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11-26-1962 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1962). Winona Daily News. 332. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/332

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. City Traffic Box Mostly Fair, Score —To Date— Mild tonight 1»« .961 Accidents .... 338 355 Deaths ...... !' ¦ ' • 2 And Tuesday Injuries ...,,.. 74 80 Damages $82,190 $104,109

Canvassers Return to Work Hamline Twins 'ARCH OF FREEDOM' Die in Crash, On Governor Ballot C o unt ST. PAUL (AP) - With the for Andersen and 230 for Rolvag. Gov, Andersen said Saturday he could well take a look at some State toll 15 Minnesota governorship at stake, After reconvening, the board re- will appoint a commission, includ- points in the Minnesota election By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kennedy Praises the . St a t e Canvassing Board ported the count should have been ing representatives from both po- laws. One matter, obviously, that Fifteen persons died wrestles again today with the Andersen 290 and Rolvaag 229. litical parties, to study,the state's needs clarification is the law per- in Minne- crucial question of whether to ac- This gave Andersen a net gain of election law5F"and make recom- mitting county canvassing boards sota traffic accidents over the long cept amended vote totals from 10 53 votes. Thanksgiving Day ' mendations to the legislature. to reconvene, once they've certi- ' weekend, in- counties." * ' Among matters to be considered, fied their returns to the secretary cluding twins from Jasper, Minn. The petitioners said the vote .; In its first meeting last Friday, he said, will be a statewide voter of state. • . The carnage raised the state's recounting came after Andersen registration law and The two agreed that basically the! board certified winners in all more use , of 1962 traffic toll , races but governor. Attorneys for telephoned McCabe and requested voting machines. the state elections laws are good. to 615 compared the two governor candidates in the recheck. They said too that "But what is tremendously heed- with 676 through this date last "Nov. McCabe did not notify the gover- Secretary of State Joseph L. ed is an. inexpensive, practical year.. ': U.S. the 8 election were given un- Servicemen til e p.m. tcHiay-Xo^ubmit-written nor candidates that a 'recounting Donovan and jT_§^c_uUiJ F^r,r_es.t .yoting-machine for- use in smaller Twins Neale and Nancy sGrage, was to be done. " . " ^ arguments concerning amended . Talbott , saTcFthe next legislature precincts," said Talbott. 19, both sophomores at Hamline President county figures. University in St. Paul, died late Original county totals, the state Sunday night of injuries suffered canvassing board said, gave Lt. Gov. Karl Rolvaag a 58-yote mar- four hours earlier in a headon gin. The Democrat ic-Farmer- collision near Shakopee. Reviews Troops Labor nominee had 619;704 Totes Neale was the driver of one car. to 619,646 for the Republican in- His passengers were his sister and cumbent, Gov. Elmer L. Ander- Cheryl Skyberg, 19, also of Jasper sen In Georgia c and a Hamline student. The three By FRED S. HOFFMAN had been home for the holiday But amended totals from the 10 HINESVILLE, Ga. (AP)-Presi- disputed counties switched the ad- weekend and were returning to . St. vantage to Andersen. On this basis Paul for the resumption of classes dent Kennedy today told 3,000 he had a 142-vote lead — 619,722 when the tragedy occurred. soldiers of the Army's newest to Rolvaag's 61»,580; The northbound Grage ear col- armored division that they and Sydney Berde, attorney for Rol- lided With one driven by Lynn A. millions of their comrades form vaag, told the board it is illegal Walling, 49, Redwood Falls, a "the keystone of the arch of free- for county boards to reconvene brother of Minneapolis , Police dom around the world." once they have certified their fig- Chief E. I. Walling. Passengers ures. Doing so, he said, opens the were Mrs. Lynn Walling, Steve Standing hatless and without a door to "mischief." Walling, 14, Mary Walling, 16. and topcoat in a stiff , cold wind, Ken- Attorney Richard Kyle, reprer Laurie Schoffman , 16, all of Red- nedy thanked the men of the 1st senting Andersen, argued that ,the wood Falls. Armored Division—"Old Ironsides" will of the voters is the important The Wallings and Miss Schoff- —for their services to the country thing, that technicaliies should be man had spent the weekend in during "the difficult period, of the waived, and. that the legislature Minneapolis as guests at Chief past weeks." int-nded for vote counting errors Waliing's home- . The President landed at Ft. to be corrected. Lynn ; Walling was reported in Stewart at 10:18 a.m. under blue good condition in a Shakopee hos- skies to start a one-day swing The Minnesota . Supreme-: Court ' through Army, Air Force and has said it will not act on the pital. Miss Skyberg suffered a 1 broken jaw and was listed in fair Navy bases in Georgia, and question until the State Canvass- condition. In good condition were Florida. , ' ; • ing Board takes some action "one Mrs. Walling, Steve and Mary way or another." , Walling, and Miss Schoffman. Kennedy was making the 2,500- mile round trip to pay his person- 7h_ legality of reconvening a Francis Steinhorst, 54, a long- al respects to American fighting county, canvassing board was also time clerk at Stillwater Prison , men who were massed in the raised by 10 residents of Water- was killed Sunday night when a PRESIDENT LEAVES .. . President Kennedy boards his southeastern part of the United ville and Elysian, Minn., who car struck him as he walked with plane at Andrews Air Force Base this morning for a itour of States when _ie TIukanu''crl_ i_ '''W£ haifc petitioned Andersen to ; re- his wife on a residential area Georgia and Florida military bases to visit troops called ur* gan in late October. move A. J. McCabe, LeCenter, as Stillwater street. Mrs. Steinhorst for the Cuban crisis. He is followed by Gen. Maxwell Taylor, He rode in a black limousine LeSueur County auditor, . was not hit. chairman of the joints chiefs of staff , along a 1,000-yard line of M48 , and other military chiefs. The governor confirmed Sunday Reed WaUner , 18, Duluth died (AP Photofax ) Patton tanks, armored personnel he had received the petition, but in a hospital there Saturday night carriers^ howitzers and Honest he did not comment further. after he was thrown out of a car- John missiles. The petitioners said McCabe drawn trailer about 35 miles north The green-clad troops snapped acted improperly in permitting of Duluth. to attention as he passed. what they alleged was an unlaw- Larry Mohler, 26, Onamia. died The President halted several Saturday. His compact car and a times and got- out of his ful inspection¦ «f . ballots for gov- ' France Supports car for ernor. • ' • . . . ' truck collided" souuY'cf Milaca ot a closer look at the equipment The LeSueur County canvassing U.S. Highway 169. Authorities said and to chat briefly with some of ROCK CUMBERS fteST AT TOR , . ; Three Ed Cooper, Glenn Denny and have fallen asleep at board, was reconvened Nov. 17 to . Jim Baldwin, At Mohler may the menry tired rock climbers rest, atop _3 Capitan after right background is Yosemite's famed.Half Dome the wheel. recheck the governor vote in Le- Kennedy,, speaking from a re- Center's first w/ard. The vote there taking almost seven days to scale its' sheer in Yosemite National Park, Calif. (AP Photofax) Gen. De Gaulle Fatally Injured in a collision on PARIS (AP)—The long shadow Gaulle's own party and others viewing stand, flanked by heavy originally had been listed as 238 3,000-foot granite face. From left to right are ¦ •¦ ' • ¦ Satur-, . J ' Duluth's Skyline Boulevard ranks, told the men drawn up be- Olson, 37 of Charles de Gaulle stretched pledged to his support captured a day was Mrs. Kenneth , clear majority in the National As- fore him ' that he wanted to ex- Duluth . even farther across , the French press appreciation on behalf of Robert B. Buege, 30, Winona , sembly—the first time in modern political landscape today in the French history that any cohesive the people of the United States. Trio First to died Friday night when his car glow of the president 's resounding He did not mention the Cuban skidded on an icy stretch on High- force could claim such a margin. Kennedy Hopes victory in national parliamentary crisis as such but it was obvious way 61-34 and struck a bridge ap- Official results, combining first- this was what he was referring Traffic D guardrail 10 miles south elections. eaths proach round returns Nov. 18 and Sun- to in speaking of the difficult pe- Climb Yosemife of Winona- In run-off contests Sunday De day's runoffs, gave De Gaulle's riod of recent weeks. Armament Donna M. Price, 34, St. Paul , Union for a New Republic (UNR) "The danger is certainly not died late Friday of injuries suf- 233 of the 482 seats in the new past and we will continue on Highway to live fered in a collision ~ National Assembly. Some 30 . suc- in crisis and danger, certainly Near 500 Mark 65 near Cambridge. in Isanti cessful candidates from other par- HOLIDAY DEATHS p.m. Wednesday to midnight Sun- S.W. Precipice through this decade," Kennedy ' County. ties were pledged to support De- Talks Succeed Traffic _« . 488 day (local time ) was 488. Belated , 49, St. said. By JIM FORBES Sigfred Ingvald Hogstad $50 Million for Gaulle. "Therefore, we will continue to MICHAEL GOLDSMITH Fires 44 reports were expected to boost Paul Park , was killed Friday By Miscellaneous 147 the total. YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, call upon your services in the fu- GENEVA (AP)-Presideht Ken- ' « Calif. (AP)—Two Americans and nigt in a crash ol cars on High - Oe Gaulle had a combined sup- TotaT^ N . 679 (fri. other violent deaths, 44 per- way 61 in Washington County, at ture as we have in the past days." nedy expressed the hope today ^ a Canadian have become the first po rt of more than 260 deputies, Kennedy said the United States sons lost their lives in fires and Newport. RS70 Granted well above the 242 needed for con- that the new round of East-West By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 147 others were killed in miscel- to climb the treacherous 3,000-foot is the "guarantor of the independ- disarmament negotiations- will end southwest precipice of Yosemite' trol. In 1958 the UNR elected only The nation's traffic deaths over laneous accidents. The over-all to- s Mrs. Edward Brang, 48, Meire ence of dozens of countries "the upward spiral of weapons granite-faced El Capitan. , died Friday in a collision 188 seats although De Gaulle's stretching around the world," competition." the extended Thanksgiving week- tal of 679 also was a record for Grove nationwide popularity and the end neared the 500 mark today, a Thanksgiving weekend since Weary and bedraggled Ed Coop- on snow-slicked Highway 4 in adding : '.The President in a statement to 1958, the first year of counting er, 24, of Seattle, Wash., the Stearns County. To Air Force pressure of the Algerian war kept "be the reopening of the the highest for the holiday period a majority of the assembly obedi- "And the reason that we are read to since 1958/ the accidental deaths for the hol- climb's leader , summed it up as Roger P. Jandt , 24, New Mark- WASHINGTON UP) ' - The 17-nation conference said the talks iday. he clawed his way over the 7,5(M- it , Minn. , lost his iife in the colli- ent to him. able to- guarantee the freedom of to ending The highway death toll from 6 RS70 reconnaissance strike bomb- those countries and to maintain should- give priority nu- foot high summit Sunday after- sion of his car and a semitrailer er, a focus of controversy in With returns from six overseas clear weapon tests onee and for Tills year s traffic toll compared , in Scott that guarantee and make it good ' ' ' ' noon : "This is enough climbing." truck on Highway 65 Washington for almost a decade, districts still unreported, the other all. .. . to 457 in 1961, 442 in 1960, 445 in County, Friday. party (1958 is because of you and your com- is getting a $50-millif the confer- tro ' Stales has lifted nl. 12 , feet , visibility II miles, tended on takeoff as in sketch and Ihcn retracted for high speeds Stewart commander, and U.S. II .S, abandonment of the Guan- blockade it imposed in October subversion is prepared and Hie wind 12 M.P.H , from South south- Rep. Carl D. Vinson , ence toward the West's position to form n delta wing. Sketch is bused on Information D-Ga., chair- disarmament in- tananio naval base, remains "in- when Ihe Soviet offensive weapons bases from which p irnto ships sail east , barometer 30.30 and falling, obtained man

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WINONA TYPEWRITER SERVICE EDSTROM'S STUDIO " ™ It East Second Street Phone 2304 161 Eatt Third Street Phono 8 3300 49 Ea»» Fourth Street Phone 1934 . » " "1003 ^Uaily Ql JUIlClay NfiWS .1 " I • October jobless Pay Declines Side of Car Sharply Here Sheared Off; M l,d-Oc t o b e r unemployment compensation claim filings for the tri - county Winona-Houston-Wab- asha area declined to the lowest Minor Injuries level for that month in the past When Steven H. Showers, 19, five years> Ray H. Brora, local Cannon FaUs, Minn., lost control manager, State Employment of his car Saturday night, it hit Service, announced. a bridge which sheafed off the left - Only 248 persons were receiving side of the- car, but the 19-year- benefit payments old driver received only minor in- in the tri-county , area as of mid-October this year juries compared with 283 for the same Following his release from Com- p eriod last year and m lor mid- munity Memorial Hospital Sunday, September this year. SCOUT AWARD . . . Robert Thaldorf , right, completed 150 hours of service to the church, he pleaded guilty before Justice scout adviser for Explorer Scouts Troop 2, Cen- plus completion of a special project. The pre- Lewis Albert to a charge of care- THE AREA consists of Winona less driving and tral Lutheran Church, presents the Pro Deo et sentation was made during " the 10:15 a.m. ser- paid a fine oE County, Houston County, the east Patri $25 and $5 costs: half of Wabasha Boy Scout award to Al&ed Wolfram , son vice Sunday. Looking on is Dr. L. E. Brynestad, County and the of Mr. . Showers was driving south on SIDESWiPED Rushford area in Fillmore County and Mrs. Ves Schuminski, Minnesota pastor of Central Lutheran, and Mrs. Schuminski. Highway 61, three miles north of A BRIDGE ... This is Steven City. The car is off the highway which is to the H. Showers which is counted with the Winona. City. The award is given to a Scout who has (Daily News photo) . Minnesota City, at 11:25 p.m. Sat- ' 1955 model car which hit a bridge right and behind it. Showers was only slightly County total. urday. He lost control of hrs car on Highway 61, three miles north of Minnesota injured. (Daily News photo) The previously announced high which then went left onto the east employment in the area contribut- shoulder. ed to the decline in • jobless Armed Forces The car went along the shoul- claims. Manufacturing employ- St. Charles School der for 114 feet, bit the bridge, ment has reached a record Pvt. Leo A. Eisch-n, son of Mr. went another 114 feet along the h igh, construction moved ahead and Mrs. Joseph H. Eischen, ms shoulder, then went into the . east Gilmore Ave., is . taking basic ditch and came to -est 72 feet Weatherman and good weather Sees kept outdoor employment at midsummer lev- training at Fort Ord, Calif., as a from the highway, It did not over- member of Winona Plat Turned Down turn. els. ' 's National , Guard Company A. His address Jesse Jestus Winona County Also, Jestus feels that Utica, Showers had m i n o r facial cuts Many persons filing claims in is: NF 27371950 2nd PLT, superintendent of schools, said being an entity, should have an and abrasions. October were oh COD this morning he has decided not The car was de- short term lay- 3rd Be 1st Bde, Fort Ord. Calif. opportunity to vote by itself molished. offs ' and were awaiting recall to to prepare a consolidation plat of , Wam which it would have in the Lew- r their jobs. St. Charles school district with 11 . "Mostly fair and mild tonight Daverage 10-15 degrees^ above sea- Lowest temperature in Minnesota Since Jan, 1 this year, $593,747 rural districts, including TJtica. iston plat but not in the St. Char- and Tuesday." sonal normals which Would bring this morning was 29 at Interna- has beenp.paid in jobless benefits He gave two reasons. Early in les request, where it .would be It's almost too good to be true daily highs to 38 to 51 and night- tional Falls and St. Cloud. in the area—566,319 less than the November Lewiston school board one among 11 districts. Attorney Drops but that's' what the weatherman time lows in the 22 to 35 bracket. Rochester posted a 32 after a $660,066 total paid for the same requested a plat with Utica, A. hearing will be held by the says for the beginning of the last Precipitation-is expected to aver- Sunday high of 47 and La Crosse which is being considered by the County Board of Commissioners period last year. In October this state Department week ia November. age little or hone. had 34 and 45 for the same times. year, $18,932 was paid-$5,585 less of Education. next Monday on petitions of sev- • A low of 28-33 is predicted for . For the fi rst time this year Lake A year ago today Winona had Since one plat involving Utica is en Utica residents for attachment Action for Writ than the $24,517 total for the same under consideration tonight and a high of 45-50 for "Winon a is frozen over and the a highr of 51 and a low of 33 with month last year. by the state, to Lewiston. . Tuesday. Mostly fair and mild is authorities issued the usual warn- the ground free of snow. The all- Jestus felt another shouldn't be J-stus said he would prepare a the outlook for Wednesday, top. ing to youngsters to stay off the The following report, as of the submitted involving the same time high for Nov. 26 was 65 in dis- plat involving the 10 other dis- Of Habeas Corpus Temperatures generally were ice until it is thick enough for 1914 and the low . -2 in 1880 and 15th of the months shown, lists trict. tricts, if , he were asked to do' so. unemployment- claims (UC) , An action to obtain a writ of pleasant over the weekend with ¦safe travel. 1898. The mean for the past 24 Ei-chcn Palbicki habeas corpus, contesting the ar- the thermometer rising to 44 Sat- hours was 36. Normal for this day claims by veterans and federal a mess sergeant ICE EDGED the river backwa- -workers (UCX-Fed.) and claims by and entered the ment of patients in Air Force med- rest and confinement of a Winonan urday afternoon and 49 on Sunday . is 29. Gerald J. Palbicki, son of Syl- Army in 1953. ical wards, dispensaries and clin- charged with second degree grand Low Sunday morning .was 22 and ters and in some cases some back- The final weekend of November area residents who worked out of vester J. Palbicki, 162 N. Baker ' water pools were frozen over. ; state: ics. He attended Durand High larceny, was dismissed in District this morning 36. By noon the read- was fair and pleasant for all of St., has been commissioned a sec- ALMA, Wis. — Ens. James C. School. Court here this morning on motion ing here was 47. Temperatures, were mild over WISCONSIN and today was ex- WINONA COUNTY ond lieutenant in the Air Force of the defendant's attorney. the Northwest, reaching as high —1962— Oct. Bade, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ahin . pected to be even more so. after graduation from Officer Bade, is attending Application for the writ was fil- EVEN THE extended forecast as 60 at M in o t, N.D. Bemidji re- Temperatures were due to reach Sept. Oct. 1961 Training School at Lackland AFB, LEW I S - ed Saturday by Martin A. Real- for the next five days is pleasant ported a high of 50 Sunday after- UC .156 187 204 an advanced tech- - .-. . . - - . TON , Minn.— as high as 60 in the southwestern Tex. He will be reassigned to nical school oi ty, attorney for Stanley, J. Losin- with temperatures expected to noon and Redwood Falls, had 56. part of the state today and the UCX - Fed. ...,., 8 8 9 Keesler AFB, Miss , for training John M. Kennedy, ski, 48, 662 E. 4th St.. charged with Out of state ...... 8 :¦ 16 ' 15 Damage 'Contra son of Mr. and 50s elsewhere. as an electronics officer. He is a at : fhiladelphic ; taking a .carton of mints from Wat- Meanwhile, the state had a re- Paid in Oct.; $16,161 graduate Mrs. Bernard J. kins Products, Inc., where he of Winona State College. after graduating Kennedy, Was minder that winter's not far away: HOUSTON COUNTY has employed as a shipping . clerk. . from the Navy'i been commission- the Eau Claire area had more UC ...... 6 13 S6 The new address of Pfc. Melvin Losinski is scheduled Tor a pre- snow on the ground than any place UCX - Fed. .2 3 3 Officer Candidal* ed a second lieu- liminary h e a r i n g in municipal Dirgfelder, son of Mr. and Mrs. School, Newport tenant in the Air Election Laws in in the nation, except on the tops Out of state ...... 1 1: 4 court here Dec. 5. This was re- Roman Kotlarz, 503 E. Front St;, R.I. On comple of mountains. Three inches of snow Paid in Oct.: $1,208 Force upon grad- quested at his appearance in the is: US 55698916, H&H Co, 2, 81st tion of 10 week; uation from Of- 1 left over from last Friday's storm WABASHA COUNTY Armor, 1st AD, Fort Stewart , G'a; city court last Wednesday, a day ground. advanced train f i cer Training after he had been taken into ens- still covered the UC 9 15 12 He attended Winona Senior High ing, he will boan School at Lack-i Temperatures early today rang- UCX-Fed...... 5 4 0 School. tody at Wabasha, Minn. He's con- the USS Shangr land AFB, Tex. „ . fined in the city jail after fail- Sfate Termed ed from 23 at Lone Rock to 33 Out of state ..;... l 1 0 La. an aircraf Kwmdy at Superior. Milwaukee. Madison Paid in Oct.: $1, He is being re- ing to post $1,000 bond set by the 563 Sp. 4. Robert O. Teska, son of carrier/ as junior officer. His ad- assigned to Dover AFB, Del., as court to insure his appearance at and Beloit had 24. Green Bay 26, Mrs. Ruth Corey, 117V. Walnut St., dresses: BOQ Bldg. 888, Racine, Wausau, Eau Claire and ;¦ U. S. a supply officer. . the preliminary hearing. * has been reassigned to Fort Naval Base. Philadelphia 12, Pa. . Beatty's action for the writ of Park Falls 28. Meade, Md. He spent a 42-day habeas corpus was taken on^-17 Basically Good MONDOVI, Wis. LONE ROCK and Beloit hit tha furlough in Winona after return- - Sgt. 1. C. Motorist Fined ' LANES - Dale M, Rud, son of Elmer Rud, counts charging, among other By GERRY NELSON Brighton, White Bear Lake, peak of 48 Sunday . Green Bay ing from a 21-month tour of duty things, that Losinski had been ar- Paul, North BORO, Minn. — recently qualified for the expert ST. PAUL (AP) - Does the Roseville, South St. was the coolest spot with 38. in Korea. He is with the Military markmanship badge during range rested by a Winona police officer St. Paul, St. Anthony and Golden Houlton, Millinocket and Old Police. The new address without a warrant, that evidence ruckus over Minnesota's unsettled $30 for Driving of Wesley T. Aus- firing with the Army's new M-14 needed Valley. Town, Maine, set the national tow for the arrest had been obtained governor election point to eight above zero early today, Pvt. Gary D, tin, son of Mr. rifle at Fort Riley, Kan. Rud is s voting laws? Outstate areas using voting ma- of Kunce, son of with a faulty search warrant and reforms in the state' compared with the high of 83 Sun- Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Kunce, and Mrs. Truman a mess steward. that neither the defendant nor his chines include Duluth , Austin, Ow- "It's basically a good law," says Rochester and Midway day at Brownsville, Tex. After Revocation 625 W. Howard St., is undergoing Austin, - is: AF attorney had been advised of the Secretary of; State Joseph L. Don- atonna, advanced individual armor train- 17557732, Hq Sq EYOTA, Minn. — M.M.3.C. Gary specific charge until Losinski's ap- Township in St. Louis County, ac- Clarence Wrycza, 252 Mankato Bowman, son of Mr. and Mrs. ovan and his deputy, Forrest Tal- cording to information in Dono- ing at the Army Training Center, Sec. 1090th USAF, pearance in municipal court last bott , the men who compile the Ave., was sentenced in municipal , Box 482, Bernard _owman, is spending a van's office. Fort Knox, Ky. Kunce. will be SRW Wednesday morning, returns for .the State Canvassing court today to pay a fine of $30 or taught to drive a tank, Saridia Base, N. 15-day leave at the home of his Hearing on the petition for the 3 JA Companies to serve 10 days after he pleaded load its parents. He is stationed Board . Except for a 200-vote mistake in 105-millimeter gun and fire the Austin M. at San writ had been scheduled for this guilty to a charge ¦ Diego, Calif. But they agree the 1963 legis- copying down machine totals in of driving after weapon. He attended Winona Sen- ¦•' . . morning. revocation of his driver's license. lature might well take a look at Edina, those communities reported ior High School. WHITEHALL , Wis. (SpeciaD- • Today, however, B e a 11 y told He was arrested by police at 3rd BLAIR , Wis. (Special ) - John E. Judge Leo F. Murphy that he wish- some points. few errors. The big problems To Get Charters and Zumbro streets at 11:53 p.m. Trempealeau County's quota for Olson, son of Pearl E. Olson, is An obvious need for clarification have been in precincts using paper Charters will be presented to The address of A.2.C. Joseph A. induction into the armed services ed to move for dismissal of the Sunday. He paid the fine. taking basic training at Fort Leon- action. The motion was granted by is the law permitting county can- ballots. three new Junior . Achievement Stanislawski, son of Mrs. Esther for December is three, ..with " five 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Gilman B. Bolstad, Independ- Stanislawski, 207 E. Howard St., ard, Mo., after enlisting in the Judge Murphy. vassing boards to reconvene once It has been suggested that fa- firms at ence, Wis., pleaded guilty to a to receive pre-induction examina- Army. . they have certified their county tigue causes some mistakes, with JA center in the Kresge Building, is: 363D CLMS Sq., Box 177, Shaw tions Dec. 5, Miss Phyllis Tangen , Stanley V. Spooner , JA executive charge of driving after suspension AFB, S.C. He recently spent a Robert S. Knutson, son of Mr. vote totals to the secretary of vote counters too weary to shuffle of his driver's license. It was his selective service officer , an- and Mrs. Selmer Knutson , en- state. That question has been hag- ballots accurately. But present director, announced. 25-day leave at the home of his nounced. Hilltop Hotshots Officials of counseling firms will second conviction on the same mother. listed in the Army and is taking gled for two weeks as teams from law has a remedy in city and charge. ¦ ¦ • township officials want to. spend present charters to presidents of . basic training at Fort Knox, Ky. both parties check precinct totals He was arrested by police at 3rd .+ LAKE CITY , Gordon Otterson , who returned Win Lake City for discrepancies. the money — they can hire extra the JA firms. The JA firms and Winona County's quota for in- their counseling firms are: Jacco, Street and Mankato 'Avenue at duction into the armed services Minn. — A.3.C. here after, serving three years with election judges and send in a fresh 1:05 a.m. today. He was sentenced Richard E , Abra- tlie arrned forces in Germany, 4-H Play Contest Present law permits a county team after the polls close. utility case manufacturer. Swift _ for December is one, Mrs. Gladys , son of Mr. board to unlock the ballot box of Co.; Jaido, identification brace- to pay a fine of $50 or to serve Duxbury, Selective Service officer ham went to Chicago recently to pick LAKE CIW, Minn (Special ) - Donovan and , Talbott point no 30 days. He paid the fine. and Mrs. Harry up his car which was shipped from any precinct on a four-fi fths vote fingers at the men and women lets, Watkins Products, Inc., and announced. There were no pre-in- , The Hilltop Hotshots 4-H Club, where there is an "obvious error." Trayco, wooden trays. Northern .Mrs. Eugene J. Wachowiak , 115 duction examinations slated for J. Abraham has overseas. Lake City, won the first semifinal who man the election boards. Chatfield St., forfeited $30 bail in been reassigned Normally, such an error crops States Power Co. A fourth JA film December. * match of the Wabasha County 4- "They are not unlike a jury," is being organized. court today on a charge of care- to Webb AFB, SPRING GROVE , Minn. (Spe- up when tlie vote in any race adds "We entrust life H one-act play contest here Sat- number Talbott mused. Spooner urged boys and girls 15- less driving. She was arrested by Thirty-one members of the Na- Tex., for training cial)—William N. Casterton , son of urday night. up to more than the total and property matters to laymen police at Mankato Avenue and and duty as an Mr. and Mrs, Norman L Caster- of, ballots cast. Zealous partisans 19 to attend the meeting and joi_ val Reserve Officer's Training . They presented "Candy Goes on on juries, so it's not unreasonable the JA program. l Howard Street at lfl!03 p.m. Sat- Corp at Dartmouth College, Han- air policeman. He ton , has enlisted in the Army for a at the semifinals held have tried to expand this provision to do the same in elections." complet- a Diet" to get recounts where even a sus- urday. over, N.H., embarked on a one- recently three-year tour of duty with the at Lake City High School. The gover- Daniel D. Steele, 18, La Crosse, ed basic training _Army picion of error exists. Donovan says this year's day cruise Nov. 17 abord the . Engineers. , He is a 1961 Pepin Hill 4-H Club, Wabasha , was nor race has made people realize forfeited $30 bail on a charge of guided missile cruiser USS Albany, nt I.anklanH APR graduate of Spring Grove High second with its play, "We Want The real problem has been that careless driving. He was arrested Tex . He is a 1962 Abraham "that their vote is one of their tlie first conventional cruiser to School. Mother. " Other clubs taking part no one seems to know just when most important possessions." by the Highway Patrol at Lewiston graduate of Lake City High School. the board's power to re-check er- have all its guns replaced by mis- in the semifinals were the Mt. «. Some years ago, Donovan asked WILL AMERICA on Highway 14 at 3 a.m. Sunday. siles. S. Sgt, David J. Jacobscn, son Pleasant Pheasants, Lake City, rors expires. of Mr . and Mrs. E. C. Jacobsen, the legislature for $15,000 to hire Two Winonans, Nicholas Staff en, Police Checking and the Hyde Park Hi-Lites, Zum- A fascinating angle in ,J_l)e,. present an expert researcher on voting ma- son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. has been reassigned to Elgin AFB, bro Falls. "guess who's gbviSl'njSr" game is Fla., after his graduation from chines and election procedure. It' s Sad Week Steffen , 375 W. 5th St., and Evan Theft of Pood le The finals will be held Dec. 1 that vote-counting errors probably He was turned down. . ¦"Pat" Woodworm* son of Mr, and the Air Force course for jet air- at Plainview with the winners have occurred in every election in In Dodge Home llrs. Leslie W-codworth , 402 W. craft maintenance at Sheppard "Cosettc," a toy French poodle from this semifinal match and Minnesota history. Not until this Wabash a St., are participating in AFB, Tex. He was trained to valued at $150, has been stolen other semifinal matches at Waba- year have they meant much. DODGE , Wis. (S p e c i a It- Dartmouth's NROTC program. supervise and perform detailed from its home at 414 ty. Wabasha sha , Monday and at Plainview , 3 Arrested in inspection of jet A "close" election in the past Thanksgiving week was overshad- • maintenance and St. The dog belongs to Mrs, Robert Wednesday . The three top win- has meant a margin in tlie thou- owed by sadness for Kenneth Jack- DAKOTA, Mltin.—Glenn E. Gile, aircraft . Werkheiscr. ners will compete in the finals. sands, so errors of a few votes Theft of Truck son , 10, and his sister Pamela, 9, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rudy J. Gile, • She reported the dog missing George Schwartz, assistant coun mad e no great difference and MILWAUKEE Ml - Three II- who live here with their grand- has been promoted to nirinan sec- LA CRESCENT, Minn. — Army Thursday. Police investigated and ty agent , was the master of cere weren 't even spotted. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward ond class in tlie Air Force. A jet Pvt. Norbert J. Walter, son of found the dog's license not far monies. Judges were Mrs. Wal linois men were held in jail to- Patzner Sr. fighter mechanic, he is assigned Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Walter, from the home. They feel that the ter Peters, Zumbro Falls; Mr.s Interestlnuly, hardly a whisper day following their arrest Satur- Within the week the two young- to Hahn AB, G-crmany. He attend- has been assigned to the 1st Ar- dog has been stolen. Lilllgaard , Wabasha , and Mr.s of fraud has been raised. Where day night by Federal Bureau of sters lost their great-grandmother , ed Winona Higli School. tillery on Okinawa. He is a sup- "Cosettc," is a mature gray toy^ Harley Rcko, Lake Citv. errors have occurcd , they have Investigation agents in connection Mrs. Katherine Mimetz , Arcadia; ply ' specialist He is a graduate French poodle and is one of five been due to human frailty — poor with the theft of a trailer truck STRIKE OUT ? their mother, Mrs , Virginia Jack- TAYLOR , Wis. (Special ) — Clay- of St. Peter's High School , Hokah. such toy French poodles in Winona , judgment or bad arithmetic. and its contents valued at $80,000. long been batting* said police. They also said that Charged with transporting stol- America has son , Madison , and a grandmother , ton L. Waller, son of Mr. and Mrs. • Recount Starts "What is tremendously needed Is high in science and invention , Mrs. Kenneth Jackson Sr ., Tren- A. S. Waller, retired from the UTICA , Minn.- there is only one other gray dog practical yoting en properly across state lines an inexpensive, ( trade, living- l oii, N.J. Mr.s. Mimetz died Mon- Navy after 20 Pfc. Kenneth J. like "Cosettc" in the city. machine /or use in smaller pre- were Thomas Durkln , 33, Down- business and For Senator ers Grove, III., Robert .Vacn, 31, ideals for peace. day, their mother died Tuesday at years active du- Zaliradnik, son of cincts,"- says -Talbotl. . -¦ standards and University Hospital , Madison , and ty. A 1939 grad- Mr. and Mrs. Hen- and Smile Guajnrdo , 32, both of But there mny be scoreless in- In South Dakota Donovan agrees that voting hy Chicago, Mrs. Jackson died Thursday. uate of Taylor ry Zaliradnik , has Good Neighbors machine is preferable to paper nings if wc do not train enough High School, he departed for Ger- Paul Stoddard , special FBI agent Kenneth and Pamela have lived PIERRE , S.I). (AP) - Ballot ballots for accuracy, provided vot- heavy hitters with higher edu- here with the Pntzners since Ap- was employed at many with the CHATFIELD, Minn. — Neigh- said tho truck was reported stolen , boxes were opened and a recount ers don 't have lo stand in line for Friday night from tho Security ril when their mother entered the an aircraft fac- 1st Infantry Divi- bors of Raymond Kicfer rural got under way today in one of long periods. cation. for treat- tory in San Diego, sion for a six- Chatfield farmer who broke his Specter Motor Freight Co. of Chi- This is causing concern. hospital in Madison the closest elections in South Da- Cost of present voting machines cngo. He said Ihe truck contained ment, She remained a patient Calif., after at- month tour as a arm recently, harvested bis corn ,509- Many collciccs are in a squeeze. from a 110-acre field Friday and kota history — for Ihe U.S, Senate. rums somewhere in ihe $1 women 's slacks, automatic coffee there until her death last week. tending Curtis part of Exercise Villi county canvasses complete $2,000 range, a bit steep for small Some face shortages , and in Wright School, Long Thrust V. Saturday. Erwin Brmnmond was pots, hair dryers, irons and brake The children are attending Sa- in all but two counties , Democrat towns and rural townships. years there will bo at Pine Creek. Glendale, Calif. A 1350 graduate head of tho group who used 12 linings. He said the shipment origi- less than 10 cred Heart School George McGovem held a 3215-vote One possibility is a change In nated Sccuucus, N.J . He enlisted in the of Austin High wagons and six corn pickers on Jead over Son . Joe Botttini , Repub- the Um to combine several sparse- at twice as many applicants, Navy my 20, Zahradnlk School , he is a ri- the job. Helping were: Alfred , lican To stay ahead , wc must sea w.il.rwaner Robert and Michael Hanson Lylc . ly populated precincts and have King of Burundi m2 Ho w(lg stn. • , one polling place. This is already that our colleges have modem Field COCHRANE , Wis — A.2.C. Les- LII1I. W. Onan Co., a division of Studebaker-Packard been reassigned to Baudctte AFS, let , Alton Goldsmith , Walter Hazel- mer congressman and President Another big help would bj use Tucson. Ariz . (AP) — Susan competent teachers. Mwambutsn IV of Burundi ar- bnsch. Walter Kicfer , Otto Rch- , night for an unoffi- Corps, Minneapolis . Minn,, after his graduation from Kennedy's food-for-penee director of voting machines that prepare Piper , 23, of Shnkopce , Minn,, rived Sunday training Hng. Erwin Timm, James Luce as the winner in the Nov , 6 elec- printed COLLEGE cial visit lo the Netherlands. He the Air Force technical a paper I ape of the vote died Saturday night in a Tucson HELP THE 's guest for CALEDONIA, Minn.—Sgt . Fran- course for radar repairman. He and Edward Pcko. tion . totals, The bi g delay in Hennepin hospital of injuries suffered Wed- OF YOUR CHOICE NOWI will be Queen Juliana , operate and _ Pierre attorney Boh Ritei" County lunch today at her country pal- cis J. Fisch, son of Mrs, Nargelt was trnincd to time . over- 's canvass was the time- nesday in an iiuto-truvk collision, repair radar equipment and asso- seeing the recount net ion for Bot- consuming job of looking at count- Police said Miss Piper was a ace. Soestdijk , and will call on Fisch, has been assigned to the 7th ' Infantry Division in Korea. Ho is ciated auxiliary equipment, No Holiday Mishaps tum, said petitions for a recount ers on each of some 1,300 voting passenger in a car driven by Aud- To find out how tho collogo crl'. i Premier Jim dc Quay. offecli you, wrib lo HIGHER EDUCA- * In Delaware were filed in almost nil of I ho machines. Tapes could hnvo been rey Brnsc, 20, of Shakopee , who . DURAND , Wii. - A.3.C. Dennis state's 1,1121 precincts , McGovern checked nt n central location, escaped with minor injuries. Sha- TION, Box 36, Now York Time* Sta- KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS—* W. Kern, son of Waldo A. Kern , WILMINGTON , Del, (API-Del- said his supporters filed petitions Available records indicate only ron Carlson . 11) , also of Shakopee, tion, Now York 36, N. Y. has been reassigned to permanent aware went through the 102-hour in those precincts where he lost about 25 Minnesota communities was treated for minor injuries, ' Reg. Netting Tuesday, Nov. 27 base duty after his graduation Thanksgiving holiday weekend heavily. u.se voting machines, Police Hiiid Miss Braso's car Piibiishctt n» « pu blic ««ri c>;)cr>ilii>ii ii 'ith Tht Ailvtr tiain/ i # FIRST DEGREE INITIATION training course for medicnl serv- extremely henvy traffic Sunday, There are 270 miles of hook Paul and suburbs of Robbinsdale , seph P. Grohall Jr., 31. of Tuc- Council (mil tho Satvattnper - ,Ut- vtrtiiing Kxtrutivct Association. I I WILLARD ANGST, Grand KnlsM ice specialists, lie was trained particularly on the Memorial shelves in the Library ot Con- Brooklyn Center , Richfield , St. son. Miss Brase was cited for to assist in tho envo nnd treat- Bridge over the Delaware River. gress in Washington, D, C , Louis l'nrk , Edinn , Cryntul , iNew failure to yield right of way. ut ------¦ - »--¦--¦ •. ¦¦ ¦- - . ¦¦ «..»,s _«.^s***»*» ^ i u u Li Li rinji/y ij inrxiuu- u »-» »i i i . i » . i i > * * ^ They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo : Pictures Reversed For Brbwnsvilk SL dteppws^ VUqhL BROWNSVILLE, Minn. - The pictures of Robert Blair, postmas- ter, and LeRoy Hanke, route car- 1&Lets Get Gmnq rier, were reversed in Sunday's on-Brownsville. Here they la 6/r/ By A. F. SHIRA < feature Cinderel are: . Making Compost In a previous article, we called the attention of gardeners to the Gefs Rolls-Royce merits of compost as both a source of humus and a good fertilizing ' ¦' ¦ By EARL WILSON agent. . : . , ' Today we will offer suggestions on building a compost "pile", "NEW YORK — Sue Ann Langdon -^- having quit the role of or "heap", as a means -of manufacturing this valuable material. "Alice Kramden" on the Jackie Gleason. .TV show — is driving This is a good time.of the year to start this work, although there back to her 10-acre California ranch In a silver Rolls-Royce, thus be Cinderella Girl theme right to the end. may not be much plant material* available now. Yet, there may carrying out the some excess leaves, old sweet corn stalks, tomato and cucumber "I came in on the Great Gleason Express and I'm leaving in my vines, and other dried plant re- own Rolls, so I owe a lot to Jackie," Sue Ann says. mains from the garden and bor- She and Jack Emrek, her husband bought the Rolls last week der that can be used to start the iest pile should have no odor. Hanke Blair pile. We have seen a number of tTiere are several products on the and headed for Soledad Canyon , narket under various trade names RUSHFORD CLOTHING DRIVE to say, the nasty way they have of vegetable gardens that have not, , (Special)— California, where they'll prepare yet hat serve as activators in break- KUSHFORD Minn. , saying it? , been cleaned up of last sea- The Men's Club; of Rushford Luth- to produce their own movie son's plant remains. This clean- ng down the compost pile and - "Honeymoonshine;" for they have WISH I'D SAID THAT: When lastening decomposition. T h e y eran Church packedl^lothing Fri your mind suddenly goes blank, ing up can be done now before a their own^. movie company, too. :onsist of moist humus contain- day evening for the Lutheran "Sujac be sure to turn off the sound too. heavy snowfall occurs and a com- World Belief Thanksgiving cloth- They call their company post pile started with it. ng the micro-organisms that do Productions," and this production TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Hard he work and help " to keep down ing appeal. Boxes were transport- work is an accumulation of things First, about the location, It can ed to La Crosse for shipping. will be 'No . 1. be placed in .an out of the way cor- idors. They're going home via Phila- you don't do when you should have. ner of the garden, perhaps behind delphia, 'Cincinnati, Chicago, St. the garage, or in a place screened , Kansas CUy and A miser is a man who doesn't Louis, Dallas want to live like a rnillionnaire, by shrubbery, or other foliage to Phoenix — if I heard right — and . hide it from view. It should be in 'll see on the return he just wants to be one . . . .. thus Sue Ann That's earl, brother. a rather shady place and not ex- " ' ' ' trip the few places she missed ]™ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ posed to full sun. . . .. DEAR ABBY: _ran__l_B___IH__P^^^^i______the Beer Barrel Special. ^ Wisconsin Has If the compost pile is to be a ¦¦ NH Very shapely Virginia Martin, rather permanent fixture of the H_1__MH^_B_P8_EF ' > '' '' ^$W1MP ^___H___ who plays "Belle Poitrlne" in the garden activities, the structure ^^^^ H n ^P ' • - *k&EammaamwBamW^'amw new Sid Caesar hit, "Little Me ," should be made of substantial mmamml ^mmmmmmmmmmTtu&Mmw j* * * <_?0^*Cr2 if^______^^^^^_ is a strange gal for these times. Big Shepherd Teeth Are 10 Highway Deaths materials and this type will be mmWammmmmmmWKmW^^T ' ___ M - ______She's not the kind of gal who taken up first. The beginner may l>w'f>.4^______tries to attract attention offstage. feel that a permanent base for SHBBBBI _M8 -l She doesn't hang around Sardi's. Over Holiday the pile is not necessary, but the Instead of going there opening Moves Into -Important experienced user of compost will night to get a hand, she and her By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS recognize the importance of es- HBHHHH_P I \___P! ' ^______H____I husband, Joel O'Heyen, went By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN Ten deaths during the long tablishing a good foundation. ___H____F~*j_KK' _____HIHH9____ Thanksgiving day holiday week- IHJHH9HBT '' AaMJb_' ' '«______¦ _[______¦ straight home, drank some cham- DEAR ABBY: Our son had only one more year before grad- pagne and read her telegrams. end and another early today rais- IT CAM BE built with a ' con- White House uating from law school when his wife made him 'quit. She said ed the Wisconsin traffic toll for 'Til do anything on the stage- WASHINGTON (AP)- A black • there was no future in law. She talked him into selling on coin- crete bottom, or with heavy the year to 852. At this time a year boards placed close together, - to m\\\\\\\\m\\ ' i_____H_lr^i/J____HB : within reason---but offstage I'm and tan German shepherd named mission. One week they eat chicken and the next week they eat HUHHK \ $ *^ammmmmmmw^Sawr W ~6IBDB ^BBB_ shy—I guess I'm not really a ago 817 persons had died. make the removal of the compost Clipper has moved into the White feathers, -tow she says they need $1C00 to get his teeth fixed — Frank L. Panacek Jr., 27, of easier. The case can be about five showoff," she says. for "business reasons." How can teeth be important in business House and from all signs he's go- ' South Milwaukee was killed be- feet long and four feet wide, or ______/^T^^___rT JW _fl______H LARRY LAWRENCE , cousin of unless you are a horse? If she would let him finish law school, tween 4:30 and 5 a^m. today when other proportions to fit the condi- -'^ ing to be top dog. he would have something in . his head and nobody would look at _HHHHBL ^BF^^?' ^ IT _B____HH_H the late John Shubert. is expected r his car struck a culvert in the tions. However, this size will usu- . K. ™ v"^ ^ rjor ( 49______B______to take oyer the helm of the vast For one thing, he's big enough his teeth/ She has made a horse of him! He s our only son and Milwaukee suburb erf Oak Creek. ally meet the needs of the aver- ______^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ we love him. Should we give him the jnoney? THE OLD FOLKS k 4&~ _& .*_r AHHHH Shubert empire. John Shubert —larger by a considerable margin The auto jumped a curb and Pan- age garden. ^^^^^^^^^^^ P^* ' _j_Mr .______HB had, in fact, trained him for the than the two other canines who DEAR OLD FOLKS: If your son is required to meet the acek was thrown onto the lawn of The frame work to hold the com- ______* _^9___r iSHHIKS post ... Richard Adler consent- live ; in the executive mansion, a public, his teeth ARE important. You don't help children a residence. posting materials, which are rath- Fight-for-Sight Kathryn Hoeper, er butty at the start . of the proc- ed to produce the Welsh terrier named Charlie and . (some child! ) to stand alone by GIVING- them things. LEND 17, of rural "Lights On" benefit at Carnegie Darlington was killed Saturday ess, should be about five feet high. ______H E_III--^___-^^' ^niBB-______l Pushuika, a gift from Soviet Pre- him the money. .: __/ The frame can be of open box con- Hall Jan- 13 . .. Hugh Downs and night when her car struck a tree ' \mmmmmmmmmmmmmmama\\mmmmm&l$m^1______B' his wife Ruth both signed up ior mier Khrushchev. * DEAR ABBY: We have a neighbor who is on Highway 78 about three miles struction , or made of heavy wov- ' ______E_i^t&3£s5sF flHHHHIIIIHHI_ ' flying lessons . . . Robert Ryan For another, note the treatment a nice person, but : she has a 4-year-old boy .' . south of G'r a tie t in Lafayette en galvanized wire, firmly secur- ______£»^ 1¦______¦ perpetrated a pun about Dwight Clipper got Sunday on the flight who has; long curls hanging down his back. He County. Her car was not equipped ed to strong posts at each corner D. Eisenhower's golfing and from Cape Codr-and the snub it can almost sit on his hair and it is a pity to with safety belts. of the concrete, or heavy board, __l__R_—_——__l__—_-_-_--0&3. __------_-_H_i chicken farming when Ike went meant for Charlie. • see how the other . children tease that boy. Thomas Waite, 34, of Whitefish base with reinforcement on the to see "Mr. President." Said Jty- Even adults look at bhn twice and wonder Bay, a Milwaukee suburb, died sides where necessary. Since the an: "Ike's a putt-er-and-egg man." Clipper traveled by Jet with whether he is a boy Saturday several hours after his well composted material in the bot- President and Mrs. Kennedy and or a girl. The woman is , Pearl- Bailey and Louis Belson either divorced , deserted or separated because car struck a tree on Highway 175 tom of the pile should be used first COMFY? were celebrating their 10th wed- their daughter Caroline on their there is. never a near Menomonee Falls in Wau- an opening through which a return from the long Thanksgiv- husband around! Some of the shovel can be inserted should be " ding anniversary when Pearl neighbors say it's none of pur business, but I kesha County. That's what my wife says our living room is now. ALL bur opened at the Waldorf Empire ing weekend. Charlie made the Henry J. Smith, , of Eau made at the bottom of one side rooms, in fact, since we , started service on MILEAGE heating trip in a propeller-driven White think it is. Am I wrong to worry about the 72 to facilitate removal. . Room — but Pearl was just as child? . JUST A NEIGHBOR Claire was killed Saturday when oil. . Must be because it contains that special "Burn-Clean" professional, and great, as always. House plane. his ear struck a tree and over- Five-month-old Clipper was giv- ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ IF THE gardener does not de- additive to make sure your burner delivers clean heat on a At one point she sat on a bass DEAR NEIGHBOR: No, you are not .___„ . ,. turned in Eau Claire. The auto sire to make a solid base for the fiddle while it was being play- en to Mrs. Kennedy by her father- wrong. The mother is doing her son a great Abby was not equipped with safety belts. full flame. (Which I guess you'd have to call a pretty com- in-law, Joseph P. Kennedy, over compost heap, it can be omitted _ ed, and, as she bounced about on disservice. Perhaps you should become friendlier with the .Other traffic deaths recorded in and a dirt floor used. The open _fortable — or "comfy" situation , huh?) it, she said, "This beats Vic Tan- the weekend. Once aboard , Caro- mother and tel her in a nice way to separate the boy from the holiday counting period . which box frame, or wire netting, can Look at all the. ways MILEAGE gives you your MONEY'S ney." In her "New Shoes" rou- line took over, leading the new the curls. began at 6 p.m. pet through the presidential plane . last Wednesday be securely fastened tp posts, or tine, she claimed that she tells were: . heavy stakes, driven into th e WORTH in fuel oil: shoe clerks she wears size 4Vs B, on his leash. DEAR ABBY: Although I am only 15, I am the "Dear Abby" Terrance Rasmussen, 18, of ru- ground. Or, a makeshift pile can —Special "Burn-Clean" additive automatically and continously they scoff and say she,only wears of our block. I've helped many girls (and some boys) with their ral Whitewater; Joseph Polvika, be made without any holding , "but I actually need 6 Q. Caroline will have a joint birth- problems, but here is one that has me stumped. A girl (my age) keeps your entire heating system — from fuel tank to burner 3V.D " day party with her baby brother 54, of Friendship; David Peterson, frame whatever by simply piling ¦ ¦ is madly in love with my brother. He is 17 and he can't stand ' '.. nozzle — clean and free-flowing. Every gallon burns FULL- IT HAPPENED on the "France" John Jr. Tuesday. John spent the 6, of Janesville; Ally Culver, 77, the materials on the ground. In her. This girls tells me she can't eat or sleep for thinking about of Bloomer; Thomas Kleman, 73, such a case more dirt will be re- FLAME for clean , efficient heat. in mid-Atlantic. A jealous wife weekend at home because of a him. She says he's not good-lookin_, is conceited and treats her demanded of her husband, cold. Sunday was . his second birth- of Manitowoc; Thomas Kirsch, 9, quired to hold the composting ma- like dirt, but she is an emotional wreck over him. I told her she of Racine, and Sever Darling, 56, terials in place. —Prompt, dependable delivery — including emergency service "Where've you been?" . . . "Play- day. Tuesday is Caroline's fifth. might as well forget him, but she says she can't. If she knew ing cards in a quiet corner" . . . President and Mrs, Kennedy at- of Portage. The pile can be started by plac- if needed. how my brother really felt about her she would die. How can ing a layer of leaves, or other "You're a liar! I searched this tended Mass at St. Francis Xavier I help this girl? . "DEAR ABBY OF WASHINGTON —Automatic "Keep-Full" Service . — make ONE phone call you weren't on church in Hyannis, Mass. Sunday STREET" plant materials, in the bottom to whole boat — and , once a year, and never worry about tank running low. it!" ¦ ¦: and drew a sizable crowd of spec- DEAR "DEAR ABBY" Galesville Residents a depth of four or five inches : Your advice was exactly what and covering it with about two Vaughn Meader, whose album, tators despite chilly weather. mine would have been. To give her false hope would be cruel. Urged to Entertain —Direct refinery source means highesf possible quality at low- First Family," is so hot, Later, several members of the Tell her to focus , inches of soil. Next, about three "The her attention elsewhere because your bro- pounds -of a complete fertilizer can est possible price. read "the newspapers of 60 years Kennedy family — among them ther likjes-her "as a friend" and nothing more. LSC Foreign Students " to the Night of Stars Caroline, Atty. Gen. Robert F. be scattered over the soil and the —Budget Payment Plan spreads full year's heating cost over from now whole wetted down. audience. A couple of items for Kennedy and his wife, the Presi- DEAR ABBY: Is it possible to fall in love with a picture? GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) - 10 months — easy monthly payments help you keep your Galesville Presbyterian Church has This layering . process can be 2022: " 'Cleopatra' will be releas- dent's other brother, Edward M. budget in order. and "The Presi- DEAR C. C: Yes. But it invariably ends in frustration invited foreign students from La continued as the organic wastes ed next week,'" Kennedy, and brothers-in-law Sar- because a picture can dent is- celebrating his birthday gent Shriver and Stephen Smith 't love back. Crosse State College to spend a are available. About once a week Call us now for lew prices, prompt service on MILEAGE Fual Happy Birth- weekend in homes of members in warm weather the pile should at the White House. —went ice-skating at a rink CONFIDENTIAL TO B.C.C.: As Lord Chesterfield said to he wetted down with a hose, or Oil. day, President Feinberg!" named for Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., his son, "Make other people Saturday and Sunday, Internation- like themselves a little better, my al weekend, several pails of water. j EARL'S PEARLS: Ever notice the President's brother who was son, and I promise you they will like you very well." (asks H. C. Diefenbach) when, killed in World War II. The Presi- » Those interested in entertaining IP ONLY a limited amount of women claim they have nothing dent watched the fun. What's on your mind? For a personal reply, send a self- a foreign student should call the plant material is now available, addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, Box 3365, Beverly Hills church office Tuesday or Wednes- it can be placed in the enclosure, MILEAGE Calif. day morning. a little soil scattered over it, and _ ^^^ _ T_i_ The guests will have a chance left until spring when more mate- OIL co. n_ i aE_P_6_I»i!Wr .i J SEE IT TONIGHT to view American home life in a rial will be available from winter (formerly Mark I e- V — At 7:15 and 9:20 Raymond F. Gross, 63, of Winne- small city, and the hosts will learn ^rrMllOflflU^^ 1 mulches, lawn rakings and other Stevenson Oil Co.) V IWIH THE GREATEST THRILL CLASSIC OF All TIHEI conne; David Zdroik, 23, of Mil- about home life in other lands. A sources. Compost that is started v l l^ _# Wisconsin Counts waukee; Adam Bednarck, 45, of dinner and program for the host in the spring should be ready lo 372 W. 2nd 6091 rural Princeton, and Elmer Min- families and their guests is plan- use in the garden by fall. ^^^^^^^^^^V ^'Mf SLWK ^WT^f aWm Dead in 9-Day ton, 48, of rural Waupaca. ned for Saturday. If carefully handled, the corn- • p7>)« ¦ mmmS_p^^^^ m tf!wiwa El • « . flV^j^^^^^^^U^^^^^M____l______lFV^^^^^H^^^ __K£ ^ __M___«_____R_ _F__I_____H^^|H^^^ ^^^^_^^^^______H Hunting Season By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ; Wisconsin counted a death toll of 17 hunters, two more than In ^li____2__AUO l1961, today after a nine-day deer HEATHER SEARS n«w«THORLEY _ ™.w HERBERT LOM^ WAITERS season ended at sundown Sunday. oiv At6L6 Ql MICHAEL GOUGH A HAHBOiniMfW UCTON-AUNIVtr^LimEimATONJaitfliASt ft j ^fc w ^ Three hunters were Extm "Rouph «nd Tumbltwtcd" _ Pacific Pmdlu 7Jc-Mc-Me killed by y our phone ¦ " — (Just charge it to bill) , t .. . . gunshot , 13 died of heart attacks Ci_I_iJ_H and one was asphyxiated. Last ITS AS EAST AS ' ENDS ' Mflt 2:15- 25*-s°M5 year >HS9ii3P^N1 l____ r^V-- < ' ^r^ I'" ^> $h flL JTV JT -1 ' * nine were shot to death and nA T.T.Tivrr. nnn.nr.no _ X______T i"*"" ^ !! ^ vt r^1 TUES .Mli six died of heart attacks. ^ ^^^^'^ "^^-^ . rvi tsar Th* three, killed by stmihot were Stanley E. Kopraa, 17, of rural 1.Princess Phone Service * ' ' Strickland in Rusk County; How- ^ I —___I____ in im __I M___ I - J DaVioNiVea : SORDi ard Hermanson, 42, of Neosho, and f.JM 0F Roger Allen of Friendship in j THfiB 6ST Adams County. L^ iMcmuiiirmirBftcim-mimauElWMieSBciuttimum Kopras was shot when his rifle ^______^"^__ T' / _____H exploded in Rusk County Thanks- ¦¦¦¦HHk ?/< JM_———¦¦¦_¦_¦—_____^^I____JHN Shell Lake; Plymouth Police Chief Glenn Zimmerman; Everett ip^«#OoDw v - b Grimm, 48, of Stockbrldge; Claude \ r^^^ESHEslH11 Shinklc, 63, of Milwaukee ; James Bong, OS, of North Lake in Wau- kesha County: William G. Molo- ney, 72, of Stiles, Oconto County : John J. Randa , 69, of Milwaukee ; Alvortljtmen? How To Hold

^TJiiiiwrHl lirtin'ttlWl netW lit tiUmin Qf liOK ~ ~ -~~lj FALSE TEETH More Firmly In Place Do Jour (Mee teeth anno^ »nd «m- FREE SHOW SATURDAY birrnai by .lipping, dropping or wob- bling when you eat, InuKh or t«|kt FOR EVERYONE —9:15-3:00 P.M. Juit -prlnkla n llttlo KASTEKTH OD Northwestern Bell i_) in Minnesota JSIffB your plaum. Tills alhnJIna (non-_cld) powder holds fnlm toot-h more firmly and more oomfortnblr. No gummy, gooey, pasty t»»te or feollng, Does, not «our. Checks "pints odor'7 (dentur* brtntri). Out FA8TKKTW lod»y •» «ny druit countir. "I am talking about segre- a very bright boy, he was (2) convince the school that do hot see how they can enter gation according to supposed classified as he entered junior he should be moved up to a college on a comparable bas- improperly classified students and ity work. is.. ' ability. high school solel y on the basis higher classification. .. request both re-testing and recon- CAUTION; Parental encourage- "I think there Ts a lot- of their classification. , "In theory no doubt it's fine. of a single reading test. He is "Fortunately we were suc- sideration of ment when the student lacks the It gives smart youngsters a prating about helping bright • Parents should encourage know-how , quickly becomes pres- an excellent reader and likes cessful and now as a senior he up chance to go ahead at their to read, students that is not backed their children to make . an effort sure and often has a negative ef- own pace, leaving the average but somehow he foul- is in all honors classes and do- by results when one considers on their own part to demonstrate fect. In such cases it is advisable Groupings Con ed up the test. Thereupon he i n g outstanding w o r k. We the overall welfare of the stu- their ability to do the higher qual- and slower students to tag was placed in a lower group, to consult ah expert. along as best they can without couldn 't be more pleased with dent b o d y. Moreover many ' which had never happened to his progress nor with the qual- b e i n g over-awed by . th e i . r him before. parents are not aware of the brighter contemporaries ity of the instruction he is re- system or what it is doing to . ceiving. "But- how does it work out "This was such a shock to their own children. If they ever Dr. C. W . Gruler Harm Students practice? him and hurt his pride so bad- "But we were in contact with find out, there will be a big- By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed. D. a problem in detail in ly that he began 331 Choate Building ¦ ¦ Prion* 4417 to question ¦ ¦ and reflect! the lower groups long enough ger than there has been ¦ ; ¦ ¦ ¦ ' "First, for a perfect system fuss ' . . . ' .: ¦ . /¦ Professor of Education, the concern of at" least one pareh his' own abilities. It developed to realize that the students over r a c i a 1 segregation."— 4 ;• on the seriousness of the problem you have to see to it that moreover that the school offi- there are generally ^discourag- University of Southern California students are segregated ac- J. B., Long Island , N.Y. Modern Chiropractic "Dear Dr. Nason : cials took a very dim view of ed , which keeps them frotn_do- The. practice of grouping stu- cording to their actual abili- any doubt being cast on their ing as good work as they This is not an isolated case. I dents according to what the school "With all this talk about in- ties. Also they should have a judgment. As one teacher told might, They lack the stimula- am constantly called upon for ad- and Electrotherapy feels to be their abilities has side tegration in the schools, most fair chance to move up on the us privately, the school could tion of bright students in the vice by students who have far too effects that deserve serious atten- people are unaware of a type ladder if they prove that the not admit an error. The result classes, and they do not get as low an opinion of their own abil- Monday thru Friday 9 a.m. to S p.m. < tion. of scholastic segregation that first judgment by the authori- of all this ities. These procedures have prov- Open Friday Evening 7-9 by Appointment — '- ' was that~we had a good teachers; on the whole as What of those who are not plac- is causing more grief in some"- ties is wrong. . . . ' . major campaign on our hands the honors groups. They are ed successful in practice: Closed Saturday ed in the top group? (l) families than racial segrega- "In the case of my son, who to convince our son he so far b e h i n d the leading • The teachers who handle seg- . . . - * The following letter relates such tion. had previously shown himself could do top level work and groups in their studies that I regated groups should watch for

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: ^ ¦ ¦ that EVERYBODY can afford to be Santa Clous when .' "^L A ; Campus, Arrow or Barclay m * ~* ' ** ' ' -• * __ t * .y : «PH[ * Pleetw ay or Carter in T«w W •^K* \ _|_| V ton knit. Wm J Center of Fashion in the Center of Town" and find out J or blends * ^ yo«-if. * / ^n| ; , : mj ^ $5.95 to ; $!5 $3-95 t_ $8.95 W ¦¦ ¦ ¦ .» .y ______. ; % __ " r« „\: ,r\z\r\ ,*._. _-„ __ _ ...... _-•"" vzr —™ s^-r -r?- i_ -. , < jg*m .«_ ^ . *c ,*_ ._? . . -> \ ^\i ^^^ i ..' - . ^^ ^ - ^ " rJf__

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* diet on. Bright plaidsembroid- and Hlgh fasnions in men's ]ew cl ¦ H|i|§^. | /iV/ B *// H ported cottonIn , decton and ^^f j^Jf tPj ' /IaWw$m$$m j |^5P/ -A-_. #/' ' t aH__ dectolene. all current H»V witfi motif rV by Swank alld Snietds _ «I1111& I r VI ' _ 1^1 . k^mMt^mk ^^M | JmSBm I j___9 (~ / ' " ^ ' ery ... all in virgin wool. | ©, You 'll find engraved or initial- ¦HSliif r I s* -\ IB /~c j collar styles. ' J$mm$^ f ^lllffl ^ ^ ® ¦m^/¦ * * GLOVES , &,^^^in '^ W l /' _Wf $4.50 ,o $8.95 Choose from imported capes suedes, [j mEB™ $7.95 0 $13.95 J//i' " - many other items our gift ff§ WBms I !\^r/4 _ -<\a}^^ t/ 4_TtrWllll,lllll | | ^ |^M ^mt 1 A \J" \2?<^ '!i*J~-J deerskin and pigskin by Daytona Lined \ '*4^f section . , — , orlon or fur and luilined ^ _!8 WlL \ (j f ' " ||^j ""' -p with silk wool, I l'^_l W ¦> ^ JgPllfe ^ 1 4>1.UU and up t _9 ^C)?5.JF3HC fo .pCO5 .»/JQC ^^» t .1 vW&a, _„_ _ v- iiTi-rci—"i - .Tr^_-^.:w;.nT.^T Wr>tw^;^^.^.r;.\T _, i S_HS_I?^ _: -• || V. nnw.,* r T, , vvl, - ._ v - ^ * : jf ^^___f_E m&m Rf>t' \ - wOfcA-^x f^ VJ- SPORT SHIRTS $ fta fat &"$» : ¦ ¦ ¦ o& -ii_l :' - ¦Wft l ' NECKTIES W? KN|T -SH|RTS IJ H *if_l' : ' yff _ By ^ ' !< ' ' ' "^ 'S I M^^^^^'^mW Holmes in /^__5?V fif< i^< f4^M?_lil Si* l ' ' f /¦'" V &- HI \p ' , siy °na ' ' &tylcs ,0 fit the rcfiulars y _ ^^ li ' ^ I ^ L O fi_x [i 'IfeSS^^S^^ >\\ / -i|v- v. \ ^HH i - .ff i 'f I HANDKERCHIEFS $1.50 - $2.50 f | . §^-^2B BH

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The Center of Fashion in the Center of Town - NASH'S Fourth at Center ;M ; ^^ Ri^ De Gaulle Gets What How Do You Stand, Sir? \VOULDJA HELP MY H ELPER — ? -—Today In World Affairs He Asked For Big Question ONCE AGAIN, voters in Francs have Russians Retain given President Charles de Gaulle what he asked, for. Their response must have ex- For Republicans ceeded even his expectations. Foothold By SEN. BARRY GOLBWATER Cuban His party—the Union for the New Re- By DAVID LAWRENCE public—came out of the recent voting with Why do Republicans , particularly conservative WASHINGTON — The Cuban problem will drag'alonj for more than 33.3 percent of the ballots Republicans , argue so strongly for limited gov- for months, if not years. On balance, today the Soviets are count- ernment? ahead ot the game. They have won a beachhead in[ Cuba, -which ed. - That's nearly double the strength re- This question was put to me recently by a now has become a full-fledged member of the Communist bloc. corded by De Gaulle's followers when he college student striving to define the differences It's the first conquest by the Communists in this hemisphere. first took office four and a half years ago. between the Republican and Democratic parties. Moscow played a crafty game and got the prize it wanted — I believe it . is an important ques- > a potential military base with- What the Gaullists did to France's Com- tion , the answer to which is too in 90 miles of the United To Your Good Health munists may be more meaningful. In often obscured in the hurly-burly States. every previous election since the end of of partisan politics. Moscow put offensive wea- World War II , the Beds have garnered the To me, limited governmen t is pons into Cuba. Withdrawal Electrolysis largest bloc of popular votes. The Gaul- the heart precept upon which now doesn 't mean they can. lists bumped the Communists out of this great nation was founded. not he secretly replaced first later. place Sunday. The men who framed our Con- Moscow got away without Will Remove stitution wisely stipulated cer- , a public denunciation of her But communism remains a potent force tain institutions , human relations course in terms of world pol- in France. Indeed , the figures suggest that and activities which the federal icy. . Even the allies of the Hair for Life its influence is rising slightly. The Com- government might not infringe By JOSEPH G. MOLNER, M.D ' United States, while sympa- munists got slightly more than 22 percent or -. violate. . thizing with this country's Dear Dr. Molner: I .have superfluous hair on my lip of the ballots counted a week ago—an in- Throughout history, govern- Go.dwater position, took no steps to con- ment has proved to be the chief demn the Soviets before the and chin. It is so embar- crease over the 19 percent with which they rassing I can't be myself led the field in 1958. instrument for thwarting man's liberty. Govern- whole world for having aimed an aggresive military action around friends. They all ment represents power in the hands of some men have pretty complexions. to control and regulate the lives of other men. against the American people. HEAVIEST LOSERS vvere the four oth- What can I do? If I. use er major parties which formed an alliance And power , as Lord Acton said , corrupts men. Moscow has elicited in ' be- tweezers, the hair grows "Absolute power corrupts absolutely," he added. half of Castro a public pledge against De Gaulle. Back in 1958 they drew from.-the President of the Unit- in stiff. Can the hair be re- 58.5 percent of the vote. This has now Republican party objectives, to my way of ed States that America's mil- moved permanently except shrunk below 40 percent. thinking, represent exactly the objectives aimed itary forces will not invade with an electric needle? at by the Constitution : The prevention of great Cuba. This promise has been Why do some women have The prospect is that the four parties concentrations of power in the hands of a few given notwithstanding the his- this problem?—P.P. will form a permanent bloc, thus reduc- who might abuse it. toric policy of ¦ ' „__ . Hair is part of the skin, a the United protective measure, but it ing the number of groups vying for' sup- THE DANGEROUS drift of our government varies somewhat according to port at the French polls. That is precisely S t a t e s—as ; away from personal freedom—toward the wel- e n u n c i- sex, race, family, etc what De Gaulle is trying to accomplish. fare state; toward an ultimately, wholly social- ated in t he Only rarely is excess hair The large number of political parties has istic, all-powerful central government—is very Monroe Doc- the result of any health fac- helped cause instability in the government strong today. We Republicans want to arrest it trine—that no tor. True, disorders of the of France. De Gaulle wants to make sure in order to preserve the freedom of each citizen Euro p e- adrenal , ovarian or pituitary and to keep the federal government from gob- an power will glands can cause it but such that order will prevail when death or old cases are uncommon. Exten- age removes him from the scene. bling up both his money and his liberty. . be permitted Our responsibilities were never greater, nor t o establish sive treatment with cortisone its "system" or ACTH preparations may What, happened was that the voters the need for our efforts more desperate. For sometimes increase hair made the Gaullists "the first party of already in this era of a steady; deadly drift to in a n y coun- 4 I .^ I in t h i < growth but such cases are un- France.1' The runoff elections yesterday the left, much of our freedom has been usurped THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Lawrence common, too. by the federal government. The need for a roll- hemisphere. in districts where no candidate won a: Moscow is free to render to Occasionally at menopause clear majority in the first round , clinched back of federal authority, and . then for the con- Cuba any aid of a military the shift in hormone balance ¦¦ , the matter. ' ¦ ' / : tinuance of freedom constitutes , in my judg- nature—and-' -the United States causes a heavier growth of ment, the overriding challenge of our time for acquiesces—provided only that , hair but this condition can 't be . Communications Satellite ' ¦' ' ' ' ¦ - THE GAULLISTS now h?U 261 of th« the Republican party. . the weapons are for "defen- he ped. . . .• . 482 seats in the French equivalent of our : sive" purposes. A lieutenant . The only answer is bleaching UNDOUBTEDLY , IN our Republican party, the U.S. Army, who or removal of unwanted hair Congress. It marked the first time in there are good men who would limit more nar- general of served in World War II in Eur- either temporarily¦ or perma- French history that a single party has had rowly the extent to which I , as a good Republi- Directors Hold Sessions now is retired, wrote nently. ' , ' .¦: By DREW PEARSON quire very expensive and elab- ope and a majority in Parliament. can , too, would carry out what I call a return the wave lengths of the Ameri- this correspondent the other Either plucking, as you have to sanity and sound government. But as a politi- WASHINGTON — The 13 di- orate ground signal stations. can satellite, and so could any buildup of "de- done, or shaving will remove , day about the The vote was a clear mandate for De cal party, we Republicans , with all the width of rectors who will govern the However Hughes' Syncom other nation. However, the arms in Cuba. He hair but it has some drawbacks, chiefly a Russians have been coopera- fensive" ¦ Gaulle to carry on with policies which our intra-party. range of governmental philoso- new communications satellite : says: ' . ' ' ¦ ' , ' . " . - ¦ will g r o w have given the country an unusual degree have been meeting quietly in brief lag during which foe tive on these matters in the can the Amer- again. It does phies, represent the only path open to restora- human voice goes up 22,300 past and will participate in a "How naive of political stability for the last four years. tion and firm maintenance of the individual liber- Washington and making consid- ican ^people get? A ofuniversal no t become erable progress toward a revo- miles, then down 22,300 miles. meeting to be held in Geneva principle war is either stiffer ties and governmental policies on which this This may have the advantage in October, 1963, to iron out-—¦^nrriiasic nation has grown great. lutionary new system of bounc- : that 'the best defense is an or heavier be- ing radio , TV and telephone of preventing a wife from in- the use of different frequencies offense .' Name any cause of this, In today 's dangerous era , we enact legisla- terrupting her husband during for international satellite com- effective p messages around the world. offensive weapon from flame- but . it some- Frisco Voters to tion unconstitutionally, icking the citizen 's a phone call between New York munication . 'hardened' Atlas, times seems pocket to finance big-governmen t dream proj - The meetings have been be- and Paris, for the wife will thrower to hind closed doors. But this col- SEVERAL countries have and it could be described , as to , because ects not only foolhardy, but vain; not only rep- have to wait after she ad infini- when the Pick Up the Tab umn can report that the most says something for her hus- indicated that they will want a defensive weapon resenting outrageous federal intrusion into each interesting statement was made to own part of the U.S. satel- tum. The mass retaliatory new growth is American's private life and constitutional rights, band on the other end of the United States to- short it feels WHILE OTHER cities may wait for by James E. Dingman, execu- line to answer. But for a rap- lite. They reason that commu- power of the but constituting as well fu rther heavy-damage to tive vice president of Ameri- nications is a two-way street, day is considered by our gov- stubbly. . the federal government to get around to tax-strangled economy. The govern- id-fire , give-and-take conversa- people as If you look Molner our debt and can Telephone & Telegraph , tion , it may not be efficient. and the Unitied States can"! ernment and the passing out funds to improve their mass ment in office now spends with scant regard the company ' :- .which , lobbied send to their", countries unless 'defensive .' not offensive." carefully at the skin of a transportation, San Francisco voters have for legality and less for the haphazard purposes hardest on Capitol Hill to get The Syncom system also has those countries are willing to THIS UNDOUBTEDLY re- blonde, you will find that it , decided to unsnarl their commuting prob- money is applied. the communications satellite a voice echo, which can pro- receive the messages. We can flects the viewpoint of many a too, has plenty of hair but it to which the bably be ironed out. All (his lems on their own. under a private corporation;. ' . . : send the messages, but if the military •olficer in the Penta- is hardly visible because of the THE DEMOCRATS impose taxas on the im- indicates some of the minor ob- forbidden to ligh t color. For that reason a which it would dominate. ' other country doesn 't receive gon who has been The proposition was voted on in the city perial premise that government has an unlimited "We hnow that Tclstar will stacles in working out this them , they just fade away. talk to the press. good , many women merely claim on all the wealth of all the people. At a work ," told revolutionary new system¦ of Therefore , some governments It is true that President Ken- blea ch the hairs, and nobody and around it, and the people voted to tax *ie communications . i ' themselves for a $792 million system 75 time when our continued world leadership, may the directors , will want actual partial own- nedy is asking for and si i II notices them. Of course you well be at stake , we follow a makeshift , tax- referring t o THE DIRECTORS who lat ln ership of equipment , not mere- hopes some day to get on-the- have to keep doing this as miles long, including tubes under water t h e satellite . ly ownership of stock. site inspection in Cuba to de- new dark growth appears. and elevated tracks on land. and-spend economic course seeking to remedy on the closed-door sessions one ill .wi th no regard whatever for new econom- d e vis ed by have been impresed with two France, Holland , Belgium termine whethe r the missiles AT&T. "It will and the strategic bombers Depilatory creams can be Those of us who live elsewhere can ic ailments which the panaceas create . developments: 1) The amazing also have their own electronics used to remove the hair, but it I suggest that the need for limited . govern- be more ex- changes the satellite will make industry and may well want have been withdrawn . But al- breathe a sigh of relief that we won't have pensive. But if 2) ready the president has madfe will grow in again, of course. ment has never been greater than it is today, for in communications; and to manufacture some of the The only limitation to the use to add San Franciscans' commuting costs Syncom or The international complications equipment themselves. Ameri- a concession by affirming that to our federal tax bills. And San Francis- the course of unlimited government is getting \is any other sys- £¦ ¦ ¦ he merely wants "offensive" of these creams is that a few ' involved. -J . * * — ' ' can Tel and Tel , for instance, to cans can be happy that they will get the into deep trouble .: tem works and has always worked with Hie weapons removed. The hag- people find them irritating How do you stand , sir? On the first point , satellites the skin . kind of transit system they want and is less expen- will be able to transmit news British post office , with 50 gling as to what constitutes sive , we in or o f f e n si v c Electrolysis—or use of an should have, without any dictation from considerably cheaper and fast- percent of the toll on a call "defensive" " " A T & T w 111 _ to London from the United weapons will go on for a long, "electric needle"—will destroy political experts in offices at the far shore Pearson er than press wireless. They the roots ' of the hairs, which support if. We will be able to send facsimile States going to the British post long time. of the country. hold no brief for smy special office. Meanwhile , Casti'o is assur- is the only sure method of IN YEARS GONE BY system , ' newspapers all over the world , getting rid of it permanently. we only want to see so that the Chicago Tribune The satellite directors com- sured against any military act THOSE EXPERTS, according to the di- the United Slates get ahead pare their foreign problems by the United Slates to liber- of the Massachusetts Mass Trans- Ten Years Ago . . . 1952 with , could be published in Moscow rector this project. " - —if Khrushchev were willing . with those of American avia- ale the people of Cuba. Even portation Commission, already have cre- A contract was awarded provisionall y to What prompted Dingman 's tion companies when they had the Cuban exiles are in an , , 11 Will make the present sys- ated something' of a mess around the coun- WMC Inc., Winona for the construction of the statement was the fact that tem of wirephotos obsolete, to establish landing privileges anomalous position now , for try. Cities, because they can get 90 per- federally-financed ttiO-unit low rent housing proj- another communications satel- and will be especialy efficient abroad. Foreign countries re- they don 't know whether , if ,3114, lite , "Belay," developed by the they try. to recover control of MEN cent federal funds for freeways, have ect in the West End on a bid price of $1 000. at transmitting data. fused unless we gave them J. R. Chappell , president of the Merchants Kadio Corporation of Amcrien , mutual landing privileges. their native land , the United been building freeways in preference to will be launched Dec. 2, while However , the satellite-direc- Negotiations for air travel States may find itself commit- National Bank of Winona and president of the tors contemplate some real any other form of mass transportation. Winona Industrial Development Association , has a third satellite , "Syncom , " rights were handled by (he ted by President Kennedy 's developed by the Hughes Air- problems with foreign coun- State Department , , yet under pledge of "no invasion " to pre- PAST 40 Freeways are fine, in moderation , but been named to the regional Small Defense Plants craft Company, tries. First , the British al- Troubled with GETTING UP NIGHTS Advisory Board. will be launch- the law urged on Congress by vent any expedition directed they have certain disadvantages. They ed in January—both under the ready hove their own communi- the Kennedy adminstrption , toward Cuba not only from Pains in BACK , HIPS, LEGS bring floods of additional cars into the auspices- of the National Space cations satellites and would like negotiations for international the territory of this country Tiredness, LOSS OF VIGOR to beat us into the air. For cities, and increase the problem of finding Twenty-Five Years Ago . . . 1937 Agency. communication rights will be but from any Latin-Ameri- years the British have con- handled by n private corpora- parking space. They also heighten conges- A sharp drop.in temperature following a snow- OF THESE , can country. If you are a victim of these the most intrhj- trolled the communications of tion. This was one reason for Before the missile incident , tion on the old streets in the business sec- fall of seven inches , the first heavy fall here this uing and the cheapest satellite the world and don 't want In symptoms then your troubles season , caused the Mississippi River to freeze Senate opposition to the pri- Castro hud' no such protection. tions of the cities. appears to be Syncom . It will rate second now. They have one vate satellite corporation. It was fenrcd by him that the may be traced to Glandular over in this vicinity. reach nn altitude of 22 ,300 miles problem — they lack the rock- Inflammation. Glandular In- George Stnuffacher , St. Paul , took charge of "Bay of Pigs" invasion might It has also been pointed out that ele- and will orbit with the same els necessary to launch a .sat- SCHOLARSHIP AT JC flammation is a constitutional the auto accessories department of the Mont- speed as the earth , lie repeated. The Itussiuns now vated railways in cities created paths of thereby ellite. SEATTLE Iff)—The presence have secured for him a pledge disease and medicines that slums through the urban areas, and that gomery Ward store here. making it , in effect , stationary. In fact , Russia is the only merely give temporary relief Syncom will cost less of a public junior college in a against this from the United the freeways are having the same effect. because country outside the United eomnmnitz is worth a ,000 States . Their clever strategy in cannot be expected to remove only three satellites , will be Slates which hus boosters, and $1 Many like to drive on them , but nobody Fifty Yea rs Ago ... 1912 .scholarship lo any student who .selling up missiles and llicn the causes of your troubles. launched as against 40 for it' s suspected it may launch would otherwise go away from wants to live next to one. So property val- Winona High scored tlie victor y of the season AT&T' s Telstar . While Tclstar a communications satellite withdrawing them in exchange Neglect of Glandular In- nt Athletic Park when they downed the rival La will operate at n lower altitude soon, home to college. tor American assurances of no flammation often leads to pre- ues and rents decline, and nobody who Whether it does or not , This e.slimate is reported by invasion has paid off . can afford to maintain the property is Crosse eleven by a score of 1- lo 0. of only 7,0011 miles , it will re- the Russians could easily jam mature senility and to incura- night the mercury went Dr. Frederick W. Giles , pro- THE PRESIDENT, In h i s ble conditions. likely to own It or rent it. Whew for Ihe second lessor of higher education down below 32 decrees Lake Winona closed , a 's at press conference on Tuesday, The past year men from the University of Washington obliterated the prospect of any MASS TRANSPORTATION today obvi- thin coaling of ice being formed over its sur- _,0()0 communities have been ' and an authority on junior col- military aid to the Cuban peo- ously is a serious problem for the cities, face. ' Jhn Sihldu leges. successfully treated here at ¦ ple to regain their indepen- Excelsior Springs. They have and just as obviously the federal govern- dence, lie merely said the found Seventy-Five Years Ago . . . 1887 PRIESTS CET OKAY United States soothing relief and im- ment doesn't have the answers. Right now "will not aban- proved health. the District of Columbia is trying to set George Simpson came up from the Wiscon- PHOENIX , WAriz. w-fT'no don our purpose and hope that daddies allowed , " said the hos- up a new mass transit" system. Officials sin Universit y nt Madison to spend ThnnksRlv- Ihe Cuban people some day Tho Kxrelsldr I pital nurse In a chap hustling be truly free." He then added Medical Clinic, have liccn wrangling for years over what ing. REDUCIBLE Contractor Stafford says the winter ' bridge of to the maternity room. quickly : "But these policies devoted to tha ought to be. Episcopal priest Bob treatment HERNIA kind it the Burlington and Northern road is all com- Lord of arc very different from any ot dls. ¦ Scottsdalc explained he had Intent to launch a military in- aanen peculiar Ii ill- tminiblo to pleted and ironed with the exception of an open- been summoned by a member to older men« • m,M Nan-Sur«lc»l Trust in th- Lord with all your heart, and do ing of 130 feet which is left open for the hunts vasion of tho island, " ,Bl iV ,r not rely on your own insight, Proverbs 3:5. of his congregation. One of the newsmen nt the ha. » N.v/ ftr " ""' until ,.the river Is ahsohilMy closed. Okay , said the nurse. same press conference TRER BOOK said to thai tolls "Daddies aren 't allowed , but Ihe President (hot there "ap- how RECTAL-COLON One Hundred Years Ago . . . 1 862 fathers are." peared tlisAO troubles WINONA DAILY NEWS to lie an implication may lie convict- DISORDERS The steamer Finnic Steele arrived from Pres- . that possibly you v would be ed by proven »n o'__ - inoclated An Independent Jvetospnper — Established 1855 colt , heavily laden with soldiers nnd freight. willing lo guarantee Castro NON-SURGICAL „l»1 r.nt1iiUr In- WINONOAILY NEWS ngainst any nnd all TDPATUFNT u UiMUMKn. Either W. F. WHITE G. R. CI .OSWAY C. E. LINOKN energies IR-ATMENT3. „ lht|(| ...ord,,, anywhere." But the President l'tun book l « y niij bi trilled at Publisher Exec. Director Business Mar. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 36, 1963 tmt ' ' dodged a direct answer and prove of utnu'it "', *'m* K 0" and Kdtfor A Adv. Director VOLUME 107, NO, J imnnriiin/.. <„ ,w rtetlvlnf tr»«t- merely said that tho state- importance in -,„n ,ar oVandul-ir Putillshod d«lly except Saturday and holi. W. J. COLE A DOI.IMI nnrcMun H. G. IIYMCR ment ho had made, nnd which your Ufa . No Inllunmitlon. dnya by R-oUblkan and Herald Publishing obligation. ) Managing Editor City Editor Circulation Mar, Company, improved and increased school glee club in mu- other record year for construction services; materials that have to sic al numbers, jn the United States in 1963. )¦'^^^ for Christmas - be furnished for expanding the 2^' and the band In a forecast issued Sunday (he y j knowledge of today's students, and played. the teaching of technology. department -predicted that money- Students helped^^ ... spent for building next year will BY 1965, enrollment in the conduct tours of Kannel total $63.3 billion, an increase of state's public elementary and high the building following the pro- about $2.1 billion over the esti- schools will be 800,000, double gram. The tour:included the some mated outlays this year of $61.2 from 1955, he said. He pointed out It additional classrooms. Coffee billion . This year is expected to and cookies were served in the that there are 100,000 births in Wis- set a record , running about $3.9 , / See Orlane Kittla f«3r coin Information J consin a year. cafeteria. billion ahead of 1961. He noted the school lunch pro- . The original high school and ele- The report estimated that hous- gram and expanded education for mentary build ing was begun in its ing will account for about $25.5 G seven th a n>d present location in 1951, and an billion of the 1963 total, with aboui ROINS AND SUPPLIES 1 STEERING COMMITTEE . . . This is the and back row, Richard Dierauer, board presi- dementary addition was , , e i g h t h graders con- 1 425 000 private nonfarm dwell- i ( 225 West Second St. (National Hotel) ( board of education at Alma,Wis., and the dis- dent; District Administrator Vernon V. Martzke; structed in 1958. The distrct , , J among improve- with ings and 40 000 public housing . un- ments in school trict administrator. Left to right, front row , Cyril Reidt, member, and John Hartman, trea- an equalized valuation of $7,827.- its to be started. services, a n d Delmore Zirzow, clerk, and Ray Iberg, member, surer. (LaCroix Johnson photo) g a v e Alma's Dairyland Coop- high school. Without further edu- Lutheran Church, who also gave trator, and Grant Paul of Paul erative plant with the benediction. Hallbeck Associates, Eau Claire its immense pow- cation he laces unemployment even in factories. Richard Dierauer, chairman of architects, wh0 spoke briefly. er productivity as /• the board of education, extended Stephen Schultz , junior represent- a ' local example People should accept their re- the welcome, and introduced Ver- ing the student council , said as a of the necessity sponsibility in providing leadership non V. Martzke, district adminis- second grader he had also been on of teaching tech- for better education, he said, in- . nology. stead of being onlookers who KaW Kahl said tech- ¦watch and wait for things to hap- nology textbooks, far advanced pen, providingL j io ideas them- from books now in use, are being: selves. The lohngp. superintend- printed and will be released for ent of schools; at Lancaster, Wis., use in the schools. . Kahl became a member of the The speaker listed four chal- state Department of Public In- lenges he urged the people to struction in 1949; was named as- ,, meet : The changes in program sistant superintendent in the de- I______I II and methods of teaching today, in partment of school finance in 1954, flliibs^v JIH __^^^_[^^' B.______I mathematics and other subjects; and last month was named first ^^^ ^^^^^^^^^ increased costs; development of a assistant to the state superintend- "Becir" Brand Bows "'„* 27.95 new philosophy toward education, ent. "' and constructive leadership. BROCHURES about the school HE SAID IT costs $2 million a were distributed to. guests . at the day to operate the schools of Wis- dedication as they registered. The consin, pointing out that transpor- program opened with presenta- tation alone costs $16 million a tion of the colors by Boy Scout year and the lunch program, $15 Troop 54, the pledge of allegiance, million. national anthem to accompani- He urged the people to go along ment by the high school band, Rob- with the improvement trend in ert Smith directing, and invoca- NATIVE education, and said it isn't enough tion by the Rev. Paul F. Witten- that the youth of today completes berg of St. John's Evangelical CHERRY PIE MIX 35 - STAR-KIST LIGHT MEAT WHITE or ASSORTED COLORS

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_;¥^ » _*^ K .. .. _ . .. „--. „. .— „_.__^.^I.^.W«^K^»_ S^ O V V_-^^^ — ; i , ; annual University Wome n changing of officers and Ralph Brinkman, VFW Auxiliary Lewiston Lutheran Report Given date of meeting from December Arlis Hinck Wed To Meet Saturday Dresses Dolls , Ladies in Session to September was tabled until the American Association of Univer- Kellogg Women December meeting. LEWISTON, Minn. : (Special) — award- At Lake City sity Women, Winona branch, will Veterans of Foreign Wars Aux- The St, John's Lutheran Ladles KELLOGG, Minn. (Special) - Attendance prizes were again be guests of the College of iliary members dressed dolls to Aid mad-e plans at their last meet- Miss Mary Passe, Kellogg, Minn,, ed to Mrs. Jay Spooner , Mrs- be given to LAKE CITY, Minn. (Speciali- Saint Teresa for the December the Salvation Army at ing for the Christmas party to who attended the 31st National John Lee, Mrs. Harry . Balow and st. Peter's Lutheran Church , Bcl- meeting. The holiday guest day their meeting Wednesday in the be held Dec. 9 at the school audi- Council of Catholic Women Con- Was VFW Clubrooms. During Mrs. Joseph Hager. Lunch videre, was the scene of the mar- luncheon will be held in the din- the meet- torium. On the sick committee for vention at Detroit, Nov. 3-7 spoke withl riage of Miss Arlis Hinck and ing room of Lourdes Hall, Dec. 1, ing it was decided that all paid- December are Mr s. Reinhold on her trip at the St. A^nes Altar served following the meeting Ralph Brinkman , Lake City, Nov. at 12:30 p.m. Members may bring up members will be guests of the Wurch and Mrs. Al Ziemer. The Society meeting Tuesday evening Mrs. Frank kuklinski, Mre. War- 3 at 2 p.m. The Rev. Walter A. as many guests as they wish. auxiliary at a membership dinner committee for the January meeting In the church hall. ren Graner, Mrs. Charles Boyd, Zemke officiated at tfie double- For entertainment Sister M. Ca- in January. Shut-in members will item sale will be Mrs. Ed Lueh- Miss Passe, one of 10,000 dele- and Mrs. be sent, their , dinners. Mrs. George Lamey Jr. _ ring ceremony. The bride is the rnille, president, and Sister Ethel- mahn, Mrs. Ed Marxhausen, Mrs, gates and guests, represented St. committee. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John reda have arranged a program of The Dec. 19 meeting will be pre- Archie McLeod and Mrs. Walter Agnes Parish, Kellogg, _t the con- Lavern Tentis on the Hinck, Lake City, and the bride- classical and semi-classical music, ceded by a potluck dinner at the Mueller. vention where the theme was, groom is the son of the late Mr. with Miss Linda Sun and Miss Ju- club and there will be an exchange Members voted to send a quilt "The Christian in a Changing and Mrs. Henry Brinkman. dith Auer as soloists. Miss Sun will of 50-cent gifts among those at- to BeUhesda Home at Water- World." Soloist was Reynold Kohrs. Miss play several piano solos, and ac- tending. town, Wis. ; children's clothing to Mrs. Gustave Timm, confrater- Carol Hoist was organist. company Miss Auer, soprano, Miss The attendance prize was award- the Apache Mission, Whiteriver , nity of Christian doctrine chair- The. bride, given in marriage by Sun is from China and Miss Auer, ed to Mrs. Augusta Donart. Highs Ariz. ; $30 each to Medical Mission man, announced the arrival of her father, wore a floor-length Chicago. in cards were taken by Mrs. Ma- and Bible school in Khodesia; bas- books for study. Leaders are to get white taffeta gown fashioned with After luncheon members and rie Lcdebuhr and Mrs. Lydia kets of food to the needy in St. the books and , groups begin classes full s k i r t and cummerbund of their guests may tour Loretto Hall, Cierzan. Hostesses for the meeting John's congregation, and send gifts next week. crushed tafetta. The bodice with the new completed dormitory on were Mrs. E. W. Evans and Mrs. to the boys In service. Serving on Apostolate for the aged chair- John Lake. this committee is Mrs. Esther Ken- three-quarter length sleeves, was the west side of the campm The ' ehrenberg, re- ¦ ¦ ¦ " ' man, Mrs. Lottie of Chantilly lace. Her veil of im- tours will have guides provided by ¦- .: nedy arid Mrs. Al Ziemer. quested that each member visit \\\\\\m\rSmWmWm^ ported English illusion (ell from & the College. Anyone who has not HOSPITAL AUXILIARY The Christmas party will be a the sick and shut-ins during . De- queen' ) potluck dinner in the-*chool audi- s crown of aurora crystals heen contacted for reservations LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special - ' cember. and seed pearls. She carried a bou- may call Mrs. J. C. Stratig. Res- Members of the Lake City Hospit- torium -with Mrs. Carrie Luehrnann Mrs. Harold Peters will have quet of red roses and white steph- ervations should be in by /Wednes- al Auxiliary will meet Monday at and Mrs. Frank Nuszloch on the charge of cookies to be made by anotis. food committee and Mrs. Esther day. 7:30 p.m. at the Hospital cafeteria. members and distributed to local our Her sister, Mrs. Rudolph Brink- Krohse _nd Mrs; Elmer Erbe, Vis- FORGET YOUR CAR (in - shut-in. arid patients at Buena ur man, Lake City, was matron of CLUB BAZAAR entertainment. After a discussion ta Nursing Home and St. Eliza- parking lot) and ui- " BLAIR, Wis. (Special ) it was "decided to give help •• " honor. Mrs. Roger Brinkman, Lake Hospita l Auxiliary — The $170 to beth Hospital, Wabasha, Minn. fre* *hultlo bus service . . . Stitch, and Chatter Club will spon- buy fuel for the church and school 1 City, was bridesmaid. They wore The Rev. Robert Sheehan, pas- leading deportment store* street length sheath style dresses Group Meets Tuesday sor a bazaar and bake sale Dec. and a cash Christmas gift for the society's prog- 8 at 2 p.m. at the Frederixon Fur- pastor, teacher and all church and tor, spoke on the with overskirts in berry red styled Representatives to the Com- ress, officer appointments and im- with form a 1 necklines, elbmv- niture Store. school employes. ii_^__^__ munity Memorial Hospital Wom- On the yearly program commit- provements. i_^-^lL length sleeves and matching hats regard to the ¦ \ - ,_ \ «| en's Auxiliary will meet Tuesday LEWISTON OESTMEETING tee is Mrs. R. Wuxch , Mrs. Ger- Discussion in ' ___H j"i-"^"'-'"4 *-* j. r with circle veils. Their flowers at 1:30 p.m. in the Penthouse of LEWISTON , (Special) (Camera Art Photo) were bouquets of red and white ' Minn. - hard! Beilke and Mrs. Ed Marx- Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Malewicki the hospital. A tour and explana- Sunbeam Chapter 207 OES will hausen . The January meeting will carnations and white pompoms. tion of the kitchen will follow ' Rudolph Brinkman, meet Tuesday evening at the Ma- be potluck. 1 100% PROFIT | (^J) writ* for i*vm . brother of the meeting with Mrs, Douglas sonic Lodge. A cake walk is plan- ewicki, brother of the bridegroom. the bridegroom was best man and Erickson, h e a d dietitian," in CLUB Barbara Gady, Lance Carroll and Roger Munson ned for the entertainment. Serving PTA PROGRAM FOR YOUR Roger Brinkman was groomsman. charge. The hospitality commit- % Serva a delkloui,at ffash Marvel &• Drake on the .social committee is Dr. and LA CRESCENT, Minn. (Special ) Ct>6w ein dinner your next - fund Francis ushered. Mary Ellen Malenke, Ushers were Ronnie Brinkman and tee, Mrs. William Walter, chair- M Jg; lOlh SI. S 5»h Av». So. R. E. Malewicki daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Junior Raymond Hinck, ail Mrs, T. W. Satterlee and Mr. and —La Crescent Public School PTA §§^ raising event. Frte fried rice, .£: from Lake man, will have charge of the tea noodles, soy sauce, place mats, nap- Motel-like convenience OGWNj WW Malenke, Lamoille, Minn., and City. ¦ Mrs. Donald Nelson. will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. Rooms M |J | hour. :¦ '. II kins, and gift chopsticks. Borrow |g cousin of the bride, was flower A reception for 140 guests was "toil! be open for parent-teacher dis- & Chinese lantern! and coolie hats. | :_j Pleiti ttnd frit map and ipeclal »'• . | Exchange Vows Representatives not able to at- CHORUS OFFICERS 5^ Food prepared In '1. Inspected ' g=; girl. held in the church parlors follow- cissions at 7:15j Mrri.Memberships Gov ¦ I information. • tend the meeting aire asked to ARCADIA, Wis. (Special)—T h e ^ kltcrens We do the wo-k .' " St, Martin's Lutheran Church ing the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. will be available after the pro- your guests have tun . your ; The bride, given in marriage by send an alternate. The auxiliary mixed chorus of Arcadia High ^ * I Name_— ——r— ; > was the scene for the candlelight Kermit Dieke served as . host gram. club gets the profit. " ' her father, chose a . gown of pussy and board will meet at 11 a.m. and School elected officers for the FOR COMPLETE DETAIL I Address— -—-— . ' :. . . r~" ' .. ' ., wedding of Miss Barbara Jean a > ¦ ¦¦ ' : willow taffeta skirt and shadow hostess. Miss Vivian Fick was in stay on for the meeting with rep- school year as follows: Student Di- Write to: I; City - ; - ~~~~~~ Gady, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Washington's new Dulles Inter- > lace bodice made with scalloped charge of guest book. Mrs. Wilbert resentatives. , A Marve! Foodi, Inc. ¦ ¦ ' ) ' rector Carol Reuter; assistant di- national Airport is located ' \ State__—_ . . . —— No. 12 * Arnold Gady , 553 E. Broadway, . • ¦¦¦ about . I . neckline trimmed , with sequins Rieck and Mrs. Ronnie Brinkman rector, Barbara Zeller ; secretary 27 miles west of the nation 's >% 75 W. Island _ and Robert E. -Malewicki, son of and pearls. The dress had a chap- served the cake, baited by Mrs. VFW AUXILIARY A Minneapolis 1, Minn Mr. and Mrs. Edward Malewicki, and librarian , Janice Luethi and capital. sbsxsz. ^w^^sa el length train. Her . illusion veil Narberdt Eppen. LANESBORO, Minn. (Special)- program chairman, Geraldine Per- *-* r^r-^^ 553 W. 4th St.,. Nov. 10. was held by a crown of pearls and The bride is a graduate of Good- The Rev. Emil Geistfeld per- The Ladies Auxiliary of the Vete- siek. • sequins and her jewelry was a hue High School, and the bride- rans of Foreign Wars Post No. formed the ceremony, Roy Bur- pearl necklace, gift of the bride- groom attended Lake City Schools. GALESVILLE CIRCLES meister sang "0 Perfect Love" 3888 will meet Wednesday night at groom, and her grandmother's They will make their home on 8 p.m, at the VFW Hall. GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) - and "The Lord's Prayer" and engagement ring, She carried: a the bride's parents' farm, rural Galesville Presbyterian Church cir- Miss Dolores Schumann was or- bouquet of white carnations cen- Lake City, following their return ST. ANN'S SOCIETY cles will meet Thursday. Afternoon ganist •• •;. ¦ . . tered with a camelia. .' . . '• from their wedding trip. . ARCADIA, Wis- (SpeciaD- circles meeting at 2 p.m are MISS BONNIE - ' \ *v* • -w Aww < > A \ •• • TO A RECEPTION was held at th« NEW W^ BE VFW Club. The Misses Janet Stev- er, Carol Satka and Yvonne Mysz- "fifo /cur -is- _H_I____» SUDDENLY SLIM ka had charge of gifts, Miss Mysz- ^^^^ ' Are you a womanwhose figure ka was in charge of the guest- " I h on ihe goodsidle but might look book, Miss Sveum served the cake Mr- nSide 9>JC£-*&te ^ K, , perfect?You 'll b*-allied by the and the Mmes. Harold Spalding, i new easy way science has discov- A- M. Cisewski, Bonnie Sullivan ered for you to becomeSuddenly and LDlian Gibbs were in charge Slim. If you're more-than 15 of the kitchen. pounds overweight, then thisidea fdTyou _j_otforyo_.Ifyo_rweightpreb. Following a trip to Wisconsin now 1 range the bride will live with her par- " /j Jem falls witlin -bis , then ents uatil she joins • her. husband yon can realize a new, smoother who reported to the U.S. Navy I \ ^W\ i fig-re today, without diet or base at Long Beach, Calif. ,. now has long-wearing / exercise. . . /]2l v [ SuddenlySIinifsaTjall-newkinl The bride is a graduate of Wi- ©£ 4-oz.girdl a constructedof sci- nona Senior High School and is carpet face enpe fibm. One startling fnnova- employed as a secretary at the ! 100% NYLON , J Rw Men is the sheer nylon front panel. City Health Department. The j J ; _Tdsis pennanen_ystiffened by a bridegroom was graduated from permanently bonded to a v\ HnV 1* . Cotter High School and was m em- ...mi>v(B scienceprocess and cannot give or ^ ' a slimming ployed at Nelson Tire Service, . LL L ^^__ ^ y sag. It s surroundedby I' ^_ 1T\ action border. A f eatherstitched Inc. j quality rubber base. 2_#j_fi i]_! \ _taneldown each side of this girdle The bride-elect was entertained >S* will contour yourhips if they aro at a party given by the Misses gifts a problem. Tho girdle itself Is of LaVonne Sveum, Barbara Ford and M gala a "wondeVLycan spandex blend. Mary Armstrong. consfatfag of \ It's a new power net nylon, acetate and spande_. It has such HOME PROJECT GROUP feelslike nothing on but LAKE CITY, ) B_-t_ning" strength, it gives your Minn. (Special - f or The Chester Home project group *l a \ figure everything that's possfbla will -meet this evening at .the I with a foundation. home of "Suddenly Slim* is -» peak Mrs. Erwin Freiheit for of the designer- a lesson on "What To Do Until achievement The Doctor Comes," including la- genius, Olga. sic rules in first aid. This is the • Be "Suddenly SHm" todayNta ¦[ second lesson for Wabasha County much I either girdle or panty version.Fea- ! Homemakers sponsored by the Ex- ] " ' ' ¦' ' tured at . . tension Home program. Mrs, Earl NASH'S WOMEN'S SHOP Majerus and Mrs. Lawrence T)arcy Feorth at are the leaders, hostesses are Mrs. Center Phona 5458 Morris Heitman and Mrs. Ed Cor- j leus. j ] metrvrnv t^m i j I Chris tmas . . | ;j t Yes, we have more to make Chnstma, 1 | j I merrier ! More gala gifts., . more exciting I j : | variety... more value for your money | I //m-««||icm^wijs\ iRnnpxiiuu ^VdicA IA I 1 0 ' * ^ nd more, more, more in every price range, | 1 l^^m^^^^^ Mj sizes 10 t0 44 In quilted nylon , I qui'tcd cotton (k ^^r^^^/fi WtW^SKT 1 and nylon and if . I to please everyone, everywhere. More, too, nrnel sucde flamicl Select i • Absorbs water nnd dirt , dries and cleans [y f vi^^^^mv^f yours r omco, - 1 si,ocs vQ_f^ elk HIA '* prinls or soli(ls i l oX_fo *i o ¦_¦ i I of everything you want for decorating, ' . I * 1 ' <"'s | 1 » Protects easily earpcling 4J , Zf »J \% «^5 vte "_iMB. 1^\ '" P '0"^ |j |j ^ • "Won't curl or bunch up . . . no interference] __v m i 1 entertaining, living in your merrierXhristmas f j with oponitiK or closing of door ^« OQ/ I ' y \^^J * M ^ 1 I home. And, of course, more easy ways to | $,°'95 *tt TO • Stnys bright nnd clciin with normal vacuum * j j ¦\ £v pj\ ' I Cnr ° f \f \C A k U help yo» »hop ... layaways, charge accounts, r 1 0 Non-skid rubber bn.se grips the floor i ~% \ » v \- \ $12.95 $iU.9o 28x45" 9 7 J 1 credit plans. i t Tailored carpet border prevents frayed edges rf | • J ftTJ See for yourself... . | | 1 * 1'8 a way & more «pecial to shop ' 4-~ ^ *SS. $12.98 _£gX Cr*^ * ^ | j ^r at u#m^\ i your merry (/ i , . . . J J ;| JSHa $15.98 1 yx ^ryy ^&r ft H | Christmas store. j . - /// •( $i55s $17.98 I >^ f

jlI T\k . C°ME IN AND REGISTER FOR 3 ^ ^ toni t J, THIS WEEK'S FREE GIFTI i;j r$*?f S +iPl 9ht . + ' ( ¦ |U3 i' Yvonnt King " ;t]i > ^° ™ 1( won a pair of Van Raalte Hosiery £| 9=00 l[ I ^^ ; ( j

£ad ML : ,, ,:,, fy Shop. ' '' - £U "" i " .' .tli 'ifiyrHN AN&ERSOW Galen Jorgenson, 22, Salt Lake ley Walker, whose knack for A Texan who liked to wear City was killed. Pally News Correspondent Western garb. Walker started his ). chronicling a fabulous era won Paul Burton, 22, and Carletta /RUSSELL, Wis. (Special - career as a reporter for tlie Aus- Ybargueri Veteran storekeepers, Mr. and Mm fame as a New York editor, tin (Tex.) American. He was as- , 21, both ol Salt Lake ended his life with a shotgun Sun- City, were injured. Burton was in Mrs. Peter Sylla will mark their sistant editor of the Dallas Hews critical condition. 40th year in business here next day, two days before he was to in 1918-19, before going to Ne-v spring when this northwestern York. undergo surgery¦ ¦ for throat can- Trempealeau County settlement cer...... ; ' • . Walker's first wife, the former becomes 100 years old. Walker, 64. a busy author and May Louise Sandefer, died in 1944. The Syllas are among one of magazine writer, returned in 1946 They had two children, Joan: and the fast diminishing country stevs- to the central Texas ranch near James. He married a Washington keepers losing their business to Lampasas where he /was born. newswoman, Ruth Alden Howell, city chain stores arid large super It was-on the front porch of the in 1946; She survives, So do two markets as travel increases. old ranch house, where most of brothers who live on adjacent his writing was done, that his ranches, Thurman and Louis ALTHOUGH SYLLA enjoy- meet- , wife found the body about an Walker. ing the area farmers in his work hour before noon. A shotgun lay he doesn't advise any young man close by. Justice of the A new $420,000 public library business in a country Peace to begin¦ ¦ Casbeer Snell returned a coro- has been built in the heart of the store. . ' .:- . Miami Beach night club strip. GET ner's verdict of suicide. "Profits aren't what they used to be," he reports. "It seems While Walkers' health had bun harder all the time to make a dol- " MR. AND MRS. PETER SYLLA poor for some time, the man who lar in the store business." Competition Became Great became a legend as city editor of Sylla's business career in Trem- the New York Herald Tribune re- pealeau County dates from 1918 fused only Saturday night to con- firm a report he was seriously when he bought the Elk Creek Galesville Lions Plan ' cheese factory. He operated it un- District Legion ill. The New . York Daily News til competition from area coopera- Skating Rink at School said air operation for throat can- IT tives became too great. He sold Meeting Slated cer had been planned Tuesday in the business to the present Co-op. GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) Houston . — G-alesville and area children Friends disclosed after hi. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Hamala He smiles when he looks at his For Galesville (Kins^ anoto) will have a skating rink this win- GALESVILLE Wis. (SpeciaD- death that Walker had written in shelves stocked with packages and ter on the lower campus of the ,. somber vein the past few days. Whitehall Couple can labels of assorted colors. elementary school. The 10th District American Legion One letter to Will Fowler of Los hall. Mrs. Willard (Valeria) Boh- "There were only brown bags on fall conference will be held here Angeles , son of the late Gen e liriger died two years ago. The my shelves when I started busi- A warming house will be fur- in the latter part of September nished by funds from the Cance 1963. Fowler—a close friend with whom Married 50 Years couple has 32 grandchildren. Mr. ness," he recalls. Trust. It will be 16 by 24 feet, Walker worked on New York and Mrs. Hamala farmed in the The veteran businessman recalls Planning for the conference will newspapers in the 1920s—said: WHITEHALL, Wis.-Mr. a n d built accord ing to plans drawn by be started at. a meeting of Rowles- Whitehall area until eigM years that everything but Nustad's Cof- Troy Stellrecht. It will be heat- Mrs. Jake Hamala , Whitehall, ob- ago when they retired and moved McBride Post 103 at 8 p.m. Thurs- "Along about da/ after tomor- served their golden wedding anni- fee came in bulk arid had to be ed electrically or with oil. into Whitehall. ; packaged. The only kind of can- day a the rink house of the Gales- row, down in Houston, in one of versary Nov. 18. The Rev. Ed- The city will prepare the rink ville Burns and Curling Club. the world's finest institutions for mund Klimek, their nephew, cele- dy bars he sold came packed in and furnish wa'ter for flooding. CHURCH WOMEN wooden pails. Martinus Benrud, commander , such matters, I let the boys with brated - the high Mass of Thanks- RIDGEWAY ,, Minn. — Women Northern States Power Co. will will report on the District execu- the short shivs work on me (car- giving at 10 a.m. An open house, of Grace Lutheran Church will SYLLA BOUGHT all his groce- furn ish a pole and lightirig. Mem- tive meeting held at Colfax , Wis., cinoma of the throat, a spot about There s Stilj Time given by their children, was held meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. for ries from Latsch & Son, Winona bers of the Lions Club have vol- Nov, 15. the size of a half-dollar). I sus- ' in the parish dining hall from noon a potluck luncheon and business unteered to supervise skating from To Make Your Own ' ' ' ¦ ¦ wholesalers, until they went out of Oyster stew will be served. pect the worst, but . I may pull ' ¦' " ¦ ¦ ¦ to 3 p.m. for 300 relatives and meeting.; business a few years ago. He had 6-9 p.m. daily. AT • : . friends. u ' ¦ the same salesman from Winona Mr. Hainal£r~an _ the former GUEST SPEAKER La rgest selection at .. . . • . STORM WINDOWS MABEL, Minn. — Republican all the years he was associated Miss Julia Filla were married with the Latsch firm. Pet Dog Gets Head GET JUL. f Vj Nov; IS, 1912 by the Rev. Gara at Women of Fillmore County will * ^ meet Friday at 8 p.m. at the The groceries ' w€re sent to In- Caught in Glass ROBS Ss. Peter and Paul Catholic Erickson, dependence twice each month by Jar Church, Independence. Attendants home of Mrs. Vernon Mabel. Representative-elect Mrs. rail, where Sylla would pick them JAMESTOWN, Ind, (AP)— Jim were Miss. Susan kliihek, sister of Torgefson of Winona up with a truck , or horse and the bride.; Miss Lucy Halama, later Virginia- Persinger's.dog had a pretty mis- _^|_ ___ti ___. BROS will be the guest speaker. wagon during spring thaws. His erable Thanksgiving, but every- iPT%5S f Kam Sister iDelphine, now dead , and was equipped with solid Bert Hamala and-Charles Filla. first truck thing is all right now thanks to OPEN HOUSE rubber tires. an operation b The eight living children of the . and Mrs. y his 10-year-old MONDOVI, Wis—Mr gro- master. STORE couple present for the . anniversary John Douglas, Mondovi, will cele- Since 1938 he has sold only STORM WINDOW KIT ceries and farm supplies. Before Last Thursday and ^^___ 72* x 36' Sh.tt Clear Pl-tric, Nolli a». were Mrs. Edward (Tracy ) Kcr. brate their 35th wedding anni- Friday the 576 East Fourth Street handled cloth and pup » Molding—everything you nttd to ma_« • pal, Milwaukee; Mrs; Edward (Al- versary Dec. 2 with an open that he also was spotted wandering J^ itorm win do-w irt 5 minutti. vina) Schlesser, Independence; house at the home of their son small machinery. around Jamestown streets, his Phone 4007 head trapped in a large glass jar. AT YOUR LOCAL DEALER Mrs. Harry (Eleanore) Kulig, and daughter-in-law, Mr; and Mrs, THE RUSSELL Store overlooks Whitehall; Mrs. Edward (Esther ) Paul Douglas, Eagle "Valley near Several would-be rescuers tried to the eight-mile-iong Borst Valley, extract the dog, but the animal Schroch, Milwaukee; Mrs. Albert Fountain City. Hours will be settled in 1863 by William S. Cra- (Dorothy) p.m. invitations was so frightened, he wouldn't let Sylla, Independence; from 2 to 5 No mer from New England . Immedi- Rufus, Joseph and Eugene, White- are being sent. anyone near. ately after establishing a home Finally the pet slunk home, and here Cramer left his family and Jim. broke the jar without any in- enlisted in the Civil War. He died jury to the dog. The youngster in an Army hospital the s ame year said he appeared to be in good at Nashville, Term. shape "except toe was awful hun- Late in 1863 came the Warnngs gry -" family, and in 1865 theBbrsts, who settled about a thousand acres in the valley. Since 1892 the valley Peterson Garden Club has been known by its present name, honoring the Borst family. Meets Wednesday Russell settlement is named for RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special) - William Russell, native of Scotland Peterson Garden Club will hold a ¦ who settled a farm here in 1871. Christmas decorations display at ' - '! , Henry, who died this -woman ;-*i>iife . His son the REA basement Wednesday, ^^ S l W 1^"^»w year at 87, serv-d many years on starting at 2 and continuing until a^m the Trempealeau County Board of 5 p.m. Bruce Iteed, Winona, will Supervisors. Bussie Russell, a demonstrate the making of ever- s From you to her ... gift from third generation member of the green wreaths ' during the after- W -. W ' a personal Williams family, operates the home farm. \f\ ^v^^^.-^- '^ noon. /IjX f \ k» * Gift Department. Give hei something to wear ... to The brick school at Russell, still The club has 17 active and 4 f^^^k^-f- standing, was built in the late / treasure ... to be a happy reminder of Christmas. honorary members. All articles on / V"^*"_^ i Li" lwM^ni^mW' l^S 1880s, followed by the erection of display are handmade by mem- the Farmers Cheese—Factory, bers. A small portion of the dis- razed many years ago. The school play will consist of a felt Noel ; was closed two years ago when Madonna and natural evergreens; the district was consolidated with topiary tree of artificial holly and the Independence system. The bells; snowmen of styrofoam , an school building now is used as a arrangement of dried weeds and meeting center. The newly organ- beauty berries ; a gilt Manzaneta ized Russell Community Club tree ; snowman made of newspa- meets here monthly. per and covered with cotton; large ADOLPH MELSNESS built the pickle jar with candle; cones and store here in the 1890s and oper- ribbon , wooden soldiers made of ated the Russell post office with spools; anti que decorated kerosene it from 1895 until rural delivery lamp; wreaths of plastic bags, and from Independence was establish- a gold base wreath called sunburst. ed shortly after the turn of the Refreshments will be served dur- century. ing the. showing. The public is in- Henry Hustlegard is a nephew of vited. the first storekeeper. He operates the home farm near the store, set- DELEGATE FROM DODGE tled by his parents, early Norweg- DODGE, Wis. (Special )—Rich- ian settlers of the immediate Rus- ard Brom , Dodge, is at Madison sell area. attending the slate convention of While there was postal service the Wisconsin Farm Bureau Mon- here, stagecoaches (raveled from day and Tuesday. He is the dele- Gilmanton to Independence, drop- gate for the Dodge area of the ping mall pouches at IUissell. Trempealeau County chapter. Robert Davis, 87, longtime Gil- Advertisement ¦ manton resident and now a patient " ot the Lutheran Home for the Srf JBWy * Wff la „ A wonderful selection of nylon , I';; t•v i"_^ v>__«'l ,_ _ LovelyT i.i han Tlues- in• linenr , cotton>i , __ ., , :> Aged nt Mondovi , was one of the WOMEN PAST 21 * a VXm: < *# *' .-- ™i_rif ton blous" n early postal carriers who drove and dainty pastels. Lace edged r«™ an? It's high (iiitc for holiday easli! Call Beneficial for yours right now. Get cash for shopping, for paying bills , for HOSIERY AND LINGERIE DEPT. any good reason, And get Ilenclicial's fast, friendly, /J_H^ HP ^ ^ holiday service, too. Beneficial h'kes to say "Yes"! Phone *^ Always welcome . . . new j ;j villi's very minute! Be a successful Santn . , , jewelry to accent her favorite .. ^ give her a handbag from our costume. Chooso from silver $ ¦ a a m m ¦ u m » ¦ ¦ gf *1 holiday collection of fine or gold finish earrings, |>iu.s, | | % A> leutheri; and fabrics. bracelets, necklaces. -^- BENEFICIAL III I Jm Iiil ^k. FINANCE SYSTEM if I L LI MlVIJ loans $25 to $600 on Signature, Furniture or Cor ' $5.oo ,nd op $i,oo .„d up I Benofl<}«l Finance- Co. of Winona "" 2 erT,brjt>ld4r "" ^Mrv fS_f ' *d 51 Vz WEST THIRD $T.,(0*/e r Kresge) WINONA BOOK and STATIONERY S Phono: 3346 . Ask for the YT.S MANager - OPCN CVF.NINfl !. OY APPOINTWI'NT — PHON T I'OR HOURS __. "Op«n On Salgrday* 9 A.M. 1o 1 P.M. Until Chrl»tm.s." __, ¦¦ spoke on "Svdne Management." Snafchers Get ' • » Judges were Donald Staples, Purse Film at Library Central Livestock Shipping; My- Mayonnaise, Flashlight ron Liebmarin. St. Paul, Swift & Co., and Loyel Hoseck, Winona, WASHINGTON" (AP) - Two Tells About two assistant vice president and agri- robbers snatched a pocketbook cultural representative of the and a paper bag from Solomon Winona. First National Bank of and Cecelia Aronoff as the couple The Fremont Green Clovers home after closing up Club served lunch with Mrs. stalled for Disappointments •4-H . their liquor .store. V . ' The Winona Public Library has "Wayne Greethurst and Ellsworth The holdup men were right among a new group of 25 films, Ihrke in charge. . , about the pocketbook: It con- available for loan through Jan. 4, President Kennedy's inaugural tained cash-$21. But they muffed one that illustrates this point: address contained only 1,355 words. on the paper bag. Instead of the There are two big disappoint- The average, of 44 previous in- day's receipts it held a bottle of ments in life—not gettiig what you augural talks was 2,499 words. mayonnaise and a flashlight . want, and getting it. THE 11-MINUTE color lllm Ii "King Midas and the Golden Touch." The actors are puppets and the film is recommended for both children and adults, In. Greek mythology, King Midas was a HOG SHOW WINNER '.. . Allen Campbell, Utica, accepts the g-eedy chap -who wished every- thing he touched would turn to trophy for the top pen of hogs at the tri-eounty me^it-type hog gold. show from Rudy Erickson, Elmwood, Wis., district represen- But Midas found the golden tative of Central Livestock Association, riitht. Oliver Strand, touch also applied to food and Winona County agent, center, watches the presentation. (Mrs. drink. Midas nearly starved to Barbara Flint photo) wi death until he lost ... the golden touch by bathing in the Pactolus JJ GOLDEN YELLOW River in Asia Minor which is said judged on the percentage of lean y ^^^ « )j to have had gold in its sands ever cuts. ' 11 ¦¦_. _¦ _k ¦ a\ m\ m) am. am% j/I ^VW&M$8Mk \\ since. Utica Entry Campbell had 38% points; GOOD SHEPHERD BOOTH . . . . This booth, three-day even?. At the booth, left to light, Ron- Other films follow: Tony Pagel, Lyle Campbell and sponsored _y the Good Shepherd , Sisters, St., ald Dreas, Winona, co-chairman of the fair, Sis- "Boundary Lines," color , 10 min- Clifton Pagel, 38; Lester Lueh- BANANAS ////m\ Paul, was one of 25 at the Vacation Days Fair ter Mary Luke, Good Shepherd order, and Sister utes, intolerance. "Egypt — in manri, Altura, and Tony Sharp, Transition, color, 10. "Fiddle De 1 held at the Cafifedral of the Sacred Heart over Veronica Ann, St. Vincent De Paul Daughters of " Tops Hog Show Wabasha, 37 /.; Stanley Campbell, Dee" and "le Merle," color, 12, Utica, 37, and Vince Eversman, ¦ ¦ the weekend. Approximately 7,500 attended the Charity, St. Louis. (Daily New_ photo) ¦ ; folk songs.. "Introducing Luxem- Altura, 36%. ' ' : : bourg," black and white, 22. Prize money was awarded to I • ,fc lAC ^^^^^^^ I minimum to residential, mercan- '"Johnny's New World ," color, Af St. Charles the first five pens by Central ft I \mW' AA tile and industrial users. 164 _, eye care. "Life in the Sah- 4 CD Meetings , Livestock Shipping, Plainview. ^^^^ ara," color, 15. Si: CHARLES Minn. (Special) The pens listed above also receiv- Eleva to Ask GOING TO Madison will be Wil- "Little Rooster Who Wade the — Allen Campbell Utica, receiv- in ed blue ribbons. Nine others re- l\ NEW CROP (t lard Fox, village president; Wil- Beg Tonight Sun Rise," color, 11 children's ed a trophy and prize money for ceived red ribbons and five got liam Forsythe and Myron Arm- story. "Living City," black and his winning pen of hogs at the white ribbons. Twenty-two , Bjork- , tri-couhty meat-type hog show at indi- OK for Addition our board members; Mr. At Mondovi High white, 24 improving old neighbor- viduals showed pens of hogs at lund ; John Ward , Osseo, village hoods. "Magnificent Canada the Winona County Fair grounds the show. attorney, and Philip Davy of Davy MONDOVI, Wis.—A series of Goose," color. 11. "Make Way for here Saturday. To Wafer Plant Engineering Co,, La Crosse. four consecutive evening meetings Ducklings," black and white, 11, Campbell .was one-half point OLIVER STRAND , Winona Coun- English Walnuts Davy. Engineering designed the children's book. "Mahnomen — ty agent; on (('Explosive Ordinance . Recon- higher than three other exhibi- Matt Metz, Wabasha ELEVA, Wis. (Specia.)—Mem- j ridge and furrow disposal plant Harvest of the North," color, 17, tors. Tony Pagel, Rochester; Lyle County agent, and Richard Rad- bers of the Eleva Village Board j for.. .Doughboy.;- piajit...:featlier . .and- naissance" will begin at Mondovi Indians and wild rice, filmed near Campbell, Utica, and Clifton way, Olmsted County agent, later will meet with the Public Service j other wastes which went into oper- High School at 8 p.m. today, ac- Onamia, Minn.• . , "Painting with Pagel, Eyota, followed the win- l ation this year. ; cordmgvto Howard llohnk, Coch- Sand," color, 11, Navajo religious ner. Commission at Madison Tuesday ¦ ceremony. on its application to male water rane, civil defense director for THE OLMSTED County team ^-_ HH HHBp__OT__--M_W-M--M"MH>aa plant additions and improvements Retarded Children's Trempealeau and Buffalo coun- "PERSONALITY and E m o- carried away the traveling trophy FUEL OIL J) | HHH |H^ H^ i * \\ and for authority to increase ties. tions," black and white, 13. "Rus- in the team hog judging contest. \ SMOOTH WHITE WISCONS IN // Unit to Hear Docto r sia," color 26. "Stephen Foster ) - The same series is scheduled at , The Olmsted team had 119 point- rates. . . ' . ' On Treatment of Eyes Osseo Dec. 10-13 and at Ettrick and His Songs," color, 16. "Story followed by Winona County with Pe sonaK John Bjorklund, village . clerk, I '¦ ' ¦ of the Great Lakes," black and ' in January. . - . 118 and¦ ¦ Wabasha¦¦ 1 County with i l lll ^ «aid this morning the munici- j Dr. F. J. 'Volimer, Winona Clin- - Transportation of explosives and and white, 27%. "Swamp," color, 117.. . : ' . • ¦ . '. - " ,' ' - pality needs to drill a new well to i ic, will discuss eye care of re- components of conventional and 9, Minneapolis, conservation. "Vik- The show was sponsored by ex- tarded children at a meeting of POTATOES double the output of the . present nuclear weapons upon our high- ings—Life and Conquest," color, tension services and vo-ag ; de- ¦well because Doughboy Indus- the Winona County Association for ways has encouraged presentation 22, produced in Norway, "Wash- partments from the three coun- tries, Inc., requires more water. Retarded Children at 8 p.m. Wed- of the course, Mohnk said. It also ington, D C.r-Story of Our Capi- ties and hy Central Livestock c nesday at Lucas Lodge. sets up procedures in deactivating tal," color, 11. "Washington Irv- Shipping Association and Swift & THE CHICKEN plant, which is The Portia Club will present a conventional bombs that might be- ing," black and white, 18, early ¦Co. 99 , I dressing 19 000 birds a day five $500 donation to the association at American writer. "Where Were 50 come duds when dropped upon the The hogs, barrows or gilts, DOERER S - Ridlo-Dlipatched Equipment days a week, uses about 85,000 the meeting. Parents of retarded land. ¦ ¦ ' : . You?" black and white, 28, Amer- weighing 190 to 230 pounds, were gallons a day or more than 20 children are urged to attend. The First of its kind in this area, ican political system. million gallons a year, besides wa- public is invited. the course is focused on personnel Canadian films—"The Cape Is- ter from a small well of its own lander," color, 14. "Eraser's Riv- of fire and police departments. ' and water from the lake .for cool- SCOUTS AT CALESVILLE Armed force personnel of the 543rd er," color, 15. "Scarlet Guard- ing its ice machines. GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special)- Ordnance Detachment will conduct ians," color, 22, Royal Canadian The industry is growing, and the VLrgil (Jack) Baer has accepted the Mondovi meetings. Mounties. plant wants to discontinue using leadersliip of the Galesville Ex- water from the pond. It is form- plorer Scouts . R. L. Longwell Galesville. They will be present- ed by damming up Big Creek. Sed- and Walter Johnson, co-lea_ers of Class at Galesville ed by Eugene Overby, Tomah, iment in the water leaves debris Cub Scouts, said a meeting of Wis., under sponsorship of the on the ice machines. Pack 61 will be held Tuesday at GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) - Lions Club. Regular classes will In addition to the plant, about 7 p.m. in the parlors of St. Mary's A series of demonstration classes be held one night for nine weeks. 16,000 gallons a day are used by Catholic Church. Cub Scouts and on executive salesmanship will All sales people and others inter- ether users in the village. their families were urged to at- begin Thursday at 8 p.m. in the ested in selling, are invited to at- Present rates are $5 a quarter tend. Isaac Clark room of Bank of tend. /-=*=___, This Is The LAST WEEK! Sale Positively Ends Saturday! Many special purchases have been mads and our «very day low price* have been slashed even farther for this special event. Now is the time to choose tlie furniture Items you've been wanting to set at tre- mendous savings!

| | 2-PC. LIVING ROOM SUITES I I SEALY BOX SPRING & MATTRESS I H 3 different styles, choice of 6 different long-wearing frieze __P H^ __P _B" I I ¦ ¦ covers. A full 80-inch sofa and matchirlg chair with zippercd ____F __ ¦ Hi __F ¦ ____P ¦ I Science Shrinks Piles H foam cushions. Regularly priced at $229.95. ^p 'flm # I of H e urcnaSB any 3-piece bedroom tulte from the H Now Only ^fcl^Q QC W 'th ^ P H ^__4_P9n<_F_9 varied selection of styles and finishes. H

New Way Without Surgery Console Typa Hollywood HEADBOARDS . MDiINIl^-INC^W imROftlvyil..i CEDAR CHESTS $6.95 Cash & Carry Blond finish . Regularly $89.95. C74 QC - ——— " ^>f Hr_Jj w-«, $59.95««;o oi MAPLE DINING ROOM TABLES Now Adjustable Hollywood BED FRAMES " SOLID MAPLE HUTCH . $99 .95 Stops Itch-Relieves Pain lane Walnut $6 95 Cash & Carry C _£.QC H® CEDAR CHESTS SOLID MAPLE CAPTAINS CHAIRS 3>l0_ "5 Preparation —The Only Hemorrhoidal Remedy In World _____ ¦ Regularly $59.95 —_____—. LULLABY E CRIBS _ That Contains New Healing Substance. Now $49.95 maifi -+* imfif Full panel Adjust able spring. — — ; DINETTE SU ITEb Regular $36.95, Every Claim Verified By Doctors __ ' Now $22.95 K. P. & Carry ^______K BI.^M______I STUDENT DESKS 7-Pc. including Tabl<.' 3.x48x«0 with . Matching Chairs. 10"x40" with jVfarlile tops. — _h _%J* mX W —————— Now $13.95 Now Only BABY STROLLERS For the first time science has tute. This new healing substance is M^Sl[^____^______| $Q9_95 _^^^H__ ' . found a new healing substance with offered in ointment or convenient ¦' '- * Reduced to -$K9>5 ^^^^|_____^^_^^^^^ |^^H the astonishing- ability to shrink suppository formcalled Preparation ^mm\m\\\m\wB^^^^^uam\\mm^am\m\ hemorrhoids, stop burning rectal H. And Preparation H is the only \\ ^ m\\\m\\W ^^^ B ^^^ f m\\\\mm\ 7-drawcr, walnut or maple. RUGS CK END U ROLL PIECES WARDROBES itch and relieve pain — without sur- hemorrhoidal remedy in the woild $29 9S [S-______^___V^^^iiri^li^^___ l 9x12 Rugs with Foam Pad $29.95 $11.95 K. D. & Carry -""¦"""---—--—----————- $] ia.95 Rug _ 12x10, now $84.95 ' BOOKCASES $101.20 Rug, I2xl0'll". now .,,..$89.95 H_ «orK<; another prompt relief was reported Maine Healing Power ««« ______^___f^^^_^^l__^__l Walnut and blond , open front. {»»•« ' ™'*" 1 "™ 9'95 ,, $177.10 Rug , 12x13'll"l now f$99.95 $4495 95 n OPp r * from 2 to 4 days. These reports were Like many great discoveriea-the $204.10 Rug, 12x18'8", now $149.95 &* verified by a doctor's observations \WBSSBKf ^^amm ^^^^ M ' $158.00 Rug, 12x1 T2", now $105.00 effectiveness of Preparation H was Jgl^^l'iM^ga^^^^^mH icMUKfcK-wrwcD* and! proved by four leading clinics. also discovered quite by accident. TV CHAIRS $136.00 Rug, 12xl0'3 " , now ,.$119.95 R^^S9H__P^i-l^__i___li9 1 0 Ru 2 2 *495 Pain and itching were promptly In the laboratories of a famous l_i_ Channel back upholstered in J", -* „ 9< } ** < *™ $99.95 _B|sSs3»2_^__ ^ ______^iB $271.95 Rug, 12x20 6 ', mow $174.95 -----_-—_--—------__--_- relieved. And -while gently relieving long wearing frieze covers. research institution in Cincinnati, Wp^^^HB^ff^^^W j iflW lieguiar $W„_ $254.95 Rug, 12x13" 10" , now $184.95 this distress — actual reduction Ohio-renowned scientists wore STEp & C0CKlm rABLES B_fe_B-__^P^^^ij -H--W-il Now $24.95 $313.90 Rug, 15x15'3 , now $209.95 n . tlI. ,, r Ohrinking) of hemorrhoids took conducting advanced medical te sts. J: $-7.00 N lon Axmimfer ftugs ' ' Ili'fiulm $>!<>.!).>. BTOt- -t^r_l_ ^}l»i !^l ——------~----—----_ y , now . .... $69.95 place. Most amazing of all-this Durinp: an ether-cxtractinp; pro- ^ ^^^ ' Now $5.95 hv,„«--.1,-5,1- A • ^ *i - improvement was maintained in cedure,thcrewa3asuddenexplosion. " ^ SEALY & SERTA —--- . ~T/n*W^innTr^ lnU r cases where a doctor's observations An assistant was severely burned. Hollywood ensembles complete LAMPS- __ «¦ HiriF A ft£D SLfFPER": ^ ^^tll including headboard , box . _- *v HID.-A-BfcD SLEEPERS were continued over a penod of As an emergency measure, large ' Upholstered in beniiliful long Shrinka hemorrhoids without sur- spring and mattress, All spe- Tab| e Lamp3 roduced fo> $3 95 many months ! quantities of an ointment (still gery_ Heaia injured cial priced. M n Ti„ . ui " i #_« wearing frieze covers , and tiflaue back t(J D k LamP* «--i «ble gooseneck, now .$4.95 In fact, results were so thorough in an experimental stage) were „_ov yon ««> os «AO OK ' equi pped wilh a comfortable normal and helps prevent infection : ' ' ^„ft „' ' j „' rreo LamPl reduced to $5.95 inncrspring mattress, ReKular- that sufferers were abl« to make aWared on. To everyone's amaze- $79.95t , $89.95 and $99.95*„^ c 0f hemorrhoids, Po)o Lamp5 r6tJucod to $9 w |y m>M,. statements as ¦ ¦ such astounding ment-pain ceased immediately and Every claim made for Prepara- . - ¦' ' Chain Lampi reduced to $15.95 Now $189.95 "PJles have ceased to be a problem!" the slciu healed remarkably Jfast tion 31 has been verified by doctors. —¦ —— — INNERSPWNG MATTRESSES ' ; And among these sufferers were a without scarring. This is the only hemorrhoidal rem- Twin si/o only. Dl ATETA DM DflrvrDC CRICKETT CHAIRS wide variety of hemorrhoid condi- Latcrtests revealed this ointment edy containing Bio-Dyne. Just ask _ r l_Hirvl\ltl IfUU-VILnO Solid mnple frames «,,_-_ f and arms. tionssomeofl0to20ycarystanding-, was full of a new substance wliich for Preparation H at any drug >IV,VS , , „ ,„ . , Regularly $34.9.i. ______Largo selection of. different All this was accomplished at hom« has the astonishing power to "heal coun ter in ointment or suppository ttylet and covtrt, wltfi and without |s| ow $28,95 iwlvel, high Jind low back. $79 without surgery, injections, nnr- injured skin. This substance was forna. — ^^ SERTA ' cotics or astringents of any kind, then scientifically combined with ^ ^ ^ W 27 M *°»- 95 ow $59 95 -<^* } Ortho llrm mnttre.. or box *» ' "° ' ' " DANISH MODERN CHAIRS The secret is a new healing sub- other effective medical ingredients ^ Fe9, W4^^5 now $4J ^.95 Rog. $99.95 ^__<______l^-^<^^^^ spring. Specially priced. ^ » . , now $69.95 Walnut with zippercd foam • ®) discovery ^ cushions, RcRulnrly ,95. stance (Bio-Dyne -th« into a product called Preparation H. <^_2____K_^r^^^ t, M rt i .j. ««. R«9- $«9.95, now $49.9>5 $44 ' tlP^^i^^^>i Now Only $45.00 ° Now $34.95 of a world famous research insti- And here's why this remarkable |^s5__ *_BE_fl_S____^'-^ S *J' BORZYSKOWSKI _____¦ Furniture IMH BI (Conv«nlinf UM Sto fo wh«n re owaf PREPARATION H^^from hom») EASY TEHMS 300-302 Mankato Avonuo OPEN EVENINGS MONDAY The Daily Record NOVEMBER 26, 1962 Winona Deaths A. Cpi-imuniry Two-State Dea ths ** Mrs. Orris Walters . Memorial Hospital V. Adry Nichols li lW l^iiii Mrs. Orris Walters, 59, 753 W. Vlsitlna hoiirji /Medical am) $w _lc»l CHATFIELD, Minn, cSpecial) - Saturday at 11 p.m. pMlenls; 2 to 4 and 7 to 1:30 p.m. (no 4th St., died children under 12). V. Adry Nichols, 56, rural Chat- her home following a leart at- Maternity patients: j field, died Saturday at 8:15 p.m. at ¦ to J:M art 7 to mMMmfS/f ^^rlf ^lm tuck. i:30 p.m. (adulli only!. at St. Mary's Hospital, Rochester. former Julia A. Nash, she mmmmmaVp^^*^v ^^^^?r\tvjir\ii- __-nl^l^fet___ljJ<-^_-i8-__-_-_-_-_-i The Saturday He had been ailing several years. ^as born July 28, 1903, to John He was born March 7, 1906, to at Ferryville Admission* and Bertha Nash , Daniel Wiskow, St. Charles Rt. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Nichols, Sara- Wis. She was married to Orris 2, Minn. toga Township. He married Geneva By GRETCHEN L. LAMBERTON April 25, 1923, in La , Walters Timothy P. Nissen, 429 W. Mark Johnson Nov. 9, -1927,. at Lanes- NEW YORK N.Y. - For the last few days I've been staying Crosse, and had lived in Winona St. boro. He farmed all his life on in the Greenwich Village section of New' York at the old 36 years. She was a member of the home farm until his retirement Van Rensselaer hotel on 11th St. just east of Fifth Avenue. Thp jit. Matthew's Lutheran Church. . Sunday three years ago. He was a mem- 80-year-old Van Rensselaer is one of the oldest hotels ill the Survivors are: Her husband; A-misiions ber of the Pilot Mound Lutheran city, with big high-ceilinged rooms, lots of tall windows and R. W a 11 e r s, Kenneth J. Lukaszewski, 8S8 E. Church and Moose Lodge 1114 St. two sons, 'Harold Wabasha St. , thick soundproof walls. Many writers and actors like Tyrone Greenwood , Wis., and * Glenn C. Charles. Guthrie, New York Times correspondents, and the English cast , Mrs. Wilfred Kaufmann, Coch- Survivors are: His wife; two Walters, Galesville Wis.; one , of My Fair Lady have stayed here. It costs about half as much , Mrs. James (Dorothy) rane Wis. sons, Russell Nichols, Chatfield, daughter Randy J. Butler, Houston Rt. .2, to stay here -as at most New York hotels, and It's extremely Tice, Hopkins, Minn.; nine grand- and Donald Nichols, Rochester, quiet for New York. Built by the aristocratic old Van Rensselaer Minn. and three grandchildren. children; two brothers, Clarence ¦ family it used to be the most elegant of hotels, and nobody was Mrs. James Sweazey, 1626 W. ¦ - —__»___—______-a_a______¦____ , Funeral services will be Tuesday .. I ,,, ,. i .. " ' . ' '¦' • and . Thomas Nash Ferryville, St, . permitted in the stately dining room who wasn't in formal even- and two sisters, Mrs. Law- 5th . at 2 p.m. at Pilot Mound Lutheran Wis., Mrs. Selma Eckhoff , 409 Lincoln WEATHER FORECAST . . . Kain and snow England coast. The lower Mississippi valley can ing dress. The dining room is now closed off, though its former rence Hanson , Ferryville, and Mrs. Church , the Rev. Percy Larson is iorecast for to- expect rain. It will be cold on the Atlantic coast cloakroom is now a rather dim and quiet cocktail lounge. ' St. officiating. Burial will be in Sara- — in the higher elevations — Newman Helgerson, Mount Ster- night in the Pacific northwest and the northern and in the northwest ; milder in, the Mississippi It's an ideal spot for poking around Greenwich Village, which Wis. Laurel P. Unnasch, Winona Rt. toga Community Cemetery. ling, 1.. Rockies. Snow also is likely on the southern New valley and Lakes area. (AP Photofax Map) Is what I've been doing. As you know, the district for several Funeral services will be' Tuesday . Pallbearers will be: Otto Merrill , long blocks east and west of Fifth Avenue from, about "12th St. 1:30 p.m; at St. Matthew's, Raymond J.¦¦ Kelberer, 218 E. Roy Cole, Clayton : Miller, Fred at ' ¦¦'¦ ¦ down to Washington Square Park and theMhrough the park and Rev. A. L. Mennicke officiat- King St. . Knauf and Ralph Slavin Jr., St. the Mrs. Gary Luedtke, 826 E. San- in Robbinsdalc. He married Hat- several blocks south of it, is old Gree_wicrKVillage. At first ing. Burial will be in Woodiawn Charles , and Orvis Redalen , Chat- tie Thrune, Robbinsdalc, in BUSINESS this area was the early elegant and aristocratic section of old born . St. field. MIRROR Cemetery. March , 1920. She died March 19, New York, then later it became New York'a "Left Sank*' or may call this -evening Mrs. Mabel Miller, : 577 W. Mill Friends may call until noon -^ Friends St. 1957. He married the former L,eah abode of artists, writers and musicians. from 7 to 9 Pirn, at Fawcett Chap- Tuesday at Jacobs Funeral Home, Ellis July 9, I960, in Robbinsdale. the church Tuesday after Mrs. Emma Haeuser; Cochrane, St. Charles, and at the church el and at Wis. Survivors are; His wife; one Washington Square Park houses across the street from 12:30 p.m. Tuesday after l p.m. daughter Miss Anna Mae Jasze\v Eat the park. At present the real Sheila T. Gile, Stockton ," Minn. . : Americans which is very large used to ski, Minneapolis; two sons, Don- estate people are trying to buy Charles McDonald An gus t A, Fabian , Lewiston, Miss Evelyn M- Norton be a favorite duelling ground Minn. ) ald, Osseo, Minn., and Robert up some of the ancient and Charles McDonald, 80, 222% W. ST. CHARLES, Minn. (Special Jaszewski, California; three grand- around 1800. For years it has shabby old houses and lofts in Mrs. Cecil Jfaskett, 703 Wilson — Miss Evelyn M. Norton, 56, 2nd St., died Sunday at 3 a.m. at ' children ; six brothers, Ben, Jo- More Sweets Now held a huge shallow fountain, the Italian district just south St. - Chicago, formerly of St. Charles, Community Memorial Hospital. seph and Edwin Jaszewski , Dodge; By SAM DAWSON dy, Chocolate and Confectionery 475 feet long and\ comfortable of the park to . put up towering He was born Feb. 15, 1882, in Mrs. . Jacob C. Braun , St. Char- died . Saturday in Chicago follow- , ben che 's, children 's play- les, Minn. Roman, Minneapolis; Raymond AP Business N»w$ Analyst Institute, set up in January 19G1 modern apartments, and so far Nova Scotia, Canada, to Mr. and ing an illness of several months. Clinton, Wis., and Dominic , Bluff to try to get the business moving grounds , chess tables, etc. Con- they've been fought to a stand- Baby Gerald G. Tropple, 174 E. She was born Sept. 17, 190fi, in NEW YOR K (AP)-Amerlcans Mrs. Angus McDonald and had Siding, Wis.; one sister, Mrs. Ar- are eating more candy, Increased ahead again. certs are given in it, and out- still by embattled artists, writ- lived here the past 27 years. Howard St. Elba Township to Mr. and Mrs. door art exhibits. Evenings Mrs. Diana Struber, 1761 W, Wa- thur i Clara) Marx , Arcadia; one consumption per capita in the last Output per capita hit its peak the ers and tradition-lovers who Surviving is one daughter, Mrs. Joh n JV Norton . She was graduat- half-sister, Mrs. Anna Knepper, " in 1944, according to available gay young Villagers gather with ¦want to preserve the charm and basha St. ed in 1924 from high school , three years heartens the makers Harvey Menard, Silver Bay, Minn. leav- Trempealeau. His parents, one of sweets, who had lived since records, at 20.4 pounds per per- their guitars and put on "hoot- flavor of this unique and lovely Funeral services will be Wednes- Steve n H, howers, Cannon ing to take employment in Chi- nannys" (impromptu folk Falls, Minn. brother and one grandchild have World War II on a sales plateau. son. But much of this production sing- -it of old New York. dat at 9 a.m. at Borzyskowski cago. She had jived ' there since died. Now they too are getting in step of sweets was sent overseas for ing) , and any hour, of the day Around Washington Square Mortuary, the Rev; Joseph La- Discharges that time. She never married. baby , Funeral services will be Wednes- with the economic growth rate for the armed forces—to build mor- you may see some gathering of Tiave lived people like the first Plante, Cathedral of the Sacred Mrs. Donald Larson and Survivors are: Oh« sister, living , but often used in lieu of cur- earnest young students or 519 W. Mill St. : day at 10 a.m. at St. Raphael's which the nation hankers. ale art- Cornelius Vanderbilt, the first Heart, officiating. Burial will be in Chicago ; one. brother , William Church , Crystal , Minn. Burial Their biggest sales season is rency. . ists protesting or espousing wanamakers, the Delanos and in St. Mary's Cemetery. Mrs. Ida Dora, 500'A Huff St. J. Norton , St. Charles, and nieces gift , Rushford, Minn. will be in Fort Snelling National just ahead. Candy is a big some cause . . Two sides of the Roosevelts, Civil War General Friends may call at the mor- Carol A. Cordes and nephews. Her parents have Cemetery. item and even diet-consciou s Then consumption settled back square are faced by New York Ste v en H. Showers Cannon George B. McClellan ; also tuary after 7 p.m. Tuesday. . ¦ ¦ * died. Americans live more dangerously to around 16 pounds per person a University buildings, and there Walt Whitman , O. Henry, singer Falls, Minn, '" ¦ ' .:¦ ' ' . Funeral services will be Wed- year, and total output grew . only ba- during the holidays. are other schools like the New Adelina Patti, Eugene O'Neill, Mrs. Gertrude A. McCormick Mrs. Roger W. Broring and nesday at" 10 a.m. at St. Charles at the same pace as did the pop- School or Copper Union near- by, Winona Kt. 3. Municipal Court Confectioners admit they still ulation. In i960; consumption was ; William Dean Howells,. Edith Mrs. Gertrude A. McCormick, Catholic Church , the Rev. James by ":¦;¦¦ ' • v. -V-;; Wharton, Henry: James, Baby Brenda L. Kuehn, Foun- WINONA have a tough fight ahead with the put at 16.9 pounds per person, :: John 84, former . residentat of Winona , Fasnacht officiating. Burial will lor years enterprising real Dos. Passes, John Barrymore, died^ Sunday night Community tain City, Wis. be in Calvary Cemetery. Forfeits: calorie counters and those who This didn 't satisy the candy estate men have tried to lay Lois M. Kleist , 1379 W. 5th St. associate, sweets with enforced Rockwell Kent, Matisse, and Memorial Hospital¦ after a long ill- Friends may call after Tuesday Gerald L. Nagel, Preston , Minn., makers and they began combat- hands on . property adjoining other greats too numerous to ness. . ' • ' ¦ '• ' ,' ¦ ' • " " ' : ' : Baby Anthony G. Wiczek, 612 E. noon at Sellner-Gedde Funeral $5 on a charge of failure to pay trips to the dentist. ing the fears o_ obesity and cav- But some. 2,000 confectionery this most charming part of New mention. At some stage in their Mrs. McCormick was the for- Broadway. Home, St. Charles. Rosary will a parking meter -violation. He ities. York , and for years they have careers most Mrs. Paul Schultz, 159 Chatfield was arrested at police headquar- manufacturers in» the United of America's mer Gertrude Somers and was ' be said Tuesday at 8 p.m. In 1961, sales rose to 17-2 pounds been fiercely fough t off by art- great poets, artists, painters, born at Owatonna, Minn., April 30, St. : ters at 11:50 a.m, Saturday . States expect their total output for each man, woman . and child. Cecillia O. Braegelmann , Rich- this year will come close toi 3V_ ists and writers of the Village; musicians and writers have 1878, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Henry Remus . Julius J. Rowekarnp, 415 Da- This year the outlook is for 17.5 one of the most energetic bat- lived in Greenwich Village, August Somers. She lived in the mond, Minn. ETTRICK , Wis. (Special )-Mrs. cota. St., $10 on a charge of fail- billion pounds , with a sales value pounds, when the Christmas sales Robert G. Murphy, 174 E, 5th of more than $2.5 billion. tlers was Eleanor Roosevelt And of course it was also a Winona area for 45 years, much Henry Remus, 42, died early this ure to stop for a stop sign. He figures : are in. who lived in one of the truly mecea St. - . morning at a La Crosse hospital was arrested by police at Wabasha It's the per capita consumption for would-be artists and of this time in Winona , and had The institute lays that some elegant and ancient red brick phohies too — and still is. been a resident of Minnesota City Mrs. William G. Franzen and where she had been taken by am- and Huff streets! at 6:48 a.m. Sun- figure that most pleases the Can- baby, 1124 W. Broadway. bulance Sunday following a stroke. day. 2,000 varieties of confections, six years. Most recently she had from jawbreakeis to bonbons/ will The Village has become so sought after that rents are soar- lived at St. Anne Hospice here. The former Hattie Adams, -she Bart T. Metcalf , 19, Buffalo, ing and struggling young was born Sept. 21, 1920,, at Stod - 111., $25 on a charge of speeding WEATHER use up this year at least 630,000 artists and writers can no longer Her husband, Patrick J.. McCor- OTHER BIRTHS tons of sugar, 532,000 tons of dairy afford to live In the Village ' proper. And so they are moving mick, to whom she was married dard , Wis., daughter of Mr. and 70 m.p.h. in a 55 rrvp.h, zone. He EXTENDED FORECAST and products, 400,000 tons of corn eastward toward the East River into the adjoining shabby at Springfield, Minn., June 30,1897, BLAIR, Wis. (SpeciaD-Nr. Mrs. Albert Adams. She was mar- was arrested by the Highway Pat- MINNESOTA — Temperatures old Bowery section where rents ' Thomas Williams, Spring- ried to Henry Remus in 1944. / rol at Homer on Highway syrup, 210,000 tons of corn starch , are still cheap and large old died in 1944. Mrs. 14-61 at will average 10-15 degrees above 22,000 tons of dextrose or refined artists'-lofts .— often unhealed — are still available. Mrs. McCormick is survived by field , Va., a son Wednesday. Mrs: Survivors are : Her husband ; one 9:50 p.m, Saturday. normal. Continued mild through Ruth Math- , daughters , corn sugar, 20,000 tons of fats and Many small experimental theaters — the "off-Broadway one son, John , Winona; a grand- "Williams is the former son , Ralph and two , Leo A Prechel, Waseca Rt. 2, mid-week with brief cooling about , 100 tons of fruits and fruit theater — have sprung up in daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Beverly and Ruth Anne, at home; Minn., $25 on a charge of oils 8, the Village' and especially in this daughter, Mrs. Jean Kjos, Seat- son, speeding Friday. Normal high 20-30 north , products, and lesser amounts of new east section. Coffee shops are all over-where Mathson, Blair. her father , of Suxldard; four sis- 75 m.p.h. in a 55 m.p.h. zone. young artists He, Wash., and two¦ great-grand; 28-36 sout*. Normal low 7-14 north , many other commodities. and writers gather and talk, talk , talk over a cup of cafe ex- ¦¦ ¦ children. ¦ ' ' ', •< ¦ • '" ' '-- ters, Mrs. Howard (Alma) Ek- He was arrested by: the Highway 12-20 south. Precipitation will aver- , But the industry still frets at presso or cappucino (potent coffee with sweetened whipped cream Funeral services will be Tues- FIRE RUNS holrn, La Crosse; Mrs Orville Patrol on Highway 61 at 7:50 p.m. age one-fourth inch extreme north- and cinnamon ) (Ada) Reiman, Romeo, ¦ ',- Mich,, Sunday. what it , naturally, considers un- . Small studios and amateur-run picture galleries day at 8:45 a.m. at Burke Funer- Ann) east to little or none southwest in warranted fears about the effects are all over. Everyone goes to free lectures or classes at one of al Home and at 9:30 a.m. at St. Saturday and Mrs^ John (Mary Kno- occasional rain or snow about Fri- ed fire back and Mrs. Harry (Eva) Lam- o. sweets. So the institute advises the neighborhood schools. Bookshops are many and crowded, Paul's Catholic Church , Minnesota 10:42 p.m.—Sparks rekindl TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS day. : eating a piette of especially the Paperback Rambler , 810 E. King pert , Stoddard , and one brother , such things as Book Shops. Both "cool" ja_z and City. The Rev. George Moudry at Winona WISCONSIN — Temperatures candy after a meal to east the New Orleans jazz bands — the best in town — play impromptu will officiate and burial will be in St., hand pump used. James, Michigan. Robbie Ozmun , 1G6 E. Mark St., will average 10-12 degrees above The funeral service will be Wed- desire for a dessert of higher cal- and informally at the Village cafes. Poetry reading sessions are St. Mary's Cemetery. 8. . normal. Normal high 27-39. Nor- orie content , It lauds candy as a held by youthful poets nesday at 2 p.m. at First Lutheran David Allan Conrad , 502 Grand mal low 12-25. Not much day to at coffee houses or cafes. Many Negro Friends may call at the funeral source of energy and as a fatigue artists, writers and especially musicians live in the Village, arid home this evening. Father Mou- IMPOUNDED DOGS Church , North Beaver Creek , the St., 10. day change. Total precipitation reliever while driving. And it Rev . K. M. Urberg officiating. there's no trace of segregation. dry will say a Rosary at 8:30 p.m. Ann Kleinsclunidt , 108 High For- less than one-tenth inch. Chance quotes some, scientific surveys There's no place on earth None. Burial will be in. Ihe church cem- est St., 6. of showers toward end of week. quite like Greenwich Village, un- casting doubt on the role of sweets less it's the Left Bank of Paris, and one hopes it'll never change. Availabl. for good home: etery. OTHEft TEMPERATURES in promoting dental cares in chil- Winona Funerals Small black male puppy. A devotional service will be held FREE TB X-RAYS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS dren. at Eunnestrand Funeral Ho me ' High Low Pf' 1963 calling for increasing party Frank Nikolay of Abbotsford. Ni- Leslie H, Baker Carpenter and (Mon. - Wed. - Fri., 1-5 p.m. Daryl Potter , Bruce Tuesday at 8 p.m. Friends may Room 8 , City Hall) Albany, clear ...... 38 19 . membership from a record 23.792 kolay replaces his brother, Jack, Funeral services for Leslie II. William Brennan. call at the funeral home Tuesday Albuquerque , clear .. 59 3G .07 this year to 50,000. The plan also who resigned; Baker ,' 475 Lafayette St., will be ¦ ' Winona Co. residents fr ee, Reynolds Won't ¦ from 7-9 p.m. and at the church others, $1 each: Atlanta , clear ...... 55 32 calls for raising $425,000 next year Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. at Fawcett Joseph Watembach Wednesday after 12?30^ p.m. Bismarck, clear 59 21 from dinners. The American United Jewish , Chapel , the Rev. Harold Rekstad Funeral services for Joseph Wa- Taken last week 55 Boise, rein .,.. 58 47 .05 Have Inaugural ITiomas Miglautsch , rural Ocon- Appeal has been credited with First' Congregational' Church , offi- tembach , 827 E. Sanborn St., were John A. Gesing Since March Ii , 1953 .... 46 ,354 Boston, clear 49 29 .. omowlc, was elected a member raising $1,435,000,000 to aid Israel ciating. Burial will be in the Fort held this morning at St. Stanislaus CANTON, Minn. (Special) — Chicago, clear 50 31 .. Ball at Madison of the committee along with during the last 24 years. Snelling National Cemetery. Church. John A. Gesing, 74, Canton , died Cleveland, clear ..... 47 21. . . .. Friends may call today from 7 (o Solemn requiem high Mass was in liis sleep Saturday night at his WINONA DAM LOCKAGE Denver, clear 60 32 .. MADISON, "Wis. tf> — Attorney 9 p.m. at the chapel . celebrated by the Rt. Rev. Msgr. home here. Flow—16,800 cubic tcet per sec- Dos Moines, clear ... 50 30 .. General John Reynolds will be In- N. F. Grulkowski, assisted by the He was born Teh. 16, 1888, at ond at 8 a.m. today. Detroit , clear ...... 46 47. .. augurated as governor of Wis- Robert B. Buege Rev. Robert Kulas as deacon and Calmar, Iowa , to Mr. and Mrs. Fairbanks , clear .... -20 -31 .. , but he won't have Sunday ¦ sonsin Jan. 7 Funeral services for Robert B. the Rev, Milo Ernster as sub-den- Henry Gesing. Iie came to the 8:30 a.m.—Jag, 1 barge , •up- Fort Wort h, cloudy ... G3 59 .11 a ball. Buege, 1740 Kramer Dr.. were con. Burial was in St. Mary 's Cem- Canton area 25 years ago from stream. Helena , clear 55 48 Stale Democratic chairman Pa- held this afternoon al Fawcett etery. the Cresco, Iowa, area, He was a 1:50 p.m.—Arthur J. Dyer , 4 Honolulu , cloudy ... 112 73 .. trick Lucey told the party's Ad- Chapel , the Rev. Harold Rekstad , Pallbearers , members of the retired farmer, lie was a member Kansas City , cloudy . 57 40 ministrative Committee Satur- barges , downstream. , First Congregational Church , offi - Catholic Order of Foresters, were: of the Assumption Catholic 7:15 p.m.—George W. Banla , 9 Los Angeles cloudy . '67 49 .. day that a desired hotel was not ciating. Burial was in Pickwick Lawrence F. Jaszewski, John Kos- Church. barges , upstream. Memphis, clear ...... 55 33 .. available for a dance. He also Cemetery. cielski , Arnold Nett , Henry Frie, Survivors are: One brother, Miami , clear 76 . B3 .. said the ball in the Capitol rotun- Frank E., Harmony, and two 7:55 p.m.—Walter G. Iloiighyul, Milwaukee , clear .... 45 24 .. Pallbearers were: LeRoy Green- Robert P. Knuphusmaii and Hen- sis- 3 barges, upstream. da at Gov'.Xxaylord Nelson 's first wood, , Wilford Wilson . ry Walinski. ters, Mrs. Amel ia Hageman , De- Mpls.,St. Paul, clear . 42 30 .. Victor Huff 11:45 p.m.—Glenda S., 15 barges , inauguration in 1958 was "not a ¦ winpivici \ corah , Iowa, and Mrs. John (Vic- New Orleans , clear .. 71 52 .. howling success." \ f^^m ^ <.* _ T * ^ John D. Weimerskirch toria) Racier , New Hampton , downstream. New York, clear .... 42 33 .. Today A reception for Reynolds will Funeral -services for John D. Iowa, One brotlier and two sis- Omaha , clear 53 35 .. ters have died. 12:10 a.m.—Rapid Cities, i bar- Philadelphia , clear .. 43 33 ,. be staged at the Executive Man- Weimerskirch , fl.17 W. Howard St., ges, downstream. sion In the a fternoon followed by were this morning at St. Mary's Funeral services will be at 10 Phoenix , cle_r :...... 77 46 ,. a.m. Tuesday at Assumption 4:20 a.m.—Heron , G barges , up- Portland , Me., cloudy 37 24 a fund raising dinner in the eve- "UGH! ME Church. The Rt. Hev. Msgr. Ray- Cath- ning nt a site to be sel ected. bur- olic- Church, tlie Rev. Clayton stream. Portland , Ore., cloudy 60 46 1.45 mond J. Snyder officiated and 6:55 a.m.—L . Wade Childress , 9 Lucy said he hoped the dinner , ial was'in St. Mary 's Cemetery, Hab'ermnn officiating. Burial will Rapid City, clear ... 6« 35 .. be in tho Calvary Cemetery. barges, downstream. St. Louis , clear 57 32 ,. costing $25 A plate, would "re- Fred Biirmeisler, Albert Had- , if not eliminate, our party's HEAP B9G , Friends may call at Peterson- 11:20 a.m.—L , Wade Childress , Salt Lake City, clear , 57 32 ,. duce dad , John Mencel , Charles Vater light, upstream. , ,. deficit of around $25,000." Honer. and ltomuald Hit- Abraham Funeral Homo, Har- San Francisco, cloudy 62 55 Herbert mony, from 7 p.m. today., Rosary 9:30 a.m.—Harriet M., 3 barges , Seattle , rain 55 43 1.28 The committee received a pro- INDIAN ter were pallbearers . will be at 8. l upstream. Washington , clear ... 43 33 posed plan of organization for Larry Jaszewski DODGK , Wis. (Special>-I,urr'y Stolen Stafue Returned CHIEF!" Jaszewski , (',9 , HEARING Robbinsdalc, Minn., To University of Kansas former resident, here , died Fri- COUNTERFIOW HEAT day evening in a Robbinsdalc LAWRENCK , Knn. (AP) — A ^ ^/ J CLINIC hospital following a stroke .suffer- valuable bronze statue has been Ihe most effective homo Wk%^ \mr ed the precedin g week. returned to the University of Kan- heat ovaj lable today . . . AT am km m m% _p_ M k\M He was born Murch 25, 18J13 , to sas Art Museum two weeks after putt volumes of traveling Mr. nnd Mrs. ' Pnul Jaszewski, it was stolen. Q FREE! M' am Jm MM t ' m m Mm Winona Optical rural Dodge, nnd was a veteran The piece, valued by the mu- § 18 KARAT GOLD PLATED floor level hoot into the * " ** " * * " of World War I, Followinii his seum at $10,000, was found Satur- dome. Rocircufatet warmed AM UQIIf return from service he had lived day night on the sidewalk In front fiftf ft&tJtBf Go. of the police station at Marysville , room air again and again ______P^-~-l^______l for even , overall comfort. RCuARDLcbj Or ^ "' ' ^It ^lH 1$9'/a Main St, Kan. m^a^aammrf The sculplurc. which d isap- 1 Golden Car Key MAKE OR CONDITION ¦HH l _a^^_ Hk. 1 peared Nov. 10, is n 30-inch Ger- Wed., Nov. 28 man expressionist piece, cast in 1920 by the late George Kolbe. & Parsonol'zed With W\ 3-STAGE OPERATION 1 P.M. to 7 P.M. ¦ _/^jjMMjf_ ik__ ft Your Own ¦j tf BH ft Only QUAKER hat the new 3-ttage ______¦' _____| For Appointment Alfonso X, Spanish king of Cas- n_^______^______K] operation give perfect combustion ' * ' "«^ |ilo ^L ^^^-r to at ______F' ¦ ^¦ < * S ¦ ___¦ and Leon from 1252-M , was \£A^^j L <•" H *! ' ' ____H 5072 known as Alfonso the Wise. lie a^K timet, This prevent watte of fuel, in- ^^^^^ Phone ^ Kjl /l tures - clean, toot*-5e combustion giving was credited with promoting the ^ Building in Winona Property Transfers 1962 dollar volume ' -. ' . .52,593,935 Residential ...... 404,963 In Winona County Inferior Steps ...... 1,419,482 Commercial Week's City Fe^ (non- WARRANTY DEED By JULES LOH Public Anna Sclimtke et al to Eujene C. So- taxable) ...... 769,490 beck el tx-Part ot NW'A of NE'/i and One way to lick the hazard of of NE',1 ol NWVi of Sec. 19 srid ot EVj ice on the front steps is to move New house* . ':...... ,.¦ 23 ol Soc. 18; also pari of . SWM of of SW''< . the steps inside, but that isn Volume same date Permits Total NW'i and ol SEV« ot NW'A . of Sec. 19- 't the 106-7. main reason they were put there 1941 . 453,413,168 Kenneth Abraham et ux Is Bmll F. in this unusually handsome and Bess et ux-S. 46»i ft. of Lo|s tl and 12, Block 20, Smith' s Add. to Winona. well ordered split-level home. , Residence Unlimited, Inc., to Lester O. Primarily, this innovation is an- 550 Block 1, Wlncresl 0nly $1 Peterson et ux-Lot 18, other , refinement in split-level con- Four building permits for con- First . Add. Oils L. Pomeroy el ux to Russell Rossi struction by an architect with a Home Building F struction with a total estimated ' 7, Block A, fltlmont Add. q • —Lots 6 and keen personal interest in this type ¦ cost of $1,550 were issued last week to Winona. of liome. ___, !•Cabinet Work _«. engineer " s office. Melvin Hallevig et ux to Cslvin J.. Voel- by the city ker et ux-SE',4 of SW'i, E. 30 acres of I • Remodeling I This brought Ihe year's new SWi of 'SWU and SEV4 of SE^i of Sec. ARCHITECT Herman H. York, 35-105-9: ' - ' volume to $2,593,935. com- Adamczyk designer. of this home, is credited building Joseph ¦ Sfjnek to Dorothy F. . pared with $3,413,168 going into the —Lot ¦ 4, except S. 64 ft. thereof In Block witY designing the nation 's first For Complete Personalized 11, Bolcom' s Add. to Winona. spl it-levels on record in tract Building Service Contract final week in November a year E. L. Klnj Estate to 420 East Sarnla ago. . Building, Inc.—Part of Outlot 19, Plumer 'j houses 14 years ago. Hence his Add. -to Winona. sympathetic concern with split- McNALLY INCLUDED In th« current total Owl Really Improvement lo John A. level development. BRUCE Annin et ux—Lot 5. Block 7. Wincrest DELIGHTFU L SPLIT-LEVEL: An unusual roof line and dra- eliminating the staggered exterior look of most splits. There are BUILDING CONTRACTOR are valuations of 23 new houses for First Add, lo Winona. Effects of the interior location 1 Phone 8-1059 Harlan J. Wood et ux to Carl J. Lossen - matic covered entry add distinction to this handsome four bed- two full baths upstairs and lavatories on each of the lower levels. which permits have been drawn of the front steps are apparent both 304 Lake Street —Part ol Gov 't Lot 1, Section 32-107-6. room home. The " front steps, incidentally, this year. Last year at this time KWNO, Inc., to Earl D, Fort et ux— indoors ;and out. are _ located inside, there had been 46 new house per- SE' « .ol NEU except 2 parcels and part For one thing, it results in only mits written. of NE'.« ol ME' 4 ol Sec. 34-107-7 . sli Floyd R.' Simon to Robert &. McQueen ght grading of the front yard, The largest of last week's per- et ux—Lot !, Block 35, OP of Winona. always an expensive project and one for $700 issued to Frances Mlynarek to Winona . Activity especially so when a split-level is mits was Group, Inc.-^Lot 10, Block 5, Hobbard's Urban Shugart , 263 Grand St., for Add. to Winona. built on level ground. In this house, construction of an addition to: his Dora E. Anderson to Albert 'Kurth ef (he front door is only a few inch- ux—Lot ' 61, St. Charles limits. home. Bruce; McNally ; is the con- William A. Larson et ux to Lewiston es above the driveway. . . —S. 90 ft. of Lot 1 ROOM tractor. ._ Feed & Produce Co. RECREATION | and S. 10) ft. of Lot 2; Block . 1. Benike FOR ANOTHER , It permits a J. Tim Morris 360, Pelzer St., 1 and Volkmann's Add. to Lewiston, except Winter ¦ simplified roof design with what ar- during received a permit to construct a .' E. 12 ft. of said Lof J. - . , chitects call a "rake down " over C D CPI AI S6O0 temporary building at 1475 i Winona General Hospital Association to Willard A. Hoelt et ux-EVi of Lot 18 the front door creating a covered U r t il l At Fix-up time! Service Dr. to be used as a sales l and all ol Lot 17, Glen-View Si'bd. in entry — the type of distinguishing room . The frame structure will be Winona. James Elroy Morey to Joseph P. Tpske characteristic that gives a house 15 by 15 feet. McNally is the con- ' et ux—Pari of Lot 10, Mount . Vernon Subd. personality. tractor. QUIT CLAIM DEED Pearl 'Brehm to Harold J, Velr et ux- Besides adding interest to the The building will be used for ; Part of NE'.i of NE'.i of Sec.M06-7. floor plan generally, the interior display of flowers; nursery stock , Frances F. Lucas to Harold J. Veir el front steps produce a dramatic ; ux-Parl ol NEW of . 'NE'.i of Sec. 1-106-7. Christmas trees'; holiday center- ! Gerald E. Stalka et al lo Mary Ann foyer. This is Somewhat of *a rar- pieces and other Kerns. I Stalka—Lol 9. Block 7, Riverside Add. ity in a house which has the liv- I to Winona. ing room in A PERMIT to do interior remod- Harold J. Veir et ux to Frances P. Lu- the rear. Some rear costing was taken by cas—Part of NE'.i of NE'A of Sec. 1-106-7. living room designs suffer from a eling $200 I CONTRACT FOR DEED lack of isolated formality at the Schaupp, ! Benjamin Priage et ux to Adolph Prigge Roy 604 E. Belleview front door; not this one. St. ; i et ux—U'l acres In SE corner of SE'i ; of NE"< ol Sec. 24-107-9 and . N. 23 acres The house. J-50 in the House of The week's! other permit wenj to of NEVi ol SE'i of Sec. .2<-107-9. John F. Burmelster et ux lo Olio Meisch trie Week series, contains four Daniel Dirigfelder. 621 W. 3rd St., '. et ux-W',i of NW'i andW; of SW'i ol bedrooms and two full baths up- for construction of a partition in a . Sec. 22; E'.i of SE'i and SE'4 of NE'i stairs ; an extra large double ga- basement house and for interior re- - | of Sec. 31-1 08-9. rage and large j DECREE OF DISTRIBUTION recreation room FLOOR PLANS: The two lower levels con- are 47' wide by 42'9" deep, including the canti- modeling to cost S50. Josephine. Stalka, decedent,, -to Gerald E. with a lavatory on the lower lev- Permits for gas-fired installations Stalka et al—Lot 9, Block 7, R iverside Add. tain 1,294 square feet of living area not count- lever. Note, the abundance of closet and storage to Winona. el; and on the mid-level a glam- were issued to: ASSIGNMENT OF CONTRACT FOR DEED orous living room-dining room ell , ing the 347-square-foot garage. The bedroom space: . Kraning 's Sales & Service, for Charles P. Blesanz et ux ro Peter Bie- ¦ ' ¦ and a functional housekeeping level contains 934 square feet. Overall dimensions ¦ - ¦ . . & Donald Baker, 550'i w. Belleview sanz Sand & Gravel Company—Government i Lot. 2 and N'. 'i of NW'i ol Sec. 12,107-8, area featuring a Dutch kitchen St.; Alfred Berndt ,'1262 W. 3rd St. ; except N. 400 ft., thereof and also except j ¦ with laundry and lavatory adjoin- Hariey Howell, 5_2' _ : E. 3rd St. ¦ 3 other parcels: ' - . .. . ' . J-50 Statistics Otto Meisch et ux to ' Nick AAeisch et ing. Winona Plumbing Co. for Holm ay ' ux—W'i of NW'/i and W'.V ol SW'i of Wow to Build, Buy A four-bedroom side-to-sicfa Motors, 312 Mankato Ave., and Sec. . 22; E'i of SE'i and SE'A of ' NEW: THE HOUSE contains 1,294 spirt level with two full baths, Normarr Lueck, 468 Westdale . of: Sec. 21-108-9. PROBATE DEED square feet on the two lower levels two lavatories, living room, Kraning's received a permit for Jo Ann Alorey, wa rd, el al by guard- ] not counting the 347 square foot dining room, recreation room, an oil-burner installation for Mrs. Ian to Joseph P. Toske et ux—Part of i garage, and 934 square feet on the foyer kitchen and laundry Mahogany Paneling , 4 x8 ... S5.36 Lot 10, Mount Vernon Subd, Or Sell Your Home , Emma Matthees,. 405 E. 3rd St: Edwin A. Messerschmldl, by rep., to upper level. Its over-all dimensions area, double garage, basement. Edwyna E. Cravath et mar— E. 60 ft. ol 4Z" Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of FLOOR TILE — CEILING TILE . . . . i are 47 feet wide by feet 9 inch- Two lower levels contain 1,- Lots 7 and 10, Block 23, OP to St. es deep. the Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you PANELING OF MANY KINDS Complete : M , Charles. 294 square feet not counting 347 LIMITED WARRANTY DEED The kitchen design in this house can obtain a contractor 's estimate. , ¦ squar. foot garage; upper lev- Building _^^- ' ' iJV* Otto. Meisch et ux to Nick Meisch et is attractive as well as sensible. ux—NE'i of NE'.i of Sec. 21-108-9. ; You can order also, for . $1, a booklet called ">'OUR HOME—How el contains 934 square feet. PATENT On the aesthetic side is the Dutch to Build , Buy or Sell it." Included in it are small reproductions of 16 Over-all dimensions are AT INSULATION United States to Wilson C. Huff—SW'i oven barbecue near the dinette ta- of the most popular House of the Week issues. wide by 42'9" deep. of Sec. 1B-106-7. hle; on the practical side is the ef- - Pouring Wool or Vermiculite United Slates to Wilson C. Huff—W'/i Send this coupon to the Daily News or you may. purchase the ] of NW'A and NW'A of NE'.i of Sec- 19- ficient layout of the work area. ' REDS CAN BE OK 106-7. plans or the booklet at the information counter at the Daily News, j ¦ A folding door hides the adjoin- Traditionally, red and yellow are ing laundry facilities , making a Enclosed is 50 cents for baby blueprint J-50. Dl avoiding when painting the walls of COVER THAT PORCH WITH PLASTIC COVERING WASH THE BRUSH functional foyer at the service en- Enclosed is $1 for "YOUR HOME" booklet Q; You a room that faces south or west 36"; . .50 lin. ft. 48" ;. .6Vi£ lin. ft. 60" . . 8P liii. ft. 'll get better results with la- try. on the ground that this type warm tex paints if NAME ...... ,...... :...... ,...... 1 ¦ i i i .-. i — _..__ ¦_ ,¦ ¦» ¦¦ . you wash the brush Architect York has made some ' . ^T"" " ' . ' out with clean tap water from time light will make tSese colors seem other inexpensive but valuable im- _lEET even warmer than they are, thus to time during the job. provements on the side of com- S'i" GEO. KARSTEN ¦ making the room uncomfortable. mon sense. CITY ...... ,...... ; STATE ...... ;...... But if such a room is used chief- I PHONE 7466 BETTER BATH PAINTING FOR EXAMPLE ly at night under artificial illum- For a successful enamelling job , th« garage has ination , disregard the direction it KEN DELL COMPANY in your bathroom, all traces of air- two doors, leading to both the rec- rn your vacation house, don 't let reation room and fron t foyer and faces and use either . of these col- Call the Lumber Number 8-3667 . MODERNIZE . borne soap oils must be removed your friend's erroneous informa- ors boldly if you want, the Na- . from the walls, and tlie old glos- enabling you to enter directly to tion affect your decision. 573 East 4th St, Duane Jackels, Mgr. r YOUR two levels. Putting the coat closet ¦ tional! Paint, Varnish and Lacquer sy surface must be dulled. This Association suggests. will assure better adh-esion and a out of the foyer, and thus away POPULAR SPRAY PAINT longer, lasting finish. If you use from front-door congestion , is an- Those handy spray cans of enam- a cleaning compound containing other; the built-in cabinet and 9 ¦ i "Shell Head" ¦ ^ Most people % are in the same boat you are — they K ran L roa( Tho bigger the "heart"— 4578 K _«_ ____. ' nni uml°rs'and these specifications, so M Jf¥ * again , most _^gj f$P«ir\ people rlenl with a reputable electrical « the bette r the Housepowerl M ^ i ^ n *Mp ' f i 1 " contractor. It' s his job and duly lo rend nnd adhere K And the "heart " of home let us give & lo sl1pc ficnl R completely! When you deal your your home d House- Jta _-*?'T _o_r ' '°n with _B wiring system is tho electric serv- power Ruling to show what necdj I I QUALITY US ym nl pu,,i K y°m' tnlst iiv Winona ' s fastest f[ keentriLncc. Ifit isn _9 VT& JO/H^^I ' ° " 't bigenough , lobe done to let you operate all fi growing bonded elcclrlcnl contrnclor employing ONLY B _you can 't brine in nil the elec- tlie lights nnd appliances you V ELECTRICAL OIL BURNER \firy i . || ^__2^ licensed bonded electricians to assure you the highest tricitv n ceded for today ' living, need or want... at any one time, m w <#*¦ « * ALTERATIONS V *"^.'- bwtf^' quality workmanship on every elerlricnl installation , Neither can your brunch circuits Remember , n big Hotisepower % J| REPLACE YOUR PRESENT m properl y distribute «leclricit y "heart " lets you live better today m WHEN YOU CAN'T READ - YOU NE1CD THE Bl.ST! H throug h out the home. -and adds permanent value to -SEE US FOR - lViji and OIL BURNER FOR Ifyou. suspect thai you r House- your home, • Sheet , Plate *nd ^/^T\ INSTALLATION , power "heart " isn 't big enoug h, Structural $(••( Work A OW Co// us: today. Let nt show you how FULL "wAl WORK ! A. $130 • Welding and Boiler '"""""' Repair Work. No money down. Up to 36 HOl/SEPOWER maket a HAPPY HOME months to pay with terms We guarantee KLINE £&emc complete satisf action. as low as $4.30 a monthl BEST "Serving IVinonn For Over WINONA BOILER *£ZP ' ...._ ¦,, —, Ihlj a Century " f 'Electric I ^ & STEEL GO. BAUER KRANING Co* K 628 Main Street Phone 8-1O02 (Day or Night) W m Wo,t Soc0|,d stroet F>1 18 5512 Phone ELECTRIC, INC. POST $?*5 325 East Third St. Sales and Service "Llcemed Bonded Eloclrklflnt"" " I M • COMMERCIAL • INDUSTRIAL « RESIDENTIAL S 163 167 West Front Street | 1005 W. 5th Phone 8-2026 j ¦ ¦ ¦ « ¦ . Holes in House APARTMENT 3-a By Alex Kotoky Overcome Gain From Insulation By ANDY LANG AP Nflwsfeatures Some of the advantages of "in- sulation are lost when a house has many openings in it. When such openings are small, such as cracks at exterior joint s, there is a tendency to overlooks them. But the cumulative effect MARY WORTH By Saunders and Ernst can be the same as a gaping hole in the side of the house. IT IS A WISE home owner who makes a careful inspection of the outside of his home at least once a year. Only by this type of in- spection can cracks be discovered at seams, joints around windows and door frames and, generally, where dissimilar materials are joined, . This doesn't mean merely walk- CLUTTER CUPBOARDS .V . Family room fashioned of golden beige west coast hemlock ing around the house and looking will stay neat as a whistle if designed with boards match wall paneling. Appearance is sleek around to see what you can spot. big built-in ' 'clutter cupboards" like these. Doors and enic. Many small openings can not be seen unless you make your inspec- tion from a ladder. homes only a year or two old. that openings exist , a caulking job a calking compound, especially de- While cracks of various sizes This is because of natural shrink- is in order. This is something sirable for this type of repair be- are more prevalent in ' older houses age, even in well-built houses. which most home owners can do cause it has a certain degree of NANCY " By Ernl» Bushmlller they sometimes will occur in Once it has been determined Ii themselves. It involves the use of flexibility and will expand and

kg. Yes, when you give a Christmas Gift to your folks or to your own family ^T that will last as long as Homeward Steps ar built to last ... it is truly a . "Gift of Gifts" . . . not just for the short Christmas Season, but it will r- >. REX MORGAN. M.D ' Bv Dal Curtis fee remembered for a lifetime of pleasure and step safety!

T_8H> #*^ \ \ I / # _f

MARK TRAIL " Bv Ed Dodd

y < // now "I** "'r PUr<*«e „„, -, I • C -h tiS>nas * No^ ^ °'«« // -* e *e Sf *««* . """ *"9er * ''"> * "" //" *°«se v of £s/ **£Y t0r // n„ " ' y°u will fi_. 'PP»ng a nfi r ... your I contract along with the materials is applied the same as putty. The to which it is applied. •compound is pressed firmly into BIG GEORGE Calking compound comes in sev- place and smoothed off until flush eral types of containers and in with the surrounding surface. In different grades, which "determine another type, the compound is in the manner of application. a large tube, from which it is One tjpe, known as knife grade , applied directly into the opening. The tube has a beveled edge to insure application at the proper angle. WHERE A LOT of calkin, hat to be done, a calking gun is a good investment. It is easy to handle and pushes the compound into the openings. In the two most popular Ask Your Friends and Neighbors kinds of guns , the calking material #\ GAS is either ' loaded into the gun with ?G0 bulk compound er with a disposable We heartily urge you to Call any of your friend* and neighbors ?1 \| :»\ ;wffn LENNOX cartridge. The cartridge arrange- see for ' {£_ ' 4ammmmmm*imwanBm»mm^ who have Homeward Steps on their house ai^d yourself , \

Delegates From Ettrick Never Made Meeting /'W/awW/Vto • > "But if you have no money — as you claim — how could ^" , (Special) \^td 4m-1ki m<)kli^ ETTRICK Wis. -Th e you buy the barrel? They're vary Free Estimates .- '. . Rev . Mark M . Ronniiig. accom- Wm panied by Sonja Hogticn , Ann expensive nowadays." iven for any size Homeward Steps you may desire. Tranberg, Jon Runnestrand and DENNIS THE MENACE . . . gladly g pSPPfflH Gary Westgard , Longvlow, Wash,, our consultant, will assist in measurements, give Bill Mann, / ^i tflfi!-? delegates to (he LutJior League Enjoy clean, fresh, gently- convention at Green Bay, returned price quotations, answer any questions, and supervise all in- jffi ^w| moving air for perfect to Ettrick Saturday, They hadn 't stallation work for you. Phone 8-1533 today for an appoint- IMJaSPf'/ attended the convention. ment without obligatio n. indoor comfort Starting out Friday morning the Jlllp.Sw party, was stranded at Wautoma, Wrutheryou'rebulld- __^___ai—--, Wis., by a snowstorm, Wautoma Ing or ramodellng, BJH is the home of the pastor's par- Lennox has tho prac- HH _^| ents, but his parents were out of Ileal answer for eco- HH 1 —r^ town. The girls took over the Ron- nomlcfll hooting and ning residence while the pastor HHj ££» nnd the boys slep t in the camping cooling. Over 400 I^K &s| trailer Rev . Ronning had taken models to choose ^^B" "- "" with him. from—all with the WLW-\ Jon and Gary ai'e student s at famous Hushtone Waldorf College, Forest City, Iowa. ^^¦R ' ¦ blower/filter that ••^ Jj ipells c-o-m-f-o-r-t. ^^=^^ HOMEWARD wj - Harmony Man Named Come in and see the latest NEW ULM , Minn. -Murrell ,Ia- cobson, Harmony, was elected vice STEPJltr COMPANYWffir_n.llI jm£M HEATING AND president of the Minnesota Brown ^V^m^^______H Swiss Association nt its annual 1635 West Filth Street Phone 8-1533 __1^S ^ M^ ^-\ M______r\ COOLING UNIT meeting here Tuesday. The annual now on display In our store. Brown Swiss sale wus also held that day. ¦ QUALITY SHEET Wabasha Co. Legion LAKE CITY , Minn. (SpeciaD- All Wabasha County American Le- METAL WORKS gion posts and units will meet nt HAROLD OFENLOCH liio Legion elubroonis liorc Tues- day at a.30 p.m. A dim. "Stars ' wUmUlM. llB rW WtfeBEN^N' RrSUKaB S7 E. 2nd St. Phone S7W and Stripes," will be shown In ad- , FOR THAT 0WV& 6INCE LASf Wmi * dition . Refreshments will follow. 'MADE BUT LEARNED' RAMS TIE 24-24 IN FOURTH QUARTER NETT : MISTAKES W/irona Daily Hill Tips Cotter News Late-Game Jinx Hits Vikings MINNEAPOLIS Uft — Late-game just didn't score enough." ful afternoon for the Vikings, all For another, they may have disaster continued to cast its pall was not bleak. • . found a real defensive asset in end ¦ ¦ "We let them get away; we had Snorts¦ ¦ ¦ ¦; over the Sun- For one thing, they kept a game Steve Stonebreaker who shone as y ¦:. them," climed in veteran line- . .; day. . backer Cliff Livingston. ahead of the .Rams by getting the a corner linebacker before being Monday, November 26, 196- Just when it looked like ' the tie. The Vikings now stand 2-8-1, forced out of . the game in the Tilt half with a pulled hatn- Overtime Even if It second In Page 14 h_d was a rather dittaste- Los Angeles 1-9-1. Vikings the Los Angeles Rams on the ropes for the knock- string. out punch they wriggled free and And quarterback Fran Tarken- stormed to a pair of late touch- ton fired three touchdown passes Tumble 64-60 downs that netted a 24-24 tie. —two to and one ROSE-BOWL FEVER to Oscar Donahue — to run his A* if that were not enough rha total of scoring aerials for 'trie Vikings had to hold their breath season to 19, one more than his After Rally for fear the Rams would pull out RAMPANT IN MADISON entire total for his 1961 rookie a victory when Kicker Danny Vil- MADISON, Wis. UP) — Rose the. celebration were on phones campaign. ST. PA-UL, Minn. (Special)— laneuva barely missed a field goal Bowl fever has gripped Wiscon- calling home and trying to get The Rams may have found infi- "We made a few mistakes, but attempt from the 36-yard line. sin for the third time in history. money to go to California for the that' s the way to learn," said You'd have thought the Minne- post-season classic. nitely more, as far as the future Coach John Nett Monday after the The fever reached epidemic The Wisconsin Alumni Associa- is concerned. They may •have! sotans had .lost. They probably did proportions answer to their sticky Cotter Ramblers lost to St. Paul as far as ,morale is concerned. Saturday after Wis- tion announced it also will spon- found the Hill 64-60 in overtime here Sun- consin defeated Minnesota 14-9 sor a trip as it did on the Badg- season-long quarterback problem. day afternoon. They led 24-10 with 12 minutes for the Big Ten football title and ers' two previous appearances in to play and lost several other a trip to the New Yeair's Day- the Rose Bowl. Young Roman Gabriel, used but It was the Ramblers' opening scoring opportunities which would lest of the season. They get their classic in Pasadena. The Wisconsin ticket depart- little this season although he was next Tuesday nigh t at La Crosse have had them even farther in Shortly after the game, a noisy, ment also reported a busy Sun- the National Football League's Aquinas. front. but orderly group of students day as students_ . sought to pur- No. 1 draft choice a year ago, got "We had our chances," offered marched to downtown Madison. chase tickets for the game his first starting call and mads THE RAMBLER coach was not Coach Norm Van Brocklin. "We Some who didn't participate in against Southern California. the most of it. entirely displeased with his veter- an-studded club wlip rallied from ¦_------M-______--_p__---__-H_«______^^ a six-point deficit in the last 2:48 minutes to tie the game at 58-53 and force the overtime. "It was a normal first game and it gives the kids an idea where they're weakest." said Nett. "They learned things they can't pick up in practice. Hill was a good tough opponent and I don't think we'll run into that size again." The Pioneers were carried main- iy by 6-6 Mike Finnegan who to- taled 25 points after the Ram- blers' bad limited him to two bas- kets . and two free throws in the fi rst- half. SAM CZAPLEVWSK1 and Bob Judge each tossed in 20 points for ON Cotter to account for two-thirds of the Rambler scoring: OUR DEAL Cotter had an unusually cold (sjzesjfi||^GET A first half when they hit only sev- P^^^^tWk en of 39 field goals for 19 percent. 0F FIRESTONE TOWN : That was against a Pioneer man- l^^^^Sjm Jllllliil to-man defense: Hill switched to COUNTRY TIRES ' a zone in the second half , to off- & JBfl HHf;' set Cotter's control of the. re- B|J®^p bounds, and the Ramblers pene- trated it for 17 fielders in 40 shots. "" ; "^^ S!_ ! I_\- WEVRE 6«*R#lTjE_D '' As it turned ovt,- Cotter had a K J THRU HraERfir ' 25-22 edge in field goals, but miss- Z^Tz) -£Q ICE, MUD ' ed 8 of 18 free throws. HD1 con- ^aaWEJC 0 M__9BKipV ' verted 20 of 32 from the charity lines. COTTER, behind 10-6 at the quarter and 23-22 at the half, forg- ed in front by 31-26 midway in the: third quarter. The Ramblers led again by four points before Hill garnered a -42-39 third period edge. (51) With six minutes to go, the score UP THEY GO . . . BUI Wickett of Har- up with him. looking on are Chuck Berning was knotted at 48-48. Dan Kinsella mony goes high to pull down a rebound in Sat- (55) of Harmony and Winona 's John Prigge (35). and Dick Reis shoved Hill ahead urday night's basketball victory over Winona (Photo for Daily News, by Allen Tarras.) 53-48 before Judge scored for Cot- at Harmony. Winhawks Jim Kasten (41) goes ter. Finnegan hit two gift shots with 2:48 to go and Judge match- ed it with a field goal at 2:37. REDMEN OPEN PLAY SATURDAY Czaplewski scored from the side at 2:00 and at 1:13 , Finnegan hit two gifters when fouled by Cza- plewski. With 60 seconds left. Judge .made it 58-56. Six Games for Winona HILL LOST possession on a trav- elling violation, Cotter getting the ball and calling time out with :54 to play. Then with' -.38 seconds left . John R. Nett hit the tying bucket. Cotter regained possession Cage Teams This Week on a ball theft, took another time out with 10 seconds to go to set By AUGIE KARCHER Mary's College making its first Cotter invades La Crosse Aqui- : fe llljW TRAGTIONATRE I up a final play, but Nett's at- g Daily News Sports start Saturday night at Terrace nas Tuesday night and is host to[ £nj sL Editor tempt went awry. Heights against Loras College of rugged Eau Claire Regis Friday ! Winona' In the overtime, Kinsella scored s basketball teams Dubuque; Iowa. night at St. Stan's. ] four straight points before Judge which narrowly missed breaking Winona State travels to Steven's tallied for Cotter. Judge's basket .500 between them last season, ar« COTTER ( 0-1) AND Winona Point Friday night and then was the only one of six Rambler 2-2 for the embryo hoop seasor State (I .' each have two games returns home to meet Platteville and Winona cage fans will get z this week and Winona High shots, ty find the mark in the extra ) State Saturday night at Memorial session. Lee Williams meshed tfie better idea about the talents ol (-1-1 has a singleton at Roches- Hall. ' final two points on a pair of free their favorites this week. ter Friday night , opening the Big throws with ll seconds remaining. Six contests are on tap with St Nine Conference season. THE WARRIORS of Coach Bob Campbell gave indications of a Cotter (60) St. Paul HIM mo UI RII quality as those Indiana hadn't won a confer- as the Winhnwks [f A Wmmm ¦ __ _T1 sell for UM which APCO! T pre p for Ro- 1^ 1 M -H 111 "ormitlly nnd $1S8. ence game since 1950 and ended chester, Harmony, Mitpi e Leaf S I ^p this string with a 12-7 triumph TT %_ ., u os ,h ,2 most |,o ' Conference favorite, forced Wino. mil *\ I ^m r %§ ¦¦¦ ¦ •? "' enrol...° , l"ll"'• ¦ j "Why wait , Fill up your • over Purdue last Saturday in the 1 1 . , ( lltlV _¦ Radio • y'""l«nns jier formed..by inko % na to .shoot f rom outs ide a zone ** ¦¦¦ S , and ¦ • ..',.' fuel oil tank now with v. battle for the Old Oaken Bucket . V ¦ ,. A> A.v.rtl..d on Bj ft l5U"'Van ,he Kire- j • defense and Coach Joh n Kenncy 's ly\ / Tal.vl.bn iCtJto„7.s. s 0r ¦ [:¦ AI'CO Fuel Oil . ; cagers couldn 't solve it or find the - y^r?t^MJ^ ¦ and ' Cll°' ¦ . . the :€; Ohio Stat*, ranked No. 1 nation- I • sHsss g^r/ DoTt wait . mm.fc y ;' • ... cleanest burning, most eco- '¦¦)>' ally before the season started , range. ' are lim ited! ' Brightest spot was the scoring ! ¦'¦{' t noirtka] lucl all you can lost to UCLA 8-7. It was shrugged ^ off as one of those things. But of forward Wulf Krnuse who has | { tise. Call today for fast , | I :.\fi averaged 17 points in his first two " the Buckeyes also lost to North- games, metered delivery .. . I ^| western and Iown and had to ; (ilenn will be happy lo I 0i Chuck Iteming led Harmony ¦ settle for -a third plnce tie with with l(i points and the, taller Cardi- ;. :.: serve yon. I I i*9 Northwestern. : ^_ I nals never trailed after the open- „. ' MP Out of it al) , Wisconsin came ing minutes , out the champion and again will Winona (41) harmony Uj) represen t Ihe Big Ten in the Hose (g It pi tp lg it pi lp Kraus* • 3 _ IS Darning M lit Bowl , "If Ave don 't win this tiilie, Prlgoe 10 14 Fshbauohr 0 3 4] I'll stay out there, maybe In the Kasten 0 3 11 Wlckell I a a • rjSm^SSmm Pacific Ocean ," suid Milt Uruhn Farrell 1 1 J 7 Hullon 11]] \^ammam ^SSSSmmS ^Bl^SS ^f^S ^Bi Keller 1 1 5 1 Aslason 7 111] S followlti K (lie Iladge v triumph over Ooloml ) 1 3 5 erickson 4 5 1 10 \W$m {V&IW 200 West Third St. Call Us... Minnesota Kalbrentr I T I 4 Htitclwr o 0 0 l \ Scharmer II i 0 1 Chrlitomn 0 0 0 0 Bcenuise of contracts nnd Invita- ¦¦ «" ¦* uuuv PAST Fostar 0 0 1 0 C< Xbed£ TirX.X. Dai,Ui!T£ WW Phone 6060 ON Z™ tions , tho Dig Ten has been rep- Tot»l» 11 20 IJ 41 in Una $\ \ \ ^H ^-JKBaW , ON-THE-FARM \ resented In the Hose Bowl every Totals 11 II It 41 WINONA. T U 10 4—41 ^SSfti 8^ SERVICE j yenr following the 1948 HARMONY IJ 39 13 IS—«1 f 1 1 ' ¦ |: season. ^^- ^ i'U?^!il-AAAAi??VW_B> __M««_l__^^ wM^l ; , .i ' : :' '-^ i .i i i V:i.-:i N |i l wp'. .'|iiiiiiii | l New YorkrOldfimers^Nea By JACK CLARY second In the East by beating Dallas Texans beat winless Oak- ies and the bruising play of the 284 yards through the air. The Eagles (2-8-1) snapped a Associated Prat* Sport* Writer fourth-place Pittsburgh (6-5) 35-14 land, 35-7. Giants defensive team, six of He had help for the second seven-game winless streak with while the surging Chicago Sears The Giants (9-2) once more whose members are over 30. straight week from fullback Jim- Sonny Jurgerisen hitting Tommy Those so-called "old" New York (7-4) kept their Western title Giants are tip to their even older used the perfect blend of exper- Skins' quarterback Norm Snead, my Brown, now recovered from a McDonald with one TD pass and hopes alive with a 57-0 walloping ience and youth in beating Wash- who bombed the Giants with four wrist injury. Brown scored three racking up 342 yards passing after habits today — that of grabbing of the Baltimore Colts (5-6) . The ington (5-4-2) titles in the Eastern Conference for the second time. touchdown passes last month, got times and upped his TD total to being criticized last week as the Giants and Bears face each other Quarterback Y. A. Tittle, 35, only one and finally retired in the 15. He picked up 110 yards rush- prime reason for his teano's dis- of the National Football League. next Sunday in Chicago. threw three touchdown passes- The Giants, whose ' alleged old to final period for rookie Galen Hall, ing for a season total of 787, well mal season. In other NFL games, Philadel- end Del Shofner, 27, and Johnny who tossed a pair to Dick James. below the Packers' Jimmy Taylor, A recovery arid pass age is more often mistaken for phia upset the Dallas Cowboys, Counts , 23, ran back opening proven experience, all but stashed the Continued improvement by who leads with 1,168. by 'defensive back away 28-M; San Francisco defeated St. kickoff 90 yards for a touchdown. quarterbacks Frank Ryan and Wade all but drove the Colts out Dale Messer set up two touch- their second straight confer- Louis, 24-17; and the Los Angeles Tittle set a club season record of ence title Sunday and fifth in the Billy Wade sparked both the of Baltimore's Memorial Stadium, downs by the 49ers (5-6) as quar« Rams : and Minnesota Vikings 25 touchdown passes, 10 conning Browns and Bears. Ryan, . who throwing three scoring passes and terback John Brodie scored twice, last seven years with a 42-24 vic- played a 24-24 tie. tory over the Washington Red- > against the Redskins. He is only took over for the injured Jim picking up 328 yards as the Colts and set up two with passes to Jim , In the only scheduled American eight away from breaking the Ninowski last month and has kept were shut out for the first time Johnson. John David Crow scored skins who dropped from second Football League games, Houston NFL mark of 32. to third in the Eastern race. the Browns in contention, tossed since 1954 and suffered the worst his 12th TD this year ior the defeated San Diego, 33-27, and the Washington suffered from injur- three TD passes arid picked up drubbing in their NF*L history. (2-8-1), ' New York needs only a victory Cards mm in one of its final three games to ^^^^^^ ~ ^^~ ^~ ^^ml^^^^^ m^^^mm^~ ^~m^ ^m~~~^m^~~~^^^^ m~^m' ^ mm'^~ m^m*m^^^* m' ^* m'^^*^* ia ^^^*^** '^*amM ^ma ^mmm amammmmamammmm ^mmm ^mm i ^^^mammmmmmar get the title and head for what it hopes will be a title rematch with the Green Bay Packers. Green Bay, whose 37-0 victory over the G-iants in the title game last year made.Athem-;;Jook even older than they are remitted to be, holds a one-game edge over De- troit in the Western Conference. Both were idle Sunday. Cleveland (6-4-1) moved into !Hufl-Wiwnger Wins Orlando ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' • . ' " . './ ; ¦ ¦ ' .' , ^^______^______j^______^ ^ By ^ ' !_. _____Bi^___la__iv UPS AMD DOWNS . . . Lee Folklns (88), Dallas Cowboys 3 Strokes ¦end, tries to leap over upended Don Burroughs (45), Philadel- ORLANDO, Fla. UP) — Bo Win- phia Eagles back, but is pulled down, by Eagles' Mike McClel- inger won the $35,000 Orlando Open Go3f Tournament with a lan (23) , in second period of Sunday's Eagles-Cowbx>xs pro-foot- -w ,lla ¦ ¦ ¦ gamble, but he had an. ace in the a_ a_R_R_R__R_R_R_R_R_R_R_R_Me_HBSnS_R__l _**^ 1^— -v1"^^ t*H_ l e_R_R_R_R_R______l' 1 I _.^_# ' _hl_k-»_._rf _ " ball game iii Philadelphia. Folkins had taken a paiss from Don hole. lleredith good for 15-yards and a first down, (AP Photofax) After it was over Sunday, he !______¦ wng-plapglZ ;; told the crowd around the 18th IHHHB! /^T? P AT green of the Rio Pinar Country LVOWLING GHArViPS REPEAT Club that there's an old axiom on the PGA tournament circuit that "you can 't beat an injured play- er. f______J ' VWI . Vvl 11Ww ^ M ; '¦ ' WVUJ . On Friday, after his second ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Hl I^V* « * "^_ ^ "".1^*" y^J^V-Wl'M ' aV " ' " amr^^mt i^il^il^il^il^il^il^il^il^il^l' ' Cartel>, Lxidewig round of par golf , Wininger went hunting, . caught his thumb in the loading mechanism of a shotgun and sliced it open. Less than two 3«9o VALU hours before he teed off for bis ALBUM ; Cop 'Wpfld-TtflGS final round, he brolte a tooth ^^^^^^HMKfl- pl q|0UBTIME - E :; while eating breakfast. °| __|M|^B|8V 10 GnEATARTISTS TWO ^ ^mmmW -^ ¦ ' CHICAGO (AP) — Tliere's no point. |HHHHH ^^ t; ^ ^ alK ^att^HHH' "* . CrwlxlotlOTxl. Kif xx^mi • ^^^^^ » C* easy way for Don Carter of St. The 40-year-old Oklahoma City ______HflR |B__^_____9 ____B^HWMr a^^^^^^^^ l Mrs. Ladewig on the other ham), pro then went out and shot , a 4- I ^^ [^^^^ [^^ KJ IIy lHG . I COlUBBUgtCmfWDUtmisil BBP ^ Louis, who has annexed his fifth |4aywta»/ Co)iMiK« *»c«75La)| ' ' «D a^aa^aa^ia^iH ^ captured her third World's title- under-par 67 for a 72-hole total of . ______H ______&fl{______§_jy_ ' jA ' World's Invitational bowling title she also won in 1957 and I960— aaVII«# ^^ "^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH in six years. 274, one stroke ahead of 30-year- by a substantial margin of nwre old Bert Weaver of Edgewater Carter, who also won tlie title than seven Petersen points. Gulf , Miss. to 1957-59-60-*31, .joined Mrs. Ma- The world's titles art decided Ladewig of Rapids, The winning checlt el $5,300 rion Grand on Petersen points which are was the biggest in Wininger's 10- Mich., as 1962 titleholders Sunday given on the basis of one point professional career. It took only after a see-saw four-game year FOR A WONDERFUL ¦ ^^ ¦ l f for each game won plus addition- his winnings to $17,705. I^^^^ KS^B^iH^^ ffi ^H^H^ CHRISTWAS ¦¦ ¦¦ battle with Ray Bluth of St. Louis al points for every 50 pins knocked Dow Finsterwald of Tequesta, ^^^^^^ B |^ H^^ H^ || 9^ HnH ; : ^kMiiy that saw Carter emerge as cham- down.' | ' Fla„ finished three strokes behind pion by less than one Petersen Carter and .-Bluth , : who, staged Wininger , at 277. Tied at 279, the same type of finish in 1961 five strokes off the pace, were with Carter again emerging on Miller Barber of Rye, N.Y., who top, battled through four games matched the course record with with Carter winning two and his last round 65, and Ted Kroll Chiefs Unbeaten Bluth winning two. However, Car- of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. WHEN SNOW SAYS "NO/"... .^^^ 1^^^ 3 ter had more pins and finally end- ^ ed tip with the title, 320.46 points After Six Games to 320.17, despite losing the final Michigan Tech By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS game to Bluth, 215-181. GO... GO... GOODYEAR! ^ H^j The Long Beach Chiefs, a re? The woman's division was Six Romps 5-2 cent transplant from Hawaii, are strictly no contest as Mrs. Lade- ^ wig, a 48-year-old grandmother, DULUTH, Minn. W) — Michigan | WITH HEW BUDGET-PRICEDWfl ffER tlRlS a4|^MH^B| threatening to make a runaway straight erf the American Basketball took the lead on the first day and Tech reeled off its 22nd League race. held it despite several t&allenges victory Saturday night with a 5-2 | 3-TNYLONSUffE-Gft/PSwith $|AQC by 18-year-old Judy Audsley of hockey "victory over Minnesota Du- VS 'W ^Bfl a^Ha^P^H 1 The ^Chiefs, who transferred tAllfA-TfCAUllUNGoo>ii>i>i*ii'*^*ii'yTm>>l*i la i J-mr gnnri fStaxI Chiefs, leading only 74-70 going Colts for Meiias I ist.r -aa>aa«eilttttttff'***' into the period, outscored the To Oaks 30-13 in tho quarter and ¦' ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)-The trade made by the Red Sox In made a rout of it. trade-conscious major leagues sig- five days. They acquired slugging ¦ naled the opening of the annual first baseman Dick Stuart from. baseball convention today by com- Plttburgh last- Wednesday in ex- PLATTEVIILE 10TH pleting three major player swaps change for pitcher Don Schwatt OMAHA, Neb. 00 - Piatteville with the promise of more to come. and catcher Jim Pagliaroni. The State College, winner of the 1962 The most important transaction Pirates also threw in relief pitch- Wisconsin State College cross involved the Boston Red Sox and er Jack Lamabe. country Championship, placed 10th the Houston Colts. The Red Sox, , In a 2-for-l trad*, Baltimore ac- NELSON TIRE SERVICE Inc. in the national small college meet still on the prowl for right-handed Branches in Minneapolis, Minn., Madison, Wis. and Springfield, III. hitters who can tattoo the left quired catcher Dick Brown from at Omaha Saturday. Platteville Detroit in exchange for veteran finished in the same- spot in the field wall at Fenway Park, traded NAIA event just one year ago. away their American League bat- receiver Gus Triandos with utility Fourth and Johnson OR THESE AREA DEALERS: Phone 2306 ting champion , Pete Runnels, for outfielder Whltey Herzog. The Orioles" were counting on Brown , Houston's slugging outfielder , Ro- GORDY'S DX SERVICE DURAND Oil CO. JOHNSON CHEVROLET GROV! SHELL SERVICE man Mejias. 29, to do the Sulk of the catching next season. He batted .241 in 134 Alrna, V/l». Durand, Wis., Houston, Minn. Sprlna Oreva, Mtnn. I MONEY-Money I Runns-li also won Hit Amsricsr. games with 12 homers and 40 runs | When you need money— | GEO. NELSON GARAGE BAUER MOTOR CO. PIETREK SERVICE STATION GIL'S MOBIL SERVICE League batting title in 1960, batted in. , Minn. Durand, Wis. Independent*, Wis. | »2 5 To »600 | .Although Runnels hit .326 last . Triandos, 32, has been troubled Altura Spring Qrevi, Minn. ¦ ¦ At Pu blic Finance we're I * by injuries the last three seasons. season to Mejias .288, new Red GAMOKE SERVICE DAVE'Si 66 SERVICE JOHNSON MOBIL DAN ||l BROS. OARA0B ' your kind of people, and J Sox manager Johnny Pesky was A hand injury limited him ' to 61 Arcadia, Wis. Durand, Wis. Laneiboro, Minn. I we like to do business with I * power games last season vhen he baited Stockton, Minn. convinced Mejias long ball $ ' j people like you. | would be more helpful than the only .159. Herzog; a- 09-gnme per- REBHAH B SERVlCE JE PE"RSI ~ A SCHE.DEGGiR ittl CliMts Bldg. ftion* JMS I 76-80. lips from Cleveland in return for Arcar,Arcama, S.yvis... s5b. M?„r MOWING BROS. .J. This was the second interleague pitchers Ron Nlscliwitz, a lefty, .«, » ««,-,.„ --»„,-- Mabsl, Minn. Waumandao. Wis. PIETREK STANDARD SERVICE BEN'S SINCLAIR SERVICE and righthander Gordon Seyfrledl. A IM rmu ciiu ini SrMICBKsvMlfMr IMPiMPLEMBNTuMBNT CO.ro Phillips batted .258 last season , hit Arcadia, Wis. Ettrick, Wis. AASE* 'S CITIES SERVICE ^ « ¦tfi.i<,<,i^IA . r,sn Mondovi, Wis. WhlMhall, Wis. MAN, I'D V VOU DONT MWATYflrJD lT GIvi ^ 10 homo runs and drove in 84. BILL'S "«16" SERVICE A.* C, PRUSSINO & SON NEED TO REAL VOU A AAAM- ,«,«.„„» ! ,»»«. AUTOAHTA USALESI K CO.rn SURE Manager Bob Schsfflng of th« Blair, Wis. Poumtaln City, Wis. lEDSBUHR £ARAOE UKE: A SMOKE TO TOBACCO SI26 TOBACCO »..».«..»•.« «,»».» rn...«.M Monay Crssk. M nn. Whlfshall, Wis. Tigers said Phillips . 32, will vie BARENTHIN'S SKELL7 SERVICE^ «: SMOKE. ENJOY REAU k TftSTE. LIFT, TOO. BRATSBLRQ OARAGE u.BYrni.^ « 1M RBIPCATM HIII L BRVIM J with holdover Steve Boros and Galasvllls NEW HARTFORD GARAGE BWESATH ^5 S SERV1CIS J TOBACCO. 7JE5 -gT |rt < Bratsbiwa, Minn. , Wit. . H?,, _____^ rookie Don Wert for the regular -* Mntt - third hfise job. CALEDONIA IMPLEMENT CO. GENE'S SMIL "On.tlto.Square" "'" "'""" ' „ NORB'SwrtB. ,2, SHELL SJERVICBL,,, _l If w%\ COPENHAGEN, Calsdwla, Minn. Galasvlllt ROLUNGSTON* CO-OP I _M Slf" fffi VI'fm V\ ^T^amTP^amaam^*^amatwT^Tr _F/ _F Birdie Tebbets, Cleveland man- , Wis. planned to open tho Rolllnaitons. Minn. Wlnw«< Minn. ager, «oid he RICE at ROVERUD R|L>S SHELl 1083 season with rookie Max Alvls, Calidcnla. Minn. WESTERN MOTOR SALES from San Galasvllle, Wis. PRESTON OIL PRODUCTS CO. who vas brought up Preston, Minn. Winona, Minn. Diego late last season where he WEIBKB SKILLY SERVICE BUD«$ STANDARD SERVICB was the Pacific Const League' s Caltd«nla, Minn. Galeivllla, Wla. BOYUM'S MOBIL SERVICE BIRNIE'S DX SERVICE s all-star third baseman, batting PRESS' HIGHWAY SHIIL SOUTHSIDB SERVICE Pttarson, Minn. Winona, Minn. over .SCO. C8",W1' Harmony, Minn. Nlscliwltz appeared in 48 De- """"' RIDGEWAY OARAGE BUNKE'S APCO SERVICE troit games, all in relief and had A. H. ROHRER DOTZENROD FORD Rldaeway, Minn. Hlphway 61 & Orrln, Winona a 4-8 record. Seyfried spent the mce 1862 campaign nt Denver where H.; ^'^. mamZaTaaXnmvc. »"< ^X w,Sffi S'tKS he had a 14-7 record. ¦ Houston manager Harry Cra-ft «» ¦-« said he planned to switch Run- ffi«>«« »«» -a' TkTsriric' ™1 :^ nels, 34, to second base, a position GIBSON'S SIANDARD SERVICB TRACY MOTORS WM. OlDBNDORI IMPL CO. ORV'S SKELLY SERVICE Lafayatta Winona THY he played before the Red Sox con- Ourand, Wis. Houston, Minn. Rushford, Minn. 4th * . verted him into a first basemntu l Kl The minor leaRuc meetings offi- RAY'S SALVAGE ANDERSON & OAKIS SKEILY OVERLAND SHELL LANGE TIRE A REPAIR SHOP DATED A PINCH cially opened today with a major Trempealeau, Wis. Spring Grovs, Minn. Lanesboro, Mtnn. St. Charles, Minn. ^La£u]j ^| league draft of minor league FRBSHNK*S^^SMH_B^^70llAeC0TA8TB players. 1 P.M. New York Help Wanted—Female 28 I Ho rw . Cattle, Stock 43 WO/WAN TO CARE for elderly person, 5 SWISS COWS—3, fresh. T and 3 week old Stock Prices Want Ads days a week. Write D-83 Dally Newt. calves at sldei 2 Swiss Heifers Dred for WHS Mafmen Market Rallies March freshening. Ktoetike S»dd It Shop, CHOOSE YOUR OWN hours. Extra ChTisf : Abbott L 68 Jones & L 50 mas money, working part-time en T»le- 117 Walnut. , Allied Ch. 43V4 Keiinecot 69 .Start Here phone- In office. Tel. B-29H, HOLSTEIN—heifer calf. Jim Hoffman, Allis Chal 16 Lorillard 44 ¦UNO ADS UNCALLED FOR— Rolllngstone, Winn. Til. 2835. Licensed SALES BARN eeds Win Impressive Amerada 116V4 Mpls lion 83& Into 51h Week, D-% 3, 35, $5, St, 74, 77, 83. LEWISTON USC N PRACTICAL NURSE ' ~ ' Am Can 44V* Minn MM 54% ~~ """ ¦ ' . -' . urges NOTICE 40 hour week. all farmers Am M&Fy 20V4 Minn P&L 39 This newspaper will be responsible for Am Mot 16-YJ Mon Chm 48 only one Incorrect Insertion of any Wage $235 with board. to bring in Dk classified advertisement published In ' ¦ . Mon . .« AT&T 115^ CALVES . U VEAL . 34'A In Area Meet Trading Active 1he Want Ad section. Check your ad Anaconda 43% Mon Ward 32% and call 3321 If a correction must be Matteson Nursing Home shortly after noon Title Winona High's grapplers return- NEW YORK (AP)—Demand fo made. Eyota , National , Minnesota on sale day as sales For Arch Dan 39 Nat Dairy 55te By ED CORRIGAN victory over the Irish would Vir- aerospace issues helped ed from Rochester Saturday with ArmcoSt 53 No Am Av 65!^ push the start promptly at 1:30, Associated Press Sports Writer tually insure the Trojans' their stock market rally into a fifth Card of Thanks Help Wanted—MaW 27 some impressive performances in Armour 40Mt Nor, Pac 36 ~~~ While most of the major owl i first national title since 1933. They week early this afternooa. HAHN- : an area wrestling meet that at- Avco Corp 243V Nq St Pw 32% FARM WORK-nrrarrled man for level For daily- hog market have been securely nailed have won all mine of their games We wish to extend our heartfelt thanks general farm, beet cows, separate mod- berths Trading was active from the and appreciation for the acts of kind- boys. Beth Steel 31% Nwst Airl 33W ern house. Stale wages, acre, family Tel. Lewiston 2667 down, the national college football so far. tracted 240 start and the ticker lagged behind ness, messages of sympathy, beautiful Boeing Air 39 Penney iAVi size, location¦ , etc.¦ Write D-Il Dally championship won't be decided so- far. The Hawks placed two boys in floor transactions twice during floral and spiritual tributes received News. . • ' ¦ ¦ until next Saturday when South- Brunswick lVVfe Pepsi Cola 43 the morning. from our many friends, neighbors and Jim McKay's club had fo come the iinals, and though they lost Chi MSPP 10 Phil Pet 47W relatives In our sad bereavement, the OPENING—Age 26-12 to take over going ern California, already the Big At noon the AP average of 60 loss- of our beloved mother. We espe- business. Must have sales ability, edu- SPECIAL. from behind and score two touch- their championship bouts, Coach Pillsbury 51 cation, character and pleasing; personal- Six winner, meets surging Notre Chi & NW 14V* . stocks was h igher by l.l at 239.3, . daily thank Rev. Emit Gelslfeld for downs in the final period to de- Chrysler Polaroid his words of comfort, the quartet, those ity. Permanent position, offers thorough FEEDER CATTLE Dame. Bob Board had much to be en- 69% 130 training with opportunity for advance- feat UCLA, 14-3, Saturday to or more than half of Friday's to- who contributed the use of their cars Southern Cal has been tapped thusiastic about. Cities Svc 53'/* Pure Oil 35W tal gain. Industrials were up 1.5, and 1he pallbearers. ment, insurance benefits. Writ* D-80 for the Rose . Bowl berth against m ale its Rose Bowl bid certain. Comw Ed 42% ECA 55% rue Family of Alvlna Hahn Pally News, Wisconsin also had to come Heavyweight Dick Glaunert bow- rails ahead by .4 and utilities by TRIPLE A—I will train qualified man Wisconsin of . the Big Ten, and a Cons Coal 37% Rep Steel 38% Personals AUCTION from behind to beat Minnesota ed 4-3 to Perkins of Rochester, a .8. 7 or woman with car to earn $30 . or Cont Caii 42% Rex. Drug 28V4 more per day in established routs work. state finalist last year, and Paul LOSE WEIGHT safely, easily and eco- w5th a touch down in the final Cont Oil 54 . Rey Tob .41% Most gains of __ Write Marvin Qutogle, 227 Allen Ave., Wed, Nov. 28 - key itockt wer* : ndmt«alty with Bex-A-Dfer-tab1ets."-Onry fWfankato,- ¦ quarter for a 14-9 decision and Heise, 175 pounds, bowed to Ro- - - Minn. —-~ PARK-REC Deere . 52 Sears Roe 75V4 fractional although some reached 98c>-;Ford/ 'Hopkins. . Sharp wind up its most successful sea- chester's Owens. " 7 DUE TO NEW products and expansion 1:00 P.M. Douglas 31 Shell Oil 32 /8 ' a full points There was a scat- ARE YOU A PROBLEM DRINKER?—Man we need sates trainees and experienced son since 1912. or woman, your drinking creates "Heise had only seven practices Dow Ch«m say * Sinclair 33% tering of small minus signs. numer- sales representatives. Wonderful career Calves-yearlings-2-year-old8 Here is how the major bowl pic- season, ous problems. If you need and want opportunity. College degree or business in bis 'life before this " du Pont 230 Socony 54 help, contact Alcoholics Anonymous, ' IBM was ahead vby 4 at one Pio- and selling experience preferred. Com* ture now shap-es up: said Board, and "Byron Bohmen, 7 neer. Group, Box 122, Winona, Minn. Steers & heifers - East Kod 10734 Sp Rand "• 12/s time but soon fell back to a gain plele company training program. Salary Loops Rose Bowl—Southern California third at 175 had never wrestled CULLIGAN IS thought ol plus commissions. ; Fringe benefits In- Cage , Ford Mot 46 St Brands 63 rnoro often, Also brood cows (8-1) 1 ¦ 6f about half that. when there Is water to clude, life Insurance, paid hospitaliza- (9-0) vs. Wisconsin . before either.' Elex; ' 59% soften. CUL- C9-1) Gen 74% -St Oil Cal Grumman jumped I Vt. Boeing LIGAN'S, 218 W. 3rd. Tel. 3600. tion, stock purchase plan, retirement Fresh native cattle Sugar Bowl—Arkansas vs. ¦ J plan. Tel. 2297 afternoons, for appoint- - The Hawk coach also lauded 103- Gen Foods 74' St Oil Ind 47 /z fell nearly 4 tlien recovered part BE THANKFUL for . quallfy workmanship, Mississippi (8-0). ment. AH breeds (9-6-1) pounder Steve -Miller who won Gen Mills 30% St Oil NJ 55% of that loss. available at WARREN BETSINGER , Open Play Cotton Bowl—Texas . ¦ vs. three matches and Bob Brewr, Tailor, t hVt W. 3rd. NO STRIKES—rso layoffs, til the over. ' " Gen Mo>( 55Vi Swift & Co 38V4. McDonnell Aircraft was oil time you want. Married, . to age 38, BUYERS—800 head and Louisiana Sta te (8-1-1). ' NOON SPECIALS for the working 95 pounds,' who scored three pins people. car essential. Send complete resume fo ( ) Gen Tel 22 Texaco 56& about 1. Well prepared and served Irfpleasant more to select from Orange Bowl — Oklahoma 7-2 and took two decisions before los- D-85 Dally News, . . vs. Alabama (8-1) . Goodrich 44VB Texas Ins 57 Generally higher were steels, surroundings. RUTH'S RESTAURANT, ing to the ultimate champion.. Goodyear 32Vi Un Pac 33% 126 E. 3rd. Open 24, hours a day, 7 ABLE CONSTRUCTION WORKERS-Over- CONSIGNORS —Yard Gator Bowl — Penn State (9-1) Chuck Bambenek took a fo urth utilities, rails, tobaccos., drugs days a Week. seas-U.S. protects. All trades. Write room and buyers de- For Season vs. Oregon State (8-2). Gould Bat 36 Un Air Lin 31Va Globe Application Service, Box 854, Bal- in the 154-pound class. 1 and jmail order-retail shares. Mo- WISS JELEANOR MILLS or Miss Eleanor timore 3, Md. BANTAM LEAGUE Gt No Ry 41% U S Rub 40 /* " Wills Schmidt, please contact Dr. H. M. mand to handle twice :• ¦ ¦ ' ¦ • Bluebonnet Bowl—Georgia Tech "Three of our matches were lost tos were narrowly mixed and w u w i ( ) (7-1-2) . Greyhound 29% U S Steel 41V* Tupper, 2232 N. . 7th ' . Sti, Grand Junc- "^ this number Red Men Club 10 Athletic Club . 01 6-2-1 vs. Missouri on referees' decisions," said the metals, chemicals, rubliers and tion, Colorado, VVljHONA COUNTY Peerless Chain 7 0 Sunbean Bread c 1 Homestk 47% West Un 26W " " Area opening for man with manage- ' The Gotham Bowl in N-ew York oils also were irregular. MEMO TO TH E LADIES-Our new Hawk coach, "and that's Ijke los- noon ment potential. Married. To age 38. No Veal Or Slaughter IB Mach 394 Westg El 32'^ luncheons will delight you. Slop and the Liberty Bowl in Philadel- ing on a flip of the coin." Jim Litton Industries was up more In on J2.15 per, hour to start. Rapid advance- Red Men C1 u b and Peerless Int HafV 493/s Wlworth «8 your shopping day, or anytime RAY Cattle At This Sale phia won't have to look too far than 2* Commercial Credit gained . ment for . righ t man. Wrfle Box 434 Chain chalked up victories in the Dotzler . and Pete Woodward low- MEYER , INNKEEPER, WILLIAMS (6-3) Int Paper 28V* Yng S & T 80% ¦ ' Daily News, for teams. Miami probably ed, in that fashion. . . . more than 1. _HOTEL. Regular Sales Every opening round of Park Eecreation will get one of the Gotham Bowl Saturday. Winona meets Rochester here At noon the Dow Jones Indus- COMPLETE NEW SELECTION — Bulova Help—Mala cr Female 28 Friday—12:00 Noon basketball action and Timex watches, Kaynar Diamonds, spots even ira the face of its 29^7 Friday nigh t in their first Big INine trial average was ahead 2.21 at U RGENT—Salespeople to handle Christ- The Redmen held the Athletic PRODUCE novelties, alarm clocks, all fresh mer- loss to Northwestern last Friday. Conference test. 647.08. chandise mas orders! Immediate commission as Lanesboro Club scoreless for two quarters to . RAINBOW JEWELERS, next sales are made. Boston College (7-2) , Texas Chris- to the post office 200 apparel Items. Man- Bond prices were mixed with on 4tr>. (Time to ager opening for qualified, full time Sales Commission ¦*in 33-14. The losers scored three ) CHICAGO J(AP) — Chicago Mer- lay-away your Christmas G ifts ) . tian (5-4 , D>uke (8-2) and West corporates narrowly higher and Wire Realsllk , (North) Indianapolis, Ind. points in the first three quarters. ) cantile Exchange—butter steadier ; Lanesboro, Minnesota Virginia (8-2 also are possibilities governments off a little. Auto Service, Repairing 10 Bill Van Deinse paced the win- for either the Gotham or Liberty wholesale buying prices *A higher ; Situations Wanted—Male 30 3 PUT YOUR CAR In fop condition for Hwy. 16 Phone 7-2192 ners with 14 ard Joe Ferguson add- Cotter loses 93 score A A 57 A; 92 A 57% ; 90 B MIDDLE AGE MAN desires Ifghf farm Bowls. winter driving. Quick and! expert serv- work, no milking. Tel 3809 Arnold Gaul- ed 13. Allan ' Sonneman was high 57; 89 C 56; cars 90 B 57%; 89 C ice , always. BROWN MOTOR SERV., ' ' LIVESTOCK ke, Rt. 1, Lewiston, Minn. Wanted—Livestock 46 for the losers -with six. Southern Cal doesn't figure to 57Vi. .; ¦ ¦- :.¦ 408 W. 4th. Tel. 5691. Peerless Chain chalked up 18 have things all its o-wn way SOUTH ST. PAUU Building Trades Technical Instruction 35 Top prices for all livestock B' Eggs steady to firm ; wholesale 13 GREMELSBACH STOCK rARDS points in the first quarter and roll- against Notr-e Dame, w3iich has Team Tilt SOUTH ST. PAUL, Minn. Ufi— (USDA1- (Special ) buying: prices unchanged to 1 high- Cattlc 7,000; calves 2,000; slatiBhler cattle CERAMIC TILE for the real modern took Lewiston, Minn, e8.00; vealers unevenly strong to extremes WE CAN'T BRAG about our bowling . . . disc with hydraulic. Ralph Belter, Rt. 1. W lg ft pf t? <9 « Pf tp ial fed white rock fryers 16^-17, $2.00 higher; tolly upturn on iflgh choice but we will strike a happy note to standard "text books and in- W L Wl sociated Press Poll, it probably Muling 4 11 i HoUkamp ; 9 on Winona. Tel. Lewiston 3750. Coca Cola "10 Winona Hotels 0 1 and prime slaughter calves steady; high your housecleanlng chores oy an expert, struction. Credit for subjects would be Mississippi which then Pellowskl 0 2 0 2 Wilson 4 4 2 13 thorough cleaning of your carpets and HOMELITE CHAlTTSA-WS Amer. Legion 1 0 JayBees 0 1 NEW YORK (A?) - (USDA) choice and prime vealers 30.O0-31.O0; good already completed. Progress Heiting 1 0 3 J St.Martln 4 3 2 10 good and choice rugs. See the wonderful difference Be sure and see the new C-l McKlnley 1 0 Paint Depot 0 1 would stand as the only undefeat- and choice 24.0O-29.0ff; ... ¦ D.Peloskl 3 0 1 i Tehlaff 5 1 3 11 Butter offerings adequate. De- slaughter calves 22.00-25.00; not enough right before your eyes; WINONA RUG as rapidly* as your time and S149.95 ed-untied national power.. Ole Miss Wo/cMek 0 0 10 Halferman 0 1 O 1 mand reduced. feeders sold early to establish trend. CLEANING SERVICE, 116 W. 3rd. Tel. abilities permit. DIPLOMA AUTO ELECTRIC SERVICE Coca Cola , American Legion, Lee 2 2 5 i St.Saurer 1 •> 13 Hogs 13,000; slow trade on barrows and 3722.; 2nd & Johnson . Tel. 54SS is No. 2 behind Southern Cal. Or Wholesale prices on bulk cartons AWARDED. - and McKinley Methodist chalked Allaire 2 0 14 Aliem I • 2 4 gilts and pri ces unevenly steady to 25 it 'could be Southwest C onference • DON'T THROW that damaged boat away ¦ REMODELING YOUR BARNS Why not Losinski 4 0 1 J — (fresh ) cents lower than Friday's Close; sows Send for Booklet— ', ' equipped set up victories in the first round of •» before you discuss Its value with us. put In a corriplete Clay winner Texas or even Wisconsin. Totals 52 10 53 about steadyr scattered lots 1-2 ; 200-220 up. Barn cleaner, comlort or lever Park Recreation Pee Wee basket- Total! 16 5 13 37 Creamery, 93 score (AA) 59W- We repair all glass boats. WARRIOR Tells You How One of the main complaints lb barrows artd I igts on early round 17.00; MFG. 5035 6th. St. Tel. 8-3866. stalls, ventilation, etc. O.AK RtDGB ball action. against Mississippi is that it does HILL 10 11 13 19-53 59% cents 92 score (A) 59-59V* S» most 1-2 19&-240 lbs 16.50-U.75; outside SALES 8, SERVICE, Mlnnelska, Minn. COTTER . 8 11 14 4—37 (B) price confined to 200-220 lbs; most 1-3 Moving, Trucking. Storage 19 AMERICAN SCHOOL, Tel. Altura 7SB4. Paced by the 15-point produc- mot play a demanding schedule. \ m score 58%-59. • 180-240 lbs 1«.25-1«.50; 240-270 lbs 15.75- Wfnona Dfsf. BUCKETS—J, used, Cheese steady. 16.25; 2-3 270-300 lb 15.25-15.7S; 1, I and WORLDWIDE MOVING — clean, expert P.O. Box 3255 r SEAMLESS SURGE tion of Steve Strelow, Coca Cola However, Ole Miss does have a - drinking cups, $6.59 medium 160-I9O lbs 16.00-16.50; few 1-2 packing, careful handling. It's easy With St. Paul, Minn. new non-slphonlng rolled over Paint Depot 28-10. each; new stanchions; 1 new 3 ton victory over Louisiana State to its Wholesale . sales, American 270-290 |b sows 15.25; 1-3 270-400 lbs 14.25- WINONA DELIVERY 8, TRANSFER, Please send FREE High School booklet. wagon, less tires, $120; 1 new 3 section Hich Gautsch led the losers with 15.00; 2-3 400-550 lbs 13.50-M.JO; 3 550-600 404 W. 4th. Tel. 3112. Free Estimates. credit. cheese (whole milk). wood lever drag with steet draw bar, eix points. " , Torres-Collins lbs- 13.00-13.75; choice 120-1« lb feeder NAME , Plumbing, Roofing 21 J65; new extension ladders. -Also several Mississippi has one more game Single daisies fresh 40%44 ceats Digs 15.S0-16.0O. used Western saddles. Kloetzke Saddle American Legion held Jay Bees Sheep 4,000; slaughter tamb trade rather ADDRESS single daisies aged 49-52 flats Shop, , 117 Walnut St.;. . scoreless the first hali and won this week against Mississippi slow, pri ces steady to 25 cents lower than KEN-WAY Electric SEWER CLEANING aged 46-53V4 processed American last week's close; slaughter ewes fully JERRY'S PLUMBING . CITY .P...... 26-4. Pat Wiltgen poured in 20 for State after having last Saturday ' ' ' : Tel. 9394 Bout Week's Best pasteurized 5 lbs 39-42, domestic steady; feede r, Jambs steady to 25-.cents 827 E. 4th . , . TWO USED the winners. Steve McCown scor- off. State should prove no prob- higher; most choice and prime wooled STATE ...... By TH E ASSOC IATED PRESS swis-s (blocks) grade "A" , Accredited Member 7.50x24 implement lires ed all four of the losers points. lem. ^e-Sft slaughter lambs 19.50-20.00; choice 18.50- ELECTRIC ROTO ROOTER With the Eddie Cotton-Voa Clay grade "B" 42-48 grade "C" 39-43. 19.50; mixed good and choll. 9509 or 6436 1 year guarantee McKinley dumped in 10 points tered games Saturday—the Army- fight postponed until Dec. 5, the \yholesale egg offerings fully good 16.00-17.50; .utility 14.00-16.00; cull $20 each. In the final quarter in a come- 11.00-14.00;. ccjtl to good shorn slaughter CALL SYL KUKOWSKI Business Opportunities 37 [ Navy clash in Philadelphia is the boxing spotlight this week shifts ample on large whites: short on ewes 5.00-6.5X); deck choice and fancy _ ~ ~" from-behind . 16-10 victory over • big one — the season ended for to the 10-roim d bout in Los An- 75 lb wooled feeder lambs 18.50; most YOUR WJFE is much too nice to be a OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS KOCHENDERFER & SONS Winona Hotels ' Scott Feather- standards and checks and age- choice and fancy 17.50-18.00; choice 16.50- garbage collector . . . have an In-Slnk- Get paid weekly, healthful work. Lib- i most teams last weekend. geles between young Billy Collins quate on balance. Demand good 17.25; good 1 4.5016.00. . . . Erator Garbage Disposer Installed now, eral terms to right man In choice fer- Founta3ti City, Wisconsin stone was high scorer for trj&,win,- with the exclusive detergent shield — r itory as sales representative for Wis- Dartmouth, Ivy League cham- and the colorful Raymundo (Bat- .ajid consin's greatest nursery, established ners with 10 ' ¦ on standards and checfe- fair stops corrosion, increases efficiency. , Mark Patterson pion, turned back Princeton , 38-27 tling) • ' ¦: over 55 yea rs, No delivering or collec- eed ' SO Torres. • — on balance today. — WINONA MARKETS -.Five year warranty. Hay, Grain, F sank six for the losers. to wind up: its first undefeated- Torres, tion. Liberal guarantee. Nurseries of the 21-year old Mexican (Wholesale over 450 acres at Waterloo,, Wis. Write: EAR CORN—SJc bu.t also ducks ani MIDGET LEAGUE selling prices based Reported by FRANK O'LAUGHLIN Lanesboro, Minn. untied season in 80 years. slugger and Collins, of Memphis, McKay Nursery Company, Madison, Wis. geese. Peter Olson, ¦ ¦ W L WL on exchange and other volume Swift & Company PLUMBING 8, HEATING ~ _ ~ Tel. 675-5843. ¦ ¦ ¦ Bubl 1 0 UCT 0 1 Oklahoma, on the road back Tenn., will be featured in the na- 207 E. 3rd . . Tel) 3703 fAVE RN Su7ooo7 Tf you want a good sales.) Buying hours are from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. tavern. In a good spot, doing a good HAY—2,550 bales, put up with no rain on Elks 1 0 TV Signal 0 1 after a couple of lean years, tional television ' (ABC) fight this Monday through Friday. Help Wanted—Female 26 business. This Is It! Reail estate and It. Orvllle Lindberg, 3 miles M, ot¦ Cen- , New York spot quotations fol- These quotations apply as of noon today. ¦ ¦ ' ¦ smothered Nebraska 34-S, for the Saturday. equipment plus living quarters ' terviile, Wis. , - ' All livestock arriving alter closing time included Bubs and Elks were deadlock- Big Eight crown. Duke won its Clay and Cotton originally were lo *-: RELIABLE BABYSITTER — wanted In my In very reasonable price. See or call ed in a two-way tie for the lead will be properly cared for, weighed and home, 8 to 3:30. 645 47th Ave. Tel. third straight Atlantic Coast Con- scheduled to meet Tuesday in Se- Mixed colors: extras (47 lbs. priced tha. following morning: 3593 after 4:30. . Start Creep Feeding in the Paffk-Recreation HOGS W. STAHR Midget ference championship with a 16-14 min. ) 41-42',4; extras medium <40 3W W. Mark, Winona Tel. At One Week With attle. The hog market Is 25 cents lower. , MINNTTfclSNSED hairdresser, neat, In- _ «925 m basketball league after the first decision ov er North Carolina and lbs, average) (35 ll)s. telllgent, 24-30 years of age, to work The week's only match pairing 33-34 ; smalls Strictly meat type addillonal 20-^0 cents/ Insurance Gro-n-Glo round action. Tulsa won the Miissouri Valley fighters , ranked among the Top average ) 27-28; standards Sfrte- fat hogs discounted 20-41) cents per hun- as an assistant to a hair stylist. Guar- 38 Bubs edged TV Signal 33-30 de- race by whipping Wichita , 24-6. dredweight. anteed salary, paid vacations. Write Ten in the World Boxing ^Associ- 38'/4; checks 33!S -34 > .&. Good hogs, tiarrows and gilts—, D-84 Dally News. All replies confiden- PIG STARTER spite a 13-point fourth quarter tial. ation ratings , will be held Tues- Whites: extras (47 lbs. min.) 42- 160-180 I' U.50-15.50 AUTO INSURANCE rally by the losers. 180-200 15.50-liS.00 PELLETS Dave Bauer ay at Caracas, Venezuela. It will 44; extras medium (40 lbs. aver- No increase in rates, tallied eight for the winners. Pat 200-220 16,00 Enriched with Manarnar, min- age) 33V2-34V2; top quality (47 220-240 15.80-16.00 (First Pub. Monday, Nov . 26, 1962) low as $4.10 for liability Hope copped scoring honors be Carlos Hernandez of Venezu- lbs. erals of sea — it makes a for , ela , No. 2 in the lightweight class, min. ) 45-48; mediums (41 lbs. av- 240-270 15.20-15.80 NOTICE TO BANKERS $ months. Celtics Gunners 270-300 14,75-15.20 whale of a difference TV Signal with 14. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That - against Paul Armstead ot L-os An- erage 35-37; smalls (36 lbs. aver- 300-330 .. ; , 14.50-14,75 Sweeney' s Insurance Agency Doug Emanuel pushed in 14 as 1 sealed proposals for the deposit of tlia See Art at geles. No 7 among the chalHengers age) 27 /2-28 ,2; peewees 22-23, 330-360 14.25-14.50 funds ot Winona County, Minnesota, lor 922 W. 5th , Winona , Tel. 7108 Elks rapped UCT 37-32. Jeff ' Good sows— to champion Carlos Ortiz of New Browns: extras (47 lbs. min;) ' " the ensuing two years, will be received by Featherstone hit 11 for the losers. Top YMCA League 270-300 .. 14.75-15,00 the Board ol Auditors of said County, at York. 44-4&Vb ; top quality (47 lbs. min.) 300-330 14 .50-14 ,75 the office of Joseph C. Page. Clerk of Ihe Money to Loan 40 FARM & GARDEN YMC A JUNIOR HIGH 45-47; mediums (41 lbs. average) 330-360 14.25-14.50 District Coiirt, In the Court House, In Ihe 360-400 14 ,00-14 ,25 NEED MONEY? Whatever your specific W L W L City of Winona, In said County, up to and SUPPLY 37-39; smalls (36 lbs. average) 28- 40O-45O 13.75-14,00 need may be you'll have the funds for Celtics 1 0 Hoi Stmts o 1 until the 14th day of December, 1962, at 450-500 13.25-13,75 It when you borrow from MINN. LOAN 116 Walnut fel . 8-3769 Gunners 1 o Snakes. o 1 Pro Basketball* 29; peewees 22-23. 9:30 o'clock In the forenoon ol said day, at Kauphusman Slags— which time and place all such proposals «. THRIFT. 166 Walnut. Tel. 8-2976 and NBA 450-down ,., 10,00 so submitted will be opened and read by your money can be ready when you CHICAGO (AP)-No whea t or 450-up .., stop by, Wanted—Farm Produce 54 Celtics and Gunners remained in SATURDAY'S RESULTS 9.O0-10. 0O and In presence of said Beard. Thin and unttnlshcd hoas discounted a tie for Ihe lead the YMCA Syracuse 137, tNew York soybean sales. Corn No. 2 yel low Such proposals shall state what security EAR CORN or shelled corn wanted. jn 124. CALVES Chicago 104, Detroit 103. ' No, ¦ will be given to said County (or such George Daley, Lewiston, Minn. Tel. 4855. Junior High basketball league as 1.09^-10% ; 3 yellow l.OMi -OB- The veal market Is $1,0(1 higher on Wins 700 Meet St. Louis 97, Boston 95. ' funds so deposited and what Interest will GOOD CORN—wanted. Georfle Bronk, Rt. both teams posted win_s Saturday. *; No. 4 yellow , 1.0VA-(mi; Mo . choice ; all others steady, . be allowed on monthly balances on con- Los Angeles 139, Cincinnati 153. Top choice .,., 28 LOANS 1, Winona. (Stockton) 3 .00 dition that such funds, with accrued Inter- PLAIN NOTE-AUTO-FURNITUREl^cf Ed Kauphusman captured SUNDAY'S RESULTS 5 yellow 93%-1.00 /i; sample grade firstt Celtics edged Snake s 27-26 de- Choice ,., 25.O0-27.0O place Saturday in the Cincinnati 1JB, San Francisco 115 est, shall lie held sub|ect to draft «nd 170 E. 3rd St. Tel. 291S Articles for Sale 57 annual spite a se"ven-point, fourth-quarter yellow 91-1.0714 . Oats No. 1 extra Good . ., 20.00-24.00 payment of all times on demand. Hrs. 9 a.m. to 5 p,m„ Sat. » am to noon. TODAY'S GAMES Commerci al to good 17.00-12.00 bowling tournament of the Wi- rally by the losers. The winners Chicago at Lo-s Angeles. heavy white 73'.4; No. 2 extra The Board reserves Ihe right to rclect TWO DOMINION—2 burner hot plates, Utility 15.00-16.00 any and all proposals. Loans — Insurance $10 each. Tel, B-2853. nona chapter of the "700" Club oi hit two points in (lie final stanza. * ABL heavy -A'hite 73'4 , Boners and culls U.OO-down — America held at Keglers Lanes". Joe Ives was high for the Cel- SATURDAY'S RESULTS Soybean oil 8lAb-%a. CATTLE Daled ot Winona, Minnesota, Real Estate FREEZERS 5IW to $259, Used refrigera- Philadelphia UN), Pittsburgh 98. The cattl e market: Steers and heifers this 23rd day of November, 1942, tors $25. U sed TV) $50. FRANK LILLA Kauphusman scored 614 See- Barley: malting choice 125- SONS, 741 - tics with 10 points, Jim Heinlan Kansas City 138. Chicago 111. steady to weak: cows and bulls weak PAUL BAER FRANK WEST AGENCY «, . E. ath. ond was Hal Bilt- posted ni ne. John VVal sk i took SUNDAY'S RESULTS 1,33 n; feed 86-1.02 n. to 25 cents lower. Chairman ol said Board, and 175 Lalayette St. Tel. 5340 FOR SALE—apt. size refrigerator, excel- fjen with 601) and game scoTing honors for Snakes Pittsburgh lia, Philadelphia lOi. Drvlcd steers .and yearlings— Chairman Board of County (NexMo Telephone Olflee) lent condition. Also, gas stove. Tel. Chicago 101, Kansas City 99. CHICAGO A?T- (USDA> - Extreme lop 28 . 50 Commissioners. ••3103 or come to 511 W . flAIII. third Roger liilt- with 13 and Larry IN'Jnzloch to- Long Beach 104 , Oakland e). ' Choice to prima 26.25-27.50 Oogs, Pels, Supplies 42 Potatoes arrivals IfiO ; on track , JOSEPH C. PAGE WINTERIZE YC3UR AIR " COMDITTONER gen with (i08. taled eigh t for the losers. TODAY'S GAMES Good to choice 24.00-26.25 Clerk of said Board, .and a3mTr~pTrps3"~ No games scheduled. Comm. to good 16.00-21.50 rnalesTTel. Roinhgjtone With cold weather wrap-around Insula- Adolph Schrei- 280; total U.S. shipments for Fri- Clerk ol the Di strict Court, 2732. tion from ROBB BROS. STORE, 574 Gunners, chalked up their second Utility tt.OO-down - ~ bcr w o n the day 383; Saturday 295; Sunilaj 2; RICHARD SCHOONOVER CHRISTMAS CT~ "beautlfuP' ' E. _4lh. Tel.. 4007. win as they rolled over Hot Shots Drvlcd hel»ert— SPECYA sia- ^ "" ~ "Granddaddy supplies liberal; demand for rus- Extreme top ,.,. 27.75 Member ol said Board, and mesa klt|ens, J3 each. 561 Garfield. ARE YOU CCIING to !houe1 107 Inches " di- 46-30. Paced by the 29 points . of County Auditor. _ _ vision with 576 to Pro Football Standings sets slow, market dull ; demand Choice lo r>rlmo 25 75-26,75 of snow this winter or ore you going Todd Spe-ncer , the winners took Good to choice 24.00-25,75 Horses, Cattle, Stock 43 to do It the easy way . , with TORO- . Monday, Nov. 26, 1962) win a trophy do- for round reds fair , market about Comm. lo good ...,,...,.,. 16.00-21.00 (First Pub — " " HOMKO-BOaCAT snow blowing equip- National League PUREBRED DUROC BOARS-slred a 21-16 h alftime lead and were Utility 16.00-dowtl NOTICE by ment frbm WINONA FIRE t, POWER , nated by Vern steady; carlo! track sales: klnlio grand champion boar of Minnesota State never headed as they poured in Ea»tcrn Conference Cows- 54 6. 2nd, Tel. 5065, Fair. Vaccinated lor crtolera and try. Mahaffey, propri- W. L, T. Pet. russets 4.00; Minnesot a North Da- Extreme fop 15.25 I will not be responsible (or any "' " - 13 poinls in the fourlh period slpelas. Raised under sanitary condi- GIFT IDEA — 5 piece (IncT cover!) West . Now York 9 7 0 .811 Commercial 13.J5-14 .0O debts contracted by anyone other than etor of Keglers , kot a Red River Valley round reds tion. Farmer prices. M, W. Wlltse, St Bend stainless steel cookware. Only Doug Knnanuel paced the Hot" Cleveland 4 4 I .400 12.00 13.50 myself. , Utility Charles, /Ulnrt. 4 ' $I».B8. BA/WBENEK'S , 429 Mankato. Lanes, r Waihlngton 5 4 1 . 554 2.20; Wisconsin russet bakers 3.115, Cnnners and cullers 12 50 down Shots wit h 12. Bill Miner added Pittsburgh 4 5 0 .545 DONALD R. TAYLOR ' ' - " At n business Bulls- PUREBRED DUROC boars, and gilts, vac- DUTCH B OY Satin ego s*eli seml-oii»s eight for the losers, Dallas 4 t 1 ,400 Bologna 15.00 17,00 cinated (or cholera and •erysipelas, ctlf. enamel. For kitchen or^bath, use "Dutch meeting and ban- Kauphusman Philadelphia 7 a 1 .100 Commer4-3r>. J, Zelller, his heirs or snilnns. tlie trared 14 poinls American League production tested and certified PARTS - SALES and will extend n bid to hold tlie and Dou g Brandt 12 , and Rill Eastern Division championship liuiging on penal- Bay State Milling Company ol Minnesota, vlt: meat type litters. A good selection. - SERVICE W , L, T, pet. Elevator "A" Oralrt Prices Tho Norlhwosl one quarter (NW'.i) and Elden Schmldtknecht s. Sons, Cochrane, Washers — Dryers ties." , convcnlion in Winona the follow- Squires I I for Winona , Christensen Houston 8 J O .m leours: 8 am lo "1:30 p.m. the North one-hall (Nil) of the Norlli- Wis. jn1 mile N. of n/eumandee).. Ranges (Closed Saturdays) ens! one quarter INE 1 *), all III Section " — Refrigerators ing year. of Hnrmmny had 13. Boston 7 1 1 .700 Heed , reached by telephoj ie at ' ANGUS DULL—registered, 5 years " No. 1 northern sprlno whe-al $2. 3? Four (4), Township One Hundred S-lx old. Winona 'B' (541 HUrmony <3J) Buffalo I t 1 .455 very gentle, Also, 3,00u> fju. good corn. II KH north suburban home, rescind- No. 2 northern sprlno wheat 2.JO (106) North, Rnnoe Eleven (11) West; no ft pi tp fo ft pi tp New York 5 ( « .455 Earl Flotlum, Lanesboro, Minn. Feite s question con- No, 3 northern spring wheat 2.IA that Ilia terms ol said contract have be»n Tel. n Irmpl. Co. Ooldbora 0 3 o 3 Chrl ftenin 4 5 3 13 VVffilorn Division ed to a newsman ' KObarl 7-3/36 alter 5 , performed by reason ol which said pe- p.m, 113 Washington St, Squlrei i l | 11 Dallas ., « 1 « .818 cerning criticism in some quarters No 4 northern spring wheat 2.12 ' "" Winona National Hockey Moor 1 1 J J titioner h entitled to such conveyance, and HOLSTEIN DULLS-reolsteVeurage~Tl Brandt i 0 1 11 l(au«jen 0 Denver 7 t 0 .583 No, 1 hard winter wheat 2.08 to 111 about the many penalties in the No, 2 hnrd winter wheat 2.04 praying that the Cour t direct the admin- 20 months, Dams liavm records up to Addlnalon 5 4 1 M Johnion San Diego J a 0 .573 League 3 13 7 No, 3 lhard' winter wheat ,...,..,, 2 0? istrator with the Will annexed o( jald de- 7« lbs,, lal 4.4 test. Harry, Marks, Mon - Krcujer J 1 J 7 Wllt-ijen Oakland , 0 11 0 .000 Badger-Gopher Ramo Saturday. DAILY 3 10 7 4 Binrd winter wheal cedent to make such conveyance accord- <« Probale Court Montreal 8 S 51 91 51 flalk 0 0 ¦ Pub. * l o Room In tho Court House In Ihe Clly ot HAMPSHIRE—purebred spring bo era Now York 7 II J 16 41 70 llolloy o the championship was in nnj way NOTICE SUBSCRIPTIONS 0 1 O Winona In said County and Statei and Raymond! 0>orn, Utica, Minn. Boiton 1 10 « 10 II Ahreni 1 ] j affected by penalties. " . 70 1 that nollce of said Iwkrlna >~ ~ ~ SATURbAV'i RESULTS lorem O 0 0 o Big Ton Standings I wi ll not bo responsible for any be given hy FEEDER PIGS-55, w«ki ld piij» Keed emphasized t Ii a t lie tho publication o( this order as provided May Be Paid at notion i. Monlronl 9 (lie). Urnen 0 debts contracted by any one other than Melvln Brlfson, Rt, 1, Houston, Mlriri 0 3 0 W, L. T. Pet. by law In 1h« Winona Dally News and Toronto «, New York 1. Lanae 0 0 thought the officiating during the myself- Tel, TW 6-J9I7. 0 O WISCONSIN 4 1 0 .157 by moiled notice as provided by tho rules TEDjAAIER Chlcaoo 1, Detroit 1 (llol. DRUGS MINNESOTA Jj 0 .714 game "was very competent ," , RICHARD L. DEAN ol Ihls Court. SUNDAY'S RESULTS Tolali 31 u tr 54 Northwester* 4 2 0 .667 Daled November 23, 1962. TERRAMYCTN Building Material! Montreal J, Now fork 1, WINONA 0x . ,., 3, a, ni-H Ohio State 4 2 0 Ml Five members of the Snn Fran- E. D, LIBERA, for MASTITIS - Botlon 5. Toronto J. MARMONr . 5 31 34-35 Michigan Smia 3 3 0 .500 Subscribed and sworn lo before m« 13-tubo carton iKlr^XrpWToNlr lUlLTsiNQ^SeTTs Judge ol Probate, concrete blocks) ileal, ^? Detroit i, Chicago 3. ¦ Pgrduo ,.., 3 3 ft .500 cisco Warriors still live in l'hil- this 31it day ot November, 1262. (Court Seal) p-lnsUc, or eluml- TODAY'S GAMES $8.39 nuni windows; reinforcing, cement, and '/'lie I JM Angeles Angels had a Iowa 3 3 ft .500 mlelphin in (lie off season, They l» O'Brien, Ehrlck 8. Wolt, (FREE ell can, $1 ,41 No mmei icheduleit, r Illinois ,. ,., J J ft .US E. 0. Johnson, Nolary ubllc value) weterproollno. . .We have many monov- 46-:i, Attorneys (or R eprosonr«flv», aavlng ctos»ouf TUESDAY'S OAMBS > road record in K«12 as against Indiana 1 9 ft .147 played as the Philadelphia War- Wlnonm, Winona Cour»ty, Minnesota jpectala, EAST ENt> First National flank Building, TED MAI ER COAL J. CEMENT No Qimei ichcdulod. a 24-55 mark lfttU, Michigan 1 4 ft .143 DRUGS PR&DUCTS CO,, 901 in riors last season. (My Commission expires April 2, 1266) Rochester. Mlnnosota. AMIA1AL HEALTH CENTER E, «h. Tel. 3389. Classified Ads A^ , Wood, Other Coal Fuel 63 Apartmenti, Flats 90 Houses for Sal* 99 Wanted—Real Esttte 102 Used Cart 109 Used Cars 109 BIRCH WOOP-for sale, 777 E, 2nd. CENTRALLY r LOCATED EL. 3 BEDROOM, story and a half REAL ESTATE WANTEO-2 and 3 bed- CHEVROLET-lfSt - Bel Air, J door, pow- BUICK—W4 Spatial 4 door seden, t room apartment home. Attached garage. Gas furnace SLAB WOOD ' ¦ room hom«s. see Hank Olson, «fl E. er-pac„ aulometlc transmission, ex- sfralBht transmission, excellent condi- Good quality green slab wood. T«l. 8-1637. .. Installed l year ago. N-ow rented at 7th. Tol. »17. ceptional throughout. Tel. 8-MU 7-3543 tion, exceptionally clean. Ervln Laufln- DAVE BRUNKOW & SON CENTRALLY - LOCATED^modern upstairs $85 per month. Full price »7,500. Avall- after 6 p.m. burner, lilt Gllmora Ave. eble on contract. West central loca- WILL PAV HIGHEST CASH PRICES I Owner is discontinuing the dairy business for tho Trtmpaeleau, Wl». apt,, J rooms -and bath. Heat, hot and FOR VOUH CITY PROPERTY winter 1 cold Water, gas tion, on main line bus. ABTS AGENCY. FORD—1959, straight Hick. Inquire Bun- i range and refrigerator Another One-Owner! ke'a APCO West. months and will dispose of all his cattle at public. 1 Furnituro, Rugs, Linoleum 64 furnished, Avallatu at once, Tel. SOJB. INC., Rea ltors, 159 Walnut St. Tel. "HANK" JEZEWSKI ~ 4342 or »ft»r hours: E. R. Clay 8-2737, '59 Custom Royal Dodge 4-dr. sedan. THIRD E. 216'A-modern (Wlnona'i Only R«al Ettata Buyer) Power steering, power brakes, automa- I Uv 4¥WJ TAKE OFF 159 Walnut St. Tel. -4242 or after Truck*. v Black station wagon, ¦ cushion style, 100% nylon black leatherette upholstery, 4-cyllnder, In This One Anytime! . Sale starts at l:0O P.M. 1 FOUR ROOM APT—oath, stove, refrts- hours: E. R. Clay 8-2737, Bill Pagel PICKUP CAMPERS^ccmplete with, - or I • cover. Champagne Beige. erstor,. heat and hot water furnished. 4501, E. A. Abts 31fM, Bill Zlebell standard transmission, radio, heater, 1954 Packard Clipper club coupe, 2-ton», • ¦ - ¦ ¦ ¦ without pickup. Also Campllner Travel luggage rack, povrer steering, povwer brakes, automi- Close In. $65 month, available now. 4854. . ' . Trailers, sleeps 4. 2 burner gas stove, wnttewalls. l| Montana EUB Ladies Aid will serve lunch. I Adults. Tel. 4591, , tlc transmission, radio, htater, custom MODERN HOME—6 rooms. 555 per montti, Ice box, 13 gal. water supply. S875. upholstery. A onfowner car, driven by $129 FOUR LARGE ROOMS—unrurnlshid, full plus faxes. Inquire 955 Mankato Ave. -LARSEN CAMPER SALES. 2VJ miles | 35 HEAD OF OUTSTANDING HOLSTEINS (28 COWS) -JJ ¦ WALZ wjfa of Winona businessman and has bath, lights and hot water furnished. Tel. 6925. H.W. Of Eyota, Mtnn, on Hwy. 42. but 33,000 miles on fl. Appearance Inside Holstein cows, springers; l Holstein cow, fresh 10 days; 7 1 Private bath and entrance. Will accept H D. ALMOST NEW 2 bedroom home. Near TRUCK BODIES BUILT—to your sped- Buick-Oldsmobile GMC and out Indicates 1he excellent condi- Holstein cows, fresh 2-6 weeks and cpen; a Holstein cows, fresh m ' 1 or 1 children.¦ S43 par month, Tel. flcaflons. Expert work, BERG'S TRAIL Open Mon. and Frl. Evenings. tion. See this one to appreciate It, . 7135. - new hospital and lake. Large living ^ and fcred back; 7 Holstein cows, due winter; Jt Holstein heifers, | BURKE'S and dining area combined. Beautiful . ER, 3950 W . 4th. Tel, 4933. '.$495 i in ;§ 18 months old, open; 4 , yearlings; 1 heifer FURNITURE MART CENTRAL APTS.-276. Center. All new J bath, bulit-in stove and oven, also GMC—1960 V^ excellent condition, Holstein heifers i rooms with private bath. Carpeting, beautiful cupboards. It's . a dream home. Priced rlnht. 210 W. 3nd. |l calf; 2 bull calves. Here is a chance to purchase some large I East 3rd and Franklin draperies and completely, furnished Make yo«jr wife happy and be In l>y TAKE A LOOK NYSTROM'S type Holstein cattle, many of which are vaccinated. If looking I kitchen. Heat and hot water furnished. Christmas. ABTS AGENCY, INC., «f'-l inr JUST REDUCED $225 Imperial - || Adults. Tet. 5017 or 6790, ' Realtors, 159 Walnut St. Tel. 4242 or li/aV^ I960 G/WC TRUCK at the finest selection of quality Chrysler || for some top quality cattle from a Grade A setup, be sure to i Household Articles 67 after hours: E: R. clay 8-2737, Bill *!'* ¦"'' -' ' Model BV-*U2, 2',3-tori, used cars in this area . . . " Plymouth - Valiant attend this - ~ cab-over-«nglne, 187-Inch wb, 126*-CA, sale. Apartments, Furnished 91 Pagel¦ ¦ 4501, ; E. A. Abts 3184, Bill Zlebell Sales & Service i tl PER DAY ' rental for electric carpet ; 4854. . . ¦: . - . ' . KM Insulated van ' body (new In 164 W. ind ^ — 3 room furnished apt., . I TERMS:"Under $10.00 cash; over that amount cash or V< i ahampooer with purchase of Blus Lustre. WINONA ST. 1960), MS cu. Inch engine, S-speed Open Mondays, Fridays 'Til 9 p.m. " H. Choate S, Co. adults, utilities furnished. Available . Dec. CSOODVIEW — 4715 feth. 4 bedrooms,. Only transmission, heavy duty 2-speed rear HAVE A TALK 1 dowr and balance in rnonth^r paynvents. 8% added to balance |1 1st. Tet. 7667 for appointment. $1,500 down, 12 years old, like new. De- axle, 900x20 tires, crystal green. Thli with one of our courteous, New Cars for 6 months. Your credit is always good with the Northern $ Musical Merchandise luxe kitchen, dining area, carpeted living truck Is In absolutely new condition f _ 70 FOR AAErT^llghtTioujekeeping rooms, 1st room, oak floors, attached garage, corner . friendly salesmen . .... " M Investment Co.' ~ floor, private JEEP SALES, PARTS and service for 1 TWENTTETH CE N TURY BARTfONE-^n ¦ bath and entrance.¦ ¦ Tel. lot. Will tinance balance like rent. ' ¦m. . ,. - ' .; - ,. Winona, Buffalo and Southern Wabasha WESLEY STIEHL, OWNER ; very good cond ition, %20. Contact Peter _ . WALZ Counties. Your frsrichIsed JEEP Dealer ! I | Skaalen, Spring Grove, Minn. FRANK WEST AGENCY Tel. Business Places for Rent 92 Buy With JP. A. KRAUS6 CO., Sa, on Hwy. 14-41. ]| Francis Werlein, Auctioneer, Mondovi, Wisconsin | | 498-5134...... 175 Lafayette Buick-Oldsmobile GMG MODERN OFFICE — Contact Furs by Tel,5240 or 4400 evenings. I Northern Investment Co., Lester Sehty, Clerk Radios, Television 71 ~ ~ Open Mon. and Prl. Evenings CONFIDENCE Mobile Homes, Trailers 111 ^ Francis. CENTRAL LOcATION-rtere lt.li. This. Is , from the finest deal of all. m ¦ Represented' ¦ by Chuck Accola, Mondovi Wisconsin § a lovely 3-bedroom mcxJern home, nice CHAMPION TRAUTER . HOUSE-lOxJO, 2 - - " • ' • ' '' ' • ' " ' ' j | RADIO AND TV REPAIR, all maKes, ex- Garages for Rent 94 bedrooms, only used 8 weeks. See Wil- ^• pert work. WINONA FIRE & POWER, kitchen and dining room, spacious living ¦ ' ¦ room, oil heating system, 1961 CHEVROLET, 4-door, 6 liam A, Witt, 808 Spruce Dr., La Cres- 54 E. 2nd. Tel. 5065. GARAGE—for rent. 31016 E. -4th. . ' full basement, TRUCKS cent, double oarage, landscaped lot. Immediate cylinder, standard shift. Minn, or Tel. TW 5-2152: FOR BETTER RADIO TV SERVICE Houses for Rent 95 possession. Only $14,500. Owner transfer- 1961 FORD Fairlane 500, V-8, Breza's TV Service ^ red. Call and Auction SaleT o3 W. Belleview . Tel. 747t. MODERN FAMJLY typa house. No fib- automatic transmission, ra- - " ~~ Jirilon to children.; Close to schools and W. STAHR , etc. ALVIN KOHNER USED TELEVISION SETS—consoles and dio AUCTIONEER, CJty and state The) churches. Immediate occupancy at 203 374 W. -Mark Tel. licensed portables/ alze and style you want . Hill St., Fountain City, Wis. Inquire 6935 PICKUPS 1960 OLDSMOBILE 98, 4-door and bonded. ?52 Liberty St. (Corner at. ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ E. 5th and Llbert-y). |; . 1M'/I»- Hill, / ; " ' , . .. ' . . . . hardtop, full power, the T«l. 4980. ' - ¦ ¦ AUCTION^ . Hardt' s Music Store 1961 CHEVROLET Carry-all; V- p. - MODERN¦ 7 room¦ ¦ 'home.¦ ¦ ¦ Inquire 270 E. BY OWNER works. Real sharp. Minnesota . 118 E. 3rd Winona 5tn. ' , .. . :.: ' . .;¦ 8, standard shift and over- I 1 mile west of Fairchild on 10, then 3 miles south on Town . : drive. Excellent unit. 1960 OLDSMOBILE 88, Coupe. Land I Road. Watch for N.I.C. arrows. Winona's Finest Electronic Repair NEW 3 BEDROOM homes for rent. W Mo/lern 5 room home with air Real nice. $' Auction Sales / for All Makes per month and W) per month. Bob conditioner, automatic washer 1960 CHEVROLET Carry-all . 4 Everett- j. Kohner Selover Realtor, 110 Exchange Bldg. WD , V-8, 4 speed transmis- 1960 CHEVROLET Impala, 4- 158 Walnut .8-3710, after hourt ?«U Don Ehrnann TV Sexvice and lull bath. Fine lot and , NOV. »7-Tues. 1 980 W. Filth Tel. 6303 BROADWAY W. 533—Modern 2-lwdroom , door hardtop, economy 6 p.m. 5 miles N.W. house, garagi, adults preferred/ no location at Canton, Minnesota. . sion lock out hubs, radio Of Melrose, 11 miles E. of Ettrick on Satiuitday December 1 Authorized Dealer for standard shift. One of the "D, t ADAAIRAL-MUNTZ-ZEN 1TH . pets, inquire 531 W. Broadway. Here is a unit with very Joiv " Peter Jo/inson estate, owner; Al- I Across the street from the sharpest on the lot. vln Kohner, euctioneer; Northern Inv. ONE OR TWO bedroom home, no ablee- mileage and priced to move. m Sale starts at 11 ;30 A.M. Lunch will be served. High School. . Co., clerk. ¦ - ¦ 1959 CHEVROLET Impala, . || 4- || lion to l or.2 children. Available' Dee, 1955 CHEVROLET Carry-all , 4 ^ " 1. Tel. 2459...... COMPLETE $3 dpor hardtop, with power, Jet NOV. 58-Wed. iz noonT^J miles S. ol 50 HEAD OP QUALITY CAXTUE (86 COWS) - 14 Holstein For Reliable ,250. WD, and it's reargood. Eleva or 'U miles N. of Independ- 1 GILMORE VALLEY—7 room house, 3 bed- 1961 CHEVROLET, % ton pick- black. . ence, on Hgwy. 93. . He'nlg. & Stevens i cows, close springers; 6 Holstein cows, due Jan.; 2 Guernsey rooms and family room. Tel. 6-3866 or Tel. 743-3369. 1959 THITNDERBIRD, loaded Auctions; W. A. Zeck, auctioneer; North- f a , side; 5 2535. up. Nice as they come. cows, close springers; 1 Holstein cow fresh calf at TV or Radio Repair with everything. Nice and ern Ihv. Co., clerk. Holstein cows, fresh 12 weeks; 5 Holstein cows, due Feb.; 1 MODERN 2-BEDROOM home-Fenced-hi 1954 CHEVROLET % ton pick- NOV. 29—Thurs. I p.m. Hlxton, Wis., on | yard, garage, reasonable rent. Tel, ,4125. white. I Guernsey cow, due Feb.; 2 Holstein cows, due spring; l Hol- Call us ... We are your ¦ up. Excellent. , Highways 95 and 27. Al and Esther Topp, COMPLETELY MODERN 2 bedroom ' •Guardian's . ' 1954 FORD % ton. 1958 PONTIAC -4-door hardtop. owners; Alvin KLohner, auctioneer; Com- 1 stein heifer, close springer; 8 Holstein heifers, bred ; 1 Holstein PHOTOFACT EQUIPPED home. I child preferred. No dog. 9 miles Sal*? Clean, sharp, low milage. munlty Loan aV Pin, Co., clerk. 1 heifer, 18 months old; 3 Holstein heifers, 1 year old. A herd S. of Winona. Frank Nottteman. Tel. 6 room house and lot at Many other pickups to 1957 CHEVROLET, 4-door hard- NOV. 30—Frl, 11 a.rn? l lnTirvvTfl"Mel- of good milky cows. Some of them vaccinated. Look herd over ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN 9612. rose. Mrs. Mabel Sholes, owner; Kohner I choose from. top, Bel Air, V-8, Power- 8, Schroeder, auctioneers; before sale. MODERN 8-room¦¦ ¦ (tome,¦ oil furnace. Tel. Northern Inv. H ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' - ¦ glide. Co., clerk. * "We understand your se£ best." 6421. . ' ' . 709 L 3rd Pretty red and white. I DAIRY EQUIPMENT - Surge 4-5 unit milker, 2 years TWO BEDROOMS, living room, tclfohen, 1957 CHEVROLET, 4-door hard- NOV . 30—Frl. 1 p.m. 9 mlieT"E. ol Alma ^S old; 2 Surge seamless buckets; 2 Surge seam buckets. bath, garage. Ideal for young couple or Sealed bids accepted with 10% top. One of the nicest you on Country trunk "E" to Cream, then We're fully equipped with a 1 mile N. on State Hgwy. II to Club ' ,000 bales mixed hay ; 8 couple with 1 or 2 children. Tel, 7131. deposit until 3 p.m,, Nov. 28, BIGAL.K will find. 1 FEED — 80fl bu. Rodney oats; 3 SAM'S PHOTOFACT LI- 81, then 3 miles E. on County Trunk I ft. silage in 14 ft. silo. ; ' '''* . ' ¦ SMALL MODlRN^iiome, 1 mile W. of 1962. CHEVROLET CO. 1957 CHEVROLET, 4-door 210. >X (Jahn's Valley). Wesley Stletil, own- . : . BRARY—the world's finest TV- Lewiston on U.S. 14. George Daley, er; Francis Werleln, auctioneer; North- 6 Berkshire brood sows, some showing pig; 16 Lewiston, Mlrin.- ' Tel. 4W. , 6 cylinder, Powerglide. Real I HOGS — Radio service data. We have _; HARMONY MINNESOTA ern Inv. Co„ clsrk. wt. 80-100 lbs.; 3 Berkshire boar. rooms, oil heat, avail- Terms: Cash. good. i Berkshire feeder pigs, avg. the complete manual covering MODERN HOME—6 Tel. 88-6-3622. OEC. 1—Sat. 12:30~lun"; 3mlle* W. of able Dec. 1st. See Hank Olson, 900 1957 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille. Galesville, Wis. j. Robert Hammond, 1 40 SHEEP — 80 ewes, 2-5 years old; 9 lambs; 1 buck. the very set you own — that's Tet. 2017. Right reserved to ¦¦ E. 7th, reject any Open evenings. 1957 OLDSMOBILE 88, 4-door. owner ; Alvin K-ohner, auctioneer; North- i . ' ¦ ¦ 1950 F-l Vi TON PICKUP — 34,000 actual miles. why we understand your set and all bids. Sale subject to ern Inv. Co., clerk. best! Wanted to Rtnt 96 1957 CADILLAC 4-door. ¦U :3T~ 1 TRACTOR MACHINERY — Case LA.tractor, 4 plow size, probate court approval. DEC. 1—Sat. a.m. 1 mlla W. of WANTED TO RENT—2 or 3 tedroom Used Car* 109 1957 CHEVROLET convertible. Falrchlld on 10, then- 3 miles S. on 1 real powerhouse; M.H. twin power 101 tractor, 6 cylinder, home by party movtna to Winona. Tet. 1957 PONTIAC, 2-door/straight Town Road. Raymond Stuart, owner; , 14-inch USE OUR VARIOUS W. A. Zeck, auctioneer; Northern Inv. I new rear tires; M.H. tractor cultivator; 2 Case 3-bottom 5i48. . . ; . ¦ Available for inspection from 3 FALCON—1941, 4 door, 1 owner, 8,800 stick ; Case 2-bottom, 34-inch tractor plow PAYMENT PLANS FOR miles. Reasonable, Tel. 3376. , ' Co., clerk. . f| tractor plows on rubber Land for Sale 98 to 5 p.m., Friday, Nov. 23 and 1957 P L Y MOUTH 2-door, tractor disc; J.D. field cultivator ; Farms, CHEVROLET—1955, Bel Air station wag- , DEC. 1-Sat. It a.m. 4 miles SE; of | | for parts; McD. 10 ft. tandem REPAIR COSTS. straight stick. Hokah, AUfirt. on Hakah-Broiv/isWIle delivery; New Holland 40 ACRE FARM—with stock, machinery, Monday, Nov. 26. on. Priced for quick sale. Harold T. M M.H. 7 ft. power mower; Roto rake side Johnson, Harmony, Minn. . Ridge Road. Sam t> Helen Moore, own- feed, furniture. Vi plowland, Vi pasture. 1957 PLYMOUTH, « cylinder, ers; Schroeder Bros., auctioneers; Thorp I 68 Hayliner hay baler ; Oliver No. 15 combine with Wise. H. Choate & Go. 11 cows, 7 heifers. Carl Hlllestad, Rt. CHEVROLET—1954 2 door, tires like new, standard shift, overhauled. Sales Co., clerk. motor; M.H. tractor corn planter with fert/; Graham 7 ft. plow; Osst0 Wl1, Merchants. National Bank winterized, very good runnlna cond f _i' ' ~- lion. Tel. 6-2273. 1956 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. f J.D, 10 ft. grain drill on rubber with fert. and grass seed, SUGAR LOAF-acreage, . about VJi acres, Trust Dept. one of the sharpest you will • Refrigerator*- 72 In city limits, bordering on hardtop high. 1954 FORD VICTORIA hardtop-Fully RESTAURANT § good shape. . way. Only $2,100. See or call equipped. See at 361 Druey Court, Apt. .see. I OTHER MACHINERY - Electric wide axle rubber tired NEARLY NEW tarae Westlnghouse selt- STAHR B alter 3, No phone. __ 1956 CHEVROLET, 4-door, V-8, EQUIPMENT wagon; steel wheel wagon; bob sled; 2-wheel tractor trailer ; defrostlno refrigerator-freezer. Tel. 4W7 W. "j ,"i WTBUICK ELECTRA Jf or 2328. . . ' 374 W. Mark Tel. 6925 GUARDIAN SALE -7r\P Powerglide. || combination rack and grain boot ; 3-section flexible steel drag _ \\ /Sr 1 "!25" 4Klr.-Hardtop. 1956 CHEVROLET, 2-door, V-8, s Refrigeration & Supply Houses for Sale 99 8 room house and lot T* ' '•' Power steering, power M with folding draw bar ; McD, horse manure spreader on rubber ; Ed' brakes, radio, heater, tinted ojass, Powerglide. Real nice. AUCTION Commercial and Domestic i horse grain binder; J.D. corn binder with bundle carrier; dump 226 GRAND ST. whitewalls, light blue, excellent shape. Due to quitting business we 553 E. 4th Tet. 5532 COMPLETELY FURNISHED-Two bed- 1956 CHEVROLET Bel Air, 4- P rake; JD. 10A liammermill; 2 sets screens; 300 gal. fuel tank; rooms, luxurious bathroom, deluxe kitch- door. are disposing of all restaurant Specials at the Store 74 en. It's a mobile home price under Lovely spaciou s home, above i Wards 30 gal. water heater. ' WALZ 1956 FORD, V-8 , equipment at auction. $4,000, payments S43.3J a month. New average in every respect. , standard shift i§ TERMS: Under $10.00 cash; over that amount cash or V* NAME BRAND small appliances for and complete from RED TOP MOBILE 2-door. A complete line of restaurant to Christmas gifts. Small down payment. HOMES, H|nhw>y 61, W inona, Downstairs — 2 bedrooms, full Buick-Oldsmobile GMC i down and balance in monthly payments. 3^4 added balance FIRESTONE STORES, 300 W. 3rd St. Open Mon. and Frl. Evening! 1956 FORD; V-8, , equipment including: 2 walk-in fu|. tile bath, living room with fire- standard shift for 6 months. Your credit is always good with the Northern Tel. 6M0. . ' WESTDALE 476—3-bedroom' rambler, coolers, cash register, milk i ly carpeted, large living room and kitch- place, dining room, kitchen , 4-door. dispenser, steam table, Hub- I Investment Co. 10% en, bullt-tns, disposal, double garage, sunroom. Upstairs — 2'large Good Car-—Good Buy 1956 MERCURY . oft on all rec room In fcasement. Tel. 8-3875. bedrooms, full bath, small den , \15T Ford . Falrlane, charcoal brow n, 1956 OLDSMOBILE S u p e r, 4- bard dish washer, slicer, malt I RAYMOND STUART, OWNER HALLMARK & GIBSON WILL TRADE my home for West Location whlltrwalli, rudlo, heater. door. mixer, full fountain equipment, W. A, Zeck, Auctioneer, Eau Claire, "Wisconsin , R.t. 22 sreeflng cards during or Goodview, Beautiful modern Florida cedar closet, $895 f| November. furnished, all electric. SHANK, 1956 OLDSMOBILE 98, 4-door, Cory coffee maker, 20 leather |] Northern Investment Co., Lester Senty, Clerk home, all booths, Kelvinator deep freez- TED MAIER DRUGS 552 E. 3rd, Winona. Many closets and extra con- NYSTROM'S hardtop, real clean. I Represented by Lyman Dutter , Strum , Wisconsin IMMEDIAT E POSSESSION-476 Hiawatha veniences. Double garage, 1956 OLDSMOBILE Super, 4- er, counter, 20 tables, stools, Stoves, Fuijpaces, Parts 78 Blvd. New r ambler, 2 bedrooms, alt corner lot. Imperial - Chrysler coat trees, Aslesen potato peel- modern, attached garage, breezeway. door . sharp. , Tel, e-2580. Plymouth - Valiant er, exhaust with electric fan SIEGLER—oil healer, 5 room size like Sealed bids accepted with 10% Sales S. Service Many other models from 1955's and full line of dishes and new, with thermostat. Inquire 16! High GOODVIEW-2 bedrooms, carpeted living 1(4 W. 2nd Forest. room, landscaped, good condition. Tel. deposit until 3 p.m., Nov , 29, and down./Priced to move be- ot/her equipment used in res- ~ ~ ¦ , Ocen Mondays, Fridays 'Til t P.m. . OIL H¥ATEir-T2 oTl barrel3, pipes¦, 85, 7689. 1962 Terms, cash. Right re: fore the snow balls hit. taurant business. Tel. J157, BY OWNER-3 bedroom home, fireplace, served to reject any and all kitchen, full basement, H«=ATIN G7 HEATING I - The largest ««¦ tiled bath and bids. Sale subject to probate Wednesday, Nov. 28 lection of gas or oil heetlno equipment In garage. Ctolce location. Hear schools, '61 Ford V-8 Tcl. 58B7. At 1:00 P.M. AUCTION churches and the take. court approval. Available for tedan 4-door model. Automatic trans- I town. E xpert service and Installation. _ _ _ RANGE OIL DURNER CO., 907 E. 51h College. Good inspection , 3 to 5 p.m., Nov. mission, radio, sharp, excellent mechan- Located at 226 South Broadway §i 1 mile west of Melrose. Watch for arrow in Melrose. DUPLEX—niar Sy. Teresa to 34 months BIGALK St. Tel. 7479. Adolph Mlchalowskl. Income producing property. Excellent 26 , 27, 28. ica l condition. 11795. Up Rochester, Minnesota home for young couple, oil hot water to pay. Typewriters 77 heal. Can be sold with furniture. Archie CH EVROLET CO. CONTINENTAL DELICATESSEN McGill, Real Estate, 106 W. 3rd. Tel. First National Bank RESTAURANT, OWNER TYPEWRITERS and adding; machines lor '58 Ford V-8 Tel . 88-6-3622. I Friday, November 30 4015 or 5U7. - . ' Auctioneer Les Olson sale or rent. Reasonable rates, free ~ Trust Dept. Sey Looking for Large living room, large bed- | | 25 HEAD OF CATTLE — 19 Jersey cows, 10 springers , 3 1 h Kit very rubber ; McD. 207 W, ind, across Spur Gas Station *> room, another room with plenty (| fresh and open , remainder due early winter ; 2 Holstein cows, p | McD. traclor cultivator lo fit "H" or "M" ; McD. 2-bottom, - Investment Property? WMT MlLLER SCR AP IRON 8, METAL of closet space, Full bath , in THESE LOW PRICES |j springers; 1 Jersey-Angus cow, fresh and bred back art.; 2 || 5 14-inch tractor plow on rublier ; Cnse 8-ft . clutch type tandem CO. pays highest prices for scrap Iron, • • perfec , j| heifer calves, 2 weeks old; 1 Jersey bull , Vk years old , tractor disc; New Idea No. 200 PTO niatiure spreader; New molnls, hides , wool and raw fur . * status one ol the fol- t shape with Uio latest Jersey | , Whatever your typy herd of Jerseys with U I Idea 7-ft power mower; New Idea 4-b;i r side ' rake; Now Hoi- 222 VV. 2nd. Tei. J067 lowing may suit your heeds, or we fixtures. All floor tiled. Insul- Chevrolet Impnla hnrdtop, || Purebred but not registered. A real Closed Saturdays would be happy 'ZO land hay baler; JD. 200 traclor corn planter with fert ; Wood have muy others we ated, has combination storms Ox, Powcrgl ide, V-!), power 1 an average test of well over 5%. Mostl y all vaccinated. Don't i I HIGHEST PRICES PAID to show yo*J. and screens, and is wired for ir;j miss this sale if you need some good Jerseys. (I Bros, corn picker; good set tractor chains . for scrap Iron, metali, rags, hides, r«* e • • steering. Rndio, This car is nn ¦ electric hot ¦I DAIRY EQUIPMENT - Surge milker pump and motor ; 2 | OTHER MACHINERV — 2 rubber l ired wagons; 2 triple fun and wooll Small home In Qoodvlew, electric stove. absolute beauty, priced too low. | ¦1 water htater. private pump, city »«w- PI Surge milker buckets; Westlnghouse It-cnn milk cooler. || wagon boxes; small trailer with calf feeder; hyd. wagon jack; Sam Weisman & Sorts taxes, $4,B50. ers are In. Low Priced below $5,000. 9 y FEED — 1500 bales 1st crop alfalfa and clover hay; 800 1 18-inch sulky plow; walking plow ; J.D. 3-section wooden drag; INCORPORATED a • • ' S?? *: $2498 | 8-ft. spring toofii ; J.D. 8-ft. lime snrrndcr on rubber; 450 W. 3rd Til, 5847 Compecl 2-bedroom home wllh many || bales 2nd crop alfa lfa and c lover hay; 20 ft , corn silage in 12 M I J.D. area'and bedrooms. ' spreader ; La Crossr 7-ft. grain drill with bullt-ln« In dining Can be purchased wilh NO 11/) Fnlcon 4-door , niiloinntlc I ft. silo. 1 trailer type limo Room i Without Meal* 86 Situated on largo wooded lot 1" ^'J"; McD, 7-ft . horse grain binder ; Littlo Now «M,0M OL , m (1 SHETLAND PONIES — 1 Spotted Shetland mare, 4 grass seeder and corn; FOR AAEN-bedrooms, 1st floor, private Mary. Very slight upkeep. DOWN PAYMENT. "Like transmission , rncllo , red p 4 , | motor; 2 walking cultivators; Minn , luiy loader; 2 hay racks , SLEEPING ROOM-Work lno men or col- Attractive, •centrally • located• family like new. Wns- ^lAOR $ ( ¦ -| ; ono lfl ft, and one 14 it,; fanning mill ; rubber tiroi l wheel- lono men. Double bedroom. Tel, B-3241. sharply redwed %\ . , home now »«Mnp at now ,. . yJ'O | ¦ din- %vm, »P' barrow ; 'good deep well pump j ack; 3 electric fencers ; too TENTH W. 515-room for rent. price, The wery larc» Hvlno «™ In Goodvieiv. [: 1961 CHEVROLET IMPALA Sports Coupe with V-8 motor | ing rooms, hall and stairs are car- , Corvnir 4-door , stnndnrd electric fence posts ; 100 stc«t fence posts; W h |>. electric Apartments, Flats 90 peted, J bedrooms, recreation room, oil ' Af \ I And standard transmission , This Is n one owner car with | motor; V4 h.p. electric motor; steel tank ; 3 gal. sprayer; good ~ burning furnace. Of trnnstnission , radio, -wliife- Owner is leaving for tho Army. btdroomi. ments upstairs. Might alio be used as now T *-'° ii; TERMS: Under $10.00 cash; over that amount cash or % !' largo living room and kitchen, Heat 5-bedrtoin home. LIVERY SERVICE lo inspect ' TERMS; Under $10,00 rash; over thnt imioimt c;ish or U and hoi water furnlihe-d. Immediate po»- any of our listings. Call. | down and balance in monthly payments, 3% added to balance & down and balance in monthly paymen ts. 8'v added to balance soislon. Tel. 7611. __ RB6ID6NCE PHONES: V for fi months, Your credit Is always Rood with tho Northern | 8 , for a months . Your credit Is always good with t lie Northern HioH FOREST Ul-nooriy now Upstairs E , J. Hartert .. . 3973 ?<; Investment Co. - 4 rooms and both, on* stove, on bus Atory Lauer .,, *»J | .] Investment Co. line. Tel, 8-254J, Jerry Derlhe , . , 8-2377 1 J. ROBERT HAMMOND , OWNER 1 MRS . MARKL SIIOLKS , OWNMK Philip A. Daumann . , .9540 H FOURTH'! E.'-upstalr» 3 ronm apt,, prl- E R f Alvin Kohner , Auctioneer ' Alvin Kohner ami Itnssell SolnoeiU'r , Auctioneers volft ontrance, hot water, Tol. 2U7 ._ f" U | " D E»-CCW" " •>'•!. 2*49 V^^crmrT oin^ca | Norlliern Investment Co., hosier S«ity, Clerk Nwthorn InveMinriit Co., Lester Senty, Clerk Want Adfl I 110 Exchange Bldg. | telephone Your Repi-esented by Eldon W, Berg, Arcntlin, Wisconsin I Represented by Jos. find Duve Noi g:i,'it (l , Melrose. \Vi«eo!iVm to Tho Winona Daily News mma VWIMkimmmmaWtmaaleWmi' Open ' Mondays, Fridays Til 81'.M. .. ¦ L,. V ..^..*.V V ^...<... M .' . ^t. .i...i.A. , . ,, .,... -, • ,' • . .-..rt . i A. ¦..,.,>-^-*i J.../:,,..*„,..^.,..,., . . ... ;..- , .1^,^,, j., JDiftl '3321 for an Ad Taker. u)i Main St, Tat , 9849 t ¦.*.* BUZ SAWYER By Roy Craho

, I8 Monday, November it 1962 "¦ DICK TRACY BY Chester-Gould . .

BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker

' ' ' " ¦ ' ' ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ - ¦ ' ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ . \ ¦ ¦ . . . . •

____»____¦__ . _ ¦ j— —; _B_—s«_^_w —"————¦¦—— « ; ^, ^ THE FtlNTSTONES By Hann«-Barbero

RIP KIRBY By John Prentice and Fred Dickenson

¦ s ' BLONDIE . . ;;. •' .By Chic- Young

U'L ABNER By Al Copp STEVE CANYON By Mil»on CanniFf

Shop ^ early this yea r ... JmW ^yf iSSL sJiCUL^ j CULiu~ ~~ J ^ ^^~. : /" . ' the selection is great ...the >4___^' z/j mW ^^ # - ' 5f . CX vf x_ _r^t A. vj choice Is good . . . the price Christmasj JftWaMmmmmwJmmW^aa^l§. is right... and terms to suit C__»_M>fli _rVli Club WRITTEN v [| sZ^T' GUARANTEES ^ |SSJ2£1SJ_^ ^^ ^ ^* \ are given with f j£/ ______P__^\V THIRD STREET PRICES < ^^ EVERY COMPARE OUR EAST ^^ 0 ^^—- % ^^ On Nationally Famous FLEXSTEEL-KROEHLER-SIMMONS-ENGLANDER SPRING AIR-BASSETT-KING KOIL - DOUGLAS - WILLIAMS

Kroehte r Danish Modern Host Chair — Kroehler 83" Foam Tufted Back Sofa nor( edge construction with zip- &4 AA walnut trim, bei ge, green, gold and #PA flA — ' |?A aqua. Pr. w.t, ^vU lVV pered foam cushions, green. ... w.t. ^JUwiwU

Flexsteel 37" High Back Deluxe Lounge Bassett 3-Pc. Bedroo m Suite—double Chair — molded foam latex cushions, dresser , chest and bookcase bed, high bei leg style, curved drawer fronts., genu- arm caps, 100% nylon cover, ge or 4£"? C AA ine formica mahogany brown. . . w.t, ^/ 3-ivW tops, canyon dT^ f%Q AA or walnut w.t. _LO«7l'( IU 76" 4* Kroehler 80" High Back Sofa — 100% Smart Trim Line Sofa' ; nylon flat fabric, zippered foam Flexsteel — v fl_JL^^A AA cushions, aqua. . . .' A w.t. /iUaVV 69" seating space , molded foa m cush- tf*< ^ AJCi.AA ions, arm caps brown w.t. JL"ft ^iW , ^ 5-Pc. Danish Modern Dining Room Set ""' — 42x42" round square table, plastic Kroehler Traditional Sofa — heavy top opens to 60" 4 side chairs nylon matelasse cover , T- cushion tf»|£r , , tf_ 1 _4 Q AA AA walnut w.t. j frJL" T«f flVlf sty le, arm caps, brown or ore-en. w.t. «P JLU_I B:V V

Kroehler 3-Pc. Sectional — extra high Kroehler Traditional Chairs — beautiful back high li ard edge construe- nylon matelasse fabrics, straight or T- , leg, *% AA tion, heavy 100% nylon flat fabric, & cushion style, arm caps, rose, gold, ^'< tf'TC AA beige , , . w.t. 3«aXfe w.t. ^M J«W ______l j ^ ^^ ^ ml Beautiful, ouhtSETS.nding SYLVAN IA COLOR fW Kroehler 35" High Back Loungo Chair— Englahder $119.50 Body form Mattress. TELEVISION in cholcs cabinots tamm^SaL^ S K ^ , W& a of M foam seat and b«ck , nylon cover, green, D luJ Box rm9 — n w or,no equalizer tf*TO nd n UnexeslUd d_ CC AA ^P *° AA wmB2^%^^^J^j>& 4\ ^ * *'y" 9»- performance, M red and blue , . w.t. 4^WFaV\l construction , full size w.t, *pf OR ii " I _M_^_SlCN_Z^8S> l^ir.^_- service, and set quality , . , a great Item JL¥ Iissssssssss »S^Or¦ \ i for the family tor Christmail Best of all ¥ sBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBsffisV' '"\)"> ~ w<,'r0 n,aW,1«> Trade-Inand allowances for & Floxsteol 3-Pc, Sectional — nylon Kroohler 3-Pc. Bodroom Sot—double 9 \\ ls\ Vour present black white sets that | ^^^^^^^ 8H | |[ jf cover, molded latex cushion seat and dresser , chest and panel bed, cultured ^^ back , wood cores, plastic tops, puliess sty le, »< reversible two-tone cover in fiT^CC A A 0 "7Q AA brown and oyster w.t. ^JDJIVVI heather mahogany , . . w.t. ^)J-f 9a ll"

' | Kroehler "SPECIAL PURCHASE" high leg straight lino ! WlUCheS-Cr ROOSH SpeClcll f style, performance tested nylon cover, rl ppered foa.rt ; K roehler Earl/ American Sot* - B3" lonii, ' cushions, soft green, beige, dark brown, Ming back , performance teitocl green tweed £4*7(1 Aft cover, foam cushion -w.t, »pAI Vr.lIU ^ IT Harold )11" "j , K roohlor Earl American Wins Back Cha irs — WMmm MM Gates and YVes Kittle Suite . w.t, -) » Sectional w.t 4>l*f*f-UlI y ! flr,n caps (oam cus,,ionf bl)l burnf wnnfli. ' ^ i 2-Pc Bumbor CiCtk AA 1-Pc COOQ Aft : As' low ' »»' «,t. C7Q AA : ^CCD»VV brown. » J i »l J.UW | Sectional w.t. -? 1U II MUU Sectional w.t . \ " " EIECTRONICS^w© Jietler J ^^nitwe oTr Radios H'-Fi T> T TO 1Z X7 O Qf ^L • • • Television No Buys at ^^ Home Set Cull Our TV or J) (J XliVil/ O Mart . —^M Scrutce Charon When Your Buy your ^— W Radio Repaired Color ^— W ^^H Is in Shop. TV where 75% » OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT ' G 211 East TMrd S.ro,, ' Phono 3791 Friendly Low Terms AT EAST 7HIRD AND FRANKLIN Freo Custome- r Parking In Rear ™ ^ ^Srf&t

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