "Not only Marxism-Leninism, ishly produced and beautifully he did for charity benefits, plus here with two writers?" "In hla duties , as "Shepherd" or but Maoism, Castroism and oth- case," he was told, "the waiter ers," she answered. The visitor- BEST PICTURE president of the Lambs. Singer asks for his order, he won't be Tommy Dillon, vice presiden t, appointment Rock'taking over looked stunned; but he appeared stuck for an answer." to accept the reply, OFTHE YEAR!f replaces him. Harry Hershfield, " Order hearing bis close colleague, also from TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: At American salaries, cars, size WINNER S 1 a H'wood wedding it's net al- of apartments, the Vietnam Chicago, says of the mobsters, lo Paris talks ACADEMY AWARDS!jfc "Jack was with them, but nev- ways the girl who catches the music business war, divorce, artticommunlsm, bouquet who's next to get mar- WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. the price of the guide's dress, er of them." By WHAYNE EISENMAN Box Magazine, one of the music on destruction ried. Sometimes it's the girl Clark MacGregor, R-Minn., aaid and the American view: . of : Rus- "Mr One-Liner" has gone but Friday AP Business Writer industry's bibles. Few others in his one-liners will live. The oth- who tosses it. he has asked President sia typify the questions that the Nixon to consider naming for- NEW YORK (AP) - The kids the industry quarrel with the guides handle daily." y . - . er comics stole them while he WISH I'D SAID THAT: "I statement. . lived, they're hardly likely to try to stay young by associat- mer Rep. Walter Judd , R-Minn., who grew up on rock music are Miss Murray and "the others of wilderness quit now. ing with young people — but I to succeed Henry Cabot Lodge adults with jobs now, and in- Last year, record sales stand alone on platforms or in as head of the U.S. delegation stead of just listening, they're booths displaying tape record- MARQUETTE, Mich (AP) - Aren't Honey Merrill , Jackie get eld trying to keep up with boomed through the $1 billion A U.S District Court hearing _ Gleason's ex-fiancee and singer them." — Ted Chinell to the Paris peace talks. also buying, probably to the mark and reliable estimates ers, teaching machines and oth- . WINNER OF 6 to, . has been set for Dec. 9 to de- Dick R^man going startle Mi- MacGregor, who met with the tune of $500 million a year in re- rock music between 40 and er American educational aides. ACADEMY REMEMBERED Q U O .T-vE . : five termine whether a preliminary i sd*mk ami Beach friends by getting "The first thing I look for iii President Wednesday, said Mr. cords alone. 0 per cent of the market, de- AWARDSI a "Rock is rapidly taking over the Russians drift from one injunction should be issued for- SSfam married along about Christ- woman is intelligence; the last Nixon expressed interest, but pending on how one defines bidding destruction immmivm Fnn mas? ... N.Y. friends of U.S the music picture," says Marty booth to another, sometimes of the "wil- . . thing I expect is under- gave no indication as to who rock. comparing the derness character " of 19,000 TS^KNTlFfCCUCTON OTR MJ Senator Vance Hartke, D-Ind., Ostrow, vice president of Cash answers of the standing." — Omar Sharif. would succeed Lodge, . Meanwhile, young, long- various guides and noting that acres of federal land in Gobeg- § D LEAN8 feel hrfa collecting a brain trust Judd , 69 and a medical doc- haired musicians who once tc County. LJS J^iBss with his eye on the Presiden- EARL'S PEARLS: Al Devore the guides' opinions differ wide- trttmnsmwi, r '^^^QSi claims he saw a sign in a Tex- tor, served ten terms in Con- caused conservative parents to The land was purchased by tial or V.P. nomination . . . gress from 1943-1962. He was a snicker at names like "Blood Johnny Meyer was riding as drive-in theater: "Please an- Lyndia Stoopenkoff of San the government two years ago DOCTOR one,of swer your car phone imitiedi- member of the House Foreign Sweat and Tears," "The Rolling his boss Aristotle Onassis' Questioned in Francisco, one of the guides, and a detailed recreational ZHHAGO tely to avoid annoying other Affairs Committee for 16 years Stones," "Steppenwolf ," "Led shocked about Bo Russians in development plan for the area mrjuuvisiOH'ANOunMMiM Olympic Airways planes London patrons. and a delegate to the United Na- Zeppelin, and "Jefferson Air- to Paris when a steward said, " her booth one day this week Was filed last November. Bobby Ramsen told of a tions General Assembly in 1957. plane" pull in thousands of fans when a visitor asked her what SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT "Here's a switch. A movie star plumber who sent a bill He was also a delegate to the • willing to pay as much as $8 a On Nov. 12, nineteen Individ- wants to know if you're Johnny for fatal deer ' she thought about the space STARTS WED. $108. A customer protested , "but World Health Organization As- ticket for live performances. * race. uals and three conservation Meyers." It was Stewart Gran- I took my whole famil sembly in 1950 and 1958 and to groups filed a suit in an effort ger, very prosperous filming y to a doc- And ta p e d -m u a lc sales, "I'm against all cosmonauts tor and got them all examined the first Consultative Assembly spurred by the advent of the and all astronauts," she replied to prevent federal officials from westerns in Europe after hav- slaying carrying out their plans to de- ing done well with real estate for only $60!" The plumber at Strasbour g in 1951. hunt cassette cartridge, are contrib- bluntly. "They cost too much shrugged : "That's right. That's Having lived 10 years in China MILWAUKEE UP>-Police said uting a growing part of the money." velop the Sylvania section of in Arizona. the Ottawa National Forest. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . what I got paid when I was a as a medical missionary, Judd a 36-year-old laborer was being buoyant rock music business. doctor." .,.... That's earl, broth- was considered an expert on questioned today about the fatal Bnt she got her best reaction The land ls located along the NITES: ¦7: 1M:20 Rod Stelger's due in to share ' Music companies don't like to when a woman asked her exact- Michigan-Wisconsin border. . some time with his dtr. through er. China and other parts of Asia shooting of a Milwaukee deer give exact dollar figures for 3U-il25-it.St> and worked in areas of China hunter whose body was discov- ly when American education be- The suit also seeks a dec- a very harmonious arrange- First navigation of the North- fear of tipping off the competi- gan to develop the machines laratory judgment to prevent ment with Clare Bloom (now under communist control as far ered during the weekend ih Co- tion. west Passage by a single ship back as 1930. lumbia County, now on display in Moscow. cutting of timber, trees and ENDS TUESDAY was completed by Norwegian ¦ A j. WINONA DAILY NEWS -v The victim, James Derrick , But Clive Davis, president of "When you launched your shrubs in the area and to bar ™« Winona, Mlnneiota explorer Roald Amundsen's There are almost 300 golf 48, a factory worker had gone Columbia Records, long a lead- first Sputnik ," she said. Tho construction of roads, JohnVifeyne MONDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1*69 Gjoa In 1903. courses in North Carolina. deer hunting Nov. 21, and had er in the industry, said rock now sigh of satisfaction from the In addition, the suit requests been staying in a house trailer accounts for 60 per cent of his crowd was almost audible. an injunction forbidding any- Rock Hudson near Pardeeville whore his body company's sales, compared Exhibit director Tom Craig of thing "which would be destruc- ¦" was discovered Saturday. with 25 per • cent about five Seattle said in an interview he tive of the wilderness charac- the Columbia County coroner Ken- years ago. believes the guides should ex- ter of the area ." neth Reuhl said Derrick had press their personal opinions The plaintiffs contend that ^ndefeate d been shot In the face at close He said he believed rock ac- freely "for the sake of credibili- the government's plan would range -with a shotgun , and had counted for about half of the ty." bring about 800,000 persons in- been dead four days or more. $1.1 billion industry sales total to the area for recreational ATTENTION "If they're all delivering the purposes, thereby destroying In .1968. The victim's car was found same line Sunday by police in a Milwaukee "Contemporary rock music Is ," he said , "it the "wilderness character" of parking lot, wouldn't go over.' the land. being treated as serious music Crai Columbia County authorities now and appeals to the 21-to-35 g estimates that the ex- The plaintiffs also claim that Residents of the said there were several weapons hibit will have been seen by the plan violates the spirit of year age group as well as teen- 800 fn Derrick's Pardcovfllo trailer , agers," Davis said, "This is due ,000 persons—or one In every the Wilderness Act approved by 30Q Soviet citizens—when but that the weapon with which to the mass appeal for the first it Congress in 1964, And, they "BATTLE OF BRITAIN" he was slain was not among time of serious popular music." completes Its six-city tour next contend there is a right "of them. spring. tlie public to have such areas STARTS WED. The body was discovered by The words of the songs put the The exhibit , part of the U.S.- preserved as wilderness . . . " a man who lives near the trail- music, in the "serious" catego- Sovict cultural exchange pro- DEFENDANTS In the suit er , and who said he was asked ry. Many are songs of protest. gram , closes in Moscow Dec. 3. are U. S. Secretary of Agricul- 4th by one of Derrick's Milwaukee Most have a definite message, a ture Clifford Hardin ; Edward WARD¦- < -. acquaintances to investigato the comment on the problems both- P. Cliff , chief of the U.S, For- n Do you know that every city surplus fund that wa* built up by trailer becauso Derrick had been ering young people today. Gets sentenced est Service; Ralph Kizer, su- tVilifcl-j previous councils hai boon drained to give you a so-called tax do- absent for several days. An exact figure for rock sales pervisor of the Ottawa Nation- NITES: 7:15.»:15 al Forest, crease? Is complicated by various defi- to marriage and Marsh Lefflcr , nitions of the term. district, supervisor for the por- Winona Daily Newa BUFFALO, N.Y , (AP1 - tion of the forest thnt is in- ENDS TUESDAY Do you know that you will be rapped willi a costly sower tax lo Between the clear-cut cate- Douglas Page, 20, of suburban volved. ] gories of "hard" rock and the provide for this so-called tax decrease? MONDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1W» Cheekl owaga explained in City The 10 • p a g e complaint "popular " music of say, Frank Court Friday that he was ar- against them lists 1!) individu- LIZA MINNEILI VOLUME IM. NO. * Sinatra, Is the gray area of rested on charges of public in- al plaintiffs, most of them Wis- Do you know that more money has been spent for additional help PublKhrd dally except Saturday and Hol< country-rock, rock performers toxication and disorderly con- consin residents, Several of the Irfnys by R-ipt.hllc.ir. and Herald Publish- who sometimes sing ballads, such as anistants to the assistants , etc — than ever before in the inn Company, *01 Fran'-lln St.. Winona duct because he had been cele- individuals are identified as con- winn. SS98; * balladccrs who also sing rock , history of our City Council? brating his last, night ns a bach- st"'»'ntlon leaders. " popular music with a rock bent SUASCRIPTION RATES elor. The conservation groups who Slngli Cony - 10c Dally, 20c tun-lay as well as rock music with a JtldRe Wilbur P. Trammcll asked for the injunction were WHAT DOES THIS ALL MEAN? It meant that the financial statoments popular appeal boyond the nor- •DMIveired hy Carrlir-P«r W«oK 50 cent! dismissed* the charges and said: the Michigan Audubon Society , presented by the City Council are misleading. We are governed by IA wMki in ;.s s? we tit, tl_i . SU mal rock audience. "I sentence you to marriage." Wisconsin Resource Consorva- Page began his torm later tion Council and the Wisconsin lax happy free spenders. Oy mall itrlctly In advance* p-nper nop Even BO , there in general p«l on expiration data: Friday, right on schedule. Ecological Society. In Fillmore, Houston, Olm»t«d, Watiiiha, agreement that it is rock in its ond Winona countlm In Minnasotai Bul- various forms that turns on the I'M TIRED OF UNNEC ESSARY SPENDING! ARE YOU? lion, Jflckior., P«pln, and Iremoaalnau COM« ONI . . . COMB ALL I countlM In Wisconsin, ani) to military 17-to-24 yenr olds, And tliey ac- r- ^* ^^^ k rxiritnnnH wllh military a<1(1rejs»» In tha counted for 51 per cent of 1068 continental United State-, and overiw Lutefisk « Lefse with APO nr FPO addresses record sales, according to the SCHAFSK0PF VOTE • yntr tin oo .1 momh» ss oa Record Industry Fact Sheet, FOR n fo-nmsiml Pitiurei Prnw»nl _, » monlhi «.(io I month J7. O0 trade publication. DINNER Elmwlnre — TUESDAY Alanjfblda ^,,^^- In United Motes and Canada I ytar moo a montha %i «> THURS., DEG. 4 *. montha JII.M 1 monlh »? Mi 5 p.m. Sunday Nawi only, I year »/ v. "W NIGHT CONSTIPATED O Photu fJISfl for \ JERRY at BCRZYSKOWSKI Second DUE TO LACK OF FOOD MM class postage p^ld Winona " ^^BVS^L Minn BULK IN YOUR DIET ¦ Roitrvatlont A VOTE FOR JERRY IS A VOTE FOR ACTION •Send ch/moe ol adrt'. -ss nnncrt unrteliv i »rrd copies, iiib.r.ipiinn orders aoo ome. |# 0 EAGLES BURT LANCASTER ¦ PAID ADV P. -Tarrd (inrl invfrlerl nl rroulnf . rlm r-li . mg nl» hv In rv Rnr •v'Anw .ki , » _¦ * liml llh Mrr-H, moll Items in Wnn-'a Dally News f u ™L/oa BRAN •0« Ifl. Wlnpnn • STEAK SHOP "GYPSY In hi*, own txlKll. \- inn SS5B. y(w , > > — ^______B______i______H___S^_S____ ffc *£& v, ^______L ^^^r \ ' ' \ +> ^ ' ' ' L ' ¦ ' ' ' ¦Zf ' '' *'t ^ ^^ ^ -^^m' M *- V.&1 £ 1* -iBt *9Bl1^_H_PaK9K______B____K'v_-» t »^»^^^^^-*^» ^" -***+**** -*w v^v -. ^^^L ^^^^ \ ^T^ " 'p.. ' » /" t \A.;f t^L§KlnfilP&r '*> '^H'S^fflrff ^^^^k a ^^T T l *^^** s 90 " Ss ..:.... ; 5 Wa *¦« mo»t to-npiM,^c i I Beautiful LANE CEDAR CHESTS 1|g \ 1.\. jf jfj ifj r **» ^*J^ Cjjg '1' l DOSSER $C90 =£Sg U ' ^ "^^ 1 ^ W '^'V V -.-— • B rnaple, !l \ ! i f (ff ir <# \^\ :-.^.—i —_*. m^r 2™i^^^pecan or oak. Shop now whd« mH :- *****—¦* m JS9L \ il LAMPSfcr^n , , ^m3 ' ^^mMJ f tJLJJzr m m^ ==== ^, ^^^^ ^^^^ \m^^ ^^ = ^^& t*HCSOfe i i3PB f ^^t ______^^A ' "" 1 z-X' M- selection is at its greatest — and use our ff Wm ^ \ "=^i m. V^M ——^' Jf ' £} ft ~ ' \ ^^ ¦ ' ^ BED M M £ *^ m ~I3 Mft Free ofLayaway until you want delivery, f I^UfJ ^k"=;==- X.: ' Wgm - ' tMt* *AW M ==;M «9 ¦ Jk 7iJ %^ ^#V Best all. Winona Furniture's prices LAMPS ;,.. 1 W Ef tftE^m WINONA FURNITUR E'S ^ ¦ J^ ^%^- m, JH1 ,*2j_£L . . f| %V ¦ ¦ V ¦ JU- ¦ r ——< i !¦ ¦¦ !¦ ¦» . B ^ ^ft "**^**^"*"*****.^ ' ' ' ' ' ^^^^__ k_. J^^^ ^H ^^ ¦ ). B^So--..-^—ZZZEELrM 14 STYLES TO BUYCKS^^^TUD TL-"^ , M g!g§M EMTDESK,,y LE ¦ ~ ^fi^^rt^^ ": ^ ffffl^ ^ s T \ ZI~~ JF w\%3WlVCImV _ffm______W*^V. ^= LIBERAL TERMS FURNISHINGS OF ACCLAIM ARE FOUND AT 166 MAIN CHRISTMAS OPENINGS - won, .im- M . 9«9 - scio^y, 'tm 5. North Central makes How about naming poor justice? a poor backstop WASHINGTON - The dust is out- Puritan ethics— the one dealing ^ wardly settling over the controver- with mercantile sin.) When 'Winona recently permitted North Central rejection of the sy that saw Senate THE CLEAR and the patent truth Airlines? to suspend its air service here, after it nomination of Clement Haynsworth fgI BJff lEBjSJggBwSZmmmBSmmSBXEaBmmm is that the liberals turned Hayns- 1, 1W» had assisted in securing a third level service, North to the Supreme ta Winona Dallv News. Winona. Minnesota, Monday, Decembsr of South Carolina worth down primarily because of his Central agreed with the Civil Aeronautics Board but a rare inner bitterness riedly pondering, in the afterlight, Court, legal philosophy on such as civil that it would be a back-stop: If the new small air- and discontent yet endure. The odd whether this may not turn out lo rights — which, ironically, is not line should fold, North Central would resume, reality is that nobody is really happy be a famous victory that they will in time heartily wish they had not really all that far from their own — about it all. ¦ ¦ ' ¦ Nixon Or did it? , " ' . - and. secondarily because he is from Understanding The Southrnefs — but for the won. . the Deep South. The earnest protes- Mankato has had the same arrangement since call- For, having had their way here excited, but merely attending to twin anti-Haynsivorth defectors tations of senators from states hold- not lost February. Since then it has been served by ed. Albert Gore of Tennessee and (and haying been pretty rough about the chores of citizenship, he votes for ) ing powerful labor and minority- Fleet Airways of Minneapolis. Suddenly last Mon- it, too they now fear that next time Gregory for president. _ Ralph Yarborough of Texas — are group constituencies that it was only Dick day Fleet announced at would suspend operations h onestly convinced that Haynsworth President Nixon may present them Anyway, Mr. McGinniss decided to ¦ ' their own profound ethical sensitivi- immediately. . f t . " . .... , with a court nominee who is far more job in Philadelphia and write was in the end a victim of reverse ties that made Haynsworth unaccep- quit his or geographical, discrimination. And conservative than Haynsworth ever Climbing higher every week on the a book about the role of television Well, what about North Central? Did it hop table fooled nobody in the .Senate it- __ this point is not without its merit. was. And then what? bestseller list is "The Selling of the in the making of a president. He ap- right into the breach ? self , whatever may have been the The liberals made their public President 1968," by Joe McGinniss, proached the Nixon people who re- THE REPUBLICAN conservative*. case against Haynsworth on the case with the public. treating On the contrary, Its first response was that the fruit of an elaborate deception ceived him most amiably, generally are no less genuinely con- ground that even though he had done In a word, should President Nix- in from the Mankato airport was inadequate for its planes which has brought joy and hope to him like a young nephew vinced that Haynsworth . was de- nothing illegal in his private busi- on choose to come back at them the Nixon-haters. wants to sit in for but it would help Mankato find "a new . and bet- the prairies who stroyed for what is in truth an only ness ventures, he nevertheless had now with an appointee who never ", the fam- ter, service." Among other things it has offered to The book, by the way, is wonder- a few months and see how mildly conservative point of view. ' showrr a certain "insensitivity" to owned a dollar's worth of stock and provide records of negotiations which produced ful reading, and catnip for those ily business works. And this estimate has even more v the notion that the bench must not whose philosophy made Haynsworth who get their kicjes out of reading commuter airline service to Winona , , soporific trta*- reality. . only be, but also appear to be, clean- look angelically liberal, the liberals how on a particular day during the ZAP I-Far - from' the " Television in With* such an attitude toward its obligations, The liberal coalition that turned er than the cleanest hound's tooth. simply could not make this sensi- presidential campaign a particular Use on the Uses of " Mr. McGinniss. it's good to report that the new commuter airline Haynsworth back is having second (It is an interesting parenthesis that tivity ploy work again. That horse television adviser to Richard Nixon Political Campaigns, on presiden- serving Winona is enjoying excellent patronage. The thoughts about its triumph — and while most of the liberals are proud- has run its last race. To justify a gasped with horror on seeing a par- brought out a volume under- alternative, at this moment, doesn't seem very for two wholly different reasons. ly anti-traditionalist, they had . re- second rejection, and one of an out- ticular television performance by tial politics that any of the have given promising. —A.B. Pragmatically, the liberals are wor- course here to the harshest of the right conservative, they would have Spiro Agnew — that kind of thing. ground newspapers would to come forward with a candor not their last joint to be able to serialize. yet shown. SO THE BOOK does have an that it makes most excel- 'I've neve r won a thing in my life -— good luck I repeat Judging without justice , pal!' They would simply have to admit ideologically salacious appeal, al- lent reading: It isyunquestionably a that they didn't like the fellow be- though it is not on that account that work of art. As a thesis, however, The massacre of Vietnam civilians by United cause he disagreed with them over it is being greeted" so ecstatically by it is pure pretension. States troops iri 1968, if true, indeed is "abhorrent the critics. Mr. McGinniss has told the Constitution. And this they The thing to remember is that an to the conscience of all the American people," as would never do; though this observ- us something important. The thesis of identical job could have been done President Nixon put it Friday. er has never understood why not. the book, they believe, is that we on Humphrey, on Gene McCarthy on Objection to the constitutional view- have for the first time a real inside But where does this leave Lt. William L. Calley Bobby Kennedy: And for that matter point of a man about to mount a look into the mechanics of image- Jr. who faces a court-martial as a result of the on Dwight Eisenhower. From the bench of utterly unchecked power making. The idea of the Nixon peo- allegations? day that the importance of televi- seems to this columnist perfectly val- ple was to sell the voting public on sion was recognized, politicians and id — if honestly put. Richard Nixon by giving the public How can he enjoy a fair trial on a charge of politicians' fuglemen have scouted premeditated murder with the massive only the view of a man who in fact pre-trial AND YET to do justice to the lib- the whole area of image-improve- publicity, much of which'is presented as conclusive — didjiot exist. just about ' eral coalition, its lack of real hap- ment. Nixon was told by ^evidence. The genesis of it all was the res- piness here does have its fairer side. everybody in the world that he lost tlyeness of a very bright.young man I960 because he The national organizations of lawyers and edit- For there is among the liberals an the presidency in who had been . writing'a column for best in televised de- ors haye recently agreed to new guidelines on pre- uncomfortable awareness that there fared second; the Philadelphia Inquirer. We have the decision was trial, and trial publicity. With the assistance of po- is an inescapable hypocrisy in cry- bates. Accordingly the measure of his own political in- with Humphrey tential trial witnesses , and others anxious to humili- ing out against a judge's "insensitiv- made not.to debate clinations — both when hei is mov- attention to his ate the military establishment and our presence in ity" in a chamber where many of and to pay special ed passionately, and when he is mov- television exposure during the cam-. South Vietnam, not only has the agreement been the members are habitually engaged ed deliberately. After the assassi- shredded but Lt. Calley has been dealt Western in off-Senate transactions against paign. nation of Robert Kennedy he wrote makes you feel that style-frontier justice. Call the next case, bailiff. — which those of a Haynsworth are rel- Mr; McGinniss ¦ ¦ in his column, "(We) do not live in but for the carefully choreographed A. B. atively so innocent as almost to be a country any more but in a cess- immaculate. '¦ television productions, Nixon would pool . . . The richest, most powerful have lost. In fact, Nixon's strength • Sen. Charles Percy of Illinois, for •place in the world (has) produced one, has frankly ventilated this con- stayed almost constant throughout In the still of night . . . a bunch of people so filled with the campaign, never budging from cern by proposing that his fellow fear and hate and ugliness that when Rubber-bladed snowplows aie becoming more senators apply to themselves pre- 42-43 percent. a man tries to tell them they must Meanwhile,, the best view of Nix- popular, not because they eliminate that horrible cisely the ethical standards they ap- : do more for other men, instead of , for those who want to know screeching awakening for the neighborhood, but be- plied to Haynsworth. Of course, the on ¦ listening they shoot him in the head. something about him, is available:. Iri cause they're practical. Senate is not about to do that. Still, This is not a country any more, the crucial thing js that the point Ralph de Toledano's new book, "One .This is a vision of hell." That's Uie Although thev verdict is less than unanimous, has been raised — and . raised by Man Alone." kind of thing Mr. McGinniss does the practical advantages , include their longer last- one of those who voted against when he gets excited , When he is The Washington Star Syndicate ing quality, in comparison with steel; greater kind- Haynsworth . Happiness is hot only ¦ ' ness to obstructions the blades might hit, such as in winning; but in winning in the manhole covers, and faster Iteration because the right way. , drivers know the blades sli p over minor¦ obstruc-¦¦ tions, v '. .- • ' ' * . . . (United Feature Syndicate) Getting the message Winona city . and county street and road main- cute some; of its leaders, under th* tenance crews are ¦ trying them. Results differ. The anti-riot act. " - ' • ' .. «. county says that they're not too successful because THESE LEFTWING-pacifist-peace. the rubber blade isn't equal to the steel blade in search in Vietnam nik demonstrations, after all, hav« cutting ice The long, long and compacted snow. The city depart- as at least one objective, the aim ment has come , rrrPirtT~?V,*'---~<- WASHINGTON — I've been exam- to the same conclusion, but says PARIS — The most perplexing ¦**•***" t-£-" .!W' ^Z^VJUti to establish neutrality as between of forcing President Nixon to make that the blades when : ining myself ,, as urged, and frankly mounted on truck units work aspect of the Vietnam revolutionary \Z^ \"A • -*A VfjMf i-V-V^T* ' .' East and West. Of course; any such decisions under the pressures of a well in outlying folks, I've decided to get right while areas where tra ffic is at a mini- war is that nobody has yet devised arrangement must be guaranteed by mob, and I for one deny the sug- mum. It won't put them * ¦ -v 1*? ijm the getting is good. Not that I think on motor patrols because a means that can demonstrably set- tunil&mF'lu I'I iTr -* - <^>- <-•^—-^.uii^^n^sHsLfvir*. the communist countries as well as gestion that Mr; Nixon would make of the down anybody has been threatening me or pressure, but it plans to switch to tle the conflict except by extrem e by the West to have any validity. better decisions under the pressures rubber on previous analysis, insisting : "All of anything like that, and not that I more truck units. alternatives. "But were it to be arranged, a of a mob than those he is , making Indochina is gone, and it is folly to believe anyone wants to set the Bill President Nixon is now looking for sort of peace could be established now. Therefore, I say we might as The cost is at least three times as much per think otherwise. There were only two of Rights aside and impose censor- foot of blade the same middle way sought before that would end the perpetual battle well let well-enough alone, and that's , but the extra wearability more than real forces in Indochina— commu- ship, in case I don't examine my- by Presidents Johnson and Kennedy — such as we now see in Laos and obviously all Mr. Mitchell and Mr. pays for the increase. nist nationalism and the French self. — that is to say, a solution that is army. The French army is now be- Vietnam — and it would provide for Kleindienst have in mind. Now that the It's just that once I started really milkman has switched to paper neither patent victory nor patent de- ing pulled out so all of Indochina is a detente. Then the area could be- Speaking objectively, I just can't and the snow gin to develop and prosper in peace. studying the situation in a totally ploive r to rubber what in the world feat. The tragedy of the United lost." agree with The New York Times that will wake us objective and impartial manner, up on a wintry morning. Maybe noth- States Moratorium demonstrations is Much later, after de Gaulle had In the end that is what will come it ought to be publishing all this sen- ing. Great. — A. B. " without any ax to grind and without that they want no middle way — created the Fifth Republic and be- about. That is the reality. sational pessimistic, bleeding-heart, any conspiracy or even any frater- only disaster. come its president, he maintained THE TROUBLE is that this for- sordid innuendo about some alleged nity to make up my mind for me, I that the best to be hoped for In- mula seems to envision as part of massacre of people that probably I HAVE recently been rereading couldn't help but see how close I'd dochina was creation of some kind the guaranteed neutral area one unit- were Vietcong spies if they were University relations notes on conversations with General been getting to an intellectual view of neutral federation guaranteed by ed Vietnam — under Hanoi. And anything. Anyway, that happened, de Gaiillc in 1954, the year when the of things. And believe me, folks, I For a month we have been trying to digest un- both great power blocs. Dec. 12, this is not agreeable to hundreds of if it did, during the Johnson Admin- Dien Bien Phu defeat decisively al- know that if I start looking at things successfully a remark made by a University of 1953. he said: thousands of Vietnamese including istration. Why rake it up now and tered both French and U.S. policy from that point of view, I'd be mean Minnesota spokesma n when it announced that here- ""I have thought for a long time refugees from butchery and abomi- encourage Hanoi to fight on? after students by pushing the former out of South- and nasty to the Nixon administra- would be provided the "pill" as part about this, and I .have told this to nation in the north 15 years'ago. east Asia and sucking tlie latter in. tion, or any other administration, for AS FOR The Washington Post mak- of fhe regular health service. The remark was, to the Americans. I told it to Presi- The ultimate goal envisioned by De It is astonishing how little the situa- that matter. And how would that ing a fuss just because we're up- the effect , girls have pretty well decided about dent Kennedy. I have pointed out Gaulle — a prosperous, neutralized tion 's fundamental has changed help Mr, Nixon carry his great bur- holding American honor in Laos — those things before they arrive at the university that in the present situation of Asia Southeast Asia — is 'what everybody since. den and still stay alive* and healthy? and I don't want it to be thought for . . . We had always thought that the purpose of the and Southeast Asia armed interven- wants. But after 15 years, a formula , university was On Jan. 21, 1954—weeks before the one moment that I'm admitting we to promote examination of attitudes tion — and indeed any form . of in- for attaining this is still lacking — SO I'M TRYING to be objective, and values. fatal Dien Bien Phu campaign .wen are — would they be happier if we —A.B. tervention — simply cannot help. We and the leaders of Moratorium dem- for a change, and like-Saul on the started — de Gaulle (still a political retreated all the way to California, ¦ French have experimented with such onstrations have yet to provide any I'm really seeing exile) said he could see no compro- road to Damascus, which went Republican?: intervention and now you are doing reasonable answer. Not long ago, for instance , "One of the ways in wliich modern public ymise solution to the struggle then the light. That's the kind of view of things so. I might have agreed with everybody school educators seek to justify their regular re- being waged against Ho Chi Minh, that just can 't, be ignored or avoided "But it doesn 't work. That is a New York Times News Service else in the Eastern establishment quests for ever-increasing amounts of money is lo "Solution?" he mused, "I can't see when a member of the media really zone where lhe only possibility is press that the resignations of Am- come up with some new program which they claim anything but evacuation of Indochina examines himself, as urged. It's the bassador Lodge and Mr. Walsh, to- will 'revolutionize' education. Our schools have been or a continuation of the present sit- kind of view he just can't,get any gether with Mr. Nixon's decision not ' revolutionized' so often that a year in which this uation. For a military solution, a other way. And it beats trying to to replace them right now, meant does not occur is exceptional. These programs fol- new method and a new effort would be intellectual about things, because that the whole idea of negotiating a low a regular pattern. They sound very good , great be required. But France does not Doctors against pot' when a man slips into thnt habit, he settlement had a lower priority . than claims are made for them though their promoters wnnt to make that effort. always winds up in the minority, and Vietnarnization of the war. But now seldom like to answer detailed questions about them, "We have no really direct interest An editorial In cent of thern. who needs the minority? my ideological blinders have been and after a few years a great silence falls about in Indochina. That is a reality. What The Courier One question was: "Should the Not me, folks. I've got the mes- struck away, and I know thnt the them and they are often forgotten. This clears the is taking place there now is merely (Diocese of Winona) sale of marijuana be permitted with- sage. If I rush home tonight, I can resignations must he just another way for still another program which will 'revolu- a prestige war. Not even the pres- Those who favor removing all leg- out legal restrictions?" even calch a rerun of Ohio State- part, of Mr. Nixon 's plan to end tionize ' lhe schools all over again . , . al lhe tige of France is involved any al restrictions on marijuana should The answers were overwhelming- Purdue the war , and that il would aid and expense of the taxpayer. "- Cordelo, Ga., Compan- more. Indochina is of international note the results of a poll of physi- ly negative. A total of 85.2 percent comfort the enemy lo tell us loo ion interest, more anrl more and of cians just , published in lhe magazine of those replying opposed eliminat- Vorlc Timei News Service ¦ many details about, it , so you're not We* French Interest less and less. There Modern Medicine. ' ing all controls on marijuana. * By going to catch me speculating one bit are 'only two real authorities in In- The magazine sent questionnaires categories, general practitioners And Jacob awked oul of his sleep, and he further. dochina — France to the 206,000 active doctors in Ihe and general surgeons were most said, Surel y the Lord is in this and Ho Chi Minh. phce; and I There is nothing country. Replies came from 13.4 per- knew it not.—Genesis 28: f6. else. There are no vehemently opposed , flfl percent of MOREOVER , now that the nation olher 'authorities.' them voting against legislation. Psy- is not to have a real crime-fighter GRAFFITI by Leary chiatrists voted three to one against on the Supreme Court, it is at last "HO IS A reality. He repretetitt . It, Only the anesthesiologist favored obvious to mc that, wc really do Independence, nationalism , commu- repeal, need Mr. Nixon's bill for the preven- WINONA nism, Asia. France is a reality. She DAILY NEWS T Significantly, lhe doctors replying tive detention of thugs and bumbs represents the Occident. Now there WILLIAM F. W HITE I ef p^etM had liberal views on other medico- that are probably going lo go out Publisher is no more French authority in the C. E. LINDEN social questions asked. Legal volun- and commit, more crime in tho ttu.-i. Mgr., Mv, Director country, Everything has been given A DOLPH /J-IISMKH -^ abortion was approved by f>2.8 streets if they are granted bail like Editor-in-Chief up, Therefore , (remember, this wns iH' G&EflSJ tary GAtor W. E VANS other American citizens. There may New * Editor before Dien Bien Phu inevitably, the percent , and 67.7 percent favored C. GOIIDON Hoiw Sunday Editor ( j repeal of laws against homosexual he some constitutional problems, but FRANK II. Uu- .io French must got out . /^ piMO c;„r/ Kfiir. Writer nets by consenting adults in private. an objr-ctive view Is a constructive CONVENIENCE WiJ.i,i.iM II. E MOUM- "Tliey will gel mil when I hey I Controller Yet these same men voted by view, and when il comes to the Con- SERVICES POR A. J, K IEKBUSCI Circulation hnve h,itl enough We will regret it o HIGH PERFORMANCE has received a letter of com- U.S. who scored in the upper ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - mendation for his high perform, two percent of those who are; 3 N.D. youths Arthur Wolover, son of Mr. and ance on the 1969 National Merit expected to graduate from high] Whaf fo do Mrs. Charles Wolover, Arcadia , scholarship qualifying test. He school in 1970. Arthur plans to Mem a senior at Arcadia High Schogl, is among 39,000 students in the become a medical doctor. i charged with or^^ with bargain grave robbing SISSETON, S.D. tm — Pros- lives in Baitimore ecution cn charges of grave missile site QIVIHQ BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) _ H. little god.". "I don't know exactly how the AUBURN, Calif. (AP> — Offi- Christmas is robbery has been put over the L. Mencken, the late Sage of Gerald Johnson, a retired younger generation is receiving cials in Placer County got a bar- r term to April 1970 in Circuit Baltimore, has been out of the journalist who knew Mencken the new work, but I think it is . j Court here for two North Dako- literary limelight for nearly 25 well wben they worked on the significant that a thick volume gain: A purchase for $25,000 of a ta students and a Fargo go-go years, but his memory lives on Baltimore Sun. says : "Dr. Bode on someone who ceased to be a missile site that cost the govern- in bis old home town. has effectively placed him in his public figure 23 years ago dancer. : . ment $70 million. Carl Bode's new biography, home town environment, and should cause such widespread Now they're trying to figure The three appeared with at- "Mencken,"' has sparked fresh this creates an extra local inter- interest." dut what to do with it. ¦ torneys last week before Judge est here. i: interest here in the journalist- Mencken died in 1956 and was Sigurd Anderson, who granted philosopher, whose vitriolic pen The site covers 52 acres above in poor health for a decade be- ground, over gently rolling hills motions to put the case over the skewered many a sacred cow hi fore that. •;• '. the 1920s and 1330s during which Black Panthers . on the edge of they old Mother term because of publicity given He was born in Baltimore in Lode gold mining country, and he was one of the nation's most 1880, studied engineering but be- to the case. famous editors, authors and say they will 30 acres of underground caverns Jon Geisler, 20, Valley City, came a reporter. Later he which once housed three 160- critics! turned literary critic and then N.D.; Selmer Holweger, 24, Ar- foot-deep missile silos, working villa, N.D., - -and Eddeana Belle "We sold out of the book five set up clinics editor. Iri 1924 he helped to found, the American Mercury and living quarters for crews Wood, 22, whose home is at Colo- or six weeks ago and are wait- OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - and support machinery such as rado Springs, Colo.y are charged ing for new stock,'' reportsMor- The Black Panther party says it magazine. He directed his invective often electric power plants. specifically with wanton and ris Klein, manager of the Balti- is setting up a series of free Protected against anything malicious removal of part or all more Doubleday store. medical . clinics throughout the at what he considered low standards ol taste and culture. except a direct nuclear hit, the of a body from a grave. Remington's Book Store, with United States to show what peo- site housed Titan missiles in three locations, has reordered One old acquaintance describes the All are free on bail. The ple can do for themselves with- tense period of 1964-6€ after the young men are students at Wah- twice and is into its second out government assistance; his literary crusade as "a revolt batch of 100, against academic writing—thei Cuban missile and Berlin Wall peton State School of Science. Masai Hewitt, minister of edu- crises. It, and others like , The young woman had been Some Baltimore booksellers cation, said the clinics were stuffed shirts." it The Sage of Baltimore was were abandoned as the Air working as an entertainer at a keep special Mencken shelves first established on the East Force Fargo bar. with a selection of a dozen or Coast about six months ago. never universally liked, even in developed more Minute- Hewitt said tree clinics are hs home town. "Half the people man missiles. They are charged with remov- more books by and about here boasbed about him and the ig the head of a buried corpse Mencken. planned .or about 30 "underpri- Placer County figured the site other half apologized for him, could be used for something from a grave near White Rock, vileged areas" and will be vol- " Who buys Mencken books Johnson recalls. when the General Services Ad- S.D., around Halloween, Oct. 31. now? "Most of them seem at untarily staffed and equipped The head of a man was recov- for "first- and second-aid." ministration put it up for sale at least a little hit literary," one $25,000—half the appraised ered at a vacant farm near clerk says, hut beyond that He said offers of volunteer Breckenridge, Minn., and re- there is no way to generalize : a medical assistance "are pouring Remarried value. ¦ -¦ turned t« the grave. banker eager to complete his in." One early plan was to use the Mencken collection, a mother "The program is developed on after 34 years The cacao bean, used to make land for an auto raceway, but a choosing a book for her son in the needs of the people," he DALLAS, Tex. (AP) study indicated tha t wouldn't cocoa and chocolate products, Vietnam, a theater promotion said. "AU ethnic groups have - Vin- was first discovered by the cent Depillis, 72, and the former pay. Recreational uses, such as man and even two stevedores accepted our offers of help." Nell O'Connell also past 70 say a park, still are high on the pos- Spaniard Cortez when he en- Donations, the majority from , , fresh from the docks. age doesn't matter if- you want sible list, said Richard Heikka, tered Mexico in the early 16th "In this city," one Baltimo- whites, include medical supplies century. rean declares, "Mencken is a from pharmacies, he said. to marry—or remarry. county planning officer. They recited wedding vows Potential underground uses m—^B^—a^mmmm ^mm^mmmmmmm ^mmammmmmmmmi ^mm^mmmmmmFriday before ^ma Justice q£ the range from a depository for val- ' ' ' ' ¦ • ' peace W. E. Richburg. uable state records to disposal ¦ • - ^i « JOHNNY LARSON her a Christmas card with my center in case of a disaster. The phone number on it. She called site is about 35 miles northeast me on the phone and told me of the Capitol in Sacramento. where she was." One problem: Access is by a That led to a reunion and the 60-foot ladder. MERV GRIFFIN decision to wed once more. Depillis, now retired, former- NO FAVORITES ly worked as a maitre d'hotel PANAJI, India , (AP) - The and bartender. His wife has government telephone office has JOEY BISHOP been holding the twin jobs of turned off 80 telephones allotted stock broker and theater harp- to the Goa government for non- ist. payment of some $26,000 in back ¦ bills. Badly hit were the secre- nights at 10:30 . . . American ' 4 Suits worn by some knights in tariat, the police department, ¦ 1 * J ^ l i'- fU&: H__i E shining armor weighed 120 and two hospitals as well as two Cahlevision lets you see pounds, took three years to state cabinet ministers and the make, and cost a fortune to buy. deputy finance secretary. Tlie V-neck pullover, styled by Revere wllh perfection In every detail. The action \ saddle shoulder, full fashioned for trim fit where it matters most! Of 2-ply 100% I Lamb's wool, machine washable. A choice of Ivy tones . t GREAT $14.00 I f TO \ / SERVE \ Introducing Reverc 's 100% OrlonW acrylic wintuk* boucle knit crew neck . .. | a i.!-i.s.sic with regimenlnl stri|X'.s. It looks smart nt the start , stays smart through | MOVIES an incredible number of machine washings. I { YOU $16.00 ON CHANNEL 11 / \ BETTER j mmmmwmmmwmm ^ HERE'S THIS WEEK'S LINEUP - MONDAY — "Ladles' Man" — Eddie Constantine yO^ BRITISH and Clpudine Coster Please use the following Daily & Sunday 1 News Telephone numbers: ^ THERE'S I TUESDAY -— "Bombors B-52" — Karl Maiden and STERLING i Natalie Wood . . . to put a classified or want | TOILETRIES FOR MEN MORE 1 ad in tlie paper, call ; S BH EXCIUS1VE | | | WEDNESDAY — "Home Before Dark" — Jean Sim- i ^ TO a mens and Dan O'Herlihy f < H A smashing After Shave and a Colognele thatin lasts | SEE 1 THURSDAY — "Carnival Story" — Ann Baxter and 3321 e him a end hls _., '$ Sieve Cochran v Pil from dus c to dawn ma 8 f ON $ §M' • ' ''' ^ (you may both ... to start, stop or inquire i own t,me give BriUsh Sterlin8 •! -.„.,. H FRIDAY — "Doctor at Large" — Dirk Bogardo and '# rM • * • < CABLt about the delivery of your ' * A' Donald Sinden TV/ y? newspaper, call $3.50 to $10.OO '$j oj &i From J "ZZLZZP~? -»-»-^_ l-» 11\ C r \J V* I D r\ L L* ****+S******A*~^*'*~** V ^**'^^ ; AFL-NFL "Thi-i Weok In Pro Football - Channel 8-2961 11 Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 12 noon. ... to put nnws in the paper, I r V \sT untiltonigh t call | VnHHna^^t O7 1 3324 is American Cablevision f To call othor department!, pl««M consult your TV SIGNAL tolophono directory or a«k the operator for 120 LEVEE PLAZA atslstanca. ^\iRistmAs EAST — PHONE 3306 (Jhoat e's! ' . :?££&£ ^^-t&Si&& ^ port said, is that investors wera taking their money out of sav- Mortgage rates ings and loan institutions which House of the week provide mortgages and putting their funds where they can earn continue on a higher interest. Remodeling Duplex with NEW WAVE IN HOUSING Fastest growing housing trend By ANDY LANG upward spiral afloat is the houseboat. Main It' ch i eco- The increasing demand for WASHINGTON (AP) - The attraction: s arm ng, dominates average effective mortgage rate nomical and mobile. Houseboats two - family houses, either for for new homes rose to 8.12 per make ideal vacation homes for conventional use or for retire- cent in October, continuing an nautically - minded families. A ment living, prompts publication upward spiral for the 11th surprising number are also building scene of this design by architect Her- straight month. used as year-round homes, where berthing facilities are not Only, three permits were man H. York. Ths Federal Home and Loan drawn from the city engineer' the bad too far from work, schools and s These two units, although at- Bank Board reported office last week—two for minor hews for homebuyers and the shopping. remodeling tached, are individually design- Thursday. of present struc- construction industry . MOBILE HOMES tures and one moving permit. ed to avoid the disadvantages of There was a wide range In Mobile homes are heing con- Milton Meyer, 478 E. Sarnia a mirrored left-and-right ver- charged across the coun- sidered as one answer to urtfari St. , and Raymond Meyer 129 rates , sion of a single plan. With sepa- try with fJie highest average of slum problems. The units, com- W: 3rd St., drew a permit for rate entrances, concealed be- 9:13 per cent in Seattle , Wash. plete with living facilities, would . .' TRADITIONAL , - remodeling to 177 and 1V9 E. hind screened perches and with DESIGN envelops both units of two- screened porches and making the two wings of different sizes This was a jump of about . Vh be stacked atop one another, • 3rd St. at which Dutch's Bar family house. By concealing separate entrances behind it is difficult to tell that this is a duplex. one of the units provided with per cent over a year earlier. with stairs added from one * and Cafe and Lang's Bar and to the next. Estimated The San Francisco-Oakland, "floor" , Cafe are respectively located. a garage, the facade appears two-bedroom, furnish- area also had high rate cost for a • " Cost of the remodeling will be to be a single home rather than Calif., ed unit with air conditioning is ¦ of 8.97 per cent. 000. 'v the duplex it actually is. ' - ..' ,000. $1, On the other end of the scale, about $5 . OTHER PERMITS : ALTHOUGH there is similar). Philadelphia, Pa., had an aver- Leo Murphy Jr., 311 Huff St., ty in the general layout of the age effective rate of 7.07 per $900, remodeling, Brugger and two units cent. ' , one is larger due to Nelson. the addition of a den ' , garage ;•• Mrs. Esther Henry, 201 W. and larger The board's report shows life terrace. Also, in the charged Howard St., move house from case of the larger unit there is insurance companies cent and 201 W. Howard St. to 729 W. a private lavatory for an average 8.48 per the own- right 5th St., Hans Haefs. ers' bedroom. mortgage companies were Total valuation for behind at 8,45 per cent on their permits so The leisure areas are divided IS YOUR FURNACE far this year is $8,675,839 com- between front and new home loans. > rear, which of OPERATING PROPERLY? pared with 539 117 for. the has the advantage Preston Martin, chairman Call For A Free Inspection in$7 , , of satisfying curtailed i^same period 1968, Forty-frye the occupants of either side re- the board , said the — Your Cert if lea Lennox Dtaltr — supply of money mortgage ^permits for new houses have garding the better view. funds at a time when housing is QUALITY SHEET j-'been drawn this year compared A family room and kitchen in strong demand accounted for • '-with 35 on the same date one are combined in one area with METAL WORKS, Inc. the 'continued rise in .October. Tjyear ago. ample space for dining. A slid- 1151 E. Broadway Phont MI14 ing glass door gives quick ac- One of the problems, the re- cess to the private terrace for [Bits of wood make dining or lounging. :'hot or plant pads EACH UNIT has two bed- rooms and a full.bathroom . Be- READY MIXED ;f t Use your imagination with tween the. two bedroom sections ' ' jodds and ends of lumber. and the units themselves is an /•Squares, circles and triangles of 8-inch thick masonry fire wall jCorie-inch board (or thinner) can that also acts as a sound har- -,lbe sanded and stained or ^painted. 'I You'll be surprised at the S-21 STATISTICS •?mimber of uses for them about >the house: Under hot cups or Design S-21, a duplex, has For All — ..pots of coffee to protect furni- a living room, family room- ^yr hire; under plants or vases kitchen, den and two bed- j ' BUILDING ; .t ( used singly or stacked in ran- rooms in the main unit, with FLOOR PLANS : Owners' unit on right side of this two- adjacent to the kitchen-family room, an extra lavatory in one " ; I :;^^^ pi >d»m shapes) ;, beside the sink to a total habitable area of .1,- family, ground-level house has a larger rear terrace, a den . of the bedrooms and a one-car garage, Jserve as small cutting boards 093 square feet. The second >or as insufation for hot pans unit, which does not have a REMODELING J just off ' the stove. den, totals 953 square feet. Property Transfers Building in Winona ^gj |f Each section has a screen- In Winona County plans For a Free Estimate v ^J^^^SB^|Mj__*i ;SHARE OF SQUARES ed porch at the front and More detailed 1969 Dollar Volume... . $8,675,839 ¦; Even a house with a family a terrace in (he rear. The WARRANTY DEED Full study plan information on this architect-designed Commercial ...... 4,753,242 main unit also has a one- Frank H. West to Monka M. Fockens Sof swingers has 17 squares on el al-WVi ol Lot 5, Block: 7, Curtis Add. House of The Week is obtainable in a 50-cent baby blueprint Residential :...... 1,251,998 car garage f t.the roof. In roofing language, a . The over-all. di- No. 3 to Winona. which you can order with this coupon. Public (non- mensions, which include Ruth C«dy to John E. Anderson et ux /r^Tf} ^ 'square is the amount of roofing —NVi.of SW'A Of Sec. 11-105-9. Also we have available two helpful booklets at $1 taxable) ...... 2,661,549 Irl ^r VtiSMSjLmmm * both living quarters and the ' Itnaterial needed to adequately Haiti f/i. Seifert et mar to Dean tol- each: "Your Home — How "to Build, Buy or Sell It- ' and New houses ...... 45 screened lefson-SVi . of NW'.i of Sec. 25-105-10. jj cover 100 square feet of roof porches, are 79 feet Volume same by 35 feet, not Inez Voelker et al to Robert. H. Wit- "Ranch Homes," including 24 of the most popular homes area. It's estimated that 17 Including the tenters et ux—Part ol, Lot 4, Block 7, f on . that have appeared in the feature. date 1968 ...... 87,539,117 squares are used the average rear terraces. Bolcom's Add. to. Winona. y m ' ^ Antoinette Girtler et mar to Albert C The House of the Week uroof. According to the Asphalt Girtler et ux—SEJi ' * ¦ of SVIVs; all SV4 ol Winona Daily News REMODELING DOLLARS Hoofing Manufacturers Aasocia- SB'/i, Sec. 3, lying'- W'ly of East Burns ' Winona, Minn., 55987 • itipn, 42,786,035 squares of as- rier. The wall extends to the Valley road; NE'A of NWy« and-iii el Homeowners are spending 71 : . . : "^ NV4 of UEVs, Sec. 10/ lying W'ly o) Enclosed is 50 cents each for -—- baby blueprints i.phalt shingles* were sold last underside of the roof sheathing. said road In Township 10 See Us For .. ELECTRICAL fl| ' WSB'I-'^ IA---./"^ x—r ADC J^M PROBLEM S ffl TUrBm. JNM iSMB IffV' **• fjWrTH 11| l| \././ Antam¦!! ¦ £J*i 7 GOT YOU 1 ¦ T^k GOING m " QUALITY IlLLnAii t^S^Si ^l CRAZY? l l iiJEvi n% 'K^ ^o lAxK ML CONTROLLED HEAVY SHEET II ¦ J^jZHJ^ STEEL Your maintenance problems are taken Our SptcUtizod Sirvlco** care of when Alio Include: Relax friend. Klectrlcal Installations and alteration work you own a Pleasant Green can bo a snap if yon land ,i qualified elect ricnl contraclor ¦ ¦ Job and Contract TOWN HOUSE. Welding in Iho first plnco , Your problems are over when you dial • Boiler Repair Work thnt easy number - R-5U7. Our llccnsi-d bonded electricians are fully nunlified to handle any size electrica l operation irom the .smallest houso insinuation to Ihe largest industrial prob- WINONA BOILER lem. Like we said, relax and phone 8-5147. Bruce McNALLY & STEEL GO. EL RIC CONCRETE BLOCK CO. BUILDING CONTRACTOR 161-167 Wait Front Strict BAUER S 5569 Wost 6th St. Phono 9207 304 lako I St. Phone 8-1059 Phono StU 225 E««r Third Str««r Ta .aphon* 8-5147 Fire Estimates See talks with Brif-ain Move launched Fewer traffic at Common Market meet Brothers held to abolish THE HAGUE (AP) - The The West German hope for a Brandt are attending for the deaths than 1968 Common Market summit compromise in which (1) first time as government chiefs. on kidnap, By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Howard Williams of Brent, the Ala., who lost a wife and only conference opening in The members will agree to maintain The most important figure Traffic accidents over the Hague today is expected to pro- child in a Thanksgiving traffic high support prices for agricul- who 4fas departed is former four-day Thanksgiving holiday accident eight years ago, suf- duce a package deal providing tural produce a benefit mostly church council , President Charles de Gaulle of rape charges claimed fewer lives this year fered a similar tragedy Satur- for talks with Britain and con- to France, but will set some France, who twice blackballed MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A By GEORGE YV. CORNELL churchmen and of white reform- day when his wife and only- tinuance of farm AP Religion Writer than in 1968, when a record 764 subsidies for limit , to the spending, and (2) Britain's attempts to join the 16-year-old '. youth has been ers joined in the informal child were killed in an auto* the six nations of the European the six nations will DETROIT (AP) _ A move procession, and some of them persons were killed. promise to economic community. Also gone charged in connection with the crash. Economic Community. set a firm date by the middle of is former West German Chan- was launched today to abolish afterward staged a hallway The total for 1969 stood at 660 ; vi". Common Market sources say 1970 for the opening of talks cellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger, kidnaping and rape of a 16-year- the National Council of Church- demonstration to air their pro-- today. France will ask that member with Britain. who never seriously challenged old suburban Minneapolis girl es in its present form and re- posals. The National Safety Council Free bananas countries ratify a plan for per- De Gaulle's stand. Kenneth L. Ahearn of St. place it with a broader, more They called for massive dis- had estimated that 700 to 800 manent financing of The meeting is the first Com- flexible organization of Chris- persal of church wealth to the farm subsi- Pompidou has lifted De Cloud was arraigned in Henne- persons might die in traffic dur- on French coast dies before starting negotiations mon Market summit conference . tian cooperation. poor, a new emphasis on evan- for Britain Gaulle's veto, but the French pin County District Court Fri- It would become ing the period from 6 p.m. local 's entry. West Ger- in two and a half years, and the obstacle to , under the gelism, along with social action, BREST, France, (AP) -It's many, on the other has changed considerably are still the chief day after being certified as an plan, more inclusive of all sorts time Wednesday to midnight hand, will lineup opening negotiations with Brit- and election of blacks to top cold and windy in this Atlantic insist on negotiations with Brit- in the interim. French President adult and ordered to stand trial. of churches—in an umbrella council posts. Sunday. The council formerly coast port, but all of a sudden ain as a prerequisite Georges Pompidou and West ain and the other candidates for fashion. considered Thanksgiving a there for ratifi- membership: Ireland, Den- His case was continued for ' s a banana harvest—344 cation of farm price supports. German Chancellor Willy stay-at-home holiday, but issued tons -worth mark, and Norway. one week and the youth was But it also would allow for a Thanksgiving estimate for the greater diversity and wide-open first time this year. The bananas are being passed France, chief recipient of ag- held on $25,000 bond in Henne- options in the choice of varied Teacher openings The worst multiple accident out free in the area because a ricultural subsidies which now pin County jail. was on a fog-blanketed section Peruvian banana boat, the Inca, coiirses of action by independ- has run into rudder trouble her-s total about $2.6 billion a year, The youth had not filed a plea ent participants. And it would bf the New Jersey Turnpike Sat- Discuss location wants assurances from the oth- urday when six persons were and cannot continue on-its nor- yet to the cBarges, which in- abandon insistence on majority in Wisconsin mal run to Hamburg. er five members—Italy, Bel- clude aggravated: robbery, kid- —determined joint approaches killed and 19 others injured in a gium, the Netherlands, Luxem- naping, aggravated rape, aggra- on. each front. succession of crashes that in- About hall of the 850 tons of bourg and West Germany—that vated assault, indecent liberties on decrease volved 10 cars and six trucks. bananas on board were shipped of second round the subsidies will be continued. and unauthorized use of an In calling for the overhaul, Five persons died Thursday in to Gtermany overland, but the MILWAUKEE Ml — The num- a gift automobile. Dr. R. H. Edwin Espy; the coun- a fiery collision 33 miles west of rest are being eaten here, Only a day and a half has cil's general secretary* said ber of vacancies in teaching Richmond, Va. of the steamship company. been allotted for speeches, dis- Also charged in connection positions in Wisconsin s public 's "half measures will not suf- ' cussion and the drawing up of a with the incident is Ahearn schools has decreased 40 per- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H ^^^^^^ H 24-year-old brother Kenneth. fice.". of SALT talks final statement, so detailed The surprise proposal, tin- cent or more in the last year , agreements are >not expected; complaint, the Department of Public In- HELSINKI (AP) According to the veiled at the council's triennial - Diplomat- cal experts, the Americans These may be drafted at a the brothers bid in the hack seat general assembly, its top gov- struction said Friday. You Are have much more spacious ac- ic maneuvering is going on be- meeting of the six foreign mus- of the girls' car Sept. 30 near erning body, came amid rising Lond Rodman, director of the commodations available at a ters in Brussels starting Dec. hind the scenes in Helsinki over laces which also are the Robbinsdale post office. pressures within and outside its department's Bureau of Teach- number of p 15. v brothers where the United States and the closer to home and have a cli- Authorities said the present structure for major er Education and Certification ^ sairprised hei, held a knife to changes, f t 'f t said higher salaries and broader ; That meeting will consider Soviet Union should hold the mate more congenial than Fin- to land's cold, dark winter. proposals to reduce farm prices, her throat and forced her fringe benefits are helping the 5 _^^ second round of negotiations to drive to a wooded area near His proposal was directed down on vacancies. W|_ state to cut ; ; subsidies and surpluses. Such check the nuclear arms race. The American's suggested Maple Grove where they . al- particularly at enlisting non- To Be Our Guest At Tha measures would be welcomed member denominations, includ- AN INCREASED number of J^ Officially there is no decision Vienna and Geneva along with legedly raped and robbed her. by the United States and other ing many smaller evangelical persons attending college and yet that there will be such a Helsinki for the first round of countries which would like to in- obtaining teaching certificates FIRST SESSION talks, and the Austrians have groups and three large bodies- crease their export of food to also reduces the vacancies, he ¦" round. The U.S.-Soviet parley Southern Baptists, the Roman of thr .. bid for round two. However, Europe. They would also make This Deer " '. ' ' ¦¦ . here now going into its third Austria may be less acceptable Catholic Church and the Luther- said. , to the Soviets politically than Britain's entry into the market an Church-Missouri Synod. A survey taken in September, -week is billed as a "prelimi- easier, since its farm prices are $64 per pound he 'said, showed about 160 teach' nary sounding out by Finland because of its more Most other major Protestant " the two open sympathy for the victims lower than those on the conti- (AP) f t. and Orthodox denominations— ing vacancies in schools big powers to determine wheth- LOUISVILLE, Ky. — - A the '. state; ' but 44.4 Dale Carnegie Course Of the Soviet crackdown on nent. Louisville hunter has discovered 33 of them with a total of about throughout . er and how they should go into f t ' The meeting in The Hague percent less than on the same • How to remember names, facet & facts the hard-bargaining phase. Czechoslovakia. - .f t that some deer meat is rather 42 million members—already will be followed in Brussels pound belong. The council was form- date a year earlier . • Mow to quickly develop more pels* and Geneva already is the home of expensive—about $64 a . The decrease in professional self confidence But the secret meetings have the 25-nation U.N. disarmament Wednesday by the annual ses- Charles Scott bagged a 100- ed 20 years ago. shown sufficient promise that sion of the North Atlantic Trea- the The plan calls f ora "General and supervisory positions was • How to get along even better with p«o- committee, arid tiie nuclear su- pound deer Saturday at 42 percent below last year's round two is now considered a perpowers do not care to have a ty Organization. There the Com- nearby Ft. Knox military reser- Ecumenical Council in the Unit- Learn PI« . level. more effectively Virtual certainty. And this has mass of other nations kibitzing mon Market foreign ministers vation;. But as Scott was stalk- ed States," to which all groups • How to eomrnunlcaU spurred backstage maneuvering too closely while they bargain will meet representatives of the a prowler was would belong, but they would re- Milwaukee's decreases were when speaking to individuals, groups, ing his quarry, better than average. Teaching wsing the telephone or writing letters over the next site. on their own arms _. United States, Britain and their husy ransacking his house. Scott tain full choice about what pro- The Finns want the Strategic other Atlantic allies—all inter- returned ho-me and discovered vacancies were down 58.3 per ¦ One possibility is that the Big grams or activities they wanted cent and other unfilled jobs Both Men and Women Invited . . Arms Limitation Talks—of ested to hear what progress has that jewelry, a dozen firearms to share—or shun. Two will settle on their own cap- were down 58 percent. No Cost or Obligation SALT—to slay on in their capi- itals, rotating between Washing- been made toward West Euro- and other it ems valued at a to- Dr. Espy said this, would pro- ¦ ' RODMAN said he expects the tal. It would keep their small ton and Moscow. pean unity. . - . - tal of $6,409 had been stolen. vide a new cooperative frame- country on foreign front pages trend to continue as more col- work that could bring many oth- lege students train for educa- TIME: 7:00 P.M. for months and also give global ers into the ecumenical move- publicity to their neutrality poli- tional jobs and salary encour- ment "while retaining their agements increase. DECEMBER 1st cy of good relations with both identity and power of self-deter- DATE: MONDAY, the Western allies and the So- Wisconsin currently has 47,- viet bloc. mination." 456 certified teachers. Y.M.CA, US, in major effort The five-day assembly, Twing- PLACE :JVINONfl Word has seeped out that the Russians would like to stay in ing together 800 voting dele- WISCONSIN ROAD REPORT gates and about 2,000 other MADISON, Wis. (ffl — , The Helsinki and the Americans PRESENTED BY would prefer to move else- church specialists and fraternal State Patrol this morning said where. on Mideast peace plan visitors, opened in Cobo Hall all main roads in Wisconsin DRISCOLL Sunday night with : a worship were in good driving condition CORDIE The Russians have an embas- WASHINGTON (AP) - The Egypt in exchange for Cairo's also mean Egypt's acceptance. service — and with - signs of with the exception of the north sy the size of a city block here, swelling demands for reforma- central area where some slip- M. NORWAM the Soviet border is nearby and Nixon administration will make "binding commitment" to es- Despite the negative and often tablish peace with Tel Aviv— bellicose no>ises from Cairo and tion. periness was reported from Moscow is within easy jet com- a major effort to get Israel to • Insurgent blocs of black light snow.- muting distance. and to keep it. the month-long silence in Mos- follow a new U.S. peace plan for —Both sides also would com- cow the United States does not The Americans appear to be , ,), reasonably satisfied with the the Middle East, hut only if the mit themselves to start talks consider its plan rejected. fR,t*1*ni** '!?*»r»*!?*JP^ communications layout. But Soviet Union accepts the propos- with each other on the basis of The Soviets are usually quick their embassy is so small that al first, according to high rank- the so-called Rhodes formula on in saying a terse "nyet" if they bad to move the U.S. con- ing officials. "practical security arrange- something does not please them. sulate to a downtown commer- But, the sources say, chances ments" regarding the Gaza The month long delay might cial building in order to get em- of a Soviet okay are slim. In Strip and Sharm El Sheikh, the mean Moscow is still bargaining fcassy working space for SALT any event some officials believe strong point guarding the en- with Cairo on how to answer the I WISH FRIENDS A ] negotiator Gerard C. Smith and no definite answer to the Ameri- trance to the Strait of Tiran and U.S. proposal, informants be- lis aides. can proposals will come before the Gulf of Aqaba. lieve. Accordingly there, is no For the substantive negotia- the December 20 summit The Rhodes formula, applied pressing concern here over the ' tions, which could go on for conference of Arab heads of delay. months or years and will ' re- state. in the 1949 Arab-Israeli armi- quire big delegations of techni- stice talks on the Greek island of It will be surprising, though, In an extensive review of the Rhodes, means that representa- if President Gambel Abdul Nas- eve of the resumption in New tives of the two belligerents ser would give up his current York of Big Four consultations would be under one roof but rigid attitude before the Arab Merry Christmas] FCC renews TV, | on the Middle East, the officials would talk to each other indi- nations that have subsidized his radio licenses summed up the new U.S. pro- rectly through a mediator. country since the 1957 war and posal, handed to Soviet ambas- Persuading Israel to adhere to he probably believes only by sador Anatoly F. Dobrynin Oct. WASHINGTON (AP) - The the plan will be a difficult task, displaying a firm stance can he •^Federal Communications Com- 28> as follows: officials acknowledge, but there hope for increased funds. "But —Israel should , withdraw be- 23rd is no point in trying before DEC. mission has renewed the li- ^he he did not -close the door" to the | hind its pre-1967 borders j censes, of WTOP-TV and WTOP with Russians accept it, which woiild U.S. plan, informants stressed. AM and FM radio stations in Washington , ruling that they are not influenced by the news and | VIA OUR CLASSIFIED SECTION I editorial policies of Washington Post. Wisconsin publishers Vice President Spiro T. Ag- new recently charged that the 18 Word . 1 Post and its station all speak [ $<| 25 jjj with the same voice. Complaints that the broad- discuss Agnew criticism Greeting | CAsH! cast stations distorted the news MILWAUKEE (AP ) - Wis- Bliss said there is always a "going on since the year 1. f ¦ \ were dismissed by the FCC as " f ' ii consin newspaper publishers possibility of government agen- The publisher of the Eau general in nature and without opened a two-day nieeting Sun- cies bringing pressure on news detailed and specific evidence of day with Vice President Spiro media. Claire Leader and Daily Tele- \ J MA, EXAMPLES: j failure to comply with the fair- Agnew's recent criticism of graph, Marshall Atldnson, said ^^ MERRVY«ar CHR,STMAS and a Happy jj ness doctrine. His role in newspapers as t f ^~*^lBk /**t friend* news media producing a variety well as radio allows him to rec- Agnew's remarks might be is-— ^^^s. New to all our and *j of opinion. f yt^j \Jf ognize "the difference between viewed-as "nothing more than neighbors. JOHN & SUE SMITH. being free in a newspaper and \ y^ ^lv^ ^ ^ J Some newspaper representa- speech-maling, and suggested tives attending the Wisconsin under a license," he said. " ^--^^ftu JXy^ ». SEASON'S GREETINGS to our families J NEW Daily Newspaper League con- the press should "shrug off" tlie £ Jt AGNEW, addressing a Repub- remarks. ^*^^ ^ vention said they found little to f > and frionds from SH,RLEY SAM 'j GIFTWARE fear hi Agnew's remarks while lican gathering in Des Moines i ^~^ » * last month, accused television Henry Youmans of the Wau- others expressed concern for kesha Fre-eman snid newspaper- ARRIVING DAILY press freedom. newscasters of occasional bias- f Wmfc+di. Ailuv » i See Our Large Selection ed reporting. He later criticized men shou ldn't bo too worried h ;$r^ f\f&"* S BEST W ISHES of the season fro*m th« " about politicians ' criticisms, es- Jll ROBERT W. Bliss, publisher some newspapers. t MM BROWN FAMILY . . . Joe, Ca rol & A pecially w ith guarantees of free- Cf* t \ i % BADD BROTHERS of the Janesville Gazette and a Martin Wolman of Madison's HVFDD STORE, Inc. radio station owner, said he Wisconsin State Journal said dom of the press. ufti- Mii». a lot of "With the protection of the i' \ V & S HARDWARE felt uncomfortable "that any- "Agnew has said what f^^«»i^^m ^^ m, ^a^*o 1 body who uses words like this people would like to think." First Amendment, I don't give f jr THE TH,RD GRADE of st piu Sch o1 S76 E. Ath St. Phone 4007 a damn what Agnew says ^" ftfklVi Ik * * ° i may be inclined to ask for more Wolman said efforts to chal- ," ^^w-v Lv ** W wish their teach er a very -Merry A *t Youmans remarked, I \ «% A<* power." lenge news reporting have been Chril,,naS• l fl* 1 to A «o PFC, Georg* This safe is f. ISA KiL ^gflggffr WARMEST WISHES & EXERCISE YOUR RIGHT TO VOTE! V ^ ^ ^ Jarnej in Vietnorm from Mom and ^B m&\ ^^ mSfi* ^ really safe * <^^^ ^ Dad. W«» mist you! . L«-«a flfP^ * WEST VANCOUVER , B.C. ("AP) - A.U through the day Fri- RE-ELECT ! r S. day and into the night bank Complete name, addrest and payment must be included with order. No guards stood by at a Toronto i \ ^ Dominion Bank branch in this ! * pnonymoui greetings will b« p*ubli»hod. * Vancouver suburb while a team ' I jj of professionals tried to crack Earl LAUFENBURGER the vault they had been sworn GREETINGS to protect. \ A A-.!I 4^ \ The vault refused to open Fri- \ iVldll TO! P.O. BOX 10, WINONA, MN. 55981 \ COUNCILMAN day morning, and all through j }. the day experts trie*d to solve ! X the probl em. Early today tliey FIRST WARD began using jackhammcrs. "There' s no reason to worry, " Franklin St. PAID AOVr.RTISEMII NT — Prrpnrert by Earl LflUtenburtier, 1500 _ nl , Winonn. *Ainn , In p At 601 W<- t Hnw-irrt Slri . said a security (jiifird , "every- , Or Sto j his own bull/ill end Inserted al the . regular oenerel odvertljlno rule . tiling is safe—so safe wc can 't i Ir i in II II i II i » - i M - i » " i MU y Tn tt "ii ii *• i t*fii Wh';iiiTfii"_iii^_rV*'il_ir __vi^i' _fi^1ftr _tfiW _____litfii'ir_fc Wk1_iTii' get at it (ourselves," I BRUCE CARRIER BILL OCHS JR. BOB WALKER JIM JABROSKY STEVE PROTSMAN JACK GIBBS MARK WILKE Redmen,W Six; seven and possibly p.m. nonconference con- be Joe Keenanj 6-4 junior ProLsman, 6-4 junior and The Warrior offense as practice sessions the past ter and Steve Kill, 6-0 jun- is fast and quick because we never get Uie big, strong eight linen will share start- test at St. Mary's gymnas- and Mike Woll, 6-3 sopho- Mark Wilke, 6-5 senior. does the Redmen offense few weeks due to sprained ior and Raleigh Galgan, 5- ium Of Ekker Hill center,' 1 Finanger said. assignments for each of while coach Ron Ek- more at forwards; Mike 's crew, Jabros- revolve around ball con- ankles. Long just returned 10 senior at guards. ing* ker's Warriors travel to La Halloran, 6-7 senior at cen- ky, Besonen and Protsman trol. "We must try to get last Wednesday. Halloran and Galgan were regulars "Our ball club is inexper- the St! Mary's College and ienced and a success to our ' - Crosse, Wis., to meet Wis- ter and Jim Long, 6-2 jun- were regulars in the War- the high percentage shots," turned an ankle last Tues- last season. Winona Sif ite College bas- consin State University of ior and Dave Keenan, 5-10 rior lineup. Ochs, Gibbs and Ekker said. day aind missed two days Luther will display a fast club this seiasOn will be to t-'onis when they ketball . La Crosse in an 8 p.m. senior at guards. Top-line Wilke also held down start- Both La Crosse and Wi- of practice. Long injured break offense. "Our style develop team unity." open then- respective sea- game. , ing reserves are Pat Wiltgen assignments at various nona State are alike in that an ankle three weeks ago. sons tonfgSy Wiltgen has decided on 6-3 sophomore forward and times. ". .; . "We were coming along St Mary's, directed by they do not possess tower- his five starters but says Mark Servais, 6-10 soplio- "La Crosse is a good good until we were laid up coach Ken Wi'tgen , meets more guard . ballbandlihg club, good ing height. Tallest rhan on he has two top-line re- by injuries but those two Luther College in a 7:30 Ekker's top eight men in- shooting team and also has the La Crosse team stands serves who will also be see- clude : guards Bill Ochs good speed and that is what 6-3. Game time at La fellas will be ready,',' Wilt- ing action. Ekker was nol Jr., 6-2 junior, Bruce Car- worries me," said Ekker. Crosse is . 8 p.m. gen reassured. certain early today who his rier , S-ll senior and Bob "Our biggest task is to con- "Our boys are real Wi- Opposing coach Kent Fin- starters would be. He was Walker, 6-0 senior ; for- trol the La Crosse game gry for a ball game, " Wilt- anger of Luther will go undecided between e i' g' .h t wards Jim Jabrosky, 6-4 and play a tough defense gen said in previewing the with Dennis Hanson, 6-2 players. * junior, Don Besonen, 6-2 because that is our game; Redmen's first game. Two junior and Jim Barth, 6-7 Holding down starting junior and Jack Gibbs, 6-4 we must make them work of Wiltgen's starters Long 'unior at forwards; Greg berths for the Redmen will senior and centers Steve hard for the good shots." and Halloran missed some Jdunson, 6-2 junior at cen- , U ri beaten Ram s clip ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ -¦ ¦ ¦ . Y/.i>w-:x?. ;¦ - * . . T - ¦* ¦¦' '¦' • * *. - Redskins for crown AL WINONA DAILY NEWS MONDAY 1M» , DECEMBER 1, MARK SERVAIS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS a victory that didn't save the in the second quarter to put the 7" y Winona, Minnesota : PAT WILTGEN Take it from Sonny Jurgen- Colts from elimination in the Packers ahead for good. son, the Los Angeles Rams have Coastal Division. Fran Tarkenton moved tho Tire an appropriate nickname. Larry Con jar set up the final Giants 75 yards m the last min- JOE KEENAN The Rams rammed , the Na- ute of the first half , hitting Aar- General Quality ¦IHUItitBW/-*?.' ' - - -M/ --K ..M-- XV^<-t*toy,':*?-7tf!l quarter marker when he got his ^^Bi—^-W Now at Low, low Prices! tional Football League's most hands on a Billy Lothridge punt, on Thomas for the final 35, to prolific passer all over the place cut the gap to 13-10. But Travis and the Colts took possession on " —while Roman Gabriel let loose the Atlanta 45. A few seconds Williams streaked 27 yards jfor with a sizzling offensive show- later, quarterback Johnny Uni- Green Bay's clincher in the in a 24-13 victory over Washing- tas fired a 19-yard pass to Ray third period. ton Sunday that wrapped up the Perkins on the two, setting up Coastal Division championship Amazing rookie Tom Demp- Matte's- clincher with less than sey, who was born without half fortie unbeaten terrors of the eight minutes to go. West Coast of his right foot and no left (B It was Los Angeles' 11th Bob Etter kicked a pair of hand, kicked four field goals— straight victory—the first time field goals for the Falcons' only to provide the difference in FIRST LINE an NFL team has strung that points. New Orleans' victory over Phil- many together in a single sea- Jim Hart passed for three adelphia. son »ince Cleveland did it in touchdowns and scored one him- The Saints' defense, mean- 1953. And, it continued the self, white Cid Edwards rushed while, intercepted four Norm Rams' hopes of becoming the for 128 yards and scored one TD Snead passes as New Orleans first team to complete an un- as St. Louis handed the Steelers picked up its third straight vic- beaten campaign since the Chi- their 10th straight defeat. torv and fourth in five games. eago Bears of 1942, when the The Cardinals managed only HTffl ClfflT SIP a 12-3 halftime edge WI full season was only 11 games. , but three ^g _ . f tjmm¦¦¦¦¦ f t ' second half interceptions — all |tf ^9^^^^^^^^^^ B||^^L ft. M/^kWf ^ " Meanwhile, BUI Nelson's pin- turned into touchdowns — put it Gophers picked point passing spirited Cleveland away.. 90 yards in the fading minutes to place eighth Halt, who had scoring tosses MIKE WOLL for a 28-24 victory over Chicago ' —giving the Browns the Century of s^*en, five and nine yards to CHICAGO - (AP) — Confer- .' . ¦BBBW ^'V mrv»ft ' ' Division title. Dave Williams, completed 19 of ence coaches and newsmen . mmmmmM ^^EM^^B^MI^^M^^mmma ^ ______^^ ^^B each , plus $1.79 ^^^^^^Uftj^^H_S___l______H______M_^___k ______Fed. Ex. Tax, size Los Angeles will play Minne- 32 passes for .195 yards. He also picked the Minnesota Gophers ^ ^^ ¦ ^ ^^^^ ¦ ¦¦ ^^ ¦ B .. ^H ______sota—which sewed up the Cen- scored on a one-yard sneak. Ifj Ilgij lSKIM ^H blackwall to finish eighth in the 1970 Big ^^^^^ Mtlllfc^^B^BB^^S^^J^PS^^P^^SS. ^B^Mtfl iPLMI '^H ^H ^| tral Division championship with Quarterback Don Horn, filling Ten basketball race. Purdue ^H ^^^^^^ HThere is no industry- . a Thanksgiving Day conquest of ^^^^^^^B/^MtBm ' in for injured Bart Starr, con- was the overwhelming choice to ______MJ^_____M^_B____fcw ^l_>^a__^ .^^.^STS -iBB^ ______^^______F wide standard for tires. Detroit—for the Western Confer- nected on a pai of TD tosses as win its second straight champi- MiMs^-MWm^Sk ^^ ^^^ ^ First-line refers only ence title Dec. 27. There will be n^^^^Kt to Green Bay shook off a three- onship. The Boilermakers re- mmz^S^^^KR^^^^^Bmtfxkfir-^F u*tJtft ^t ^tjLJmfmm tftfnmm i&ML General's line of tires. a preview of that pulverizing game losing streak by handing ceived 35 of a possible 47 first- WK^^H^^^^BmmmmmW9 ^.mW m^ showdown next Sunday, when tha Giants their seventh Fhst-Line Quality Deep Duragen Rubber plaae votes for 451 points. Ohio \BKwm^^^^^^BK^^LimL ^ \: vlfc ^^r • * • * the Vikings travel to LA. straight defeat. ' State was second with 384 K J^* TreContouredad Cleveland will lake on either Horn |^ P P|[ ^^^ H |HH &^^ AVAILABLE threw a 36-yard TD pass points. ' Nylon Cord • Shoulder Dallas, 8-2-1, or Washington , 5- to Donny Anderson, climaxing a Illinois was ranked third with iSK|k|^^^^^ BH ^^ B|lp v^^^lf^l___^ 4-2, for the Eastern Conference 95-yard march, after New York M' , Iowa had ' 321 , Northwestern title Dec. 28. Although the Red- took an early lead on Pete Go- HL s&lre ^BSmPKBUmWAW- -Y- ' - w$f<$WJ£m WHITE WALLS AND THESE LARGER SIZES 219, Michigan 215, Indiana 207, WL mmBns AT EXTRA COST. skins' loss Sunday virtually golak's 14-yard field goal. Then Minnesota 161, Wisconsin 1$3 ftm^^m^^ffUK^^^MLML/"JmjNnHH 7.00x13 killed their Capitol Division the young quarterback teamed and Michigan State 126, m\mmmmmmm ^^Kt^%M'im^ 7.75 x 14 8,85 x 14 7.75 x 15 8.85 x 15 hopes, the} still have a slim with Carroll Day on a 41-yarder R«PM|||^^HR^^In_lS^_^HBH^& 6.95x14 8.25 x 14 6.85x15 8.25 x 15 9.00x15 mathematical chance of over- HF 7.35x 14 taking Dallas. raM^^^KP^HHH|3HMfl|HHB In other games Sunday, Balti- ¦ more edged Atlanta 13-6, St. ^fc^____t*'4i^______R'wi^____^______B ' Louis ripped Pittsburgh 47-10, Green Bay checked New York 20-10 and New Orleans beat Br^^^^^Ki^B^B^lBEHHBr^BinTirTiiiTl mr TTiT MB MIKE HALLORAN Pittsburgh 2fi-17. The *.wo conference winners meet .Jan. 4 for the NFL title and the right to go to the Super I nfl ^^^^^ BHQRBjHH f j %^&ALL WINTER Bowl Jan. 11. AVAILABLE WITH San Francisco, Dallas, Minne- ^^^^^^^^^^ H^Hfl^HH^' fBB0* sota and Detroit were idle. ^^^^^^^ Bj ^^^^^ HK^ F V5^ STEEL SAFETY STUDS Gabriel fired two touchdown passes—one-yard to Bob Klein ^BB_|_P__P__P__|P__|_|P__|_|_|_^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^M^ill3jM\ (Prohibited in Georgia, Mississippi ^fl in tho second quarter and three yards to Billy Truax in tluo final quarter—and Willie Ellison ran six yards for a score, while the Rums awesome defense throw WILLARD Jurgcnson into a tizzy . HEAVY DUTY Sonny, who led the league in 10-POINT COMPLETE BRAKE OVERHAUL - aerial yaraiigc going into the game, was held to less than 50 yards net gain In passing during ¦ ¦ the first three periods , was in- > NOT JUST /% RELINE! WILL TURN YOU ONI tercepted twice and dumped for L tl WE DO ALL THIS WORK: TOTAL COST _____ losses six times. He finished t*S5§S&\ chu '!' with 20fi yards on 21 of :i!) com- P»rt« and Labor K5—«P "' : E__dh 1. Replact brnk« lining en 6. Inspact braka hosat msBfSSsSSSsVour* plol ions. ***¦ todny! all four whttla , _ , , , , jfc.^fe. M^ * \ wB ^&B ^^ SL Gale Sayers, 7 R, »,a ho who scored a 2. Arc lining for p.rf.ct " " *« """ ' * DICK TRACY By Chester Gould BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Wal ker BLONDIE By Chick Young ¦ V ¦ ¦ ' ' ' ¦ - . . .. - .. __> ' ' ' ^^ ¦MasMMMMMeMn ^^^ aaManMnM ^^^^i^ii______l______»______»<» '———*-**-i FI *I -I **I LI'L ABNER By Al Capp REDEYE By Gordon Bess BARNEY GOOGLE ind SNUFFY SMITH By Fred Laswell STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kotaky I ttlidaySpecials TAG OF IM ^ HB TAKE ADVAN E THESE JL A A Q-j ||W ULL YEAR-END CLEARANCE PRICES NOW! afea ^ T S ' PAWED REX MORGAN, M.D. By. Dal Curtis . ... b Kroehler. With Scotchgard treat- MCLWER tT!w!y ^SmS^ B I l j l __ ed nylon covers. Your Choico .... W.T. J \ ^p ¦ STr ^J v . ^** * ' in black naugahyde...... 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