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Winona State University OpenRiver

Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

3-14-1972

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1972). Winona Daily News. 1117. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/1117

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f WE CLEANED OUT THE PLACE with chance J J WithoWont A. t - of^howers ; a;v v;.^ , V^ Florida primary: a place to learn for Democrats By CARL P. LEUBSDORF .. Democratic presidential nomi- race as a Democrat, are the vals hoping to capture close to gained national attention with presidential candidacies. think Muskie's had It, and MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Mora nation. other major contenders in the half of them in the congression- his campaign against a propos- Humphrey needs a strong Humphrey is in deep trouble." than two million Florldians For Muskie, Florida .could 11-candidate Democratic field. al districts of the Tampa-St. al urging a constitutional showing to overcome fears by At Tampa, Jackson said ha vote today in a free-for-all pres- further cloud a front-runner im- Among the Republican, Presi- Petersburg and Miami areas. amendment to ban school bus- political professionals he is a had passed Muskie in Florida. idential primary, that could in- age that suffered when he dent Nixon is expected to be a Polls will be open from 6 ing to achieve racial balance "loser," while Jackson needs "We're close to Humphrey, and fluence the national prospects polled 46.4 per cent of the votes runaway winner over con- a.m.. CST to 7 p.m. More than and could score a major politi- one to show he should be con- I may have passed him too," of three likely Democratic los- in winning last week's New servative Rep. John Ashbrook two-thirds of the 2.1 million cal victory by keeping the ex- sidered as a major Democratic he added. ers more than those of the ex- Hampshire primary in his na- of Ohio, who has campaigned in Democrats and nearly 800,000 pected margin of approval rela- presidential contender. Humphrey campaigned from pected winner, Alabama Gov. tive New England; Humphrey Florida the past week. 1 Liberal Republicans are expected to tively small. "If 'Scoop' . Jackson does Jacksonville to Miami on Mon- George C. Wallace. and Jackson faope for strong Rep. Paul N. McCloskey of Cal- ballot in the state's first major The governor is already well," the Washington senator day, proclaiming: "Not one of Sens. Edmund S. Muskie of showings to spur their drives to ifornia dropped out of the race presidential primary. being mentioned by same of the told reporters at a Miami news the other candidates stands a Maine, Hubert H. Humphrey of overtake him. last week but is still on the bal- A fast count is expected since presidential candidates as a conference, "niy show is on the chance of beating George Wal- lot here. voting machines are used in all possible vice presidential nomi- road." He shied away from Minnesota and M. Jack- Sen. George McGovern of ; ¦ lace except Hubert Humph- son of Washington are fighting South Dakota, the surprisingly Nixon is also expected to win 67. counties. '¦nee. .. . predicting how well he would rey." V tor second spot behind Wal- strong runnerup to Muskie in all 40 delegates to the Republi- In addition to the presidential For Humphrey and Jackson, do in a primary he once consid- Aides to the Minnesota sena- lace's antibusing bandwagon New Hampshire, and - Mayor can National Convention. contests, Florida voters will de- who bypassed the New Hamp- ered make-or-Break for his can- and for position in the multi- John V. Lindsay of N^tv York, The 81 Democratic delegates cide a number of issues. shire primary, Florida provides didacy. But he said if Muskie (Continued on page Ila) candidate scramble for the a former Republican in his first may be split, with Wallace's ri- Gov. Reubin Askew lhas the first major test of their and Humphrey do poorly, "I Florida primary

In North Ireland Ih^eykillin^vtl ^ii iw Busing issue bombings break truce expected to BELFAST (AP) - A trol in Londonderry. a police officer. three-day cease-fire declared The bodies of the men In . Belfast, bombs damag- Republican were brought to a hospital ed a house, a paint store, a by the Irish gasoline station and a Army ended Monday night shortly after the gun battle butcher shop and destroyed aid Wallace with the killing of three in the Catholic Bogside dis- an automobile. Three explo- MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — Ecology, the economy, crime in moire men and a chain of trict. The army said one sions occurred in London- the streets and welfare all bave been topics for the active bombings in Northern Ire- of the dead men was a derry; v candidates in today's Florida presidential primary. But for land. member of the IRA. Three In addition to young Mc- most Floridians, the primary issue is busing. bystander Patrick McRory, an 18- British soldiers were wound- Rory, a woman The question of busing children to achieve racial balance year-old Roman Catholic two of them seriously. was killed by guerrilla gun- ed, in schools has made Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace the standing on .his doorstep in The deaths brought to 272 fire during the weekend leader in the Democratic race, and state legislative action a mainly Protestant neigh- the number of persons killed cease-fire, four person- that put a busing straw vote on the primary ballot is ex- borhood of Belfast, was cut in the 31 months of North- were wounded, and two pected to bring out additional Wallace voters. down by gunfire from a ern Ireland's politial and bombs were exploded. But moving car shortly before religious war. Sixty-six per- that was a comparatively Busing has forced the major national candidates to the truce expired at mid- sons have died in 1972. , quiet weekend for North- take stands on the issue and forced them to tread cautiously night. The , most powerful bomb ern Ireland. so that a stand in Florida doesn't conflict with a stand in Before the night was over, wrecked nearly every store The truce had been de- less conservative states where they face future jnrimary con- 10 bombs caused much dam- front on Lisburn's main clared by the Provisional tests. Of the seven Democrats actively campaigning in Flori- age in Belfast, Londonder- street only 500 yards from wing of the IRA but scorned da, five favor school busing or say they can accept it as ry, Lisburn, Strabane and British army headquarters. by its Official wing. Pro- an unpleasant necessity. Castlederg, and two civil- Between 50 and 80 pounds visional leaders said the ap- of , MUSKIE MEETS WITH 1ELDERLY Y . ;V|Yaged. Musl^ Busing has caused Florida's young Democratic governor, ian men were killed, gelignite were detonated ceasfr-Hre was intended to '^ paign swings through central Florida prior to parently in a heavy ex- insiife a parkfedV car, wreck- back its demands for the Sen. Edmund Muskie meets with a groups of Rexibin Askew,, to take an unpopular position as a cru- (AP sader against the busing straw vote. change of gunfire between ing 10 nearby shops and release of suspected terror- elderly ladies at Orlando, Fla., before a speak- today's primary. Pho^fax) ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦¦¦:¦ ' - ¦ ¦ ' ¦¦¦ ¦ "'" '( ' - - . , ' ' . - , ¦' -y//- . guerrillas and a British pa- wounding three soldiers and ists detained without trial, ing engagement at a condominium fni thr iqMBft'Jgifelii'i'1 " . 'iSlr The busing referendum" placed on the ballot has no standing in law. Sponsors said it merely will allow Floridians to tell the nation their opinion on racial busing. Of 25.9 percent The referendum reads: "Co you favor an amendment to Report peace B 52s destroy the U.S. Constitution which would prohibit forced busing and guarantee the right of each student to attend the appro- Pay Board report priate public school nearest his home?" Askew's forces in the legislature failed to keep the re- pact between key N. Viet ferendum from being included on the ballot, but the governor did manage to tag on another referendum which reads: "Do you favor providing an equal opportunity for quality backs dock hikes education for all children regardless of race, creed, color Israel, Jordan headquarters or place of residence and oppose a return to a dual system BEIRUT (AP) - King Hus- SAIGON (AP) - U.S. B52 WASHINGTON (API - A men's Union won the big of public schools?" sein has reached a full peace bombers, blasting a path for a confidential Pay Board re- raise after a 134-day strike agreement with Israel, Bag- Coast A third question asks if voters favor a constitutional South Vietnamese armored port lends support to West that closed West hdad Radio reported today. ports. And, ILWU President amendment to allow prayer in the public schools, but that Earlier, the royal palace in drive into eastern Cambodia; Coast dock - workers, who Harry Bridges has vowed issue seems to have been ignored by the voters. Amman announced Hussein destroyed a major North Viet- are seeking board approval to renew the walkout if so Here are the positions on busing taken by the candidates would make a "statement of namese jungle headquarters of a guideline-straining 25.9- much as a penny is trim- tremendous importance" Monday night, military author- percent pay raise. campaigning in tbe Florida race: - med from the pact. The ad- Wednesday concerning the ter- ities reported today. The board holds formal mimslr ation has promised "It was one hell of a big • Rep. Shirley Chisholm of New York, the only black ritory Israel seized from Jor- healings today on thd raise, to back the Pay Board in candidate in the race, is in favor of busing. dan in the 1967 war. camp," said a U.S. officer. He which exceeds any it has any showdown with the said the air strikes laid bare a considered so far. union, • Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota says he op- The Iraqi broadcast said the complex of more than 10O un- The board 's staff report poses massive busing solely for the purpose of achieving agreement provides that the oc- derground bunkers filled with The 3LWU argued prior says the productivity of the to tho hearing that the big racial ratios, but he favors busing where necessary to pro- cupied territory on the West supplies and ammunition. vide equal education opportunities. Bank of the Jordan River and dockers went up 30 percent pay raisd is justified by the Gaza Strip which Egypt oc- Interrogation of a prisoner during the 1960s, saving past increases in. worker • Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington opposes busing cupied before the war will be- and aerial spotters' reports in- shippers up to $1 billion. productivity. and says he favors a constitutional amendment to outlaw it. dicated at least 34 enemy sol- "In summary, thd staff The Pay Board staff , in come an autonomous Palestin- New York Mayor John V. Lindsay favors school busing. ian state federated with Jordan diers were killed in the bom- concludes that there are a detailed analysis prepared • sufficient grounds to consid- in a United Arab Kingdom un- bardment and as many as 200 for the hearings, supports • Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota favors school der Hussein ' s Hashimite others fled into the jungle 10 er an exception to the ap- many of the union's factual busing, although he did vote for the busing compromise throne. miles inside Cambodia and plicable wage and salary claims. amendment in thc Senate recently. The old Arab quarter of Je- about 85 miles northwest of Sai- standard," the report says. It says unit labor costs gon. Without such a special ex- for the dock workers fell • Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine says school busing rusalem or part of it is to be 1 the capital of the new Palestin- Destruction of the headquar- ception, the longshoremen 30 percent from 1960 to can be a useful tool for desegregation but that he does not ian state, Baghdad Radio said. ters was the first success re- could get only a 9.2-percent 1970, while thdy rose by an like it. ported in the five-day-old But Israel's leaders have said South increase. This ihcludcs the equal amount for the na- Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace opposes school Vietnamese drive against ene- standard • bus- repeatedly Jerusalem is now a 5,5-percent lid on tion's entire private non- ing and has based most of his campaign on this issue. united city under Israeli rule my bases in eastern Cambodia. pay and 0,7-percent lid on farm e-conomy. and will never be divided Another armdrcd task force of fringes, plus allowable Mucli of this increased On the Republican side Rep. John M , Ashbrook of Ohio again. 2,000 men crossed the border standard catch-ups to com- productivity resulted di- is thc only campaigning GOP candidate, and he is an out- A dispatch from Amman said MISHAP ON FINAL PATROL . .. GIs in unit attached tod ay to join the offensive, but pensate" for recent substan- rectly or indirectly from spoken critic of busing. details of a broad new plan to U .S. 106th Light Infantry Brigade prepare to fix a track the Soulih Vietnamese have en- dard pay and fringe in- work-rules changes in the President Niaon, the only other avowed Republican can- aimed at breaking the deadlock on their armored vehicle southwest of Da Nang, countered little ground resist- creases. union 's I960 mechanization- didate, has not campaigned himself in Florida South Viet- ance so far. , but he has between Jordan and Israel nam. Unit was on its final patrol in Vietnam when the track Tlie International Long- a n d-modrt-nization agree- said he opposes busing and announced he will make a state- were handed lo the ambassa- came off the tread. (AP Photo(ax) Military authorities said the shoremen's and Warehouse- ment , the staff said. ment on the issue after the Florida primary. dors to the United States, the new thrust into Cambodia es- J M ***, Soviet Union, Britain , France ff l8&$&&±38 ^ifff8$%?$V£$>fX ^¦^^¦^yp^i^^^^ '^"^^^'^ ^ ^i- *^ ** '<**~iw ,w^ tablished a 35-mile front along and thc Arab countries Mon- ' t which some 7,000 South Viet- In settlement of IT&T suits -->< day. namese troops were driving The Jordanian government into suspected communist sup- newspaper Al Dostour said the ply and base areas. king would announce a "nlan to | On the inside: j "We nre saturating the consolidate national unity be- al omcn n,1( arc area , H fififif ttflPflS ^ " ' middlemen ¦ getting f| " a senior Vietnamese of- Mitchell expected to deny tween the banks role | two of Jordan | c |ii iocs m0YR m9M y for (,ce{) j .gj ys ficer snid at Tay Ninh , the on a permanen aml the mn is t basis of de- |i tlie highest beef prices on record — story, page 2a. |j command post for the oper- WASHINGTON (AP) - For- .luck Anderson ,who charged derson nnd his associates ailment , Rave him a different centralization. " ation. "It is our purpose to de- mer Atty. Gen. John N, Mit- Justice Dcpartmnt officials linked tlio settlement wilh version: Slie said Mitchell told The use of the term decentra- T 1C stalc PCA )Unrt Monday ordered Good- | chell takes a Senate witness with impropriety In thc han- her President Nixon told him to ^ UUIIli-inntl'arlabl ' ' * stroy everything we can." ITT's convention commitment. lization indicated some form of i| v jcw (0 j i„jt U)v Wjth Winona 's sewage treat- I U.S. B52 bombers have been chair today, expected to deny dling of the case, lay off ITT and make a reason- autonomy for the Palestinian | ment system to avoid further pollution of Riley 's Lake - i any role in the settlement of Klcindlenst' s nomination to Mitchell already has snid he able settlement. | | | | story, pnge 3a. . , hammering the enemy's known population on both sides of the . . $ or suspected locations, in- three antitrust suits against In- succeed Mitchell ns attorney met Mr.s. Beard at a party Mitchell denied that March 9, Jordan River. cluding Uie huge Chup nnd ternational Telephone & Tele- general was approved unani- after last spring's Kentucky issuing a .statement saying: Bnghtlnd Itndlo broadcast nn | | Roman " le Winona Counly Board of Commissioners has j | " M i m o t rubber 'plantations graph Corp, mously by the committee, but Derby at the mansion of former "The testimony attributing Iraqi news agency disnatch fj sc! ii public hearing May I for an n>yet undrawn ?V Mitchell Kentucky Gov Louie B sj plan for reapportioning county commissioner districts—story . U which are longtime headquar- , now head of Presi- is being licld up unlil tho hear- . . Nunn statements to me involving the from Amman which said the § pnge 3a. g| ters for North Vietnamese divi- dent Nixon's re-election cam- ings end. and told her ho did nol want to President i.s totally false nnd king hoped to pet approval of sions. paign, also is expected to re- Harold Gencen, ITT president discuss thc ITT case. without foundation." his plnn at a meeting this after- 2G"y tory and picture, page an. ;'•§ dieting, a .smaller rubber plan- summer's GOP National Con- Mitchel l has issued two state- ndvi.scd her that I was not fa- Nixon administration and ITT lights of the agreement: If u tation just south ot Chup. Rut vention and had no knowledge ments denying he was involved miliar with the matter and thnt to settle the suit in exchange •Proclamation of n ndw fed- P'^sent prospects of American businessmen § U\ TrailA11IIIIO sources in the field indicated it of ITT's purported pledge to in eillior Ihe settlement or the the appropriate people repre- for the contribution to the GOP eral state under Hussein to be j | dosing deals over n friendly cup of tea in Peking j § underwrite, convention negotiations an senting ITT should tnke Iho M are slim. Tliere are no signs of quick development of trade i-l wns doubtful that this drive some $400,000 in convention. called the United Ara b King- which is convention costs. charged by Anderson. mntter up with the appropriate Sunday, two cardiologists following President Nixon 's trip to China — story, pnge Bn. jf would go into Chup, dom. I Indochina 's largest plantation. Tlio hearings, now in their Mitchell is expected , how- people in the Department of confirmed Mrs. Beard's illness, kingdom is to be made •The $ Ifirjnp' Sources closo to author Clifford Irving my ho [| South Vietnamese forces have eighth day, aro being held at ever , la go into greater detail Justice." nt tho request of Judiciary up of two autonomous states , ¦ ¦ " wr|ij|ig failed several limes in thc past tho request of Acting Atty, Gen about hla encounter , last May Brit Hume nn investigating Chairman James O. KnstlniuJ. || || £ ^ another hook, this one about his roln Q . , Palestine and Jordan , ench of i;i. iii tho Howard Hughes autobiography hoax — story, pnge 3b. !:? to push the North Vietnamese Richard G. Kleindicnsl, He with Dltrt D, Beard , nn ITT lob- reporter for Anderson , testifler l They snid, however , that sho which will have its own govern- >?J : V 9th Division out of tilie 75 wanted to answer accusations byist, llor memorandum and last week that Mrs. Board , hos- may lie able to testify this ment for Internal affairs. square miles of plantntion. made by syndicated columnist subsequent Interviews with An- pitalized in Denver with a heart week from her hospital bed. Government economists report future is hazy Cattlemen, rniddlemen rnM original 1 cattle and from the AU told, the ,000-1V (EDITOR'S NOTE: Beef Department. On the hoof, beef Stein said. recent uptrend in not classified as red meat. farmer to arrive at an adjusted pounds of beef cuts reduced , t(^ , 439 nearl a beef prices. - At this point, the packing "farm value" for the red meat original carcass. steer was price* hit an average oil- cattle hit an all-time high of Meat accounts for y of meat selling for * time High ihis year. The fol- $32.60 per hundredweight in third of the average family's A 1,000-lb. choice-grade live company has a beef carcass of $307.14; But, on the average, there is pounds farmer or weighing only 620 pounds. The The carcass sold by the in the re- $468.40 total or about $1.07 per l lowing gives a feedlot-to- February. food dollar , and beef is by far steer is sold by a a 5-per-cent reduction more than three the favorite, according to gov- feedlot operator for $327.79, or carcass is sold on the wholesale wholesaler for $340.10 to a su- tail cuts from spoilage and pound. That's dinner.-table breakdown on beef the original on-the _oof . your beef dollar.) The futare for ernment analysts. afcout 33 cents per pound, not market for $340.10, or about 55 permarket chain, a large hotel theft. That leaves 439 pounds of times prices? ' transportation or any cents per pound for the net re- perhaps a small independent retail sale to cost per pound oi the live steer. Who gets the consumer beef . including or beef available for breakdown By DOISTKENDALL Hazy, according to govern- dollar? marketing charges involved. maining weight. grocery store now must be consumers. According to the , WASHINGTON (AP) — The ment economists following last , a marketing The packing company, which Meantime, the . meat packer transported, cut up, packaged of the cuts vary and allowing for the $20.65 re- Allen Baker The Jrices packer for farm-to-dinner-plate trail drive week's report by the Labor De- specialist for the department's; bought the animal, slaughters has sold the byproducts, in- and, in the case of hamburger, widely* from about 69 cents a ceived by the meat for today's steer is an increas- partment that the February Economic Research Service, the steer and converts it into cluding the hide, tongue, tripe ground up for consumers. pound for hamburger nationally byproducts, there was a mark- ingly expensive trip in which wholesale-price index was up provided a breakdown of beef' socalled carcass weight. By aind liver, weighing a total of During this process, the retai- lest December, according to up of $161.26 from the time the less than half of the critter 0.9 per cent, the most , in a costs using figures for the this time the steer has been di» 193 pounds, for $20.65. That ler trims the 620-pound carcass the Vlurtau of Labor Statistics, steer left the feedlot until it winds up on consumer tables at year. Food products, mainly fourth quarter of 1971, which in- vested of hide, internal organs amount is deducted by econo- of excess bone, fat and other to mere than $2 a pound for the ended up in shopping carts as triple its original cost per meat, led tie pace. cluded part but not all of the and other byproducts which are mists from the $327.79 paid the waste material. That leaves 463 more prized steaks. red meat. Herbert Stein, chairman of pound. '¦ Cattlemen are getting more the Council of Economic Ad- vfts'srz AS „rv.7^^c;ra.^v?s^^ V money for beef and so are mid- visers, said, livestock prices dlemen who slaughter, trans- recently have eased but in- port, slice, wrap and ring up dicated the retail price momen- steaks, roasts and hamburger tum will continue at least for a on supermarket cash registers. time. The result is higher beef "We do not expect further prices for consumers, a record sharp increases in meat prices average of $1.11% per pound on at wholesale, although retail a composite, all-cut basis in meat prices are likely to con- (/ (/ January, says the Agriculture tinue rising a little longer," (/ TED MAIER DRUGS \^ j Lucey praises j DOW ™^ ^fB^ESaifc MERCHANDISE, OUR LOW PRICES AND OUR SERVICE TO YOU _ j ^^tgmM S^ THE CUSTOMER/ TODAY! Beloit award PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SUN., MARCH 19 I f i BELOIT, Wis. (AP)—Gov. uing efforts of your citizens to Patrick J. Lucey says civic ef- improve the quality of their : ¦¦ : ¦ ¦ ' " ' ' ' ¦ ¦ y VAIUE :. :- 78* VALUE . -f ¦ ' " : : ¦ ¦ s selec- lives," Lucey said Monday in a W . J - JJ CTPi nCV vr .| . : v , V , $1 98 VALUE Y . : :V . -; fort which led to Beloit' speech for a banquet. j J all-America city en- ^ tion as an " Beloit was selected by the compassed human development National Municipal League as I MINIT ' - . MEDICATED nrtLt 1 in its totality." one of nine all-America cities. *j ^ia^ _j_\\\\\__\ ' "* . - 'T ^ 1 He said work by Beloit to im- ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' ' '" Lucey said state government 1 PI IR • ' ESiKi Aerosol Shave Cream . . HHH . vl V prove education, the environ- JY UD _ REGULAR & FLAVORED § ment, culture and human rela- plays a significant role in feed- I WSP W REGULAR MENTHOL DATSC mUTm ing financial assistance to : . & rAUy y ' tions provided "an outstanding I ' ¦ '/¦ ^JTMI M'C| ¦ "¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ : | ¦ example of leadership for other cities. § A - VhJyz, • F A^FM ¦ ^£&k A " cut . W- *% vl communities." As a result of a recently ap- p Y vV V , V Y YY„ ¦' " ¦ : ¦ • ' '¦' ¦ ¦ " ».«? : proved budget-review bill, there .]^c WMl': J ii- OOc Cric . ¦^V . IK 4 I "This honor reflects the vital- will be a 27.7 per cent increase ity of your community and fo- in 1973 tax credits for property ^ O^5 cuses attention on the contin- | ! ^- ff' owners over the previous year, ^ ^^^^ ^ he said. ^ ¦ : ; : ' ' Ay ALUE V V__ ' ..' " .V $i.79 VALUE ¦¦ '¦ Hope says He has "Beloit citizens, for example , I _¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ »_ " . $1 59 VALUE 450 V __^--^^. V VU EFT • I ' been falsely accused will receive an additional $159,- 000 in tax credits to reduce : GAS LINE of being pro-war their property taxes," Lucdy - i^l^l^l^?^ : ^ ^^-3 KOTEX. v/\ • ; | said. " I lf^^^C ^r Sg"1 . vnnqrenGhilclren s -* . . . ¦>*/ ANTI FREEZE NEW YORK (AP) - Comedi- "This means a property own- I \ 2S?5 ll -BlB g 1 an Bob Hope says "I've been er in Beloit with a home valued ¦ falsely ' accused of being pro- at $20,000 will have his credit I ' 1__SH D i DUrrtKIM¦ : Me r- _r>^s.r\ J war." increased from about $60 to Brylcreem ; ;;. - ¦: y - . -W: EGULA SUPE .y R R R ¦¦ "It's like accusing a doctor , I ffiEM . . - - fyf¦ ¦ ¦¦ j » 5 ¦FOR ¦ I ¦ $78 " he said. M ¦¦_ HM^H 36$-»A> ' ' ••if - f^rF ... ¦ ¦ ^^ - .^ , ft who gives a patient two aspi- iv IMPERIAL SIZE . * - . ¦:.- J y-gp* y . . . < — rins for a headache of being IRfflS a 1 proheadache," Hope added $70 mill ion in refunds : ; : ¦¦¦ 1 ~ si Tuesday night in hitting back I «Sm "•«* ^- no OOI ait criticism of him in con- paid state taxpayers : *1 nection with a church award. ST. PAITL , Minn. (AP) - Xyym95< VALUE : J ' ' . - 'V ;.. ___¦MA A ^^ WHILE SUPPLY The New York City Council of More than $70 million in 1971 I P*^ .^ J*f * f . . ^y ^ 'Y | Churches last year reversed its ¦ federal incopie tax rcfunis ' ' " .;¦; ¦;;¦' ¦ USTS ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ decision to give him its annual have been paid to M innesota I W ' .. -V . ' ";; ., .;- , : . , V" . . j- y jf ^ • ' . :: " : "i". Family of Man award after taxpayers as of March T*VI\ICK'S J $1.15 VALUE - ' , ' ' - ; | 4, says | $2.00 VALUE—RICHARD HUDNUT S ^ • | protests that he was identified George Letliert, district direc- with the war. tor of the V.S. Internal Reve- Hope, who has entertained nue Service in St. Paul. (Xbiigh-S^ troops regularly in Vietnam, The average refund thus far told the 23rd annual dinner of is about $200 per return he : : ^ Religion in American life that , v . 6.c, v V said, as compared to $265 a I HOME PERMANENT ' - fl^^ ^ ^ ^ he could never be "prowar. year earlier- ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ v ^, REGULAR , DRY, OILY ^ ^ I've seen too much of it." Lethert said the average fed- I P JJ, N AA l$S\ '^Hf Hi - I eral refund is lower due to the tax withholding tables in effect last year. ¦ II 1 —¦— • . . ,, .. ,. —¦———— \j S^j diyodSfe th $1.39 VALUE \ $1.98 VALUE W^^ J I F\ and ~!SH^ 1 ATTENTION! | TAME ; ,,, ,. $2,_S VALUE Jjg SPRAY MMIJS3M Hold , HB 1 Because we didn't have room for 1 f^^J ON /M^ B R E C K 'In all those wanting to take our January Clean ^^ I |" W CREME RINSE H M§J BASIC USy | DALE CARNEGIE c c $ COURSE jg 83 iffl 88 HE/ :. 1.22 BRECK We will be starting another class in Winona this : : J month. As classei are limited in sue, we en- I — , . :— Dryodorant fl courage you to ACT NOW if you have any interest ^ ' in getting more information about this course .. . 1 \ X f/j 1 10 Ways This Course Will Benefit ' " " REGULAR OR I ^L S ^ « ^^ lfc ^^i^^_SW^- ^^^^___i I iS^ / rUAD A klC | Men and Women "******^ CHAP-ANS • U.SCENTEO I 1. Increase Poise and Con- 6. Think and Speak on Your | H / fidence Feet ^' ^ O^Ji MEDICATED HAND CREAM 2. Speak ElJcctivcly . yl Control Fear and Worry I W^V^r _C Tc l 3. Sell Yourselj and Your 8. Be a Better Conversation- Ideas alist 4. Be your Best With Any 9. Develop Your Hidden Abil- Group ities 5. Remember Names 10, Earn That Better Job , More Income i wi ll Wrndshield I CLASSES NOW BEING FORMED IN m— ¦ WINONA :] EASTER CANDY $1.69 VALUE WasherTTUOIICI | For a free Brochure describ ing the course , fill ui the attached G,FTS! Coupon nnd nuiil lo Dole Carnegie Courses , Box 413, Rochester . AND > Minn. 55001. Naturally there is no cost or obligation. j D-CON READY MIX Solvent »<» ,„ | JELLY BIRD EGGS - ' - 27c «IUS .ATS « M I SPANGLER G«'- Name | 8-OZ. BAGS ,lb ^_|fi | C £jL F I Address I CIRCUS 4'" 88c VV ^' "™ " ~ ~~~ City § 49C VALUE, "*" I Zip RIT <^ _ Presented hy G. W. Driseoll and M, L, Norman | EASTER EGG COLOR KITS - - 37c If • SfeeC (V) Al€R • rf 1 i ¦ 1 i IIP —P ¦ m m _ _ 1 PLAYTIME ^ J | C^______T* ___ __T__I •! "J I «-. «.« 111J >l V^MI 9^ IS THAT . . . 1 EASTER CANDY «* - . . 33c ' m i %j ^ "one drink too many" becoming a habit with you or W nerme DISCOUNT j lomoone In your family? Tha Winona chapter et Alco- ^> C\0/ holic* Anonymous ttends ready to talk this over wllh i EASTER SAND PAIL BASKET - 66c OH ALL PHOTO FINISHING you. Cell 454-4410 — the number I* In your phone book. JL\J /O | > ' * Black & Whl»« All calls nre confidential. If you need ANO want fittp I and Color % with m drinking problom, call Alcoholics Anonymous NOWI STRAW HAT EASTER BASKET - 88c I (r, zz^f DOWNTOWN sao TO 600 - 452 7000 I XA.^AX&^r, r .<™z^ ^^^^ '•¦ - ¦.u.i.J. v .. A '< 1 ( Independence man arrested for giving aid to kidnapers By VI BENICKE family's home are: to drive to a telephone booth before U.S. Magistrate Robert Daily News Area Editor Joseph R. Diffie, 32, a White- outside the Blue Moon Supper French in the Winnebago Coun- Wis. — A 26- ty courthouse, Rockford , HI. EAU CLAIRE, hall farmer and form* school Club on Highway 53 in Ona- year-old Independence man is l Mathews is wanted in Wiscon- teacher, and Mr. and Mrs. Pau laska. the fourth person to be arrested E. Mathews, rural Indepen - sin on a kidnap charge and abduc- Monday forenoon Diffie was in connection with the dence, v- . . . V Mrs. Mathews is charged in a tion last week of an Eau Claire charged with kidnaping when Wisconsin warrant with being dentist's son. LATE MONDAY the sum of he appeared in Eau Claire z party to kidnaping. Dennis W. Schendel was $21,24Q was recovered from the County Court. Judge Thomas Magistrate French Monday charged with harboring and Mathews' vehicle in Illinois, H. Barland set a $50,000 cash set Mathews' bond on the fed- aiding felons this morning when reported Eau Claire authorities, bond and scheduled a pre- eral charge of unlawful flight he appeared in Trempealeau along with a pistol and four liminary examination for March at $50,000 and for Mrs. Math- County Court, Whitehall. shotguns. Earlier FBI agents 21 at 3 p.m. Diffie, who was ews on the same charge, at He was charged in Trempea- recovered $21,381.82, ¦which Dif- remanded to the Eau Claire $10,000. leau County, said Eau Claire fie had reportedly used to pay County jail, said in court he Their preliminary hearing Police Chief A. R. Ziehlsdorff, an operating loan at the Farm- would hire an attorney from date was scheduled .for March since all of his activities in ers Home Administration office Oklahoma. 16 at 10 a.m., subject to tho connection with the alleged kid- in Alma, Wis. The money was Diffie could receive a maxi- U.S. attorney in Madison, sine* naping took place in that coun- later deposited in a Winona mum 30-year, sentence for . the he will be prosecuting. After ty, out of the Eau Claire juris- bank. Diffie also had paid a $4 kidnaping charge. Eau Claire pleading indigency, the coupht dog tax with a $5 bill which County District Attorney Law- received court-appointed at- ¦ diction. Xv& ^yxn-y ^-iv;***:.-:^ ' +,«* nWi^-Ms&y ^&xfiii. Dr. Aim was first reportedly MATHEWS, 35, and his 32- they do not waive extradition as his ard Galstad, Osseo, told to to Osseo court-appointed attorney. Wil- go with the ygar-old wife, Mary, were proceedings, Wisconsin author- ransom money, La Crosse charged with unlawful flight to ities will start the proceedings Wallin is liam Mattka, Trempealeau Coun- County Sheriff ty district attorney, represent- Richard Baker avoid prosecution, Monday immediately to return them to said. From there, be was told killed in plane crash ed the state. afternoon when they appeared that state". Richard SV Glaunert, 53, 521 been with the local company un- American Legion Post 9, and Judge A. L. Twesme said no indictedfor bond was required and released Sunset Drive and Norman Hal- til his transfer as manager of the Westfield Golf Club. Survivors his wife; two Schendel on his own recogni- vorson, 37, Houston Rt. 2, Minn., its- La Crosse store in Septem- are: sons, Richard Jr., Lincoln, zance. No date was set for the towi of Pleasant Hill, were kill- ber, 1970. Neb., and Mickey, at home; conspiracy preliminary hearing. ed. Sunday ; in a plane crash Authorities said they believed one daughter, Mrs. Jerry (Car- Maximum fine on the charge Dl. Also killed in the plane crashed about 10 min- Dale M. Wallin, 30, Winonan is more than $500 or a near Orion, ol) Adelman, Ripon, Wis.; sev- for whom authorities have no not the crash was the pilot of the utes after it made its last ra- en grandchildren; one brother, prison sentence of not more than Cessna 172 Kenneth Johnson dio contact with Moline's control permanent address listed, has one year, or both. , , Eugene, Philadelphia, Pa,, and been indicted by a federal 67, Eau Claire. tower. An extensive search for two sisters, Mrs. Harold (Nita) A spokesman the craft was launched Sunday grand jury in St..Paul. He was SCHENDEL, a native of Gibson. Big Bear Lake, Calif., formally charged with conspir- for the Federal night when the aircraft failed and Mrs. Clarence (Beatrice) Fairmont, Minn., reportedly has to arrive at Moline as sched- ing to rob a bank and entering been living in Independence the Aviation Admin- Colfack, Columbus, Neb. larceny. istration s a i d uled. The wreckage was found Funeral arrangements are be- a bank- to commit past Mw months and -was em- the plane left about 24 hours later on Monday ing made by Fawcett Funeral The charge results from a se- ployed by the Whitehall Packing Band Creek, night. Home. ries of events in Winona in Plant, Whitehall, from Dec. 13 Wis., Sunday. Authorities still are seeking Norman L. Halvorson was which Wallin and two Winona to March 6. A three-year Army It stopped at the cause of the crash, born at Rushford Minn., June juveniles allegedly conspired to veteran, he is married and has , Bank of Winona where A spokesman from the La 17, 1934, the son of Arthur and rob the First National two children. It was fueled Crosse, Wis., Flight Service Thora Grinde Halvorson. He Winona, 177 Main St., about All of the $50,000 ransom paid and the two said today there was a great married Delores Steinfeldt at noon Feb. 17. for the return of Stephen Aim, men hnnrdflrt it amount of thunderstorm activ- Ridgeway, Minn., July 16, i960. According to Winona Police 17-year-old son of Dr. and Mrs. sometime after Glairaert ity reported in the area where He served in the Army from Chief James McCabe, the police Donald J. Aim, Eau Claire, has lunch Sunday. the plane crashed Sunday. 1960 until 1962. He was a mem- received a "tip" that gave them been recovered, according to The men were flying to a Mid- ber of Grace Evangelical Lu- reason to believe the bank was Eau Claire authorities, with States farm supply dealer meet- RICHARD Stanley Glaunert, theran Church, Ridgeway. going to be robbed. Police alert- the exception of about $3,000. ing in Moline, Dl;j for a group _ie son of Felix and Helen ed the FBI, McCabe said, since Other persons charged in the called the "River Rats," includ- Kulas Glaunert, was born at SUKVIVORS are: his wife; bank robbery is a federal of- alleged kidnaping Wednesday ing farm supply dealers in the Winona June 26, 1918. He mar- one daughter, Connie, at home; fense. of the Aim boy, who had been area up and down the Missis- ried Dorothy Tullius, Feb. 22, his mother, Rushford, and two The three men entered the taken at gunpoint , from the sippi River. 1941. They had lived in Winona sisters, Mrs. Kermit (Shirley) bank through the rear door and 12 years, where he had been Klinski, Plum City, Wis., and went to the far west teller's GLAUNERT was manager manager of Valley Distributing Mrs. Joel (Audrey) Johnson, window, McCabe said. He added and secretary-treasurer of Val- Company 10 years, and prior rural Houston, when ho teller came to wait on ley Distributing Company, Wi- to that was a 20-year employe Funeral arrangements are be- the three individuals they left Change order nona, and Halverson, manager of S. S. Kresge Co. He was a ing made by Martin Funeral through the rear door and were of its subsidiary, Valley Farm member of Winona Elks Lodge, Home, Winona. arrested. & Home Supply, located at La a World War H veteran and A memorial is being ar- ¦ One of the juveniles had a Crossel Wis. Halvorson had member of Leon J. Wetzel raoged. V - note on his person that he ap- is approved parently intended to pass to the bank teller and an attache case. The note, pen printed on a two^ by three-inch piece of notebook for vo-tech paper, read , "Do you know A change order providing for Board sets hearing on what this is" and was signed installation of an additional lay- er of plywood on the platform of , "The Gangsters." *, '^: :'*-^m?.->.veeeeeumemmemeemmemi ^m^*eeeweeim&e^m.™9xtieeeau;.-?.-^eee^eeeememeaam^m-'¦>:•» the lecture room in the addition According to Assistant U.S. KIDNAPING CHARGE . . '¦ , Joseph R. who is the to the Winona Area Vocational- a 17-year-old Eau Claire, Wis., youth last Attorney, Earl Cudd, Diffie 32 Whitehall -is shown prosecuting attorney, Wal__ re- Technical School now under con- , , , Wis., . as he week. Escorting Diffie is Eau Claire police reapportionment plan mains in Hennepin County jail struction was approved Monday was escorted to Eau Claire County Court officer Donald Polhamus. (AP Photofax) 000 bond. Wallin night by the School Board of Monday to face charges in the kidnaping of I By STEVEN P. JOHNSON missioner Charles Williams represented by Commissioner in lieu of 51, will appear with his court-ap- Winona Independent District i Dally News Staff Writer from his own district. Leo Borkowski, 3975 7th St., pointed attorney, Neil Con-very, 861. The cost will be $995. The Winona County Board of The key to the whole redis- Goodview. It is that district St. Paul, sometime this . -week William Hemsey, director of Commissioners will hold a pub- ricting concept, board mem- which has become excessively for arraignment. the school, explained that the lic hearing May l on an as-yet bers agreed, is Winona Town- change order was recommend- undrawn plan for reapportioning large under the 1970 census and ed on the ad- ¦ . . ship, particularly a small chunk must be reduced in size. Preliminary action on the county's commissioner dis- vice of the . of the northern end of the town- K "Winona Township can le- tricts, the board agreed late ship, containing seven families, DFL use of seating sup- School Monday. that is geographically separated gally be removed from that dis- plier who said trict without also taking the Commissioners spent much of from the rest of the township that greater Board Monday afternoon studying the village of Goodview, redistrict- stability would by Winoiia city and Goodview ing could be accomplished with senior high ¦¦ contract matters taken county's 1970 census data for Village. be real- indications of how the necessary The legal question before a minimum of juggling. Remov- ized with the installation of the By C. GORDON HOLTE forms by March 20 each year. of issuing the new contracts redisricting can be accom- commissioners is whether the ing both the township and the three-quarter inch layer under Daily News Staff Writer Superintendent of Schools A. based on present salaries. village would not be a reason- approved " .—iplished. It.was township, split as it is by Good- is the entire platform. Preliminary action on con- L. Nelson said that since nego- "They won't be signed, we'll able move, c o m m i ssioners Use of the Winona Senior The board also accepted a tiations on new contracts be negotiating for new contracts ^» . the first time view, can be in a different com- its teaching LOUnfy the board has missioner district than the vil- agreed , since it would make High School for its county con- recommendation by the school tract matters for haven't been initiated he felt and it seems to me that it's a ¦ ¦ any district it is added to ex- vention was granted the county business manager Paul W. staff for the next \lork year the most practical approach waste of time and money to 0 , met . to study lage. , board the problem. cessively large itself , as well as DFL Party Monday night by Sanders, that the salary of the was initiated Monday night by would be to simply issue con- write out all of these new co- THE LAW says township making the 2nd District too Board mem- the School Board of Independ- lead secretary at the vocation- the School Board bf Independ- tracts for 1972-73 specifying tihe tracts that mean nothing," Fril- boundaries cannot be violated small . ent District 861. al-technical school be raised same salaries that are being lici declared , bers expect to in setting commissioner dis- ent District 861, motions that come up with a detailed plan Superintendent of Schools A. from $450 to $465 a month. for the most part represent paid this year. He asked whether, from an tricts, which means that the IF THE township cannot be Nelson told directors that economy standpoint , the board well before the May 1 deadline southern and northern sections legally removed, the only oth- L. Mrs. Charles Russell was em- mere formalities to comply set for a legally required public the party was . ployed last Oct. 25 and Sanders HE SAID ihls seemed advis- and teachers might waive the of the township could not be er choice involves a westward with state law during a period able since the board at this time hearing, and hope then to take requesting use . , explained that the recommenda- in bargaining pro- March 20 contract issue dead- almost imme- placed in separate districts. shift by the two city districts of transition has no knowledge of what funds line. final action on it The law also states, however, of high school SCnOOl tion for the salary increase was cedures. diately after the hearing, if no to gobble up some of Borkow- f acilities might be available for any sal- Supt. Nelson said, "I don't that commissioner districts precincts, being made in accordance with A new Pub- _ . T" strong opposition is encounter- ski's city a school policy to review salar- J ary changes. think we are legally able to cir- must bo made up of contiguous Such a move would create the March 25 Board lie Employes SCnOOl ed. territory, and board members He noted ies of new secretaries after a Members of the Winona cumvent the law," acknowledg- necessary population balance, Re- Labor Rela- Teachers Council representing ing that the issue of contracts THAT TIMETABLE wou were not certain whether or not that the three- to six-month period. tions Law 'd but would also move 4tih Dis- publican Party had' been granted ' DoaRnArqrrl the Winona Education Associa- at this time was meaningless piit tho new districts into effect that means that the village and Directors received and plac- adopted by tho 1 trict Commissioner Charles Wil- use of the facilities without ed on file, a letter from Carle- tion (WEA) and Winona Federa- from a practical standpoint. well before filing for the offices the township must bo in the liams, 456 Main St., into the 1st legislature at same district. charge for caucuses because ton W. Fish, president of tlie tio n of Teachers (WFT) , were The board then authorized the opens July 5. District, now represented by its last session doesn't go into nt the meeting and In its first detailed study of County Attorney Julius E. custodial employes were on Winona Senior Higli School their chair- administration to write con- Commissioner Len Merchlewitz, the time. effect until next July 1 but, man, Vincent Frlllici, question- tracts for 1972-73 specifying cur- the redisricting situation Mon- Gernes will be asked to come , duty at band, writing on behalf of the in the meantime up with an answer to that ques- 202 High Forest St In this case, he said, since bond, choir and orchestra , , the board and ed the economical Implications rent salaries. day, tho board agreed there are This would necessitate an teachers arc obligated to nego- likely only two logical ways to tion. the convention is on Saturday , thanking tho board for recent The village and township, as election in the 4tli District, even a feo of $50 should be charged action revising a policy to allow tiate and follow procedures set go about redisricting the com- though Williams—and Borkow- out in the existing meet nnd missioner districts, one of which well as the five westernmost to pay for custodial services. each organization to make an " illegal Tho other precincts in the city of Winona , (Continued on page lln) Thc bonrd then granted thc out-of-clty concert appearance confer" law. is, probably . In tho first place would remove 4th District Com- now make up the 2nd District , Bonn! sets request. this spring. , the meet School bond nnd confer law specified that if contract issues nro «ot resolv- ed and nn impasse panel is de- sired to enter negotiations, a re- issue approved quest for such a panel must be Order Winona-Goodview sewer linkup mado by cither party prior to A resolution authorizing the cuss bond sale procedures. March 1. sale of $000,502 in bonds to elim- official s tho village while the city THE BOARD Mondny night Village of Goodview 's com- directed to file a federal grunt annual cost for connection to grant of 25 percent, inate nn operating deficit of the voted to retain Springstcd to were directed Monday by thc ments were brief. application by May 15 to cov- tho Winonn system would be GOODVIEW , however, isn't ALTHOUGH negotiations pro- schools of Winonn Independent bably will be conducted supervise details of the sale. Pollution Control Agency WINONA City Attorney er costs of thc connecting line about $17,600 whereas Its cost eligible to receive cither the , for the District J161 wns approved Mon- state George M. Robertson , greater pnrt , under tho new Thc plan outlined n week ago Jr told between village and city sys- for adding secondary treatment federal or tho stato grant, PCA day night by the School Ronrd . called for retirement of the (PCA) to link the village sewer the PCA that " we're principal- tems. Final construction plans to its own plant would bo $35,- members noted. law, tlio teachers last month The bond issue is being made with !that of Wlnonn to bonds over n 10-yenr period nt ayslem ly interested in taking care of and specifications must bo sub- 800 a yenr. Villnge authorities present at submitted a request for an ad- In accordance • (he further pollution of Illloy's Winonn people but justment panel to protect their with stnte lnw nnnunl estimated cost to the avoid , if you say mitted to PCA by Aug. 15 nnd Thc PCA said federal Envir- Ihe hearing were Mayor E. G. , . district of $00,722. Mississippi River bnck- BO, we'll also lake enro of the rights under the existing law. wliich pro- Lake, a tho contract must bo awarded onmental Protection Agency Callahan , Councllmoii Boyd Ni- SCnOOl This could be lower, tho board wnter opposite the village. people of Goodview." by Oct. 15. Tho PCA order re- (EPA) policy favors consolidat- chols and Chnrlcs R. Smith and They drafted the request with vlclos for .snlo village's primary treat- Wie provision thot both board of b ds had been advised, if an interest Tho Robertson told tho eight quires the linkup to bo com- ed sewngo treatment concepts Rex A. Johnson, clork. Also on , Board rate lower than tho 4.5 percent ment plant currently discharges bonrd members thnt Winonn pleted by May 15, 1D73. nnd opposes thc proliferation of on hand was Paul Brom , Good- nwl teachers agree to defer without a ref- Iho swampy n*ea, on which cost figures were pro- effluent into wns in a position similar to FOLEY told PCA members plants that sc-vo single commu- view foundry opentor , who pre- appointment of panel members erendum , by jected is rcnliv-cfi. poth tho city and the villnge thnt of "n reluctant suitor with that the village wants its own nities. viously had retained Foley in a until impasse is reached, Minnesota school districts which represented at a special a shotgun pointed hnve incurred deficits as a re- Tho present plans call for wore at his head." plant. "We don't need tho city EPA has allocated a 33 per- private capacity ns a citizen op- Tho board Mondny night for- snlo of iho Imuta April 17. PCA hearing in Minneapolis Tho order gives tho two mu- of Winona ," ho said, adding cent construction grant for Wi- posed to tho PCA order. mally acknowledged the request sult of changes in tho stnte Monday. It wns called to re- nicipalities 90 days to execute that tho lako allegedly being nona's new secondary treat ment The village council will meet nnd agreed to defer appoint- revenue law. THE LAW requires thnt tlie ceive exceptions (o the PCA or- i Joint treatment contract sub- polluted is "merely a shallow plant nnd it nlso Is to receive Wednesday night nt the village ment of panelists. A week «nrlier n representa- bonds be in the hands of pur- der by tho two municipalities. A stantially as outlined by PCA swamp, " a 25 percent stato grant. This hall ln a session postponed from Tho existing lnw also speci- tive of the St. Paul bond consul- chasers by June 30, long list was filed by Patrick several months ago, According to n previously in turn will qualify the Winonn Monday, Iho regular meeting fies thnt teachers must he pre- tnnt firm of Springstcd , inc., Estimated cost of tho bond Foley, Minneapolis attorney, for Village authorities nlso were drawn PCA report , tho village's plant for an additional EPA date. sented continuing contract hnrt met with thc hoard to dis- consultant's services Is $4 ,200. ENDS TUESDAY \______\\\\\\\\W^W___ \____\ 1:W. 15 - JI.SP - ^^^^^y#' B3g They're laughing in NY? Tonight iomorrow on TV ^ Vff^W r ! NEW YORK - What refeiences to it. The play M__MilMli_l_flM_B_ll___i______K l_M_f^f____i are they laughing about in opened — and closed —. New York City? Are they the same night. At 10 a.m., Earl Wilson Evanina BI"V Oraham¦ ¦ 11 Marcus Walby »-M» able to laugh there nowa- . -IM Mwtttn - . I Billy Oraham 11 the next day, a few hours u.f~JZ?Hi, P.— t„i ' days? These are questions ¦«» ««"•« « »:»»,"» JWMI- 'Y J Where Do All the Minnesota Vikings, after th. show's demise IWnTw mill . « tht I get from readers who Miss Verdon was on- a bus don't know that this is the was dining at the Spindle- *i» Word Pwiir t Awarti «•« M<*>'> °» Ti/tiaay « top when a cab driver in Uie 80s headed for Times Hawt M-M-lWWf .„, safari to *»nlonl ft Son I the happiest city in the world. • Cponirjr Plata r < N-ce Stl.. . . ^J? "* «¦ Vdvantur.¦ il _n*roBtf_-tfrf#l_t -llH l_ _-l STARTS Mayor Lindsay still gets brought in a blind man nuances • , . ,„„,, nawt li wearing dark glasses and "Where are you going at To Tall ttia Tnrts ? li» "roor CltlW'a , Ititt Nwi VMWll picked on when he's in «iM Oraat Daclilons » r,d ; Kawi «•!» WED. — this hour?" an acquain- *... ; »¦?-•..J WtriTTTSt^SfXt^TS^BU People Go carrying a white cane. The Oian Campbttl M* cannon , . . . Drajttat H town long enough. "It's a ' T headwaiter helped tbe blind tance asked the star. Winnie Wa Jtmss loiw Movii J-I-Il ¦HvSIW^Siiiil-SsAsHm^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^ . . . ., » ip wonderful city to visit," "To the theater," she Pooh I-1M1 Oamtr I J. Cirscii l-l0-11 ^^ —i——rrn-T r-nrr Tltl—_° the Mayor supposedly said man remove his overcoat, Billy Oraham « Billy Oraham V> 10:40 Elsctlom 71 «-Mt on , answered, "There s nobody Mod Iqiuo Perry Mason ll 10:50 Movli "but I wouldn't want to then helped him to a ta- ' M* 4 ble, hung the white cane there to feed the cat" Jaannla U Primus 31 11)08 Dltf emvelf t-i-ft ; J ZIP-A-DEE-DOQ-DAHI f live there.'' 7:0S Saw (mart 1 fiM Prlvata Collsaa U:M David Prott I J ^F M ^ i The Mayor used to kid over another chair — and Bruce Blaine, director of Mevla SO0-11 Conesr* » Movli ll Walt then handed him a menu. "The Omega Six," was mfp^? ¦ Disney's . "®# Y j Johnny Carson: "It's al- ' ¦ ____¦ J_r __ ___ri M -~ -_» _r__' - ^iM- /j^^^3^_9r j_f ¦ ¦¦ & -~ ~ ... / •' ¦ ' ___ us & mffiM*MBF ways nice to see you when V • . . * talking to a priest about P__K_v -i-k. ft -____-_r_K__r___f €K ^ ^_____n_IHH_l ST. PArS you re passing through A Howard Hughes spokes- using the auditorium of . . l-MIMg&glliliia^T *mTf ' Our Lady of the Peace wmM$ town. Now Carson can say man told me that Hughes 4U0 Sissms Strait t Courtihfp ot Ed- " ¦ Aft«m oari . will again turn his mind to Church for the play. 0 ek van Dyka I

Wm & LOUNGEHWYS. fyf SUBSCRIPTION RATES \B^_P^ INTERSECTION 6^ Single Copy 15c Dally. 30c lunday \o\\ Delivered bv Carrier—Per Week W cents & 14 AND STATE HWY. 43 26 weeks $15.30 55 weeks 330.60 ^rvtfS 1 JlDi - i ^J, 1B fllr SUPPER CLUB ' -aW" — PHONE 454 4390— iii By mall strictly In edvancai paper stop, I I i?m Jm& pod on expiration dates 7P«B_ FOUNTAIN CITY, WIS. ____ \\ \ Bf7 ? 6&Ov ^ -*>~«V&fr \A«« f mmm 'M GREEN - Our 0REEN PEPPE PEPPER flpoloctn lo those wo could not c , Mr m W l ^v H WitF M I 1 M V nccommodfltd. j Wo will ba ^^^^|^|^^^^^^^^^ | ^f^2_l______^B______^ OPEN AGAIN FRI., MARCH 17t h

Fnlth ond Bogorrn, IT'LL BE A GREAT DAY FOR THB IRISH! Wa'll havo Corned Bcaf & Cabb«o« tor Jlggi & Mogglo, Paddy'* Pig, Shamrock Salads ond Fish from the Irish (?) Seal OLD TIME MOV I ES ^1? &l|ffWllW§11 You can |li*^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ' ^ house __4i*4WJKi> FRANKS - - - > ±to . - :.$IM;J . ' ^?^$M- sical biography of Fanny Brice. (1939) 3:30 Ch. 6 . from China include tungsten IGA TABLERITE HORMEL . , and tung oil "NO TIME FOR COMEDY," James Stewart. A Broad- , both used in steel way playwright believes he's wasting time 'writing comedies. production; brush bristles; tex- «• SIZZLERS - - » °-59c (1040). 3:30, Cb. 19. tiles; ingredients for hair prod- CORNED BEEF 99c S^UIIDC lb M "WEST SIDE ST6RY ," Part I, 7:00, Ch. 5-13. ucts; art works; rugs and pot- M.»... uu.t ,u 7n. "UKR¦ bffUro¦ ¦ .- . - SWC WITH DRESSING "CHARLIE BUBBLES," Albert Finney. A writer seeks tery. ii* :- ,» ,. , : -;. , anV antidote for wealth and boredom. (1968). 7:00, Ch. 10. Most analysts say "high tech- Chow Mem Meat ; 79c - . .v- y nology PORK ROLLS - "• 89c "THE VENETIAN AFFAIR," Robert Vaughan. Com- " products are the ones ^ ¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦ « V Lb. 79c plex spy drama with colorful Venice locations. (1967). 10:30, that would interest Peking. For OCEAN PERCH FILLETS ...... - _^_^_^_^_^_^_^^£. example, sophisticated control . . . Chs. 3-8. y JOA FROZEN . . "THE MAN IN THE NET," . Mystery sur- systems for industrial plants, T B FL T$ _ Uum |^__^^_^^^^| rounds the murder of a neurotic woman — with false accu- petroleum offshore drilling sations against the husband. (1959). 10:30, Ch. 11. equipment and electronic "PENELOPE ," 10:50, Ch. 4. items. «.»„ "THE SECRET OF BLOOD ISLAND, Barbara Shelley, The Nixon administration ap^ ORANGE JUICE " ,^ A female parachutist escapes from the Japanese with the proved an Export license Mon- CK help of British POWs. (1965). 12:00, Ch. 13. day for a U.S. firm to maintain Wednesday a satellite" television station in "FRONTIER HELLCAT", Elke Sommer. Typical western China. Although most of the ««- - 4-wi. equipment already is in China ¦ V drama as outlaws disguise themselves as Indians and clashes c"r$i^oR 7-oz. J::_ With settlers result. (1964) 3:30, Ch. 4. as a result of Nixon's trip, ap- J I - mSmL proval of the license "THE OUTLAW'S DAUGHTER", Jim Davis. Western dra- was neces- *% ma involving a notorious character suspected of mastermind- sary if the equipment was to ————— CREAMETTES - « 10c W® remain. IGA ASSORTED FLAVORS t ing crimes. (1954) 3:30, Ch. 6. JM m ' Wff "PUBLIC ENEMY", James Cagney. Story of Prohibition The Commerce Department ^ * days as two friends control a racket. (1931) 3:30, Ch. 19. said the value of equipment for "WEST SIDE STORY", conclusion. 7:30, Chs. 5-13. television transmission was $2,3 "BULLET FOR A BADMAN", Audie Murphy. Tale of re- ICE CREAM CATSUP venge, violence and Indian warfare. (1964) 8:30, Ch. 9. >°-°- 3-' $1.00 ^** "COME FLY WITH ME", Dolores Hart. Comedy and ro- ff aE M __ C IGA RIPE RAGGED mance blend as three stewardesses seek love and adventure H OAU N' ¦ ¦ in Paris and Vienna. (1963) 10:30, Chs. 3-8. 7 percent hike jy •«* *». *«. . "BEBO'S GIRL", Claudia Cardinale. Story of romance PEACHES «•** 79c between a young Italian country girl and an underground 3'- hero. (1963) 10:30, Ch. 11. "THE. SINS OF RACHEL CADE", Angie Dickinson. An in meat imports I IGA TABLERITE IGA RED LE I I UvE American missionary nurse in the Belgian Congo struggles against disease and witchcraft. (1961) 10 :50, Ch. 4. y U r "SANDERS", Richard Todd. Adventures of a woman doc- Kid e BeaBS ° 6 $1 tor at a remote African outpost. (1964) 12:00, Ch. 13. slated for 1972 BUTTER " '" «. Ac WASHINGTON (AP) , -A ,GA « D 1 seven per cent hike in meat im- " I V ports for 1972 was announced c by the Nixon administration, ut SPINACH 5 $1 00 — livestock producers may be far '** '- ~~s. ™ 69W W WISCONS.N RUSSET ^ from pleased. ,GA TWIN PACK For this year, Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz said, most imports are estimated at IOA ORADE A POTATO CHIPS " 43c 1.24 billion pounds, based on ' POTATOES "voluntary restraint" agree- VISS 28-OZ. ments being negotiated with CC¦¦ jGS«_F 20-LB. BAG foreign countries. ^* ^* That is 80 million pounds more than the 1971 restraint Root Beer or Cola 5'- 89c level, but is far short of the 15 -w#% per cent or more boost sought - M c C by importers and some con- D=- 33 «* 12 # 9 sumer groups who wanted the I J Cottage Cheese - 29c Hr^^^^T ^V ^_ »_ ____r ^^^£S^J^, C lid removed completely. °* i YOU C. W. McMillan, executive ^^^^^^ — ^— vice president of tho American ^^^^^^^ \Y WOULDN'T yilllllllDIIIIIIIIII MBBHilBlOHBHHBMllg illllllllllllllllig « ^ \ Ik ^tr Mutter National Cattlemen's Associ- w^L ^L——\ ^^r cartons, cans, [ate, cups, ¦ ¦ ^ papers, bottUs bags er ation, said tho increase is a po- 30 " io ¦ COUPON is ^_^ ^Lm^ ^ , n COUPON £ COUPON fl ^^ P^ ^ rags around your own yard. tential threat to cattlemen in the future. ¦ DON'T DO IT anywhere elsol Doing it oven cnco add* up "The thrent of more imports 5 BUTTER NUT COFFEE 5 S DRIVE DETERGENT S DOVE LIQUID g to lots of litter, titter usually Isn't mado by o few peoplo 1 dumping a little. in itself (ends fo be a form of With dumping a lot; ft * «lu"0 a f°w P°oplo __^19y 5 S wi,h ¦ C wi»h price control ," he said, S 3 LBS. Thi, 49-OZ. £^ f\cC Thi. ¦ S¦ 22-OZ. ^Ar€ U This S¦ WB WONT STOP LITTER by >toppii>0 Ih* uto of certain B * Z. ' " g QU "Second, in future years, _¦¦ Coupoii H ^F _aT Coupon ¦ ¦ •^ Coupon ¦ can* or bottlts that make up only a fraction of it. Wo when the cattltf industry is not H = " ¦top It by stopping the littering. ¦ _ as favorably blessed economic- IGA W . Sth St. — ¦ ¦ — IGA W. 5th St. — ¦ — IGA W- 5,h St- — ¦ ¦ ¦ £ AND PLEASE . . . When you use our products or any ally, these foreign countries COUPON EXPIRES SAT., MARCH 18 BB 19 COUPON EXPIRES SAT., MARCH 18 S ¦ COUPON EXPIRES SAT., MARC H 18 g others . . . DON'T misuse thorn by making Utter of their and U.S. importers might use necosisary containers. DONTI 1972 as a vehicle to get more niiiiHiimiiiiiiE SiiiniiiuiiiiiiiR SaHi»«iB»fliiHH»0 JX beef into the country." ** r — McMillan said tho immediate STORE HOURS: 8 A.M. -9 P.M. MON. THRU FRI., 8 A.M. -6 P.M. SATURDAY, SUNDAY 9-5 P.M. COLD SPRING ^. effect may bo a "psychological \ |JX reaction" on tho cattle market BftT which could mean lower prices to producers. S wkmsofas' m Tho west coast has fewer BREWERS thunderstorms than nny other Si Paying over $53 Million In Excise area in tho country—an average and Direct Taxes Yearly. of less than five a year, accord- WESTTELEPHONE Sth STREET IGA 454-3030 — ing to thd National Geographic — Society. NEWS Wallace's bid WINONA DAILY of opinions¦ and ideas the A page ¦¦ '. : ¦ - ' ¦ ' - ' : ' '¦ ¦ - - ¦¦;;. of A •"- War books ' — ' ' - V ' ! GTSAAD, Switzerland - Gstaad Is _-___«_-^-__--«--__r_^-----*-<-_V-»-_a«*«w._P^^m cause of the New York dock strike, Winona, Mfnm, Tuesday March 14, W72 for bigger piece a sleepy little town that bustles two I replied that New York's long- Pag. ia, Winora Dally N«w.f or three months per year, when peo- Wlliam F. Buckley shoremen are distinctly my kind pf ple descend . on it in great num- *»»- ^--- *i_w» ^»_«_ __** ^ »i» ^ • ¦ ( ¦ - people, and I could not imagine bers, most of them to ski or to write so well? Do I go about play- their consenting to load the innocent of party action look at the skiers, or to drink with ing British colonels?" Fortunately, bottoms of Liberjan transports with- them. Mr. Niven is not a professionally books by Galbraith, and declining On the supposition that Governor Wallace of V Everyone runs into everyone at qualified skier — otherwise he would to ease their conscience by supply- Alabama today may be the front-runner in Flori- Cadonau's, which is where one pichs be intolerable. ing them with my own. I caljed da's presidential primary, many analysts — par- ' New York and had air-expressed six up trie daily edition , of-the Paris I felt no resentment at all against ticularly those who do not wish him well — have to Madame Cadonau, and Herald Tribune, paint supplies the display of his book. But just next copies gone out of their way to discredit the results in Scotch tape, stationery — and oc- then went to China. advance. ' to it was another book hy a famous casionally a book, local resident. "War, Economics, . MADAME Cadonau s window Is a and Laughter," by John Kejipeth I RETURNED fo find, In .thr win- They say Florida is not a microcosm ' dow, the of the showcase for a few recently publish- Galbraith. Bad enough, I thought, ell old entries, plus a pa- nation. Nor is it. Florida is heavily populated perback of Mr. Galbraith' by ed books which are there in three to pollute this unspoiled .Alpine re- s "Am- the retired, not only retired, but retired from oth- bassador's Journal." I thereupon col- languages, available for the occa- treat by displaying a book by Mr. er states, so that many of them have no identifica- lected from an old trunk a copy of sonal tourist in Gstaad who knows Galbraith , but altogether intolerable tion with the state. Moreover, many my anthology of conservative wrifc Florldians how to read. The saga of the past in the light of the fact that a chap- are part-time residents. In addition, the state has ing, and hapded it, wordlessly, to few months to do with my look- ter in it i? devoted to.the disparage- relatively " few union members, who, traditionally, has ' Madame Cadonau, who dutifully ing into the showcase to find promt* ment of a classic on municipal gov- are believed to identify pretty well with the -horned it into her feverish wh> Dem- uently displayed David Niven's best- ernment written by a third distin- ocratic party. dpw. The day, T saw a seller "The Moon's a Balloon.'! guished writer-in-residence of the next there , capy.pf New Industrial State" Mr. Niven is a local resident who area, to wit, me. "The BUT, TRY —in German, which is the kind of as tliey may to discount who it Is very highly regarded. It came as Added to this slight was the mys- voting for thing that happens when Galbraith Wallace, the votes he garners today something of a blow to the profes- terious nonappearance of my o^n re- will be by people decides to pull rank. I wired New , and they're all Americans. sional writers in residence when Mr. cently published book, a lacuna York and got hold of the single Niven managed to dash off a su- which Madame Cadonau embarras- extant copy,V in German, of book I Gstaad hook store: Messrs. Gal- In an editorial yesterday the Wall Street Jour- perbly written best-seller. The com- sedly explained on the grounds that a TRIUMVIRATE . . .At nal guessed that if Wallace runs well today it laywright George Axel- the book, though ordered months had a hand in writing 18 years ago braith, Buckley and Niverj. ment of the p on MpCarthy, which desiring Will mean that Wallace's appeal has extended into rod was dead on: "How dare he ago, had not arrived presumably be- Sen. the middle-management class. It comments that not to lose it (there were only 87 Wallace, in addition to his former racist and an copies printed), I priced at a level anti-intellectual base, appeals to a growing hum« beyond the reach even of the ski-set ber of "little people who are tired of being taken of Gstaad. Commercial for granted, ordinary men and women who prob- At this point it had become nec- ably can 't articulate their fears of a vague and essary to retire from the window impersonal "Everything You Always Wanted to bureaucracy but who feel it in their v bones." ' ¦ •' .,. Know About Sex, by Dr. Reuben, and everything you didn 't want to politics Harold ftopbins. Should the little governor know about sex by make it big today, Everyone has been moved out ex- WASHINGTON - Oddly enough, It might propel him into a stronger position than cept of course David Njven , and now a lot of people have been surprised four years ago as he prosecutes his candidacy the showcase has in it the original to learn that the International Tele- Russell Baker in as many as 12 other primaries. doctoral dissertation of Professor phone md Telegraph Corporation is .II ,. . i .i. . .. , )..' till' . . i > •• JI.I... Galbraith, written in 1936, and en- putting ip $400,000:^ maybe ?100,- pledge a cent of its money for the However, he may encounter some legal diffi- titled, "Economic Reasons Why The 000; the figures are srill confused) to Repubjican natic-nal convention un- culties should he decide to be a candidate in No- Government of South Vietnam Can- help pay for the Republican national )Tfiljyn 11i is either al- ^ I 1 ^|| y they do come back, if they do como ed lhat federal standards for abating air and wa- ^ ^ It has been remarked that the an- ready considering the matter or will back, It will be aa something less ter pollution would be met without "severe" ad- cestors of innumerable Americans do so once the campaign is out of than full-fledged heroes. verse effects, either on industry or the national the way. wore draft or war resistors or po- economy. mmmmtfi litical or religious dissidents who Richard Nixon and Nelson Rocke- fled to this country to escape mili- feller, once stood at polar opposites The study tary service or life under oppres- Child discipline declared flint the cost of abating pol- in the GOP. Tlie one, Mr. Nixon , lutio n sive governments. would not threaten "the long-run viability " was the thoroughly conservative ig i iih l William V. Shannon, New York The idea is that our present-day of any incluslry. Furthermore , the national econo- champion of thc orthodox Republi- Times editorial staffer, In Lot An- my would not be severely damaged by the im- r draft evaders or Army deserters, geles Times; canism based on the Middle West. {( . ^W WVM Wi'y:ViW^fcftW., ¦?i'¦ 'va position of ttfeMHYYtif.vw+r- *' tosM'..v-'..^'Kkii!^i. '¦ >" .rv& some 70,000 of whom are paid to be anti-pollution standards — Now York The other , Gov. Rockefeller , led the an Times ip Canada alone, are following an If a child is to learn to be liberal Eastern wing of the parly. honored American tradition and adult, he has to begin by respect- The years, however, have brought a ing the adults he knows his par- thflt (he stigma is not on them but , Moth slories purport to be summaries of the slow movement hy President Nixon ents and, if they are alive, his joint rqmrt tessf on the nation which was and is issued Sunday hy the Environmental toward the center nnd sometimes to _ fff_>l I3ftHfiBa»S _^'& '!" prosecuting an "immoral" war in grandparents, Respect does not pre- Protection Agency, (lie President's Council on En- even slightl y left of center. Rockefel- \M^mmm H MMl i i Vietnam. clude emotional warmth; rather, it vironment ;)! Quality and the Commerce Depart- ler, for hi.s part, has at the same The comparison might be valid Is love's jcomplement as the right ment. time steadily progressed from tho ^fliwSll iRi^l hand ls to left. By learning expect for one thing: Those who the lef t wing toward the center. mm^m^mm*,''' lcnw , , ' these self-righteous WINONA DAILY NEWS just about where Mr Nixon stands ternal affair in which no other coun- why do we hoar NORMAN HALVORSON on foreign policy, having steadfastly China communique, February try has the right to interfere." proclamations from Toronto and Arranoomonf* Incomplete MEMDEH Or THE ASSOCIATED PBE'lfl refused to buy tlio notion of tho 1972: Stockholm rejecting anything short new liberalism thnt the proper way "Tho United States acknowledges of absolute and total amnesty before f " mftftrm out of Vietnam Is the wny of out- that all Chinese on either side of they will consent to come homo? FunEPtAL Home,^ Tlio Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to Boss watchers Formerl do they want to como back y tho use tor republication at all the loca l newu printed right American surrender. the Taiwan Strait maintain there is, Why Breltlow Mtrlln Fijnirll l|i>flX in this newspaper ns well as all A .P. news dispatches. Too, Gov. Rockefeller is bolh n but one China nnd that Taiwan is No one goes before his tlmo to this terrible country at nil? personal friend nnd a liko-thinkor to part of China. The United States unless the boss leaves early, Let them etew. Let them stew STi Utt S.rnl. • Wlnon. An Independent Newspaper ~ Established 1855 Phon. D»y or Nl ht 4S4-1M9 Henry Kissinger, Mr. Nixon 's Whito government does not challenge that Phllnowi. until they accept tlie fact that they v L-__I8 J Limitation on To the editor How to keep secretary happy -W. TW^ «¦*¦»« WASHINGTON - Women's ^¦ W pi in — II III _ ¦¦«» ¦, wants to take over the column as I do I've pulled their raison Lib organizations have moved it's hers. This has made her d'etre right from under their guns suggested out of the home and are now feel that there is some future feet. attacking the male Art Buchwald People are inclined to reftqt to problem? Wth emotion, chauvinist- here, and while she hasn't done Los Angeles Times Syndicate rather than common sense and Walk p>arf of search where it hurts — in the na- any humor colunws yet, she is companion , tion s offices. write down the name of the per- Perhaps, the term, . gut ' secure in the knowledge that If " reaction," drives from that They finally have realized son who called and his tele- she wanted to, she could go as BACK-TEMPOBARItyT psychological fact, Mindful of pur senseJegs approach to phone number. problems, most politicians attack something that men have far as any man in the business. BENTON, Wis. (AP) - Sev- the politics of a problem, for new solutions known all along — the power BUT SOMP are crank calls en students expelled earlier be- rather than the problem itself. J cite school busing and hand- America has achieved some of the goals she set herself tils MANY secretaries complain gun reform as ideal i across America and bosses me to call first for her. We don't have this problem AS FOR 38ANDOPV control, the real aim is to save lives -rr rerowdp na that we have new problems and new possibili- chauvinist who takes in our office because although through some'form of federal legislation that Wonaen'a Lib's attempt to or- Tho moat important thing I've will beta keep ties to face, , discovered as a boss is not to I am good-looking, I'm serious eoacealable weapons (handguns) outside the reach of convict- One million young people in this country alone are will- ganise peeretaries seriously. I about my work, and Margi con- ed felons, mentally disturbed , for* specific tasks which so obvi- knew that my sweet-smiling, burden my_ secretary with too persoflB children. My response ing to walk to raise money many details. I might tell siders me mord than just a sex Wl AT YOUFt^B is to the letter by Mr, Beyerstedt (March 7) end my- source ously peed doing, but they are also oMleflgtag m through Jwioesque secretary, Margi, her object. Is the 1968 tasks are to be . ef- who sits in my outer office, about my appointments, just in SERVICE of informatiqtf staff report on firearms and vio- their quiet witness tor discover how new case she wants to remind It is for these reasons Mar- m Ip lence in American Ufa to thei National Comipissipri qj) the fectiveiy rfone, V would really like to be a col- me pijel in a heavy artillery wom- later about thero. (This, oi gi has rejected all approaches w «T us HELP \m Causes and Prevention of Violence, chaired by Dr. Milton We iiow know that the technology which sent man to the from the Women's lib move- S. Eisenhower which refutes Beyerstjedt' cpuW be used to provide every individual oa earth en 's brigade leading an attack course, io strictly voluntary, a/ YOU WITH — Iw , many of Mr. a con- moon and she' has no obligation ment. While she is sympathetic Plumbing & Heating teations; e.g. V- , adequate resources. The problem is that we have devel- on the National Association of to do glj • \»J with Mamifacturers. it if she is busy readin g Wom- with their goals, she knows that 91 # Water Lino Trenching IK Firearjns are used in BS percent of homicides in oped effective management systems which make it possible Women s give her .¦I • Duplex Pump Jacki \K • the on the moon, but we lime not yet developed Put I wisely have prevented en'? Wear Daily.) And I try not ' Lib couldn't U.S.; the number increased by §0 percent from 1963^68. When to place a man to any more than she has now. It's V • Submer*lbl( Pumpi W to manage our potentials within her irom finding any excuse to bother her with IBM or m » Precusl Septic Tank* K a gun is used, the chances of death are about five tinaea and refined the techniques Xerox no wonder that most militant the United States, let stone throughout the world. fetl oppressed or exploited, This salesmen who constant- as great as when a knife ia u$ed. , the architect best kpown for the is hpw I keep Margi happy. ly are coming Into our office to women resent somebody like I k Oai 6. Elect. Water A i of all Buotoilnster Puller sell their me. By treating my secretary • • Although only about one^fqurth firearms in invention of the geodesic dome, has said: "I can prove to In the morning I always get wares. I believe Mar- {___ are Tiaqdguns, they used in three-fourths of gi's time is too valuable to % • Hot Wtter Bolleri ^U the U.S. are young people that it's cproptetely possible to take eare of to the office at D o'clock sharp talk vBnmwvmmmmmBmaTW # Precast Clstern» ^ 1 the homicides involving firearms. anybody to open the mail so it will be to these people. While I have If • Water Softener* 1 I all humanity at a higher standard of living than We Now Have ¦¦» ' KI|che(!*W» »I ¦ / ...•¦ In our urt)ani?ed society, the gun is rarely an ef- ever thought of; that the war which they deplore^ is the ready for her when she comes been accused of being brusque • in around 9:30 with strangers who come into ¦ • "fiat & Oil Furnaces jK fective mean? of protecting the home against either the same as other wars, •which have been based on the as- . 91 Kitchen & Bathroom. m burglar or the robber j the former aids confrontation, the sumption that there's not enough to go around so that some- I naturally wait for 'her to fin- the office selling postage meter • latter confronts too quickly. body is going to have to die, But that's no longer true . . ; ish iier coffee and talk to the machines and insurance, I S&UUn 3|l • Stock Wateren IM $91 Eave Trough Work iK If you can go to the moon and under the Arctic ice, you can secretary on the floor befero would rather have them think • • The proportion of gun use in violence riseg and falls badly of me than of Margi.' with gun ownership. When the number of handguns In- make the world work." asking her if she would be in- BICYCLES Mankind has the machinery and tha computers to feed, terested in taking any dictation One of the main priticisms IN STOCK creases, 'and where tjiere are fewer guns, there is less that secretaries voice about I K&M jj gun violence. . clqthe and shelter the whole world. It is time that we start- or answering any calls. Coma in and cheua your*. III PLUMBING ed to see how the successes which we nave achieved in ma- By li o'clock she's in her their work is that there is no / Il • If there were fewer haiidpns in this country, the knife terial terms can be transferred to the rest of the world with- happtest moo(), md we usually chance for advancement. This |ii & HEATING /f;4 and other weapons (Mr. Eeyerstedt would add ice picks, is pot the case in (COLTER'S S* Mm 689-M37, 489-2421 I Mi out the costs to the environment and to the spirit pf man get our best work done. Occa- my office: I SALES _ SERVICE ,ne jack-handles heer bottles) might replace the gun as keep encouraging " ? ? t< and which have often attepded the industrialization propess. . sionally, when she has to legve Margi to be- . "Since IW . ll_ L____vv "' ' * t instruments of violence. Even 60, deaths and injuries would LES LOFQUIST the office, i take her calls ior come a humor coiumnlat, I 40! Mankato AVt. Phont ASl-SUS be reduced because a gun attack Is five times as deadly as Coordinator, Winona March her. If I feel it's important, I'll have told her any time she an attack with another weapon. • .The constitutional "freedom " guaranteed by the 2nd Amendment has been consistently interpreted by the Supreme Conrt and lower courts as a prohibition againgt federal interference with the state militia and not. as a guarantee Mondovi gets of an individual - right to bear arms- I CAN'T THINK of a response to Mr. Beyerstedt's "gay* concern with erosion of our freedoms, a police state, pr 1984 new city because such arguments do hot attack the immediate problem (fact?) that hppdguns are a major cause pf violence in America and that their restricted use would, in fact, reduce the number of accidental deaths (most occur in the home assessor and involve a person known by the shooter)* homicide?, ag- MONDOVI, Wis. (Special) - gravated assaults, robberies, burglaries, and to some ex- Mondovi City Council members tent, suicides. . Tuesday evening accepted the A handgun is concealable, lethal from 9 distance (un- resignation of Efpuger f. Rock- llie a knife, j ce pick, jack-handle or beer bottle), quick, clean and deadlyV well as city assessor. He has Because handguns are used in an increasing number of served in that capacity for 17 crimes, I submit: tbat part of that "constructive effort'* years. called for by Mr. Beyerstedt ought to aim at limiting the The recommendation of the fi- number of people possessing handguns, and that while nance committee to hire R. "people! not guns, cause crime," sensible studio prove that Kent Peterson as his replace- a handgun In the hand of an jrrespQnsible person deals death. ¦: ment was accepted. Peterson Legislation should safeguard the rights of legitimate comes to this position with ex- sportsmen and collectors, while protecting the general public perience in assessing, having against the misuse of firearms. done re-assessment work for ROBERT J. TR1TZ the state and other communi- ties.- . ' ¦ • ¦ A request by Edward Linse and Charles Scheurmann to in- stall a softball diamond at Me- morial Park was granted. tonl^rison! The copcli approved the ad- dition of facilities at the sewage fet fbrthe disposal plant to take care of wastes (rom private septic tanks and holding tanks. second tiine, This will be done along with the Other proposed improvements to the plant. A free fireworks display for July 4 at Mirror Lake Park was approved. Wilbur Weilep came before ,f _ t _w____M_wB_B_H____^___S_i_____^______l-___B_-^<*B_t__W______i___BHgp 'i j-^ ^^______H-__l-__H___H______B^_H-_H______I the council to discuss a contract K-_9-__K__l______9__7^^ XT __H______i-______HU__S___H^____l-______H_fi&« T_a ^I^ fl______H___H______R__n__S_^_n____Sk-______i_S_6fft- ^£______^B_H_B______I with the city to take care of H___H-B__^B^Ba______S_Bw_WiW_HM the sanitary landfill operation ^_t__ -.^_ RS_M______l______^___i |wfflJF$|gfflyiJP_ *Tft }^jHftj ^^SS-^Si- il faalfc y^sa_BHI______M-______i at the city dump, required un- der order from the Department of Natural Resources. The or- der is effective May 1, 1872. The coi\ncil ^ill investigate before »MM tB^ _9__BI ^ rafl___S_^i-: _^_Ke.J|Mag JWWB»*WgK? * >?*: ___£ KaWS^^fcVi "^mtt ^HH ^BHWHBajR? * t f ' -v ^^^^SS _3SMn______i sented by Mra. John Tanner was accepted by the council and ^______I______L placed on file. ^^i^Sl^_f|BM||^^^Yj|fflBBB^^^^^B A resolution was approved au- thorizing the city clerk to ad- vertise (or bids for the }Q72 wa- ' ______L ^f______P^' ______^_____l _____D______H^______H^A- ______! 1 ^ :V<'VV______BM_^______[ ter and sewer Improvements ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^M ^___B' and the new reservoir, and to act the doto of April 11, 1972, at 7:30 p.n\. for tho opening ______L^ ^_-______''''»^______-l bids on these projects. Galen Sather was designated as deputy city clerk. ' tf?3!rdK. niair_hih__ _rQ The council authorized the ap- fC^w "y¦ " plication for a police high ban jjj£ 'MV frequency base station. With fe- M?^fCNv>^^ ** deral funds available the cost to the city would be $400. The council was advised that Again, for the second year in a row, Ron the city has been ordered to Evenson of Harmony ranks first in health moke certain Improvements to among Lutheran Broth- the sewflge treatment plant, insurance sales and that a hearing will bo held erhood's agents. at Eau Claire on March 15. The Having good As a member of the David Asp items included in tho order have neighbors makes life a lot more fun. And help- munity affairs. And NSP nelghborliness includes a respon* Agency in Austin, lie is part of a team of already been included in the ful, friendly, easy-going neighbors are typical throughout slble everyday effort to make sure you have adequate 1072 plana and specifications for thesq great northern states. Whether they meet over a l awn electric power from envi ronmentally more than 1000 field representatives (led* Improvements to the plant. sound facilities, hoth icated to bringing the benefits of frater- ¦ mower and a lemonade, or in their dally business, the friend- now and In the future. to Lutheraha throughout the Ilness and willingness to help one another shows nallem Most of tho pointing breeds of through.a MaybeM«..U„ thera«, „,, „ and Canada. are ways NSp could be a better neighbor. United States dog were developed in tho Bri t- The NSP people who serve here Congratulations and thank you ish Isles. try to be good neighbors Ways we haven't thought of. Call or write us anytime. New , They II II too. live and work close by. a^..i..i. inil Ideas are ____ They' Ron, for your outstanding service to the ^•mmi t i _-_-_ ^- I re active In com- welcome. Lutheran families Jn this area, (tfcotis) H^ PRE-SPRINO Lutheran Brotherhood SALE Fraternal insurance for Lutherans of BfS-Plll ' Ofilco : Minneapolis • Turf Builder IXomo Minn. HH0?t • Supsr Tur( Builder Ourjob: a brighter life for you • Halts Plut DADD BROTHERS l»vl>B STORE, INC. TRUE VALUE HARDWARE 576 E. 4th St. Phon* 452-4007 E9____ l PILLSBURYTHE SALE. . .VALUABLEREB COUPONS... r— n |_ B-__ Ba PLUS MUCH M0RE...SAVE AT RED OWL... HOME PRICE ELLION CAKE MIX y^^l OP ! «^^"§|

¦ v ' ______¦_' .' ______r ______K___fl______' . Zt_ IIr ^9^^^^ iti| >.u__H__^____^__r__^'^^__^______Bl_U____Hr___ F jJlfi__i\__l Anr_foeaMsv_C_L!_<- - ______' *>B» B^H MM __.V______T' ______^w______-___r_-___K_-______i It?' ¦ - , arfnf^a_L_i____--___--__I__--^______Li~^ ^W___ii______H___^ _jjH__i____B " ^PPiesaucebpice . . . ' ^^^^H* 1K* __H _____ ' ^ F _T ¦¦ j^Jr OZ . K^^^^^^^ HV. . ' ^^______B^< _^ W ______r _____P_^______I -j P^V ^i*jMi_S______^___^______F2_W9^______!^______- ^ ______Lv____R_Sr _U___VS___9______Hr ^^ p* _a______HI " _____B _____B ' __¦V

¦ ¦ ^^___»^^^9_l^^ lf _^S^^^^^H_-______fi_-______i_---___-_^^ H ,f-i- fl rl^______FROSTING ¦ VIlyv I - 1 _f%_fa _P"i- ¦¦ I '^Mgli-f- B-BilHT^^ I ¦ ¦ ¦ H I II ^¦__¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ __ f l ^j^mMa ^kdMmaaMMmMiM g ^aam ^^ HflflU BELOW I I W-W-Tr-_¦-_¦ . v.^ 1 B WITH COUPON BELOW M ¦___¦ _«»Y i ' _ ___¦ ¦__—_____¦ »"«¦RI ^ v.^ ____ —J ^^__\\\W V ^ ^^H ^ W i W I MMI I OT Al I B -Y. '-^^i ¦ _-_i_¦_ -__¦ IH -_H B f 1 r ^H ^.J A ¦ ^^^»I " ¦¦ S ¦ I ' IliiI -fMiB.. BB _JL-H flflfl fl ______L ^^^•B ¦ _f * ^¦ ^B__L ^ ir * ^fl HI - ______¦ _____ r VI¦ I ' -v |nB ' JCI^IU I : ____^- i ' ¦ ' H 9_____r 1 i wh_i 7 - I' I ____HI ^>S'^:C^Ls^ K > I | | M CAM WS'I I ¦ ¦ ¦ l LB ¦ _____ '^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^^^^^^Y^^^ ^^ "¦""mam+m* m'^^timaimmmmmmmmm 'A ¦ : : v^P^SM - IV B0 Y 1 0 :P B : IB COUPON BELOW j VS!!L*J!L___. __f __ r LESS ^^HIVH * I WlRI d_r^M14-B__H :^^H 1I F9&9v ii ^ ll -CSuitW'TH B .J ^— —L- ^H ^ L01 * i ^E ¦« ¦** ¦ FAMILY BM ___F 9 |HBr IA ¦ 11 CAKEW^F MIX0Z 1 "TVVI-Lr ^ ^^^^#¦H BflJ ^ • OTCAI/'- 11¦ ¦ _H^ ^*^ J !

e ¦ ¦ MM, JL xSc^ ^¦^^¦- Y I SIRLOIN, SMH^^____ -__ !_-__ VANHCTEN '' ^or' S POTATOES^.,^|...89^¦ ., W- JJ -r I flEI '^ ^ YY A . . ^ I I I nnMC ll SAUERKRAUT...... ^.,39^ | ,„ Hllia- ^ - j W CREEN GIANT, FROZEN ^vfl I T—HI liSIr ¦ ^-___¦ lll ^____T ^i_^ j1 ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ^ ¦ *MiH______Hi______¦ n ____J ¦ ¦ ¦ . ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ Duri ¦ Y . Y ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ Y ., , '• ' ¦ ¦ If Jk fL_l « I ' ¦Hr ^^ v -I . . ' ¦ :. - ' V - ., . . - . . . . ™^—^——• .- -: ¦ ¦ EB veqeTaoies11V^^^^T yy- / Ml GLUB¦ M ?ERm " ¦ This coupon entitles customer to purchase 4 pkgs. I H OR ' , ~ - ^^^ H H " " ' II ||| 9 oz pKGS. & UP ; ¦ ¦ - -fl fl1 DTCAl_ Q _BB_ 1 Beef, Chuckwagon, Bread.Portions 10 Qrtfi i D-ll_»I*aaB>i« /"VA IfC ItJII'V ill ^"^ ^ ' : * ' H ______JL ______fl fl DlCni\M ^ fl Veal.BreadedDrumsticks, Pork orBeef -C „ ' HH * I rlllSDUry_. ¦ UA fVE IVI IA I f H ______k __k___iHI _____^__^_^^^^M9______B*B-- i * X'3/4 Or. ••«»«• FOR ^JW § v _ , \. . V .Y ub ¦ 1 H ___* _¦ __ _I^H ¦ ¦ ___——¦W_r f *** —^ ^ ¦¦ H Straw.,FudgeMacaroon,Yellow, j| ____ » ¦ H ¦ ¦ _B ¦¦ - ¦¦ ^ ¦• ¦ ' • g Sour Gr.Fudge, Red Devils Footf , £§, j lri/Z^. m W5T H ¦ -- § oz PKG» H " ___1 _3 _¦H » German Choc., DM. Dutch Devils v g H .LeSeuer Baby Peas, Gffien fmg ¦ ¦ ' ' ' • JUICYBIRD BASTED, US.DA, GRADE FoCd.Choc.Fudge. WWteor dM ?¦B¦ . - .DRUMSTICKSMRII uvrirKq , WINBSWINGS OR THIGHSTHifiHq - " A | § Applesauce Spice $100 H ¦ ¦ Beans in Butter Sauce, B^ K fc_«_A • naiv,, ^ with with Y I »VW | B broccoli Spears in Butter _¦ ¦ l aa HA ¦ ^JH lb _ HA coupon. Limit 4 pkgs. coupon. Limit "^^fl ¦ KPI l_ %l #i ^ # EITO ,K _^lfllfl S H -¦- . -Sauce, Cauliflower in _____ WR ¦ ¦ I ¦ l O l f Ltf rMHI-l _^WiY "• 9 LB.MINIMUM _ . v*"JP_f_S § one coupon per customer. Expiration date,Sal , § F0R-«.« ¦ ¦ ' ¦ rata B Cheese Sauca ¦ ' " . ¦ ¦ H' ¦ , » _T aTjpr • TI BH § [ March 18.1972 (CXXl024) Comn . ¦¦ ¦¦ H H fl - '"flJ_F_l PI |C " ¦¦ ^ . IUtfFVQ l^p ¦ -i^^ ,. ^^^|B: _B B .^9 %B \_fc_l B •••••••(•••••• I U|\ |yC Io»t*»Mt««*t«(«fitntiaiKy ^w^miy^ .

WEW ' , 3 y^m^^m^^n^^^^^^^^m ^B^» SWEDEN FROZEN HASH BROWN _ NORTHERN, WHITE OR ASST'D COLORS Y IJMlT . m^ ^ H — • , , , ¦ ¦ ¦. ¦ ¦ ¦ F^cHorcE or«DEL.(:iousaAvoRs- l DnTATHCO _l $i • TIOC.B IC 4 OCO I¦ . *^^i_W ^*rr • * . . I_ i _L" ...... Instant Frosting Mix I ; ¦¦ "U IMI UtD *T I : I IQoUt KSUU | I I IPI I i fl¦' ¦1 ¦ ¦ ¦Y ' DM. Dutch l /4 _n ¦ ¦ -^,w ^ ij| i i^ J _C I_ f - • g Creamy Lemon. , Q oz ^1i 1 » R_- *™ ROMAN, FROZEN GALA Fud8e• Straw•» or Fud«"• PKGS. U" DESSERTS J SAUSAGE.CHEESE «A A • _^ ^_f%A 1 with Limit pkgs.° with ^ ' Limit' I J __¦"_--_-k. B rt l" _f T r* i% - O nC -Ttt I' ___ f__!_l K? eiG ROLL ^I^JV 1 3 j

¦ I¦ o^ftlH TED 30Z..KG. H^F o« ^ " ^^^ iSBSS_W'^_ff&5Q* 1 C0FFEE...2^$1.18Warc 1 SPECIAL, J ^ j^%^^^^ l^i^lUUnT*inn ! FISHER'STlOnCIV O .M, .. ,„„ .... - I WITH ANY PURCHASE _l LJ I FRUIT J E JJU | m~ H P cif i CANS kQ ( with coupon, ttmlt one can with coupon. Lfmlt M BT H_7 - 4a M ¦ ' ¦¦¦_rH ¦ "" l « HDIMbfC ^¦ ¦ H PflTTlftPE PUCCOC 2LB,,B™CTN I H CHEF'S CHOICE B_r ___v __C____ fl ^F UKllM fvO • Uul IRU t Lnttut ' - I «ne coupon percustomer. ExpirationH date, Sat., g - "^ £13 hl8, 1972 (AXX1800) Corporate ¦ ¦ CARVING ______B\H|T© 1 ^j ^gj ^ j J IS lMita ¦ ¦ ^fnksfstceibla^^a^^rafneThan^ B ^ ^______

flflj one bag aim'e, uniform thickness thick or. thin Ideal for WW This coupon entitles customer to purchase fl . B ^^^^ H *— BBB __¦ _fl I ____M_I ^^^_^____Bt_fcl2uI$%^^ |§ !__ B| back guarantee: handle will not separate from fl I^^^ H __^H B_ B_ H ______! H9 «W I _fl______Bil^__i^J7^^^___B^___§ Cl /*_! ID lit blade . Now, safe guard handle is shatter proof, ¦ 9^HHH 1 i BAG |H ^^^ Hfl H_H H_k. _k. i - ^^______B_^_G^)i__ I___ B_ rj P^I$ withrLUUnmiirl Uwith (JjJ 7* j@ Limit Limit coupon. coupon. R coupon one bag _M_R_ta. P9 ______^_fl____B____9B______^__^______IB______-N P customer. Expiration ^ Hf OUIKUT WITH Gfl ?J_^V fl^___ Pi___ B^____ l^___ i^____ l^____^______^___iflw^ •§ one per date, Sat., ttfl ^-il- l___ ^^___ ^^B_Pfl__ ¦ March 1972(CXX9817)Corporate ^ ANY PU RCHASE ONLY.... B9 Y ^^ ^^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^ ^ i 18, g B ^^ ^^EII M ™ J EK __ ___ M [^¦|^BBSS9^>^B^^iBB__B__BIBH_H__D_BHHVSS____I HEAD LETTUCE ... EACH ^^^H___f___^___B^H^^__^^^B ¦ ¦ _~^ __T^^^^^^^^V ^ * PRESHTENDER Mi AICA^^Fa^» ^"" RRA »t_P Pc_C I y*^^THIS CQUPON GOOD FOR lll ^iT>0 _ *^ CtMlP'r»^ 11 ASPARAGUS __H_| ______¦fl ^ I * I i 1 li ALLEGKU j . ^...m H^ Hb lOrjIJ 40? OFFiss^r6°'- yl' CHINAWARE 1 TOMATOES V- ...33P » "' INSTANT COFFEE 1 I I H 1ML JB Mm_-B_9_^ ___^_iI -rHlS VMEEK'SFE H g «noW |th coupon. Limit one Jar with coupon, Llmlf; ill ill "RED OWL IS HAPPY TO REDEEM j ^ HI ^_fl______B^ coupon percustomer. Expiration HI _„__¦ _fl9___fl^_^^ W _| FOOD fOI IPniM^S RFTMnRFR FOROR ¦_¦_¦ ^ ^ BF ,S »M^IB4-RV»»,date , Sat, ga^ llT ™ou^FffiDboLuT5' . FRESH BAKERY - j "^ J | I I CDl¦ ¦ m ¦ BtC5, rtrlOI • ^__ ___._ ¦ HI ¦ 1\W I _fU i A , PLAINORSUGARED <^»«TO8»™8MM5TOi^^fnrammm?M_M Bifl 79i —^^B fl ------i---- i— . * RED OWL OH ift 5T0RE HOURS: wmmmmmmmmMmmmmmmmm_ i HI nlOu ILlW-P 1 ° nnffvii ITC DOZ &F\ " HI I HfUtt Biln S*r^^ fl Monday-Saturday 8 a.m. -9 p.m. • »^UUI^fl*¦U I¦ O.... . '.< ___l___|W-v 1 _ Z . . 11 HH1 B^I H TI„,„ J„„ LJ F,; J « nm in « m A ^** %* g This coupon entitles customer to purchase one box -*" ThU ™ ^ W..I. Dete.ent, No Phosphate, No Byrnes or NTA ^ I I ^uX " WH.TE( CARAWAYOR nYE.RED OWL | | ¦ ¦ ,C AOi)„^ EVERV^^Sf&^cW$o,o- __^ ^^T» J |f )0 HI (SAVE | ^^ LOAF IH 1 3 LB ""¦ ' ^ DpCAfl - 1 ¦BH ... — fl GREEN GIANT, VACUUM PACKED © Ow\d\ %J *U | TASK BOX 59 r* P " HEINEMANN KITCHENS 1 HI -.ii l ODtlDV R\f>rDIOUUII"alll iS 1¦ NIBLETSri !¦# ¦.¦_ ¦ *» IC la-Oz S^I • HU FOR 48C with box with Limit § PlLLS BUHl raStCANS I O HOTCROSSBUNSUnVOO DUIMO U6 | coupon. Llmltono coupon. g —BlM ri*-«-wfc"* H#^A fl CnRN __J^ E I ... , . j| onocouponpercustomer. Explratlondate.Sat.. §1 1 "' "" ^ # Ma-h 18, 1972 (A105900)Corporate Hi paTFD CHOICESt^ in ' I JT HEINEMANN KITCHENS p | | | ¦ ¦ V BUTT ERMILK DONUTS DOZ. 55c g piiM E?S I GR ETNGTANT FROZ. l^ AW • " ^ 79C Value, California Onion 1PT. EA - $^ '29 | | ^ " § «*^ iMl ^ || ^ Jy ^ |^ J __ HI .Mn&nnAM0ER 12p««»....77? OZ. -77^ ! DT L DECORATED CAKE HI t!KnsnjTSVVML-IN^ i | H WISH BOWE DRESSING.....:...48£ HE .NEM.NN KITCHENS _ KQ ^J1 Treats On Us I ^ ¦ 1 ¦ A 5^ ,es | | ¦ ¦ »2^££ |r — , „ Y .1 FreeJ»» 1 BUNOT CAKE. FILLING&GLASMIX 1 POLJS I USAGE I P^^lHBaBSSSSBaaaSr0 thru Saturday, March 18 ! ' ' BP 19^ BEHWPIfl 1^$im_ l llAllll H l Lomon-Bluoberry, Choc-Macaroon or UQv Ill At Your U " OuamHy^rlBhte rosorve d. nb MlestodTOteK.';^^^ ¦ Pudne Nut Crown, 1 Lb. 7V4 Oz. Pk Up Ij ,! ^ P | fffl __B __¦¦_ tJIAfl «*¦__) __¦ 0. 4 fJJJ RED OWL FAMILY CENTER L _BM__-_-- ¦• ¦w « H-_ - « IH N95r ^p" L ¦ ¦ ¦ . I ikiEZSfiri ^^ 1 . ¦ ' PrttM •Htdlvs V : ' ¦Qwmttlyright* ^^______^ | B M _____]' ^____^_____H_____H____^HlBB ' STOPP HOURS- ______H______^fe___. thru Soturdoy, ______9fl_-___^^B^^_. _^_^H _^____0BB 9H___i^_ ____f______VB*Ba^^_____fe__: Wi»rv»d,no io!.» x^ H-^ ^^^^______. ^^______HB__^__B " ^^ ^ B - - Mmh ii - iw. - >___ ^ ^FmmW^ ^^ ^^ ^^^__ . Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-9 p.m. .^____ ^^^ ^ ^^^^^_____ . .od.ol.ff. BANKAMERICARO Thu,,, Fr _ ^^ ^^ -^---\^ ^ ^^ Y^^ ^" Y^^^^ Y 1a m y^ry ^^^^_

¦ J|^¦ St PATRICK'S DAY SHAMROCKS »^ CLOT H ING V I ' I Your choice I_^BV TO \\Uk V ««« ^^^^______B______H_____ HB______^S^_« ___T __./¦¦_¦I with Pipo or Pin with Hot ' ¦ ' -B_ ¦ H A- Wl J __^# ^^ m 'A ' - . - " : ^ _C^ ' ¦

1 H Mm CTUI=I=__!D 1 YOU'LL FIND YOUR ¦FAMILY CENTER I fl l©l iaP^ 1 J__ __•»¦*_-*_»' __»¦ ' • «9_r"___ft Dresses—Blouses— Skirts ¦ BUNNIES fl. A MVK £ 1*OK I I 1 ^ ^ Slacks-Sweate«-Coats I sn«ws_i„ sHorts ¦ ALL SEASONS - ¦ ¦ : IlillilrVv im] Assorted f¦ ll¦ ______\\\f¦ lc' - m 7 B!a _B 'P-iKPl ^ ^ I ¦•¦" ¦' FamiYes u *ind 52 weeks of super savings at your Red Owl ; C-riClC 96(9 I _B " t iaB IMf '^ColorsY ^^^vH __P^__t S « y° " ¦ ¦ D ' y Center 1 Winter, summer, fall or spring, you'll find " ¦' " ¦ ¦ _¦ W^^^^fliW ^^^_H_fl _B IH most ' " * H _B lfe^^^_aP _, ______H'^__L__B 8 wanted, most used family type merchandise, ond you'll : ¦ ¦ ¦ , V , l j fl find it for less, ot the homo of the Pnco Rebel I V H fl | ;. ; , v -y flfl I LIMITED QUANTITIES ¦

¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' • ¦ :¦ ¦: A ¦ ' A- _ ' A-/ : ¦¦ I I w^^^^%^tkk ' *>ri 1¦_ -_• r it t JOfi 11 ^' .ICi ^r r * ' .. ¦_¦.- ,. _¦^\ y ¦_¦ . '(* __¦ ,- ¦ . : . . / ]fc37 ' S1.0 0 fl!_ ____ Bffg2k*% « ^JH__I- STUFFED 9_ffl #0 IH w^m R ¦___¦___ ¦ ¦ v v - . - -T-$2.00 * 4 r-^--,' UMBRELLA $4.9r-$s.97 | I M^m^BSS . -1 $6.9^7.97 ; $3.00 I W__7 S\ /®t nrr^mDEEP DOMED C__ A W 1? : ; I I I r %1 fnim 5^JD9V M^ M_LBfci# $11.5*/<_11 Q7 $4.00c_f nn ¦ I ^ (ftv CLEAR VIMYL J ^ ^ n i i Bl ii I I VINYL rh WM i I I UJ0 )® \ I UMBRELLA CHILD'S CLEARDo VINYL Ml $13.97 $5.00 ¦ ¦ ¦ Deep med Umbrella ...... ,.¥/ INft ^ §1 fZAjkAA m wj$f7. -$_,/,»/Q7 «7 nn B ___! DllilMIBC if#YN SU- N Y^S/ PRBQD tf V • 3 assortedslyle», prlnted nylon, ***M $/.UU _B H DUHI1IC9....«...« _f 'V ' .^.., V-TT^.Tl--' /_nK _FN ll < _"r _B a^^_| LADIES' plain nylon. Your choice. $<_%_0 »i« m ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ : ' : - Nylon ...... 2" UM7 $8.00 ¦ fl- ¦ - ¦¦ , ' ^- '?0rn-i_!_ftfl - _ Umbrellas..... B . - ' V, ' . ' . V V —-——-~-^V AoVy~\^TO^ m ___¦#** ¦ MEN'S 24" x 8 ribs, black

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Snlur dny. /-flp~A; 3 ^IJ^S-S Mmmsh l 0 ^^ H^-B^^ \ _\mJ^^^^F^ lj____C___J' mMMWWtw^ ^ i tjnmwff lmw *^ i mMMintMnM^^ Wmmwm^^ * On question of remapping Nominated for 'MacArthur would be fun' Wisconsin Supreme Court asks state teacher Reagan: no pI a ns to of the year solans to put aside roadblock LEWISTON, Minn. — Mrs. return to the movies one MADISON, ms. (AP) - The Warren had formally In- should do the apportioning of live elections because of dis- James Luehmann, a home eco- SACRAMENTO, Calif. ' offe .;.: NSP said. Senate and Democratic-con- again until four years ago; She . trolled Assembly in hope of de- taught part-time the first year. But Reagan, who made more termining ways of resolving the Mrs. Luehmann said her than 50 films during his movie- stalemate. classwork varies from year tp television career , said the ham However, Lucey said he had cohsiderecl by PCA year as different students.indi- in him made him wish he could no immediate plans to call a MINNEAPOLIS Minn. CAP) to pay for the costs of having a discussion of a stipulation be- cate different educational needs have done the title role of "Pat- Think about this remarking: , special session, "I — The Minnesota Pollution PCA technician at the plant, al- tween the agency and Boise and curiosities. ton " which won the Academy might talk to leaders about in- Control Agency (PCA) has tak- though the man's selection will Cascade regarding air pollution "We never stick completely Award as the best picture ol cluding a few more, things on en under study an offer by be left up to the agency. abatement facilities at its Inter- to the textbook," she said. 1970. the agenda when they return in Co. She believes practical experi- Then he mused, "There is an- before you buy (or clean-up ses- Northern States Power Board action was deferred national Falls plant. June" a brief , (NSP) to allow a PCA staff one month to allow the PCA Vogel argued that Boise-Cas- ence as a homemaker has help- other one. When I think ol the sion. ed her in the classroom, espe- story that could be done on the The governor said he was dis- member into its Monticello nu- staff to study the suggestion. cade's pulp plant is a major same basis of MacArthur com- clear plant full-time to monitor Also deferred one month was polluter and said the public cially as trends in home eco- , appointed that legislators nomics teaching are changing. ing to a close with thai your next tank seemed to be surrendering the radioactive missions. the agreement with Boise-Cas- hadn't been represented ade- speech. cade after Howard Vogel, presi- quately in the matter. Since she started teaching, " duty of reapportionment to the Th PCA also postponed ac- she said, the emphasis has been Reagan referred to the "olrj Supreme Court, tion Monday on an agreement dent of the Minnesota Environ- PCA Director Grant Merritt soldiers never die address mental Law Institute, filed a reported on a letter he'd writ- broadening from traditional " "The courts are overcrowded with Boise-Cascade Corp. after cooking and sewing toward of heating oil now," he said . "It would have an impromptu complaint was complaint under the Minnesota ten to Reserve Mining Co. last Environmental Rights Act. week calling for a compliance complete home management. been far better to have filed. More time is spent on budget- TITLE 1. High qualify Mobil heating oil. achieved reapportionment on Vogel, a Minneapolis attor- plan for air pollution at its Sil- The NSP proposal, believed ney, wrote out the petition and ing, planning and family rela- 2. Complete burner tervico & furnace cleaning. their own." ver Bay, Minn., plait by May tions than in the past. INSURANCE Changes in population dis- to be the! first of its kind in served it on the PCA during a 10. 3. Our "KEEP FULL" delivery. the nation, followed an an- Six home economics courses /M§MMMwM?M^^^xMy^^^^k tribution as recorded by the are available in grades nine 4. Our balanced monthly payment!. 1970 census require Wisconsin nouncement last October that Wfff mfJfBJ^m NSP agreed to a system of in- through 12, including two in 5. Expert maintenance-repair service for ell to realign its Assembly and food preparation, fashions and heating equipment. Senate districts. plant electronic monitoring by the state. Miss Trimble won'f fabrics; creative living, married The 1972 legislature ad- III • Written In Title In- Roland Comstock, NSP's di- life and child development. journed last week with politi- The teacher of the year will surance Co. of Minne- cally divided conference com- rector of environmental affairs, III called the new proposal "an ex- be announced Aug. 27 at the V anittees having been unable to name person involvedstate fair. A $500 scholarship S sota and in Chicago blueprint of dis- pansion, not a retreat" from Mobil. agree on a new ROCHESTER, Minn. re- County District Court Judge will go to the recipient. WM Title Ins. Company. trict boundaries. that agreement. The tate now has monitoring prosecuting attorney Theodore David Marsden. HOSPITAL PATIENTS heating oil devices outside the plant, but Collins had until 9:30 a.m. to- "Do you refuse to answer the ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - their accuracy has been ques- day to produce any rebuttal question." asked Collins. Mrs Clara Enger is recover tion-. witnesses in the murder trial of ing from major surgery at a "I'm afraid to answer the Bft slk Winona Count/ J oswick Fuel & Oil Co. TENSION? Comstock told the PCA m a Constance Trimble. question," she said. La Crosse hospital. Darrion Abstract- Co., If you suffer from simple every, surprise announcement that the If he does not produce any, "It's a proper question, I or- and David, 2-year-old twin sons M^Bft Phone 452-3402 day nervous tension then you firm has concluded that "tele- the two sides will argue their der you to answer," the judge of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Briggs, ^^ymf Ine. should .s taking B.T. tablet* for metered data by its«lf is nei- cases Wednesday and the case said. are hospitalized at La Crosse. relief. Y ther complete enough nor accu- will go to the six-man, six-wom- Call on the dfUOQlst at the drug rate enough" to be of much an jury later that day. "Out cf respect to you, your store, listed below and ask him help to the agency. honor, I'm afraid to answer about B.T, tablets. He said "face-to-face in-plant The defense rested its case that question," was Miss They're safe non-habit forming ' and with our guarantee, you will involvement" is necessary if Monday after the 20-year-old Trimble's reply. lose your every day litters or the monitoring is to provide the Miss Trimble testified that a Miss Trimble was the : only receive yOur money back. best results. person she knew gave; her in- witness called Monday. She tes- Don't accept a substitute for structions to place a fake emer- tified she had lied when she relief, buy B.T. tablets today. Under federal Iaw-rwhich the gency telephone call to police. told police that she had re- INTRODUCTO RY OFFER: PCA is challenging in court— St. Paul policeman James ceived an anonymous letter no- Worm 51.60 the state has no authority to Sackett answered the call and tifying her of a marijuana par- Buy one small size B.T. regulate radioactive emissions. was shot to death from ambush ty at midnight on May 22, 1970 —oet one Free Comstock said NSP is willing May 22, 1970. at 859 Hague Ave. Winona Daily News However, Miss Trimble de- She said that the story she Gibson Pharmacy Ifla clined to name the party de- gave police was true, except Westgate Shopping Center I Ua Wlnone, Ml nnesota _3>0-jj» s 1 TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 197J spite a demand from Ramsey for the letter. > iT^y ' V \J v

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Look to us "~ ^ „J" __*M)Gl *WM1HUM COOKWiM | Ny Jj , MKH M„ Km J^ A0| | ||Jw| i lfflft| f \\' t.g. 1.37 Co. -4 Doyt M ^ F faMA fc PANTY HOSI NYLON BRA lOZ.'YARH CHMTS !£flWFm WtiffiM _$TOJM$ Saw port »ti, rong. ith, r____V» ¦ coff.. po., cofc.,r]n,, mor.l ^______. ___. -_. __. __. — ^. _ ' OfTilVlHLfJ^limUlfS^cmMl **"** |4$ |4$ | i^^fi. ¦ - ¦¦ ¦ S flf¦ $9¦¦•« wMmKlWMM y ^^^ $ <™ "•¦ »•' - u^^mWrnw^Wi tS ^U^ ' C^rP ^ ^ V ^ i fi i Stralch ny lon Natural - look Orient acrylic 35xl8x." under. W. ^ lfmulM kl^sWjfll i&3L _ VjM ~*22-*-*"''~^ AJ |* wl»hriud«ht.l ftrrfchTtyJortfltt pull tktttnt tri vl- bed or 28 x Mi B_Mw/_S_l^.Wi l1i?/ )fi*J ^ W In S/M-MT/T. all .(««; Saytl .rontlon... i ^ g ^ ^ Y^! ^ KU" 1runk .1... mV m^m mT ^L^ li -Z --! McfAwmjA,(fan, (Happy. U)aijA. l^^^^^^^^^^^^^M < WM mm W\J\mI Ek? I El\ G|nrvlm3 I^I^^^^^^ H DOORMlVCn BUSTER DOOR BUSTER SHAG PILE RUG M^^^2_____J_____^F a W^^ K ^^ SS HOUSEHOLD _ ,______— ^^ 1 __ ».« * 3 HAND¦• ¦¦¦ # TOOLSI VWI-V *. 9*A M[ _ ^^^S^^^^S.SP S*^ *^ ¦ ^...-Sr 4 Dayi Only MM ^B__ P '^ll-^5^55^ FillMI ITC13 Hammers, Filer*, Screw 1 ^Y MMSMMMB 100 8" PAPER NCRI0 PLATES 13-Oz. Can, Reg. I9i driven, ethers. ReB. 75* 1 -BH ^T 52/54" ¦ '«. A Lf^! '**_.. ' __P-I_I______c ifJAA Roomil-tlFlulfyihogfactwIt hiurt-nrlpu Bank Auto "* m non.,kld l_..x Xalllo backing. AvocadS Loan I F SSJtnnMMftCsSs 0W^S m F^. ^ I Sl00 ^1 ® CiAA p,um oold p nk b,uo bu Moron99 St,v,,i APP is ' JL i i I *1 I ' ' ' ' ' ' FOR EVERY . |ADDVY motoring possible, onl , y when you con dependA ' J ^ \3 on your POOR -_$/\i^llVlftl cor, Before you try to make your old model do H » MISSES' 1 li] B"STER DOOR BUSTER CT R^^^^ j ZIGZAG DENIM :: ¦ __ _ _ AB!rJav£ AFGHAN ORCEVI /*C for another season or another trip, find out how easy it is to llBR IfI *v_- - ._ __..-. .._«-. -.^r* : 11 #| SUCKS LOOP KNIT HOT DOG JH¦SEES KITS ¦¦ I buy a new car with one of our Bank Auto Loans. You'll be iiPt^!! _¦ YSSH -l 4!! 75% Ac9tfl,e 35% wl,h prench Fr,f,» ' Ii i ^H^/M j &__w ; - C- ^ ^ 'i' ' Nylon. Reg.' I.f7 FREE Coke or Coffete 1 ll ' ffSr j i I ^> H B ^ PH R _ pleasantly surprised at our low rates, with terms so liberal. Ben ' ^_ A W U rMi I <»l ^^ I" Af m _Pw31 CHECKING *^a* y°u PrQC*lca" y name your own. And you'll like being 4 m 6',,~4 Da,t ee D'V' ft ¦•_£i_-fcyd 3U Nil r"- your with your regular agent Mm ityl.s l I 'V\ fr^rnB^t/Stpowlt ; 7 ^O*.' tktini, ACCOUNTS °k'e *° ^ P insurance who ; WkllSV' . P'ncy AymK ||| . knows your needs, 1Sj.1 PM'V. ^^ 2^^ t SAVINGS ^^ AUUUUNT D For carefree motoring, for convenience and econom y, fr\^$$$$$$^^$,$ us or ur ^$$$$T$^l » Tsmmmmmmtetititt FDR see y° nex au oaa i OAN^ ^ ^ *° ' EVERY PURPOSE Co PLUS EVERY | | k 7^/7 and Unffll OTHER BANKING nw _90» ' TI_.T RAMI l ^ . R«,, o.,. 71 Bio ttAMKn 9I-60" POIYHUH VINYl-POCKIT ALBUMS HALL RUNNE^^^ 2; \WSmlm!l STATE<5 «= ' / ^^k ] SERVICE WS ilii HiBfl.- BANK «, .;,« .„,, $ 38 U $«« g M ' $3 ,.ws ¦S* ' ^^ x-;s.Idi. nylon blndlnrj. WM yd. pc». _*_iv...*F 7V6-s-3li x 3« ".,2MmUt ^W «?^v«uOlfflln Pll. ¦ Ww-t- ^3 2 3 lS e.Utti.iiredleMO - *S f 'OO WEST nROADWAY & JUNCTION STREET ^SSS^S^$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$9$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$^ E|ftl^ ^5 ^ mmWm%F "NEIGHBORHOOD BANKING FOR EVERYONE" HUM*-! ntet'1 mnjemeu ioe*«f*n+m JmCttll "Wrsatherphono" 454-1230 Any Hour for Woalhor Information OPEN DAILY 9 TO 5, MON. & FRI. 9 TO — S r 9 .. ' i Winona Dally News If and Wednesday until time of I l«fl services, Winona, Minnesota TUESDAY TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 1971 Pallbearers will be Gilbert Twillinger, Charles Schmidt, Man receives The weather The daily MARCH 14, 1972 Claude Mobley, Kenneth Gar- Board sets record bisch , Fred Jacob and James (Continued from page 3a) Peterson. Honorary pallbearers jail sentence Two-State Deaths will be John Dill, Ivan SieVers, ski-rare not scheduled to run At Community Winona Deaths Donald Heins, Alfred Pretzer, this year. A first term com- Memorial Hospital Hagen George Mclntire, Walter Buck, Williams was elected Mrs. Robert jepson Mrs. Julia missioner, ( MABEL, Minn . (Special) — Zillgitt and William in 1970, and bis term is not Visiting hours: Medics! and surgical Mrs. Robert Noreen) Jepson, fbr assault patients: 2 to 4 and 7 to 8:30 p.m. (No Julia Hagen, 87, Mabel, Holmes. scheduled to expire until 1974. 48, Owatonna, Minn., formerly Mrs. Dale R. Johnson, 20, 71 Man- children under 12.) died today at Tweeten Meirior- Merchlewitz must run this Maternity patients: . to 3:30 eta 7 to of Winona, died unexpectedly Stanley Kamrowski kato Ave., was guilty of {Mulls only.) ital, Spring Grove, found year regardless of how the re- 8:00 p.m. Monday at Owatonna City Hos- ial Hosp ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - Visitors to a patient limited to two at pital. Minn. simple assault and sentenced to districting works out, as must one time. : , - Julia Garness, Stanlev Kamrowski, 85. Arca- County 3rd District Commissioner Paul The former Noreen Hengel, The former dia, died at 1:05 p.m. Monday 20 days in the Winona she was born near Mabel, March jail under the Huber Law today Baer, Fremont, and 5th Dis- she was born here July 31, 1923, it at St. Joseph's Nursing Home, TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS to Theodore and Ann Lougear 19, 1884, to Ole and Berg , by Winona Municipal Court trict Commissioner James Pap- She was married to La Crosse Wis. Judge Dennis A. Chaleen. enfuss Nodine. . The 3rd and Hengel. She moved from Winona Garness. retired farmer, he was born . Jamie William Moger; Roch- Peter Johnson in 1902. In 1926 A Johnson allegedly assaulted 5th districts are largely rural, to Owatonna in 1947, and has May 5, 1886, in Arcadia to Nich- , ester, Minn., 5. she was married to Nicolai Ha- olas and Rose Jaszewski Kam- James M. O'Brian, St. Charles and it is unlikely that the 3rd taught school in the Owatonna died in 1962. She was Minn,, at 7:30 p:m. Fetf 8 on will be affected by any remap public schools for 22 years. She gen who rowski and married Katherine a member of Hesper Lutheran West 5th and South Baker ¦ — ¦ ¦—-— ¦ ¦¦¦ -¦ ¦¦- plan while Che fifth would be FIRE -ALL was married to Robert Jepson Rossa. -— y— : ...... '¦' — "T" '. ' . women's organ- streets. only minimally affected. at Owatonna July 11, 1970. She Church and its WEATHER FORECAST . . . Rain is forecast today for Today ization. Survivors are: three sons, Al- Questioned by city attorney northeastern coastal regions, some of the Midwest and the Commissioners hope to have Milwaukee Rail- was a member of St. Joseph's bert, Joseph Alphonse and Syl- Frank Wohletz/ O'Brian said he a legality ruling on the Winona 6:54 a.m. — Owatonna. Survivors are: three sons, Pacific Northwest Snow is also expected in part of the North- one block west of Catholic Church, vester Kamrowski, Arcadia; was driving west on 5th . Street . Township situation fey their next road tracks Omer Johnson , , Wash.; seven daughters, Mrs. Frances east. There will be generally cool weather throughout much Franklin Street, inside walls of Survivors are: her husband, Canton Minh., when he noticed tour male scheduled meeting, April 3. It Theodore Milford Johnson, , Lee and Mrs. Ann Pearl Mor- of the nation. (AP Photofax) an empty boxcar, used a boost- her mother, Mrs. and Vernon Johnson, Redding, youths in their early 20's in the is likely that a concrete reap- minor Hengel, Winona; one brother ton, Galesville; Mrs. William street. He said he thought they portionment plan will be work- er to extinguish fire, Calif.; 15 grandchildren; 26 (Margaret) Swartling, Mrs. Al- damage, returned at 7:IS a.m. Ralph Hengel, Winona, and two great-grandchildren, and one were possibly hitchhikers. As he ed out at that meeting. Pe- vin (Alice) Gabrych, Mrs. Hel- Loca/ observations sisters, Mrs. James Cady, brother, Obert ' Garness, Pow- approached where they were and Mrs. Charles en Kaczorowski and Mrs. IN UNREL A TE J) activity terson, Minn., ers Lake, N.D. Two daughters standing, one of the youths OFFICIAL WEATHER BUREAU OBSERVATIONS for IMPOUNDED DOGS Brennan, Winona. Her father John (Cecelia) ; Prochowicz, jumped in front of O'Brian's *P Monday, commissioners again have died. Trempealeau and Mrs. James the 24 hours ending at noon today: shelved a request for funds Winona has died. car he said causing him to stop. Maximum temperature minimum 20 noon 40 no Funeral services will be at 2 (Barbara) Rohn, Winona, 17 45/ , , from the Hiawattialand tourism No. 18 — Large brown male, Funeral services will be at At this time another . opened up precipitation. p.m. Thursday at Hesper Luth- grandchildren ; three step- the right car door. organization. part spaniel. Available. 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at St. Jo- Church, the Rev. Norman A year ago today : Henry eran grandchildren and four great- O'Brian said he started to Hi low The much-criticized Roches- No. 51 — Small black, white seph's, the Rev. Msgr. Estrem officiating. Burial will grandchildren. His wife died in gh 51, 34, noon 40, precipitation .10. Burial will open the left door then to find Normal temperature range for this date 40 to 22. Record based organization has been and brown female terrier. Speck officiating. be in the church cemetery. 1965. Two sons died in infancy Available. be in St. Mary's Cemetery, Wi- out what was going on when high 65 in 1911, record low 4 below in 1896. asking since last July for the ' Friends may call at Mengis and one great-granddaughter, he was pulled from his car: He Sun rises tomorrow at 6:19; sets at 6:12, county's $1,304.04 share of the No. 59 — Small brindle male, nona. Funeral Home, Mabel, after 2 five brothers and five sisters ' Available. said Ke was grabbed . by the 11 A.M. MAX CONRAD FIELD OBSERVATIONS organisation's 1972 operating long hair, no license. Friends may call at the Brick p.m. Wednesday and until noon also have died. neck and wrestled tb the ground (Mississippi Valley Airlines) costs. Board members have No. 60 — Medium size black Funeral Home, 1603 Austin Thursday, then at the church Funeral services will be by two of the youths. In the Barometric pressure 30.10 and failing, no wind, cloud been repeatedly critical of the and tan female, long hair, no Road, Owatonna, from 7-9 p.m. after !. Thursday at 10:30 a.m. at Sa- hassle his shirt and coat were again parish vigil - ¦ cover clear, visibility 20 miles. organi-ation and agreed license. Fourth day. tonight, -where the cred Heart Catholic Church, 'torn. . . - . HOURLY TEMPERATURES Monday that hhey have no in- No. 62 — Largd tan male will be held at 8. Mrs. Mary Speltz Pine. . Creek, the Rev. Edwin , Minn. — He added he did not get a (Provided by Winona State College) terest in paying the Hiawatha- part golden retriever. Avail- EOLLINGSTONE Stanek officiating. Burial will be clear look at the tWo boys ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' Mrs. Max Lessen Mary Speltz, 80, Rolling- un- . ' . Monday land bill. able. Mrs. in the church cemetery. til George Henthorne, 956 W. 1 p.m. .2 3 4 5 6 7. 8 9 10 11 midnight Commissioners Monday also No. 65— Four black anil white Mrs. Max (Helen) Lessen, 80, stone, died at 9 a.m. today at Friends may call at Killian Nursing Mark St., pulled them off. Hen- 40 43 44 46 47 . 46 44 41 40 38 37 ; 36 approved a half-year on and pups, mixed breed. Available. Minneapolis, Minh., former Wi- Whitewater Manor Funeral Home Arcadia, after 4 thorne - ' Crystal Minn., where ^ , owner of the Oasis Bar, Today, v off-sale beer license for Rich- nona resident, died at Home, St. Charles, p.m. Wednesday. Rosaries will 926 W. 5th St., was tending bar l a.m. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 noon ard Hernker, Rushford, new op- Lake Nursing Home Sunday she had been a resident two be at 8:30 and 9 p.m., the lat- ' ¦ ' on the night of the incident. 35 33 33 32 29 28 26 27 28 32 36 . ' 40 erator of the Witofea Tavern. Municipal Court after a long illness. years. . ter by Father Stanek. Johnson was not represented , Mary Neines she , i I I I They also learned that the The former Helen Yahnke, The former by council and ;."- ' - -!- - - . - . - . - . -:-f i . . . 111 H i 11 M ft. . i nn i . V ..WINONA. . - ' did not testify l &' state bas released the Interstate shd was born in Winona,. April was born at Rollingstone, Aug. Two-State Funerals in his own behalf. *&***& A$& 'ijmm t Y_^fe/!V Dale L. Dorsch, 173 Mahkato hter of John EVf 90 construction haul.\rpad sta- 26, 1891, to August and Augusta 20, 1891, the daug At the recommendation of tus of two. more county roads. Ave., pleaded not guilty this Martha Neines. She mar- Mrs. Esther Haslerud morning to a charge of failure Rost Yahnke. She was married and Wohletz, the judge sentenced Those two haul roads included Lossen who died in ried Edward N. Speltz, April PETERSON, Minn. — Funer- Johnson to 20 days in the Wi- to yield to a pedestrian in a to Max H. She ; a 1.5 mile stretch of C_A_L-35 1966. They lived in Winona un- 14, 1915. He died in 1920. al services, for Mrs. Esther Has- nona County jail ; His $100 bond : SV f M v __P* ______P* crosswalk. Municipal Court of Holy Trinity if): :£S-*rr£ : I:N* *SJP£: : \'33FMFk&:^ in St. Charles Township, as well til when they moved to was a member lerud, Peterson, will be at 2 was refunded. Challeen also Judge Dennis A. Challeen set 1930 ii m as a haul road that began on Catholic Church , Rollingstone, p.m. Wednesday at Grace Luth- said that Johnson was free to trial for 9:30 a.m. April 27 Janesville, Wis., then to Min- 1st Quarter Full CSAH 35 at Highway 74, went and its St. Theresa Society, eran Church here, the Rev. La- contact an attorney at any Last Quarter New and released . Dorsch without neapolis. one son, Cyrus March 21 March 29 March 8 March 15 four miles east to a Saratoga Survivors are: Vera Johnson officiating. Burial time. bail. Dorsch is charged in con- Survivors are: four sons, Roy, F Rollingstone; four grand- Township road, Sien to CSAH nection with an accident at .V will be in East Grace Lutheran 33 for a mile to 1-90. Winona; Carl, Arlington Heights, children; three great-grand- West 4th and Main streets at Cemetery. - Forecasts Elsewhere HI., Ellwood and Eugene, Min- children, and one sister, Mrs. The former Esther Larson, 4:08 p.m, Monday. neapolis; three daughters, Mrs. Roches- Lucey task force S.E. Minnesota High Low Pr Julius (Margaret) Wise, she was born at Nydalen, Nor- Albany, snow 39 25 .03 Thomas J. Karaus, Owatonna, Leslie (Ruth) Lagermann, ter, Minn. One son has died. way, Oct. 2, 1894, and came to Increasing cloudiness to- Minn., pleaded hot guilty this Janesville; Mrs. James (Arlene) Funeral services will be at member charged night with chance Albu'que, clear 78 41 .. bhe Peterson area when she of a show- No action morning to a charge of parking Haney and Mrs. Frank (Peggy) 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Holy was 12 years old. She married er late tonight or Wednes- AmariHo, clear 69 45 .. too neiar a fire hydrant. He was Quigley, Minneapolis; 12 grand- Trinity Church, the Rev. Leland with Dane Co; ra pe Anchorage tagged at 1:28 Albert Haslerud in April, 1911. day. Continued mild. Lows , snow 17 8 .11 a.m. March 3 children, and seven great- Smith officiating, with burial He died in 1962. She was a tonight 30 to 35. Highs Wed- at West ICing and Winona MADISON, Wis. (AP)—Mi- Asheville, clay 75 40 ... grandchildren. One son has in the church cemetery. member of Grace Lutheran chael Murray of nesday 40 to 45. Chance of streets. Judge Challeen set trial Friends may call at Sellner- Cottage Grove, Atlanta, cldy 75 53 .11 on Wabasha died. Church and its women's organ- who said he was a staff mem- precipiptation 30 percent to- Birmingham, dear 78 49 .03 for 9:30 a.m. April 26 and set Funeral services will be Wed; Hoff Funeral Home, Rolling- bail at $15. ization. ber for the governor's Task night and Wednesday. Bismarck, cldy 42 37 . nesday at Capella Funeral stone, Wednesday after 3 p.m., Survivors are: six sons, Wal- Force on FORFEITURES: where the Rosary will be by the Offender Rehabilita- Minnesota Boise, clear 57 34 .02 Chapel, Minneapolis. ter, Centralia, Wash.; Daniel, tion, was charged in Ronna R. Rasch, Tomah, St. Theresa Society at 8 and Dane Increasing cloudiness Boston, cldy 40 33 .,. - . school lease South St. Paul, Minn.; Francis, County Court Monday with to- Buffalo Wis., $30, improper left turn, Frederick E. Rossin a wake service held at 8:30. night with chance of a few , rain 33 31 .51 WABASHA, Minn. — State Rushford, Minn.; Glenn, Du- rape.' . Charleston, clear 78 57 Y. Education Commissioner How- Minnesota Highway Patrol ar- Funeral services for Freder- luth, Mirm.; Milton, St. Louis showers tonight and south- rest at 1:15 p.m. Feb 26 on Mrs. Stephen Walters Murray, 31, was released on Charlotte, cldy 73 54 .04 ard Qasmey announced Monday . ick Edward Rossin, 36, Kansas Park, Minn.,: and Paul, Phila- $5,000 signature bond by east half Wednesday. Con- ' Highway 61-14 at Lamoille. City, SPRING GROVE, Minn, (Spe- Judge Chicago, cldy 39 25 .. during a meeting of the State Mo., who died Monday, ) (Cyn- delphia, Pa.; two ; daughters, Ervin Bruner. tinned mild. Lows tonight Cincinnati cld Education in St. Paul Kenneth Kinowski, Rushford, will be Friday at Mount Moriah cial — Mrs. Stephen M. 214 to 35. Highs , y 63> 33 .13 Board of , St. Clair Mrs. A. J. (Ethel) Clark, Min- A police complaint said Mur- Wednesday Cleveland, cldy ^4 37 .71 that he will neither approve nor Minn., $25, ho valid drivers li- Church, Kansas City, with bur- thia) Walters, 31 40 to 54. Shores, Mich., former Spring neapolis, Minn., and Mrs. Ade- ray is charged with going to Denver, cldy 70 40 .. . disapprove of the Wabasha cense, 10 p.m. -Feb. 26 at East ial in the church cemetery. Uhggrman Norfolk Wabasha and Steuben streets. Grove resident, died Monday line , , Va.; woman's apartment to "inters Wisconsin Des Moines, clear 50 24 .. School Board's continuation of a He died at his home of a 21 grandchildren and a twin view her of a former parochial Henry J. Zieman, 551 Hamil- after a short illness. for a job as a coun- Partly cloudy with little tem- Detroit, cldy 35 32 1.07 lease heart ailment after a long ill- sister, Mis. Ben (Dagney) Hal- selor" at a state school for Duluth, clear 28 3 ¦ ' school, building which the edu- ton St., $25, following too close- ness. . . The former Cynthia Tweito, ¦ ¦ perature change tonight. Lows .. ly, Highway Patrol arrest at she was born at Spring Grove, vorson, Rugby, N.O. One bro girls, Y .. ./ ' Fort Worth, cldy 78 57 V. cation department believes is He was born Sept. 13, 1935, ther has died. 15 to 25 north half and in the inadequate for a liigh school 7:50 p.m. Friday on Highway Oct. 30, 1940, to Maurice and Bruner set n hearing -*-or 20s Green Bay, cldy 31 25 .08 to Arthur and Agnes Rossin, Friends may call at Jensen south half. Mostly cloudy program. 14 atop Stockton Hill. Ruth Grindeland Twdto. She Thursday. and warmer Wednesday with Helena, cldy 64 39 .. Winona, and attended Winona Cook Funeral Home, Rushford, Honolulu, clear 80. 72 .. He reminded board members Jay E. Fotland, La Crosse, graduated from Spring Grove chance of showers northwest Wis., $45 speeding, Senior High School. He went to tonight and at the church Wed- Houston, fog 81 63 .. that a $1.9 million school con- , 75 in a work for the W. T. Grant Co. High School and attended Wi- portion. High 42 to 52- struction bond referendum will 55-mile zone, Highway Patrol nona State College. She was nesday after 1 p.m. Florida primary 1 Ind'apolis, cldy 63 30 .02 and was transferred to Kansas 5-day forecast Jacks'ville, clear ; 79 52 .. be decided by voters ih the arrest at 10:30 a.m. Feb. 20 married to Stephen Walters at (Continued from page 1) May on Highway 61-14 near Dakota City about 12 years ago. He Kansas City, cldy 48 37 .. Wabasha School District on , Spring Grove, July 28, 1962, MINNESOTA 16. The following people forfeit- married the former Carol Nel- tor say they are confident he'H Thursday through Satur- Little Rock, clear 75 41 .. son of Winona Oct. 12, 1958. Survivors are: her husband; The Wabasha School District ed $5 each , on charges of de- one daughter Hearing set beat out Muskie for second day partly cloudy and var- Los Angeles, cldy 66 57 .. Survivors are: his wife, in , Heidi, at home; has been leasing the St. Felix linquent overtime parking: her parents; two sisters Miss place and, thereby, pull himself iable cloudiness with a Louisville, cldy 66 37 .26 Kansas City; one son and one , even with School facilities for the past four Mrs. Louis Kwosek Jr., 845 Solveig Tweito, Mankato Minn., the Maine senator in chance of occasional rain Marquette, cldy 27 23 .. years cost of $44,384 a year. daughter, at home; his father, , the residential race Memphis at a 49th Ave., Goodview, 11:36 a.m. and Mrs. Dennis (Kathleen ) on La Crescent as they or snow in the north Thurs- , clear 69 39 .07 State funds have paid three- Nov. 11 in Winona; one brother, Robert head for the April 4 test in Wis- Miami, clear 74 70 , 1971, West 3rd Street. Onstad, Minnetonka, and ma- day through Saturday. Con- fourths, or $37,000, of this an- Darrell K. Metcalf, Oronoco, Rossin, Winona ; and one sister, consin. tinued mild. Lows Milwaukee, snow 33 26 .81 nual amount. Mrs. David (Ethna) Stock, Wi- ternal grandmother, Mrs. Sarah in the 20s Minn., 3:07 p.m. Nov. 8, 1971, Grindeland Muskie indicated in his final and lower 30s. Highs most- Mpls-St.P., clear 39 20 .. Casmey also announced that nona. , Spring Grove. theft charge campaign appearance New Orleans West 4th Street. Monday ly in the 40s. , fog 80 58 .. a 30-member emergency review Fred Nihart Bethany, 3:22 Funeral services will be at Michael D. Wilson, 20, La he is prepared for the worst in New York, cldy 47 34 .. , WISCONSIN team will be in Wabasha April p.m. Aug. 28, 1971, West 3rd Winona Funerals X p.m. Friday at Trinity Lu- Crescent, Minn., appeared be- Florida while looking to the fu- Partly cloudy Thursday then Okla- City, clear 66 42 .. 24-26 to conduct an investigation Street. theran Church, Spring Grove, fore Winona Municipal Court ture. mostly cloudy Omaha, clear 52 34 .. of the district's curriculum, fa- James Judson D. Scott the Rev. Kenneth G. Knutson Judge Dennis A. Challeen today Friday and Sat- Philad'phia, rain 47 37 R. Smith, Caledonia, "If there's a setback tomor- urdpy. Temperatures will aver- T cilities, finances and staff . Minn.y 4:15 p.m. Dec. 3, 1971, Funeral services for Judson efficiating, with burial in the with a courkappointed attorney, row—and I don't think there Hopefully;, the team will be age above seasonal normals for south. Daily lows will be most- West 2nd Street. D. Scott, 426 Dacota St., were church cemetery. Steven H. Goldberg, to request is," he told a small group of able to publish its study in Joseph E, Kelly, Rochester, held Monday at the Cathedral a preliminary hearing. the period. Daily highs will be ly in the 20s north and 30s early May, Casmey added. Friends may call at Engell- black supporters, "there are 22 mostly In the 40s north and 50s south. Minn., 1:44 p.m. July 13, 1971, of the Sacred Heart, the Rev. Wilson is charged with taking more primaries, there's a con- McGinnis and Roble Funeral Homd, Spring a portable color television set, a Main Street. Msgrs. Joseph R. Grove, Wed nesday evening, vention next July and an elec- J. R. Feiten officiating. Burial gold pocket watch and a pocket tion next November." Food-buying with military rites was at St. Thursday afternoon and even- knife from the home of D. C. ing and Friday until noon, then Failure to place second in Mary's Cemetery. Minard, La Crescent. Florida seemed Likely to spur a at the church from 1. Goldberg indicated that he co-op will Tax chief: Pallbeaters were Richard H. reassessment, already reported In years gone by Darby, Earl H. Harkness, Leo might possibly object to some Elwyn DeMarce of the evidence that the state under way, of the Muskie organize here F. Murphy Jr., James F. Row- LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) strategy of running in all pri- an, Rome Ritter and Dr. Arnold presents in its case and if Chal- (Extracts jrom the f lies o) thia newspaper.) Famine Foods, a group of Wi- criteria needed — Elwyn (Bus) DeMarce, 57, leen denies the use of this evi- maries. W. Fenske. The Maine senator is com- nona persons interested in a co- Members of Leon J. Wetzel Lake City, died Monday at Lake dence Goldberg will waive the Ten years ago . . . 1962 operative food-buying, will hold City Municipal Hospital after a hearing. mitted to running in Illinois American Legion Post 9 provid- Wisconsin Penn- an organizational meeting at for consultants ing military rites were: Fred long illness, Bond is set at $3,000 and hear- next Tuesday, , City officials expressed an interest in exploring the possi- Lake Park Lodge at 7:30 p.m., The son of Mr. and Mrs. J_m- ing is set for 10:30 a.m. Friday. sylvania and Massachusetts bility of obtaining additional ST. , PAUL, Minn. Heyer, bugler ; Al Hodson, H. M. April 25 and Ohio on May 2 but property easements from the Wednesday. ^-Min- k FYank Mertes, Dean ery DeMarce, he was born at , Chicago nesota's tax commissioner says Lue^ , Lake City, Sept 1914. He 1 might concentrate his later ef- & North Western Railway which would permit con- According to Roger Lacker, Varner, John Prosser, Edwin . 5, There are about 3,000 lang- struction of a roadway on the Crooked Slough flood dike at member of the group, topics of the state needs some criteria graduated from Lake City High forts in fewer states to ward off for income Prosser, O. P. Runkel, George College, uages spoken today over tlie spots against a greatly reduced price. interest will^ include natural tax consultants and Karsten, P. T. McKeaveny, Don- School and St. Thomas foes picking their so-called tax experts should St. Paul, Minn globe. Winners for the Winona YMCA swimming team, which foods, low-cost nutrition, barter ald V. Gray, C. W. Schneider . He married Ma- him. placed second in thc Northern District Champiinshlps have to meet some kind of rion Schumacher at Lake City, at Min- gardening, and foods of the Wi- and George Achcff . neapolis, are Da vo Woodworth, Wes Streater, Dennis Slovors,. nona area. qualifications. April 21, 1914, He was manager John Boiler and Mike . Streater. Gordy Gutzmann is their Homemade bread will be Commissioner Arthur Roe- Ladislaus E. Libera of the Independent Grain and coach. served mer said recently he plans to Funeral services for Ladis- Coal Elevator here, where he Florida primary m ask the 1973 legislature for au- laus E. Libera, 668 W. 5th St., had been employed 35 years. Twenty-five years ago . . . 1947 thority to regulate the profes- were held this morning at St. A World War II, veteran , he sional income tax preparation Casimir was a member of Louis Mc- Local man is 's Catholic Church, the Cahill American Legion Post Company A of the new National Guard will be activated business. Rt. Rev. Emmett Tighe offi- in a public ceremony at tho Winona Armory. Twenty-five hospitalized in lowa Tho state currently has no li- 110, Lake City, St. Mark's at-a-qlance ciating. Burial was in St. Episcopal Church , where he wns men will be sworn in by an inspection team Irom the office of afte r car acc ident censing provisions governing Mary's Cemetery. the Minnesota adjutant general. Individuals offering their serv- a vestryman, Cnrnelian Lodge By THE ASSOCIATED PI.KSS Pallbearers were: Steve Draz- 40, A.F. & A.M., Lake City, the s pri-sldrntinl primary "The Best Yenrs Of Our Lives" was voted best picture R. M, Thomson, 625 Clark's ices as income tax consultants. kowski, Mark Caldwell, John Here arc koy facts on Florida ' was listed In fair condi- Lake City Sportsmen's Club and election today: of the year by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sci- Lano, "Any one can put up a sign Rompa , Chester Fockens, Ralph Ihe Chamber of Commerce, ences Frederic March was chosen best actor and Olivia De tion today by a spokesman from VOTERS — More than two million a rte expected to cast , that says 'Income Tax Special- Mosiniak and Carlus Walter. Survivors are: his wife; one , 77_,05« Havlland received tho award as best actress. University Hospitals, Iowa City, ist* ballots. The state lias 2,133„113 registered Democrats and that is unfortunate," son, Richard B., Inver Grove ICTH total 77,507. Iowa. Roomer said. Mrs. James E. Sexton registered Rcpuhlicnns. Independents nnd OII patient at the Heights, Minn.; three grand- VOTING HOURS — 7 a.m . to 7 p.m. EST. All 07 counties Fifty years ago . . . 1922 He has been a The tax commissioner said he Funeral services for Mrs. children : hi.s mother, Mrs, E. hospital since ho was transfer- James E, (Nellie) Sexton , St. havo "voting machines. A fast count Is expected. feels most tax preparers are L. (Mayme) DeMarce ; two primary candidates Gov. The Rov, Mr, Todd of Lake City will this week preach nt red there at 2:20 a.m., March 7, competent Anno Hospice, who Mills of Arkansas; . ably well qualified and cooper- say of New York and Sum Yorty of Los Angeles; former Sen. ate with this office ," he said. Pallbearers were Steven , Wil- Wis., and Mrs, Francis (Jean) years ago . . . Lawyer says Warren liam and Patrick Price, James fludd , Wacouta Bench , Winn. Eugcixi J. McCarthy of Minnesota . Seventy-five 1897 "Tho people should have some REPUBLICANS — President Nixon, Reps. John M. AtJi* broke ethics code go Sexlon nnd William and Patrick Ills father nnd one brother have the druggists who are to open in about assurances that when Ihey brook cf Ohio and Pnnl N. McCloxkry of California. Brown Bros., ho has the ex- I-eonnrd. died. two weeks nt the old stand of A, M. Pett & Son, are having (AP) at- to a tax guy, DELEGATES — Tho Democrat with the most votes in MILWAUKEE - An pertise to advise thin. " Funera l sorvlees will Iw tit 3 tho old storo fixtures moved out and now ones of modern torney for a cosmetics firm ment. p.m , Wednesday at St. Mark's each of the 12 congressional districts will name the delegates design put in place . says Wisconsin Atty. Gen. Rob- Tho fire burned a mattress Episcopal Church the Itevs. from that district. Tlio 01 delegates .thus selected will then , commit- ert W. Warren violated the Rochester man nnd Nibbo apparently died of Gcorgo C. Perkins and George choose 12 nt-Inrtfe delegate)), llie stale Democratic, One-hund red years ago . . . 1872 state

DICK TRACY By Chester Gould

BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker

BLONDIE By Chick Yovng

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STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH By Fred Laswell

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They' re the Bunny Kiusic|ans: You know that Easter can't be far away when Head' s gives you these cuddly, in- NANCY By Ernie Bushmlller • One Plays the Guitar A rw Plane fha Rnnnnr- flatable Easter Bunnies! They inflate to • Une nays the Bongos , 0 , , ,, ,« T, , Cnrr < JLl •_ m M.L. if i- nearly 2 feet high. They re FREE with an ~ One Plays the Violin • incoming Dry c,eQning 0rder of $3 50 Don't wait — send your order now as the ^——-«»^ y ^ u u^ v supply of bunnies is limited , Gk.U__B___H___mawfMM<. \I rJffTffi Mf.fllll|^^ _ ^^^ _ fl ^ i 164 Main Street Freo Parking In Rear ^^_A Phone 452-2301 ^ i | | | | iP i : ;