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Winona State University OpenRiver

Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers

5-30-1972

Winona Daily News

Winona Daily News

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Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1972). Winona Daily News. 1182. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/1182

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Airlift from Kontum During Soviet sumrnit ' •• ¦-. . V *v So/cf/ers trying to Kissinger: no //ee w^ By MICHAEL PUTZEL stretchers that are shoved bandages on their hears, secret accord throats and chests; a girl s KONTUM, Vietnam (AP) to the front of the cabin. with red-stained By FRANK CORMIER little trouble at home if I summit had been so care- One grimaces in pain, the gauze hold- — Two American soldiers ing her hand and arm to- KIEV, U.S.S.R. m- Pres- didn't go." fully prepared that each and two Vietnamese stand other appears to be? uncon- gether. ident Nixon concluded his A few hours after the ar- side knew pretty much at the yawning rear ramp eious. Then the others — a Ramp up. eight-day visit to the Soviet rival in Kiev, presidential what to expect.: He said the youiig man in the arms of a adviser Henry A. Kissinger two governments agreed in of the helicopter , their rifles Two American soldiers Union to-day and flew to boy, a plasma bottle dangl- swing up and climb aboard. Tehran for an overnight told newsmen that Nixon advance: "Don 't let's sur- at the ready. They make , th e Soviet leaders prise each other at the sum- threatening gestures at the ing near his weary brown They lived in Kontum once visit with the Shah of Iran.;. and face; four soldiers with reached no secret? agree- V mit."y . cpwd outside, an anxious but now go there only in Wearing a , gray . suit, white shart and blue and ments on Vietnam or any The Nixons' flight from mob of women with child-; the daylight to guide in the ques- helicopters. They grab ? a gray tie, the President: look- other controversial Moscow to t h e? Ukrainian ren slung under their arms, Solution "' ¦lions. * . soldiers waving official , pa- ride out each night on the ed tired but smiled as he * ? . capital was delayed; nearly Pieiku, said goodbye at the Kiev "This is hot the way these . an hour when the Soviet pers, old men . with the lines Taffy Tuttle ysays she last bird to things happens," the Presi- of worry and age in their ' ¦¦' The engines accelerate. airport to President Alexan- jetliner provided for them ¦¦ ? ¦ . watched a TV' ; mysLery der Lyashko of the Ukraine dent's assistant for national developed engine trouble on faces. * . show, and solved everything A cloud of dust and debris envelops the machine driv- and other officials. security affairs said . the ground. They switched The guards shout but can- but the commercial . .. The , to another Ilyushin 62. not be heard over tie roar ing the crowd back as the The weather was -clear Questioned closely about way traffic is now, in- g Chinook lumbers? into and balmy as the President Nixon 's extensive talks in. The delay forced Nixon to of the big jet engines*, stead of getting ticket for bi a the air and turns south for and Mis. Nixon boarded Moscow : about Vietnam, postpone until today an ap- Despite the searing ex- parking you ought to get a Air Force One after an said; "I just do haust and gale-force winds Pieiku. Kissinger pearance at Kiev's tomb of medal . . . We heard of .the Each day Vis the7same overnight stop in Kiev , the not want to speculate about an unknown World War H of the rotor downdraft, the unluckiest guy. For exam- capital of the Soviet what the results may be.'' .• '¦ ' • ¦ ' mob presses closer; The now. Several hundred towns- soldier. .' . . . . ple, he finally went to see Ukraine. He said there had been Nixon spends tonight in ramp is raised to prevent people wait in the half fin- predictions about the Grand Canyon — and ished soccer stadium down- "It's such a lovely day, too many Tehran , the Iranian capita!, them from leaping aboard. the day he arrived it was the war in the past and he then flies on to Warsaw on The guards' job is not , town, hoping one of the di- I'd like to stay another closed . . . A fellow says he week/' TNixop told Lyash- would prefer to a wait con- Wednesday for another pleasant but necessary. On- minishing number of heli- crete developments. gave his wife a wonderful copters will somehow open Jco's . wife and Mrs. Vladi- overnight stop and a meet- ly wounded soldiers and '¦ mir Scherbitasky, -wife of y question, said ing with Edward Gierek, Americans are allowed budget . system: "By - the to them. One big time she gets it straighten- 1 the Ukrainian? communist Kissinger, is how Hanoi will the chief of the Polish com- aboard. "No, ' the American ser- ed, out each day it's too late who party chief , as they pre- view Nixon's summit talk. . munist party. During the The chopper taxis a few geant, explains to all OH. YEAH? . . * .. President Nixon examined a model of visit Secretary of State to? go out and spend any come begging. "Only Amer- pared to leave for the air- Asked if American negotia- yards to get away from the a Soviet Ilyushin 62 jetliner of the type which flew him to port. '. ' , :' tors suffered any disap- William P. Rogers and For- crowd. Before the people money." ?. icans and wounded Vietna- Leriui-nrad and back, as the pilot of the plane, Capt. Vadim "Why not?" Mrs? Lyash- pointments, t h e, Nixon ad- eign Minister Stefan Ols- can catchup, an army am- mese. Those¦ are my oir Sazhin, held it. Bottom, Capt; Sazhin salutes Nixon at Mos- ko replied. . viser sa id they got more zewski will sign a consular bulance swings belund it y. alliance." favoring J- . - . ferences—a big one con- way 13 south of the devastated The West German chancellor town and are keeping a relief addressed the opening of the centrating on cooperation and a smaller one dealing with troop column from getting through. annual two-day spring meeting Field reports said of the North Atlantic Treaty reductions and other miliary is- the enemy On the inside: gunners on Monday slammed Sc VVilliam F'oxmire has called Transpo & Organization 's foreign minis* sues. - TraiKllflII dll3|IU "' , 2,400 rocket and mortar shells 72 fl Rross mjs(1S( of taxes, but his 23-yenr- ters. Earlie r in the day, Secre- Rogers reported on the Mos- | Into three South Vietnamese po- A; old daughter is working there and considers it n great success ! tary of State William P. Rogers cow talks to "Washington 's three : — stories , page 2a. f principal European allies Mon- sitions along the highway two • ' : i? met with Brandt and told him to 10 miles ' Moscow, day night at the four-power din- south of An Loc. •' , PAfi*||::' Ralclfih , N.C , shopping center , killing three persons, wound- | Scheel of West Germany, Sir bodia , Just across the y. * and on troop reductions. border ing eight others and then taking his own life as Sen. B. Alec Douglas-Home of Britain from the western Mekong Delta ? Everett Jordan campaigned for reelection — slory. page lla. I? Brandt told the NATO minis- ; and Maurice Schumann of in South Vietnam. South Viet- ters that a . "security conference Ij ,Sens 'luhwl Humphrey and George McGovern I France. But informed sources namese rangers spearheaded ;i rUIIHUaPn|if|f*e ' should serve to explore the said Schumann nrfl heading into their second campaign con- f indicated the by an armored column clashed ff ; frontfltion in pivotal California still debating Ihe issues of I pal lis of cooperation between French government hns not re- with North Vietnamese East and West and in doing so forces $ the first — story, page 12a. | laxed its opposition to any talks while on a drive to block infil- should - not- ignore the military on troop reductions. ACT "Search" is the key word to ' life in a world that Is 1 tration into the delta. %5 Uul aspects." But he warned that The Nixon administra tion '•frightening and confusing," members of tho gradu- \ any reduction of troops "should feels' that talks to achieve a In the central hlghland-i, A aling class al Ihe College of Snint Teresa were told nt com- i meet the requirement of the al- balanced , mutual reduction of South Vietnamese troops fought Sj mencement exercises Sunday — story and pictures, page 1|>. I liance 's undiminished security, Communist and Western forces for a sixth day against North ! NIXON . . . Presi- rival at Kiev from Moscow , Many waved i Tft naliflinal 'r,le ^'"""a State Collcf-c basebaU/fenm \ should not bring nny military in Central Europe should be at- Vietnamese forces in the south- FLAGS WELCOME _i IU lldllUlldl wiU make (AP its first trip to thd NAIA disadvantage for either side, tended only by nations most ern and northern sectors of dent Richard M, Nixon shakes hands with arnall American Flags. Photofax) i| "World Series" since 1903 — story, page 3r>. I and should thereby' help to re- directly affected. Kontum. Kiev residents who greeted him after his ar- ' * . . .* . ' r ' . " ' . : * . " * • - . .

: : : ¦ ¦ ¦ fr"- " r^ ^ I safely UCT i A LmmmJ I I ' 1 1 / ^_ \j _f' ¦ A¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ A |. 1I . . v \ia l.. *V-U.,/ ^/ - . /:>. ' poster award &ffffl)wB**^ 1 ¦ TED MAIER DRUGS | §' • • " 'if- ;¦ ¦ ¦' Sunda¦ ' ' " I : DOWNTOWN . .: • . . | . winners named ¦ I I UJ» Our ' • '* . . Prices Good _^/BBf^BBBwBvf9^^^.June p Winners of the annual safety § Computer . Thru y poster contest sponsored by Wi- mT^tn^SmSSmWBtff ^m) i i Charge Sorvico ^^BSa^mmammJMfi 4, 1972 nona Council 69, United Com- W^B | mercial Travelers with the co- operation of Winona Safety Council were announced by j Morris Bergsrud, chairman of | ONLY the highest qua lity drugs and medications are the UCT safety committee. Winners in the fourth grade: S used to fill your prescriptions. LET US FILL YOUR } 1st , Kimberly Drier, Cathedral School ; 2nd, Tim ?Kronebusch, NEXT PRESCRIPTION. ^> j Minnesota City School; 3rd I Karla Johnson, Mnnesota City VALUE . School ; ^6.50 ;J „, VflIu. ; . . ? Fifth grade: 1st , David Kulas, | re=t $..OO Vcl, \ ' . St. Stanislaus ; School; 2nd, POSTER PEOPLE . . . H. A, Stow, far right, past grand nooa Present at the ceremony were, from left to right, John W,LUAMS Jackie Heim St. Martin s Lu- , ' councilor, United Commercial Travelers Minnesota-North Pearson, Jane Rogge, Kim Singer, Connie Cieminski and J Toss-em gijpi ? theran School; 3rd, Brent ¦ ul Ban - Dakota jurisdiction issued awards for the organization's ; Ann Gierok. (Sunday News photo) '- ' .; I Drenckbahn, Minnesota City , ¦ safety poster contest at Winona Jr. High School Friday after- School ; 4th, Jody Church, Min- Gome MH j nesota City School. I Spro,- ! L«*" Sixth grade: 1st, Debra Barne- P witz, Madison ; 2nd, Richard On wort h of Tra nspo 72 ^ Meier, Madison; 3rd, Linda U JW J fi Regular and Menthol /f , Gough, Madison; 4th. Larry ^J ^ ' Gdrai StV Stan s. * Regular ' > s Seventh grade: no; posters ' \ were entered. Proxm 4 Z- Eighth grade: 1st, Ann Gier- ire^ -° , S2.49 VALUE * came to see me this morning." *; \ ? j Winona Junior High School ; By VERN HAUGLAND as vice president of Kaiser In- the exposition. Z+9 ok (AP) _ She indicated the meeting 2nd, Jane Rogge, WJHS ; 3rd, WASHlNGTOyN Sen. dustries Inc. "I can't say whether niy fa- c William Proxmire has called was pleasant. Bird agreed- , K/ Suoer 7ZT A„ T "- - , -, Kim Singer, WJHS; 4th, Connie Miss Proxmire, asked wliat ther is right about this or not " '% . 1 # v r ** < " r /AA ^ATTr "% , - Transpo 72 a? gross misuse of A recent history graduate of * "" ' Cieminski, WJHS. she said. "I am not economic- j'i * tax dollars, but his 23-year-old interesting experiences she has Georgetown University, Miss *^ !/ ¦¦ Winning posters will be en- ally oriented, arid I'm not in a ' ^/\/"i ^ l" '"f 59^ VALUE tered in the UCT Grand Coun- daughter is working there and had since Transpo opened over Proxmire was careful not to ' Ew 7^?™ j ?s /rrzm"^~™' " OUQKI^r * ¦ s view of position to know about such cil poster contest of the Minr considers it a great success. the weekend, said: "Mr. Bird contradict her father' "Transpo seems to be going matters. It just seems that nesota-North Dakota jurisdic- Transpo is a great success." tion at its grand council session over very welt" said Miss CiCi " Chomois S : Proxmire from behind? an infor- Miss Proxmire work part- A in Hibbing, Minn., Thursday time, for a modeling agency Pepfo j^g^fe through Saturday. Winners in mation booth .at the Canadian Kite flier falls i o Department of Transport exhib- that holds the contract to pro- the Grand Council contest will vide hundreds of attractive then be submitted to the contest it. *7W young women for Transpo. She ¦ conducted ,by the Supreme death at Trans po •«*i^«T«rouKn Bismo1 ¦ :?> vx/ Hr^^^KuSiJuAiysUjUiUE^JIIlj . f-y. ' "Its technically oriented , hii ' 99c * hands out Canadian maps, •w*'^- —< , o f\ -» * n ^m^SmmmmmmmmW^ ^^s \ m***** AAAir-^\ ' II ' WZI U _Z__jB-mmmmmEi— \ Council of the UCT in Dallas, i \ B^L_ *m aimed more at the trade WASHINGTON (AP) - * "I over the kite and he landed booklets, pins and souvenirs, ' ¦ isr Texas, in July. people, so some persons who think we have a problem ," the back on top of it. He yelled and answers questions. t c << Bl'= - '- :""'=^'° /j . TThe UCr Supreme Council come out expecting a fair are a public address announcer said 'Oh, no,' and you could see him v * $2.00 VAIUE j j ' - -^S awards will be as follows: Ele- little disappointed," she said. as Hobert Kennedy of Escon- kicking and fighting as the kite Although all members cf Con- mentary grades, one first prize "They don 't really care dido, Calif-, plummeted Vfrom wrapped around him. As it fold- gress have been invited to $50, two second prizes $30 each whether the vehicle has a tur- the sky.; ed up, he fell straight to the Transpo, Miss Proxmire said c \ ' , •' Nudit 1f ^^^^~AKos ^i&£i ^9 and three third prizes $15 each. bine engine or something else. Thousands of spectators at ground, just like a stone." her father has not visited it. 77MB' i\ ? Junior high, one first prize $60, —Kenned landed in- a- grassy V "He has been in Wisconsin," But there are also many things Traiispo '72y -the -international y ^ ' two second prizes $40 and three that have a great appeal to the transportation ex posi tion , area at the north end of the she said. "He did see my red- \ .. .. ._ . Cream Hair third prizes of $20 each. kids. . watched Monday as the 26- runway, away from the specta- and-white uniform before he | ' Hanc|i :¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ Wj pes ¦ * ¦ ¦ • . - "It seems to nie to be quite year-old kite flier fell to his tors' stand but within view of left and said it was okay except, worthwhile." death, y thousands. for the red stockings—he didn't $i 5 vdue Re mover Two Rivers man like them." H \..™sJ{ c c Proxmire, w3io has asked for A member of the Australian A puWic address announcer 7 * ° ^ named to state post a General FOR THE FACE K Pkg- Accounting Office in- Birdman Team, Kennedy was was promoting Kennedy's dar- f? ^K FDS ^ O Qc f* vestigation of the 10-day ex- ing when the kite collapsed. , ROCKTON, "Wis. V(AP) - killed when he lost control of Hmm tP dm mi A^^. r •• '« J7^0 ~ ' Robert Humphrey, executive position at Dulles International his kite at an altitude of about Kennedy, who had been fly- Airport, contends the Trans- Feminine 51 1Q vice president of the Manito- 500 feet. He was being pulled ing his kite professionally for 41 receive P| \ woc-lW Rivers Chamber of p o r t a t i o n Department has into the . air at the time by a more than three years, was sns3s^a {" ™~ -^ - =^ wasted much of the iM Deodorant I . I if * f .Commerce^ Has been elected $5 million speeding automobile. rushed ib a medical station by + U MBI ^nrav , H 49* VA1UE < president of the Wisconsin appropriated by Congress. "He was in a steep climb helicopter. A team of three i HH jpray ^-*r-3^T3^^^-T p j, . Chamber of Commerce Execu- The Wisconsin senator in par- when all of a sudden a gust of physicians,. who pronounced diplomas at ^ STUART tive Association. ? ticular attacked what he called wind hit him or something," him dead J5 minutes after he ' HALL ? Humphry succeeds TW. Rr aa unduly generous expense ac- said Ja ck Wallace, 31, of Lees- fell, said he suffered multiple i UNSCENTED . \ Lackore, manager of the Wis- count rolled up by Transpo burg, Va., . who witnessed the head injuries and compound f^^ J consin Dells Regional Chamber manager William J. Bird of Los accident. fractures throughout the rest of Elqin-Millville ' l,0fest Envelopes , of Commerce. Angeles, on lo an froni his post "His feet suddenly flipped his body. *\ *s, I K ELGIN, Minn. (Special) — 3; c Strip Commencement exercises for o QO Re9dar r BuslneSS Size graduating seniors at Elrin- < * ' i ""51^ fi ° 7 POLE LAMPS LOVE SEAT MUlville High ; :-: E? ^«E£r\ *"" ™*.sj ^( A Mi^^^ H«^ were held ^ ^ ^ Vni ^ ^ ^^ ^^C y Modern Styling IftwiSr Mediterranean $1.98 VALUE ^ms wn| M \J Jli ^ H^QS3Su ^& ' # Thursday. J 1 Style Black Vinyl ^ ¦ Ifi f/i l *J &^d§P_~ Dr. Dean L. SHELL 2 colon ' . .:¦ fci wLM mm^ °niy Swanson, Uni- ¦ ¦ I '17*^ ' Nft-PFST STilP r ' ¦ v - ' ' *¦ ¦ OUR 10QTH ANNIVERSARY YEAR - i versity of Min- Reg. ' ¦. ', '¦-Ka *™ -** Reg *±- ~ c nesota, former ' " '" ; - 50 OQ95 school princi- 1 JT w VMUE ; wgy pal, here, gave $111 J J Kilfa»il niub, uiuj guHoS s, IA ¦ |7 ¦ and other small llylng .„..,„ the commence- ¦ ' ¦ ¦¦ I S S Insects Indoors. % . STUART HALL„.„ —1_ A IY A '"• ment address, | I # xf ^J rp_ . . \i HEADBOARDS "T o mor row, MATTRESS ¦§• \_JI _f\ | First Day of W m^m^^m^mms&smm ^^M^m^^mmm^^m^^mm% Vv ritinO I Twin or Full Twin Size Your Future." D. Benike j—~. • A ' J " 50% off when &L H " Colonial Sty le Diann B e n- j j m^ W ike, valedictorian , gave the 430, foundation purchased ^k AW^m. Modern Style | Amerk^Nun^lSharnpoo I Tablets 1 ^ H HBH welcome. Diplomas were pre- ^ sented by Dr. E. W. Ellis, I GetamB^&Slumldm^im chairman of the board of edu- I coupon bv mail when you 5 W I 250 sheets i1 JAkE cation. B' ^!! ¦* 1 buy one tkod&Shouldm Jk^W OA t Class members are: V Cr I .7io« '10 Merry Bayslnger, Sheila Becker , Di- | (any size) with in-store ^^^^^ | ?>A I iB A^r P ann Benike, Gary Brown. Ton ta Camp- certificate. C _ STARTS WEDNESDAY bell, Debra Curry, Rita Dick, Billy Died- 1 ISS i3!ife7 UU M /I D k Z£L c rich, Dan Dunn, Debra Ebiing, Ricky Mail In by August 31, 1972. m TF I Englor, Kalhy Ernest, Dorothy Gusa, 1 ^Aay tor tfeta/)».. ^ |j § ^^ I I COCKTAIL COMMODE Nanello Hollrniin, Lossa Ihrke, Fred ^onc L T"v* vs <, - ^, Italian Provincial ¦¦ Modern Styling Knaup, Gary LeVnn, Linda Mulholland, I ^ ''rKTr'zms" ^" V ~ ^. 'la*s^;«sjm*^"^^^i{m^^ | TARI F »« J r, _ ¦ Barbara Mullln, Michael Nolan, Nancy ,„. . _ I MULE. Modern Styling , , With Drawer °ne on'y Olson, Eric Ostrandcr, Burton Peterson ... Sturdc» J y Construction«- / » • Robert Peterson, Cheryl Pick, Cindy Mode rn Styling Plenge, Glenn Reller, Bill Sansem, Jann 00 V Schmoll, With. Drawer One only A„ M _f\Kf % Drug Coupon R Peony Schntll, Michael Schroeder, Car- 1 ll «r Ted M^ier ^ Pfl PffllT ' ^llffW\\ ^l \%. Tentis, ol Schuchard, Pawl Craig Tesmer, I HF 6.75-Ox. «[j WVB DrugTed CouponMalor ^Ij lin Suzanne Thecl, Dlano Wandrqy, Janet I Wm ig a49 Wehrs, Ronald Wehri, Fred Wtscotl and CRESf -. p l I? »35 ... A-, Arly» Wrloht. ^^ l C0M0 * •»* i¦»* ™ 49" SNACK TABLE j il' TOOTHPASTE 53' "' M 1 j —CflMM0DE — transplant J SHAG RAKES Ro„„d Tooth i Biri ^^ . Good Only «t Ted Maier Drug, Downtown. ^fvl ^ll U TlCCII^ M C /ITIMIC UATC* & »3iai2 ^ .^^Cki3itt ''U ¦ ' I lOOUC 11 Ij* ;'; Modilerr«n.on IT AI IhHI t IHA I > 16" High Wooden Handle « .. i i , n««, only*™i.. Marble Top Vinvl Cover n n r -r lL ° Ono Row of Toe,h tried between ' •WfU.with Drawer« Modern>. Vl PatternsBT I Pfl'*S „ D» ^^ m ..TmiTn. . . nmn. .. WIIHI ¦WWI I 'll 18"x30" 3 onlV Reg- $ 1 C 500 , Ted Miltr Drug Coupon ¦ brother sister 1 f|S Sr Reg. fJSO ^o- . A ft, ° i i ^ j ^ BEJ 1 ^1 OfY M I* ,5.00 Reg 8 5 H QC NEW "YORK (AP - Dental I W MI Wllh l>urch««t-l "D" Battetiei. * J/ -j ** |?3F lBP R • t| 3.69 w surgeons at Brookdale Medical ^ ¦ ; ¦ ^ Center have removed nn im- V ¦¦ []¦ LAWN and AAr |? | wnh coupon.Expire n N OCCASIONAL irxr nirc Hil I? sunu»v, junt 4. un. |l pacted tooth from the jaw of a ^ LEAF BAGS W*# Oood onlv M 7ed AREA RUG 16-year-old youth and implanted ffiN IIV I 7/•* ^ KMMl IIn Maier Drug, ¦ tt NS* SHAG RUGS CHAIR Downtown. .9 •>: AREA RUGS it in his twin sister's mouth. M \\m\. mim U& : 12' •>i " vvl,h Cohort- Explret Sundty, June 4, It71. *1 !* Color Gold Dr. Norman Cranin, director LllBk. mf%r\ IjIfW. ^ >fl '?' 9'xir 9x12' I JH Oood nly Ted Meler Drua Down,own HH M BW mTvLu Be,ge of dental and oral surgery at i I 9 W ° *' ' ' ,^< I R ^ A rt , 3 Color. 3 Color. 1 Only °ne on|y Braid Back the Brooklyn hospital , said "we One each won't know for four or five years" whether the tooth, a 50 88 molar, would take root or be A %, ,& rejected by the recipient , Janet 21 5 2750 *56 14 Ramsay. Ik £7ec6 fnfll£R> rfj * The donor, John Ramsay, I i »* l »1 f7# Bir^ki »1 VINYL CUSHION CARPET CARPET had six extra teeth that had w-T-i l -J cfcBPET formed but could not grow nor- f » ¦ m ^ - * ^ Mm IT J FLOORING mally. Three were removed REMNANT REMNANT REMNANT Friday and one was planted In 6-Foot Width 5'7"x9'4" 6'4"xl5' 5'2"x9' his sister's mouth, in place of a just-removed abecssed Ono Pattern Green Green Green tooth. DISCOUNT Wax-NoMora Sculptured Sculptured Adv«rtliem«nl I AAQ/ Sculptured , , 1 R.B Now Many Wear AN ALL PHOTO F N SHING 5?9 109 Rn 1 Q88 Rog 4 Q88 Ro0 I JL\) Black & White and Color I 72.50 110.00 62.50 $^A I //o Run Ft. I Ft. Jty ft | ^W - FALSE TEETH \\ ^ Wilh More Comfort | ___«______s Thoy know n donturo adhesive can p FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY - IN CITY help. FASTEETH* Powder jiveo , 1 denturea * lonner. Armor, steadier % [I vw/ipno MIRACLE MALL-WIHONA hold. You feci more comfortable ... 1 viflflL k eat more naturally. Why worry? Get | OPEN SUNDAY FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE | ^VjjO presently assistant to the pres- tion wagon is $900 and to the LA CROSSE , Wis. - James Postal Seryice*/t hilatelic Sales sign of forced entry. Unit Wasfiw-fton ident for Northern States Pow- right rear of the 1969 Kerkeh- A. Burnett, 19-year-old son of , , D.C. 20036. er Company. bush hardtop, $150. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Burnett, Hassinger has been with NSP OTHER CITY ACCIDENTS Hixton Rt. 2, remains in critical LIONS CLUB since 1948. He will be responsi- condition at Lutheran Hospital TREMPEALEAU, Wis! (Spe- Fire da mages ble for the activities of the en- Monday 3:29 p.m;—East Mark and here, following a motorcycle cial) — An informational meet- vironmental affairs, information accident May 18 on Highway 27, ing will be held this evening rura l home and advertising departments. Franklin Streets, intersection collision : Frank J. Morawecki, 5.3 miles west of Black River at 8 at Sullivan's Supper Club He received a bachelor of sci- Falls. in regard to forming a Lions near Lanesboro ence degree in mathematics 978 E. King St., 1957 model sta- tionwagop, $75; Elmer W John- He is in the hospital's inten- Club here. All active Lions in from WSC and a degree in elec- . sive care unil -with head and WHALAN, Minn. ( Special)— son, 168 W' Sth St., 1969 model Trempealeau and any other in- trical engineering from the Uni- chest injuries, said a hospital terested citizens may attend. A Monday afternoon fire at the versity of Minnesota. hardtop, front left, $2fl0. spokesman. Richard. Glenna home, about 12 4:49 p.m.—East Mark Street miles southeast of Lanesboro, 'Police/ civilian which started in the chimney, caused an estimated $2,500 dam- cars crash; age. Members of the Lanesboro two injured volunteer fire department were called to the Glenna home Two persons were reported abou t 2:15 p.m. Flames de- injured in a two car accident , stroyed portions of the build- involving a police car, at 6 :08 ing, around the chimney area, p.m. Sunday on West Sth and AT THE BANDSHELL . . . Program Other participants in the veterans observance in the attic and first and sec- Winona streets. members for the annual Memorial Day cere- are, from left , Bernard Kostuck, Edward Cur- ond floors. According to police, Patrol- monies appear with the principal speaker, tis , David T. Morse, the Rev. A. TJ. Dey,e Firefighters remained on tha man William O. Tenseth, was Stale Rep. M. J. McCauley, fourth from left. and the Rev. Dale Tupper. scene until 7 p.m. on a silent alarm call and was driving west on Sth Street with thc overhead lights flashing and Damage $600 Past sachems Gregory Nyseth , 19, 626 Lafay- ette St., was southbound on in crash near hold dinner, Winona Street when the two Cool weather vehicles collided. annual meet Nyseth and a passenger In Minnesota City Twenty-four past sachems at- his car Miss Karla Vfcst , U , No injuries resulted from a Onalaska, Wis., were treated tended a dinner and annual two-car accident at 11 p.m . Mon- will continue at Community Memorial Hospi- meeting Thursday of the Past THREE PERSONS INJURED . . . Three Janet L. Nelson, Richards Hall, WSC, were day at the junction of Highway Passage of a storm system n slight chance ot precipitation Sachems Association of Wenon- persons were injured in a three-car accident tal and released. treated at Community Memorial Hospital and Damage to tbe 1071 model 61 and 2411 north of Minnesota lhat brought mor e than a half through Wednesday. ah Tribe 20, Improved Order of at 6:57 a.m. today on West Sanborn and released. Floyd Wood 429 W, King St., was Red Men. The dinner and meet- , patrol car is $500 damage to lhe City. an inch of precipitation to the Grand streets. Miss Janell R . Opsahl, 458 reported injured but was not treated at the TIIF NORMAL Umpcrnturc ing were held a', the American left side of the Nyseth sedan is. According to the Minnesota Winona area during the Memor- Sioux St., and a passenger in her car , Miss hospital. $2,100. range for this date is 74 to 53. Legion Club, Highway Patrol , n car driven ial Day weekend was followed Memorial services were con- by a sharp drop in temperatures The record high for this date by Timothy J. Speltz , Rolling- ducted by Albin Johnson, Evan as readings fell well below sea- wa.s !i:i in 19,'M, a year in which stone Minn., was northbound on Davies and R. K. Filings. , sonal norms* temperatures soared to record Past Great Sachem Arthur Hi ghway 61 making a left turn Anrl cool , though drier , weath- levels for five consecutive days Brom installed incoming ap- Into Highway 2-18 and Richard er is expected to prevail for the at the end of May and thc first pointive nnd elective officers ! part of June, including a 107 Peters , Red Wing, Minn- , also next day or so. James Neeck, presiding past Rain began falling Saturday reading on May 31. was driving north on Highway ¦ sachem; Gerald Masyga , senior night and continued intermit- past sachem; Mark Schneider, 61. tently through Mondav with only Pursued foxes have been junior past sachem ; B. H. Ha- Damage tn the ri ght rear of brief spashes o( sunshine mark- known to leap on the back of a toeck, past prophet ; Roy Nelson , the 19*38 Spellz hardtop i.s $150 ing thc summer season 's first sheep and ride for some dis- secretary - treasurer; Jlonaltl and damage to the left side of holiday weekend. tance In an attempt to break Vnndrashek , past sannap, . and the 1969 Peters hardtop is $450, the scent left by the gland s on Fred Brust , officer of thc asso- mm BY 7 a.m. today, when partial clearing began , .60 of an inch of the feet. ciation. victim precipitation had been measur- F.C. crash ed* remains critical Temperatures , meanwhile, be- gan their slide Monday after- NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS FOUNTAIN CITV , Wis. - noon us winds shifted to the Lloyd Abts 55, Fountain City, , north and from Monday 's high Wednesday, May 31 sf, is tha last day to pay tho first remains in critical condition at of 74, the mercury slid to an St. Marys Hospital , Rochester, overnight low of 44 this morn- half of Real Estate Taxes. According to law, a penalty where he was transferred ing. Thursday from Community It was 55 at noon today under of 3% must bo added to tho taxes paid after this data. Memorial Hospital , Winonn. mostly sunny skies. He has head and arm injuries , Tonight's low will be near 45 whech he received in a car- and a high of 70 is forecast for TERESA M. CURBOW EXTENSIVE DAMAGE ... A police car driven by Pa- at the Intersection of West Sth and Winona Streets at 6:08 truck accident May Zi on Wednesday. County Treasurer trolman William Tenscth, was westbound on Sth Street and p.m. Sunday. Damage to the police car is estimated nt $5«0O Highway 35, north of the Foun- Skies will continue fair to M cir driven by Gregory Nyseth, 626 Lafayette St„ collided anrl damage to Nyseth car is $2,100. tain City limits. partly cloudy and there's only Te levision highlights, movies Osseo-Fairchild Butler: Hair s aristocrat top jal rescued by the beautiful ruler of a hidden city. (1953). 3:30, students build NEW YORK - I spent an of Miami Beach's Ch. 4. hour with Michael Butler, alai players may wind up in , Ban-ymore. A talent- Las Vegas; the MGM Grand Television highlights "THE GREAT PROFILE " Jotor the tall, rici, mustachioed Earl Wilson Hotel will feature the sport. ed actor loses his job because he is an alcoholic; (1940). fourth house OSSEO, Wis. The fourth producer of "Hair," one of TODAY'S BEST IAUGH: Today 3:30, Cb. 6. — the most successful shows of horses in South Dakota. Mack McGinnis says a man PRESIDENT NKON'S TRIP. Satellite coverage of tho "THE GREAT O'MALLEY," Pat O'Brien. The daily- house constructed by Osseo- Michael, being In* show bus- he is a stickler for the all time, and happened to grumbled about the high cost President's arrival in Teheran, Iran. 7:30 a.m;, Chs. 6-9. paper ridicules an officer because Fairchild High School industrial ask him "Do you consider iness, figures lie must let , (1937). 3:30, Ch. 19. , of auto insurance: "He final- LOCAL NEWS 5:00, Cable TV-3. letter of the law. arts students will be open to the yourself an •aristocrat?5" his investors in on movies Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey and George McGovern de- "A LITTLE GAME ," Ed Nelson. A young loy, obsessed ly jpaid it—but he had to sell public on Sunday. "Why, I've never been as well as stag* shows." his car to raise the money. bate during tbe California primary campaign, Chs. 3-4-8. with guns and death, decides to get rid of his stepfather aiid In. his 60th St. set-up ROBERTS OM COUNTRY ROADS. Tie Rev. Oral his plans. (1971), 7:30, Chs. 6-9-19. Tours will be conducted from asked that before." He lau- EARL'S PEARLS : Lana ORAL makes no secret of ghed at the question, "I'm Michael is experimenting Roberts, Roy Clark, Skeeter Davis and the Clara Ward Sing- "TROG," Joan Crawford . An iithropologist discovers a 1 to 5 p.m. at the house on West with a restaurant where Turner reportedly once ex- ers present this salute to country music—the sermon is on living pie-historic man, (1970). 10:30, Chs. 3-8. North Street in Osseo. not unhappy- with that kind plained how she prepares for of label. health foods .and natural faith and hope. 6:30, Ch. 5. "THE SERVANT," Dirk Bogaide. A study of pervasive The 26-by-40-foot structure foods can be prepared non- an evening out: "After I'm a 16- "We've been around the OPRYLAND, U.S.A7 "Music on the Banks of the Cum- evil and moral decay in which a strange relationship deve- features a breezeway and faddisbly, "where meat and dressed, I look at myself and berland", with a star-siudded cast, is a salute to American, lopi* between a wealthy Englishman and his servant. (1963)- by 24-foot garage. Booms in- country since 1654," hepoint- ask, 'What can I take off?" and mentioned that vegetables can co-exist hap- music Songs are performed against a backdrop of woods, 10:30, Gh. 11. clude a l4-by-20-foot living room, ed out, pily. So food people Leonard L. Levinson pre- , with an there are contributing; and many gardens, a "Western town and a Dixieland plaza complete with "QUICK, BEFORE IT MELTS " 10:50, Cb, 4. two bedrooms, a kitchen make a religion of it, and dicted he would't find pot- river boat, steam engine and an old tin lizzie. 7:30, Chs. "TRIANGLE," Dana Wynter. Story of intrigue at a fash- eating area, bathroom and util- non-contributing aristocrats. holeis in the street on his • ¦ (1970). "I've known a lot bf aris- say, 'If you don't eat what 5-10-13. . * -7-7 ionable school for girls. 12:00, Ch. 13. ity room, we eat STARVE-"* trip to Paris, such as he "'Getting a Piece of the ' the living room tocrats who are not too well , BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE. Wednesday Fully-carpeted, As he was recently divorc- saw in N.Y.: "I was partly Rock" is l>r. Graham's sermon topic as his Charlotte (N.C.) "JOHNNY DARK," Tony Curtis. An engineer designs a has paneled and textured walls, off ," he said. "A classic ex- right. The only potholes I Hildebrand and ample is the Duke o' Bed- ed from Vhis third wife Loy> crusade bejins. Guests are folk singer Ray sports car and gets a chance to build one. (1954) 3:30, Ch. 4. and a 4-by-6-foot entry with a ce found in Paris were in front singers Myrtle Hall and George Beverly Shea. 8:30, Chs. bedroom has ford," the titled Englishman , I asked, "Are you dif- "ANNE OF THE INDIES," Jean Peters. A woman pirate large closet. Each ficult to get along with?" of the TJ^ Embassy." 5-10; 9:00, Chs. 3-6-13. the six feet of wardrobe storage- who opened his castle to the of the 16th Century roams the seas between England and "I don't think so but I That's? eark^brother. Caribbean. (1951) 3:30 Ch. 6. tourist world. THE DREAM STI1L, LIVES. Documenlary about the , include guess my last wife-thinks so. life and works of dramatist Paul Green Pulitzer Prize "WHIPLASH," Dane Clark, A painter searches for his KITCHEN features , dark cabinets white formica "NOW he' s well off ," But- We've been t*tlking recent- winner. 9:0O, Ch. 2. girlfriend and finds her in New York — married. (1948) 3:30, , took~a~bad ENDS TONITE countertops, carpeting, and a ler said.—"He ly oh the phone which is Ch. 19. V7- scene where the death: taxes Wednesday "THE CASTILI AN," Cesar Romero. Adventure tale about sliding glass door leading out- something new. It was pret- PRESIDENT NIXON'S TRIP. Satellite coverage of the side- ? were going to wipe him but. ty acrimonious, it took 5 "STHAW a Spaniard who leads his people in a struggle to overcome It's a very good scene for President's arrival and; official welcome in Warsaw, Poland* Moorish rule. ( 1963 ) 8:00, Ch. 19. ? White fixtures, gold and white years to get a diyogee. We DDBS" 10:30 a.m., Chs. 5-6-9-10-13-19; 10:3O p.m., Chs. 5-10-13. ceramic tile, and blu e carpeting him now and he lives well. will probably wind up hav- "SADDLE THE WIND," Robert Taylor. The life of an He hasn't .gone to seed. 7:15-?:20—$1.50—R LOCAL NEWS, 5:O0, Cable TV-3. ex-gunfighter? is shattered by the return of his violent younger highlight the bathroom. ing a sane . relationship," :; A-PUBLIC AFFAIR/ELECTION '72. Sander Vanocur ex- brother. (1958) 10:3O, Chs. 3-8. The floor of the utility room is "I' ve more respect fcr peo- Michael favors legaliza- amines. techniques of Sens. Hubert Humphrey and George "SAJJTIAGO," Alan Ladd. Adventure story about gun- of ceramic tile. Equipment lo- ple born With a silver tion of marijuana and says McGovern as they use hews media, specifically TV, in their runners trying to break through a Spanish blockade. (1956) cated in the room includes a spoon who make it, Believe it is easier to buy heroin campaigns for the presidency. 7:00, Ch. 2. 10:30, Ch. 11. washer, dryer, and gas counter- me, the temptaton to do no- SU rti ~ now in New York than it is aaamfnBa.ML ORAL ROBERT ON COUNTRY ROADS. 7:00, Ch. 3. "ALL THE BROTHERS WERE VALIANT ," Robert Tay- flow furnace. . -<*- ^- thing is extremely streng. I to get pot. WwMP- Wed. BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE. "The World on Fire" is Dr. lor. A couple go in search of whales to tftfe Gilbert.Islands. The house Was constructed know how nice it is. I used Graham's sermon topic in the second program of the Char- (1933) 10:50, Ch. 4. ?: with no basement but with a to spend 3 bi 4 months in 'Is this really true?" lotte Crusade. Myrtle Hall, Arthur Smtih and Quintet are "Yes, it's hard to get." /JH *«HPHarnA |l crawl space for access to heat- Acapulco without putting News 1-4-1 I-30-13 school year. Students have done Butler,. 45 now, did not keeps his weight at about To Tell Ida Truih » Cannon 48 News fr-9-19 let "Hair" go to his head. 155 lbs., and Hosey sighed 4:30 Glen Campbell 3-41 Billy Graham Mo Dragnet 11 all the work with the exception , Oral Roberts On Perry Misen 11 10:30 Movie 3-8 of plumbing, heating, and: ma- He's producing a musical, "I weighed that much when Country.Roads S Primus IJ J, Carson J-J0-1J which will ques- 1 was born Ponderosa 10-1J »i00 The Dream SIMI Dick Cavett .«-».-)» sonry, "Space," ".. .Ruby Keeler Mod Squid l-l-ll Lives 1 Movie 11 The house, purchased by Mrs. tion whether we longer need showed pictures of the 5- Jeannle II Billy ' TOiSO Movie « national boundaries. month-pld grandson she 7:00 WeitBrn 11 Graham 3. J-13. IJiOO David Frost t Agnes Watson, is the latest of has- 7:30 Advocate 1 ... Marcus Welby M» . Western : • four constructed by Osseo-Fair- It's not a downer ,Tin not n 't seen ; he's ©n Guam with Hawaii Flv«-0 J.-48 »i30 Mora on Tuesday 4' Movie 13 his parents. Hl <&s> LnrtBdftrtwts Opryland, Sanford & Son 5 Galloping child students in cooperation saying wipe away all coun- . .Anthony U.S.A. 3-10-13 Country Place 8 Gourmet 1* with Hong Lumber Co. tries!-boundaries, but it's go- Qoinn's working on his sing- Charles Browson N ^. ing to take place, ?We all ing with cafe star Aris Jack Palance IHl Students constructing the San. J isi ? : : i? dp ^ ^ ^" , house this year Were Ron Krien- have populations, pollution Veteran cafe owner Max \mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtm *^^^i^S|ffe H Wednesday Mike Buch- and food problems, Why s' TOMORROW lj ONLY l^ lx^^ i ll l l ' ,,, ^ . - - ke, Ron McGaver, Gordon will title his auto- 9W/A4& ^ S^- ~ -* holz, Tom Anderson , Bob Kut- don't we solve them togeth- biography "Closed For Al- | i %p^ NO CARRY-OUT PLEASE^S^fSj ] Aflarnnnn Dlcl< Van *>**>* ' c,rcl Burnett 48 separ ately? ... m l. ? ... Western S Adam-12 HO 13 chera , -Greg Sieg, Peter Erase, er rather than terations". . .Richard Round- l:J0 Guiding Light 3 4-1 , Love Luey * .: Courtship of . Ed- like Thi Doctors S-10-13 * and Charles Lahn. It's wasteful this way, tree asked .that his grand- Gilligan's Island U die's Father *-f 1* ¦ ' paling Oame 4-9-IJ 4|4} Lucm, Ball 1 Western 11 ' * . : me producing two shows on mother be invited to the pre- 1:00 Secret Storm J-41 7:10 This Week 1 same Another the same subject at the mier of his film "Shaft's crtle rv l McCloud 1-10-13 World M0-1I Smith Family 4-». 19 Montevideo records time. Big Score" ; she's 103. .. Oenero Hospital HoiVn's Heron S &«, •»!? «» Vibrations i "Look at what President Singer Rita Dimitri, who wettest May in years -when YrffTT'fri "¦" !! y%r ««• Nixon did he went to teams: with husband Stanley n[ KR-V-iSL"' ^i-M-con u fl^ ? PANCAKES p r '° Pwt U 8 J MONTEVIDEO; Minn. (AP)- China just on acupuncture." Brilliant at their romantit p " ".« sVo-ii »'» "<' " "l 'i ™"™ a ' Ont Ufa lo Llv* t:30 Electric Company 2 Rtf p.,.,,1 9 The Montevideo area of west- Michael — nobody's ever La . Chansonnette, told the J3L ONE OR A MILLION A *.M» News 3 4-5-4-B M013 Movla 1» has recorded called him Mikt — Is also audience Stanl«y 7:15-9:15 > 3:50 Sewlirj 11 Star Trek 11 . „„ ,,,. , ,,. central Minnesota felt "out of Dick Van Ovke If •» 1 L , negotiating to make a movie 3:00 Supervision 1 ^T.^'""y " . its wettest May in 30 years. place—he's the only man 550.$1.OO-$1.5O GvU, , of "Hair" and it will prob- ^%\ 3 4 , Evening N, me of h. oaTne » Rainfall thus far this month here with his own wife!" ENDS TONIIE Somerset J ins 4. W Reading 3 P*"-*V ""°" 'I 7.51 ably be done with soirie out- »OO Forsythe, Sa 8i 2 in Montevideo totaled Flip Wilson'U drive across Love, American News 1 4-S4I1013-1» side money despite Butler's .CUFF ROBERTSON Style 6-MI Truth orConse- Mannix a-a Inches. The record of 7.66 the country this summer ^ BI]Iy ' It Takes A Thief ll quenccs « .,,.m ... i«.,, inches was set in 1942, accord- wealth. getting ™ To Tell Ida Truth » Graham 35-4-10-ls material for a boot 9 fc 3il0 Cartoors 3. ^his was from Frank Os- ¦ PG: % Movie 4-4-19 4:30 Inquiry 1 News 11 ing to National Weather Service . . .Julie Newmar said at SBHr Virginia Graham S Clrtusl 3 lOiOO News 34l-<-«-» good Butler, the grandfather ' '^H **C^^^* _m^B^ l4 records which go back through Monsignore she was to writ** Lucille Ball I Oolddlgger* 4 News 10-13-19 . 1931 who at the "* tim- was selling Flylns Mun » Hollywood Squares 5 ,j.]0 Wov„ M a book oh beauty. . .Some " tfiB best Food by a country mile" Croen Acres ^$?*$r Jell'* Collie 16 i-IJ prddenf Nixon's Concenlration 13 Flying, Nun , 8 Trip 5-10-13 4 00 Mister Rogers 3 Truth or Const- D i ck cavett 4-9 19 Wiiiona Daily News Truth or Const- quences ? Movie "ll 10 wenees I Mouse Fodory ,0 JB Novli 4 TUESDAY, AMY M»"t« • Jeannle 11 30, 1972 Carson,...„« B-10-13inn 11 Star Trek 10 Hogan's Heroes 11 "'»'J- VOLUME mm^mmm^MJl GentU Ben 11 7:00 Election '7i 3 13:00 Western » S, NO. 165 Galloping 16II Service Drive Virginian 13 Oral Roberts On Published dally except ^Ml iiGfiTM 4:30 Sesame street 1 Country Roads 3 Gourmet 1* Saturday and Mr- lain holidays by Republican and Herald Publishing Company, 601 Franklin St., Wlnona, Minn. 55W, . HminDHiJOSEPH {. IEMNE imim tH mo E W8«St* PIC WE A. SUBSCRIPTION RATES MARLON BRANDO Monday Through Friday Morning Programs j Single Copy w 'lM!CHA[LWIN«l«firtl * •Hm yvtHVMl^A w. —^.J^Vrt-.- ^*^. « w-rt ^i-J- /SCSHWU t w**w.» ~ «r «»w ^i.\v'v,^*^.v^+^3B 15c Daily, 30c Sunday Delivered by Carrier—Per Week 60 cents STATION LISTINGS 34 weeks $15.30 . 53 weeks J3O.60 "THE Mlnntapolls-St. Paul Austin—KAUS Ch. ,4 Eau Claire—WEAU CH. » WCCO Ch. 4 WTCN Ch. 11 RoChester-KROC Cil. 10 La Crossa—WKBT Ch. S. By mall strictly In advance; paper, snip- NIGHTCOMERS* KSTP Ch. 5. KTCA Ch. 1 Wlnona-WSC 3 La Crosse-WXOW Ch. 19 In-jvalson Landsom N. Swenson Olson ped on expiration da le : |R"SJ> ceion by TKlmcdtr Prats 6£0-¦¦""• Oourmet 11 In Wlnona, Houston Streei 13" 1HI5 News 5-10-13 , Wabasha, Flllntore STEAK j 4:30 Sunrlia Sesame and Olmstead counll«s In Minnesota) and Religion . 13 H:0O Elaelrlc company a ,].oo News I4-S-8-10 BuMalo, Trempealeau, k Family Aflalr 3-4-1 Top studenis named Pepin, Jackson liOO Now* l-t-> . All My and La Crosse count ies In Wisconsin) and Csrtoom 4 Sale ot ttis children «•»¦!» Cenlu 5 armed forces personnel wllh military Today 1-10 13 „ rv . -'°-'> Lunch With addresses In Iho conllncntal United States 1:00 Cartoons H-B rcon Acrl* ! Cnsey 11 10:30,. ,. SClassroom, or overseas with AP*0 or FPO addresses. NDU/3 • ' ..2!,s.. Variety..,. 5-10. ,. 1 year $25.00 9 I I SPECIAL I ¦ 2 - .! Love ol Lift M-l " months $20.75 Comedy . II Hollywood HU« World Turns 34-8 at Spring Grove High 6 months $15.00 3 months , I ».0O iKHIlLOi mL © WEDNESDAY 3:10 Classroom 3 Squares 1-10-13 Let'* Msl<* * ¦ Elsewhere — • iH Movie 4 Bewitched 4-M9 . 0«' *¦»•" SPRING GROVE , Minn. (Spe- tend Wmona State College. In United Slate s and Canada Cartoons 9 Ben, ,(,„ clock II TI"'M on • Miss Swenson is a member I year SW.Kt 9 months I30.5O 7 p.m. to 12 Midnight §M liOO Jack LaLanne 3 u,oo Where Ihe Malr.h 10-11 cial) — Spring Grove High 6 monlhs $20,75 3 months $1 1 .00 H i Lucille Ball 4 Society, Sunday News only, 1 year " Heart Is 3-4-8 School's honor students, in the of the National Honor $1 5.00 Dinah Shore S-10-13 jeopardy S-10-13 HO-0 Love Is a Man* band, choir, Thespians and an- Single Dally Coplej mailed 55 cenls each Woman s World a Password 4-9-19 Splcnded Thing 1-4-8 class of 1972, have been an- , Single Sunday Cop ies mailed 7J c«nti Romper Room 9 Womon Tall- 11 Days of Our nual staff. She has been active each What' s Newr 11 11:30 Search (01 Lives S-10-13 nounced. in speech and was a Girls Stater Subscriptions for lesi than one mo«th: Sesame Street 19 Tomorrow 14-1 Newlywed $1.00 per week. Olher rates on request. 1:30 My Throe Sons 34-8 Who. What. Oame 4-l-lt Donald Ingvalson , 18, son of and winner of the Daughters of W^ Concentration 110 Where S-10-13 Movie 11 Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Ingvalson , the American Revolution award. Send change ol add ress, notices, undeliv- - - CHOICE — Caledonia , is yaledictorian and ered copies, subscription orders and olher She will enroll in Augustana mall Items to Wln&nn Dally News, f 0. 7:30-52.25 ^ David LandSSffi , 18, son of Mr, College, Sioux Falls, S,D., this Box 70, Wlnona, Minn. 55987. Wisconsin paper and Mrs. Julian Landsom , fall. Second class post age paid at Wlnona, f RIB EYE STEAK 1 group is renamed Spring Grove, salutatorian . Olson has ?been active in band, Minn. , Served WEth Your g¥> £k W* gu . Two other top students are choir and stage band. His 1 Choice of American MENA.S1IA , Wis. (AP)-The Nancy Swenson, 17, daughter m Hkl^ll i choice of school is St. Olaf I Fries or French «j*F ¦ *# V I Wisconsin Paper Industry In- La Crosse man of Mr. and Mrs, Sander SWen- College, Northfield , Minn. A Fries, Toast, Salad I A formation Service has renamed son, and Charles Olson, 17 son ¦ ¦ , __\s. and Coffee. JUST . M itself the Wisconsin Paper is hired as of Mrs, Archie Olson. All are of Council. Spring' Grove. Double Feature—$1.25 The group which serves as a agency planner The four top ranking student s public relations association in will speak at the commence- the state paper industry, said it WHITEHALL, Wis. - Dave ment program Thursday. made the change lo more accu- Wilcox , La Crosse, has been Ingvnlson 's activities include ¦ ¦ rately reflect a wider member- hired as agency planner for 4-H, Future Farmers of Amer- ,;¦i: y \ " '-2 ship base and expanded associ- ica , Lettermen's Club, Nation- ^^^^Hl^^,kk. Western Daaryland Economic ^^k^k ation responsibilities. al Honor Society, choir, band Carl Liebert of Rliinelander , Opportunity Council , Inc., White- and football. Ho is a member a St. Regis Paper Co. execu- hall, announced Maurice Han- of the Wilmington Lutheran I^^^ H M^^^v ^ii tive son , executive director. Church nnd American Guern- ^^^ , was named general chair- i man of the croup for 1972-73. He replaces Patrick Herriges sey Cattle Club, He plans to £"A 'or Heservat, |ff ^A^ ^ C ^ vi , ^/A\»™i «a^ "^ W m Ea<> Thlrd Str,,t who accepted a teaching posi- attend the University of Min. . i |bv ^CsUBI^^mT Wmmw \l tion at the Community Learn- nesota 'Technical College, Wa- seca. ® Mice exterminated, ing Center JI ' OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY , new educational Landsom has participated • • facility in Eau Claire. In workers to return band and baseball . He Is a Wilcox, a graduate of the member of the ?Lettermen SYDNEY (AF) - Steel- 's University ef Wisconsia , La Club and Trinity Lutheran CUMT workers at n factory in New- Crosse, hns had experience in „ castle who went Church. Ills hobbies include <4 ; MT ^> BT on strike two (he day cam urn) social work reading, hunting, fishing and ^-^^^^^^A^ days ago after mice invaded EAnwoop field. motorcycling. He plans to at- \^m their lunchroom were expected r ' ^c ^^^^^^m? I to return to work today. MRIY The ONLY Place Tho mice have been ex- STEAK SHOP SPECIALS-5 TO 9 P.M. DAILY terminated. / /i | A m r^ HARRV J^W Plus Second Feature 11:10 SPEC,Al CHAR-BROILED for your COMB ONBI COMB ALU FRI ED SPRINO - Jatcn Robardi, Stella SUveni, TENDERLOIN : Noon Luncheon SCHAFSK0PF CHICKEN $1.49| '~A fAA~> [ STEflK $1,99 s^''' "•"• ¦* ¦ ¦¦" ¦ ¦ I TUESDAY "' »-- ' ' I- ' .- .il . ' - ¦¦ ¦¦¦I ¦ I II i ¦ W .lll.1 —WW—^MMW, INCLUDES SOUP , POTATOES. SALAD, COFFEE • Frencli Fries, American fries, steamed or mashed potatoes. cfilnakanlL Ju NIGHT • Mixed salad howl with French, Roquefort , 1,000 Island Dressing. (faxtfbm BAIiLAD f RESTAURANT ' ^ OP WSL ? CALL US TO CATER YOUR PICNIC \[\^i& * LOUNCE .I BF EAGLES POTATO SALAD, COLE SLAW, BEANS TO GO. J|\./jT Intersection Highways 41-14 ,e=5?S!P» suppER CI,|B CABLE B, \\V 41 ~ Phon* «M390 New Clubroome Main STEAK SHOP Mw5F1 --% Founlwin City, Wh. 4th Franklin Main "^^ ¦ ^ irrt^^ \ ¥ * i ' ^ HOGWE Residents of 4 Illinois towns are evacuated ¦>' ASHMORE, 111. (AP)—Some 2,000 residents of four small towns in Coles County were forced to evacuate their homes for a time to escape deadly nit- ric-acid fumes spilling out of a wrecked railroad tank car. Residents of Oakland, Bush- ton and Raridan were able to return after an hour Monday, but the sheriff's office didn't give the all-clear to residents of Ashmpre for more than eight hours. The tank car was one of 22 MARCHING "UNIT V . . Members of the Cochrane-Foun- hall High School claiming second place. Other bands were derailed a mile west of Ash- tain City High School Band march along the parade route . from thp following high schools: Arcadia, Pepin, Blair, Gale- more. Firemen sprayed the Sunday at .Arcadia, Wis. Judges rated the West Salem Farm- Etlrick-Trempealeau and Independence. fumes escaping from tlie rup- ers Band as the best overall band in theparade with White- tured tank to dilute the highly , toxic chemical. ¦ ¦ ¦ Five farmers were ' • A„ A' A : ¦ ' [. . - .; : A;. ,, ;. , * . . ' ' treated at y ^ a Charleston hospital Parade chairma n reports—- for minor . The Rev. Paul Nelson skin reactions attributed to the COTTER BACCALAUHEATE ... Mem- toward the altar E- , acid fumes. bers : of the 1972 graduating class at Cotter Cotter principal, was celebrant of?the Mass High Sthopl took an active part in Sunday's and the Rev . Dale Tupper was homillst Grass, Blair) 5th-Ron Miller, Prairie baccalaureate Mass for seniors at Cathedral Cotter commencement exercisesywilL be Wed* Farm, Wis.; «th—Edmund SoBotta, Ar- ' ' cadia; 7th— Lee Bros., Barron, Wis. of the Sacred Heart. This photograph of the nesday at 8 p.m. at St. Mary's College Field-- Arcadiace/eferof f on one of fees/ Pony Pulll no contest results: Mass was taken from the balcony, looking house. (Daily News photo) ARCADIA (Special) f Mr. and Mrs Wendell Byom , Open Class—5,000 pounds: Larry Gil- 42-Inch Class—first place won by Bob , Wis. - the Northern Investment Co.,of . bertson, Black River Falls; Gary Bet- Peterson, Boyd., Wis., who- pulled a The' 1972 Arcadia Broiler-Dairy Independence, Dolly Madison, -Atradia. tesworth , Ettrick; Ron Gilbertson, Black 3,800 pound weight 11' 6". He was j First rtterdant was Mary Kay River Falls; David Kramer, Trempea- awarded a cash prize and a trophy. Sec- Festival was one of the best Pabsi Blue Ribbon, Arcadia ¦! leau. ond was wan by Virgil P, ?La Crosso!]Mrs. Leonard Hssch, Wauman- Rushtord.- Minn.; Adrisn Bisek, Arca- pound weigh t i' |".-.——T—* dia; Mike Unnehan,5p-rta, Wis.; David The 4i inch Class trophy was won by fay an estimated 20,000, a record Oktoberfest, A-G Creamery, Ar- idee, ^nd second attendant, Joan Kramer, Trempealeau: Duane Wundrow. Boyd, Wis^, -for pulling reports earriiiigs Open Class—9.000 pounds: Gary Per- a .4,100 pou nd weight 4 feet, bettering NOTICE ¦!Sc'.im idtknrcht , 18, daughter of crowd, reported Mel Nelson, cadia churches, OLPH Youth , son, SI. Charles, Minn.; Larry Sass, Dave Franrwa, Mondovi r 4'' distance ; ' after 1971 loss parade chairman. Eleva Festival, Kellogg .- .Water- , i * Mr. and Mrs. Efden Sthmidt- Rushtord, Minn.; R cae r Butterfield. New and Clifford Williams, Osseo, V 2" pjll. knecht ,, Wcumrndce . : Auburn, Wis.; John Void, Osseo, defended his 1971 TO ALL DOG OWNERS Every spot along the parade melon Festival, Trempsalcau .'' Robert Tennesson, Blair; Orin Schwier, 50-Inch class pony pull championship RACINE,; Wis. (AP)-Versa route was clogged with spec- County Democratic Party, Ar Barry Mills, Wis.; Mike Llnnehan, Spar- by -again 'Outdistancing his closest com- THE announcements were ta. ' petitor, Norman Wundrow of Boyd, by Technologies Inc. has reported IN LEWISTON cadia FFA, Sportsmans, 3' .8" tators, especially at the end of made at a coronation dance Ooen. Class — 13,000 - pounds: Curtiji at *,8to pounds. He Was given a . trophy and earnings of $305,859 or 45 cents the route near the activity at Dukes Bar & Kupie'z Bar , Persons, St. Charles, Winn.; Garry Per

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TEAM EFFORT . . . Urging his ponies Festival is Virgil Perry Jr., Woodvilie, Wis., I on in the ponypailling contest at the Arcadia who took second place In the 42-Inch clans. J If no-fault comes it should be in force all over No-fault auto insurance, currently facing an uncertain future, may yet come alout If a bill There's always recently approved by a U. S. Senate committee can win full congressional adoption. ' Shepherded by Sen. Warren Magnuson, the bill a Kissinger would establish nationally ¦uniform ' standards for WASHINGTON - Always in the no-fault insurance. States could draft their own international af- plans but they great moments of would have to conform to basic fairs the American public sees tha federal principles. Wfc S. White still moonface of Henry Kissinger peering over the shoulder of Rich- NO-FAULT insurance has been both hailed and ard Nixon. — not to mention this city of Wash- assailed with nearly equal vigor and effect. A pio- Because this White House as- ington. AH this he knows too well. neering effort in Massachusetts is still operating. sistant is bathed in a light of pub- What he really wants, if perhaps he The Illinois version was first adopted and later licity — especially on the TV tube Is not always fully aware of it defeated bi the courts. A New York version of than the — scarcely less effulgent himself, is a fellow who without no-fault was narrowly defeated in that state's leg- light that beats upon Mr. Nixon him- islature despite a broad spectrum of support. Var- self , the insistent question one hears agonizing about it simply lays out a ious legislatures, including Minnesota's, have order- is this: What makes this German- proposed course of action and shows ed studies of the question. born ex-professor so necessary to no inner doubt whatever about it; the President of the United States? All this does not mean, parenthet- Under the no-fault system, anyone injured in ically, that the President is in fact an auto accident would collect loss-of-income com- TO BEGIN, it is a fact that every going to-accept this course; he may pensation, damages and medical costs from his president has his Henry Kissinger or may not: But at least he is able own insurance company. This would be the case however his name may be spelled to feel that one man around the regardless of who was at fault. and whatever his title. The country shop is not operating on the prim then, is not seeing here a novel ciple that he is necessarily going to phenomenon; it is only seeing a re- The purpose is to do away with the adversary . live forever. Any battalion com- curring phenomenon, in this case method of determining fault or negligence mander of infantry feels good to see and much enlarged by the circum- assessing? costs and damages. Frequently, under a company commander consult- stances of these times. the present system, such arguments bring on long, ing not with the medics but rath- For the Henry Kissingers are costly . legal battles. In some cases injured per- er with his riflemen just 10 min- th ose presidential associates who, sons are inadequately compensated while others utes before H-hour. 7 , become sometimes aren't reimbursed at all. in every administration The Kissingers, in sort, are men indispensable in the end because of completely sober purpose who of personal qualities rarely found nevertheless have on call a tinge of OBVIOUSLY, a system that dogs court ca len- among colleagues in the palace the spirit of danin the torpedoes — dars with heavy backlogs and leaved settlements p) guard. The President, any President, poop scoo war full speed ahead. Reckless? No: But The to the uncertainties of legal procedures needs has a houseful of advisers willing resolute in conviction? Yes; they are. changing. Whether present forms of no-fault meet While waiting for developments create a market for their pooper- to give him counsel on any and all And above all when the going is this need Isn't fully established ; on the international war front, I scoopers, as they are felicitously but some sort of matters,— but subject to the temp- hardest they do not come into the modification appears to be coming. pause to report on the war in New called, and are demanding ah ex- tation to oyeradvise. presidential office with 5,000 words York City between the dog owners ww;^^ pose. American ingenuity has not . The vast majority ; — and this is of yes-but and maybe. "You asked and various 'anti-dog, or more pro- solved by such facile digressions. risen , fully to the challenge. For Much opposition fo no-fault has been provoked the core of the business 7- are in- me what I think; well, here is what perly anti-dog poop, groups. Anyway, the anti-dog people are instance, why could they not devel- by provisions iri present versions that prohibit per- clined to waver; to see this side I think." This is the effect of their The issue suddenly burst upon now reviving statutes which have op a can of squirt which deodor- sons from suing for pain and su ffering. While and that side of every problem ; to utterances. the yscene last winter when a mid- been sleeping soundly for? years, izes it all, or better still, turns it trial lawyers get the blame for belaboring the offer their opinions with many A ' die-aged doctor, coming upon a Do- which restrict the freedom pf dogs into corn flakes, or the nearest al- point, there's plenty of objective reason for oppos- words — and also with many on-the- ONE MIGHT SAY simply 1htf 1h« berman pinscher squatting down on and specifically proscribed certain chemical achievement duPont can ing a plan that could prevenfc4he victim of a last- other-hands and escape hatches. Kissingers have long since accepted the sidewalk opposite his apart- areas, for instance children's play- corne. up with? ing injury from recovering appropriate damages. (It is an understandable weafc that it is indeed a tough world , full ment in Greenwich Village, sudden- grounds in the park, the zoo areas, ness ; but it is still no comfort in of all kinds ot perils, including KIAYOR LINDSAYVhas ly found himself reaching into his and what have you. A tactical am- actually . Moreover, no-fault seems to pass lightly over showdown times to the man at the perils to themselves, and have nev- proposed that dogs be required to *:* pocket, pulling out a firearm, and bition of the anti-dog people is to the central point most accidents are caused fop.) Sensitive to the vastness of ertheless concluded that the pale perform in their owners' bathrooms, that shooting the dog quite, utterly dead. construct a DMZ around the whole by someone's negligence. ¦ Those Vho cause acci- the issues, and aware that mistakes cast of overbought does truly de- which suggests that the mayor's' . This violence was not senseless, in of Central Park, a territory, the dents that injure others or their property should in judgment or possible inadequacy ter not merely action but also wise kno wledge of dogs is about on a the opinion: of those who under- dog people would yield only after not be able to escape the consequences of their in their own homework could have thought. par with his knowledge of cities: stood the doctor's frustration. But bitter resistance. But even if the actions, say opponents. catastrophic consequences to the So if Kissingers did not exist they but no one wants to politicize the the dog lovers, greatly aroused, anti-dog people win there their vic- country and to themselves, they would have to be invented. All have , issue, and for that reason people bore down hard and of course the tory can only result in an intensi- may blow an uncertain trumpet In been at one in the plain quality of are careful to move with ¦biparti- AND SO the arguments go. But the need for gentleman will be prosecuted, and fication of the problem somewhere sounding their views in any crisis. the other in many things. They have san solidarity, whichever side of a better system Is inescapable, notwithstanding the no one now believes that the final else. I mean, the less poop in Cen- been at one in the plain quality of the issue they find themselves on. adamant refusal of some opponents to recognize "WHAT THE President — any solution to the dog problem was tral Park, the more poop else- tough-mindedness; they enter no For one thing, the pollsters have : this fact. President — least of all needs in adumbrated by the incident in where, which is called Boyle's Law poker game automatically ready to . . not discovered exactly where the these hours of decision is men Greenish Village. check the hand. political advantage lies. It is: all If there is to be a form of no-fault, then a around him to tell him how very IN ANTICIPATION of this prob- COMES NOW something called very well to say that more people nationally uniform system would be the most nearly rough and d angerous Is this earth United Teatvres Syndicate lem, the anti-dog pepple are sug- ¦ equitable. . Leaving it. solely to individual states Children Before Dogs. That organ- gesting, that dog owners be held are without ? dogs than with them. ? .;¦ * . either to adopt or reject means exposing the? trav- ization, one suspects from the fan- instantly responsible for cleaning But whereas most people who eling motorist to a bewildering, contradictory atical gleam in its prose, is a hard- up everything their dogs do. vant the street poop removed are patchwork of laws. Given the mobility of the av- Rampage af the job fair liner, which would really like to do To this end. American capital- indulging a velleity, those who want away with dogs altogether. Which their dogs are indulging a passion. erage American, this is an unacceptable situation. men were from but of state and ism has developed a little device ¦ An editorial In reminds me that if there is a dog So that even if only one-tenth of — F.R.U. had taken part in a similar fracas . which facilitates the scooping up Chicago Tribune in China New Yorkers have dogs, their in New York, where a similar pro- , he isn't in Peking, Shang- of the: debris, which are thereaf- hai, may. well be the strength It is hard to imagine anything gram has been under attack. The or Hartgchow. When we left ter dumped into a plastic bag. The slrength China last February, I remember of ten if they find some politician more senseless than the disruptions disruption, like other protests we whole operation would appear to be make that swimming which wrecked the Job Fair for Vet- "^Kave seen in the past, ended up thinking that instead of sending two difficult to consummate with the thr eatening their dogs. Untold prime erans Tuesday afternoon. hurting most the very people the musk oxen to the Peking Zoo, Mr. kind of polish that goes with a stroll ministers of Great Britain have , pool a safe place Some 200 youths, most of them protesters claimed they were try- Nixon should have sent two dogs. down Park Avenue with one's St. fallen for suspected indifference to black, stormed into the Internation- ing to help. Either dogs are forbidden, or else Bernard, but the anti-dog people dogs, let alone for conspiring to they were eaten during one of the are not struggling to make it all constipate dogs. So Mayor Lindsay's 7 Somebody is forever spoiling things for the al Amphitheater, overturned tables, We can only wonder at the mo- £ famines, or else they were mis- that easy for the dog owner*, the foray into the dog war is under- rest cf us and here's the latest one. It's^Varn- smashed displays, and generally ter- tives of these vandals. Some, judg- taken for people and shot during hell with him is their attitude. standably tentative, and meanwhile ing to the owners of swimming pools who by now r o r i z e d company representatives ing by the liquor bottles in evidence, the cultura l revolution. But there But now the Dog Owner's Protec- the Village Voice has helped matters must be getting into the spirit of tilings, readying and job-seekers alike. Complaining were bent solely on a spree of vio- are no dogs now in China, and that tive Association charges that the not at all by publishing a recipe for a pleasant summer season. that the job fair was a sham, they lence. Others, judging by the flur- settled that problem. But the prob- power brokers are really behind the for Sweet and Sour Doberman. crowded in front of the television ry of press conferencs they called, lem of dogs in New York is not suggestion, that they are trying to Washington Star Syndicate There's a decided danger, according to the cameras shouting: "We want jobs! were more interested in publicity. city's electrical inspector, of Injurious shock, should We want jobs!" If so, they were amply rewarded. electric current somehow escape from defective . Well, jobs is precisely what the Television coverage, both local and filter pump motors or other appliances. job fair was all about — jobs in national, seemed to deal almost ex- particular for nonwhite veterans — clusively with the protesters and and it was anything but a sham. their complaints, and hardly at all Mr. The amount of current used by a one-quarter Mayor at 31 The 800 Chicago firms represented with the overwhelming majority of I—I IM horsepower motor is enough to ele ctrocute a wet PORTLAND, Ore. — Opposition ¦ ^ "-*"" « *" ^ wmamtmmmamaaman Goldschmidt raises the question bather if defective insulation or damage allows at the fair here were offering more veterans at the fair who became to the proliferation of automobiles , wh-ether the city and the surround- the motor to leak current. Other potent sources than 4 500 jobs — jobs desperately the protesters' victims. and policemen is not normally the Tom at poolside needed by unemployed veterans in The fair resumed the next day, Wicker ing counties shouldn 't be building of trouble include the electric radio route to political success in the —— ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦!¦ . ^ ¦— | I I I——I.II. ||, the area. The disruptions, which with company representatives and mass transit corridors instead, lo- that falls into the water, -sa^defective connections American city , but — among oth- perimemtal high impact crime pro- frightened away many of the com- job-seekers returning in large num- cating them by comprehensive land- or lights that can send stray electrical impulses er things — it worked for Neil Gold- gram, Goldschmidt hopes to ear- pany representatives, only made bers to make the event a success. use planning, with ample outlying shooting about. schmidt, Last week, aided by a Mc- mark about 75 percent for preven- things harder for those seeking jobs. We commend them on their refusal parking facilities for commuters, Govern-like army of volunteers, he tion of crime, rather than for vari- Representing an organization cal- to be intimidated by organized van- downtown parking sited and gear- There is a way to ward off these hazards, for- became at 31 this city 's mayor — ous forms of beefing up the police led the American Servicemen's Un- dalism apparently imported from ed only to shoppers, and awtos oc- tunately, City Inspector George Jessen recom- the youngest and maybe the most force. As an exa mple of what he ion, many of the rampaging young New York and elsewhere. cupied only by a driver banned mends that every pool owner install a protective de- provocative big-city mayor in the hopes to achieve, he cites a pro- from certain streets at the rush vice called a ground fault interrupter. This handy country , gram being tried here as the re- hours. little gadget senses any current leakage and cuts Mayor Goldschmidt is not at all sult of excessive violence in a neigh- off power in a tiny fraction of a second. against policemen. In fact, as com- borhood school. Neil Goldschmidt is no surer that missioner of public safety, he has The situation was so bad that It Ideas like these can save the city Since pools usually are extremely popular with been overseeing the 730 cops who was threatening the stability of the fro m the automobile than he is that both children -and adults they are often surrounded patrol Portland's streets and try to school neighborhood •— and another Ihe incidence of crime can be re- by substantial numbers of people . It's reason protect its 370,000 citizens, on a of Nefl Goldschrnidt's alms is to duced, but he sees no r&ason why enough (o see that protective equipment is in- budget of about $12 million a year. preserve the neighborhood structure a TOP DEMOCRATIC CHOICE > own a handgun. These people 'Among iJemocrats independents; Humphrey¦ ¦ McGovern Wallace Sure NO COUNTRY in the world and ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ " : ' " ' are being deprived of the offers its citizens a greater . — May April MarTh February 7 , . . . * . * •«. ¦%. . ' ft A " %. ?*; ' •¦% ' ' ¦ 31 26 ? WANTED! pleasure of shooting at targets choice of guns than the S77 * 7 .ft A'. . ft Na tionwide ...... A-,.. 34 MEN-WOMEN and cans, as well as defending United States. McGovern 21 8 6 5 Bv Region ¦ Humphrey ...... ;...... 20 17 ? . .' 18 15 East :...... ;...... 35 • 40 7 15 10 age ll! and over. Prepare now Lincoln Service has helped themselves against intruders, There are snub-nosed guns ' hippies Kennedy ..720 17 15 12 Midwest 35 36? 21 8? for U. .S. Civil Service job thousands prepare for these and communists. that can fit in a woman's ' • : 5 during the next 12 tests every year since 1948. Unless everyone in Ameri- Wallace ...... 19 17 12 ¦ 12 South V.v. 32 14: 49 openings handbag, semiautomatics that ....A...... 6 15 20 ' ¦¦;¦ 24 V West . - . ... .¦ ¦ ...,..• ¦34 ' ¦ - 37. ' - . " ¦;• . 19 10 ¦vmonths; It is one of the largest and. ca owns a handgun the**re will fh-e eight slugs at fc time Muskie ¦ ¦ ...... - ¦ ¦¦¦ -¦¦ , .38s Jackson ...... 3 4 5 6 """ '¦ By Agfe . . - . ?• . . '; A- y ' '" ' ' . Government positions pay oldest privately owned school* never be peace in this country. that can hit someone at 50 feet, salaries. Tliey of its kind and is not connect- ' McCarthy ...... 3 3 3 4 18-29 ...... ,...;...... 31 . 46? 20 ?S high starting .45s that can make holes as ' ¦ 30-49 ...... 36 33 23 8 provide much greater security ed with the Government, THE PROBLEM with supply- Chisholm ....,..-...... 2 3 3 5 , ing everyone large as a fist and very light None ?...... 3 6 8 * 9? 50 and over ...... 34 24 . 31 11 than private employment and For FREE booklet on Gov- with a handgun .22s that a 8-year-old excellent oppo rtunity for ad- is money. Many people would can fire. Not sure .:...... /.v..?.,.. 3 . 10 10 ; 8 ? By Education ernmcnt job s, including list We are blessed because any- 8th grade or less ...... 40 19 33 8 vancement Many positions o[ ^mous and salaries. flU rather spend their salaries on When Sen. Edward Kennedy's supporters were asked who require little or no specialised such luxury items one in America can have the their second choice would be. the chief beneficiary, taking '7 High school ...... 736 26 29 9 otff coupon and mail at once- as food, cloth- education or experience. TODAY ing and housing. They fail gun of his choice at a price 41 percent of his vote, was Sen. Humphrey. A smaller 22 College ....,.;...;...... 29 ? 47; . V 7 , But to get one of these jobs, ' ¦ • • . ' ., . .. . to see that a handgun is a he can afford- percent of the Kennedy vote went to Sen. McGovern , sug- By Politics you mik pass a test. The -Vou will also get full detalli necessit gesting the potential importance of a Kennedy endorsement V Democratic ...... 43 28 24 5 . keen and in on how you can prepare your- y and essential to the For those who are on re- ¦' ¦ ' ¦ competition is tests : safety and well-being of the lief and unemployed the gov- in the future. Here is how the Democratic lineup looks with Independent ' ..;...... 22 ... 43 23 12 some case* only one; out of self for these . Kennedy's vote distributed among his supporters' second- three five pass tf . Don't delay — ACT NOWKo American family. By making ernment could supply surplus THESE RESULTS reveal a great deal about the top ^ the ownership of a handgun op- weapons from the armed forces choice preferences : leaders in Democratic delegates. : ___--• . . tional, DEMOCRATIC CHOICE WITH KENNEDY OUT ¦ ' ¦¦••¦ hrey strength is heavily rooted among LINCOLN SERVICE, DEPT. ?25-3B the government is leav- at the same time they give • Sen. • Hump 's , Illinois 61554 ing 110 million persons out food stamps and unemploy- May April March February blacks, the less well educated, enrolled Democrats and male Pekin L , V un- ' ' ' ' absolutely ' send me " ¦ ' interested. Please - . . • I am very much ¦ ; ¦ • * ¦% - * ft . .ft- . . .: ; . . , . ;. . . ft re- armed and at the mercy of ment checks. voters. But he does have significant backing in all four FREE (1) A list of If.S. Government positions and salaries; the 90? million persons who: do There is absolutely no rea- Humphrey ,..;...... 28 28 22 . 17 gions pf the country. (2) Information on how to qualify for a U.S. Government Job. own handguns. son why everyone in this McGovern .7...... '26 10 7 V 6 Sen. McGovern leads in every,,yjegion . outside^the TTT,.:. ¦¦ ¦ Age ...... coun- • ' ' ' Name ...... A -... The only solution to this try could not be armed by Wallace ...... 21 18 ~|14 13 South ,. but runs.j,a .poor -ti}ir3V.belpw the M^on-DkotpTuje. Street ...... ?..•.••'.. Phone ...... problem ? is for Congress to 1973. ' Muskie ...... i...... 7 7 V 18 K 28 He easily wins the uhder-30 vote; the ? college-educated, and City ...v, . State 4¦ ' ¦ pass a law making it manda- The opponents of handguns McCarthy ..,;... .A-...AAA ' - "A . . '• 3 • 5 : independents, while he edges out Humphrey among whites and ' 7CJ7yy :7 , - * ,/ ' .; ' tory for everyone inV the will argue that if everyone owns Jackson ?V. .'V.'7...... 3 56 6 women voters. In light of the attention being paid to blue<;ollar United States to own a gun. a gun there . -will be an in- There may be cries from crease in crime. the antigun lobby that "by forc- This is balderdash. ISvery- ing people to : : " own handguns one knows that guns don't kill ' ' ' A' ¦ ¦; -AAAA - ' ' ' : "¦/' Congress is trying to infringe people — people kill people. ' • '>" A- A -. A . _ \ ' y -AA- y . . 7' . - - V ' . on the rights of the electorate. Y?6u don't eliminate -crime by There will be other com?- keeping guns put of thd hands of law-abiding citizens in this country. Pig War triggers It's time to stop talking about handguns and do some- softball game - thing about them. In addition The Gopher State to a law making owning a gun international fun mandatory, we must have an educational campaign pointing FRIDAY¦ HARBOR, Wash. out the good things about guns. . (AP) . ' —¦ :' . Who would have Not only do they give pleasure to people Don Rate. guessed , but they also 't-Rush-Me that the shooting of a porker in 1859 would have re- contribute' heavliy to our econ- omy.". *? . sulted in an international soft- " 10^ ball game in 1972? The handgun , manufacturing 7 : Certainly not the American industry provides jobs for hun- : . J;- -V :^^ ^ ' . *¦;• . BoIdlerVwho picked off a pig be- dreds of thousands of people longing to a Hudson's Bay Co. including steelmakers, ammunU The Gopher State Don't»Rush-Me on the \weekend, place your«all \vUhiri tbe Gopher State Don't-Rush-Me agent, and thus precipitated the tion suppliers, distributors and Rate is for peop le who don't like to be Minnesota, and dial the number your- Rate from Northwestern Bell, Pig War, a 13-year con- sporting goods store owners, not rushed. self without operator assistance.* Think of it as freedom of speech. frontation between Great Brit- to mention the lobbyists for the one who cares about thd For only,$1.39, you get ten long, lux- And if you make the call after 11 PM, ain and the United States over econ- urious minutes to say all you want to the same $1.30 gets you twenty possession of omy of the country knows he /2\ tbe San Juan couldn't survive economically say. As long as you do it after 5PM or minutes.* 7 ¦¦ Islands in the Strait of Juan de |*Q| NOrthWGStOTrt Boll ."¦' Fuca. without handguns. If you care about freedom, •Does not apply on the legal holidays ol Independance Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving , Ch-istnvos or New Year's Day." The dispute, in which no hu- if you care about target shoot- man casualties were recorded, ing, if you care about a ended Oct. 21, 1872 when Em- thriving gun industry, write peror Wilhelm of Germany ar- your congressman today and bitrated a settlement by award- ask him to pass a law which ing the contested islands to the will make it essential for every United States. citizen of this great nation to ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^i_^^__iS^Sw^^^Bm ^m ^m ^m ^m ^mwm^^wSlm ^^^ ^mBKII ^P^^av^ammK ^S ^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m\ Over the weekend, the Cana- have a handgun he can call ¦^^^^^^^^^^^^m^^^^^^^^^^^^EBBBEBK^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^UBJBB@&BBBm^^^^^^^mmmmmmmmmmmMt ^A^, m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^ mmWWBSamWtm ^mmmmmmmw ^^ dian vessel HMCS Porte de his own. A„ **¦*«. ^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmWmwS ^^^f ^^Sit ^^^^^^^¦^AWsaWmmmmmM WBsW^m^ms ' ^mmmmWWmmmmmmmmmmmmm ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ k Until Congress ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^gA' mm t *****i ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ mms ^^mi ^^^^^^^^^^^^' >. - ~ .M^HI^^^ mmmr>H Law Reine, visited this San acts we will never have a safe a\\\a\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\aa\\\\\W^^: ^aa\ ^m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Bi^@^iHl ^^^B^^^^BV^^>9^^^BI^^£'^'^^^^ HMi ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^H l Juan Island community to cele- and sane America. ^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^BssA*> y Im^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^^^m^m^Bmtm^Btff/^BB^B^BI^mHMB^^^^^^^^Bm^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ brate the centennial of the end W^mmmmmmmmW ^^' y mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmwBEim ^^B^^^^^B&.\ wBe!m ^Wamw A ^^^^^^^^^BBS ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^A mmm ^m^m^mwm^m^m^m^MMAKT J^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^mlmHKHH K ^m^mwBC ^SBmi^BHHil^B*«B^^rnij^^^H^^fii^^B ^m^^E^m.. ^WUBBL ¦A&m^m^m^m^Mm^mKm^m^m^m^m^m^m^m^mm of the Pig War. Its crew en- Los Angeles Times Syndicate aaaaw ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ KXEr-**^ ** ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^ ^ . { ^^^^^^^^ ¦R Hk ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H m^^^^^^^^wSm'% m^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm mma\wBmm»* -v ^ teAW^mmi ' ,A- M'SJiWAWImk }¦ *'&msb ' Vw wSmmmm^mmmm mmmmmmmmWmmmWBmmmBBBmmmmmW-*Wm& -; -» -y mmmmmmm ^mmWm^^_ T mBmrnm' A//V-A7# -• M m^___\\\\\\\: MBmmmWmm\^^w WmBmrnwA'W ^m «/MFW -iM^m^%Wm- *!» ^mmmm mmmmmWWKmmmmmWmmW&, ^mmmmlti/iMA/ <»# %MSB V? «- WmmmW HARDT'S MUSIC STORE ^HI fl^^^HKK-. '-l^HS l^ft- < WB A - •A$i_^_^_m 116 Levee Plaza East Phone 452-2712 \mmmmW^^^VJ ^a\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ma\\m^^^^^^^^. KraW -:M^HK»l!immmmmmmmmmmW ^r ^ *'*'^^irmES^maaaaaaaaaaVifri ^ Jmmmmmm;AAw&>^f ^ ^ '- v'M^mBSBs^SWBm &&... i WWW^L. 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J 1 3-RING DELUXE BINDER ... EACH $T.S9 I DHRICI Ce ^ * 'VAA V * ¦ EARJ FORMERLY HH ^fe . 1* I BONELESS MM* r^^ >SCTED ¦ I ¦ GROUND ¦¦¦ ¦ M VI* J ¦¦HB¦ ^^^^^ SH I wwCHUCK wv TEN0R CARE fiSKWIa ^?* - . ¦ SE-Kr*' - ¦ " m » SH -1 ^^ ^ ^" ¦ "" ¦¦¦¦¦ • ¦¦¦ " ¦ Ku*toi.....Rn/kQT M. HH : BEEP f H I H\rnrrCE ^^-^os^ __"r*_r+__% I M ^ I EGGS I RED OWL.BREADE D W^^ ^ FR0Z.SHRIMR ¦ ¦ ¦ __ . J wam • ' - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' * __ _^_a _ . ^. ^• . ,^»Mwfg*M^ttB flMiflBhh ' .Jn ^ Wti ^^ '' ¦ ^ TUBfflvy -.A / PE BtE - : ¦ ? raoffi^BEefteiiiMii pR ^^fe KMI ^ : ¦ ? / ?? CHOICE OF B FIAV .O .; y . Y ;' ^ ^\ . .-. « r-OI lit JT V. - .^ ^ ^ A** * * I REDOWL If m^ POT PIES VEGETABLES COCKTNL MACARONI DRINKS Lfil 3 QQo ilQH 1Iflo 19Tn

¦ ¦ ¦ BMg»'» ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ . ¦ ¦ ¦ ,. . y : : HARVEST QUEEN • ,ppwojR£DDE^* ¦ ^l^H»kA. r ' .- - . ' . ^^^^ ^^ _^^^^^^^______- I Individually TERQENT, ChO c« • . c CHOICE OF^ 7 • CREAM STYLE Z ' ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Wrapped Sltctf/ BRIMFULL. CUT • .. OfTwHOtE ! °f"°. Phot phatat, m _JKf_t_WIBI_M_tSBSSfS!B!IIVBBB9fBSS9BW9^^ FLAVORS STOKLEY ; ??7?V:' a^gSgj ^^gj ^^gg ^g^SgB^^^^,* H ^,. c ; PINEAPPLE: 1 GREEN • KERNEL i °V. • umA:rai^re02EH Jr"" BEANS = CORN "! TASK • \ ^^ragstsss^ * * | LioW1NF„ : DRINKS i JUICE I CHEKE -y«.*.: ¦ ': F00D l ylSiasr GRADEW OQC ! TURKEY OQC ! TURKEY EQC : 'JM T ! 'S"* !! ^ "^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ m ^a^a^^^Hamm ^^^m ^^^^^^^^^^ a^^^m ^^aaaaaam I I TURKEY....0O j PARTS.VV-Lq I BURGER...00 : 7^1 1 59 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ # 29° 4 "I • 49° 17 III II III II RED &y> WBiHi^ HHHHHHHHHBHHHHIHIII ^HHBHBHII HHHHHHHHHHHHH H^^HHHIIBHH B OWL, Condennd, Chick , Gumbo, Beef with Vegetable* & This coupon .ntitlM CUito -iH-r to purchase on^ quartjer » • ^rley. or Beef Noodl. io>^OZ. SLICED BABY BEEF ""«*¦» "" 12-0Z. I DCfl t\\U\ Of]] ID ?£?. ,g Hjg SALAD DRESSING . ¦ . . HA ^ . ^ » nuU UWLuUUr; ¦ 0^>A ^ .»» !• .. tfffi l ^ . . k. «^ . . — A ( I • » lo MIRACLE WHHLS.39 * 1 NEWIREDOWLSNACKERS...S. sse I I 85 with eouoon md purchaw, Redeem Both with $35.00 purchase or more g§ BEEF LIVER 759°US* SLICED. BACON mw 0 I : urtlll ALII1an I f»n*ni/rnf> a30Z. i»«-i_ . » Hid«em Either one with i?.50 purchase or moro <«xcludln9 «lflarttte$) B§ V ^'ffff^B ^. ^. 59V lurW ANIMAI I.RAnKFRR PKG u33Cw S Limit one Jar with coupon. Limit one coupon p«r customer. Expiration ^ ! ^ MMMeMMniMH«iHH« ^ Hn y i J| u A «MiMiMMM MMinMiiM ^ * '™- WwjrH^IIVini- UnriUfVunU .. ,,. r...;« ** , 1972. (AXX0330) Corporate - g| dite.^aturday, June 3 AtrV FRESH CRISP 'k ^WP'WBS ^amWaWm CALQON, Newt "Cling Free", Antl-Statlc. You spray Jt In your dryer SMl ^^ ^ CALIFORNIA ^WtsilWmwmWjL. ' Prlceie1fectIvathruSaturday, Jun6 3, 1972, , , . nni

This coupon entitles customer to purchase one gallon f\ 3§> ^^H • R f^ H^^^^^ H H^^^ Ki ii ^^^^^^^^^ l l^^H ^^^i P^^^ Bl^^^^^^ l NEW !

purchase more, IsS j :§ with coupon and purchase. Redeem Both with «35.0O or I ^H___^I i^^I I HBBBI^^^_ !^ij^i^Hiiv\ li1^i^Hi>'%rij^i^H JI ^HI JI ^HI mmm^Bmy • n<«ifir C...J... <£: Rtd«em Both with $15.00 purchase or more, Redeem Eltherone with 38 k^^^^ HH ^^ k« ^^ H!l*m!4 rfj ^^H^ i^^^ H. ^^^ 1 ^^^ ¦¦^^ ^ ¦ 1 1/ailY JUnCldV purchase one gallon with 5S i^^ H i^^H_ ii :j> »7.S0 or moro (excluding cigarettes) Limit ^^^^^ H^^^^^^i HH ^^^ llHBi ^^ HlH ^^^^^^^ V i^^ H^^^ B ^^^^^^ H * ~. mm. m. ;B coupon. Limit one coupon per cuitomer. Expiration date, Saturday g JJs M^l^^^^^^ KI ^^^^^^ V ^^^^^^ H Ram tn 10 fl ltl V n m tn n n rM jS Jyiw 3, 1>73. (AXX0331) Corporate ^^^^^^^^^ I^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ HaWB ^^ HNni ^^ Hi a.lTl. ¥U IV p.m. 7 a.m* TO O p.m. i J nPw Wl ^mmm ^^^^ SI ^^ ^^^ SS ^^ S ^mB^^"" P* "''' ^ •

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VINYL ^ H FOAM, 6-PAK, 32 QUART SIZE Z FOLDAWAY WITH ^' MATTRESS SF VMA m^'%mW%ta\Wmma _W a\ k. Wi. J L 1 ^H H 11 ICECHEST ; FOLDINGBED » j.4A H il flflWWfflMffl l I 1 1-89° | ^iQ88 1 $paa j^j.^.ptiig :: ^^ ?f ' ; : - 1 ?¦ ' ^ ^ ^ ^ """^ ^^ ^ ^•V -; - ? Limit one roll wlth coupon. yS AI%AI • . . . . : * ^ V »- ' w h coupon. H DAI ^ BT I DrM EACHejvru £ |QT : W. , '» ' • ' ¦«! ' * BWBC3C ^9 12II I PCSIl 3IQW / ^^ p^ | W 'S, V Aimitoneeoupon per customer. Explr*rtl»i» F . y DCIDCUCI II DOV ...... ¦...T| ¦¦ ¦ ^^^^ ^/ ^s,t J M3 !97?ccrpw,ti £i# m GOLOHAWK ? ¦::¦ /¦' mm muir * *#^4#%^. i^ ' " ' p .. :: 3 WrVUirMla¦ p E K l L l CV ? l™*^^f^ 1 GOlf BallS . — ? 87^ POOL - ^';5J2J ' V ? .ps«%mtwm g S(v ' ' ' " ¦ ¦ " ' " ' I ¦ I flffl5 _BWG\ ALUMIN¦ ¦ UM. 8x3x3 GREEN WEBBING a" . ¦ . ' . ¦ V — ' i . i i i % m\\\ ==rJ~^m^m\ ^m\ MEDI-QUICK I ^m \\mmmfSimA,^\ ______" ^_ ¦ ¦ ' _ _ ^_^_WH!*s, ¦ ¦ ^ l ^ ^ llilfn tffl l ? All II inA 111 *. MME Jl ll A VI UII ^ ¦ aee«>tx]( ^ P WBr\ '' i n ial ! ¦¦ j MSa ^y Sat, Jun«3, 1972 Corporate B ^ P » IW \ 'A\ 'IS SSK /(I ' ^^ ' ¦ ^'^^' *^ ^^ CHaAIRS "'ff'JW ^^

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^ COUPON ENTITLES CUSTOMER PURCHASE ^ ^ -~ il iM . TO H W \'r TT Vl .y ^* .a^Pim^imM ~M^ljj §§ l liin ¦^^ fc I I ¦ ^^ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ' ' ¦ ' ¦ ' ^^^^^ ¦ ¦» : ¦ ¦ 1 EACH v* I. NUTROGENA c^nn E l ^^s^ M m\^M COLOR, CX1J0, 12 EXPOSURE KODA.K INSTAWATIC X25 KODAK INSTAMATIC X13 ' 3)7X7 H L*^ Plr ^ I H I 1 ' r «* n •» c £ EA ••¦ y ' „£.„ ^g--- ' Umlt I, Llmtl l coupon. B»plm sat, JUM », l»M. H . --—- • J ¦¦ ¦¦ ~QV -SIW' XM L KIT .S|Wf* (SjEiP FIL m J S9« KIT S|tf7.I "T 1 I^X^^ ... ^ i. ¦- ,— MmMWW^ =sssss=5*s= 1^ 1 1 1 ^ i : i I { aWXwr^SSLMMMMmmmm MMSKi \m *^ ^fete. Jk ^"fflBf - ¦ ..' .... ? - • __^______^^^^^^ iraBBg„ aBmBii I H I^&^^^^^ J ¦ ¦**¦•¥ *¦¦¦"¦¦¦¦' ¦I ¦ (^i . * ^^ HLHi ^Bfii -*n LAi _^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^_l^^^___^_____'^ ¦¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^•^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦'aa^a^BBlB»BlM******MBB«B***M*MB ^^__^^ «*** MBM*^^ ^^f^SS^w p iTBBI ^ I ¦ _0t ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ti a 1 one oka Sylvania Blu« Dot KJ ^I A#^ | A f B' a'n .^H^S ^^^^^ in HOUSEWARES L^A/IM & GARDEN BARGAINS FLASHCUBESPKQ< 1 ill II A ¦ PS laaHBltiiuMi$' ! ftL^H 77^ E *f i l l RANCHER MIRROR GREEN 3 °^ ,.u VlM L>I ^<* V aft l 1 MONSANTO H li > S H¥¦ i coupon. Limit7 «n» pkg.o with coupon, 1te ^ 1 ^ ™ VSaU l F >>¦¦»»»... . -T- Z.1^—¦ ¦ § ^¦Naflitff ___ with ono coupon per cuatomer. Expiration ^L--^^ VffTBi li* lA/LICnM 209/l.l H _— nADnCM .^ — a ^HU 2SN? ^P Limit p VMttu IM ^^ ^ uAKUfclM CAOQ^ ^^ ! ^aM gjF -f .«-*,jun.3.i »wcorpor.u «-BJ| C4 77 w> , ^^ A FEED «• * v li « ^ «»«« UW/ AbTE»»- BAS ^ ^«KET • I HOSEHWWL .«.«." 2 GARDEN FAIR l-REMIUM RANCHER 20-10-5 ^^^^^^^^^^^| THIS COUPON ENTITLES CUSTOMER TO ^^^^^ PURCHASE ^^mp C GRASS M- _ __ '"—"» .m R^ n, $|SQ LgjWT V* $148 - so "" | 00 SEED. . i r FERTILIZER... I r N c SJSv Jun* 99 v%%# ¦# Bi^r* ¦ MII ^i ¦*4 ¦>% M af*> ¦* ¦***¦¦ ''^''''^^¦"¦¦¦¦fl'fl'flBeWaWBBBHBB BBBBHlHBBHH ^2^p ¦ ¦ LAUNDRY BASK ET IIIT F^INTDAIMT IUP-PIX ID PVIUP ID CDCTSPcCIAI IALo C: ^^ I I B B irapigMZMmgyA^ii^ RCG- ~ THROWAWAY RAYON 7" SIZE 9 ^ ¦ ¦ H Xl XI C PKG ^ fl ^ . This couponontltleicuKomerto purchM. I ^ ^-f'fc-f nAllklTnr ^l I EDO C7P* l^PB^ nVrHTriiAnn I ¦ DELUXE RECTANGUUR rMINiKULLtKw D/ ||BH 89 I I PEOCSTAU ORNAMENTAUPLASTICWHITE |™ILSSD^ tar.%*y^-5MisissJ* I H LAUNDRY*.. BASKET1 ^ ^ -AA I Kr BirdBath ::::!249 Picket Fence=.59c ll ^ Z. ^ ^ ¦ ¦ 4-INCH NYLOM yiMaa^R-flMmtMl ^^ J u% BARBEn5 j ^ Q Q u ^ 11 . I Paint Brush 99c PaintThinnete.99c 1 ~r:st:sa m°~ 1 I I I SNYDERASPIR ,N rQc 1 mmmmmmBmm ^tmmmmmmmmmmBmmammmmBm^mkmmam ^^ +0 1 llmlM B P «¦"¦ s>l J ] PBICES-EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY j """ ""' ' «"""¦"• > ^'"°" - ""' * '»"• fi_jJ . JUNE 3, 1972. QUANTITV RIGUTS RES£RW£D , MO SALES TO DEALERS. l OTIWiWJVJ^Tmi WI^m^WWny^^MVW^A^^li M Husbands can forgive

and forget, too t T cecur nowusrom DEAR ABBY: An unfaithful wife who had been caught ht taai liiiar in the act, wrote in part: "What's with men anyway? Are COUNTRY BAKED APPLES understanding, compassion and forgiveness qualities that only women possess? If you know of one man who'd be willing Thdr core cavities are to sit down With an erring Wife, discuss the problem, forgive stufied. ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ her and ' ¦ - ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ' • ' '- - • "" . 6 baking apples suggest they 1 cup apple juice 7~ AI_I_ - start over, De31 ADDV•¦¦ .' . % cup plum jam please aom- :¦-. -- . 1 cup coarse whole-wheat inate him ¦ By Abigail Van Buren.¦ ¦ bread crumbs for saint . * • ¦- - .- ¦ ¦ ¦ , :* ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ' ¦ ° * ~~"—~ - ¦ % cup suugar was attended by 750 doctors, . , . .. . . - hood." ...... Vt, teaspoon allspice Attend convention midwives, nurses, childbirth in- Well, my husband qualifies. He caught me in the act, V* cup corn-oil margarine parents. and ¦ structors ¦ ¦ not once, but three times (with the same man) and each Core apples almost through Mrs. Larry Sutton, 1065 Mar- ¦ • ¦ • • time he forgave me, and now we have a Stronger marriage to blossom end; pard about 1- ion St;, and Mrs. Louis Guillou, than ever. MARRIED TO A SAINT 3rd of the way down from stem Trempealeau, Wis., recently at- M.G. ladies aid end. Blend Vi cup of the apple tended the International Child- DEAR ABBY: I don't know whether t?his qualifies me ' CITY, Minn. — for sainthood or not, but I did catch my wife with another juice into plum jam; stir in HONORARY MEMBERSHIPS . .. Hon- and Benjamin Mahle, senior at the colleg;e. bir thy Education Association MINNESOTA crumbs; spoon mixture into From left: Miss Magnus, Miss DeGroot, Mrs convention in? Milwaukee. Dr. The Ladies Aid of Mrst Baptist man, and I forgave her. All she said in her defense was, orary memberships in the Winona State Col- . City, will "Well , now we're even." apple centers. Place apples in Society were presented Saturday Benjamin Mahle, Benjamin Mahle and Mrs. T. Berry Brazelton »a member Churah, Minnesota lege Alumni Harvard Thursday at 1:30 p.m. at She was right. NOMINEE IN TAMPA an 11 by 7 by 3 inch baking evening to Miss Doroth B. Magnus, retiring Bruce McNally, Alumni Society president. of the faculty of the meet y , was ihe key- the home of Mrs. Floyd Farn- dish. Combind remaining % cup director of the college theater ; Miss Ahgelyn (Daily News photos) Medical School DEAR ABBY: I'd like to nominate my husband for saint- apple note speaker. The convention holtz. 3880 8th St, Goodview. juice, sugar and allspicd. DeGroot, -retired head cashier of the college, hood. After nearly 20 years of marriage I fell in love with Pour over apples. Dot apples another man (also married). The other man's wife . found with out about it and raised such a stink that my husband ga\e margarine. Bake in a pre- heated 350-degree ovein, basting " up a thriving professional practice to move as far away as often with - " r^-tl ;; possible from that little community. syrup in pan, until VVSG ".; a l-amri i:-,. =hpn^ The other woman divorced her husband, but my husband apples are tender-45, to 60 min- stciod by me. I am trying to make it up io him by . being utes. S«rye warm with sweet- the best possible wife in every way. My man is one in a ened whipped cream. Makes 6 million. V 7 FORGIVEN IN WINONA servings. on golden anniversary DEAR ABBY: So, women want men who are "under- CHOCOLATE PUDDING CAKE Members of the Class of 1922 Mary Ellen Carlson. standing, compassionate and forgiving?" Well, I was mar- of Winona State College were Benjamin Mahle, a senior at ried for 26 years. Then my wife left me saying, "I simply A cakelike topping and a sau- cy chocolate base. honored Saturday evening at Winona State College from can't stand a man who is so understanding, compassionate the annual Winona State Col- , Minn., was named and forgiving." 2 tablespoons butter, melted Plainview 1 cup sugar ?V lege reunion sponsored by the the recipient of this year's hon- We've been divorced for five years, and since then I orary membership in the Alum- have treated women like dirt and they love it! EX-SAINT 1 teaspoon vanilla Alumni Society. 2-3rds cup sifted flour ni Society. The award will be Brother Leo Voelker, St. presented to him at gr adua- DEAR ABBY My husband is a saint with a triple halo. ¦ Vz cup unsweetened cocoa He not only forgave me, but at great financial sacrifice he ;. - 1 teaspoon baking powder Mary's College, a member oi tion exercises. secured psychological: counseling for me; Even as I write % teaspoon salt the Class of 1922, presented the Miss Dorothy?B. Msgmis, re- this X am struggling"to keep from making a phone call to let % cup milk invocation. Each of the hon- tiring diretor of the college the- "the other man" know that my husband will be out of town % cup quick - cooking oats ored , graduates presented a ater, was given an honorary and I'll be available. 1 2-3rds cups boiling water membership and citation by Counseling is expensive, but when I look at my beauiiul In resume of his life since grad- Norbert Mills ef the speech de- a bowl combine butter, M y family I realize it's worth holding my marriage together cup sugar and vanilla. Sift to- uation. partment of the college in hon- '- believe , no woman ever had a better for. Besides, it or not gether flour , J/4 cup cocoa , bak- MISS REBECCA Vau Aukeni or of her many years of serv- husband. STILL FIGHTING IN SEATTLE ing powder ice. Miss Angelyn J. DeGroot, and V_ teaspoon a Winona State College voice salt; add with mill; to sugar retired head cashier of the col- DEAR ABBY: The saint vou are searching for is living major and student of Walter in Houston, I was the unfaithful wife. He caught me with mixture; blend well ; stir in lege, was also presented with oats. In an 8-irtch square cake Hinds, presented musical selec- an honorary membership and 50-YEAR ALUMNI > ,. Members of the ing corsage to. Mrs. Besse Blatchly; Mrs. his best friend but he didn't get mad and try to kill any- Margaret McElmury, body. He calmly walked away and came.back the next day pan combine remaining & cup tions, accompanied by Mrs. citation, presented by Miss Fae class of 1922 of Winona State College were Louis Goldberg, Mrs. to talk things over. This wonderful man was big enough to sugar, remaining % cup cocoa, Griffith. She was also presented honored Saturday Evening on their golden Amanda Benedett and Hazel Benedett. Back say, "Maybe it's partly my fault. If I had paid you more remaining y_ teaspoon salt and with a gift in appreciation of year as graduates , of the college. The an- row- from left: Clarence Christopherson, 't need anybody else." the boiling water. Drop o a t Open house shower her contributions to the Alumni nual Winona state College reunion wis spon- Brother Leo V oelker, Harriet R. Averill, Har- attention you wouldn • ¦ ' '¦; We both decided that we'd try to make a go of bur raar- mixture by tablespoonfulsVonte Society. . . sored by the college's Alumni Society. Front ry Soya and Ellen RafathSimon. years , cocoa mixture WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) riage-This* happened^! ago, and God willing we will in pan. Bake in OFFICERS ELECTED during row from left: Mrs. Donald Kalmes. present- HAPPY IN HOUSTON •a preheated 350 - — An open house shower in celebrate our 50th this June. degree oven the business meeting were: about 45 minutes. iServe warm, honor of Miss Carol Thompson, DEAR ABBY; If you are looking for a saint, look no Robert Hogenson, vice presk A DISASTER AREA emergency relief funds and spooning chocolate sauce from bride-to-be of Jeffrey Edwards, Officers elected further. I am married to him. pan over each portion. dent, and ?Mrs. Roger Busdick- HAUPPAUGE, N.-Y. (AP) loans to private industry. This man was a fighting Marine whose wife gave birth Top with will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. er and Mrs? David Mahlke, WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) — vanilla ice cream. Makes € The designation will enable to a baby in his absence mat couldn't possibly nave been at the Elk Creek lutheran board of directors. Mrs. Bruce — Mrs. Dennis Jack was re; Suffolk County, which stretches servings. y his. He forgave her, raised that boy as if he were his own Church, Hale, Wis. McNally is president. All Wi- cenlly elected president of the from Nassau County to Mon- the county to receive mone^ ¦ ' ' and he never once mentioned it again. HIS WIFE ¦ ¦ * tauk Point on the eastern end under the P'ublic Works and . . nona State College alumni are Whitehall Women's Golf Club. DEAR ABBY: I'd like to nominate myself for sainthood. invited to become members of Other officers elected were: of Long Island, has been de- Economic Development Act for Altura adults Newcomers icnic the Alumni Society by sending Mrs. Darryl Oates, treasurer, clared an employment disaster everything from ? industrial sew- My wife left me for another man. Three weeks . later he vp ers to roads, tourism facilities kicked her out and I took her back. She got herself $3,000 in . ALTURA, Mum. _ the membership fee to Mrs. Mc- and Mrs. John Radke, secre- area by thd Federal Govern- The Al- The Newcomer's Club family Nally or Mrs. John Cross. tary.. ment,, making it -eligible for and research laboratories; debt, gambling, and I paid it off. The only time she ever said tura Older Adults met Wed- "no'' was when somebody asked her if she's had enough. picnic will be held Sunday be- nesday for a picnic at the Nel- ginning at 1 p.m. Members are We're still married. A GLUTTON FOR PUNISHMENT son Boat House, Minnesota (Sty Problems? Trust Abby. For a personal reply, write to asked to meet at the north pa- ABBYr~BO:0&700 L; CALIF. 90069 and enclose a stamps Boat CItfBfPlans were made for vilion of Prairie Island Park. y' ~ ~ ¦ ¦ ^ 7' i ,. A., JH|SK( . A W am ' y . * . mm!mmJy mmmim ' ___ '^B ** : ' '*****«****«^^*^» ^ ^Bi Ooan j ed, addressed envelope. a bus trip to Chanhassen to see Each family is to bring its own -^_^^_ un "Fiddler on the Roof" on June picnic lunch and supplies. Cof- Hr ^tfk. ^ ^^ ^ ^ ^^BKB^BB^^P^BF?^^ffP^^^B(j^^jm^WPB^^^ttBt^^^Ba\^ * i 14. Mmrs. Loretta PUet was fee will be furnished. Games mn_mSBm^ l THE LQCKHORNS will be played, Further informa- j bonored on her birthday. Cards tion may fee obtained by con- *___ to were played. tacting Mrs. Paul Buscher. IT-H 11 ifl 17frl--"aj- * BI J\ \i I "Br*^AVfi I k^TPHL'HB F* JL J i 1 1*L| ,|I,,i"^ Si,JL-Bl.f Lj( .j^I^Si^y^^J^^^UJlLA^^ri^i' * Your horoscope —-Jeane Dixon

For WEDNESDAY, MAY 31 Your Birthday. Today: You are relieved of old burdens, given new responsibilities in a changing world. All depends on how you bring together resources and skills. There is no time to waste this year or next. Today's natives demon- : FW ^FASHION VI strating mind over [ fWSSSk~ /R e C SUNG^^^ . ^ tcu ov/. matter, are versatile and agreeable. lIl A\ \ \\ \ , *" / > ?( ii r jj[ \li "- '8 Styled lo lit you, your rriood or your larorilt m^U j | . N KiTH*/ V. \\ C*\ V V « J colon. Sun-ia fe grey or bro-wn tinted leniei, m ,, " Aries (March 21-April IS): Your community shows |J. fc*^. ^>kC ' . f j " y^^F^* 2,97 l\t ld[ * \8lV " A " its » 1' Childr»r 'f 28< Sunglatui...23' ; J7' Jr. Sit*...37' ¦ ' shortages. Serious consideration in legal matters, participa- 8\ \_>* j \ "iivV"' 'Ar^it 5 MBV P Mr jRr ^ 1 * A ll tion in neighborhood affairs is advocated. ' ( RRY SHIRT NYLON S Taurus April 20-May 20): Use your intuition and common ff Dayi S 12 W^^^^ ¦¦:¦¦ ¦ /4v| \-f\\ X Reg. 3.6S-4 , t> ~ A&A&J^-S^} - . '(y, PILE RUGRWU ' / A-t-VC 4)4 \ \ sense rather than the suggestions of influential people. Short X Hl-crew cotton knlti In A /r / X r ' V^Wi CS> ^> H 8* . / /ijtP -J \ V OO 0 . • v^ '" ; i ^ term agreements are enough for the time being. 0 bold stripes. Machine JS ¦ . ¦ .'.' T^: *; . •.• 7'- Q>«,l> fl / / W.l I * V If ) \<> ! washable. .Men's ML- { ¦] ' ' \y sT' - .-,: ,-J>,:2M^ ^m *. Af, Bjl * Gemini (May 21-June 20): You may be quite volatile— - «¦* -^ - M^ ^ ^ / J ' v il I /'I ! '. M- L-XL. ] ^T -v - •;:.. "CT,. ,:- ;-r ' .-y ' ¦ ' ¦ OO 5 / / L^Hr^- "-! f\ realize others " ' Hp' who see things differently may be the same O Boyi' 2.33 KnllSpil Shirt, S-XL 1.77 ! | y^;, ' ., .* •- ,..' * r -7 'A' A ^ "' ~i way. Being fair and objective might be difficult, but is help- - J/ _^L\_^m \ I I ^V J J i ts*^»^^ ful. cx>0 L yn. \ unmmimmamtmatimmmt^mmm^mmmmmaamttkm^mi Cancer (June 21-JuIy 22): You begin -to pravail, gaining ' " " y ' /^^f^al^ r ^ * ' •• » - -AA^' - A»«odo, odd|? 9x12' room-size nylon i wj ^^ HL -^ / \ ^ ground in conflicts important to you. ?Protect your 1 M &S^^?^^\5 17 " v ' •• '" ^ Pin*. Uu" health \Jniii ?Xw. /ftl n't' kHfi ^-l ' " i Vl- '. • /' ¦ ] carp.ling with lur«-orip ! VHIHK ''}/I<«.1. U« \ and well being. Watch where you are going. ' i' ¦ ¦'¦ A ^ AAAv': °"™' ™ ': a king 1 Leo (July 23-Aug. 22): Friends and older members of i &rs$ i Bfeiit® I ' !i r!iidcoio i ^J^HKI ^'SS?? ' your family cause some concern. Reflect on what you can 0000 offer , how your life is going, what can be done to improve ,0< ¦ ll pliolb^/A^is) | matters. !i i rr° °?^^C ' ^ ' ' C0TT0N KNIT BL0USE 'Mi * I '^feS I (I< i Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You are on your own all day. ! T if' / M?}™ ¦ Wl*£f.'W' 8 1 V vAiPj ll Jtti'iL ¦ ]\,""",l«\\ ? '5 ' ! E«sy-car"e cijinriori/cotlon (_\^__\_w7 " ' || J knll fclouso a v.rlet/ Proceed boldly but carefully where you are sure you are \\j Y ^P'kLS^ | ! \ .Sw-Mf^l \ \ I MISSES' JAMAICAj B !! right. Stay out of situations you can't handle. ' il WAIKING SHORTS 1^ <" . ii Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Tales and plans are all around I '' /f^^^^^^^ >^^\l !! I]^" "' ^ 11 more than § you. Just getting your full quota of routine done is an achieve- cJ£™;£ZMn BB27 SHORTS ment Older people require special consideration. |eon-lty wolk ^ T X ra ^^ P^^ffl _ JL ^ R'9 3',4M I l«, froytd*l*g \ \S^ Wf ( '^^^^ WKl ^rVu) ^ f> Y ' D"V* 4% Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). You will be rewarded for your Ij i hoi*t..M(jVf ?8*3B. Wm 0 1 'Woitpoint" lo.hion wM button J ^1 5I || unique | j \ \-^&$W^ ^ ?S\ Jf' 9 ll V*> ¦ extra caution and self-restraint. Normal actions will be j, Boyi' 2.97 W»lkln9 «i»r1l, MB . 1.97 8 M«»i 1 JtroMm 0 || orzipptr ftont.Collon 1018. A j| 22"V*2w \B *^ ^ |j |' y| A PHOTO CHARM GIFT ° | changed to fit circumstances temporarily. ¦ Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Endless discussions are ROTARY MOWER ' ^\r^ ^ % ! FROM ALF PHOTOGRAPHY I likely, most of them relating to misunderstandings or dis- SSS u^^ ES I RBflU"r | ft : ; IjS n^ ' ¦ ; * crepancies. With patience you can agreements. ' reach Dav, • I'fW^pi; - . , \ 49'M_4 , . .;:] ii O ", ?\ V i Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 39) : Health holds top priority for j^p-p^lJ J i d. lirt ^JO^ J ! \" li^l^JSffl \,\ WHAT IS A PHOTO CHARM? ft- changes; plan it into your schedule. So many people need r' j& LATE^ r 'A^jsj^."j : ' !•• [ A picture taken by us or one of \ your advice you forget your own worries. I ' i^l^£EilHiiZ ^^ \' '' 'i S^^^sfl iy* your own put on n key chain, tie A?, Aquarius (Jan, 20-Fcb, 18): The moment of trulh in fi- : : ' nancial accounting arrives. Check your figures, make new ffi^FT-J ; iWilSM'i DOOR BUSTER . DOOR BUSTER \. A \ Y' 3 |® MB8P A '\ bar , cigarette lighter , necklac e, or / ¦>_ * : Sayel ";• . chnrm bracelet set. V:{ plans in accord with thc facts and your limitations. ; PflNTY H0SE Pisces (Feb. . i i?: | " fy- I, v\ 19-March 20): Important negotiations can K^S^t. 'A -'^® ;\ YARN Vi sSalr un^ ALSO AVAILABLE V'.! rest while you tend to your personal life. Seek serenity in |s^r^.:gy : - -^S£T MISIM' Nyion M«h fc! ;i >-Wyi Pl fcffli AI meditation , get through the day in peace. LATEX FLAT FOUR-PLAYER Sizes S/M, T/7 4-Oz. Orion Acrylic FULL VIEW 7't Fond-Photo* Jewelry, Pendants . Cutf :£' ftWgfiaE ^^fl '¦ ' Advertbement WALL PAINT BADMINTON SET D0OR MIRRORS 1" j; Links, Tie Tacks, Charms nnd Double .•• Re #% ^% .« "MR WHT POK .,.2,» i, ,y! Rrg> 9- B J IN' AAi Pendants. "3 *,D fl |37 4f ^9 6 . ^m ^Bt ^r ^rC *' ^22 BIG IO-PAH •:*; tf °" mBhu. D°Y' JM a6« "%|% L27 """" ^ «-o-« By MIKE LEONARD I jK^ Really, it isn't easy to do tho i_^_^tgSm_jB/* DOOR BUSTER J L- L right tiling with money. _i_ * DOOR BUSTER DOOR BUSTER DOOR BUSTER ;H 1 ^P^V^r- ^f ' 1 tf> 1 Some people never hnve enough >L-^ ^~ ^ Ai' LADIES' IRREGULARS MISSES* SLEEVELESS of it , others never make tho best , ¦__j^ JLr STEREO i—— ' n B JL use of it, \ zOZA- mm ' r i Why? They just don 't handlo V '*^^ mwA. ] KNIT TOPS Bath Towels DRESSES LP'S money well. ^\ - ^^mW^^^^^. , , It li a hard task, using money «»% ,o 7es,.r Ny ,o„ SizesS1 24x44 -T1Reg. 84# Slr« 8-16 , MW-24% 'ftK rBm^r^W^W xzd Many otherS&^Sr famous it can be done, SIzei S-M-L«* " 'r«r art|,ts. wisely. But, V^^^^^I I I I «^» nbouL ^^^ * R°°" 4 *97 Values to $5.00 ^A i'y^ Those who know something ______^______W jm*n I money nre in a position to liandlo _^__ ^ I PHOTOGRflPH U wBmmmmmm\ tl -TM' — 1 _B_mmmmmw ^__\\ c A'' ~r 1 L 69 '¦$ Most work very hard lor m_^__^__ \\\\\__Bm^B our money. We should work junt JBHBH HHIi -V $066 $197 : , i'. t ¦ ' ' — Fourth St. -';. ns hard to use It in thc right' - S 6801HS 17c ^¦•H ' I % wny. We'll live hotter, if -we do. Winona we ar« concerned about "' , ^ ttntmammmtmmmmmmaaaaaamammamamaaam mmimmmammmmmmmmA- Ono important thought: Do not .-^our . concerns, especiall y .when A SS 9/$1.00 *J *f# hesitate to ask for and consider Jt comes to. money" matters. As carefully tho advice and counsel n "Full Service" Hank we've your banter is ready to provide learned a few things we'll be OPEN DAILY 9 to 5, MONDAY & FRIDAY 9 without cost. He dce» want to happy to pass along to you. Per- |o 9 SHOP THE EASY WAY — READ THE ADS FIRS!' hclp, haps you , too, will live better At the First Notional Bank of ns n result! SUNDAY 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' A : * . Thee killed in N. Carolina Women, earn less thanmen , New version greater than mid of sa ndwich Police say Jordan not target fi fties By CECILY BROWNSTONE REESE HART Police Capt. C, H. Haswell ponent in the Democratic pri- obile, authorities said. Associated Press Food Editor By NEW YORK — Women today port notes. sions, where distaff earnings RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Po- said he doubted Jordan was the mary runoff , U.S. Rep. Nick McLeod's body was found in DEAR CECILY: Can you target because so many people Galifianakis of Durham, had a pool of Mood between two earn not only less than men, The -figures show that there are about 67 percent of the give me a recipe for Reuben lice say Sen. B. Everett Jordan for the most part, but the dif- is a considerable difference in amount made by men. were shot. declined protection offered by cars in the parking lot. The Sandiwches made with corned apparently was not the target state authorities after the semiautomatic .22 rifle va» ferences in earnings is greater incomes for year-round, full- The study emphasizes that beef, sauerkraut and Swiss of a young gunman who killed Jordan, a Democrat on an now than in the mid-nineteen time workers. The median for not all differences in pay neces- unannounced handshaking tour, shooting of Gov. George . C. near his head. cheese? Wou may have had it three persons and wounded "Wallace in Maryland two weeks Killed were Jackie Wharton, fifties, long before the advent women in 1970 wis $5,323, for sarily ' indicate women are re- in the newspaper, but I didn't eight . others before taking his was rushed into an optome- of thtJ women' at ago. 47, of Raleigh; James G. Hen- ¦ ¦ s liberation move- men $8,966. ceiving unequal pay for equal try it, dunking I wouldn't like own a^e a shopping center trist's office when the rifle ry, Va. shot ment. . ' ¦' ' 31, of Woodstock, The report shows that among work but concedes that inequi- it. While traveling I had it and where the senator was cam- shots rang out Mond ay among Police said the gunman, Har> while driving his car which The growing disparity in ydar-round, full-time workers, ties do show up within specific love it. So please help me out paigning. V. hundreds of holida; shoppers at -vey McLeod, 22, a school jani- rammed into another -vehicle; wages is the subject of a re- 12 percent of the women earn occupations. now — Changeable. The gunman "just broke out North Hills Shopping Center. tor in Raleigh; used a rifle he and Melvin O. Harrison, 23, of; vised "Fact Shieet in the Earn- less than $3,000 -whereas only In the* same type of jobs in DEAR CHANGEABLE: Yes, his gun and started shooting, Jordan was not hurt , but his had purchased two h ours ear- New Bern. ings Gap" prepared by the Wo- five, percent of the men earn accounting and payroll clerk I've featured Reuben - style first one way and then anoth- news secretary, Wes Hayden, lier for $54.95. McLeod had a Witnesses said Harrison was men's Bureau of the United that little. By contrast, seven positions, men's average week- Sandwiches, but I'm delighted er," Police Chief Robert Good- was shot in the back. Hayden police record which included in front of lyey' s Department States Department of Labor. percent of working women earn ly earnings were substantially to give you a delicious new ver- win said. "We don't know why was reported in serioys condi- two assaults with a deadly Store when the gunman shot Median earn- more than $10,000 .. compared higher than women,*, the report sion. It comes from "The Ran- he was there ." A -witness, tion ata hospital. weapon, and had been released him in the right side. They said ings for wo-l with 40- percent of male workers. said. In the professions, male dolph-Macon Sandwich Book" Bruce Bland of Raleigh, said Jordan, 75, said, "I have no on $200 bond Sunday after he opened the front door, stag- men were 59?4 New York In the analysis of salaries by scientists make from $1,700 to compiled and published by the the gunman was "aiming at reason to believe anyone would being charged with falsely re- gered in and collapsed befor* percent of —rimes- occupation and profession, the" $5,100 more than women, the New York City Chapter of the anything that moved." try to kill me." He and his op- porting the theft of an autom- horrified shoppers. men's in 1970, . largest pointed out. The gap was N gap in earnings was report Randolph-Macon College Alum- Among the wounded, lh addi- as compared " V found to be among sales work- found to be the greatest in the nae Association. The book gives Servicec tion to Hayden, were a 60-yeai> with 60.5 per- ers, with women earning 43 per- field of chemistry, with women recipes for cold, hot and fancy One Twin Citian killed old woman In critical coindition cent in 1969 * . ' cent of what men make. The averaging $10,500 and men $15,- sandwiches and has a chapter with a head wound and a 3- and 63.9 percent in 1955. the re- smallest exists in the profes- 600. on canap-es as well as one on year-old girl who was shot in sandwich dressings. By the the leg. V * way, ? you'll be interested to know that the original Reuben 2 rescued, 2 missing in McLeod *wag marraed and Sandwich comes from Reuben's worked as a janitor at Brough- Professor says church must Restaurant in New York City, ton High School. Authoritfe* famous also for its cheese cake. said he had closed his savings - CB. W p lane crash at CI eve land account at a bank shortly be* RICHMOND REUBEN fore buying the rifle and am- accept women in religiousylife SANDWICHES CLEVELAND , Ohio (AP) — Divers located a portion of a picked up by boaters about 100 munition.? Adapted from "The Ran- A twin-engine plane with five plane wing and one of the air- yards from where the plane A store clerk said McLeod WINNIPEG (AP)— Equality the female. She said if religion is to be of dolph-Macon Sandwich Book." men aboard crashed into Lake craft's engines. sank. had to answer four or five Erie off Burke Lakefront Air- between the sexes will come "You see this in the lack of any significance, the church 8 slices rye bread Earl Murphy; an investigator Aplikowski was admitted to questions on a firearms fonni Butter ':; port here Monday as the pilot about only when men stop fear- women as leaders in religious must start accepting women as for the Federal Aviation Ad- St. Vincent Charity Hospital one of which was: "Have you lifeX r a full part of the religious life Vi cup real mayonnaise veered to the left to avoid an- with a fracturei..right leg and ever been convicted of a charge ing the feminine and acknowl- other plane. V ministration, would not disclose edge that both sexes share sim- ?Prof. Washbourn said West- and must also accept the femi- V-i cup chili sauce the name of the pilot of the lacerations of the right eye. Ko- resulting in at least a one-year but- One man was killed, two are ilar characteristics. ern civili-sation must change its ninity of God. Vi cup drained bread and small plane in the . path of the lar is in Lutheran Medical Cen- jail term?" He answered no to attitude towards ter pickles, chopped . missing and two were rescued. ¦ with multiple lacerations That's the opinion of Pene- the sexes in "Not only will it allow man to Cessna. . ter 1 of all the questions on whether he order tb develop a more realis- accept death more gracefully 4 slices Swiss cheese The plane exploded into the face anp back. had a police record. lope Washbourn of Wooster Col- flames and quickly disappeared "He told us he was making lege in Ohio Who said ; ''We tic conception of religion, a and without fear, but it will 4 slices corned beef step that Is. necessary for also make mortal life more 1 oup sauerkraut, drained beneath the murky water when an approach from the south- have split the human person- it hit nose down 200 yards off west,' ' Murphy said, "when he ality into two separate entities, equality. peaceful.' * Butter one side of each slice of bread the East Ninth Street Pier. saw Uie other plane coming to- labeling one masculine and the ward him they saw each other WESTGATE OPTICAL other feminine, attributine cer- Mix mayonnaise, chili sauce The occupants of the Cessna OPENING IN WIMONA ON JUNE 5 and pickles. Spread some of the simultaneously and each start- tain characteristics to each." 310 were pilots returning to ed a left turn . They were at mixture on unbuttefed side of 4 their homes in the Minneapolis- : ¦ ¦ ' She said the feminine is the KKafba is matGhmaker slices of the bread; store the least? two miles from each other ?' * ^- ^^^B^tm^m^ y^sl Irrational, that which cannot be St. Paul, Minn., area from the when they turned off." remaining dressing in the re- Transpo 72 controlled, a category into convention in Wash- Murphy said? the ? Cessna was which both death and emotions frigerator for use another time. ington, D.C. They were at- by Egyptian custom Top with cheese, corned beei tempting approaching from the west, also fall. to land at the Burke contrary to instructions from and a layer of sauerkraut. airport to refuel. "Our Western society fears CAIRO (AP) — Wrapped in a capita income is below $200, Cover with remaining 4 slices the tower, which was landing both these because we are long, flowing black dress called But her days are numbered, Killed was Lawrence O. Nil- bread , buttered side up. sson planes from the east, Into the unable to control them. Aiid so a Milaya, sometimes with a thanks to Women's Lib and the , 49, of St. Paul. wind. Pan grill each sandwich slow- Richard Aplikowski we suppress them," a move thin veil over her face and a cost of living. , 50, of He said the planer called the ly over medium heat 3 to 5 New Brighton ane Edward T. ¦ that led to the suppression of profusion of gold jewelry dan- "The business is not as prof- minutes or until cheese is mel- | airport about five minutes be- STYLE - ECONOMY COMPLETE SERVICE gling from her arms, she wends itable as in the past," com- " Kolar, 50, ot St. Paul were re- fore the crash ted and bread is lightly brown- ported in fair , asking for per- her way from house to house plained Urn Mohammed, 38, a condition in mission to land. The tower ESTGATE SHOPPING CENTER WINONA ed or grill in an electric sand- Cleveland hospitals. W — offering her services. Khatba in Shubra, a Cairo sub- wich grill 3 to 5 minutes. tried to contact the plane Her customers^ mostly wom- urb. "The spread of education ¦ Divers were unable to find again, Next to Randall's Super Valu Makes 4 servings. the other but there was no further en, warmly welcome her; but in such a big city as Cairo two men identified as communication, Murphy added. she pays little attention. In- spoiled the business; girls and Robert Hildebiandt and David . Pennsy lvania State Phelps, the pilot, WESTGATE OPTICAL stead, she builds , up anticipa- young men now choose by ¦ both of St. Investigators theorized the tion by slowly sipping Turkish themselves. Police Academy to Paul. plane may have overshot the Near-zero visibility beneath -airport , then tried to return coffee and talking about every- the choppy thing except the subject she "Permitting girls to work train 14 women water hampered the from the opposite •direction. No ¦ " • • ' ' side , by side with men has re- HERSHEY Pa. (AP) — The search, which was halted after • • y Rausch , Ren. Be Interes ted In the alight dy Wayne * Rahnenfuehrer , Jeff Ran- Ready, SKS of our persecuted brethren dall, Linda • :i' i ' bafiind the Iron and Bamboo Thomas G. Ready, Janice R Rem- ^S^^^ ^u!uS *V£SSr*(| Curtains. llnner, Arnle M. Richmond, Thomei " Mall coupon for the book, John Richmond. *Mary Catherine Rob- MSS ert«, ?.luff Ros* . ??Devi Roth, ?Laurie "Tortured for Christ " by Rev. Roth, •Diana Belh Rumiey, ?Michelle Our MONITOR PUMP HOIST v ¦ ¦ Richard Wurmbrand. Ann Ryen, L ij " "' ! * *¦*¦ ¦***• UNIT makes things simple! - - Hk — /^i^ MM Mi Mi tttm wam mm ****¦ ? Martin J. Sandvlk, Marsha Lynn R^^^^_^woo * Clip and mail te: ipjj VVN ¦ Schatler. Kennelh E, flchaller. ??Nan- It's n multi-purpose unit thnt _ y§9B^fik?!i*tf VOICE OF THE MARTYRS " I , ¦ ¦ QUndtle, CA 9120a U.S.A. *¦ cy Jeen Schlelch ?Mark Schulti. Carol /^^^^^k P.O.Box 11. Selke , Onry W. 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Von Arx, Ron I I a fend FREE Book Ttiwik You I Von Arx, •Gregory P, Voss, Dawn H & M Marie Walter, Sally «n{oyt her visit to the boauty ialoi\ . . . ihn Kenneth G. Ward, Larry Webb , Sle- PLUMBING & HEATING llOt t. Chr-Y Ch«u Dr., Glendili Welch, Re- alto ven J, Wedl, Merle Jean CflU A8?-M37 or 689-3421 TfltphOAd (2U) 247-3713 snjayi har visits to Winona National & Savings becca Lynn Westby, Terry Wieser JOSWICK FUEL U OIL CO. ?Thomas Bernard Wloer, •?Rosann ROLLINGSTONE 901 EAST SANBORN PHONE 452-3402 Bank for adding to her savings account, Mary Wilkes, LaVerne SV. WIU, •?Vlckl Ann Wilt, •?Ralph P Valw. Structure called unsafe Humphrey, McGovern trade Report 7^sf"Yirg/ii /cf Sheriff prepared lo auction off shots on wella re, Vietnam :jj ro/e^wi& doomed By WALTER R. MEARS McGovern said Humphrey is a McGovern's position on wel- people on welfare at a cost of i confiscated guns LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sens. former defender of U.S war fare. He said he favors a public $27 billion," Humphrey said. By STAN BENJAMIN nature could have prevented its visible evidence of this steady Hubert H. Humphrey and policy In Vietnam who "now service job program that would McGovern has said he doesn't '¦¦¦ MEMPHIS , Tenn. (AP ) — George McGovern are heading goes across this land- posing as cost $6 billion and put one mil- :; ' WASHINGTON (AP ) - The collapse. weakening for a year before either, In fact, the Corps said, water the final breakdown. Shelby County Sheriff Roy Nix- into- their second campaign con- a convert to peace, and I dpn't lion unemployed people to work favor the latter plan, Army Corps of Engineers says : ' y : -a-plan the West?Virginia dam that col- seepage had been steadily un- The Corps said adequate in- on is preparing to hold his first frontation in pivotal California interid to let him get awa^with within ai month. <-^?- haAan^-introdueed-such it. . courtesy lapsed last February, killing at dermining the dam's already- spection would have disclosed mandatory auction of low- still debating the issues of the " y "I'd rather put a million in the Senate only as a poor foundation and there was this deterioration. first—welfare and the war. Humphrey, in Fresno, re- people to work at a cost of $6 to the National Welfare Rights least 118 . persons, was doomed priced pistols he calls "Satur- from the start. A Senate sub- Hi* mphr e y slapped at n e we d his c ri t i q Ue of billion than put 104 million Organization. committee opens hearings to- day Night Specials." He says McGovern welfare proposals, day on the disaster. Improves slowly he doesn't like the idea one bit. Mc Govern at Humphrey's A law enacted by the state record on Vietnam policy as The Engineers released a re- legislature in April orders sher- port Monday saying dam the two Democratic senators the iffs to hold public auctions to prepared to face each other in "should neyeJ have been built." sell all confiscated guns and HHH hit by n a nationally televised appear- sudde The report spread the blame specifies that the money from ance , tonight. for the disaster among the U.S. Wallace given the sale be added to the coun- ? Bureau of Mines, the State of ty 's general funds. Previously, A.nd Minnesota's Humphrey West Virginia, and the Buffalo confiscated pistols were thrown sought to revive and take over Coal Co. which built the struc- into the river, Nixon said. a familiar issue by challenging spurt of confidence ture. All three; the report said, "It will put these gu»s back McGovern to disclose . how By BILL STALL added, "I ye been recycled." rey sharpened his attack on appear to have legal responsi- choice of menu on the street," he said. much money he is spending on tax re-, McGovern's welfare, bilities over the safe construc- the California presidential .pri- LOS ANGELES (AP) - On that note, Humphrey took SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP ) Although Wallace has in- The auction will be held in form and unemployment com- tion and inspection of a darn. mid-July, ? mary campaign, There's a sudden spurt of con- off his blue suit jacket, rolled — Gov. George C. Wallace is dicated he is totally committed pensation proposals. Nixon said the majority of There was irony in that/since fidence in Hubert Humphrey's up his sleeves and thrust his At Fresno Monday, he said Said the Corps report: "The improving slowly, his doctors to securin g the Democratic it Was McGovern who first consequent: 1 the guns seized in Shelby Coun- California campaign—with the hands into his front troiiser the tax plan was "con- 'let-George-do-it at- say, and has his choice of the made public his over-all cam- titude resulted in tragedy hospital menu. presidential nomination, Snider ty were pistols, a large number primary election just one week pockets, the Humphrey jaw jut- fiscatory" and could hurt the " paign finances, and turned the ¦ '- The Senate subcommittee The Alabama ~ chief execu- said, he -did' not flatly rule out a of?them "Saturday Night Spe- away. : ting out in self assurance...* ' . * • companies which provide jobs scheduled two days tive third-party candidacy if Wal- cials," so called because they topic into a major issue at the The 411-year-old senator from The audience rose to its feet for American working men and of testi- 's abdominal wound , doc- start of the primary season. mony by Bureau, state and tors attending Wallace said in a lace is not ;' the Democrats' can be purchased oyer the Minnesota expressed it in in a standing ovation, the first women. company officials, along with daily, choice ... in Miami; Snider said counter cheaply. That was V in New Hampshire, words at a Sacramento news time that's happened in Califor- "It takes money to provide medical briefing Monday , . when he was rated at best a law-enforcement and National shows less drainage of abscess the third-party decision would Police officers . said they conference Monday, "I think nia, where Humphrey crowds jobs. And when you start to Guard spokesmen , and survi- daily. be left up to Wallace com- could not estimate the number long shot in the race. we're on the way. We're on the mostly have been modest and have confiscatory taxation, Now it is McGovern versus vors of the tragedy, They said the governor's con- pletely. of firearms confiscated yearly, attack. We have momentum." restrained. even against some of the big On the eve of dition but the sheriff's department Humphrey, head to head, for ones (companies), you're not the hearings, continued to improve The turning point for this new the subcommittee released slowly and Besides Snider, the governor alone reported more than 200 in 271 Democratic presidential But his new enthusiasm about going to provide jobs," Humphr the gradually. also was ^visited by Sen. Ed- his campaign against Sen. confidence, Humphrey aides Corps report on the collapse of its vault, Criminal court offi- nominating votes in the Califor- rey said. the Buffalo Mining Charles Snider , Wallace's na- ward MV Kennedy, brother of cials said the court has about nia primary a week away. George McGovern, D-South Da- said, was Sunday's radio and Co. Dam two assasstnated politicians. t ele vision 3 with "Tliat doesn't make you a lib- No. 3, on tRe ' Middle Fork of tional campaign officer, said he 1, 000 guns, being held .as evi- Their campaign tone since kota , perhaps came? across "debate' Buffalo Creek. and tiie governor's son, George Kennedy, who recalled that dence. Sunday night, when they ap- more forcefully in his actions McGovern. Immediately after eral, **' he said. "That makes ¦Jr., 20, after a 1964 airplane cr ash, doc- ¦ ¦ peared together in a national during an address to the Serv- the program, Humphrey ex- you a fool." The Corps is preparing a sec- would go to appeal for c5J* ond report surveying votes in the California and New tors told him he probably would television interview, indicated ice Employes International Un- pressed pleasure with the out- In his prepared address for similar , Health waste-pile dams in West Vir- Mexico primaries. be permanently paralyzed en- group reports the dispute might become even ion at San Francisco Monday come but declined to speculate the7 Service Employes Union, ginia. - Snider quoted Wallace as say- couraged Wallace never to give more heated as they meet evening. whether there was a winner. Humphrey said McGovern's ¦ up the increase in income "¦ . When Darn No. 3 collapsed ing- the governor . wishes that hope of walking: again. agaim It was a friendly audience of But Monday, after getting war-tfrpeace economic con- last Feb. 26 after three days of Americans will quickly forget MILWAUKEE, (AP)—Nation- The television appearances, somei €00 union delegates and some reaction to the contest, version program could cost '• rain it sent a 20-fbot wall of wa- that he has been shot. BRADLEY BOOSTERS al Health Enterprises Inc. has billed as debates but actually another 400 Humphrey back- Humphrey declared, ? "We won thousands of California defense ter through the Buffalo Valley Following a 45-minute meet- reported a 33 per cent increase joint interviews broadcast by ers—the most receptive crowd round one," He seemed eager workers? their jobs. , STANTON, Mo. (AP) Wiping out the towns of Saun- ing with the governor, Snider — in net income for the fiscal the national television net- he's had in 12 days of cam- to get on to round two tonight "This is callous," he said in ders and Loradp and spreading said Wallace reiterated his In- Neighbors ? of New York Knick- y«ar ending March 31. works, have become center- paigning in California. and the third and final meeting the text, although he digressed havoc for 17 tention to be at the Democratic erbocker basketball star Bill Robert Paliafito, chairman pieces in the California "I want to tell yoti, I'm a dUr of the two candidates on Sun- from his prepared material and miles downstream. ¦¦ cam- National Convention , in Mdaini Bradley have opened a cam- and chief executive officer , said paign, . ' rable guy," Humphrey said. day,- never got around to reading Government and company of- in July. He said doctors as- paign office in a ? cave at Mera- n«t income went up. from $904,- Then lie paused a second and As this week began Humph- that part of the speech. ficials- called it an act of G-od. sured him that the Alabama mec Caverns. They are hoping 347 to $1.20 million, while gross Humphrey planned two cam- But the Corps report said the chief executive ?would be able to influence the former Rhodes revenues increased 10 per cent paign appearances in Los Ange- dam was so basically unsafe to attend the convention in five Scholar to campaign for State from $25.04 million to almost les today, then set aside time to that only a "happy accident" of weeks. treasurer. $27.56 million. prepare for the television ap- pearance. McGovern scheduled a news" r conference oh? con- ' version of the economy to a There s More To Love At... peacetime basis and cleared his schedule to rest and get ready for the second round. We're Proud To Be... It will be broadcast on the BETTER i ^ PERSONAL National Braodcastihg Co. pro- ^T f gram "Meet the Press," for ah hour beginning at 8:30 p.m. QUALITY * *i_ UJ SERVICE CDT. The ; final McGovern- Humphrey matchup is sched- ' ' V . " . CENTER-CUT V . . .; uled Sunday, on the American . ^ i ^ ¦ ¦ Bf aodcasting Co, / ^mS^W1* T%ai\aT%m\M ¦ BF ¦¦^mW^ ¦ Humphrey raised the finance ^ A : A ^ , :¦AAA M¦. . %*¦ question in Sacramento Mon- MMW*^2^ FUKlV day, saying that "the selling of ¦ \aBS!ita ^^ rff ¦¦^¦¦'¦¦¦f^l^r* ¦ H m '^^B ¦• a president ought not to be- '- come a habit in this country." lb The former vice president ,v.HT wf CHOPS . ¦ ¦ said his California primary SLICED ? . vvv vv * .? 777 * 7* , ? — . v , 7y : _^ ' - campaign had cost $299,000 ^^ BS l^^ ^0* ^ v 7 through May 22. That partial ¦ accountnp did not cover the $&_ period after costly radio and t W;. PORK LOW .. v. 591 television commercials began. A McGovern spokesman, Kir- LOIN CUT LOIN END by Jones, said the primary campaign budget for the South 79c PORK ROAST " 59c Dakota senator is $1.25 million. PORK CHOPS "• ** Humphrey is known to be COUNTRY STYIE BONELESS, ROLLED facing a financial squeeze in his California campaign , and SPARE RIBS 59c LOIN ROAST - 79c We're Also Proud of Our McGovern is certain to out- " spend him by a wide margin. DUBUQUE DUBUQUE ALL-MEAT In San Diego Monday, Bologna Ends lb 59c FRANKS - - l 79c Full-Service PETERS Employees CARNATION

¦ Mr'?'/!"//<{¦*» -> <*¦ ministers 'tif * Few *- >** * t < »* >\* *-* , BACON - - 7V 99c PORK LINKS - - 89c attend dinner by FRESH PERCH FILLETS .... 79^ McGovern VNAAAAAAAAAAAJVVVMUWVUVWWVWVtfV^ tG By CARL P. LEUBSDORF ^ JLOS ANGELES (AP) - The pink ballroom was half-empty E N and an organ was accom- POTATO CHIPS panying the gospel singer as i i e f.i 4 *mis *, |1 e blacks gathered to get the mes- ^ ff*y ^mmmm[^mmmmmmmmmm ^^^^^^BiX * \ ^^^Vv ^^^HHUI ^^^^E' V MH^HraUK ^K^HlKntf ^ sage: preach the gospel of 12-01. „/c &J 49 George McGovern this Sunday. 110B ^O i The setting was the Beverly V Hilton hotel in posh Beverly * LETTUCE Hills that usually houses Sen. j l Hubert H. Humphrey's entour- age. The target was the over- whelming black majorities that „ «- Left Humphrey has polled in pre- PICKLES EL 49c to right: Delia Hayenga, foliar; Varna Hjcrleid, tellar; Grace Stark , secretary; Carol Haine- vious primaries. L uJ!Z]Z^uu^J man, chief accountant; Kay Campbell, chM toller ani proof operator; Clinton Heaser, build- IGA DOLE—Chunk-Sliced or Crushed Ing and ground* lupervlior; Bonnie Salter, drive-up teller; K ay Bender, drive-up teller, and Wanda On hand for tlio dinner, along Winger, teller. with 42 waiters nnd almost as many newsmen , were about B0 BREAD - V*?*V 29c Pineapple 3 7W S1 black ministers, their wives ,GA ASST. FLAVORS—Unsweetened and 35 other guests. -Jk Some 250 ministers had been - - 79c invited to have dinner with Co- BUTTER " KOOL-AI D 10 " 49c They Love Our re tta Scott King, widow of the Customers! STAR GRILL PAGE ci-vil rights leader. About 100 had expressed interest In at- tending. CHARCOAL C 69c NAPKINS - — 10c Try For turning up on three days It...You II Like It! notice on tho night of Memorial i iiiiiiii iiiiiiiij ¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ q - Day, ¦ they got three gospel ¦ VAN'S COUPON <*¦ VAN'S COUPON ¦ numbers by Bessie Griffi n, a Bub^potHarlnarndtoltaOftO short , punchy speech by Sen. S T- ¦ CRYSTAL SUGAR McGovern , a low-keyed mes- ¦ r T cl7p S _ _ B sage on the potential power of CATSUP m m S.LB. 04G ¦ CcunlTll bl ack voters from tho Rev. ¦ rtMut twoOTiKiuuMa cxMmunMi Ji VI Jesse Jackson , the civil rights S ! FDI€ t^JI"liifflrlSSBi ^^ on O T A -W tSf **^> a 1/ AA 5c ; 39c Milt leader, llnli lfl l'P^ ""J O I /V I El 0#\ IM rV and a 35-mlnuto plea With Coupon and $5 M#at Purchau _ wi,h Coupon and $7.50 OrcKir S ^ ^ from Mrs. King that n vote for m H - ***-g Van's IGA—Coupon Expires Junt 3 « ¦ Van't IGA—Coupon Expire* Juno 3 ¦¦ ( • Register for ,' ' —————— Ihe senator Ls "the west way YMCA Camp you can work for the realiza- tion of my husband's dream." SIIUIIIIIMIM0 iliiaBBHBIHnHirS West " o\oy. Broadway & Jtmction Street Jnkfion called the ministers STORE HOURS: MON.-WED. 8 TO 8—THURS.-SAT. 8 TO 9—SUN. 8 TO 12:30 FOR "the keys to the black commu- NEIGHBORHOOD BANKING EVERYONE nit y " and snld ho expects many ™!l!!!L _Z ^ to speak from their pulpits and Calf . on radio broadcasts for 'S "Weatherphone" 454-1230 Any Hour for Weather Information McGovern on Sunday. The VAN IGA SUPER SAVER state's presidential primary Is PHONE 452-3045 • LOCALLY OWNED • 724 E. BROADWAY Juno fl. Falls; Mrs. Dale Llnder, War- one daughter, Mrs. Gary (Jo> rens, Wis.; and Mrs. Theodore ann) Weeky, Walnut Creek, TUESDAY Moser, Mesa, Ariz.; and two Calif., three grandchildren and brothers, Oswald Kleven, Black two brothers, Bennie, Arcadia, The weather The dail MAY 30, 1972 River Falls and Henry Klev- and Edwin, St. Paul, Minn. Ont» Winona Deaths y record en, Milwaukee. daughter has died; Lorenz Weinmann Funeral services will be Wed- Funeral services will bs Lorenz Weinmann, 84, 519 W. 2 p.m. at Watkowski Funeral At Community Two-State Deaths nesday at 10 a. m. . at Evan- Thursday at 10 a.m. at St. Mark St, died Sunday evening Home. The Rev. Donald Gru- gelical Lutheran Church , the Stanislaus Catholic Church, Ar- at 11:45 at Community Mem- bisch, St. Stanislaus Catholic Memorial Hospital Joseph A. Brantner Rev. T. A. Rykken officiating, cadia, the Rev. Joseph Udul- orial Hospital. Church, officiated and burial DURAND, Wis. (Special) - with ¦burial in Riverside Ceme- utch, officiating. Burial will ba Vlilttng houri! Medical and lurgl^al . in Calvary Cemetery. A retired laborer at Miller was in St. Mary's Cemetery. pailtnti: J to 4 and 7 to »;30 p.m. CNo Joseph Anton Brantner , 66, tery: The child died Saturday at children under 12.) Durand, died Sunday at the Friends may c all at Torger- Friends may call at Killian Waste Mills, he was born March Maternity patients: t to »:30 and to Funeral Home, Arcadia, after 2, 1888, in Davenport, Iowa, to 9:30 p.m. at St. Marys Hospi- IM p.m. (Adulti onty.) ' Chippewa Valley Area Hospi- son Funeral Chapel this after- Vlsltori to pallens limited to two tt noon and evening and Wedes- 4 p.m , Wednesday. There will Lorenz and Hulda Weisbrot tal , Rochester, after a brief ill- ona time * tal here. be a prayer service at 8. -V^kunann and married Violet ness, He was born April 6, 1972, A farmer, he was born in the day irom 9 a.m. Vivian Summers Oct; 2, 1919, to Robert and Judy Burt Stolt- SATURDAY town of lima Sept. ? 3, 1905, and Admission , Frank B. Rohrer Two-State Funerals in Bowbells,. N.D. The couple man. y ? married Mary Prissel May 12 AL MA, Wis. (S pedal)—Frank Mrs. Goldie Myers, Valley was a lifelong area farmed from 1903 to 1927 near Survivors are: his parents; 1926. He ¦ B. Rohrer, 93, died Sunday aft- Jerry A. Hanson View Tower. resident. 7 Powers Lake, N.D , and then one brother, Jeffrey; one sis- . ernoon at Community Memorial MONDOVI , Wis. — Funeral moved toy the Winona area. Discharge are: his wife; one ter, Tricia Aim; his grandpar- Mrs. Ernest Kranz, Minne- Survivors Hosp ital after a two-month ill- services for Jerry A. Hanson, They observed their golden wed- ents, Mr. and Mrs. James Stolt- son. Charles J. Brantner, Rock ness. 36, Janesville, Wis., a former iska, Minn. five daughters, ding anniversary in 1969. man, Winona; Mrs. Charlotte SUNDAY Falls, Wis., He was born July 21, 1978, in Mondovi resident wJo died Sat- Survivors are : four sons, Rob- Strain, Winona; and LeRoy Mrs. Leonard (Magdalene) Belvidere, Wis., to Franz and urday morning at St. Michael's WEATHER FORECAST . . . Rain is forecast Admissions ( Roset- today in the ert, Lansing, Mich.; Vernon, Burt, Milwaukee; and great- Mrs. John Salwey, Minnesota Bauer ahd Mrs. Elddn Margaret Mueller Rohrer- A re- Hospital, Milwaukee, were held Durand Rt. 1; Great Lakes area and showers are expected in the Midwest. Boca Raton, Fla.; Leo, Lansing, grandparents, Mrs. Frances City, Minn. ta) ?Pittman, tired farmer since 1964, he has this afternoon at Central Luth- There will be warm weather In the Southeast. (AP Photofax) Mich., and Oest, Winona; three Beck, Winona, and Ernest Burt, . Sarah McDonald Mrs. Garold (Lorraine) Smith , lived all of his life here. He eran Church here; The Rev. Mrs , 1267 (Regina) daughters, ?Mrs. Erwin (Betty ) Minnesota City, Minn. W. 5th St. Alma; Mrs. DeWayne married Hula Rollinger June William Schumacher officiated. Van Gilder, Cottage; Grove, Mrs. Robert Ruben, Fountain McMahon, Eau Galle Rt. 1, and 20, 1903, at Christ Lutheran Burial was in Oak Park Ceme- Local "Watkowski Funeral Home was (JoAtin) Stewart, ¦ observations Minn., and Mrs. John (Maxine) in charge of arrangements. City, Wis. ?Mrs. Donald Church Cochrane, in the first tery- Beckman and Mrs. Charles Discharge Janesville; a number of grand- wedding held at the church. Kjentvet & Soil Funeral OFFICIAL WEATHER BUREAU OBSERVATIONS for one brother , William the 24 hours ending at noon today : % (Shirley) Newell, Winona; 26 Scott Mrozek, Minnesota C5ty, children ; He was an original member of Home bad charge of arrange- Winona ruricjrals F. Brantner, Durand, and two the church and was a past pres- ? Maximum temperature 74, minimum 44, noon 55, pre- grandchildren ; four great- Minn. ¦ ments, • ' ' sisters, Mrs. Frank Kothbauer ident <>f the Cochrane Co-opera- cipitation .21 (weekend .60). y grandchildren; two brothers, Miss Martha Zielimki BfHhs ' ,. Carl Weinmann Powers Lake, Funeral services for Miss Mr*.' ; and Mrs; Larry Ken- Sr., and Mrs. Joseph Weisen- tive Telephone Co., with Which Mrs. Clara C off man A. year ago today : V 7? , One daughter High 77 low 45 noon 71, precipitation .08. and Peter Weinmann , Lignite, Martha Zielinski, Lewiston, for- drick, Winona Rt. 3, a dauigfr* beck, Durand . he has been associated for the ALMA, Wis. — Funeral serv- , , brothers have died. Normal temperature range ior tins date 74 to 53. ?Record N.D., and two sisters, Mrs. merly of Winona, were held at ?ter. ' and Jour past 30 years. ices for Mrs. Clara Coffman, high 93 in 1934, record low 36 in 1873. Margaret Van Burkem and 9:30 a.m- Monday at St. Stanis- Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Maloney, Funeral services will be at Survivors are three sons, Ros- 70, who died May 27 as the Stai rises tomorrow at 5:27, sets at 8:41. Mrs. Lena Van Burkem, Powers laus Catholic Church, the Rev. 262 TVilson St., a son' 10 a.m. Wednesday at Holy lyn, Lewiston, Minn.; Rodney, result of injuries suffered in an 11 A.M. MAX CONRAD FIELD OBSERVATIONS Lake. His wife died Sept. 23, Donald Grubisch officiating. Bu- Mr . and Mrs . Jack Mueller, Rosary Catholic Church, Lima, Alma , and Wilb ur . Alma; two automobile accident, were held CMississippi Valley Airlines) . * . ?. 1971. One brother also has died. rial was in St. Mary's Ceme- Utica . Minn ., a son. the ?Rev. Raymond Schultz of- daughters, Mrs. Elmer (?Melba) today at 2 p.m. In the Stohr- ' ' Barometric pressure 30.08 and rising, wind from the Funeral services will be Wed- tery. *? . MONDAY ficiating. Burial . will"; be in the Bade, Alma, and Mrs- Merlin Hagen Funeral Home, with the north at 15 mph, no cloud cover , visibility 20 miles. nesday at 2 p.m. at Martin Pallbearers were Walter Win- Admissions church cemetery. (Marvelle) Haeuser, Cochrane; ReV. W. R. Burge r officiating. HOURLY TEMPERATURES iecki, Leonard Erdmanczyk and , may call at Rhiel three brothers, Alfred H , Coch- Burial was in the Nelson cem- Funeral Chapel, the Rev; Msgr. Melvin Tulius 673 E. Sanborn Friends ¦ ¦ (Provided l>y Winona State College) R, Harry and Ervin Koscianski- , .;¦ . Home, Durand, this rane; Edwin J.,.; Riverside, etery. ., * :. ¦ ' ¦ ¦ Joseph McGinnis, Cathedral st * Funeral ' . ' .'Saturday of the Sacred Heart afternoon and evening. There Calif., and George A., Coopers- Born Aug: 16, 1901, in Nel- , officiating. Mrs. Mi nnie Jensen Jeffrey Rosenow , 1781 W. Wa- town, N.Y., and eight grand- .7 n.m. 8 9 10 11 midnight Burial will be in Woodlawn will be a prayer service at 8. son to Christian and Bertha Funeral services for Mrs. Min- basha Sty children and five great-grand- 79? 76 74* 72 71 ¦ 70 ¦ Cemetery. ' Hopf , she was the retired man- Sunday * . .. . ' . . ' nie Jensen , 81, 317 E. Wabasha Mrs. Leo Ctibor, Prairie Is- Mi« Jo Ann Keeffe children. His wife, one brother Friends may call at the fu- land Road. : ager of a women's clothing 1 a.m. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 noon St., who died Saturday at St. WHITEHALL, Wis. . — Miss and one sister have died . store in East? Chicago 111. She neral chapel this evening after 111., , , 68 . 67 66 65 64 64 64 69 65 66 68 70 Francis Hospital, Evanston, Mrs. Mamie Reynolds, 816 E. Jo Ann Keeffe, 51, Trempealeau Funeral services will be held , 7 and W?ednesday after 1 p.m. this afternoon at St. : morning at had been living with her niece 1 p.m. 2 3 4 5 6 7 ,8 9 10 11 midnight . were held Sanborn St: Wis., died Monday at Christ Lutheran Church, Darlene Hopf Alma for the Martin's Evangelical Lutheran Hospital She had , , 70 70 70 72 74 75 74 66 €6 66 66 65 Mrs. Verna R. Pelowskl Dennis Oredsen, Dover,J-tinn. the Whitehall Wednesday at 2 p.m., the Rey* past IS years. Her husband, Al- ¦ ; - Church. The Rev. A. U. Deye at the Golden Age . .* Monday * * Funeral services for Mrs. Ver- Mark Thompson, St. A.iine been residing Wilbur Beckendorf officiating. vin Coffman died March 4, m. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 noon officiated. Burial was in Wood- Whitehall, for sev- . 1 a. ¦ ¦ na R. Pelowski, 59, 410 Vine Hospice. Resthome, Burial will be in the Buffalo 1960. 65 65 65 65 65 64 64 64 64 64 66¦ • ' 67 lawn Cemetery. months, • St., were today at 10 a.m. at Houston Minn. eral City, Wis. cemetery. She was a member . of the 1 p.m. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 U midnight were Robert Leo Rostad, , was bom May 22, 3921, at ¦ St. Stanislaus Catholic Church Pallbearers Discharges She Fjiends may call at the Voigt St. Paul-St. Luke United Church "" . •68 70 68 66 62 61 60 58 56 54 52 51 , , Raymond G. Stuck , Trempealeau , to Howard and . the Rev. Donald Grubisch offic- Stevens Funeral Home, Cochrane, after of Christ Alma. . Today-*' Ray Laak and Ray Nicholas Mrs. James Gourley, Exeter, Frances James Keeffe. Never , iating. Burial was in Sacred 2 p.m. Wednesday, and from 11 Surviving are: two half- broth- 1 a.m. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 noori and Patrick Thrune. NH. . . . married , she lived in the area a.m. at the church Thursday. Heart Cemetery, Pine Creek, - ers, Donald Ebersold, Deerfield 50 50 50 50 49 48 49 50 50' 52 54 55 Survivors include: one' ne- Kari Hatlevig, , - Rushford, all of her life. : Wis.7?'7. survivors Her Beach; Fla., and John Ebersold, phew, Arvie Pittelko, who made Minn.. . . . There are no . Harry E. Bradshaw Mrs. Pelowski died Saturday brother, James, died Friday. . B LAIR, Wis;—Harry E. Brad- Afina; a sister Mrs. Frank at 4:47 p.m. at his home with his aunt * the past Peggy Sue Wells, Nelson , Wis. Community Me- Wenzel Rushford, Funeral services will be held shaw, 73, died Sunday at Tri- (Christine) Weita, Pompano morial Hospital after 45 years. A daughter, Evelyn, Herbert , suffering Minn. Thursday at 10 a.m; at St. C o u n t y Memorial Hospital, Beach, Fla.; a half-sister, Mrs. a heart attack. died in 1965. olic Church, 7 ;Blrth .• 7 y*v Barthlomew's Cath Whitehall, Wis\ William (Helen) Schultz, St. The former Verha Sfanislaw- Mrs, Helene M. Hoeppner Mr. and Mrs. John Burros , La- Trempealeau, the Rev. Walter Ke was born Feb. 27, 1899, to Paul, and two step-sisters, Mrs. ski, she was born June 13 will be , 1912, Funeral services for Mrs. moille Rt. 1. Mirifi., a son. Brey officiating. Burial Peter and Emma Geibel Brad- Elf a. Fox, Stevens Point, Wis., to Frank and Mary Xiedrowski Helene M; Hoeppner, St. Anno in the Holy Cross Cemetery, sha w at Augusta, Wis. A rer and Mrs. Vira Nickerson Eagle Stanislawski, Galesville, Wis., Hospice, who died Saturday , Trernpeaieau. tired farmer River, Wis. 1st Quarter Fnl) Last Quarter New BIRTHS ELSEWHERE at" Smith , he farmed in the and had lived nearly all her were held at 11 a.m. . Monday Friends may call the area all his life. He married Pallbearers were Sidney Mo- June 18 June 26 June 4 June 11 Wednesday, 7-9 p.m. life in Winona. She was married at the Cathedral of the Sacred Mr. and Mrs . Dennis Luedtke, Mortuary Abbie Osbourn. V har, Jerome Baecker, Gerald be a rosary service to George E. Pelowski who died Heart, the VRev. Msgr. Joseph Winona Rt. 3, a son, by ? adop- There will Survivors are three sons, Pe- Baecher, \ Andy Jost, ? Ben Forecasts The Mississippi Nov. 15, 1971- She was a mem- R. McGinnis officiating. Burial there at 8 p.m. Schwartz and Allen - tion . Thursday. Paternal grand ter, rural Taylor, Wis. ; Jack, Wald, all Flood Stage ber of St. Stanislaus Church •was in St. Mary's Cemetery." . -, parents are ?Mr. and Mrs. El Blair of Alma. Mrs. Mamie Williams , and Thomas, La Crosse ; ' ¦ ¦ - ¦ ¦ S.E. Minnesota Survivors are: one ; daughter, Pallbearers were Dale Welch, mer Luedtke, also of Winona (Special) one brother, Archie, Pigeon ¦ ' :;¦ -U Stage Today Mrs. LeRoy (Mary Ellen) PLAINVIEW, Minn, Recoming fair tonight, My- John and Harold Hoeppner , Rt- 3. : 81, Falls,' . Wis., and six grandchil- Red Wing V...... 14 6.2 ren Rapid City, - Mrs. Mamie. Williams, The nation's scheduled air- iniostly sunny Wednesday. , S.D ; four John.and Charles Mettille and her ; home dren and one great-grandchild. Coaler tonight Lake City ...... 9.0 plainview, died at lines will buy some $2.5 million , low in low grandchildren; one brother, James Krache. His wife died Sept. 30, 1969. 40s. Warmer Wabasha ...... 12 8.4 John Stanislawski TODAY S BIRTHDAY Sunday afternoon . worth of fuel, parts and serv- Wednesday, , Winona; and Mamie Ford, she Funeral services will be high in low 70s. Chance Mrs. Vincent (Soph- The former ices during 1972, says the Air Alma Dam ...... 5.9 one sister, Floyd E. Waldo Sandra Marie Dennis, 1735 W. Sept. 15, 1890, in Wi- Thursday at 1:30 p.m. at the rain near zero tonight jiml,, ie) Bambenek Ajcadia, Wis. 9. was born Transport Association. j WMtmah Janu -**-. ..-- 12 , y FuneraJ services for Floyd E. 5th St., County to MrV and Mrs. Augusta Methodist Church, the Wednesday. Rosary -iwais ^recited*- Monday "Winona nona Winona Dam ...... 4.5 Waldo, 77, Rt. 3, who August Ford and was married Rev. Ralph Walker officiating. at 8 p.m. at Watkowski Funeral died earl Friday morning at IMPOUNDED DOGS Minnesota WINONA V...... : is 6;e y W'inona to '-: Willmer Williams June Burial will be in the Augusta Pair and cooler toniglit, Home, Winona. the*home of friends he was vis- ; ' in Winona. She lived Trempealeau Pool .. .. 9,5 TNo. . 136 —. Large black Lab 19, 1912, cemetery. low mid 30s central and Pallbearers were Jerome and iting at Shorewood, Minn., were Plainview most of her life- Friends may call at the Fred- Trempealeau Dam .. .. 5.8 Roger Bambenek Arthur Mal- female, available. in north to low 40s elsewhere. , held this aiternoori at Witoka ' time Twhere she was a mem- erixon - Jack Funeral Home, " szycki, James Stanislawski, No. 137 • :— . Large white and , Sunny and warmer Wed* Dakota ...... * .*. 8.0 United Methodist . Church, Wito- ber of the Catholic Daughters of Wednesday at 2 p.m. and Alvin brown male, part beagle, avail- Blair, nesd^y, high in low 70s east Dresbach Pool ...... 9.4 Francis Cisewski and ka, Minn. The Rev. Gordon Am erica and St. Joachim's Al- at the church Thursday after to lipper Prondzinski. Langmade officiated, assisted able. , 70s and few lower Dresbach Dam ...... 4.5 No. 138 "—;' Small white and tar and Rosary Society 12:30 p.m. 80s west. by the Rev. Charles Dundas, are: a son , Charles, La Crosse ...... 12 6.7 Edmund E. Nowicki brown female terrier, available. Survivors Le Sueur, Minn. Burial was in Plainview, and a sister, Mrs. Ernest Rudolph Sr. w Wisconsin FORECAST Edmund E. Nowicki, 71, SOS the church cemetery. No. 139 - Small white and died Monday at 3:30 Ethel Kells, Barnesville , Minn. BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis. ^Siek Pky t Fair tonight northwest most- Wed. Thurs. Fri. E. 3rd St., black male terrier,- no license, ( Special)" ly cloudy a.m. at Community Memorial The Orient Masonic Lodge 84, Her husband died in 1943 and a .— Ernest Rudolph Sr., east and south and Red Wing :.... 6.1 6.1 6.1 Money , Minn., conducted fifth day. , Black River Falls Rt, died cooler with lows 35 to 45. Hospital after ah illness of sev- C^eek daughter in 1971. Three broth- 82 2, insurance Part- WINONA ..... 6.7 6.6 6.6 a funeral service Sunday eve- No. 141 — Medium-size black Monday at Jackson Home. ly sunny and not quite era! weeks- He had been a main- ers and three sisters also have Monty io keep your family so cool La Crosse ..... 6.8 6.8 6.8 ning at the Fawcett Funeral and white nnale pup, mixed, He was born Nov. 9, 183)9 , in Wednesday with highs 64 to 72. tenance man for 40 years for died. going if you're rick or hurt Tributary Streams Home, Winona. available. Funeral services will be held Jackson County and was a life- and can't work. Tax-free Chippewa at Durand ...... 1.8 Worden Allen Co., Milwaukee, No. 142 — Small cream-color- 5-day forecast Pallbearers were Arthur and Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at St. long resident- Survivors arc cash to help pay bill* when Zumbro at Theilman 28.3 and had retired in 1962. ed male, mixed, availab3e. your paycheck MINNESOTA Eric Aldinger , Emil Fabian , Joachim's Catholic Church , the three sons, Ernest Jr., Robert stops. That's Thursday Trernpeaieau at Dodge .... 2.3 He was born June 19, 1900, in Allstate's low-c ost "Sick through Satur- George Hess, Howard I*e and Rev. Peter Coleman officiating. and Arthur, Black River Falls, Pay" insurance. day: mostly fair Black at Galesville ...... 2.3 Winona to Anthony and Marth a Mrs, to partly La Crosse at W Clinton Dabelstein. WINONA DAM LOCKA<5E Burial will be in the church cem- and one daughter, Ronald cloudy with a warming . Salem ..... 4.1 Leszczynski Nowicki and had Olson , Black River Falls. Root at Houston 5.8 was a mem- ete ry. trend. Lows 42-54 Thursday never married. He Sunday Pallbearers will be Tom Gil- Funeral services will be >llisfatEV to 52-64 Saturday. Highs warmer ber of St. Stanislaus Catholic 4:00 a.m. — R. W. Neyaie, 15 George Mason, Bruce Thursday at 10 a.m. at Torger- ! Sea or i-hone the lows in 40s and the barges, down. creast, mostly in 70s and 80s fcut highs lower 70s t« lower 80s. Church. and William Kreofsky, Leo Ell- son Funeral Chapel, the Rev. locally {n the 60s to tywer Surviving are one sister, Mrs. 9:30 a.m. — Linda S.„ nine GENE REGAN Friday mostly sunny and BOBO probe of barges, up. rin ger and La Vern Herron. A. N. Rusten officiating. Burial 70s along the north shore warmer, lows Theodore (Cecilia) JjHehman. Friends may call at Johnson- SEARS STORE lower 40s to low- 11:30 a.m. - W. S. Rh-ea will be in Riverside Cemetery. 57 on tha Plaza East of Lake Superior. er 50s, Winona , two nieces and two , 15 highs upper 70s to upper barges , down. Schriver Funeral Home today Friends may call at the chap- Phon* 452-7720 WISCONSIN 80s. Saturday partly sunny and nephews. Four brothers have after 3 p.m , Rosaries will be re- el Wednesday afternoon and Thursday died. 3:00 p.m. — Delia Ann, 13 Res. Phona 454-2276 mostly sunny and warm, lows in 50s, highs in JOs. coffee house barges , up,, cited at 3 and 8:30 p.rn. evening and Th u rsday from fl Funeral sevices will be Wed- a.m. 9:30 a.m. at Watkow- 4:25 p.m. — Hugh C. Blaske, nesday at 12 barges, up. Mrs. Ma rgaret Johnson ski Funeral Home and at St, BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis. Mrs. Daniel Campfield 10 the 9:25 p.m. —• Badger, 12 barg- , \ Stanislaus Church at , grants asked es, up. (Special) — Mrs- Margaret An- GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) ^Hft - In years gone by Rev. Donald Grubisch officia- Monday derson Johnson , 69, Black Riv- — Mrs. Daniel Campfield , 66, St. Mary's MADISON , Wis. (AP) — G-alesville, ting. Burial will be in Flow at 4 p.m. — 43,600 feet er Falls,, died Saturday at a died Monday at 3:47 " yL^BHui^ **" ^7 * State Rep, Ilerbert Grover says p.m. at St. Joseph's Hospital, ¦ Cemetery. per second. Marshfield hospital after a -' "mmBSti IL (Extracts /rom ihe filet of thia newspaper Friends may call today from he is suspicious of appropria- a.m, three-month illness. She had re- Arcadia, following a brief ill- J tions for a teen-age coffee 6:45 — Emma Bo rdner, 2 to 4 and after 7 p.m. Rosary 15 barges, up. tired in 1969 after 25 years as ness. Ten years ago . . . 1962 will be said at 8. house, and wants an investiga- 9; 15 a.m. — Hillman Logan,, the city treasurer here. The former Margaret Kolstad, tion by the Board on Govern- 14 barges, up. The former Margaret Kleven , slie was born Aug. ll, 1905, in ment Operations. Radio Station KWNO has been authorized to increa se Ralph M. Langowski 10:25 a.m. — Tammy Grant, she was born June l, 1902, in Arcadia , to E-dward and Mathil- its daytime operating power from 250 to 1,000 watts. Founded Ralph M. Langowski, 59, 524 The Sawano. Democrat said two barges, up. Norway. She was m arried to da Rudlich Kolstad and was by the late M. H. White , KWNO went on the air in January, Center St., died at 5:12 a.m. he is demanding BOBO inves- 10:50 a.m. — Ruby Le-e, one Clarence Anderson who died in married in 1%7. 1M3. today at Community Memorial tigate $497,500 in grants by the barge, down. 1953. In 1957 she was married Survivors aire : her husband ; Carol Litcrski was crowned queen of the 1S62 Arcadia Hospital after an illness of Department of Local Affairs 11:15 a.m. — Mobile La to Milton Johnson. Broiler-Dairy Festival at the coronation ball. Beverly Sobotta about four weeks. and Development, including Crosse, two barges, up. Survivors are : her husband; and Joan Walski were chosen her attendants. distributor Small craft — 60. Hp was the local the coffee house project. ¦ one son, Harlan Anderson, of Meadow Gold Ice Cream. , with- Merrillan; one daughter , Mrs. Twenty-five years ago . . . 1947 He was born here March 11, "Some <*f these grants ers her prints exactly ns though justification Marian Wittke, Black River MOMEnKLP^^AU 1913, to Matthew and Pelagia out further , con- The female deer always cov- Tlie laxity of Winona citizens stitute the most ridiculous ex- Falls; four sisters, Mrs. Ray who expect a small, part- Polus Langowski. A lifetime her tracks had been mad e by a Peters Champlin, Minn.; Mrs. lime group of men to run the city's business penditure the Wisconsin tax- , was hit by C. city resident, he married of two-legged animal Helma Allen , Black River $F ataw Paul Venables, president of the Association of Commerce, in Aug. 7 payers' re sources in the eight n talk at the Kiwanis Club. Blanch Kiszcwski here , ¦¦ Firattm ItVMIW^ ^PIII!!^^^B years that I have served in the ^^^^^^^ W /'"i"" ^^ 1 M U m A monument. erecle«, en« judge panel of federal court. use the list as a guideline for ^ ts > iMUkC weeding out job applicants who Tip! *N»S**^ IJR»:Ht*i X" -ucccTiuii . . 1 PORH SUOOIDS-D i alC&UCKa The panel's first plan, which belong to organizations labeled p,e 53 ? ¦ ^%m£ijftmmY'A%,Bi JJ*AJ*AB\eUTT \ y - " ?: . ? : - • : Astrology-astronomy mmmmWtm&b&k ^^mT ^ilf Wi ^V ABM3T7 >H.C« *e«K WKfmwmB^ f bff n$f^ ie. . * ¦ ^'^f ' f f J >NlUSON-S\KCLA4lR V ' : wor kshop sponsored - rBk:^^fSKmmmmmWmmW mmmmW ^^mtS ^ f WSL^^^ 'J&BKr' 0>^& * 'A '<~~-fr* POUSH SI AGE by New Way school '"^fffii if|i||dnff r^ a.f I I I 7Q?^ HOMEMADE ^ ' 7 A two-day astrology-astrono- horoscopes by Gardy Behrends, ^^^^ i^i^i^i^i^i^. ^^I^^^^I ^I ^^I ^I ^AI M2Mnw 5^1? my workshop will be conduct- a well-known astrologer from ~ , ed next weekend under the Minneapolis. CT fc **" sponsorship of The New Way A 6-inch and 2.4-inch refractor „"?™ ^^ 1 "**-19 School and Gathering Place . , i^am will be used for observation of 8C:' / i mmmmS ^ 513 Johnson ' St. the; stars at the farm and parti- p0LLS • C 39c 2 BA^2 Arrangements for the event cipants who have telescopes 9^^^BHHP^CS V .I^ which will begin Friday night are urged to bring them. PORK CHDW MEIH and continue through Saturday During the night, those attend- ^^tfti ].aMlBtfW are being made by Brother ing also will make their own ^^^ Gregory Hanses, counselor and WESTERN " sundials¦ to be used the next V-' ' CUTLETS" ; h: ' instructor at the school and day. """ ^^g or ¦^^^P-^^^B ? njV ; ' . ? ' . an amateur astronomist. The ^BW ORA.NGE ORAP L^^^^^^^ ' ib New Way is sponsored by the Breakfast will be served at E B0NELESS Southeastern Citizens' Action the farm Saturday morning ^^H.^M^Ul^^l^^^^^ r Council, Inc., Rushford, Minn. and in the afternoon the group The workshop will be limited will go to the planetarium at m to 20 participants who will meet the College of Saint Teresa for m^^-W £!£/>1#^B4^ \m ^Bk AmmmW at the school at.7 p.m. Friday a presentation by Brother Greg- ^ ^ ^^^^mW\^^mmm\mm ^ and go to a farm on Wilson ory. Arrangements for use. of the planetarium were made Ridge, about 4 miles south of ^ ^ PORK - 89c with its director, Sister Mar ^^^y r^^W£s«as)ii.T,MfcH<£M fee will be charged and asked £ that all participating bring ^^^ GIFTS sleeping bags for use Friday I¦ CHUNK TUNA 2 - 89 I M^,GA TABLERITE COLORED FOR ALL OCCASIONS night. mmmm ——____^_« H Bamm DADD BROTHERS I nformation about workshop ¦ ¦ IIUDDSTORE., INC. registration may be obtained I ..« I ¦ MARGARINE - 4VV S1.00 Tru» Valus Hardware by calling Brother Gregory at 576 E. 4tfi St. Phona 452-4007 The New Way beginning Tues- 89c CO day morning. I BAKED BEANS 3'^ I ^1 TTAGE CHEESE - - - . »>¦ 67c women... I IGA FRESH fl ^^^ L KRAFT ,60 18 fo 34 years of age 0LBI GET C''EKE"M tired of your pres-ent routine? | FISH!!LD DILL PICKLES— 49 1 X! .STICKS : wish for travel and -exciting work? I fa onrf fmv«t cppertuntllii fn th« Woraon'i Amy Corpi.

Wnin* .

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City County ^_ Stal«_ Zip High Sftlinn' _ a ^ IGA WEST— TELEPHONE 5th 454-3030 — STREET Women' s liberation called inevitable Seek truth, justice and their expansion, CST grads urged As they enter "a world of caJJ Activities Committee. A the first millennuna, man await- "Paradoxically, with the ex- change in which rapidity of summit that year was also held ed with great trepidation the pansion of the universe through technological advances, moral in Moscow between Mao Tse- possible end of the world. In technological advances, and the and social changes bring about frustration and confusion," tung and Stalin. the year 1000 man was still consequent frustrations of the members of this year's graduat- "Since 1950 in your lifetime," struggling against a nature he individual, philosophy and theol- ing class at the College of Saint she continued , "we have ex- could neither understand nor ogy are stressing the impor- Teresa were advised Sunday perienced the expansion of the control. But today although man tance of tbe individual, and his that "search" is the key word computer, space exploration, is still far from understanding humanity — his body, soul, in- for personal accomplishment. communication through satel- himself or nature completely, tegrity and person." The assertion was made by lites, and the increased power he has acquired an almost in- She concluded with a wish for Sister M. Emmanuel Collins, of scientists to control man credible power to control not every graduate of "good and OSF, vice president for aca- both biologically and psycholog- only the universe but his fellow every grace. I even wish you demic affairs at the college at ically." man. Man no longer fears na- happiness, but never complacen- S9th annual commencement ex- She told graduates they would ture but he fears man. Frus- cy; a happiness always alive to ercises at which 211 degrees live through the second millen- tration and fear have led to wonder and pricked with dis- were conferred. nium of the Christian era, com- violence at one extreme or to content. Accept yourselves a» The commencement speaker nienting, "in years preceding escape on the other. God made you." . at the graduates' request, Sister Emmanuel urged members of the classy to "search for truth, for justice, for the way to peace- We cannot leave this search to others; it must begin in our in- dividual lives. Each of us has his own sphere of influence, as real and effective within its TERESAN COMMENCEMENT . . . Originally scheduled seen here at the Cathedral where Sister M. Joyce Rowland, limits as a major power..An in- to be conducted outdoors at Lourdes Court on the College college president, and James N. Doyle, chairman of the board dividual gifted and committed of Saint Teresa campus, the 59th annual Teresan spring com- of trustees, conferred degrees on 211 candidates. (Daily News can accomplish much; each of meccement exercises were moved to Cathedral of the Sacred photos^ us can accomplish something." Heart Sunday because of rain. Graduates and ? guests are Sister Emmanuel acknowl- edged that the present state of the world is "frightening," but added it has always been so. —HOUR-dlffiqttty todays she held, '%' that all of us are so much more aware and our awareness is so immediate. We can observe a disaster in Japan or a revolution in South Ameri- ca while it Is happening." She spoke at ceremonies at which Sister M. Joyce Rowland, college president, and James N. Doyle, Winona , chairman of the board of trustees, conferred de- Record crowd grees on candidates. SPEAKER, GRADUATES . . ' .. Sister M. Heart. Prior to the exercises she spoke with Sister Emmanuel said "the Emmanuer Collins, second from the right, three members of the graduating class, from present crowds in on us, blotting vice president for academic affairs at the ~—left, Sandra Wershofen, Pickwick, Minn,; out perspective afforded by the College of Saint Teresa , was the speaker at Mary Clare Koprowski and Anne Harga- past. It is difficult to distinguish at RIeck's exercises for graduat- sheimer, Winona., ephemeral from the enduring, Sunday commencement the historically significant from ing teresans at Cathedra] of the Sacred the passing fad. Park event "It is ironical that in a time ) when thoughtful study of history ALMA, Wis: (Special ;—- A is so much needed, history is record crowd attended the week- neglected not only by the young end Eieck's Park celebration but by those for which jt should here, despite the cool weather be a guide." M-r-[ ^ on Memorial Day. The annual affair, sponsored SISTER Emmanuel had be by the Alma Rod & Gun Club gun by observing that when she , ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ $OJb^ offered various entertainment, had asked for suggestions on a K^^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^l^ including talent contests, canoe topic for her address most she races, airplane rides, carnival received dealt with Women's rides and numbers by the Liberation. She said she had decided Alma High School Band? . Give your Tug of war games were con- against it but did note that summer sidered the best ever. Lake women's lib action "is coming *M ^^^^Kftl City beat out Dwaine Radsek's JUNIOR TALENT . . . Archie Brovold, tion; Cyntbda Ruff , Alma, second, with a and will come, fully, please wardrobe a fresh new team in the finals. Alma, Wis.; Buffalo County agricultural agent number on the organ, and Tammy, Bonnie God, in your lifetime." S5 f T IHlV Darrold Abts, in his fifth and master of ceremonies of a musical pro- and April Roemer (brother Carrol not pic- She added, however, "it will not come alone- Only when OT Qk' with our cool/ year as chairman pf the food gram at Rieck's Park, introduces winners tured) a vocal group from Alma that won all J - j A fs Jlifi 'P pit, estimated that 2,400 pieces of the junior talent contest: Barbara Strand, third prize. human beings are free, when each of us looks at another and ' of chicken and 450 pounds of Nelson, who took first with her piano selec- W» j AL if i i) carefree pantdresses. bratwurst were sold during the recognizes and respects the hu- three-day affair. man person that each creature Sleeveless styling in Food was served in a new 16- of God is—and by looking at an- S / / fe??=iltv by-24-foot building, constructed other, I mean at our brothers cottons and blends with by Clem Breen, president of the and sisters, our neighbor, our X \/f \m%K or Alma Rod & Tjun Club, at an fellow worker, those within our " -H 3 button zipper fronts estimated $3,000. own little spheres of influence- Y \ Vu^ when we reciprocate justice Many HIGH ILLEGITIMACY and love with each other, then In sizes 8-20. as Saint Paul said 'there XV L^V ; WELLINGTON (AP) — Ev- shall : ¦¦; ¦ prints and dots in the ery eighth New Zealand baby is be neither slave nor free, but / \\r' ' R^\- illegitimate and one in five is offspring of God and heirs of heaven.' ' colors. concdved out of wedlock, ac- 7 JWjM.f f \ \ season s prettiest cording to latest Health Depart- DIRECTING att entlon to ment statistics. changes that have occurred in The illegitimacy rate now , the lifetime of the graduating one of the highest in the world, class members has risen from 8.05 per cent of and their sig- ' $10-$20 nificance to all people Sister I T H live , ) births in 1962 to 13.34 per Emmanuel noted that J cent in 1970—and i. still rising. most sen- iors had been born in 1950. That Almost 38 per cent of unwed BARBERSHOPPERS' mothers are teenagers. Sev- SEXTET . . . Win- ma High School . From left: John Noll, Greg year President Truman author- ning the senior talent ized construction of the enty-five per cent of married contest at the Rieck's Baecker, Steve Brovold. Pat Noll, Randy Balk hydro- I / | / READY TO WEAR - JUAIN FLOOR %Bf teenagers conceived their first Park celebration at Alma , Wis., ' -was the and Tom Noll. (La Croix Johnson photos ) gen bomb and television over- baby before they wed. barbershoppers' sextet of students from Al- took and passed radio sales. "In human affairs," she said, "change seems only apparent: in 1950 our troops were engaged in an almost disastrous 'police action ' in Korea and French troops were experiencing defeat in Indo-China. It was one of \\ Jl l / gf&3t& IMf oa i' the more active years of the ^ COTY ORIGINALSlmA * fflf Red scare. It saw the close of 9 I l\\ V Af ll 9 Where Personal Service ^r» the trial of Alger Hiss for com- At A* ^ JL—-A i7 y^r\T>y <\„-r V^ '* Important ^Eate, THE FANTASTIC /«K munist activities and the debut ip'Sl ^v^lll Th« Merchandise lUclf " FOAM MAKE-UP FOR LEGS! in politics of Richard Nixon and ^_\ Jjl r Robert Kennedy. It was the NOW TWO LUSCIOUS NEW SHADES JPJf year of Joe McCarthy and not FOR SUMMER! MW Eugene and of the feverish ac- ' tivities of the House Un-Ameri- SUN RtlGE—a versatile, neutral beige. M . .'.$ BAREFOOT BRONZE-a beauti ful neutral tan. J? '£» _____ PLUS... Summer loo ff l , iM f oiuiLihswL- — ih&ML afUL sdqixL ofr. JUA~, unci stack,OWL CL "P M " gggg | and Copperina J? ^Jf Nothing Slips on fas tor and jHHvli/A -t4 H W {H^Hret <'' rf " Am looks silkier ' ¦¦ ( / "N, ># \f than Coty's tpfSSBBsli- J\1 ' ,ij r fabulous Ultra tegs *'^ fe»tir*H'"'j j^n ur '03m make-up. Covers imperfections ililSt tfOffij $ 'sT ¦ ||||K ¦ ||||K ^J^Stl > h beautifully... flaws disappear! ' BpPw* W^ W> A PA Won't streak or rub off " " " ...waterresistant...and KfitJl $• * ' tiA ' the price is so W$Bm ' V/ r >~ ^wk. ' > * DISTRIBUTES COINS . . . Children attending the week- end Rieck's Park festival at Almn , Wis., scramble for coins being distributed by Mrs. Bruce Denk , Alma, Wis., for rides nt the carnival. Seven killed in Wisconsin COSMETICS-MAIN FLOOR By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Milwaukee drowned when lie Seven lives were lost in Wis- apparently fell into Lake Win consin waters during the Me- nebngo south of Oshkosh while moricil Day bending over to tie his boat, to a weekend. dock, Qg"/ Michael Kescnovitz, 31, of Other weekend victims in- AG CT Milwaukee drowned Monday in cluded : W/M S Brown Luke, Oneida County, Bruce Ortel, 12, rural New te hi; (Jhpa when f"ll from a boat while Ijondon; Jerry T, Crooks , Hi , Where Personal Service ^*// (( <"t fishing. Witnesses said he wns Green Ray; Michael Schmidt, m >^ x_X 's ^S Important Aa uiia 'ilc to swim because of wa- 6, Neenah; Timothy Mcixnnr , 0, The Merchand ise llm-lj ter-filled waders. Janesville; Mark Wintlnnd , 11, Walter Jo.skfihklewicz, 78, of Clinton, .i a- i ——J A Good Neighbor St. Mary's draws permit Anywhere

for more ta As Low At. ;...» $10,234 Complate—InoludH enaction Winona 's 1972 building per- St., $1,700, rebuild garage; $2,0007 aluminum siding on - on -your lot and foundation. ' ' is scheduled house, work is scheduled for Features Include: mit valuation increased to . $!,- work, by owner, for completion in two months completion in two months. • BMUIHUI bathroom wtth C1)«p 873,849 last -week compared '' ¦ Rick Sobeck, 729 E. 5th St., . ¦• fixture*, lifetime eartmle til * with $906,580 at this tlm* a • Carefree kitchen wWi gena* $3,000, i n t e r i o r remodeling ; SINGLE DAY RECORD Ina trireh cabinet*. . year ago, according to the of- by owner is scheduled Roomy badrooma, IMQ cJoeett work, , NEW YORK (AP) - "What's • * fice files of George Roggo, city for completion in four months. • Hrdronlo radiant haatlng— tjp, Doc?" set a new record for eltan and draftlea*. building inspector.* Charles Shustead, 118 W. ¦ a single day's gross at the Ra- • Cathedral beamed eejIKag*) St. Mary's College drew per- SaMa St , $2,500, remodel up dio City Music Hall the last lew Cost Financing Available '— stairs apartment at 629 W. 5th mits totaling $277,872 to con- Saturday in March by register- BILL WIECZOREK St.; work, by owner, is sched- ¦ ing $65,398. Barbra Streisand - DHALBR- * ' struct 28 four-person apart- ¦ uled for completion in eigh* and Ryan Q'Neal star In the* PHONB «MIH-- ; ments in six buildings measur- months technicolor comedy . ing 52-feet by 52-feet each. Four of the buildings each will BRUCE McNALLY, 301 Lake B^KB^BIimiat^^^^^Btat^BI^^^KB^B^tBBll^K^KBBBBK^tB^WWKWt ^WW^Wtmm ^Kmmm ALTHOUGH ACTUALLY an apartment over a garage, roof , double hung windows and flush plywood on the front of ' contain five apartments and St., $2,800, consrtuct a 28-by 22 the entire structure gives more of the appearance of a tradi- the lower level. • two of the buildings wHl con- foot garage at 1414 McNally tional house, /with wood siding shingles, an asphalt shingle tain four apartments. Each Dr;; work, by owner, is sched apartment will consist of two uled for completion In ibt House of the week double bedrooms, a living room, months. a bath and a kitchenette. Edward Board; .1066 W. How- Complete The project, named "Village ard St., $220, close in front II, will be located south of the porch ; work, by owner, is athletic field off Gilmore Valley scheduled for completpn in two Electrical Apartment garage for a 11 sea sons Road on college property. A - months. 80 cars will run wall of storage closets and a paved area for August Benek, 551 W. King By ANDY LANG apartment yet be close by. The would help to defray expenses. along the Gilmore Road. Service An innovation! garage could be rented or used As the income grews, wings St., $50, replace window, work; . . . heater room is connected to the The wood frame buildings will Not a complete house, but def- it a by owner. by the owners and the in-laws, could be added to make garage. have a rough wood outer fin- initely a home! since it is a two-car unit. full-sized home, with the origi- Paul Fenske, 762 E. 2nd St. Upstairs, . three rooms, a ish. The apartments will be car- It's an apartment-garage—a • It could be built as a va- nal apartment rented out. walls covered $448, nlne-by 11-foot shed, work, cation home, with the garage The design of the structure is kitchen and a bath make up peted and the structure that has as many var- with a vinyl paneling. by owner. ied uses as people have varying used for car-or boat storage or as intriguing as its multi-use. the efficiency apartment. A Jack Dublin, Winona Rt. 3, area, The lower level is on a slab. sloping beamed ceiling runs One of the buildings will house conditions in their life patterns. as a rainy day play Work, $1,000, pressed wood siding on It could be built on its own An attractive enclosed porch through the living room and laundry room facilities. Small in size and simple in con- • by P. Earl Schwab Co., 74 Kan- a two family living unit; work, struction piece of property as a retire- makes the- separation from the kitchen. An area is provided in , it can be built at a sas St., is scheduled for comple- by, owner, is scheduled for com modest cost. That in itself is a ment home, with one or both of garage so one can proceed up- the kitchen for eating, and a pletion in three months. stairs without thinking he is still sliding glass door provides a tion Aug. 18. t big plus. And here are some of the garage units rented to¦ sup- the ways it can be used: plement a fixed income. in a garage. A side door allows view of outdobrs ; as well as ac- IWWWWW4W ) ROBERT FIX, 825 W. Broad ' It could be built by an in- a weather-protected entrance. cess to an upper level deck. way, $2,392, construct a 22 by y ' • It could be built on residen- • JBSBB&" i ^&s»^v "&t tial property on which there al- dividual to rent out as an in- A platform , staitway leads The larger bedroom adjoining Building in Winona 24-foot garage; work, by own . ^^ ready is a house -with or with- come producer, either up or beyond to the laun- the living room has a folding er. is scheduled for comple- • It could .be built by a cbuV dry and storage room. This also separator to it; it can be left 1972 Dollar Volume . $.1*873 ,M9 tion in? three months. out garage, so that it might be ... 19L303 pie starting out in marriage on has access to and from the open . when spaciousness or ad- Commercial . . ?. . $L , —Cecil Kieffer , : W; Broad- used for rental above and the V Besidential ...... r 439 152 '97fl. T a modest incom e where their garage and outdoors. A guest ditional room is required for v , paneling in one owner's garage use below - or (non-taxable ) 279,572 way, $300 by renting both levels for a to- housing needs are small. Rent- closet is also located at the guests. A concealed bar is in Public . , by owner, is sched- New houses ...... 17 room* work, tal income producer — or by al -of part or all of the garage stair. The garage has a rear the stairwell recess. uled for completion in one having it occupied by a newly Volume same date in 1971 .:.: .? .....$906,580 month. married couple of the same Earl Kruezer, 518 Chatfield family for modest living quar- . ivwvvwiMfVW; St., $2,000, remodel house at 359 ters, with the garage rented to Bruce McNally, 304 Lake St., Chatfield St.,; wort?, by own offset some of the cost. ¦ ¦ drew a $44,536 permit to con- er. ' . ' . . Will Polachek ' :.• It could be occupied b)*y in- Kendell-O'Brien Lumber Co laws? for their retirement with struct a three family dwelling 115 Franklin St., $905, build -i an arrangement that enables at 1402 McNally Dr. The ono • RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL story 96-foot by 54-foot wood 11- by 19-foot rear porch, word them to retain their inde- by owner. • INDUSTRIAL pendence by having their own frame apartment will have six bedrooms and three enclosed Harold Myers, 676 Grand St.. parking places. Work,. by owner, is scheduled lijffiJ^Excsllarrt . 'Xfi ^ for completion in six months. Polacli elk: Northern Barge and Dock SBfe* Values In . . . ^§1' Co., 68 Lafayette St., drew a r $200 permit to remodel the in- NEW HOMES 1 I Electri c terior. Work, by P. Earl Schwab Located at 963 W. Sth Phone 452-9275 UH0? 1 Co., 74 Kansas St., is scheduled CIRCLE PINES ESTATES for completion in one month. (Lewlslon, Minn., City Llmili) OenVta\ ' All Utilities \ OTHER PERMITS: Rtady (or Occupancy, on^^S Look i Uftol«W° " W» John Moe, 461 Glen View Dr., 1 w ol. $8,610, 18-foot by 34-foot add! . Ben Ellsworth . than tion on side of house; work, by pPx - HOME BUILDER - JM l-r>^',«¦»»» H§ga • "roof^m" Winona Construction Co., Ill Sw Call Rochelttr WW 3KKfflV collect JSWM1 vsSS« Your Certified Lennox Dialtr FLOOR PLANS: Comfortable, and com- location, permitting movement to each of the Market St. plflBlW After 6 p.m £Wlmt£f. pact apartment for a small family. Stairway four rooms without crossing any other room. Charles M. Doffing, 330 Elm QUALITY SHEET which ends on the upper level is in an ideal ¦ ' METAL WORKS, INC. . ¦% 1131 I. Broadway Ph«n« «4-«H More detailed plarrr at your Full study plan information on this architect-designed ?L-52 STATISTICS House of The Week is obtainable in a 50-cent baby blueprint which you can order with this coupon. Design L-52 lias a living Also we have available two helpful booklets at $1 room, two bedrooms and a kitchen with dining area, ^ ^^^ each: 'Your Home - How to Build , Buy or Sell It" and STIPS' "Ranch Homes," including 24 of the most popular homes totaling 8D3 square feet, ex- ¦f else Home that have appeared in the feature. cluding the deck. There are SBSUj L mm jfej^veryone does! Security 142 square feet on the low- ^^fe iJ Box The House of the Week , Winona Daily News er level excluding the ga- MSTAtlS IN BLOCK WAIL or POURED CONCRETE , can Winona , Minn., 55987 ? rage porch and heater A convenience anyone afford and always occmttbfo, room. The over-all dimen- No problem* of legal entanglement*? a* enperleiMod w«fc of Design No. L-52 fW I\ HOMEWARD commercial Mfo-dopoatt boxesl Enclosed is 50 cents each for baby blueprints sions are 33 feet by 24 feet 4 inches. Construction Enclosed is $1 for Ranch Homes booklet • '. '— is on Enclosed is $1 for Your Home booklet ...... a concrete slab. H M STEP CO. \^\_ PHONE 454-1730 FOR -SEE US FOR- (/ ¦ FREE ESTIMATE • Sheet, Plate and Name , • Structural Steel Work hetoctieato ncenh I Naiad ChltdrM ! Stora ImplocM *!* andva(wbl«asaln*t | ftoa Polionowt I Official Docanantt, Welding and Boiler MtiplantiMnt . fUa. | Spraqw and Draga , Tooli and Vababtoa • Theft, Uaa. Repair Work Street ammmeaaaauwams ^i^^ M»__ __ New CeaMi«cK* / ( cleans up quickly with i> ' %*^aiS^7^' •»<•** sonpy water. Cnn be ap- ^&^^¦ CONTINENTAL CALL plied on damp surfaces, tn '• "¦''¦ > 454-5564 Traditional and Coiiteinpo- LATEX * NL ' I ^^^e^i !^ HOMES rary colors. W HOUSE PAlN^ A ^i^,^^ II Jf^ <<^b3rr* -* BUILT IN WINONA Vfolt Our Plant "Quality" Factory-Built BAUER Homes to fit your budget. HUNDREDS OF CUSTOM We put a home on your foun- ELECTRIC INC. FAST? SIMPLE! STRONG! dation ... In ju»t weekt. 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CBS HOMES • All comimnents and brackets hav e n baked l>lack eimmel 184 Main Street < fiiiisli . La Crescent, Winn. 55947 Winona Paint & Glass Co. 1 AM INTERESTED IN COST SAVING ON CBS HOMfiJ 7.....1...J -*^L--. 276-278 E. 3rd St. (Next to Golti Pharmacy) D I own a lot ? I am ptrtnnlnz on bldg. a homo nMKM SEE US FOR AT THE "VAL5PAR" SIGN JttlW M\ • REC ROOMS • CEILINGS • CABINET KENDELL-O'BRIEN Nam*: . , . , -T«I,, . Zmr \Am WORK • PANELING • GEN. REPAIR Phone 452-3652 Wo Deliver LUMBER COMPANY _ ¦ ArMrr ««- , . - CAUL 454-2044 FOR FREE ESTIMATE "'Here to Sorvo " AIR CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORT < City .. .. .SmtH Zip • JIM LARSON- Builder 115 Franklin "Tubby" Jockels, Mgr. P hono 455.3110 ¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^HaaMHBMaalB ^a^B^a^a^a^ • Winona State, Area Four champion, had heroes aplenty By STAN SCHMIDT cnly thing we «ould do was go out and play behind the plate for all five Warrior games. cracked a three-run homer against Missouri Daily News Sports Editor it one inning at a time." • Tad Bothwell. Although he had hurled Western and accounted for six RBI's- Dave Winona State7 surprising everyone, in- When did Grob change his mind? just Vh innings prior to the tournament, the linbo went 7-for-16 in a dual outfield-short- cluding Warrior Coach Gary Grob, won the "After beating La Crosse the first time," outfielder-pitcher yielded but four hits in go- stop role; and Dean Yoost went 4-for-15. Area FourTNAlA baseball championship at le replied with a smile, r'And when \ve went ing the distance in th championship game — AU told , the Warriors collected 41 hits Wa verly, Iowa, Saturday — the hard way. ahead 2-1 in the last game we sensed we'd and struck out 11, more than any other pitch? in 146 at bats (a .282 BA), outscored their The Warriors were upended Friday after- lie going to Phoenix. er in one game. The southpaw also made hil opponents 34-7, drove in 32 runs, ripped four noon by the Cinderella team of the tourna- "Dan Halvorson's home run in the sixth bat felt, as he played in e very game, going home runs and nine doubles, tallied half a nament, ?Universaty of Wisconisn - La Crosse, inning, which tied the game, just completely 5-for-i6 and driving in four runs. dozen double plays, committed seven errors, by a slim 4-3 margin, knocking Winona into lifted our ball club. We knew we would win • Steve ?Krinke. The only tournament yielded only four earned runs '— all in. the the loser's bracket. then. That home run was the shot heard pitcher to be credited with two victories, first game off losing pitcher Terry Brecht But the Warriors bounced back, ripping round the world as far ¦ ¦ 1 as we wer« con- Krinke worked 12 innings, three against Bu- who suffered his first loSs of the season — Buena Vista 8-1 that same nicht; clobbering . * ¦' ¦ Ross , * .' . "-. Bothwell cerned.' ena Vista and nine against La Crosse. He struck out 40 and accumulated a team earned Missouri Western, perhaps the pre-tourney The Warriors had heroes aplenty in the yielded just one run — that unearned — dur- Hnlvorfinn Satwr run average of 0.92. favorite, iW) Saturday afternoon ; forcing the 39 innings they played in less than 36 gruel- ing that time and gave up eight: hits and "It was definitely a IOO percent team tournament into an if-newsssary game by ing hours: struck out a dozen. And he worked the last effort," continued Grob, "Not only on the shocking La Crosse 5-1 Saturday afternoon; • Jeff Ross. The Warrior third baseman five innings with a badly* bruised hip, an part of those who played, but also on the part and then earning a berth in the national went frfor-16 in the tournament, drove in injury suffered while running the bases and of those who didn't. We were a very, very tournament next week at Phoenix, Axiz., via nine runs, poked a thre*-run homer in the feeing tackled by La Crosse second baseman tight knit team this year. a come-from-behind 7-1 triumph over the third inning of the first game agaiast La JEtoger Buswell. - "I really thinb that the one attribute to same La Crosse squad that had beaten them Crosse that gave Winona a 4-0 lead and • Lee Boettcher. The only tburnaahent winning three games Saturday lis that our three straight times this year. cracked four doubles, including a three-RBI yitoherVto hurl a shutout, B oettcher was cred- club is in the best condition , physically, of "After the loss toy La Crosse Friday," rap that opened the Missouri Western game ited with the Warriors' surprisingly easy any club I've had . And I think the new Me- noted Grob as he finally relaxed in his home wide open in the fifth liming. ¦victory over Missouri Western. He gave up had a lot to do with it. " morial Hall facility in "Winona Monday morning, "Pheonix s?eem- "• Halvorson. The Warrior catcher crack- only three hits, walked two and struck out "Hitting actually won the tournament for ed a long, long, long ways away. ed a pair of home runs, both solo shots off :nine in the seven-inning game, shortened be- "To be honest — I didn't think we could La Crosse pitcher Jerry Augustine. "Toad" cause of the ten-run rule. Hitting won tourney Boeltclier Krinke (Continned on page 5b) do it. The percentage were against us. lhe went S-for-13, drove in five runs and was • There were others too. Doug Sauer Linbo McNary V In national tourney s 1st round " : : ' ? ' : : In District 3; o«/ti«. -: ; sv ; ; : ^.; ; :P :';-/ . WSCS^;^il ^(^ Lake City ousts La Ver^ Winona State College set he expects to practice Sat- ing its seventh appearance a record for most victories urday afternoon . in the tournament, after in one season this year by "If our kids don't go to making six straight trips ' down the: third base line. It three and4-2 struck out six in suN WinhawksSTAN SCHMIDT winning 29 games, one bet- Phoenix tight — stage from 1960-65. Sam Houston By could have scored al least . one fering the loss before giving ter , than last year. sruck — we could do very won the national crown in Daily News Sports Editor ROCHESTER, Minn—Winona Hawk - but third sacker Eg- way to Greg Zabrowsfei, who But when the Warriors en- well. In 3961 we were, in a 1963. . genberger made a spectacular hurled the last inning. ter the 16th annual Nation- sense, awed by playing in Lewis College will be High once again was elimina- /a diving grab. And . the Hawks ' Huettl on the other hand , al Association of Intercol- national tournament, arid, in making, its fifth appearance ted in the District Three base- . , / ball tournament here Monday were finished for the season. gave up seven hits, walked three legiate Athletics tournament 1962 we just wanted to go after . finishing third last ¦ V*IT JUST wasn't our day." hi Phoenix, Auriz., next back . year behind champion Lin- afternoon. and struck out four. Both of week, they'll haV-e the worst The Winhawks, who were moaned Raddatz, "It seemed the runs he gave up were "We could do well this field , Ore., ard runner-up like every ball we hit was right record , percentage wise, year, especially if our hit- Da-vid Lipscomb, and sec- beaten by Rochester Mayo in earned. of the eight teams entered. the opening round last year, at someone. We certainly hit ."You certainly have to glv* ting holds up. The pitchers ond in 1966 behind Linfield. Huettl a lot harder than they According to tie pairings we face aren't going to be David Lipscomb made its were ousted by Lake City in the Huettl a lot of credit," contin- announced at NAIA head- semifinals 4-2 this time around , hit Caise. ued Raddatz, in his second year any better than those we've first " appearance last year, "That last hall Alirens hit quarters in Kansas City, faced already this year. losing a 10-inning, 9-fl deci- forcing Winhawk Coach Jerry at the Hawk helm. /'He bora Mo. , over the weekend, Wi- Raddatz to conclude the sea- just kinda told the story of the down in the tight situations. "Tht lustre of a national sion to Linfield in the cham- game. The? guy just dove and nona State, with a 29-10 re- tournament effects kids in pionshi . Oklahoma son with a 12-6 mark after fin- And in the last inning, with cord, will meet La Verne p? game caught it in the webbing of his different ways, but we've Christian, Frostburg and ishing second in the Big Nine the sacks full, he got out of it." College of La Verne, Calif., glove; we just hit the ball ' ' ' ' just got '-to play very relax- High 'Point will be making Conference. 'Wlnona High ¦«) • Laki City. («) at 7:30 p.m. (Winona time) ' ' wherever they were." at) ed," V their initial trips to the na- The triumph boosted Lake r h ab r h Monday^ Case yielded ten hits, walked Lundo.Jb . 4 00 Haasa.si 40 • Sam Houston will be mak- tional tournament. City into the championship Rendahl.cf 4 0 1 DCoyle.ff J J 1 La Verne, runner-up to game of the District Three Caic.p 113 Huatll.p 10 1 William Carey of Hatties- Bcjtul,pr*A 0 0 0 SCoylt,prV 0 0 t playoffs. The Hiawatha Valley r«borow»kl,p 0 0 0 DTackrnan.t 411 burg, Miss., in the 1969 Conference champions now Ahrcns.Jb 4 0 1 EBgon'«r,Jb 4 0 1 tournament — its only pre- will Scarb'ugh.ll 100 Steffn'«i,cf S01 vious tournament appear- sport a 12-2 record and Kreuier,rl ri 1 JTaekman.Jb 111 face either Red Wing or Pine Hamernlk.c I 6 0 McNoe.lf 10 0 ance—catties a 39-9 record Wlw.lb 2 0 1 Pr«bl»,lb 10 rob District 13 Island in the title game Thurs- 1 G Wf-lgM.u a 0 0 Totali 11111 into this years' tourney. day? at « p.m. at Mayo field. Totali JI17 ? This year marks the A—rah for caaa In 4th. V—ran for fourth time t'h e Warriors RED WING and Pine Island, Huottla In « the Warriors los-e their first Area Four baseball cham- The Warriors compiled a rescheduled for today at 5 p.rn "Jsborowikl ...... 1 0 0 • t 1 two games in 1981, finish, pionship since 1963, was 29-10 record this season. Huettl, (W.B-1) ... 7 7 1 1 '•¦* 41 Both Winona and Lake City WP-Huettl; fourth in .1962 and fourth named District 13 NAIA The Warriors, who will be were hampered considerably again in 1963. Winona State Coach of the Year over the he ading for their first na- by the sloppy playing condi- Coach Gary Grob w a s a weekend. tional tournament since tions, but the Tigers were able member of the 1961 and '62 Grob, who took over the 1963 next week, placed three to take advantage of it more Warrior teams. V Warrior helm in 1967, pilot- on the All-District 13 squad. often as they collected at least Oklahoma Christian oE ed Winona State to a North- They were senior first three infield hits that most as- Oklahoma City, Okla., (28- ern Intercollegiate Confer- baseman Dick McNary, who B.F. Goodrich suredly would have been puts 8) and Frostburg (Md.> ence championship •"— the won his second NIC bat- Presents A (30-9) the under more preferable playing Proudl y . . State will open school's first since 1966 — ting championship, an d tournament Monday at' l conditions. p.m. David Lipscomb o£ pitchers ? Terry Brecht, a Nonetheless, the Winhawks (30-7 junior, and Steve Krinke, a jumped on Lake City and ace Nashville, Term., > ¦ takes on High Point, N.C, senior. pitcher Mike Huettl—who had (34-7) at 4 p.m.., and Sam St. Mary's College, which given up just one earned run Houston State University of shared the Minnesota Inter- all season—early in the game. Hu-ntsvJlle, Texas, (31-115 collegiate Athletic Confer- Karl Kreuzer rapped a double meets Lewis College of ence crown with the Col- to left in the second inning to Lockport , 111., <42-9) at 10 lege of St. Thomas, placed start a brief Winhawk spurt i^^s p.m. a pair on the all-district that saw Ross Ham mernik draw In the June 6 second team: senior second base- a walk and Steve Wise load the round , the Warriors , win or man Mark Servais and jun- bases with an infield single. V ° ,T los e, will play the winner ior third baseman J a c k Kreuzer then came home on a • 167% more mileage V S££ J |1l \ or loser of the Oklahoma Brawley. wild pitch. Christian - Frostburg con- Others named to the team MIKE CASE, the bnrly right- test .The other winners and for Winona , losers will also clash Tues- included shortstop Jack handed pitcher day. Tamble of St. . Thomas; helped his own cause in the catcher Bruce Fuchs of St, third frame when he slammed Two games will be play- AGAINST THE WALL . . . Chicago Cubs centerfieldet* ed June 7 and two more Paul-Concordia; outfielders an 0-2 count curve ball well June 8, with the champion- Rick Webb of Gustavus Rick Monday goes up against the wall in an attempt to .get over tlie leftfield fence for a ship game slated for June Adolphus, Scott . Backer of a long ball hit by Montreal Expos Ken Singleton in Chicago solo homer. 9 and an if-necessary game Miinnesota-Morris and Tom Monday. Monday missed the smash and Singleton turned Case led the Hawks at the for June 10. Fier of St. John's; and the hit into a double. Chicago downed the Expos 5-2. (AP plate, going 3-for-3, including "Our record is excellent ," pitcher Steve Samuelson of Photofax) the home run, a double and a noted Coach Grob after Gary Grob St. Thomas single. He also drew a walk. learning of Uie national But after Case had put the pairings, "but if we had Winhawks out In front 2-0, played some games on OUT Krinke, Brecht, Servais All-Area Four Huettl bore down—and retired southern trip and if we the next eight batters before would have played some of giving up back-to-back singles our games wk-n they wcr«e in the to Case and Gary Ahrens Q\\ MkvV supposed to be played , we top of the sixth. Huettl worke<] ^B V \ V U^^^^HJ^^ could have had an even bet- his way out of trouble by for ter record. Two to hit Warriors Scarborough all-tourney cing Greg "And we played nine fielder's choice, Kreu- WAVERLY , Iowa, - Wi- were the only Warriors male Terry Brecht , a right- with the College of St. into a tournament games and we r , zer to pop out and Ross Ham- did well in all of them-o r nona State College, despite elected to the all-tourna- handed pitcher , and second Thomas. Servais was named capturing the Area Four ernik to go down swinging. we wouldn 't be were we ment team, which was domi- baseman Mark Servais of to the All-MIAC team for Tigers were NAIA baseball champion- Meanwhile, the nre now." nated by six selections from St. Ma ry's were named to the third straight year, as at Wino- WheefAlignment ship here Saturday, placed slowly chipping away ITL ^'A! Eighteen Wairnors and tournament runner-up Uni- the All-Area Four team. well as sharing the IVfost with single runs Ad|ust enstor, camber And Work •x partly ony two players on tho all- versity of Wisconsin - La na's advantage bead Conch Grob and As- For the season , Krinke Valuable Player honors. in the third and fourth innings. toe-in to manufacturer '* <£Q r A performed by sistant Coach Rick Decke r tournamen t team announced Crosso. comp iled an 11-2 record, La Crosse, which made its ahead for • 0 : >5 DU midway They finally went P^""" "' ' M«t.r Mechanic are expected to fly to through the final The voting was done by he gave up only six earned first appearance ever in the bottom of tho fifth. Torsion Bart L Mr ConJ. $2 More game. good in the tOM HOLMAY Phoenix sometime Sunday niajor league scouts and runs for a 0.71 earned run Area Four tournament , cap- IN THE THIRD frame, Lake The Warriors also morning. NAJA. rules state placed members of news media in average, walked just 42, tured six berths on the all- City tallied on a walk to Dan they must report in Phoenix Iwo on the All-Area Four attendance, Ballots were gave up 42 hits and struck tourney team: catcher Jerry Huettl and Coyle, a double by COMPL ETE U-POINT by 2 p.m. Sunday. team , announced at the turned in Saturday after- out 71. He hurled six com- Henley, first baseman Hob an RBI single by Dave Tack- Tota| c0lf Conch Grob hns indicated same time. St. Mary 's Col- noon. plete games and was cred- Steigerwald, second base- man, In the fourth , a double by lie will Rive his team either lege of Winonn placed one Halvorson , n senior from ited with a pair of shut- han Roger Buswell, third Jim Tackman and a single by BRAKE RE-BUILD ^*•--"* Wednesday or Thursday, or player on the all-area squad. outs baseman Mike Lalor, -out- tho score 1, Replaca braka lining 6. Inspect brako hotel Red Wing, Minn., went 5- . Stevo Preble knotted QAiA Q*, « both days, off because of Catcher Dan Halvorson for-13 in the tournament , Brecht , a junior from fielder Steve Kamla and at two apiece, , 1, 7 1 dB,e<:,lvo « h «P';" ¦' •, 1, iViArc llnlno'L/T^" for p.rf«cf",,. - r.lurn""p" spring. °» final exams. Me also sai d and pitcher Steve Krinke pitcher harry Madsen, " ,„ or including five RBI's, a pair Norway, Iowa , who suffered The Tigers went ahead In thc contact with clrutni . " *",r Henley went 5-for-14 In the 3, Rebuild all tour wheel ' • fj1 h *av V du' V ^»*» _,, . of home runs and two dou- Ills first loss of tho senson fifth — and sent Case to the < compact! tournament , Steigerwald 4- cylinder* „ ""f bles, He caught all five in a 4-3 decision at the showers too - as Coyle , Dave 4, Turn and tru« brnkn »• Ad|ust brakei ~mo»t olher care ... for-10, Buswell 6-for-lli , La- druitiJ 10. Pack front whceli games for Winona. hands off La Crosse Friday, Tackman , Tom Eggenberger 11M* lor 3-for-14, Kamla l-for-15, Steffenhagen collect- I, Inspect maitar cyllriderll. Ro»d test cnr Krinke a senior from compiled a 0-1 record and Terry , and Madsen gave up four ed singles. Steffenhagen drove Lamberton^ IMinn., collected through 61 innings of work. TOUR ? -^ earned runs and ten lilts in in both runs with his rip to Wf?3*® -gg^jp n pair of mound victories Ho walked 16, struck out beating Winona Fridny. YOUR DOWNTOWN HOME OP 5fl , gave up 30 hlls and gave rightficld. — setting a school record of Others picked on the nll- The game was still undecid- COMPLETE UNDER CAR CARE . . . EARNINGS i' 11 victories In one senson up six earned runs for a tourney team included short- 'AmL WgMr 0.89 ERA. He loo threw a ed until the last pitch, however, in the process — in 12 in- stop Sandy Sigmnn of Mis- as the Hawks mounted what nings of work, defeating pair of shutouts, souri Western who went 1- BHiflMJf j HaB Guarantend Incomo could have been a go-ahead ¦ mmm '^m mmwmm. £l|il3HP55lll?lBuena Vista Friday night Servais, a senior from La for-9 , outfielder Clin lies rally in the top of the seventh. ^Bt^TAGGlooihAimiKtw}, m.^m mART m MARV Cnr Ihfl R ACI PAUL and La Crosso Saturday Crosse, who recently signed Mulligan of Buenn Vista who lead-off walk, r0 ,0 V;>i BUSCHER Wise drew a FUGLESTAD* ° afternoon. n major league contract went 3-for-7, outfielder Tom only to watch as tho next two In QUALITY' "and SE RVICE In Krinke, a r.outhpaw, yield- wilh the San Diego O'Brien of Missouri West- Hawks struck owL,and popped DI SABILITY and LIFE INSURANCE ed only eight hits, walked Padres, lurncd In a .286 bat- ern who went 2-for-m; and out. But DaveJjAd/ihl singled pitcher TIRE SERVICE SEE or CAL L nine, struck out four and ting average for the Red- Kevin McDonald of to rtebt anrt^S^drew a walk Opon 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m, — Saturdays 7:30 a.m. ta 12 Noon Buena Vista who gave up . MONARCH LIFE INS. CO. did not give up nn earned men, who shared the Minne- run in tournament play. sola Intercollegiate Athlelic (Continued ) Aliteh'S trapped to tho plate 116 W. Jnd St. Phone 452-2771 MM-* West Fourth Phone 45-1-4608 on page 5I> Krinke, nlong with team- Conference championship Only 2 and alopped a sharp line drive mmmaaaaaaamaaaimmaamamiiaaaammaamaaaammimmmmmm mmmaaaaawmmmamaaamm Milwaukee Replaces Bristol r _ Perry seeks Crandall brightest ray of overpowers end pf slump Boston 11-3 By DAVE O'HARA BOSTON (AP) - What can a sun at County Stadium manager say aftea -hia-yteagv takes an 11-3 shellacking? general manager ufl for the players and fun for MILWAUKEE (AP) -^ The but denied s "Nothing—we got beat," pplied the the fans. vsrftoyaj brightest ray of sunshine In Frank Lane had a " pressure. "I want to ir*y for a relaxed (AP) Jim Peiry, Perry faces the Royals' Paul Manager Eddie Kasko replied Milwaukee County Stadium is ST. PAUL - Lane's 10-player winter trade atmosphere," he added. ineffective his last three Btarts, Splittorf as the rainout forced to the question Monday after Del Crandall, whom the Mil- with the Red Sox had mot put attempting to break his pitching rotation* to move back Players saluted Bristol as a will be ¦ the Milwaukee; Brewers over- waukee Brewers have selected the Brewers in the winning col- pitching slump tonight against a day. powered the Boston Hed Sox li- umn, and tbey had slumped to hard-workine boss. But they Met- as ai replacement for field man- spoke the team's having the Kanaas City Royals at A bit of bright news under 3 before 15,486 fans at Fenway the American League's worst of ropolitan Stadium. the rainy skies Monday was the Park./ * ager Dave Bristol. '¦ been under pressure and ten- a record . ;. Perry was originally sched- report that Tony Oliva would "Milwaukee was ready to Crandall, 42, called up from sion. Lane was happy to ex- Tain Evansville, observation, uled to pitch Monday, but be activated Friday. break loose, and they sure managerial post in Bristol had been censured by pand on the that Monday while forced postponement of Oliva, the defending Ameri- did ," Kasko said. "They got 48 Ind., checked in fans for his line-up switches; "Possibly he tried to cram as club, was avenging a too much experience in too game. It was rescheduled can League batting champion, hits in four games, and we won his new which he presumably made in double- weekend of defeat with an 11-3 an effort to find a winning com- short a time in the younger part of a twi-night has been on the disabled list three. Any time the cither team victory in Boston against the bination amid Lane's personnel players, causing theni to tight- header June 29. this season with a bad knee. gets that many hits, you have Red Sox. alterations. en up," the trade-arranger sug- In his last three starts, P«rry But outfielder Steve Brye to feel very fortunate to come Club president Man H. Selig Unable to associate with a gested. has given up 14 hits and 12 urns leaves Friday for two weeks of out with three wins.'* rousted Bristol out of bed Sun- constantly changing roster, "When there is no improve- in 12 1-3 innings. This prompted military reserve duty and a The Brewers, led by Billy day with a prendawn announce- fans fell away from the club. ment, you've got to make a Manager Bill Eigney and pitch- Twins spokesman said Oliva Conigliaro and George Scott, ment tihat he was being fired , Home attendance was running change," Lane contnued, "We ing coach Al Worthington to would probably be activated at had 12 hits, including eight for 40 per cent worse than, it was waited 30 games." spend extra time with the for- that time. 7 extra, bases, in snapping Bos- mer Cy Young ?A ward winner. ton's four-game winning streak. last season . After 30 .games this season, He would be available for Bristol displayed surprise at Bristol's Brewers had won only VALLEY RIDER'S QUEEN . ..TThe Winona Valley "Both Al and I worked with Conigliaro hit his fifth and Jim a couple of days ago when pinch-hitting duties. sixth homers and a run-scoring the announcement he received a third of their encounters and Rider's Saddle Club crowned Sally Sbortridge, daughter of were he threw some to loosen up," "We'll Use Oliva as a pinch triple, while Scott drilled his in Boston , but denied he had batting only .185. Mr , and Mrs. Pat Sbortridge of Pleasant Valley, "Valley any grudges. Selig denied there "Things have gone Rigney said. "He hasn't teen hitter and work him into the fourth homer and collected a bad all 's Queen for 1972. Miss Shortridge, 14, was judged was reason for any. season," Crandall said. Rider getting a good turn and every- lineup slowly," Rigney said. triple arid a single. The two Then, for horsemanship and knowledge "Dave and Frank said. the pits for quick repairs on a third in a Dodge, more than; 12 the cockpit of his car, Foyt (LotusX Moorhead . State won the team some ticket-window health to "I don't feel like we belong up vib rating right front wheel— most of the way. title during the two-day tourna- the owners' pocketbooks. , . here in second place." and Donohue had the lead, miles back/ was jumped from the car. his cloth- , who lost his First-baseman Bob Burda ment at? the St. Paul Keller The former all-star catcher, Nobody took Mark Donohue's fourth and LeeRoy Yarbrough ing ablaze. He was hospitalized pole starting position at the and Reggie Smith hit solo He held U for the remaining course with a 780 total. Bemidji who left the Milwaukee Braves place. He won the Indianapolis fifth , both in Mercurys? and listed in "good" condition Bryar 200 Trans-Am road race homers for the Red Sox. Dou- was second with 785, Min- in? 1963, has been ma nager of 500-mile auto race. But Unser, ,12 laps—30 miles—to win with a Also Sunday, three-times In- Monday night, but will ha*ye to at Loudon, N.H. Monday . be- bles by Doug Griffin and Pattin nesota-Morris had 786, Mich- the Evansville min-or-league who finished third in the run- record average speed of 162. 962 dianapolis 500 winner A.J. Foyt undergo ankle surgery . cause his rar wouldn't start, accounted for the other Boston igan Tech 792, S. Cloud 793, club for more than a year. ning, wound up second after miles an hourV He also? turned was hospitalized with first and Denis Hulme of New Zealand took over his teammate's Jave- run. Smith, who twisted his Winon-a and Southwest 813 In contrast to Bristol's iron- -original runner-iip Jerry Grant the fastest single lap at 187.539. second degree bums suffered Fittipaldi of lin and drove it to victory, av- right ankle Sunday, also had a ; outdueled Emerson each.?- '* . fist attitude toward exhausting was bumped down to 12th for Al Unsfcr , who failed in his during a pit atop Ln a 100-lap Brazil to win Monday's For- eraging 75.351 miles per hour. double, which was -wasted. drills and bid to win his: third straight ' The Red Sox wound up the Burt Keiger Morris, arid Dan clubhouse training illegal refueling. United States* . Auto ? Club dirt- mula I Gold Cup race at Oulton Milt Minter, driving a McGrath, Bemidji, tied for sec- rules, Crandall radiafed bliss Donohue, a 35-year-old engi- Indy, was third when the cars England, averaging Firebird, finished second , two weeklong home stand with a 5-2 track event at Du Qwoin, ill. Park , ¦¦ ¦ ond with 151 totals. as he checked in Monday. neering graduate frofcn Brown crossed the finish line and Joe The mishap occurred when 115.17 miles per hour. Hulme laps back. . * \ record. "I don 't pfcin any changes in Leonard was fourth. Larry Lenoch, a junior from "University, captured the 56th ' 1 ' 9 Austin., was the only Warrior rules and regulations because I edition of the Memorial Week- • But after speedway Officials ????????» +** * * +++++++±++++** +* ^ *+++++++++ '++~+*+++*++*'+~^^ T\ golfer to finish in the top 14 don 't know what the current -end classic Saturday and took upheld a protest by Unser's after firing successive rounds of ones are,'' he said , a dding he home a cool $218,767.90 for it. chief mechanic, George Big- 77 and 78 in the two-day meet doesn't even object that Selig is Gary Bettenhausen, of Tinley natti, Grant was bounced out of for a 36-hole total of 155. Le- retaining Bristol's coaching Park , 111., led for 126 of the 200 thee top 10, boosting the other noch's score was five strokes staff for the rest of the season. laps. But with* only 18 of them finishers up a notch. The offi- off the pace set fcy Hanjey and "If I have any conviction remaining, ignition troubles cials said Grant improperly was good for fifth place in the about managing,", he said , "it knocked him out of the race, took fuel from teammate Bobby individual standings. s that baseball should be fun; leaving Grani, in front, V Under's tank during that final pit stop . The infraction cost Giant m ore than just the No. 2 spot. i While Al Unser took home 1 TIRE SALE Lunn ends mniess Caledonia falls $95,257.89 for second place and WALLS-BLACKWALLS j Leonard received $58,797.89, j WHITE Grant wound up with $23,852.85—a loss of some "$72,- drought at A tiarita to Bangor in OOO for the penalty. . . . ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Soft- "I really didn't think about There was auto racing in spoken Californian Bob Lurn winning the tournament until places other than Indianapolis departed for another stop on the 18th hole wher I made that over the Memorial Day week- Tri-sfafe action end, too. the PGA tour with a 16-month last putt," said Lunn, who had HVL TRI-STATE . winless drought broken, and won only $7,300 thL year before W L W L At Charlotte, N.C, Buddy . Athletics' ¦: 1 o Wlnna. Valley J o Baker drove his red Dodge to a Jack Nicklaus didn't think his pocketing the $26,000 first prize Merchant! 1 o Bangor l l ¦¦ Atlanta Classic downfall would in the $130,000 Atlanta tourna- Dakota To Caledonia 0 i one-mile victory Sunday in the ¦ ' ] ' ' Sizes: • ' . Wesl Salim 0 1 Lansing 0 2 I wB^^mmWSmWKmW^l^^^i ' ' " " '?^i» m J% > affect his preparation for the ment. World 600 stock car race, aver- .^iMi ^ ^^*. United States Open. It was Lunn's first victory Winnebago Valley and Bang- aging 142.255 mile per hour and earning $21,975. flNE since his January , 197 1 triumph or j Wis,, posted victories in an z #P«ffiSBB^wil^l I a $1^ B 50 ^i gunning for his ^ * at Los Angeles. It als o was his abbreviated slate of Tri-State WJHS thinclads second Ailanta title ; he won third consecutive victory in the this tournament in 19S8. League baseball action over race, had his . 100 frlll*^iliBiflM)Ml RBIfME I WBBL \ bury area foes Lunn started the fimal round the weekend. yards in front of Baker with ^ "Pi Sunday in a deadlock for the After losing to Pepin, Wis., in just 50 miles to go when his The Winona Junior High (rack lead with Gary Player, while a non-league contest Sunday, team breezed past Peterson Nicklaus , who had a course Winnebago Valley came back 7.75 and Houston in a triangular at record 64 Friday, was only strong on Monday lo stage a m^^^ll ^^BsiBmmmmmMAtiArfA ^^V^i$ ¦ ^^3v xH •?¦ j|Jv Sizes: ? Jefferson Field with victories in three shot s back. 15-2 rout over Lansing, Iowa. Durand golfers 10 of the meet's 16 events. Player drew even when Lunn The winners pounded out 15 La, The fledgling Hawks wound bogeyed the 14th , but the South hits in the game including a v^^pfj ^^^^ HmHHv l PRICE lisxis PRICE s8r ? up with 105 points while Hous- African fell one shot b ack when home run, a double and a single ousted, Bauer's ton was second with 32 and Pe- he bogeyed at 15. from Dave Darling and a 3-for- ^ i^ i^ i^ i^ i^V -*> Plus 27< to 464 per tire Estimated Fed Ex. Tax recovery (depending on size) A 3 performance from Earl Ben- ¦^^^^^ i ^V and retreadable Mme T terson last with 29. Lunn was standing iai the 18th i n ^^^ i ^i i ^i^i^i^i^i Thr«e school records fell and son . fairway watching as Player Bangor edged Caledonia 8-2 73 is 2nd best a fourth was equaled in the win. sank a 12-foot birdie putt , forc- BLACK RIVER i ' the pace by scoring twice in the bottom FALLS. Wis . Mik e Aeling set ing the big Californiar. to par —Sparta and La with three solo wins for the of the ninth inning to hang the Crosse Central the final hole to avoid a tie, wall represent Western Hawks, including new school loss on Craig Anderson. .. Wiscon- ^m W Lunn sent his approach only | GOOD?YEAR In the onl sin in the state records in the long jump and y Hiawatha Valley high school golt six feet from the pin .and made League game played, Dakota tournament as the result of : ; : I the 440-yard dash. A leap of Fri- \ ^— —— it for a birdie that gave him a knocked off West Snlem day's sectional action ,, 6-1 on in Black 4 USE OUR RAIN CHECK PROGRAM DeeiUM o( »n ex- 3 WAYS 1 fa9fifiHft 9 (jSS^\Q l*iitw*mii*im*iitf Surra* locator*, #> 17-9'A was good enough to bet- 69 for a 275 total over the par peeled heavy demand for Goodyear tires, we may run _._ ¦• *^ '^F ~T *^ B>nk I the pitching of Terry Beach and River Falls. 'n ^* /MWHlBft **• ^ ^^ F ^ ter the long jump mark , while. 72, 6,883-yard Atlanta Country ? out o« some sizes during this oiler, but we will be happy Til c~***>GM.« mmmmM *?-* - Do NwCredit Honor Cank. f a two-mn homer by Tom Thes- Sparta finished with nn 18- ? to orderyour size at the advertised price end luu« you _.._«!._. _ infflm I^^B^BI) HHHHHI a clocking of :56.15 in the 440 Club course ~ ~ ^ . ing in (he fourth inning. AH ho.'e total of 307 A I rain check for future delivery ol the merchandise. chalked up that record An 11.9 Meanwhile , with Central CHARGE i . Nicklaus had other HVL tilts were postponed just one shot back with _ , ; in the 100-yard dash completed skied to a 75 in the thffcTround 308 and 4 ' : : : — 4» due to wet grounds. B lack River Falls tied for third his day. and went to a fat 76 om the final Results from the Eastern Di- ? .... _._ ._ ..__..._____ ? day. with Durand at 309. Lanny Brown tied a school vision of the Tri-State League Trailing the record in the fiO-yard dash with Player was second lenders were Wis 'wilh a 277 has Chnseburg whipping DeSo- consin Rnpids , 320; a :7.3 clocking, but finished total , followed by Lou Graham Stevens ? to 5-1, Stoddard nipping Viro- Point , 328 ; Neillsville , 334 | 1 SPRING IS THE TIME FOR second , .2 off the pace. at 278, Honiero Bla ncas and , and qua 5-4 , Wauzeka battering Eit- Eau Claire Memorial , trailing The third school record fell Dave Hill nt 279, and Gay zen 13-2, and Harper 's Ferry Brewer n | 2110. the rain dampened field, with- t to the 880-yard relay team of edging Genoa 7-6. d row. | GOODY EAR'S "CIRCLE OF SAFETY" INSPECTION Brown , Dean Emanuel, Scott Erwiai and Todd Duffy with a The lop two teams in the sec : time of 1:43.5. S I iona Is advance to the state t I i J peltz quartet G-E-T' s Byom meet in X I Free Check of the Following: THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL ? Steve Olson, Peterson , also Madison June 2-3, ns d oes the sectional medalist. Brake System Battery i notched firsts in three events , wins horse race named top athlete 4 I • • p^ * witli a 25.5 clocking in the 11)0- Black River Falls' Dnvo Young ^ ^^ ^^ nipped Durand' T I • Shocka • Suspension Complita Front ^ ? ynrd low hurdles , a leap of 5-ii golf GALESVILLE , Wis , - John s Tim Bauer by f£ ^% flj \ at Westfield a stroke to %0 • * 0 *F ? in the high jump and a vault Byom was the recipient of the gain the berth , fin- 4 I • Tlraa • Wheel Balance End Alignment of 9-6. The John Speltz ishing with n 72. lea rn captur- Butch Gardner Memorial Award I H Exhauit System " ed top honors in the • Tors,on Bflr| & CendH|oWnB Extra Memorial presented to the outstanding se- Mf %l * Miss Grover places Day Horse Ilace Tournament nior athlete at the Galc-Ettrlck- ? I j ? held nl, liie Westfi eld Golf Club Trempcnlcau Awards Banquet Tri-Oval is in charity Monday, held here recently. ? I FOR APPOINTMENT . „ . CALL 454-5181 ? show Team No. fi , one of a total of Byom , son of Mr. and Mrs. MADISON, Wis. - Pamela 2o teams , in the tourney con- Gerald Byom of Galesville , was washed out a—, , ,. j Grover of Winana , riding her .sistinc. of Spell/ , Cliff Koxlien , a standout receiver for the Red- FOUNTAIN CITY Wis , _ I thoroughbred hauler , Lady Steel Gordle Fakler , nnd Gale men's unbeaten Cotiteo Confer- , Blue, placed in three different Schullz , compiled ir.:i points The Memorial Day stock car 4 OUR STORE Monday through , ence champion football team racing doubleheader | Friday — 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m., ? classes at tho Madison Charit y seven more than Iheir nearest scheduled Inst fall , was a top scoring here at Tri-Oval Speedway Horse show held at the Dnne challengers. Scoring wa.s kept threat for G-E-T's conference 1 HOURS: Saturday — 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. County Coliseum here over on a basis cf three Monday wns washed out by al- | J the points for a co-chnmpions In basketball' and most continuous min. weekend, birdie, two for a par and one , was the lending quniter-milor Neither the nftcrnoon nor ? Miss Grover earned a second for n hofiey. on the Fledmen 's track team t Finishing second evening events .scheduled Mon- in the Hunt Seat Equitation Un- with Mfi this spring- day will be made up. der Saddle for 13-ycar-olds and points wan Team No. 1 consist- The event was sponsored joint- ing of (iirard Janikowski Tri-Oval will continue Its nor- under, followed by n fifth place , .lorry ly by thc Galesville, and Et- mal slate of races Friday nt in Junior Hunter Under Saddle, Rodgers, Dcnn Browm and Kd- trick Lions Clubs, Don Hendrick- 8:30 p.m. and 4i sixth In Junior Hunter ward Ilemmelinmi. T hire] place son served1 as master of cere- NELSON TIRE (lnoJ' SERVICE i porid«nt boodye.r Dtfaler) L Stake competition. went lo Team No. 7 which piled monies, nnd Larry Fronborg, n ed speaker* 14 J WSSjW|ni|ipP^jT Judging the American Horse up HI points. Making up the former Gale-Ettrick and Univor A total of 21 senior lettermen t?i SHO Service Dr., Hwy. 61 West Courtesy C*r Avflllnbl. Phon* 454-5181 , ^^ ^ ^ H 1 4 \< | ^ i ^^ i ^^^^^. ^^^^^B^^^mmmmmmmu Show Association and tri-slalc loam weio Karl Buswell , Ken sily of Wisconsln-Ln Crosso star were honored , and tlio cheer- HiBB^^^^^^^^^^^^m*-^H^H^ 4* appro-ved show was Solon Pal- Poblocki , Boh Ives mid Don athlete who is now Ji coach at leaders nnd girls' gymnastics i bK~A:&y>Awmmwx::&y^^^ * ^i^i^i^Hi^ii^i^i mer -oi Upper Montclalr, N.J. I Kaufmonn. Shawano, Wis,, wns tho featur- team were also recognized, ^?^????? ^???? ¦» ¦»?•»? ¦?¦?•»-»???•?»-»-» ¦»???-» ??? ^^ ??????? ^?^???» ?? ????? ^ BOX SCORE MMWIUKM UII BMTOn UJ «br Abl IbrhM Hansen wins HtiM.lb J t I • Hirptr/Cl 5 0 10 Stock prices Scoreboard DM»y,cf 4 1 ie Apiricl »,u 4 0»o ScMMb 11 14 Ogllvli,!) 4 10 0 Hitti ng won tourney Il1 nt,ir 1)21 RSmltM 4121 1 P.M. New York l*«iT»re,Ib 111* PttrDctiilfSb 4lio BCnglare^f 3 2 2 4 Burdo.lb 4 12 1 Stock Prices Baseball everything BRodrotLt 1110 Crlinn.lD 4 110 ease ahead By THi ASSOCIATED PRitt AB*rb*«h.u 4 2 10 risk.c 3 110 NEW YORK (AP ) - Stock Allied Ch 32Vi Honeywl 153V4 NATIONAL LBAOUB P«rMlM,p 4 0 0 0 P»ltln,» 2 0 11 EAST Total 42 11 li it r»un,p i o oo market prices eased ahead to- Allis Chal H Inland Stl 35% for us, claims Grob W. L. Pel. O.B. Bollnji 0 0 0* New York .21 11 .m Donnybrook Tlinf.p 0 0 0 0 day as the Dow Jones blue-chip •Amerada 54% I B Mach 400% at Oall'er.ph 10 00 (Continue* from page 3b) was when Dick was still hitting that ball very Pillsburgll 34 14 .(32 iVs TMII J42 02 indicator moved closer to an al- Am Brnd 48V* Int Harv 33% us. It took a lot of pressure off our pitching well. I told them that Dick was an excep- Chleajo „ ' 20 17 441 7 BRAINERD Minn. (AP) Montroal 17 22 .«i It , - MILWAUKBI ...211 003 2«3—11 ...;.. . 000 »1« 000-^ 1 most 3V4-year closing high. Am Can S0V4 Intl Paper 40 and defense; vou can play much more relax- tional hitter. Pbi'adelpliia if 21 .410 12 BOSTON .. Jerry Hansen of Bloomington E-Burt« , Scott. Orllfln, Bollrv. LOB ed with that big lead. And the depth on our "But I think tills might have put too St. Loult .... 15 25 .373 13'4 The\npon Dow Jones average Am Mtr 8% Jns & L 16% WKST —Mllwoukt * II. BMten J. IB—O.May, climaxed a most successful Me- Pattin, Porraro, R. Smith. IB— ball club was really a definite factor." much pressure on Dick. He started to slump Houston ...... 24 11 .tit Orlffln, of 30 industrial stocks gained AT&T 42% Josens 32% One Warrior who noticeably wasn't hit- and the team thought "if he can't hit, we Lot Angalet .24 li .MO . ill 1 o championship. McNary went only 3-for-19 in "But we're putting the ball on the ball Chicago d Montreal 1 Armour -— Loew' y 58% 5*00 endurance race at Donny- Bolin IVi 4 I . 1 2 1 set on Feb. 9, 1966. a the tournament, driving in three runs. He now and it's all kinda culminating together. San Frands<» II, Atlanta » -TlBIW ...... V, 0 0 0 0 1 Cinclnnall ?, San Diego 4 brooke Speedway. Advances led declines by a Avco Cp 16 Marcor 27% did They played ball down there like we expected HBP—fcy Pttlln (HtlJt). T—1:». A— , however, turn in a superlative defensive Philadelphia 2, Pittsburgh 1. 12 Innings small margin on the New York Beth Stl 30% Minn MM 155% Hansen, who had won the fea- I5.4W. performance at first base. them to all year. New Yerk «> St. Louis I Stock Exchange. Boeing 23% Minn P L 20% Grob revealed that McNary had been "How does it feel to be going to Phoenix? Los Angelta 7, Houston ! ture races Saturday and Sun- SUNDAY'S RESULTS day, built a commanding lead Analysts said there was little Boise Cas 14 Mobil Oil 55% playing with a bene bruise on one hand, It's pretty good , pretty good. You know, this San Francisco W, Atlanta 3-7, 2nd Brunswk 53% Mn Chm 56% impairing his hitting ability. was a goal I set when I first started coaching game 11 Innlnos through the heavy rain at the ioursoine in the news background to I Ward Brl North 47% Mont Dak 30% Grob explained the Warriors' sudden here. We had two other chances to go in Pittsburgh 4, Philadelphia outset of the race. stimulate the market's rise. Montreal 7, Chicago 5 Driving a production Chevro- They noted that many investors Camp Si> 29% N Am R 33% - surge at the plate, after several games of 1968 and last year, and we didn 't. But now St. Lotiis t- New York I wins horse race Catpillar — N N Gas hitting that just managed to eke out vic- it's a pretty good thrill." San Dltgo J, Cincinnati 1 let Corvette, the Haasen-Baker had stepped out of the market 44% Los Angeles 4, Houston e, 11 Innings to see Ch MSPP — No St Pw 25% tories, in this way: The Warriors will be carrying a 29-10 MONDAY'S RESULTS duo averaged 92.332 miles an tourney at WCC how long the m arket Chlcogo S, Monlreal 1 would continue ita advance. Chrysler 32% Nw Air 54% "We had a meeting one day , and I told record into the national tournament, which ( hour over the three-mile cir- the team not to Iry to hit with McNary. This they will enter for the first time since 1963. Ntw YOrtt 7, St. LOUll cuit. - The Memorial Day Horse The Dow average has climbed Cities Svc 36% Nw Banc 42',4 Pittsburgh 7-4, Philadelphia l-l Com Ed 34% Penney 79% Los Ang»le» I, Un Francisco 1 Tony DeLorenzo oi Detroit, Race Tournament held at the some 46 points in less than 2 Atlanta 2, Sin Dltso 1 ComSat 6914 Pepsi 87 Houston J Mich., weeks. Cinclnnall I, and Bill Morrison of Winona Country Club Monday Con Ed 24% Pips Dge 39 Saturday s '• ' . TODAY'S GAMBS Blue Island , III. also driving a Oils, motors, rubbers and St. Louis (Oibsott 1-31 at Chicago , was won by the Bill Ward team Cont Can 28% PWllips 29% (Hands 3-D Corvette, finished six laps be- with a total of 148 points. mail order-retail were up. Air- Cont Oil 27 Polaroid 148% Pittsburgh CEIIIs 1-21 tf Mofllrtal (Tor- hind the winners hut still pock- crafts, electronics and chem- rei 4-2), N Completing the Ward four- Cntl DaU 71% RCA 38% Warriors 1-31 tt Ntw icals were 7 Philadelphia (Carlton . eted $1, lower! All box scores 800. other York (Mtllack 3-0), N some were Stan Sorern, Tom Dart Ind 56% Rep SU 23% —lit oarr.-e-r- stock categories were mixed. San Diego (Norman 4-1) tl Atlania Another Corvette, piloted by , a nd Gene Wicka. Deere 65% Wlnom Sills (11) MUiourl Weilern HI Uhderdahl Rey Ind 74% (Reed «). H AB R H At R H 2 Mike Murray of Toledo, Ohio, Taking second place some four Dow Cm. 9 Sears R Cincinnati (Billlngham 1.-4) at Hou- 117% Yost.ab 4 1 J C1»rk,cl 11 1 ston (Wilson 1-J), N and Dwight Knupp of South- points back were Jim Sullivan , du Pont 171 Shell Oil 45% Ev|en,ji o 0 0 Sauceda,)b 3 0 1 ¦ ¦ Los Angeles. (Osteen 5-2) at San Fran- E S Llitta,M " • 1 1 2 O'BrUn.r * It. 1 field, Mich., finished -third . Dr. J? V. Testor, Warren Wun- East Kod 126% Sp Ran 40% are All-NIC ckco (McDowell 4-1), N " ' McNary.lb 12 2 Bray 3 0 o WEDMESDAY'S OAMES derlich , an d Lee Newbcrg. Firestone 24% St Brands 52% MOORHEAD, Minn. choice in 1970 and McNary 1.1'KHHC 3 0 0 CHICAGO WHOLESALB ROSJjb 2 Pittsburgh at Montreal,- N ' 4 1 2 Verbck.c 3 0 0 Finishing third with 142 points BOO MARKET Ford Mtr 66% St Oil Cal 58% League champion Winona in 1969. Boltiwell.c Phlladelphle at New Yerk, N Halvorson,c J 0 1 Mclrllre 3 0 0 John Pendle- Grade A large while .;...,. .JJ State College led the bal- McNary led the NIC in St. Louis al Chicago was the team of GraOe A melliim whlla ....,.,.,. Jl Gen Elec 69% St Oil Ind 65 Saucr.lf .411 Slgmm,il 3 0 0 San Diego at Allanta, N " ' ¦ Ballc-y.rf 3 0 0 Hollanders 10 o Cornell claims ton, Bill Laurie, A. I. Kelson , ¦; U Gen Food 26% St Oil NJ 76% loting for the 1972 All-North- hitting this spring with a Cinclnnall at Houston, N ern Intercollegiate Confer- .444 average, including 20 Boettcher.p. J l l Flnn .p ooo Los Angelei al San Francisco and Chuck Merkel. Gen Mills 51 ? Swift ? 34% —- — Jcnci.p 10 0 AMERICAN LEAGUE Totilj rouiW-H.p 0 0 0 ¦ In a club tourney held Satur- Gen Mtr 76% Texaco 34 ence baseball squad with hits and 12 runs scored. 27 11 13 EAST Livestock W. L. Pet. O.B. day where only the two best Gen Tel 29% Texas Ins 166 seven selections, including Raasch placed second be- ' sectional title Totals , 22 0 3 Baltimore ...... 30 13 .371 SOUTH JT. PAUL hind McNary with a .439 ' ...... :.... 010 050 J—11 balls out of a foursome were Gen Tel 29% Texas Ins 168 three pitchers. Wlnona * Stale Detroit .: ...... 20 1* .3st '.'s . SOUTH ST. PAUL, Minn. , (AP) — Mlueurl Western .-; ' .:. 000 000 0— O CHIPPEWA FALLS. Wis. - Unioji Winona hurlers Terry mark, followed by Backer Cleveland ...... 18 14 .J2» IVi counted for score, top honors (USDA)-Caltle 4.0OO; calves JO; slaugh- Gillette 44% Oil 30% E—Boettcher, Unbo. RBI—Halvorun New York ...... it .«7 4 Cornell captured the team j at ,369. ¦ 1* went to Neil Werner, RE. Mies- t*r eteere and holler (airly ecllve, gen- GoodricTi 26% Un Pac 56% Brecht, Lee Boettcher and I, McNary 3, Ron 3, Bothwell, Sauer 3. Boslrn .-.: ' ' . 1* 1' -«4 3 crown in the Chippewa erally (tesdy. 2B—Rots 2, Halvorson, Linbo. HR—Siutr. ' ¦ *n John Goodyear 30% Steve Krinke were among Brecht topped the NIC Milwaukee ... . 11 11 .M* . 'i bauef , R. J. Ritter and Dr. Two ' toads high , choice . 1951 and 1137 US Steel 30% SB—Slgman. S—Unto. SF-McNary, Hal- WEST . Falls Class C track sectional Ib I ' laughl'er steeri 34.75; most choice 950- Greyhnd 18% the 16 NIC a pitchers with a 5-0 mark 5, MW 4. Alampl with 126 strokes for 18 West El 53% thletes select- vorson. OP—WSC 2, LOB-WSC, Oakland ... .. 24 11 .Mt with 43 points, while area teams 1100 lbs 35.J0-36.5O,- mixed high good ed. Winona also placed first and a sparkling 0.49 ERA. PITCHINO SUMMARY MINNESOTA .. 21 12 .434 » holes. The team of Jim ¦nd cholco 35.00-35.50; good 31.3J-3J.O0; Gulf Oil 25 Weyrhsr 50% IP H R ER BB JO Chicago ...... 22 14 ,*11 HV. — Osseo-Fairchild and Eleva- , Bo b Jacobsen , three loads hlgli chocs Including some Wilson finished 4< in NIC ' O'Laughlin Homesti 28 . Wlworth 37% baseman Dick McNary,. sec- Boetlcher (W, .<•]) 7 3 0 : 0 2 » California U M .«1» 10 prime O4J-10M lb' slaughter heifers 36 - " . . ¦ ' ' Strum—fell far back and failed Mark Modjeski, and Wally . . ond baseman Dean Yoost, action, while Kiecker and Hollander (L) .. 4t*> 7 4 4 1 1 Texas *. . ' .: H IJ .. .«!•. lt O0O-1000 lb slougtiter hellers 34.00; most ' .« "to qualify anyone for the state catcher Dan Halvorson and Krinke were 4-1. Finn : ...... 0 12 2 1 Kansas City * .* ...» 22 .371 11 Friend wound up second. choice 850-1050 ltn 35.75-34.75; mixed high ¦ Jones . ;.... 1>V 4 3 3 1 1 S»,T\IRDAY'S RESULTS meet in Madison June 2-3. good and choice 34.J5-J4.75> good 31.50- There were six seniors ¦ ' ..' .. * .: ' ¦ Vi 0 0 0 0 0 1 Low net honors for the same outfielder Tad Bothwell. on Younglwnd* Detroit 2, New York 34.25; slaughter cows steady;¦ utility ¦Winona markets HBP—Sauced by Boettcher. Ross by , f, Chicago 3 Osseo-Fairchild tallied two St. Cloud State, the NIC's the All-NIC squad in Halvor- * Oakland tournament went t© Carl Klag- and commercial 56.50-28.00; slaughter Jones. Texas U, MlnnMota 1 points on fifth place finishes ge with a 68, Jacobsen and John bulls steady; utility and cornrnerclel Froedtert Malt Corporation runnerup with an 11-4 league son, McNary, Yoost, Kelly, (Ffrsl Game) . Baltimore 4. Cleveland 2 30.0O-33.00; good . J8.00-3I.CO; vealers ? tlou n o a.m. to 4 p.m. (11) Mo. Western (0) 3 from Brad Garber is the mjla Patnode Wln«na SI. Boston », Milwaukee ¦ Clemens both carded Ws, and steady; choice 53.00-57.00; prim* up lo Submit tampl* btttte loading. mark, had three selections and Krinke. Eight 1 ' ' ¦ ab rli ab r h California 4. Kansas Cily . *. and Larry Moen in the 880-yard C. W. Olsen . Mike Gostomskl, 44.00; good :4* .M-54.0O.; ' Barley pu rchaiad at prkot iub|eet to in shortstop Bob Kelly, ceh- junior selections included Ycost.Jb 4 21 Clark.cl I'M SUNDAY'S RESULTS Hogs 4,0001 barrows and gills rather chang». 1 run, while Eleva-Strum scored and U. F. Albrecht all had 71's. * terfielder Mike Stoulil and Raasch, Patten, Bothwell, Linbo,ss 3 2 1 Sauceda,3b 2 «* 1 Boston 4, Milwaukee stow, steady lo SJ lower; ,1.J . .190-74O Bay Co McNary.lb 2 2 1 O'Brien.rf 3 0 1 NDctrolt 3, New York 4 one point on a fifth place finish lbs 24.00-J6.1J; 1-3 : 190-J40 lbs 25-75- State Milling . ¦¦ ¦ pitcher Brock Kiecker. Long, Brecht, Boettcher Ross,3b 3 3 2 Bray,2b . 3 » 0 Baltimore 5. Cleveland 1 * . ' ' . . 26.00; 2-3 24M60 lb» 25.50-24.00; 260-280 • ' " : EJivolor A . Grain Pricaa Minnesota-Morris finished Kiecker and Wilson. : Bothwell.cl 4 12 Keesoo.lb 2 10 Minnesota T, Texas 2 in the 880-yard relay. field. 6; Augusta . 4^; Hoi lbs 24.75-25.50i sows steady to weak) 1-3 No. I northsrn rprlhg vvhaat .... 1.51 HaNorsoii.c 3 01 Verbeck.e 30 0 California 4. Kansas Cily 1 Finishing behind Cornell In combe 3: Osseo-Fairchild and 370-400 lbs 22.0O-23.0O) 2-3 4KWO0 lbs No. 2 northBrh aprlnfl wheat .... 1.51 last with a 3-11 conference Backer was the lone soph- Sau«r,lf 4 11 Fields,!) OOO Oakland 5. Chicago 4. 10 Inning s . 21.00-22.25; bosrs steady; 19.0O-23.0O. No. J horthirn spring wheat. .... l.<7 log but gained four All-NIC omore on the squad while Bailey.rf 3 00 Mclntire.lf 3 0 0 MONDAY'S RESULT S the event were?Elk Mound , 35; Weyerhauser, 2; Eleva - Strum, Sheep 30; all classes fully -atead/. No. 4 northern iprlng wheat .. *.. 1:42 Boellcher,p 3 11 Sljman,si 2 0 0 Milwaukee 11, Boston 3 trading active; spring . slaughter lambs No. 1 ha rd winter whiat ...... "1.51 choices in Stoulil who led the NIC in Detroit 3-3 Ondossagon, 30; Altoona. 26 , 1; and Flambeau, 0. catcher Ron Total 21 11 13 Holl»nder,p 10 0 Now York 5-4. " choice and prima 65-110 lbi 34.0O-35.O0; No. j hard wlnler wheat ...... 2.40 Raasch, utility infielder in runs-batted-in with 14, Flnn.p O 0 0 Kansas Cily at Mlnnetota, rain. . Winter, 19; Bruce, 18; Wash- The first and second place good and choice 32.00-34.00; ulllily and No. 3 hard winter wheat 1.4] . Jones.p 1 0 0 Chicago 5-2, California 4-J, 2nd garni good slaughter ewes 5.00-4.50/ choice to- No. hard wlntar wheat ...... t.41 : . burn lT/z ; Colfax, 16; Drum- winners in. each event qualified 4 Doug Patnode and outfield- was the only freshmaii hon- Younghini,p 0 0 0 10 innings . . ts lb feeder lambs 2S.OO-29.00; 85*100 lbs No. 1 rya ..:...... ;...., 1.05 ers Scott Backer and Steve ored. Totals . 12 01 Oakland *7, Texas 11 mond, 10: Fall Creek and Bay- for nextyweekend's state meet. 25.00-21.00. ' . No. I rya I.M Long. WINONA ST. . ' . ' ...010 050 .5—11 Balllmora f. Cleveland 1 MO. WESTERN ...... 000 OOO O— 0 Today's Gaines . ' - . .7MARK : ..TRAli.' ': By Ed Dodd Moorhead State landed E—Unto, Boetlcher. RBI— McNary 2, Doirolt (Tlmmerman 3-4 ) at Cleve ' Ross 3, Bothwell, Halvorson 3, Sauer 3. land (Wile©* «-4), N pitcher Mike Wilson on the :B—Linbo, Ross 2, Halvorson. HR—Sau- Boston (Gulp 3-4) at Baltimore (Cut! all-NIC squad **vhile Be- er. SB—Slgman. S—tinbo. SF—McNJry< lar 2-3). N . '? Halvorson; DP — Wlnona 2 (Halvorson- New York (Kokleh 4-1) at MllwtukH midji's Lee7-Patten * was (McNary) (Rbss-Yoost-McNary). Mo. (Loekwood M), N named the all-conference Wesl. (ClarV-Hollander-Sauccdi). Left: Kansas C.lv (Rooktr M) at MinnHoli Wlnona 4, Mo. Wait ». (Blyleven 4-3), N third baseman. Southwest IP H R ER BB SO Oakland (Holhman 7-2 2 at Texas ' ' State did not have a man on BoelKher (W.S-2) . 7. j 0 o 2 » (Hand 0-3), N . ' -* J „ , , Hollander (L4-3) ;. *V> 7 4 4 2 4 Chicago (Bahnsen f-5) at* . California the AU-NIC team Finn .,. ... * ,...... O 2 I 2 1 0 Va" Halvorson, Patnode and Jonas ...... l'i 4 3 S ll WEDNESDAY'S GAMES Yoongehani : M 4 0 0 ". O 0 Chicago at California, N Krinke are repeaters from HBP—Sauceda (by : BoeHeher), Rosa Kansas City at Minnesota, N the 1S71 All-NIC team, while (by Jones). U—Knudson, Bonder, T— Oakland at Texas, N 1:03. Detroit at Cleveland, N Long was an all-conference Yoost Brecht (Second Oame) Boston at Baltimore. N Wlnona $t. <5> UW-La Crow (I) New YorK at Milwaukee, N ab r h ab r h Yoest,3b 4 10 Lalor ,3b 3 0 1 Lint>o,ss-lf J 0 1 BUwelUb 30 0 McNary.lb Sll BSIei'ald.l b 3 01 Only 2 Warriors Roas.lb 2 1 2 Henley,e 301 Bottiwell.cf 4 00 Henger.c 10 0 Pacelli, Cadels Halvonon.e 2 0 1 Kamla.ef 4 0 » THE WIZARD OF ID By Parker an* Hart Sauer,1l-rf 4 0 0 Mell.ss 4 11 Balley.rf 10 0 Dolphln.rl 3 b 0 Ev|M,ss 2 10 Oohr.ph-A . 1 0 0 meets; Krinkcp 4 1 1 Arney.lf 30 0 win state on all-tournament Totals 3S5I Piegel,ph-B ioo Bmme.p too (Continued from page 3b) the team too early; The bal- jsierwid,ph-c ceo lots, I understand, were sub^ Aog'lln«,pr-D e O 0 near last three earned runs, five hits mitted before we played La Hunf.p TOO Cotter and struck out nine in losing Joten.ph-E 1 O 0 — Austin Crosse Saturday Totals 31 1 « ST. PAUL, Minn. to Missouri Western in the !" Others named to the All- B — tan ler SleiservaW In 3rd. E— Pacelli captured the Minnesota tourney's opening game. struck out for Hunt In ?lh. A—struck oul High School girls Area Four team were : Stei- for Dolphin In »th. B—founded oul for Independent Noticeably missing from gerwald ; third baseman Arney In tth. C—walked fdr Bueg e In track championship here at the all-tourney team was the Srd. Macalester College Saturday, Warriors' third baseman Ralph Sauceda of Missouri WINONA ST 004 100 OW-3 Western ; shortstop Jack UW-la C rosso 000 000 1«—1 while St. Thomas Academy Jeff Ross, who led the tour- E—Ev|en, Buswell, Mell 2, Arnsy. RBI grapped the boys crown. Tamble of St. OJI HR ney in hitting by going 9-for- Thomas ; McNary, R 3. 3B—Ross, Mell. 13th in catcher Rick Knipper of —Ross. DP—Wlnona (Krinke-Yoosl), La -- Winona Cottei finished 16, driving in nine runs, rap- Crosse 2 (B. Stelgerwald-Moll-B. Steiger- the girls meet and 22nd in the ping a home run and col- Upper Iowa; outfielders Bri- wall (Mell-B. Steigerwald). Lolt-Wlnona an Felda of UW-Oshkosh, 1, Li Crossa I. boys meet. lecting four doubles. IP H R ER BB SO Pacelli tallied 39 points in the Steve Proeschel of UW-Ste- Krlnka (W,ll-2) .. t * 1 0 J • Other Warriors who could ] nipping St. Margar- vens Point and Rck INetol- Buege (L.3-3) I 4, 4 14 girls meet, just as well have been chos- Hunt i 3 l ' 0 I 2 ets by a mere two points. Frid- TIGER By Bud Blake icky of Upper Iowa; and U—Knudson, Bond«r, Wahl. T-l:3i. en were shortstop-outfielder ' ley Grace was third with 34 pitchers McDonald and , (Third Game) Dave Linbo, who went 7-for- UW-La Crosse (1) Wlnona (7) points, followed by Rochester 16; outfielder-pitcher Tad Madsen. ab r h abrh Lalor.Jb A 0 0 Yoost,2b I 0 1 Lourdes 23, Concordia 12, Min- Bothwell who went 5-for-16, Buswell,2b 3 I 2 Llnbo.ss-1* 1 0 1 nehaha 16, Duluth Cathedral drove in four runs and yield- BStelg'Id.lb 4 0 0 McNary.lb 1 0 o Glennie offsets Henley,c 2 0 1 Ross,3b M 2 8%, Northrup 7, Breck 6, Holy ed only four hits and struck Hunt.prA 0 0 0 Bothwell,p J I 0 Angels 6, Marion 4, Mayer Lu- out 11 in pitching the cham- Henoer.c OOO Halvorson.c 1 2 1 theran 4. Cotter 3, Holy Trin- pionship game against La rumors of joining Kamla, tl 4 0 0 Saucr,lf,rf 1 1 0 Melt,ss .4 0 1 Balley.cf 0 0 0 ity 2 and Minneapolis Uitheran Crosse; pitcher Lee Boet- Delphln.rf 3 0 0 Simp.cf 1 0 1 Fi hting JSIelg'ld,ph-B 1 OO Youngbauer,rf 1 0 l 2. tcher, who tossed a three-hit g Saints OSHAWA , Ont. (AP ) - Bob Arney.lt 3 0 0 Evlcn.ss 1 2 1 St, Thomas won the boys shutout against Missouri TOmlinson.p 2 0 0 Totals 31 7 t meet with 34% points, followed Western ; outfielder Doug Kelly and Brian Glennie still Avgustlne.p 0 0 0 are in tlie National Hockey Gchr .ph C ooo by St, Cloud with 26, St. John's Saner , who went 2-for-lll Ficgcl.p . 0 0 0 25, Hill-Murray 24 , Grace 22 and drove in six runs; and League as of Monday night. Jolen.p ooo . Kelly, a winger with the Bucge.ph-C 1 0 0 Benilde 20% , Minnehaha 18,. second baseman Dean Tclals 31 1 4 Blake 17 Certin 11 Breck 9, Yoost , who went 4-for-15. Philadelphia Flyers, denied he A—ran lor Henley In olh. B—Hit Inlo . , FC for Dolphin lr» tth. C—walked for Marian 9, Brady 6, Lourdes 6 , "I was disappointed with has signed with the Chicago Auguitlna In 7th, O—filed oul for Jolen Pacelli 5, St , Croix 5. St. Paul the all-tournament team ," Cougars of the new World Irs Jlh. commented Winona State Hockey Association and Glennie UW-La Crosse 100 000 COO—1 Academy 4, Concordia 3, St. WNONA ST 000 001 Hx-7 s 3, Mayor Lutheran 2 Coach Gary Grob , "and I offset rumors he has joined the Bernard ' , E—Lalor 3. Flegol, Ross. RBI-^oost, De La Salle 2, Duluth Cathe- know a few of our kids were Minnesota Fighting Saints of Halvorson, Sauer, Samp, Ev|on 1. 2B— GRIN AND BEAR IT I DEMNIS THE MENACE disappointed too. Three or the WHA. Buswell, Samp. HR-Halvorson. IB—Mc- dral 2 and Cotter 1. Nary. 3—Yooaf, Bofhwell. SP—Sauer. DP Cotter girls placed in three four more of our kids could Glennie, a defenseman , said UW-La Crotte B. Stelgtrwald-Mell), Wl- have made that team. it would be one or two weeks non a (Bo|hwell-Ev|«n.McNary. Lefti La events, Gail Teston finishing Crosse I, Wlnona •• fifth In the long jump and Ram- "Jeff Ross, to me, was before his lawyer, Alan Eagle- IP H R ER BB 30 our Most Valuable Player, son , settles contractural talks Bothwell (W ,2-l) . 9 4 I 0 5 11 bler quartets finishing fifth in AuBusllna (L,3-l) . 1'/, 13102 the 440-yard and 880-yard re- .Jeff drove in nine runs and with his current employer, the TorsiHnson IH I 0 0 4 3 wnl fl-for-lG and twice Toronto Maple Leafs, or the F level ) I 3 1 7 O lays. Jolen . ... 1 2 2 0 2 1 Ae Dee Latten was the only drove in runs that broke Saints. Wp-Jolen. PB-tlenley. Balkt-Flegel. T—1:37, Cotter point winner in the boys games wide open for us— Kelly, in denying the Chicago ¦ and yet ho doesn 't even get claim to his service, said he meet, finishing fifth ln the dis- mentioned. had signed a two-yepr contract BOWLING cus. "Thc thing is , they picked with the Flyers. BER MUDA W L Mrs. Pozanc hits 524 Bowling Bags I I Weslgale Bowl I 3 in a 52-4 C»goy Kids ,. t 3 Joan Pozanc turned Medics i 4 to pace Westgate Bowl to a 2,662 r Drop-Oule 4 J in the Westgate Bermuda TUNE UP " Country Gals 4 3 L.CD.-D.K .'s 4 3 League Monday night. AT BUNKE'S APCO Blesani Bomborss 3 l a 197 and Oroen Hornets j t Mary Eichman had and Mey Caters j ( the Drop-Outs a 916. TAKE OFF V ON A WORRY-FREE VACATl0N* ^^^^ |) IS THAT . ¦ ,

"one drink foo many*" becomlnp; a habit wlfh you or BUNKE'S someono in your family? Tha Winona chnpter ol Alco- ^ SM \ holico Anonymous standi ready to talk thii «v»r with j APCO STATIONS PRp ^ you. Call 454-4410 — tha number la In your phone book. 700 E. Sflml« «MB5» | All calla art confidential. If you need AND want help Hwy. 61 »t Orrin St. 453-9421 OPEN 24 HOURS j I with • drinking problem, cull Alcoholic*- Anonymous " .. And , this is where lhe pr«ifd«n1iol advisors on NOWI meet!.. and where thoy brief ' SuPE.6oys yoyc/AN HEADTWEAI OFF IP THEY DO the nation's economy . -r L J hlnn where to Qo for campaign fund»lv BUT 1 OONY THINK Wite A50UT TO 5TMP£OE. 448 Calgon reports 20 Auto Service, Repairing 10 Help—Male or Female 28 Farm Implements CAR. SHAKE and thlmmyt Tire wear MAN OR WOMAN to supply consumers USED NEW HOLLAND Super 69 baler. percent sales hike Want Ads uneven? Alignment needed! 31.50 most with Rawlelgh Household Products. Can excellent condition. F. A. KRAUSE CO.. cars. Taggart Tire Service. Tel. 452- •im »«0 weekly part-time, $150 and Hwy. 14-41 E. Tel. 452-5155. valuation 277Z- "Write: Rawlaiah Co., Permit (AP) - The up full-time. MILWAUKEE Freeport, III., or Tel. collect, ar«a code 661 : FORD TRACTOR, live power and Property Transfers Bruner Division of the Calgon Start Here ¦15-232-741*. snow plow, excellent condition, only NOTICE 2640 hours. Approximately $2,000. Ann Corp. has announced a 20 per This newspaper will be responsible tor Mattes, Tel. Dakota 643-6704. In Winona County $23S;700 in county only one Incorrect Insertion of any Situations W-anted—F«m. 29 cent increase in sal*s in 1971 classified advertisement published In ELEC-TRAK Garden Tractors, » to l« WARRANTY DEED were cluded one to Hardrives, Inc., the Want Ads taction. Check your ad WANTED BABY3l*rriNG-pre(er Good- h.p., runs on bsllerles. No flas or oil AAarthi Zielka to Norbert Joseph Gelcr Nine building permits over 1970. and cal) 452-332) If a correction musl view araa but -will go tlsewhata. ltl. nee . . ux.to John H. 'Court -In lhe Schnelderman, et ux — E. 60 feel of o'clock A.M., before this cers of the Village and the poundmas- SENIOR CITI2ENS-N.W. tour, Calgary cartons, glass containers, etc.) with the Warren's office said it would court house Lots U I 8 8. . E. « feet of N. 50 feel probate court room In the ter, or his deputy, shall tako up and Stampede with other stops. Visit friends, ' CERAMIC TILE Sales 8. Insta llation. that the lime safe/ ' sanitary In-Slnk-Erator Compac- of Lot 9. Block 19, Blrae s Addition lo not. challenge the redistricting in Wlnona, Minnesota; Impound any dog found In the Village share expense. $150 to llrst person, $300 HORSES FOR SALE Brooks 8. Associates/ Tel. 45<-5382. ' decedent tor. Reduce bulk to about Vi of lis St. Charles. . within which creditors of said withou t a tag provided for In Section each for 5 more. Tel. Fountain City . law because the legislative limited to sixty original size In an attractive unit right :¦ Edward W. Pahnke, et ux to Anlhony may tile their claims be 5 hereof; and to enforce this ordinance, 687-4762. GIBSON REFRIGERATORS ft A hereof, and thnt the In your own kitchen. No plumbing or 35 Head ¦' R. Ochs. et ux — Lot 1^ Block 1, Whet- election process had already days from the date said officers and poundmaster or his FREEZERS , heard on August 3, special wiring required. stone's F irst Subdivision to Wiriona; claims so filed be deputy are empowered and Instructed to SPECIAL: Ap Yearling $30 Finest Quality at Popular Prlcet. started. 1972, at 10:30 o clock: A.M., belore . this Auto Service, Repairing 10 QUIT CLAIM DEED ' enter upon any prlvale premises . where WI NONA FIRE 8. POWER EQUIP. CO. , court room In the Frank O'Laughlin Wilmer L. Larson, ef ux to David J. The suit contends the reap- Court In the probate they have reasonable cause to believe ;. Tel. St. Charles ? 54-56 E. 2nd Tel. 452-5065 Wlnona, Minnesota, and PLUMBING & HEATING Lltchy; ef ux—Part Lot 2, Minnesota court house In there Fs ah unlicensed dog. The sa|d ¦¦ portionment law . violates state given by publication 761 E. 6lh Tel. 452-6340 ' .- 932-4557. City. lhat notice hereof be law enforcement officers and/or poupd- V.\ . or this order. Iri the Wlnona Dally News William Voelker, el nit to Charles 0. constitutional provisions "de- master or deputy poundmaster shall take Automobile ANTIQUE notice, as provided by Judy, et ux—- Part of WW % of NE Vs signed as safeguards against and by mailed up and impound any dogs possessed , Female—Jobs of Interest—26 AND newer furniture stripping. Fret of Sec. 28-106-5. law. harbored, kept or. allowed lo bo about Poultry, Eggs, Supplies 44 estimates; pick-up and delivery. Deal- , 1972. AIR CONDITIONER Samuel 2. Hechter, e-t ux legislative gerrymandering and Dated May 26 * the . premises or . maintained contrary ers welcome. Iel. 454-5837. to Dan V. . S. A. SAWVER, lo Fink, et al. Trustee — S. 20 rods of the provisions of this ordinance. LAST CALLI USDA reports smallest voter inconvenience," and de- ¦' .. Probate Judge. SERVICE SlOO A MONTH EXTRA cash-would if SE V4.erf SE Vi See. 11; Part S. 20 SECTION 12. : chick hatch In 25 years. Chicks avail- parts more thar necessary {Probate Court Seal) sojve your budget problems? Many rods of SW Vt of SW Sec. 15; Part ESTABLISHMENT OF VILLAGE able June 3 and June 10. Hurry; Fuller Brush "A C. Stanley McMahon . Avon Representatives actually earn an ' of NW of NWVi of Sec. 13: of from population equality guide- . KENNEL OR DOG POUND REPAIR ; hurryl SPELTZ CHICK HATCHERY, Summer Sale. -Tel. * 452-1129 alter. 4. • V* E W Attorney for Petitioner • estimated $40 weekly spare time selling NE 'A; -part of W W of NE Vt- lying lines. (a) The Village Council: shall each Air Conditioner systems our famous products. Why can't youl Rollingstone, Minn. Tel. 689-2311. Northeasterly of Road S nl NE ""< Counly of Wlnona j In Probale . Court SECTION 3. 8:30 p.m. June 5, 1972. 1104 Currie Ave., Minneapolis lying Southerly of RnaH Sec. 14; N. '0 The Minnesota Synod ef the Lu- The Village Clerk shall cause Ihls or- —at- v, No. 17,536 Arnold P. Nllles, ALLIS CHALMERS trailer type mower. rods ol E. «0 rod « ot MP 'A of NW ' In Rn Estate Ol dinance and notice to bo published once Town Clerk of theran Church Ir. America Tel. Founalln City 687-6322. Si>c. IJ; SW Vt nf SE "A 8. SE l'i Wary M. Kalmes. aka Mary Kalmei, In Ihe official Village n«wspaper , Town of Rollingstone Approved ior Veteran Training V, rt (LCA) SW 'A Sec. 11; N. 30 acres of SE meets at Gustavus Decedent Pass«d and approved at Goodview, INTERNATIONAL 455, 461 and 46B culti- SE "ilSE of NE . i- '-i NE 'A of SE Minnesota, Ihls 15th day of May, 1972, BITTNER'S ¦V "i Adolphus Collegi- Friday Order (or Hearing on Petition for (lsl Pub, Date, Tuesday, May 16, 1972) vator; John Deere, Massey Ferguson t Sre. 11; Norlhwesl d lan-n»l ^O acres Probate el Will, Limiting Tlmi fo Attest: To Paul Schmllt nnd Louise Schmitt and Oliver 4-row cutlvator; Interna- CABINETRY of NW 'A of Nlr "« Sec . 13-105-5. through Sunday, and delegates File Claims REX A. JOHNSON and for Hearing Thereon You are Hereby Notified : That default tional 255 2-r«w. We can got cultivators Anna Vordlck lo Hn len Brands — • Bernello Clerk 5th & Olmstead ' themselves will set up the Scherbrlno havlno filed a has been made In tho conditions of that Help—Male or Fern.aU 28 to lit mosl tractors. Lyle Houdex, Tel, Easterly M- of Lot 8 Block 4. Plal of petition lor the probate of the Will ol E. G . CALLAHAN, D O, r agenda. certain contract, daled (he unknown day Caledonia 724-2564. E. . Hnmlllon's Addition tn Wlnona. said decedent and (or Ihe appointment Mayor Lur- of February, 1948, whereby Walter L, LIFE GUARD at Fountain City Swim- William Rep* , el ux tn WMmer L. The opening meeting will ot Bernotto Scherbrlng as Executor , t t M K a Hunter and Mnadclena Hunter, his wife, ming Pool. Contact Hil Duellman or ammmamawmaaawamaamaaaammaaaaammmammmmaammmaaaaaammmmmmmmaaamamm aon, el uv — Pari Lot ?, Mnntnola CI ly which Will Is on tile In Ihls Courl (First Pub. Date Tuesda y, May 23, 1972J ' Dorolhv Du;, r to J»cH A, Sr w'Mrrr. take up housekeeping proce- as vendors &old and agreed to convey George Ferry Motel, Fountain City. ' and open lo Inspection ; Stale of Minnesota I et ux - E. 60 feef of tots 6, 7 8, « K to Paul Schmllt and Louise Schmitt as dures required by the synod IT IS ORDERED, That tho Hearing Counly ol winonn ) ss. E. tn trrt nl N 50 feet nf I. , Block vendees the trncl of land lying In the COUPLE WANTED to hub distributorship "I " Ihr-reof bu had r.n Juno 27, 1972, nl In Probale Court 19, nirgf- s Artdlllnn lo St . Charks, constitution , and in ihe after- Counly ol Winonn , Stole of Minnesota, for this ar«o. For Information write ' 10:30 o' clock A.M., before Ihls Courl No. 17,015 GRADED FEEDER PIG PfU.r "JV , Wern»r lo "Nlkkl R. Werner described as follows, lo-wlt: noon the 13 districts will hold In Ihe probale courl room In Iho courl In Ro Estate of Box IU, La- Crosso, Wis. — Lois 1 K 2, Block 9. tlolccm's Addi- The Westerly 50 teet of Lot 1 In Block house In Wlnona, Minnesota, and thnt "Victor W. Bohnen, Decedent tion lo U/lnnnn, three-hour caucuses to develop 136 , Original Plat ol Wlnona, thai the adult lor ob lections to the Allowance ot said will, Order for Hearing on Final Account MATURE RESPONSIBLE young CONTRACT FOT DEED mortgage ' registration lax on said con. , resolutions on how the con- II any, bn llled bnforo snid lime of end Petition for Distribution child core during Ihe summer months Hertierl E. Herold, "I 'ix to lohn tract In lhe sum ot $9,30 was paid lo hearing; that the timo within which The representatives of tho above named between Fountain City and Wlnona. Prcidfoot, 'I ux - S'A/ 'A of SW 'A vention time should bo spent. tho Treasurer of Wlnona County, Minn- creditors ol said decedent mny file estate having llled Iheir final accounl Tel. 6B7-M11 alter 4. Of Sue. 19-1(15-5; rxc'nt p*r| In Vl'ln"' In thc past , the tigcmh has esota , on Ihe 2nd day of Mnrch, 1945/ their cl.ilrm bo limited to sixty days ond pellllon for settlement and allow- that the condition of snld contract SALE of Nqw Hartford ; (llor.nt emeritus. Oscar Oaarden, Docudent. in Re Esta te Of In Re Eslale Of Pigs May be Brought in 8 a.m.-ll:30 2, Rlock 4, Dlelz 8, Lees Addition lo An ordination service for 20 Order Por Hearing On Interim Ethel Leonard , Decedent John P. Wachowlak, Decedent on Sale Date. Wlnnna, graduates of Account and Pellllon For Order for Hearing on Final Account Order for Hearing on Final Account LCA seminaries Partial Distribution jnd Petition tor Distribution . and Petition lor Distribution. Day & Night Shifts Tel. Rushford 507-864-0150 will be conducted S unday by The represenlallvo ol Ihe obove named The representative of tho above named Tho representative of the above named Dr estate having filed her Interim account estate having tiled Ils linal account and eslale having tiled her (Innl accounl and . Mctoin A. Unmmnrberg, and petition for settlement and allow- pellllon for settlement and allowance pellllon Inr solllrmenl am) allowance YES project ance thereof and (or synod president. partial distribution thereol and for distribution to Ihe per, thereof nnd lor distribution to tho per- APPLY" Galesville, Wis. I Rushford Barn lo Ihn persons (hereunto entitled ; sons iherounlo entitled) sons thereunto entitled ! IN PERSON AT IT If, ORDKIi r:!) , Thai Ilia henrlng IT IS ORDERED, That tho hearlno IT IS OROCRCD , That the henrlno Tel. 608-530-2131 I Tel. 507-864-042!) gets under way Ihorenf be hrd on June 27, 1972, al 10:30 had on Jonn * 13. 1977, fll ly by the Winona Aroa Chamber Ihorool bo Ihorool be Iiml on Juno 13, 1972, al ) o' clock A.M., helore Ihls Ccurl In the 10:00 o'clock A.M., l«lore Ihls Ciwrl 10;y publication of Ihls notice howof be given hy publication nl nollce horrot be given by publication Tho Winona Summer Youth ices. Thia is the fiftli year of order In Ihe Wlnona Dnlly News and this order In Iho Winonn Dally News of this order In Tho Wlnona Dally News Depa rtment of Employment the project. by mailed nollce as provided by low., and by mailed notice n» provided by and by runt tort nollco at provided by WISCONSIN FEEDER PIG Service will offi- Dated; May 26, 1977, law. low , Manpower Service cially get under way Thursday Mayor Norman Indnll will of* 5, A. SAWYF.fl, Daled May 11, 19)1. Dated Mny 17, 19/2. Probate Ju«lge# 5, A. Snwyer, S . A, Sawyer, with n "kick-off" breakfast at flcially proclaim June- as "Hiro (Probale Court Seal) Probata Judge. Pinhole Judge, 10.1 Walnut St. MARKETING CO-OP 7:30 a.m. at Holiday Inn. the Youth Month" an

DYNAMARK GARDEN tractor, 8 h.p,, AVAILABLE JUN.E 1, deluxe l-bedroom JO ACRES of hayland for pasture). Tel. STpLlT FOYER, 4-ye«r-old 3-bedroom, DREAM HONDA-1945, 305 with saddle FORD- 1964 Falcon 2-door, V8, automatic with 34" mower, M" snbwblower, sptrtmtnt, newly decorated. Lease. 6S9-2479. built-in appllmces, 2 balhi, rec room, bags and new turning lights, windshield, transmission, real good tires, needs III- Minnesota Land & chalnr, electric start and lights. Mower Lake view AAtno-r Apartmtntt. Ttl. 454- patio, garage, Outside utlllly building. $40O. Excellent condition. Tei. 452-6218. tie body work, otherwise In good Condi- ' ¦¦ used one*. $495 complete. Tel. Arcadia 5250. .*;. Must iell. In St. Charlts. Til. St. Chor- 1086 Glen Echo Road. tion. SI 49. 263 Franklin or Tel. 452-6817. Auction Service Housas for Rent 95 Everett j. Kohner .323-3508. . ' le> M2-41W. DON'T FORGET. TWO-BEDROOM «Hlcl«ney »pjrtm«nt, YAMAHA-1969 200 with electric start. Wlnona. Tel. 451-7814 QALE ST, 1061—2 bedrooms, un%S K 810' 39th Ave renters pay the bulk of the vinyl roof, bucket seals. Tel 453-1462 Wide selection pt new ¦gTl 4.V. t * tresses. . appointment. . and. used camp- THREE BEDROOMS, living room, dining hills. One unit has one ' after 4. ers and travel trailers . Easy financing Furn., Rugs, Linoleum 64 room/ family room with fireplace. 12 , kitchen and available. Tel. TOWN t, COUNTRY al I Farm has beer sold, so will sell all my antiques at: Sugar Loaf Apartments miles S. of Wlnona. TeL Dakota 643- bedroom , bath DODCE—1969 Polara 2-door hardlop wllh 454-5287. | DELUXE 2-bedroom apartment, fully living room. The other unit B'lr . conditioning , contact Installment TWIN SI ZE .rollaway! with Inner spring 6*40. carpeted, air conditioned, Includes heat, Loan Department, First National Bank. CLOSEOUT on MOBILE HOMES! mattress, $47.95. BORZYSKOWSKI has 2 bedrooms, bath, kitch- water and gas. No single students. 358 BY OWNER: Large duplex, 3 bedrooms; Only 3 left! F , A. KRAUSE CO., "Breezy ' FURNITURE, 302 Mankato Ave. en and living room. Also RUBY RED 1966 Volkswagen, new engine, E. Sarnla. Tel. 452-4834. * carpeted dining room, living room and , . Acres", Hwy. 14-61 E.: Tel. 452-5155. new paint Perfecf l 1179 W. Howard. sunroom: large kitchen, large bath- has 2 furnaces , 2 water . ¦ Tel. 454-3850. TRI-STATE MOBILE HOMES ' ' Good Things to Eat y 65 room down. 7-room (3-bedroom) apart- l NORTHERN iNVESTMENT COl 1 heaters, and a 2 car ga- Breezy A.cres I -¦jfj ji ;|U Valley View Apartments ment upstairs. Large double garage. PONTIAC — 1968 Bonneville convertible. Hwy. 14-61 East, Wlnona ONION SETS, 10 lbs./ $1.99; seed pota- : Under $22,000. Inquire 221 E, 8th or rage. MLS 663. Contact Installmen t Loan Department, toes; plants; fomaloei; eggplant; kohl- Ultra-modern, furnished or . -Tai. ' 454-5837. *. . rabi; carinas; . coleus; petunias; mart- unfurnished, 2 swimming First National; Bank. MOBILE HOME TOWINO sold. Wlnona Potato Market. Rambling Ranch ICC license. Minn., Wis. pools. 1 bedroom and l-bed- NEW HOMES for Immediate occupancy; You will like this home lo- CLASSIC 1956 Golden Hawk . One of a Dale Bublitz. Wlnona . Tal. 452-9418 I Location: 4 milfes North of Osseo, Wis. —OR—V4Vi miles | room efficiencies . Addition or we will build to suit. Need a home kind. 1179 W. Howard. Tel. 454-3850, Musical Merchandise 70 today? "We are geared to do It now." cated on East Sarnia. Has I Southwest of Atigusta, Wis. on Highw ay 27. Watch for | to Lake Park Apartments. Quality built homes by Continental MERCURY—1968 Monterey wilh air con- RENTALS [7 arrows. : dining room, ceramic tile ' . ,| ELECTRIC GUITARS — Gibson Firebird Tei. 452-&490. Homes. Tel. 454-1885 or evenings- 452- bath , arid 2 carpeted bed- ditioning. Contact. installment . Loan De- BETHANY CAMPERS. Sleep « end 8. « and Fender's Telecaster , with cases, .1445. - * partment, First National Bank. and $10 per day. Tommy's Trailer Soles, ¦ Prices negotiable. Tel, ,452-7910. rooms on upper level, Hwy. 35-53. 3 miles S. of Galesville, : Apartments, Furnished MERCURY—1965 Comet, standard trans- Wis. Tel. 608-582-5371. ' ' ;¦ 91 properties for , ; INCOME PRODUCING shower, utility room, family mission. Contact Installment Loort De- I* - - S3ltVlf

DICK TRACY By Cheater Gould

BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker

BLONDIE By Chick Young

LI'L ABNER By Al Capp ' ¦' ¦ REDEYE . * . By Gordon Be«

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

APARTMENT 30 By Alex Kotiky READY FOR LIVING! COORDINATED 3-ROOM OUTFIT

REX MORGAN, M.D By . Dal . Curtis

.'Tr Jr ' m

MARY WORTH By Saundon and Ernst

6-PC. MODERN BEDROOM j Double Dresser, Mirror, Chest nnd Panel BH— *fc *^ A O ODCfMAI niOlll IU Complete witli Quilted "Matlrcss and Box Spring. T i/l lC OrCUIAL UldrLA T II Purchased Separately Ai"f || N0W RE ADY 5-Pc.*„ Walnut„,., Finished Vfoodgrain

¦———-—-- I.- ¦.. ¦ ——.—— - -I.— . ..-...... ¦. — .-. — . .,.,.i „ ii--^.—*i... ¦¦ ,i .i H * " ' ' f — .. Plastic Top DINETTE with 4 Naugahyde-covcred clinim In bronze finlsti. 1OO00TjC fODi NANCY ^J TtVCF CtAPaa-A By Ernie Bushmiller If Purchased Separ.tely ©# *M" «5t! Unt T-PC. LIVING ROOM GROUP . " You Ar* tf M D ady for De,lv ry Sofa Bed and Swivel ltockcr , 2 Vnlnut Plnstlr-fimslu -ci 3>1 0% ^# * Tables nnd Cocktail Table | , Pair of Table Lamps. | \/J^ ' • ¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦¦¦ J If Purchated SepnrMel y Open Monday and Friday Evenings 'til 9

79 YEARS THIS 72 Better 13 T T 13 TZ T? ^ Q FumHure BU VS At LJ U I YJL Y JC/ O Mari Phon* 452-3762 PIENTY OF FREE PARKING BEHIND OUR STORE Ecu! Third & FronMin I *_ _ , _J