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1-21-1965 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News
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This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Sales Tax Up to Rolvaag, Dunn Says Couldn't Pass President Winds Up Tough Day Over His Veto, Legislator Says ST. PAUL u?i — The ques- By Balls tion whether the legislature Attending Five Inaugural wiU WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- State College, and shook the Many Republican! Joined be an iron man physically. He spacious skies. pass a sales tax depends main- ly on whether Gov. Karl Rol- dent Johnson's inauguration day hands of four girl banner bear- Democrats in applauding the wound up the long day with an Tlie Johnsons' first stop on the turned out to be a remarkable ers. goals , if not perhaps all the arduous round of hall-hopping. ball circuit was it the Mayflow- vaag would sign it into law, says veteran lawmaker Rep. Roy melange of solemnity, folksiness The important part was, of methods. Example: Rep. Accompanied by the First er Hotel. The President led the , and fractured security. Charles A. Halleck of Indiana, Lady in her jonquil yellow satin Dunn. course, the swearing in and the First Lady to tie dance floor, Dunn, The security was broken by inaugural address. And the who was deposed by colleagues dress, he attended the inaugural a Conservative from and danced with her briefly be- Pelican Rapids and chairman of the President himself. The inau- reaction to this speech, in which as Bouse Republican leader, ball, spread out over five great fore changing partners nine called the speech "excellent." halls. Some 26,000 people had the House Tax Committee, said gural parade had hardly begun Johnson branded poverty and times. Then he spotted Mrs. Wednesday he thinks it's useless when the ebullient President ignorance as national enemies, He added that ot course there paid $25 a ticket for these king- Clifton Daniel, daughter of to consider a sales levy without jumped out of his bullet-proof and said such evils as racial could be differences about spe- sized i "dances, " The decor, former President Harry S. Tru- two certainties — that the gov- limousine. In long strides he injustice and international cific programs. symbolizing "America the man. He lifted her over the rail HUMPHREY TAKES OATH . . . President Johnson " ernor sign it and that the tax proceeded to the band of his hatreds must go, was generally The 56-year-old President, in Beautiful," featured shining of her box and made several stands behind Hubert Humphrey as latter is sworn in as vice replace at least part of present alma mater, Southwest Texas favorable. his great happiness, proved to seas, waves of amber grain and turns around the dance floor president Wednesday by House Speaker McCormack at the personal property taxes. with her while several hundred Capitol. At left is Secretary of State Dean Rusk. (AP Photo- At the tax committee' guests applauded. , fax) s first During the afternoon, the meeting today, Dunn said: President had the time of his "This is probably going to end life watching tbe big inaugural up being an unsatisfactory ses- parade pass his reviewing stand sion, both for us and the people in front of the White House. Humphrey s New of Minnesota . It looks like a When he got to the White case of 'damned if we do and House, attendants brought the damned if we don't.' " — an ap- beagle "Him" and the white parent reference to the necessity collie "Blanco" to him and the Salary Begins of increasing taxes. President lifted Him up into the "I'm not out to embarrass any leather easy chair reserved for WASHINGTON (AP) -Hubert make way for the appointment governor ," said Dunn. "They the chief executive in tbe re- H. Humphrey's salary problem of Walter F. Mondale as his come and go. I've served under viewing stand. ended Wednesday when he was successor as Minnesota senator. 11 of them." sworn into his $43,000-a-year The office space story is more He said the committee won't The dog stayed only briefly, start shaping a tax program un- perhaps because Lady Bird fore- post as vice president. complicated. But the Minnesota Democrat- til Rolvaag submits his budget saw trouble. She is reported to Shortly after Lyndon B. John- next week. State departments have hinted strongly that Blan- former party whip in the Senate —is still looking for new office son became vice president in submitted sharply higher re- co is an outdoors dog, used to 1961, construction of the new quests from the $655 million romping, and if he started space in the capitol. The salary story is simple—he east wing of the Capitol includ- spent during the current hies- romping in the reviewing stand went off the Senate payroll when ed a suite of offices intended for nhun. things could get embarrassing. he resigned in December to the vice president and a match- When the Georgia float rolled ing suite on the other side of Although Rolvaag is expected by, the President kept pointing, the Capitol for the House speak- to trim those requests consider- calling Lady Bird's attention, as er. if to say, "Look, ma." But Johnson declined the new The float was a model of a 225 Negroes suite, and retained quarters he On// Fa ir Tax Is One Civil War railroad train, and had across from the Senate represented the liady Bird spe- chamber and had occupied as On Somebody E lse* cial which chugged through the Senate Democratic leader. South in the last campaign. MAD1SOU, Wis., I» — Jailed ia Two A senator for IS years, Hum- "Everybody says the only , The President kept giving the phrey was sworn in at 11:57 fair tax is a tax put on high sign of friendship to all and a.m. Wednesday at the Capitol, somebody else •— I don't sundry paraders, including Gov. Days at Selma six minutes before Lyndon B. know where to turn," Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama, Johnson took the oath as presi- Warren P. Knowles said who has given the national SELMA, Ala. CAP) - With dent. The vice presidency had Wednesday. Democratic administrations a the voter registration board in been vacant 14 months — since peck of trouble. Johnson succeeded the assas- The governor, who has recess, Negroes turn their at- until the end of the month The President was particular- tention back to restaurants and sinated President John F. Ken- ly joyous over the band from nedy in November 1963. to get his spending and tax other public facilities in Selrna proposal to the Legislature, the Chicago Fire Department. today in a continuing civil rights But, for some, the members These experts play music of the Doland made the comment during campaign. , S.D., high school an appearance at a meeting scored for sirens, bells and the They talked about renewed band, for instance, Humphrey hissing of fire extinguishers. was the top man. The baritone of the State Commission on efforts to get service, at a down- Aging. They are led by a St. Bernard town drug store where one horn player in the class ot 1929, dog with a bat on. Humphrey grinned from ear to Finding new tax sources, group was turned away. Monday Knowles said, is harder than MINNESOTA FLOAT IN PARADE . . . The State of Probably the most tired and perhaps at three others ear and clapped his hands when marchers Wednesday night the band played the "King Size" ever because the state "used Minnesota float swings around a corner on Pennsylvania whose lunch counters they found up all the gimmicks" to ba- were the "Barbarettes" of San- closed. march in tribute to Doland's Avenue Wednesday in the inaugural parade. (AP Photofax) ta Barbara, Calif. These ladies favorite son. lance past budgets. He said high-kicked their way all down The rlght-to-vote drive which When it was Minnesota's turn cuts in the .state budget Pennsylvania Avenue, in a sent 225 Negroes to jail in two to pass by, the University of would be reflected in in- striking display of comeliness. days was halted temporarily Minnesota band played "Min- creased costs for local gov- because the registration board nesota Rouser," a fight song ernments. Least tired? Probably the Humphrey heard again and "highty-tighty" band of Virginia completed a three-day week Knowles Asks Wednesday and recessed until again in last fall's campaign. ably, Polytechnic Institute. A march he has talked about need- of a couple of miles is a breeze Monday. ing to meet growing demands to them. They once got caught County officers under Sheriff in such areas as education, up in a five-mile parade in the James G. Clark, who had been health, welfare and institutional Safety Drive Deep South, and by the end they content earlier in the week to programs. Churchill Still Rolvaag said recently he be- had played "Dixie" 72 times. arrest Negroes only at the lieves both Conservatives and MADISON , Wis. iff) — Gov. that would make chemical tests Wonder of wonders, the pa- courthouse, spread out into the Warren P. Knowles made a automatic for suspected drunk city Wednesday afternoon to Liberals ought to reappraise rade attained its goal — to end their historic positions on tax forceful plea today for a tough drivers. before sundown, which was at take three civil rights marchers , safety program to rid Wiscon- into custody and bring the ar- In Semicoma matters. But Rolvaag and other "Last year In Wisconsin we 5:16 p.m. Actually the proces- Democratic -Farmer- Labor sin highways "of the menaces sion got past the President at rest total for the day to 159. to our lives." murdered by motor vehicles 1,- spokesmen have voiced their 057 people — a new record, a 5:07. Except for the 156 Negroes traditional opposition to a sales The chief executive asked the shameful record," K n o w.le s The President then seized a jailed earlier in the day because Life Ebbing tax. state Legislature to approve said. "This year it appears that microphone and said: "Thank (AP) Among new bills introduced mandatory vehicle inspections, of another courthouse march LONDON - Sir Winston we are embarked on another ANOTHER DANCE FOR PRESIDENT . . . President you very much. You are won- and the 66 arrested Tuesday, it Churchill — reported Wednes- Wednesday was one to limit compulsory driver training for derful people and you have campaign to kill our neighbors Johnson moves around the floor at the National Guard Ar- was the first time in months day night to be al a very low pheasant hunting to only 20 license applicants under 18, in traffic. This senseless high- made this such a lovely day, counties a year. Rep. Roy and an Implied consent law mory with Mrs. Hobart Taylor, wife of the Negro vice chair- that the sheriff's deputies iiad ebb — today continued his val- way slaughter must stop." and we will try so hard to be gone into the jurisdiction of the iant struggle. Schulz of Mankato offered that man of the President's Committee on Equal Employment worthy of your trust and friend- bill providing that no county The governor called his sev- Opportunities. (AP Photofax) city police to make arrests. A medical bulletin, issued at en-point program the necessary ship." 12:16 p.m. said: "There is no shall be open for pheasant hunt- "drastic action to meet this change in Sir Winston 's condi- ing more than two years in a GOP Leaders emergency." tion. There will bo a further bul- row. Seasons are now statewide. Other proposals in the pack- letin this evening." Another measure dealing with age would mean license suspen- May Seven days after he was felled game and fish matters and in- sions of up to one year for those U.N. Be by a stroke, tho 90-year-old troduced by Schulz would set up Meet Before convicted of exceeding a speed statesman is in a semicoma, but four deer hunting zones, with a limit by 20 miles an hour, make with momentary fleeting signs hunting license good for only ono all new driver licenses proba- of consciousness. zone. ' tionary, and initiate special Forced to A 16-day split deer hunting Chicago Rally counseling for motorists with li- Only member) of the family season between Nov. 1 and Dec. cense demerit points. inside the Churchill home at the 15 was proposed by Sen. Henry CHICAGO (AP) - Republican time of the medical bulletin meet today for work- Created by executive order Harren of Albany. He said this leaders Take Recess were Lady Churchill , 79, and would push the second half of shops and caucuses prior to a was a governor's council on UNITED NATIONS, NY. young Winston Churchill , grand- two-day conclave called to heal traffic law enforcement, the season back to a time when (AP) - The United States Is son and namesake of Britain's snowtracking would be mors the wounds of November's Knowles said it was his immedi- wartime prime ir.lnister. He is landslide. mounting de- reported resigned to a recess of likely. Democratic ate response to the son of Randolph Churchill. Harren also offered a measure National Chairman Dean mands for an increase in Wis- the U.N. General Assembly un- It was the 14th medical arrival bulle- requiring that Minnesota duck Burch was the first consin's 250-man State Highway til spring if the majority of the tin since Churchill suffered a and he promptly seasons and shooting limits bo Wednesday, Patrol. members want it to avoid a strok e last Friday. the maximum federal regula- told neWsmen that the Friday Tho governor charged the Saturday meeting was a U.S. - Soviet showdown over "There is no change in Sir tions permit. Some recent sea- and council with the job of coordi- ' sons were curtailed to protect for unification. nating state, county, and local peacekeeping dues. Winston s condition. There will call be a further bulletin this the Minnesota hatched mallard traffic enforcement efforts to U.S. sources said, - however, eve- Burch. who la stepping down " ning. " population. , said provide more protection than that Ambassador Adlai E. Stev- as GOP national chairman we now are receiving ." It was the 14th medical bul- Republican leaders can unify enson will place before the as- letin since Britain 's great war- the party If they "quit jousting sembly ii demand that voting time leader suffered a Faribault Man at windmills." WEATHER rights be denied the Soviet Un- stroke last Friday. H« called for a"strong, uni- ton and any other member na- Dead in Mishap fied and dynamic party." FEDERAL FORECAST tion refusing to pay the dues. A new deterioration In the 90- "I expect and hope this meet- WINONA AND VICINITY - The Soviet Union has threat- year-old statesman's circulation FARIBAULT , Minn. (AP) - ing will mark the end ol the Variable cloudiness tonight and ened to walk out if it is subject- was reported Wednesday night Charles E. Fuhrmelstor , 26, Far- many discussions of personal- Friday with possibly some light ed to Article 19 of the U.N. by his physician , Lord Moran , ibault , was killed Wednesday ities that recently preoccupied snow Friday. Low tonight 8-15, charter, which denies the as- who said in the 13th bulletin he night when the car he was driv- ua, " he said, "and that we can high Friday 20-25; ^ sembly vote to any nation two had issued on Churchill's condi- ing turned over on Interstate arrears on its total now begin to got on with th* LOCAL WEATHER years in as- POINTING WITH PLEASURE . . . Pres- inaugural ball. At extreme left Is Luci John- tion : Highway 35 , about eight miles the Repub- Official observations for the sessments. The Soviet Union "Tho weakness of Sir Win- south of here. primary business of ident Johnson directs the attention of Mrs. son and next to her is Lynda Bird. (AP lican party : Namely winning 24 hours ending at 12 m. today: and la other nations are that far ston's circulation is more Minnesota's traffic death toll they Johnson and Vice President Humphrey to Photofax) victories and defeating Demo- Maximum, 34; minimum, 14; behind because refuse to I marked. There Is nothing else to for the year rose to 32, or two crat*." noon, 34; precipitation, none. pay peacekeeping assessments. the crowd in the Washington Armory for th« report." ahead of the 1964 pace. ucts rose 17 per cent and mis- cellaneous products were 18 per Woman Changes cent higher. Oklahoma Man Gives Manufacturing There were losses in the ex- Johnson Turns Mind on Bill Up Smoking at 98 ported quantities of chemical, OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - Legislators paper products, electrical ma- POTEAU, Okla. (AP) - Wil- chinery, apparel and several mi- State Rep. Ellen McCaffree, a liam Sanphard McWurray, who On Increase nor categories. Back to Battle Seattle Republican, voted turned 100 years old Wednes- A^ Phone 9851 But the over-all dollar gain in against a move Wednesday to -^k To Talk Tax day, said he gave up smoking bring to a vote a legislative two years ago. Minnesota export sales rose "I quit cigarettes at age 98," In Minnesota from $146.6 million in 1960 to Against Poverty reapportionment measure she he said. "It wasn't the cancer ST. PAUL (AP) - Minneso- $193.7 million in 1963. WASHINGTON (APT — Presi- nad helped to draw up. Hike Early scare that got me. It was the ta's manufacturing output will dent Johnson turns today to- IBut she hadn't changed her be about 32 per cent more in Minnesota in 1963 had $60.1 mind , Mrs. McCaffree said aft- mm ST. PAUL (AP ) - The chair- hike in price to 30 cents a pack- million is machinery exports, ward the hard realities of com- age." 1965 than in 1962, according to batting injustice, pOverty^arid erward. man of the House Appropri- latest estimates from the state except electrical; $44.2 million Sra had lust broken ;her glass- in instruments and related prod- ignorance on the way to his Jfoj ^ ations Committee isn't going to business development commis- es and couldn't see to push the ucts and $39.3 in food and relat- "Great Society." be bashful about talking taxes sioner's office. Republicans who - have been right button on the electric vot- ed products. ing machine. LIQUORS ^ Figures released by Commis- critical of the President' early in the session. Republicans, Too These were high points for s poli- wH< I kM /Mf Cornor Contar & Mark SfrMtf ^^MV "We've been criticized for sioner William B. Farrell Mon- cies found little in the speech day indicate the state's gain as WISCONSIN: $500.2 million to- about which to complain. ^ talking about tax increases as tal, $241.8 million in machinery WATCH FOR DRASTIC a whole is expected to total $3.5 Senate Republican Leader soo n as we get here," said Rep. Have Own 'Sub billion. It will overshadow the except electrical, $43.7 million flichard Fitzsimons, Argyle con- in food. Everett M. Dirksen called it performance in many sections of "an eloquent resume ot our his- JANNEY BEST servative. "Perhaps when peo- the country, Farrell added. ple see how the various pro- tory and an equally eloquent Inaugural' Ball reminder of our responsi- PAINT grams affect (hem individually WASHINGTON (AP) - The If the forecast holds up, Min- the picture will change." nesota will move up four notch- bilities." Rep. Gerald R. Ford Democrats weren't the only Airliner Now of Michigan, House Republican He said he hopes to show by ones who were dancing. The es among the 50 states to tie Close-Outs April 1 how budgets of various with Georgia for 16th place. leader, characterized it as "a Republicans had their own "sub good call to arms for the Ameri- sizes will affect various state inaugural ball BADB BROS. ," and they were And the 21.5 per cent gain Cocktail Lounge can people." nllDD STORE programs. He added : swinging like a bunch of projected for the Twin Cities New York's Republican Gov. KANSAS CITY (AP) V A S HARDWARE "We're talking In terms of winners. area will probably exceed gains . Mo. - Nelson A. Rockefeller said the The GOP party was held anticipated in 14 other metropol- A Super-G Constellafwn airliner President had "touched on the 576 E. 4th St. Phon* 4007 SHOP THE EASY WAY — READ THE ADS FIRST enormous amounts of money. We Wednesday night in the Republi- soon will be standing on Main just can 't wait until May 1 and itan areas. fundamental values very effec- can Capitol Hill Club not far Street and used as a cocktail tively on the basis of which this give the Tax Committee three from the Capitol, where Presi- Meanwhile, the U.S. Depart- lounge. weeks to find the money. Maybe ment of Commerce office at Min- country was founded and dent Johnson had taken his oath The 4-engine propeller-driven reached its greatness. I like the we'll have to raise $100 million , at noon. neapolis reported that many but with all the talk about tax Midwest states were among plane will be complete in every emphasis that, while he is the reform maybe we'll have to find The club's three main rooms leaders in the growth rate of detail, the owners say, and leader , the responsibility is on $200 million to replace some were jammed with Republicans. exports of manufactured prod- could be readied for flight in all of us.'' Michigan's Gov. George Rom- ucts between 1960 and 1963. The four days. House Speaker John W. Mc- forms of taxes." ney hesitated in a corner near Two years ago, the $655 mil- national rate was 14 per cent, There will be nothing on the Cormack described the address Annual January the bandstand and a receiving lion budget was financed with- but Minnesota was 32 per cent now vacant lot but the plane, as one likely to live in history |B2E3ffi E3 line formed on the spot. He out major tax increases. But higher , Wisconsin 30 per cent, moored in concrete, the usual for its "high moral plane and its signed autographs, shook hands North Dakota 46 per cent, South appeal to reason." there's little chance that will be and introduced dozens of party ! air-terminal gates and the duplicated this time. ; Dakota 35 per cent and Iowa 9 [ boarding ramp. Senate Democratic Leader faithful to his wife. per cent. Mike Mansfield of Montana felt Gov. Karl Rolvaag, in Wash- Govs. William W. Scranton of ' j It will seat 70 customers with ington for inaugural activities hostesses to serve cocktails at that Johnson had "spelled out Pennsylvania, Nelson A. Rocke- There was a 59 per cent step- ' the American dream." this week, is expected to present feller of New York , John A. up in Minnesota 's sales of non- the touch of a buzzer. ; ¦ his budget message to the legis- Love of Colorado and John A. electrical machinery and over Principal owner is Patrick G. Glacier National Park is the lature next week. Volpe of Massachusetts slipped 50 per cent increase in sale of Quirk, an ex-pilot who bought [nation 's fourth largest park in and out almost before the I instruments and related prod- I the plane for 530,000. It cost i after Yellowstone, Mt. McKinley Several more bills were Intro- party got off to a good start. 1 ucts abroad. Exported food prod- ' about $3.5 million new, he said. and the Everglades. duced in both branches Tuesday, . ' including one to give property tax relief to persons over 65 CLOSEOUT years. The proposal , by Rep. Ly- of DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY all Schwarzkopf , Minneapolis, "Are you still wearing those , \ _ would be limited to persons with rT - > A-H7 $3,600 annual income or less. It creasy kid slacks?" LET l would require senior citizens to r%l ..l4 pay their real estate taxes but get an income tax credit. Meanwhile, Highway Commis- sioner James Marshall proposed REVOLUTIONIZE Your Laundry - Pressing Problems some get-tough measures which he said could cut the state's high FAMOUS FEATURE-LOCK DIAMOND RINGS traffic death toll considerably. Marshall told the Senate High- way Committee that motorists With f li LS Press-Free SLACKS found guilty of driving under the influence of liquor or after their licenses have been sus- g pended or revoked should have %6 LS\ m Xf ir?/f ASiK?i. 6HT llrfPl MORE BEAUTY their cars seized by authorities. BrM>,* MMDM StaPt,ctt Style Right \&-V Save WL Sow * WLfog- ^L \(fc Mflf \ Savt Cf TO He said the first step in his ^lg $157 J13/ ^g S123 2i\il \5H $U2$|/3 safety program would be to en- '^^^ ¦ ¦ ¦ ^ ¦ B^^^^* . . ^^^^^^^^^ ¦¦¦ i^W^* large the State Highway Patrol. mMMMMMWMMMMMMM Marshall also suggested pe- riodic inspection of motor vehi- cles, re-exarnination of drivers— especially ior eyesight—when they have their driver's license renewed, and proper training be- fore giving out licenses in the first place. The commissioner said, too, the minimum driving w fiBPl^wcHa I YAfi J-PIECE WA'• •' MASCULINI 1 age should be raised from 15 to 8n$ 9 18. WT _ Wedding tet W . BrWd Set -\J/k JJ Si I Asked if the Highway Depart- ment can match all available % &%! roaw »"&w 1 federal funds , Marshall said an ^ ^ additional $14 million would be needed during the next two years. He said the state could P B not have matched all federal ¦ ¦ funds during the current 2-year SoUct From Nationally Famous Brand* You Know! period if the 1963 legislature had |^|^^jjj mygj aj| not voted a 1-cent increase in ^^^^^^^^^^^^M^ I UO.ES' ^^^^^^^^^iSSl the gasoline tax. FULLY JEWELED VA/AT^lAf #\ Iff ULJ bCC V I DECORATIVEUSS: Marshal! declined to unpport JL^ M L%^ "HURRICANE" any single way of raising addi- ^ r^^V j tional money. He said that ^^^ would be up to the legislature. r In reply to a question , Mar- c ^^^^ITTWt m ¦• 11 f Wt< ./ ^B\ VJHSS S ^77o' Korosem £_§ %_ shall said mailing ot notices of expiration of drivers' licenses Jf Ladies-Men s XfflKj V^Sg^fiBEBESSEr would be resumed about July 1. ¦.M.WIWIM New mailing regulations made I WATCHES y>lfe?r^ | it impossible to use existing Fruit l_ Men* StyUt, Whit* aid Y«ll«w, p^^MN Doiigni forms, he said, and money ha? ft som. WM iw *- •«*¦ W i^^^^ not been available to print new K^JErX ',
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WASHINGTON CALLING Strikes at* Heart of Law Onep i History s THE WISCONSIN Supreme Court'* re- Last of Great cent decision that county boards must be realigned on a "one man, one vote" prin- Greatest Men ciple points the way for the setting right of By DAVID LAWRENCE Figures Passing inequities, not only in Wisconsin, but also WASHINGTON — Winston Churchill, half- in other states in which one voter has less American and half-British, has left an imprint By MARQUIS CHILDS voice than another in how his county is on world history scarcely paralleled by anyone WASHINGTON — By the kind of dramatic coincidence run. else in modern times. His deeds and accom- history provides the last great figure out of the turbulent lishments will fill the pages of history, but it past is leaving the stage as the inauguration confirms a new The unanimous decision of the high is in his written and spoken words that his era. court was reached when its justices ruled personality will live on. Winston Churchill was tbe very spirit of his age. He charg- the 1949 law under which county board Sir Winston was a master of oratory as well ed into danger like the valiant warrior that he was. In the he was at the cen- members — supervisors, in Wisconsin f— as of the written word. He had oo need for two great climactic wars ci our century of great schemes and great endeavors. are elected , violates federal and state con- "ghost writers." Unlike Woodrow Wilson, who ter of the strife full And if, as at Gallipoli in World War I, they failed, the fault stitutions because it denies equal represen- was an extemporaneous speaker of remarkable that of tim- , was more often tation. akin Sir Winston prepared his speeches in ad- id compromise imposed oo vance, but often added telling phrases as he his bold concept. It has an obvious application in Minne- spoke. Letters to The The Churchill of the cris- sota, and Winona County is one of the Even in his youth, Churchill seemed to have is era is the indelible Atamp places where a need for similar reform is a premonition of the fateful career ahead of Editor he has left on his time. But greatest. Here, the minority of county him. On his 25th birthday, when he was a news what is forgotten is the bit- commissioners — two out of five — repre- correspondent covering the Boer war in South (Editor's Note: Let- ter frustration of his role sent the majority of county residents — Africa, he wrote to a relative in the United ters must be temperate, between the wars. And this last may be the most im- 68.61 percent of the county's population, in States: 0/ reasonable length and to be done in the world portant lesson out of his fact. "There is so much signed by the writer. and so little time to do it." career for our age of af- Bona fide name * of all fluence. The 2nd District of Winona County, rep- But in the 65 years that have followed, Win- letter - writers will bs though he As a Tory back-bencher resented on the board by Leo Borkowski, ston Churchill did a great deal, published. No religious, ' was never in the wrong. in the 'Thirties he railed has 17,798 residents or 43.49 made no claim that he medical or p«rsonal con- Goodview, , in a speech in the House of Com- against the smug complac- ' In fact, troversies art accept- percent of the county s total population of mons on May 21, 1952, he said: able) ency of the policies of with- 40,837. "I am by no means sure I have been right. drawal and retreat that It is no part of my case that I am al- Recalls Plan To Erect Stanley Baldwin tailored to Len Merchlewitz's 1st District has 10,- ways right." Cross On Sugar Loaf the mood of a war-weary 288 residents, or 25.13 percent of the total Sir Winston's thoughts and words after World To The Editor: Britain. He saw the true menace of Hitler's rise and population. War II have been much concerned with the In Tuesday night's Daily world war and with its pre- the resurgence of a Ger- possibility oi a third News there was a news item many reared for conquest Contrast this with the Sth District, vention. Speaking in the House of Commons on concerning t proposal for a represented by Papenfuss. It Almost alone among public Jam** Dec. 14, 1950, he said : Christ statue on Sugar Loaf. men in the West his was a hu 3,411 residents, fewer than a third "The argument is now put forward that we At the bottom of the article voice crying in the wilder- of the population of th* 2nd District must never use the atomic bomb until , or un- it said, "Some years ago ness of indifference and and only 6.33 percent of. the total less, it has been used agains us first. In other erection of a cross on the timid refusal to face the county population. words, you must never fire until you have mountain was proposed and facts. been shot dead. That seems to me .. . a silly some contributions made to Carl 0. Peterson's 4th District has thing to say. . ." the cause." IN THE HOUSE of Com- by Bri- mons in those days he was 3,854 residents — 9.41 percent of tho Perhaps the most telling warning A number of years ago I whole — and Adolph Spitzer's 3rd Dis- tain's wartime leader to the free world is found an angry rebel. You saw ," his book covering suggested that the four ser- him douched down, his trict has 5,586 persons living in it — in "the gathering storm vice clubs being the Kiwanis the period of appeasement that led to World feet on the bench before 13.65 percent. Club Rotary Club, Lions War II. He wrote: , him, looking like a trucu- THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Club and Exchange Club lent infant. At times he Together, the three districts represent- "If you will not fight for the right when you can easily win without bloodshed; if you jointly undertake the .erec- roared out in anger. Th» ed by a majority of county commissioners will not fight when your victory will be sure tion of the cross on Sugar front benchers were happy contain a total of 12,850 persons, or 31.39 Loaf. A reliable estimate of * and not too costly ; you may come to the mo- to ignore him. This med- percent of the county's population. This is ment when you will have to fight with all the cost at that time was about dlesome man, the visitor almost 5,000 persons fewer than live in the odds against you and only a precarious chance Humphrey Far Out in $8,000 for the steel work was told, had no future in 2nd District — and the 2nd District is rep- of survival. There may even be a worse case. and the total cost depend- British politics. He was t resented by only one man. You may have to fight when there is no hope ing upon material used spent force. of victory, because it is better to perish than would be about $25,000. There was even the inti- Similar situations prevail in Mower live as slaves." It was suggested that a mation that he would man- County (Austin) and Blue Earth County On internal politics, Sir Winston has always Front on Many Policies cross of 200 feet or more in ufacture a crisis if he could (Mankato), and a suit is currently being been a skeptic about socialism, which was often height appeared reasonable ih order to come back to By DREW PEARSON er people had been able to hipi to be more aggressive power. But the doom that tried in Rochester which, if successful, tiie subject of his speeches in and out of the as the rode itself reached House of Commons. In a broadcast on June 4, WASHINGTON—It's been claim credit for them. against Ike. 90 feet above the rest of fell on Europe in those fate- would compel the Olmsted County Board of ful! months of 1940 was not 1945, he declared: traditional throughout most HE TOOK a stand against THIS NETTLE© Johnson, the hill. Bishop Binz and the Commissioners to be reconstituted so as to "Socialism is inseparably interwoven with of American history that the members of the Winona of his making. It was the give more representation to the city of Ro- nuclear testing seven years and the two men had a precise specter — tbe fleet totalitarianism and the abject worship of the President and the vice pres- before John F. Kennedy showdown. Ministerial Association fa- chester. ident of the United States of Nazi bombers, the Pan- state. Look how even today they (the social- negotiated a treaty . putting "I was trying to make vored the project because ists) hunger for controls of every kind as if have not loved each other. it into law. He persuaded the motivation was stated zer divisions with the mass- Sometimes their enmity has you a better leader, " Hum- ed movement of tanks that At stake in this suit is a state law pro- these were delectable foods instead of wartime the State Department ten phrey told him. as follows: "If such a cross hibiting a city of the second class from been open, as when Vice years ago to form a ciftn- he had so often warned of. inflictions . . . This state is to be the arch-em- President Charles G. Dawes In brief , all the ingredi- were to stand by day and having more than two commissioners rep- ployer, the arch-planner, the arch-administrator mittee to explore disarma- ents are present in the per- shine by night here in Wi- IN ALL OUTWARD as- failed to turn up for a tie ment. This was seven years resenting it on a county board. Because.of and ruler, and the arch-caucus-boss." vote to aid President Calvin sonalities and backgrounds nona, it would help the way- pects Lyndon Johnson, who this law, counties could be redistricted in- In the House of Commons, on Aug. 11, 1947, before Eisenhower acted on ol these two men to cause farer traveling by air , rail by the happenstance of Coolidge in the Senate. the suggestion definitely and still give a disproportionate he said of the socialists: "They have neither Sometimes it has smolder- . the usual friction between or road know that there are fate is the principal figure share of voting power to rural areas. the efficiency of collectivism nor the enterprise ed below the surface, as He proposed food for Iniia, President and vice presi- Christians in our city. To of the new era, could hard- and energy of individual initiative." In a speech with Kichard Nixon and food for East Berlin, cul- dent. our own citizens the sight of ly offer a greater contrast The Wisconsin Supreme Court's deci- in May 1948, he characterized socialism as "the Dwight D. Eisenhower. tural exchanges between the Yet they share the same the cross would, on all oc- to the leader of the past. sion, however, strikes at the heart of this philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance But the vice presidency , United States and Commu- goals. Both have seen a lot casions, tend to engender President Johnson holds to law. Representation on county boards in and the gospel of envy." entrusted mainly with the nist nations, long before of poverty, both share the an inner glow of human con- the conviction of the con- Wisconsin that state's high court has ruled, duty of waiting for the the Eisenhower administra- goal of making the United tentment kindled , by the sensus both at home and President to die, is not con- tion adopted them as official States a better place to live awareness of home^ with the aboard. His words are pa- must be realigned because the present American policy. And eight system deprives voters of their rights and, ducive to harmony between in. feeling of family protection cific. He is the last man IN YEARS GON E BY the two top men of any ad- years ago he proposed the Johnson can never forget within a peaceful Christian to seek a crisis, a show- thus, is unconstitutional. ministration. Civilian Conservation Corps his experience as Texas ad- down, for the sake of cris- which has now become part community. The uplifted THIS IS A PRECEDENT that Minne- Ten Years Ago . . . 1955 This week , two men of ministrator of the National cross would speak to us of is. of Johnson's anti-poverty Youth Administration, ignore when more and Emil J. Holz, president and general manager great vigor, great experi- the Christ, whether we live here This approach fits tho sota courts cannot program. men selling apples on the mood of a prosperous peo- more of them are faced — as they will be of the Winona Truck and Implement Co. plans ence, and somewhat oppo- or are visitors or are way- site backgrounds begin four Humphrey is a more pol- street corners during the ple who see many things faced — with the glaring inequities of the to open his firm's new building at 162 W . 4th farers passing by." years as a team. And the ished speaker than Johnson . days of the great depres- to be done here at home. present system of county districting. St. sion. Humphrey was a No solicitation of funds President Eisenhower nominated George P. big question asked by the He talks in machine-gun The cold war. as Sen. J. politicians is: Will Lyndon bursts, pours out both hu- clerk in his family's drug- was ever made by someone William Fulbright pointed Daley, Lewiston, to a six-year term as member mor and vitriol ; has coined store, and up until recently left a single silver coin about out in a recent cogent speech , of the Federal Farm Credit Board of the Farm Johnson and Hubert Hum- phrey get along together? such phrases as: "The sym- had to go out and fill speak- the value of "A widow 's should not be an end in it- A Poor Plan To Credit Administration succeeding Clark L. Their backgrounds would bol of the Republican party ing engagements to aug- mite" which the newspaper self as often it has seem- Brody. appear to lead them along should be the mole — it ment his slender Senate sal- forwarded to me. ed to be. The ironic advice opposite paths. sees only in the darkness, airy, Donald f. Winder given to John Foster Dulles is blinded by the sunlight. Help The Railroads Twenfy-Five Years Ago . . . 1940 " THOUGH HE Isn't as elo- 63 W. 4th St . as he swept from one sid» Carols Goya, exponent of Spanish dances, HUBERT began life over ¦ of the globe lo the other a South Dakota drugstore. Furthermore Humphrey quent as Humphrey, John- Sugar Loaf Suggestion THE NATION'S railroad situation dur- will appear in Winona as the second artist of bucked Lyndon Johnson for son is also just as dedicated and from crisis to crisis — Lyndon began life as a Tex- Doing Things ID Reverse "Don't do something, ing the past several years has been highly the Season's Community Concert course. the presidency in 1956 and (0 peace . He has gone much just as schoolteacher , Hubert To The Editor: • sit there" — may be per- frustrating to both labor and management . The annual President's Birthday Ball to raise got iatto politics with the bucked him hard. And when further than his State De- Lyndon was Senate leader tinent today. management's frustration has funds for the National Foundation for In- backing of the radical partment advisors in work- A Chicago travel agent Some of fantile Paralysis will be held at the Winona during the Eisenhower ad- ing for arms reduction and The President understands been resolved by court decisions on feath- Farmer - Labor party , to has suggested putting a Athletic Club. ministration, Humphrey was better East-West relations. large statue of the waiting game. He has problems . The ex- become mayor of Minneap- Christ on Su- erbedding and related olis, then ran for the Senate one of those rfestless Demo- But the most important gar Loaf. He describes his played that game with tent of labor's continued frustration is in- in , with southern Demo- crats who believed LBJ was bond between these two men masterful skill with the Con- Fifty Years Ago .. . 1915 19*8 pulling his punches , idea as an "inspirational dicated by the Railway Labor Executives ' crat conservatives putting , wanted is mutual respect. idea that will put the city of gress in his years as major- ' Captain Sunday of Minneapolis and Lt. Nellie ity leader Association s call for government owner- Heighs of the Salvation Army Training College money into the campaign to Winona in the eyes of mil- of the Senate. ship and control of the railroads. defeat him. They remem- lions of people across the He knows, too, that Amer- in Chicago have arrived in Winona to assist ican power ' bered how Hubert bad country. " He is in hopes cannot prevail In taking this position , the leaders- of or- in the army s work here. stormed into the Democratic JhsL $M L everywhere and under all Another book by the Rev. S . Arthur Cook, that the statue would attract ganized labor in the railroad industry re- convention in 1944 to oppose nationwide publicity. circumstances. D. D. of this city, has made Us appearance the watered - down civil Among versed a stand in favor of private opera- his suggested plans are a from the Arlington Press at New York and Cin- rights plank and tell the a mere $200,000 to turn tion that railway labor had maintained for Swiss cable car ride and tho cinnati . This latest production is entitled "The Democrats: "Get out of the eyes of millions to Christ. nearly half a century. It is hard to believe Essence and the Ethics of Politics, Individual money-raising telethons with shadow of states rights and Larry Paul Schiller that this position will not be reversed Messages to the Public Conscience." walk forthrightly in the prominent TV stars parti- again upon sober- second thought , perhaps brigh t sunshine of human cipating. Boys Secretary egged on by the contrary views of the Seventy-Five Years Ago ... 1890 rights." The idea of using Jesus Winona YMCA Christ as a tourist gimmick rank and file. The weather was the coldest of the winter Johnson began his politi- cal life as assistant to Rep. ^W turns my stomach. If the re- being 26 degrees below zero and the mercury Saying this may reflect undue optimism Richard Kleberg of Texas, w^V ligious people of the city Dial Th« "Hot" Number has kept down low all day. as to the good sense of the union member- co-owner of the King ranch were to erect a statue of A letter was received by Postmaster W . J. ship. But if railroad workers like the idea and one of the most con- Christ to raise us spiritually Whipple from the supervising architect at Wash- servative leaders of Texas of nationalization of the carriers they are ington asking for the general plans desired as we went about our daily for democracy. Lyndon's climb work, running counter to the overwhelming ma- the first floor of the government building here. this would be one up tlie political ladder wns thing. There are religious 2314 jority opinion among Americans. Few backed by Texas gas and FOR want the government to run the railroads. shrines in the world that are One Hundred Years Ago . . . 1865 oil, though he also sat nt tourist attractions is not among the few , as wit- the feet of a practical Texas , but moat The President Messrs. Hossfeldt & Co. have sold their pack- had deep spiritual signifi- FUEL OIL & COAL ness his State of the Union assertion that ing establishment to Charles Miller who will liberal , Sam Rayburn. , Johnson played his cards cance before they attracted R«dl*Olipi»ch«d Equipment he would advise "heavier reliance on com- hereafter carry on the business. tourists. Tbe Sugar Loaf transportation." Nor is there caut iously while Hubert was petition in incautious, courageous, ancl , suggestion is doing things in reason to believe that Congress would wel- in the opinion of many poli- reverse. God has already DOERER'S come any such proposal. ticians, indiscreet. He was given Winona beautiful sce- WINONA DAILY NEWS probably first in proposing nic vistas fthlch are going APPARENTLY th* Railway Labor Ex- more lost causes which lat- to attract more visitors than ' Association intends to go ahead An Indtpendent Newspaper Established 1653 ecutives — er became victorious causes a statue will. To use Christ START YOUR DAY with this unfortunate idea. The word is that W F. W HITE G. R. CIX>SWA» C. E. LINDEN than any mon since William for such purposes is plainly the union leaders will soon draft plans for Publisher Exec. Director Bu«ine,s» Mgr. Jennings Bryan. But by tlio » sacrlllgJoua! with ! a federal takeover of the railroads, bul in and Editor & Adv. Director time they won victories, oth- "This is the one Hut makes*4Jf me sing 'Hello, Dolly'!'" Would that we could spend 1 1 the interum will talk with President John- THE WIZARD OF ID valuable W. J. Coi.r. A DOLPH B IIKMKB A. J. K IFJUIUSCH By Parkar and Hart Bill Mtrrjll's son about it. He could perform a Managmg Kditor City Editor Circulation Mgr. ; public .service by making it clear that he will have no part of such nn approach to B H. H AHIXE F. H. K LAGGE L. V. ALSTON the railroad problem. Composing Supt. Press Supt . Engraving Supt. "Something toj Will AM H. K NW.IMJ 'CiOKDEN HOI.TE Comptroller Sunday Editor Because of a shortage , silver coins may Live By" I1 i ' MEMBER Or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS < be miide with no silver. But paper money s 1 safe: just tho old income tax forms would t «*J 6:50 Each Morning < supply raw material for years. 38EE*" > t » 4 ¦ The Associated Press In entitled exclusively < (0 the use for republication of all the local ' on Thr wolf hhull dwell with the lamb , and (he news printed In this newspaper as well as all Icopunl hhall He down with iht kid. and the A. P . (><:ws dispatches. calf and lion and (he falling together, and a UUIe child oh all trad tliem. 1st. 11:8. Thursday, .lanuary 21 , 1W5 ! KWNO I Something for DEAR ABBY: Former Governor Caledonia Fire Everyone Theory Andersen Against BILLMERWUS What's This Calls Decline Termed Costly State Tax Hikes fe^ W CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) _ MANKATO, Minn. (AP)-For- — The Caledonia volunteer fire ST. PAUL CAP) The theory About Milwaukee? department answered 22 calls of "something for everyone" mer Gov,, Elmer L. Andersen lait year, 14 tn the country and has been costly for Among my Wireaders there some Minne- By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN said Tuesday night he is opposed eight in the village. This is less sota colleges, Rep. Rod Searle must be those who have an DEAR ABBY : Can you tell me why there are more to any increase in taxes in Min- than one-half the calls usually of Waseca said Wednesday. emptiness tearing away inside. made in a year. Searle told the House Approp- double beds sold in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, than in any other nesota, and that he believes the Good relationship one with the riations Committee city its size? BRUCE G. state can find the money it Damage during fires also was the Legisla- other would prove a splendid considerably less. Fire Chief ture should look at the in- needs through an accelerated way to help reduce thet empti- dividual needs of DEAR BRUCE: No, but it might account for the size J economy. maybe that is easier George Albert credits the record the state col- ness. But to good fire prevention. leges and try to fill those needs! of Milwaukee. Andersen was here to address to say than achieve. To better an awards dinner of the Man- grasp the subject, reflect with Officers elected at the annual "In the last 10 years, St. Cloud DEAR ABBY: I am writing about my sister, who is an kato Jaycees. , of a dog and meeting besides Albert were: middle-aged widow . About five years • me the actions and Mankato have lost ground," attractive , intelligent, the words of a great mas. Glen St. Mary and Ronald Pe- he said, "because they are ago her husband committed suicide. It was a dreadful ex- "I don't believe any extra ters, assistants to the chief; perience for tier, out alter five years we taxes should be levied on the As a boy I recall having a James Ring, growing the fastest. falling out with one of my best secretary, and Wil- "But the Legislature always feel she should try to make a new life for people of Minnesota," Andersen fred Schiltz, treasurer. herself. Several desirable men have shown said. "Economic development friends, a neighbor boy who had feels that if St. Cloud gets this, come; to fit into my life very then Bemidji had better have an interest in her, but she has run away should be accelerated to provide at him was a familiar one, and from them all. When I pinned her down she more money from present tax closely as we went back and a close-up proved that the boy this; if Mankato get this, then forth. I was either at his place, * * ^¦^¦^¦^k^BW' m mm ^mm\\\\\\\r "Winona should get this." became very upset and told me that she sources." he was barking at was his own had no right to "lead a man on" because He said added revenue could or he at mine. I'm really not master, who had just taken over Searle headed a subcommittee she would have to tell him (if he didn't be realized through the creation sure what the occasion of the the paper route. which held many hearings be- already know) the circumstances of her of new jobs and expansion of falling .out was. I only remem- Now let's take a lessen from MIDLAND f tween sessions. The information husband's death. She feels it is a reflection the state's economy. ber the emotional stress I was that dog. He dropped his head, W_M_ gathered at these sessions on HER that her husband took his own He cited the taconite amend- under and the direct approach his ears fell to each side, and should materially lighten life. We've tried to tell her she is wrong, ment as an example of what he to healing the wound. It was vir- he indicated great shame as he the Appropriations Committee's but we can't get through to her. Maybe meant, calling it _"a simple tually impossible for us to walked across the street, so tak- work during the session, he you can. N. Y. ABBY change in public policy." avoid each other completely. en back by his mistake that he said. When the occasion would arise didn't even try to follow his Andersen said the taconite that we would be brought to- Searle said faculty salaries, DEAR N. Y.: Your sister is apparently suffering friend and master that day. In WITH YOUR PURCHASE OF from guilt feelings (justified or otherwise ) about what amendment "came 10 years too gether, we were more conscious the only way he kn^w, he said, improvement of . libraries, better late, but it still is going to do of each other than any other per- retirement systems at the state she failed to do that might have saved her husband. "I'm sorry." Psychiatrists say it's a typical reaction of one who has great things for Minnesota." son or event. It's an emotional 8 GALLONS OF MIDLAND colleges and more faculty mem- He said the same approach emptiness that calls for some- SUCH HONESTY among bers appear to top the list of experienced a tragedy of this kind. Try to persuade your sister to seek professional help. Her future depends on it. " should be taken toward other thing, and. until it gets satisfied, liumans would make better re- higher education needs. Minnesota resources, such as the hurt goes on. As I recall on lationship in many a home, of- MH GASOLINES DEAR ABBY: About three months ago my sister (age tourism and forestry. this particular occasion, I met fice, shop, or in field that now ffiTP Filing Deadline Near 77) and her two daughters (53 and 50) came to visit me. "If we face facts in Minneso- my friend coming from the east reeks with tension. And to cap We spent a lovely afternoon and they stayed for supper. ta," the former Republican gov- as I was going east. We were this thought , let's reflect the At Independence; After supper, my daughter (age 30) brought out a box of ernor said, "we can have the each riding our bicycle. I delib- words of Lincoln who said, "I TRI-COUNTY GO-OP OIL ASS'N Election on April 6 old family pictures. We passed them around and all had a most enormous prosperity the erately crossed the street to don't like that person very well. good chuckle over the old-fashioned clothing and hair styles. state has ever known." make amends, and that hurt — I must get to know him better." RUSHFORD WINONA HOUSTON , iri a strange sort of way — just Among other things, establish INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- Suddenly one of my nieces became enraged and shouted 307 Elm St. Second & Main Highway IS ) — The deadline for filing "These are OUR pictures. You STOLE them from our before I did it. But once I a good relationship between you cial and nomination papers for city of- house!" With that, my sister and her daughters stormed out started the process ; once I your family, business as- Phont 864-7722 Phon* 9345 or 4185 Phone 896-3755 of the house and I haven't seen or heard from them since. mustered the courage, I al- sociates or friends, and life will fices is Tuesday at 5 p.m., ac- Hixton Resident take on a warm glow. cording to Clerk Phil Roskos. ready-began to feel good. Mak- Abby, I am 73 years old, have been married 49 years, ing up, fulfilled that emptiness, Terms of Alfred Szczepanskl , and have never had any trouble with my own family, or my Lawrence Sluga. Herman Pape and we were enjoying a friend- husband's. Those pictures were mine and I can't imagine 90 on Saturday ship that wouldn't die. Admit- and Robert Helgenson, alder- " and why my sister didn't what came over that niece of mine, HIXTON, Wis. (Special) ting fault or need isn't easy, but men in the first through fourth put her in her place. However, this is my only living sister, - COSMETIC SAVINGS AT expire. The 90th birthday of Thomas often very healing where emo- wards, respectively, and a day doesn't pass that I don't feel sick over this ter- Thompson, Hixton, will be ob- tional sores are being aggra- Terms are for two years. Elec- rible incident. I haven't called her and she hasn't called served at the Thompson home vated by temperaments. tion will be April 6. No one has me. What do you suggest? HEAVY-HEARTED Saturday. VON ROHR REX ALL DRUG STORE filed at this time. Thompson was born in Oslo, WE CAN take a lesson from DEAR HEAVY-HEARTED : Call your sister. Granted, Spot, a sassy little fox terrier BENEFIT FOR SLABYS she could have saved the situation by putting her ac- Norway, in 1875, and came to this country at 18. He married with a real devotion for his INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- cusing daughter in her place, but don't hold this against master. Spot was most accus- cial) Club 93, Independence, and maybe Mary Eide Dec. 5, 1912. The — your sister forever. The daughter sounds sick, couple farmed in Fall tomed to chasing the delivery will sponsor a benefit dance your sister isn't too well either. Coulee near Hixton. Twenty years ago man, iceman, mailman and pa- ggl- TUSSY COSMETIC LINE Monday njght for the Ronald they purchased a smaller farm per boy. It was a balmy sum- Slaby family, whose home, in- Troubled? Write to ABBY, Box 69700, Los Angeles , Calif. mer day as Spot basqued in the furniture and clothing) For a personal reply , enclose a stamped, self-addressed in the same area, where they cluding reside. They celebrated sun and aU was quiet. Then it were burned Sunday morning. envelope. their golden wedding anniversary in happened. 25% to 50% DISCOUNT 1962. Around the corner came the UON oe . a weekend special ¦ ¦¦ They have three children, paper boy, who maneuvered the Not but Every Day Low Prices *¦ LW ^u ,,- .. Mrs. Gerald (Cassie) Brenen- corner at considerable speed, ^ ^ gen, Ettrick ; Mrs. Raymond flung a paper on the porch of af our Cosm etic Department. (Olga) Richardson, La Crosse, the corner house, and was in the and Mrs. Gay (Mame) Skaar straightaway on the block. Spot of the Hixton area. There are had perked up his ears and had 12 grandchildren and one great- cited the object. The boy had PRINCE MATGHEBELLI I COT Y'S grandchild. A son, Tilman, was hardly made .the turn until Spot killed in an automobile accident had bounded across the street Polyderm Astringent and Compensating V4 PRICE Treatment Vitamin in 1962. . and was in full action, when all _ , _ , _, Moisture Balancs Cream for Face and Throat. of his senses brought him into SPECIALS - fer Dry, Nom)a| knowledge of what was happen- ing. The voice that called back $5.00 Valu. Re8 $3M ° $365,534 Increase +* CA* ' fit $5& Nowtry... Both for aPtJatJV « « In Blair Bank NOW $1<75 N0W $2.50 Assets Recorded BLAIR , Wis. (Special)—Busi- The smoothest ness was good in Blair and area Lee last year, the report of the Un- ion Bank of Blair indicates. BLUE & STRIPED BONNE BELL'S Assets on Dec. 31 totaled $4,- 601,503, a gain of $365,534 over Plus 30 Hormone Lotion $*)0fl * whisky ever to come 1963. Loans totaled $2,101,778. OVERALLS The bank has $123,520 in un- Reg. $6.00 Value, Now ,.; * divided profits, and $130,000 in J surplus. It is capitalized at $120,000. Francis Herreid is president; Plus 30 Hormone Cream $*) * out of Canada ! Victor Thompson, vice presi- 50 pN ^^^^^^^^^^^ ffi Hv dent; Howard R. Turk, cashier, $5.00 Value, Now Only . r. ' and the Misses Doreen Myr- £ land and Gladys Hanson, assist- ______^K______^^^______mB__sTi. tf. f ™M int cashiers. tr &f 9 With Herreid and Thompson ^^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^HB^^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^Ha^niKlSmm. m ^^^^ H *
MISS JOAN SHERYL LARSON'S engagement to Gary P. Roverud, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rov- "Miff I /N^M Winte r Clearance erud, Spring Grove, Minn., is announced by her par- NORGE VILLAGE %* . ents, Mr. and Mrs. Emil N. Larson, Spring Grove. ... THE NEW AND MODERN DRY CLEANING WAY! The wedding will be June 26 at Trinity Lutheran Church, Spring Grove. Miss Larson is a student at ll ENTIRE STOCK (EXCEPT AWARD JACKETS) H-^ ^ 1 Winona State College and her fiance is employed by Think of this in line with the the Burlington Railroad at Chicago. (Edstrom Stu- dio) price of cleaning the old-fashioned way: ^ I Jackets-Ca r Coats-Parkas fep^K 1 L Reg. to $12.95 Rag. te $15.95 __f§M_____ WmwM. Gamma Tau Chapter Sather-Sensiba 10 to 14 Sweaters cleaned for just $2.00! Kappa Delta Pi Betrothal Noted • $ 95 $ 95 Hears Panelists TAYLOR, (Special) • 6 to 7 Pairs of Men's Trousers i 8 n Wis. - . '. Reg. to $19.95 Reg. to $22.95 Reg. to $29.95 __%\Mmmk___ Mr. and Mrs . Ray Sather, Eph- cleaned for just $2.00 95 ^_M_^L_Wk A panel of various members rata, Wash., former Taylor res- of Gamma Tau Chapter, Kappa • $ 795 idents, announce the engage- lain -8 to 10 ,\ $^595 s23 Delta Pi., representing various ment of their daughter, Miss • Skirts-pleated or p 1 Mmmm fields of training, presented in- Elaine Sather, to Airman S.C. to a load... $2.00! ' lixsmmmmmmmmmzmmmimmmmmmiii^^ formation and discussed job Lee H. Sensiba, son of Mr. and their opportunities in each of Mrs. Harold Sensiba, Land A LONG SLEEVE KNIT mm _fk m\\WL^-^Mm professional fields Thursday O'Lakes, Wis. No date has been t can' t hel p SHIRTS. CORDUROY PANTS, ^ evening. No matter what you used to pay. You fus p #l|0/ /YCC t_ WmWMmr set for the wedding. f< CAPS, GLOVES , MITTENS, _t.lf /O wi l *^\ U \\ They talked at a meeting of Miss Sather, a graduate of but SAVE BIG at P.UAMAS, E0BES ' \ " the Winona State College group, Taylor High School, Is a sopho- . . . p \ held at Watkins Hall. more at Washington State Uni- SPECIAL! Miss Sandra Corey, president , versity, Pullman, Wash. Her I conducted a business session, fiance is stationed at Larson Air prior to the panel discussion. Force Base, Wash. $ 98 The group decided to sell candy ¦ '" ™ I COTTON PANTS J=«a as a project f or raising funds NORGE VILLAGE K 2 for scholarships. Girl Scout Opan 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Weekda ys — 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays I Mra. Floretta Judson, coun- Neighborhood 601-603 Huff Street Phone 9885 I The Center of Fashion in the Center of Town - NASH'S - Fourth at Center selor, announced the regional "' 11111 i n iii im i|iii |i|iiiiifiiniiiiiri n i i m i iii M iiiini i i iiiiiiiii in 1 i mi ii Fi 1 i iiiin iii iiiiMiiiiiiiwiiii conference in Milwaukee March Meeting Planned ' ' i ' 27. Five members indicated a BLAIR , Wis. (Special)—Mrs. desire to attend. Delegates will James R. Davis, chairman of be chosen later. Girl Scout troops in Neighbor- Feb. Ll was the date chosen hood 9, announces that a meet- for the Valentine tea. Serv- ing will he held Tuesday at 7:30 ing on the committee will be p.m. at Mrs. S. B. Ivers' home Philip Shaw, vice president; in Whitehall, Wis. Gretchen Koehler, secretary ; Neighborhood 9 includes Laurel Johnson and Peggy Berg . troops from Arcadia, Ettrick, The date of the March meet- Blair and Whitehall. Two films, ing was changed from March "Our Cabana" and "Our Cha- 16 to M arch 23, because of the , quarter break. let " will be shown. Members Coffee and doughnuts were are to bring their song books. 166 CENTER WINONA served after the meeting. Independence PTO FABULOUS FIRST-OF-THE-YEAR3 PAYSAVIN GS ON QUALITY SALE FURNITURE! " To Meet Monday INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- mm QUICK EASY cial) — PTO for special educa- tion will peet at the school here ~_^_^_^_^_^_B^^n?_^^__\^_^__^_m. Monday at 8 p.m. _BSstmTCijiV_Nft9^_PI^_2iParents and teachers will dis- cuss the drop-out problem, the future of special education in Trempealeau County, what will —^_*_BB59S S^^*^ \ _ ^BS_ ^_^^mMwmMBjMnKM%8Mm^ ^ mr ^ ^^^Mf j ^';W' *^\ ^M ^^^MMMmm happen to the graduates, par- * ents' responsibility of pupil at- ^ tendance, discipline, health, and DISHES children's eligibility for special * * education. MIDLAND means QUALITY Midland Regular, with its new higher octane level, is a cleaner burning gasoline offering more complete combustion for maximum power output, greater pow- cr response from your engine. Today, call your friend- ' '£jt _r_EE€_M_i_^_^_^_^_R^l ______ly Midland Cooperative and order a bulk supply of ^ ^m^m^m^Mm ^m^mWm\%A A-\^^' ' t\&'- —T ' —_ —^ - ___^_^-Ei' ki^^k tl ' m^MMMMMmmmmmmmmmmmmmMmMMtr^TiK^S&*5$^^ quality-fresh Midland gasoline. Make H a habit to check with your Midland tank wagon man for all your petroleum needs. _ _ _^^m ^N JHB luxurious Stylefoam* Cushions ^ 1 ^^fe ^3 -?«r iMw^SW f D JCT1A f II ^^5=^ Beautifully coordinated suite Includes a sofa T ¦ _f J K $3.25 ^Nif , M ^ MI fcWI/lE" I ^_ ¦¦¦ ¦ ' ^* ondmatchlngchairwithjturdyhordwoodframes , V^A P_»r AAnnth '^MB 't_M_W^^ * ' * reversible cushions and rich nylon upholstery. IHO mil ^JJ^^ ¦ ¦ W^M* W^^ W ^-u_.MM *rH>-^->t M. Double Duly SOFA BED Striking sofa bad has a thickly • ¦ ¦ M^ __l faa "S:55o88Q Q f UA AlAlirV l\AlAf _.. V .. ' _MMMMMMMMMMrTmmmmmmmmmm\ NUM M WW IVivNtTWW MWW MMMM M UUWNM W M W MMMM --"a» Gamblosl -"WT^r^M?.No Money Down—$1.25 Per Week
1§ 8 IT'S PACKED WITH MIDLAND ^ 1^^^^^^ ^^ ^^ TALK TO THE \ ^ DEALER NEAREST YOU. SEE NAMES BELOW. 'llfT SPFCIA U *3(|S» FFA Tf iff EC LEWISTON CO-OP ASSOCIATION ^ LEWISTON - Ph. 3141 ROLLINGSTONE CO-OP OIL ASSOCIATION p^Bum ROLLINGSTONE - Ph. 1351 r ^oilrtkal on Coll Mafch»d Coni»m rs ORrH . Charge It! Penmy s In WINONA is Open Mon. Frl. 9 to 9r.r.:9 to 5 1 ttl MmnkaH Ava. l»hM< Mil WOOLWORTH'S 1 ' * WMlSM'^ " — ¦ ! ir -'T-rn i i i min i iiiiiiiiiimmnrMnii-ffriiiM^ THURSDAY Mondovi Man Spring Grove Hospital The Daily Record JANUARY 21, 1965 Heads Area Club Elects Officers Luci's Boy Death of Couple SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- Ruled Accidental At Community Scouting Unit cial) —¦ New officers were elect- Blast Kills Winona Deaths Two-State Deaths ed at the Hospital Club meeting MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) Memorial Hospital Henry V. Rudnik John Wendel Monday. Mrs. Tosten Thompson Friend Finally Hennepin County coroner's of- — Paul R. Wechter, district is president ; Mrs. Arnold Mor- fice ruled Wednesday that the Visiting hourt: Medical and surgical Henry V. Rudnik, 65, Waba- SPRING GROVE, Minn. (Spe- p.m, (No scout executive, Whitehall, pre- Har- deaths of a University of Minne- ptlltnts: 2 to 4 and 7 to 1:30 sha, died Wednesday at 10:15 cial)—Funeral services for John ken, vice president; Mrs. 2 Workmen children undtr 12.) sented goals for 1965 at the an- old Rosendahl, secretary, and sota coed and her male compan- , (API Maternity patlentt: I to 3:30 and 7 to a.m. in St. Elizabeth's Hospi- W. Wendel* 90, who died Jan. nual -Hiffalo-Decorah District Gets Home SEABROOK Tex. - 1:30 p.m. (Adults only.) tal, Wabasha, after a one-week Mrs. Nelius Storlie, treasurer. ion were due to accidental car- Two workmen were killed as a 13 at the Waukon, Iowa, hospi- committee meeting at Club WASHINGTON (AP) — Teen- bon monoxide poisoning. WEDNESDAY illness. He was a former em- tal, were held at the Methodist Midway, Independence, Wed- Last year the club purchased gas line exploded and flames ploye of Lake Center Switch Co. a highchair, card table, training age Luci Johnson's favorite boy The victims, Marie Elena ADMISSIONS Church in Lansing, Iowa, Sat- nesday night. friend finally made it home In Carlstrom, 19, of Goodhue, shot up while they wera re- and the Royal Cab Co., Winona. urday, with burial at Oak Hill At the election of officers, Ho- chair, circumstraint and coffee Ricky R. Weikel, 227 E. King Mr time to take her to dance at the Minn., and Gary R. Burke, 21, pairing a leak near here late . Rudnik was born Jan. 19, Cemetery. ward Peck, Mondovi, was chos- urn for the hospital. Club mem- St. 1900, to Mr. and Mrs. Frank bers made 218 articles; mended inaugural balls. Minneapolis, were found dead Wednesday. James A. Mueller, 425 Sun- He was born Jan. 28, 1874, en chairman, and Or. B. L. early Saturday in a car parked Rudnik, Winona, and lived here , vice chair- 162; held a rummage sale and Paul Betz, 20, a premedical Asst. Police Chief A. L. Wil- •et Dr. at Lansing. He farmed there 54 Johnson, Arcadia student, was busy taking exams near the university campus. The until September, 1963, when he man. Members at large are a tea for the first anniversary cox said Charles C. Canon, 61, Clifford G. Rothering, 563 W. moved to Wabasha. He never years. In 1950 he moved to of the hospital, and assisted with at Mount St. Mary's College at car motor was running when a Sanborn St. Gordon Meistad and Melvin campus policeman discovered of Sour Lake, Tex, was working married. He was a member of Spring Grove and lived here 10 Arnold, Arcadia; Gerhard capping ceremonies for the pink Emmitsburg, Md. Luci was Jon E. Christensen, 280 E. wearing his school at ber the bodies. St. Stanislaus Catholic Church, years. The past year he has re- Waarvik, the Rev. Robert Sal- ladies and candy stripers. fin ¦ in a six-foot hole when a spark 5th St. the Hol sided at the Waukon Rest Home. father's noontime inaugural cer- Thomas C. Anderson, Winona y Name Society, Wino- veson, Robert Mills and Verne from his tools apparently set off na Athletic Club and its Benefit Survivors are seven sons and Black River Falls; Hoi- emony. RETURN HOME the blast Rt. 4. Brown, Miss Barbara J. Starbuck , 170 Association, Winona Activity one daughter, among them Al- lis Herell, Mondovi; Arnold Ol- Luc! went to all the other in- ALMA, Wis. (Special) — Mr. Carson, the contractor on the Group, Catholic Order of Fores- Peter Bieri and Lester job for Gulf Oil Corp., and B. E. 4th St. fred Wendel, Spring Grove. _.- son, augural activities squired by and Mrs. Robert Jones, owners William Lafky, ters and . the Fraternal Order of Brennom, Whitehall; Charles Fresh Blast Paul's older brother Jim, 26. of the Jones fishing float here, Cravan Martin, 61, of Willis, Mrs. Winona Lindsley Ross , Rt. 1. Eagles. Zepp, Alma; Dr. O, M. Schneid- And, she made a big plea to the returned Tuesday from a Tex., were killed. David A. Mahlke Jr., 761 W. Survivors are: Three sisters, ALMA, Wis. ( Special) - Lind- er, Blair; Charles Rongstad, nation's colleges to switch their month's vacation at Nassau and Flames destroyed two pickup Wabasha St. Mrs. Frank (Elizabeth) Morou- sley Ross, husband of the Osseo, and Buck Rogers, Gales- exam times so they won't con- Freeport in the Bahamas and trucks and burned 50 acres of DISCHARGES schek, Norfolk, Va., Mrs. Ed- former Ruth Eller of Alma, died ville. Of Arctic Air flict with future presidential in Florida. pasture Edward E. Lafky, 64 W. Sth ward (Frances) Burt ST., and Jan. 8 at Seattle, Wash. At the district round table at ght Leland inaugurations. St. Mrs. Agatha Brezlnski, Hib- Since 1958 Arcadia Tuesday ni After all, Luci said, it was , Ross and his wife Chenoweth, Blair, and LaVern William A. McNally , Winona bing; one niece and two neph- had been conducting the "Ruth important for young people to Rt 3. ews. Eikamp, Cochrane, headed Hits Northeast > A Dalicious Hot Breakfast . and Lin Ross Tours" throughout the scouting section, and Gene be interested . in politics and ~1_9H-K3 C_ \\ Mrs. Hertha C. Putnam, 415 E Funeral services will be Fri- the world. A graduate of Reed By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS they ought to be able to come to day at 9:30 a.m. at Watkowski Heinemann, Cochrane, the cub- I Troat or Evening Drink . / (( Howard St. College and Princeton Univer; see an important event like get- J$m_. (j) William P. Busse , 420 High Funeral Home and 10 am. at bing section. A fresh blast of arctic air sity, Mr. Ross had been witli The next round table will be whipped into the Northeastern ting a new president. Forest St. St. Stanislaus Church, the Rt. Bell Telephone 41 years, retir- When she appeared at the ball Ole Nygaard, 428 E. Sanborn Rev. Msgr. N. F. Grulkowski held at Arcadia High School section of the nation today while ing as general employment Feb. 9. mild weather returned to Flori- Wednesday night in a rose petal ' St. officiating. Burial will be in St satin dress, her hair upswept ! CHOCOLATE manager for Paciifc Northwest About 40 in the district at- da and the Gulf states after a Randy Gluesing, Alma, Wis. Mary's Cemetery. with a glittering tiara Paul was ^Hp Bell in 1958. For 20 years he tended the cub scout pow wow severe cold wave. , BIRTHS Friends may call today from had been appointed by succes- her partner. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Lock- 7 p.m. Rosary will be said at at La Crosse State University Additional accumulations of ) sive governors to the Washing- Saturday. Ed Ausderau, White- MII I/ -S^WSSL (( wood, Houston, Minn., a son. 7:30 by Msgr. Grulkowski, ton state personnel board in from 2 to 4 inches of snow were A reporter asked if that was I ffllLlY W_mirip ^^p Mr. and Mrs Gary Poulin, Holy Name Society and the Or- hall, was instructor in cere- expected in New York State, on the missing young man, luci . Olympia and served as its chair- monies; Charles Chenoweth, 1 516 Garfield St., a son. der of Foresters. Winona Ath- man nine years. top of the 8 inches already on replied with a happy smile and NtaAm with WHOLE milk |^Hj) SJHHp~^ The Rev. and Mrs. Wallace letic Club Hixton, in skits, and Mrs. Mild- the ground in some areas. emphasis, "Yes, m'ara." jj members will call at Active in Scouting, ' i-«JEH5-«B_B-_. Larson, 616 41st Ave., Goodview, 7 and Eagles at 7:16 p.m. he was red Stenberg, Whitehall, in pup- Sister Lynda, 20, in a white in quarts or Vi gallons. T^5Jfa \\ a son. president of the Seattle Area pets. silk gown and long white eve- I M^^^^VWMWWWin ^^^M^MWWWMW ^^WtMWiM ^ii i^WWW ^W^W^^^ Jf Council for a time. Other coming events for the Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester J. WEATHER ning coat, also wearing t tiara ' WOIL'S DAIRY, RUSHFORD Ml Roterlng, 181 E. Howard St., a Survivors are: His wife ; one District include : Feb. 6, Ex- in her hau: was with her favor- plorer jack and , , son. OTHER TEMPERATURES daughter, Marjorie, Portland, Jill frolic Black Viet Troops ite date, David Lefeve, a former ' Assorted Flavors «f Half Calient \\ BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ore.; one son, Kenneth, and one River Falls; Feb. 7-13, Boy Marine lieutenant who now grandson, Torrance, Calif. Scout Week; March 9, round works for a New York broker- BIRTHS ELSEWHERE High Low Pr. The Ellers were prominent table , Zion Lutheran church, Home Style Ice Cream Albany, clear 31 17 .08 Blair age firm. He took her to all the | | SPRING GROVE, Minn. ( Spe- In business and education at , and March 13, Scout-O- inaugural events. ' / f Flavor* , Albuquerque, cloudy 48 34 .02 Alma many years. Rama. Black River Falls. Check Saigon jj cial) — Tweeten Memorial Atlanta, cloudy .... 50 36 Hospital, Spring Grove: Bismarck, clear ... 23 5 Miss Doris L. Duxbury ALMA FILINGS Diabetic Ice Cream Mr. and Mrs. Dale, Torgerson, Boise, cloudy 33 30 .01 ( | Mabel CANTON, Minn. (Special) - Hearing Slated ALMA, Wil. Special) — Two J )) , Jan. 13, a' daughter. Boston, clear 36 19 Miss Doris L. Duxbury, 56, Street Riots STRICTLY GRADE A Mrs. Torgerson is tbe former a aldermen have filed for re- Chicago, clear .... 39 12 .. former resident here and a resi- On Burglary Count here, ' u ar er Homogenized \l Gloria Fossum. SAIGON, South Viet Nam election reports Louis mill _€. '*0 ' Cincinnati, clear ... 36 9 dent of Lansing, Mich., since WABASHA, Minn. (Special) - (AP) — Vietnamese infantry- Noll, clerk. Norbert is in the ) lfllLI\ Quarts and Vi Gallon* ; (I Mr. and Mrs. William Ro- Cleveland, clear ... 32 20 .01 saaen 19^0, died at 10:30 p.m. Wednes- A preliminary hearing will be men placed Saigon's Buddhist first ward and Alvin Voltner, , Spring Grove, Tuesday, Denver, clear 53 24 .. day in a Rochester hospital aft- third. Lutz Ambuehl has said FARM FRESH ! // a daughter. Mrs. Rosaaen is the held in the state's case against headquarters under virtual ) Des Moines, clear . 23 13 er a long illness. Guinn Mlnter, 20, Maieppa, siege today after the Buddhist he is not seeking re-election as , GRADE "A" EGGS )) former Dorothy Holm Detroit, cloudy .... 31 16 '.03 She was born in Fillmore second ward alderman. He has • HARMONY, Minn. (Specia!)- charged with burglary. He was campaign to overthrow Premier Fairbanks, clear .. 10 -3 County Aug. 15, 1908, to Samuel arraigned before Municipal Tran Van Huong touched off a served on the city council since • 2% LOW FAT MILK ; )) Mr. and Mrs. Elwyn Mensink, and Jennie (Wllford) Duxbury. 1050. Filing deadline is Tues- a son Monday at Harmony Com- Fort Worth, rain ... N 62 T Judge Kenneth Kalbrenner street scuffle. I BUTTERMILK COTTAGE CHEESE | (( Helena, cloudy .... 51 26 .. She left this area after being day at 5 p.m. • • munity Hospital. Monday, who appointed Martin Inside the headquarters five ¦ CHOCOIATI MILK (Made With Whole Milk) Honolulu, cloudy ... 77 66 .. graduated from high school. J. Healy as his attorney. leading monks went into the ) • ] (( Lake City, Minn. (Special) - )) Indianapolis, clear .34 S .. She was graduated from Car- Minter and two juveniles, 16, second day of a "fast to the OVER THE TOP • ORANGE • SOUR CREAM j Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Eggenberg- leton College, Northfield, and er, rural Lake City, Jan 20, a Jacksonville, cloudy 67 34 were apprehended Sunday by death" unless Huong resigns. TAYLOR, Wis. (Special) - • • WHIPPING CREAM • HALF I HALF j \\ Kansas City, clear . 39 24 did graduate work at American Only newsmen, son at Lake City Municipal Hos- Wabasha County sheriff's of- monks and Mrs. David Lunde, Christmas | CHIP DIPS I (( Los Angeles, cloudy 65 53 .. University, Washington, D. C. ficers for breaking workers in the Buddhist organi- , • pital. She was a statistician at and entering seals manager has been noti- )) ¦ Louisville, clear ... 39 16 .. Gerhardt Gahler's tavern and zation were allowed to enter the fied by the Wisconsin Anti-Tu- • Carryouti of Malts, Shakes, Cones, Novelties Memphis, cloudy .. 57 34 .. Mayo Clinic and also had work- main pagoda building where the ed at University of Minnesota bakery Sunday morning and al- berculosis Association that Tay- ? WE HAVE A VARIETY OF COLD CUTS )) Arcadia Firm Miami, cloudy .'... 71 58 .. legedly taking about $40 In mer- monks were lying on cots under lor is one of 63 Wisconsin com- Milwaukee, clear .. 27 11 Hospitals, Minneapolis; the air mosquito nets. surgeon's office, Washington, chandise and about $5 in cash. munities going over the top Renames Officers Mpls.-St.P., clear .. 18 8 .. The juveniles were released in the 1964 campaign. Contribu- New York, clear ... 38 26 D. C, and an American govern- The infantrymen arrived after ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - ment public health office in Monday, the sheriff's office police clashed with a crowd of tions here were $100.60 compar- All members of the board of Okla. City, cloudy . S3 30 .. Berlin West Germany. said. ed with $155.90 in 1963. Omaha, clear ..... 36 22 , 30 youths heckling them outside »iL Margie's directors of W. P. Massuere Co., ., She was a fellow of the Am- the headquarters. Police arrest- Inc., were re-elected at the an- Philadelphia, clear . 38 23 erican Public Health Associa- KINDERGARTEN RESUMES ed 10 of the youths. FIRM ELECTS Phoenix, cloudy ... 63 48 .03 nual -stockholders meeting held tion and is listed in Who's Who DURAND, Wis. (Special) - The government also an- ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - Tuesday night Ptlnd, Me., clear ... 28 14 .20 Among Women in America. She Kindergarten classes will be re- Officers and directors of Et- Ptlnd, Ore., cloudy 42 39 .13 nounced the arrest of 12 others At a meeting of the board of belonged to the American As- sumed at Eau Galle Monday. in a riot Wednesday night. trick Lumber Co. held their Rapid City, clear .. 53 29 .. sociation for Public Records «¦ \\ directors the following officers They were suspended two weeks The troops strung barbed wire 47th annual meeting Tuesday. r vTuPw/^- *Hfflrl M m HI , St. Louis, clear .... 37 30 .. and Statistics, the Michigan Officers Henry Solberg, l were re-elected including Mor- ago when Mrs. Gale Bradley, outside the headquarters to are ris English, president; Gile Her- Salt Lk. City, cloudy 29 25 .. Public Health Association, the Menomonie, the teacher, was president; Stanley Nelsestuen, San Fran., cloudy . 56 50 .. head off further trouble. ^ Women's Overseas League, the killed in an auto accident west WWr ll -a A II rick , vice president ; Emil Be- The Buddhists closed their Whitehall, vice president, and C*a.V. *a nusa, treasurer, and Mrs. Mar- Seattle, rain 48 42 .19 YWCA and First Presbyterian of the Chippewa River bridge Atrhur Oftdahl Sr., secretary- Tampa, clear €8 51 headquarters and one of the ifti Lotrage garet Wenger, secretary. Direc- Church, Lansing. on Highway 10. Kindergarten treasurer. Henry Larson, White- Washington, clear . 46 27 Survivors are : One fasting monks said it would re- tors for one year terms are Mrs. brother, classes also will continue at hall, Arthur Zenke, Galesville, \ CORNER SEVENTH & MANKATO // Winnipeg, cloudy . 42 39 .56 Vernon, Canton, and two sisters, main closed for the duration of noon and evening, Friday to 11 nedy wns standing beside the i "S a.m., then at the church in saw with another employe at m^mw T^w Fountain City. the time of tho accident. Quick, now. Whose names (besides John Hancock's) appear at the end of The Declaration of Independence ? 1 'LVANIA EVENING POST. * ^SV^ENNSY ; ,_*_» _—_i sffi^cs^^ku<(»tou.«d .srT^ * * SUGAK. OI? ttel-ftMqianBr, •» «»«> i?8__V_. :—;— v.H= <», f Did you think the Declaration of Independence wait for the little old man ringing the little bell.) But in that case, we could h ardly expect mem- was carried around on parchment scrolls and read What you paid for this newspaper today just bers of the government to use these media to in town squares by little old men wearing funny about covers the cost of the paper it's printed on. publicize their own shortcomings or mistakes, hats, white pony tails and ringing little bells? Everything else—the entire cost of world-wi de It is apparent, then, that advertising is intimately Not so.The historic news was spread by papers and local news gathering, pictu res, features, the connected with freedom of speech and freedom like The Pennsylvania Evening Post (above). And actual engravings, typesetting and printing —has of the press. these papers were supported by advertisers like to be borne by local and national advertising. Because there are advertisers who want to tell Hyns Taylor, upholsterer , and David Pancoast, It's the same with magazines,radio and television. you the difference between products, there are realtor (also above). Perhaps we wouldn't be in the dark ages with- newspapers (and radio and television) to tell you The same holds tru e today. out advertising, but we'd certainly be in the dark. the difference between political candidates. Without advertisers , the paper you're reading Of course there's alwa ys the possibility that the There are some countries, you know, where they right now might cost one dollar or more. government would subsidize newspapers, mdga- don't have a choice between political candidates. (At th ose prices some people would much rather zincs, radio and television. Or products. Prepared by BATTEN, BARTON, DURSTINE & OSBORN, INC., CHICAGO, and published in the public interest by your Winona Daily News $492,368 WIN H FOR ONA World Council Skunks Invade ^" I^HDL ^^^L^^^iM^^^Ks&Lmm ^MmmmiMl ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^M Asks Catholics K^^S-^-^^9_^-H-lMMMmmmmX.km ^^^S ^AAm ^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMmPlainview, But Area Counties Safranek's 601 last Sanborn dBfe^ ! They're Repelled ^^^S^^^&JP^! Participate PLAINVIEW, Minn. (Special) Get Road Funds To -^mmm^KMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMi —There's a "Skunk Holler" in A total of $492,368 of state- tion fund ln fiscal 1965, coming Fresh Choice Lamb, All Cuts i ENUGU, Nigeria CAP) - The the vicinity of Plainview, and collected highway funds was from state motor vehicle license Young, Heavy ROASTING CHICKENS Ib. IW ! World Council of Churches there are various theories about allotted today to Winona County, fees and the state-imposed fuel By asked tbe Romas Catholic GRETCHEN L. LAMBERTON It. the Minnesota Department of tax. H.avy WHITE ROCK HENS Ib. 29* ! Church Tuesday night to join it ''THERE'S nothing quite as awesomely complete as the New Three skunks were shot near Highways has announced. — ARCADIA FRYERS & PARTS— i •*¦ York Times, especially the colossal Sunday edition. It 2nd Avenue NW in Plainview AFTER $3412,106 it paid to in formal discussions of church The county's allotment is di- HAM LOAF, Fresh, Homemad* Ib. 90* < baa world famed authorities on politics, spoils, theater, mu- Friday afternoon. Bruce Kreof- the motor vehicle division, tbe unity. sic vided into the regular account, petroleum division and other BRATWURST, Homemad* Ib. 69* , travel, business, fashion, book reviews — you name it sky killed two; Ray Blowers of which $183,582 will be used j The council, representing 214 and they've got It. Some people say, and firmly believe it, got the third. Others have been state departments, $121,687,894 Home-Rendered LARD lb. 2$. that if for maintenanceand $278,327 for will be left. * member churches of Protestant, you take tlie Sunday New Work Times you need never spotted in different Plainview , and the municipal BEEF, VEAL PORK. Ground for Leaf lb. again have to read construction State law establishes a three- * 69* j one other line because the Times gives locations. account, with $13,396 going for Anglican, Orthodox and Catholic everything, but everything. fold apportionment of this to- BRAINS —We Have Them, Beth PORK & VEAL ] faiths, announced at its annual A good friend Charles. Becker said he ladn't maintenance and $20,093 for tal: Sixty-two percent goes to gave me a year's subscription to the Sun- seen a skunk while hunting in construction. Homemade Ring BLOOD A LIVER Ib. 60. j it will set up a working day New York Times and last , the trunk highway fund, 29 per- meeting week the first edition arrived the last five years until this Fresh HAM for Roast or Slicing lb. 69* < committee for formal consulta- a heavy bundle neatly encased in a cellophane sack. I went LAST YEAR, Winona County cent to the county state aid to work on it and stayed buried in it for a whole week, and winter; now be has killed eight. highway fund and 9 percent, to tions with the Vatican. Wesley Moore, milk truck driv- got $475,889, with the regular then it was time to start the second edition in its cellophane account receiving $175,519 for the municipal state aid fund, - Fresh Select Oysters- j The committee, "subject to sack. er, counted 17 in one culvert which is shared by 77 munici- mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrm **'i^^mmmmwm ^m**m^m^m^*^m^^^^^^^^*mmm *ma^^—mama near Elgin. maintenance and $283,279 tor parallel action by the appropri- It was a devastating experience. Ones familiar home* construction. The county's mu- palities with populations of 8,000 We Ara the Exclusive Mrs. Lassen's j ate authorities of the Roman % Sundry speculations have been town newspaper prints the news but does not delve deeply nicipal account included $14,- or more. Dealer in Winona of Home-Baked j Catholic Church," wil] have six into the reasons behind every statement, and that's a good made about why they are brav- The gross allotment to coun- ing city life. Some say they are 838 for maintenance and $22,255 Sexton s Canned Goods Beans Pt. j Roman Catholic members and thing for ones peace of mind. The Times' thorough analysis for construction. ties is increased by a number ' 39* eight from the council. of the dark underlying chaos behind most of today's news rabid or they wouldn't come in- of increments, such as interest leaves one all shook up. to town. Some say they're glossy The amounts assigned coun- We close Wednesday afternoon at 12:30 | The VmOcans two observers ties are determined by law on on Investments. They printed, for instance, a huge "Disaster Map of the and fat; others that with cold The counties will receive $35,- Dial 2851 for Free City Delivery J at the council meeting, the Rev. " weather, they are beginning to the basis of each county's mo- U. S. for 1964, and it was chilling. For there was hardly a 639,932 this year; last year, they »»ww Jerome Hamer of Belgium and nook or cranny of the U. S. that hadn't been hit by vast get hungry and are searching tor vehicle registrations, num- pwnRnnrwww wi »>tPwwypfP^ wwwwwwk the Rev. Pierre Duprey of ber of miles of county state got $34,655,816. The municipali- natural disaster during 1964 , and had to be bailed out by for food easy to come by. ties will receive $11,370,240, France, termed the council ac- the federal government. The disaster map showed killing They apparently aren't mad aid highways and financial tion "a step forward." need. compared with $10,967,128 last drought over the center and southern states, floods in the at anybody; they appeared to be year. "In our opinion," they said in far west and east, hurricanes in southern states, tornadoes, frolicking in the snow while the A gross amount estimated at a statement, "the general trend forest fires, tidal waves, earthquakes and I don't know what Plainview men waited to get a $125,500,000 will be paid into APPORTIONMENTS for area of this report on the relations of all. In fact, studying this map it looked to me as though good shot. the highway users tax distribu- counties are as follows. the World Council with the there wasn't one single state that one could live in without Catholic Church is in harmony being bedeviled by one of these disasters of nature. Regular— —Municipal— * * ± County Allotment M« at Const. Maint. Conit. GROWID^H with the recent decree o! the Vatican Council on ecumen- Next, speaking of nature. cause more people need Canton IOOF Fillmore $551,712 $195 114 $292,520 $ 9,627 $ 54,551 ism." I read an article that dis- water. They need it, if any- Houston ...... 440,628 167 SO 251,595 8,521 12,782 Olmsted 471,879 184 88 277,478 3,766 5,649 Dutch Bishop Jan Wille- turbed me telling of a new thing, worse in Arizona than project to flood the Grand in New York City, for the Wabasha 455,153 164 61 246,892 17,800 26,700 brands, head of the Vatican Sec- more Installs Officers Winona 492,368 183 52 275,327 13,396 20, retariat for Promotion of Unity, Canyon. Then the article water sources are 093 went on to explain, "But meager and the population CANTON, Minn. (Special) - was reported to have assisted in only about half of the inner is growing faster. The sale Canton Odd Fellows Lodge 214 the planning for the consultative gorge of the 279-mile-long of waterpewer is only inci- and Rebekahs Lodge 237 held Masons at- Eyota committee. Grand Canyon would be dental to the main purpose — open joint installation at the 39s However, council officials flooded, Water would be bringing in much needed wat- IOOF hall Monday night. Elect Officers New Plane in FULLY COOKED backed up a few miles, about er," District Deputy Grand Master cautioned against speculation EYOTA, Minn. (Special) - that the theological differences 30, into the Grand Canyon Well, my next travel proj- R.W. Sparrow of Winona Lodge » National Monument Park ect was going to be to have New officers of Ashler Lodge PICNICS - - - 29c between the council's members 24 and Mrs. Minnie Stevens, , with the new Glen Canyon my first look at the Grand district . deputy president of 61 A.F. and A.M., Eyota, are Test Flight and the Roman Catholics could Russell Allen, worshipful mas- FRESH PORK & BEEF be bridged quickly. Some Ortho- Dam built. The water would Canyon, but I guess I'll have Sunshine Rebekah Lodge 172, FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) - be silt-free and would cre- to settle for looking at a Charles ter; Layton Ernst and Walter dox and some evangelical St. , and staff, installed Whitcomb, senior and junior The Fill , a combat plane being Liver & Blood NECK BONES ate a great recreation lake." "great recreation 1 a k e." officers, assisted by deputy built for the Air Force and churches appeared lukewarm warden, respectively; James L. the toward the move for closer con- The article went on to Shucks, there are getting to marshals Mr. and Mra. Paul Navy, made its fourth test hop explain that this step was be too many people in this Jones, secretary; Clarence Sey- SAUSAGE Lb 10c tact with Roman Catholicism. Baer, St. Charles. mour Wednesday. General Dynamics, "absolutely necesssary be- world! , treasurer; James Whit- the builder, called the S5-mlnute The report approved by the comb and Adolph Schumann, World Council's 100-member ODD FELLOWS Installed: flight a success. But the Times in two articles offered a small ray of Rowland Hanson, noble grand; senior and junior deacon; Chris Home-Rendered LARD - Lb 25c Central Committee said the pro- hope that not every canyon and gorge in the West would Von Wald, tyler; Charles Von A spokesman said the plane Walter Barth, vice grand ; Sa- did not attain supersonic posed committee would be pure- have to be flooded to take care of growing population. For Wald, marshal, and Stanley speed W« Do Cojlom FROZEN FOOD , ly consultative and "would not bert Halverson, secretary; De- because of a cloud cover that t _fl\ during the past year intensive work has been done on con- wey Busse, treasurer ; Odell Johnson and Alfred Schumann, be able to make any decisions." verting sea water into fresh salt-free water fit for human senior and junior steward. obscured a good view of the : cSSf lookers for Rent )R|gp The report also noted that the Nelson, warden; Howard Rol- ¦ flight from tbe ground. consumption. The former cost of de-salting sea water was lins, conductor; council itself "cannot act for the about five dollars per thousand gallons. During 1964 the cost The maiden flight last Dec. 21 member churches unless it is Clarence Myron and Vernon was curtailed after the wing ras.Curing hold•«*•» 200 Iba. t__ &_m£ has been brought down to 88 cents per thousand gallons. And Kyseth, inside and outside guar- Houston Co. March • 4_ H^JP&7* specifically authorized to do now contracts are being signed with California companies flaps failed to retract. But it • Smoking of meat! *^frj_9l5_J so." dian, respectively; Joe Morau, Of Dimes Cards Out was flown successfully Jan. 6. that will develop nuclear-powered de-salting plants which lain; ¦ can produce fresh water at 30 cents per thousand gallons. chap Ray Johnson and CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) Lloyd Schneekloth The report pointed out that And what's more, they expect within ten years to cut the , right and — March of Dimes cards have DEATHLESS PROSE the World Council is a "fellow- left supporter noble grand, and cost to 8 or 9 cents per thousand gallons. No more deserts or been distributed in all Houston LOUISVILLE, Ky. m — One ship ef many churches wilh dif- drought areas. Wonderful, but I couldn't help wondering a Keith Busse and Lyle Knokke, County schools by Miss Gladys ferent confessional back- vice grand supporters. candidate for office at a recent little uneasily if man wasn't trying to fill God's shoes. Lapham, county superintendent. high school convention minced grounds" while the Roman The Times also had a disturbing article on modern art These are smaller cards W&BtHtlfTHOMEMADE SAUSAGES GROCERIES - LOCKER PLANT I espe- — S Catholic Church is a single REBEKAH LODGE officers no words in reporting a lack of with the headline "Paris Art World-All Crisis, Crisis, Crisis." cially designed for giving by the words: "I had a great speech 477 W. Sth St., Winona, Minn. church. installed: Mrs. Loren Johnson, Phon* 3151 1 Apparently the art center df the world has shifted to New past noble grand; Mrs. Odell children and are not meant to planned. But the room got "The committee is a signifi- York and no two critics can agree on what is worthwhile art take the place of family contri- offi- Nelson, noble grand; Mrs. Ver- cleaned up and the maid took cant step," said one council and what is junk. Today's art, according to the Times is "in butions. it." SHOP THE EASY WAY — READ THE ADS FIRST , "but it should not be non Kyseth, vice grand; Mrs. cial a state of dangerous confusion" and "under the control of Roy Stefflar played up too much, else our " Another article , secretary; Mrs. merchandisers and public relations experts. Roland Hanson treasurer; Mrs. individual member churches warfare" and "the art hodge- , speaks of the "internecine art Sabert Halverson, warden; Mrs. will feel they are being over- podge." bypassed when actually loves old horse-and-buggy Martin Dahlberg and Mrs. Earl ruled or It all makes a person who still Johnson, will be trying to bring them , Goyas, Modiglianis and so on feel uneasily out inside and outside we Rembrandts guardian, respectivel together." of the stream of today's culture. In fact it all makes a per- y; ¦ son feel like reading the comics in ones nice comfortable Mrs. Dewey Busse, chaplain; hometown newspaper and forgetting for the moment the Mrs. George Rasmussen and Miss Florence Mltson, right and QUALITY Historical Society problems, chaos and confusion that seem to underly life HIGH TUSHNER'S today. left supporter noble grand, re- Y0UR COMPLETE FOOD STORE To Meet Tuesday spectively ; Mrs. Ray Johnson ¦ LAW" « DDIff" lml%_E HAT I 501 East Third Sheet Since 1896 At Galesville Bank and Mrs. Lloyd Schneekloth, phasis will be on membership. Dog Gives Hiding vice grand supporters; Mrs. GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) Interested persons are invited Vernon Kyseth, musician, and —The Trempealeau County His- to attend. Place Away to Police Mrs. Loren Johnson, captain of ST""' D M AA FRESH PRODUCE arti- * * -», torical Society will meet Tues- The House of Memories FRESNO, Calif. (AP ) - the degree team. Co»* facts are stored at Galesville. Cherry Pie Mix 2 49c HMH day at 8 p.m. in the Isaac Fresno Deputy Sheriff John «_* Clark room of the Bank of Discussion will be held on sort- family dog standing in front of a Galesville. ing and best method of display. Camino arrested John Grice, 20, closet wagging his tail. CELERY - •-«• •* 19c Officers will be elected. Em- Lunch will be served. Wednesday on warrants charg- Camino opened the closet and SPA"CPnM1 CAHFORN.A ing 13 traffic violations. there was Grice. T™ . mm The deputy reported Grice's "I should have sold that , stool 39c ca, l sl Do1 wife said her husband was not pigeon," Grice moaned as he Oatmeal ZV 39C ORANGES " 39c at home, but Camino noticed the was led to jail. °"" 9MHHHHUHHHHMIU Her»h»y'« SWIFT'S PREMIUM — CENTER CUT WHOLE — LEAN — BOSTON BUTT rJr^ v™ 1 Sc Candy Bars '„ * R0UND P0RK e 5 Pleasant Valley ¦ ^Q ,b Seafood 10 ,., 39c STEAK... / Y"> ROAST... 4_IT Oysters & " 4-5 lbi. , lb Me J Smoked Chubs or Chunk Sable \^jj 5 Guernsey Dairy B Salt Boneless Codfish, 1-lb. wood box IJ* ?l L ¦ HOME OWNED — — HOME OPERATED ¦ — $1.29 • Swiftning Klaky White Fresh Frozen Lutefisk , 2'^-lbs WA ZZZ» Jumbo Peeled Deveined Shrimp, 3-lb. bag ?5.25 i^\ S Buy tho milk that's FRESH DAILY at tha ttora ot | 3 Pork Loin Roast 49c fc\\ CUTLETS ._ 49c Swordfish Steaks, 12-oz. pkg 73* j m phone 4425 for home delivery. ¦ £ 79C " PORK Baby Goudo, Blue f*i Sap Sago, Maezarella, £/6 ¦ PLEASANT VALLEY FRESH GRADE A GUERNSEY ¦ OBRBBR'S STR^MED L«N _ MEATY - COUNTRY STYLE L. 06656 Mounds Smoky, Scamorze , Primost, Gjetost , ^oX SWFTS PREMIUM French Port Soult , Hand Cheese , Catnembert , Liederkranz (TsVt Kaese, Swiss Cheese Fondue and ¦ BABY FOOD PORK RIBS Lb «u.iw» Blue Cheese , Swi&,\Koch l^jj JJ MILK g : » j - 49c many others . xyJ, °°'- 37c Mc 4m J_ STRICTLY FRESH ¦ RIB STEAKS Dairy Farm Pork Sausage IjjN Jones -LEIrl_n_E _|,, Seasoned just right and always the same. g\V KRAFT MINIATURE 7Q|* >J\\ S GRADE A EGGS Links, Mb. box 85* Meat , Mb. box 75* J lb Marshmallows CHEESE - 59c b c ¦ Jumbo Large Medium jjj Folger's Coffee So, r stant ::::::;:i!:;: *J Pkp- GUARANTEED—TENDER | FOR COFFEE and CEREALS g J GRADE "A" ARCADIA W%Wm Wm Wm AIIDF Sunshine Cinnamon Grahams, 9-oz. pkg 4** jil PURPLE ¦ ¦ CEREAL CREAM - - 33c g (No Part. MMns) BEEF CUBE PEPPERIDGE FARM if PRUNE PLUMS GOLDFISH CRACKERS PKG. 39* f FRYERS - Cheese, Sesame Seed. Pizza or Poppy Seed III ¦ STEAKS - 79c SKIM MILK - - 30c C_n fcJC BREASTS — LEGS — GIBLETS - Mrs. Steven 's Juleps 3 boxes $1 .00 J/J j Chocolate, Frosty or Party f I ¦ Half and Half for caraals and coffee! Cottage U AC FR ESH - SLICED-YOUNG M — Chi Di ¦ ¦ Cheat* p pc — Buttermilk — Low Fat J FRESH SHIPMENT MEYERS FAMOUS and Skim Milk. Jj POTATO CHIPS Lb P0RK LIVER ik 25c j j> j Pork 29c * _i Hocks Peanut CQ_% Glazed Cf OQ ^^_ *ii"i * -*H*«* .i*VM'v » Si~ i* f'n^wVwVVMVW uW* ¦V^/v^%»f\>-_*i-»>v>KJ>_»x/vr\j"v^ji>/*^^ Mi Hickory Nuts «p*»_»_r Twin Pack ^Q« -_-_-____»__-_----__-_-_-_-J_^^ Brittle 3*»«* THESE ARE CASH AND CARRY PRICES AT THE ¦ Ono Pound Red Clip ill I J_ ¦ ¦ DAIRY. DELIVERY PRICES ARE SLIGHTLY MORE. ¦ — FAMOUS SAUSAGE re-Ann Lady Fingers, pkfi. of » 35* 111 11 S Pick up your SUNDAY PAPERS h«r»l g CHEF BOY-AR-DEE TUSHNER'S llU " Constant Comment" Ten , tin of 24 bags Jl.M H Open 8 a.m. to 6 Dally Except Friday* 5 DI7T A - 8 - ASK FOR IT AT FOOD - 8 - W r l-C-LM DILICIOUS oauciout Open 8 a.m. to • p.m. Friday am VARIBTIES cYnnrr Tunftiirum iT VARIHTIBS Decker'i Thick Sliced Ranch Cf AA \\\| STORES THROUGHOUT fM.mVi > X& 5 Open 8 a.m. la 12:30 p.m. Sunday* |j Stylo Bacon. 2-Lb. Box Box ¦ ¦ 179 "*" SOUTHEASTERN MINNESOTA -8- East Fourth Phone 4425 Jj 43C ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ SI [Wabasha Winners Low Moisture *SL!\^flPipBi-iSr BPKKSS? Silage Gums Silo Inferiors Holstein Breeders MADISON, Wis.—Low mois- utre silage is still "gumming Varying Price To Meet Feb. 8 up the works" on some Wis- consin farms, but University of At St. Boniface Wisconsin agricultural engin- eers are getting closer to a so- Trends Seen ALMA, Wis. — The annual lution to this problem. meeting and banquet of the Buf- Research continues t$ seek falo County Holstein Breeders for the reason for "gumming" In Wisconsin Association will be held at the of chopping machinery used to St. Boniface School at Wau- put up low moisture silage. Le- MADISON. "Wis. - Unusual- mandee Feb. 8 at 8 p.m. Em- gumes and low moisture in the ly varied trends are shown for mons Accola is president of the silage are the biggest causes of the prices received by Wis- association. FOTJR-H WINNERS . . . These four Wabasha County gumming. These are a couple consin farmers for products Vern Olson , national fieldman 4-H'ers were trophy winners at the achievement day cere- of facts from Marshall Finner sold in December. and Norman Rasmusson , state monies at Plainview. Left to right, Robert Starz, Zumbro and his co-workers who have Potato prices were the high- secretary, will be speakers. Falls, top junior boy ; Elden Lamprecht, Plainview, top sen- been studying the problem for est for any December since re- Directors and officers who ior boy; Kathleen Gerken , Lake City, top junior girl, and the past few years. cords began while slaughter sell are : (Mis. photo) Gum from low moisture silage cow prices averaged the low- will have tickets to Linda Bremer , Lake City, top senior girl. Timm Marvin Passow and Henry- hampers operation of chopping est since 1956. according to , equipment, elevators and silo Wisconsin Statistical Reporting Hanson , Alma; J. J. Rosenow Anton Wolfe and Robert unloaders. It also seems to in- MARKET BOUND . . . Residents along La Forrne and George Tiff , both of rural Service. crease power requirements. As a whole the level of farm Schmidtknecht, Cochrane, and. | Mankato Avenue were not seeing things Wed- Rochester. Actually the three hauled the oxen Heike and Accola, Mon- Finner and his team have prices was the highest for any James i nesday morning when they saw two oxen to Winona by truck and then hitched them dovi. been testing different materials December since 1961. The in- j pulling a wagon toward Swift and Co. H. C. to the wagon and drove them into the city. dex of prices received for Wis- which may be resistant to the gum which comes from moist Schmidt, right, Rochester, was taking hogs (Daily News photo) consin farm products was 252 and calves to market. With him are Clifford percent of the 1910-14 average silage. They found out that sur- or 5 percent above December faces coated with teflon collect- 1963. But the index of prices Church Night ed less gum than steel surfac- paid by Wisconsin farmers at es. However, teflon coated sur- 310 percent of the 191M4 aver- faces don't wear as well as You Can Force age was the highest on record steel. (Teflon is the coating now common on many cooking pots -H' for December. To Begin 4 er of Week Prices received for milk av- and pans.) WABASHA, Minn. - One of Shrub Blossom eraged $3.70 a hundredweight They also found steel treated Wabasha County's top 4-H'ers in December — 17 cents more with silicone has less tendency is 17-year-old Andrea Passe. than a year ago. Milk prices County Fair to gum, but it also wears out ITie daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Passe, Wabasha, Andrea During Winter were 6 percent above Decem- A church night and a rodeo faster than regular steel. ber 1963 and the highest for the The researchers conclude the has been active in 4-H work 8& DURAND, Wis.—If you're one will be featured at the 1965 Wi- years which includes four years 't wait for springtime month since 1960. nona County Fair, Russell Rent- gumming problem is handled who can The index el prices received best by using proper practices as junior leader. —though winter is really just frow, St. Charles, president of A member of the Up and for meat animals in December the fair association said. in putting up low moisture si- beginning—you can rush the sea- Comers 4-H Club, Andrea was son a bit by force-blooming was less than 1 percent below This year's fair will be a five- lage. After testing many of the a year ago but the lowest since president one year and has been shrubs inside your home. day event beginning on July factors that might cause gum vice president of the junior lead- 1959. Hog prices averaged high- formation, they give the follow- Flowering quince, forsythia, 21, a Wednesday, and concluding ers federation. pussywillow and Thunberg spi- er than a year ago and lamb on July 25, a Sunday. ing list of recommendations: prices were the highest since She has taken awards in cloth- rea are easily forced into bloom Church night on Wednesday • Legumes will cause less ing, foods, home yard and safety 1958. But these gains were off- gum formation when mixed with in mid-winter. So are peach, set by lower steer and heifer, evening will mark the openin g PROUD 4-H'ERS . . . These two Wabasha County 4-H'ers projects and received a gold apple, pear , plum and cherry of the 1965 fair, Rentfrow said. grasses. watch at the governor's ban- slaughter cow, and calf prices. display the trophies they received at the achievement day Keep moisture content of branches, says Pepin County December prices to farmers The stock cars will race Thurs- program. Karen Rabe, Lake City, received the trophy for • quet. Home Economics Agent Judith day evening and Sunday. The the crop below 45 percent or A student at St. Felix High for eggs averaged 28 cents a her clothing project , and Cyril Schnell, Millville, received above 55 percent. Voland. dozen — down 6 percent from rodeo -will be held Saturday and School, she is a member of the the trophy for his ship project. (Lake City Graphic photo) The time of day when cut- Cuttings from most of these a year ago and the lowest for a tractor pulling contest will be • Sodality, Catholic Students 'Mis- may be made any time after held Sunday. There Is a poss i- tings are made doesn't seem to sion Crusade, student council, Ai the month since 1959. 'A Jan. I. For apples and pears, The index of prices received bility the fair will sponsor a affect gum formation. school choir and chorus, was a ii Andrea Passe ii Mrs. Winona County contest. Add a small amount of wa- Girls Stater and is a member A ?s it's best to wait a little longer for crops sold in December was Farmers Don t • ^^mrntmmmszzmzAimmix—probably until February. 11 percent above a year ago. Beyer Brothers Shows will be Buffalo Fair ter to the blower or unloader. of the National Honor Society. on the midway. Select branches which have Included in this index were the \Share in Gains, Houston County F6 many large flower buds. Cut highest December prices for Farm Bureau Unit the stems, remove bottom inch corn and oats since 1956, and I NFO Session Told July 15 to 18 To Hear Dean Monday of bark and pound the base of hay prices averaged the high- Discusses Fashions Fillmore Counly the stem ¦with a hammen to est since 1949. The price of all Are irregulars TAYLOR , Wis. (Special) - ALMA, Wis.—The president of CALEDONIA, Minn. ( Special) the Buffalo County Fair Associa- For Man in House — Sherwood O. Berg, dean of give good contact for water up- hay baled in December was Robert Reddig, Withee, Wis., take. Place stems in a warm $22.10 a ton. state NFO director, spoke to the tion, George Jackson , said the NFO Elects; the University of Minnesota In- ) CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) , (110 degrees water and allow Prices received for potatoes Worth Buying? Jackson County NFO seminar 1965 fair will be held at the , stitute of Agriculture will be — Mrs. Vernon Fruechte Hous- guest speaker at the annual to cool naturally to room tem- ln December averaged $2.34 a at Taylor High School Satur- fairgrounds at Mondovi July 15, ton County home agent, discuss- bushel — $1.11 more than a year ST. PAUL, Minn. — Is it 16, 17 and 18. Houston County Farm Bureau perature and then remain in worthwhile to buy irregular day. ed "What Every Woman Should Plan Prepared the water for 24 hours. Cover ago and the highest price for Reddig said agriculture pro- Tip Top Shows will be on the banquet at 7 p.m. Monday at the months since records be- merchandise if it seems to re- Know About Men's Fashions" PRESTON , Minn. (Special)- St. Mary's Auditorium here. top with moistened burlap or present a saving? ducers are the only major seg- midway. Crash Dick Auto Thrill at the Universal Five Farm Bu- ¦ with a plastic bag. gan in 1908. Apple prices re- Show will perform for the Sun- Vernon Michel , Harmony, was Mrs. Edna Jordalil, extension ment of the economy that have reau unit meeting here. elected president of the Fill- After that place the branch- ceived by commercial growers not shared in the continually day grandstand programs. averaged the highest for De- home management specialist at ¦ David Ernster, Caledonia , more County NFO at the organ- Lanesboro Farm Sold es in a vase of water and keep the University of Minnesota, increasing prosperity that the state runner-up in the junior cember since 1960. ization's annual meeting. LANESBORO, Minn. (Speciah them in the sunlight at 65 to says irregulars, imperfects and rest of the nation have enjoy- OSSEO VETERINARIAN division of the soil and water Leonard Vigum, Ostrander, 75 degrees. Branches forced in seconds are terms used for mer- . As a result 47 per- —Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Elstad ed he said (Special) conservation speech contest , was elected vice president; ? the dark develop very little Wabasha Co. Home chandise that falls below stand- cent of the farmers are in the OSSEO, Wis. — Dr. recently sold their 200-acre pio- O. P. Idsvoog, veterinarian who presented his speech. Sales tax , Verlis Payne, Cherry Grove, neer homestead to Gynther Flat- color. ard specifications. But she adds poverty class. The percentage of personal property tax and day- secretary ; Wayne Hoag, Scrub base of branches often Council Sets Meeting that a wise shopper can find left Osseo 2& years ago, has Har- tum, Lanesboro, who will take parity received by farmers is at purchased the business again light savings time were discuss- mony, treasurer, and Joseph possession March 1. The farm and replace water frequently. LAKE CITV, Minn. (Special) good buys in merchandise bear- the lowest level since 1939, he ed. Use a flower preservative in ing these terms if she examines from Dr. Roderick Zachary. Dr. Gildner, Preston , trustee for a is 111 years old. Mr. Elstad, 90, — The first Wabasha County said. wil] the water. home council meeting will be at it carefully. Zachary, his wife and two chil- 3-year term. continue to manage it un- "The reason for this^| that dren have moved to La Crosse FRENCHVILLE 4-H CLUB til March 1. The couple will Expect blossoms in 2 or S the home of Mrs. Arnold Peters Irregular may mean an im- , , Elected to the meat board farmers are willing to let some- where he will work with two ETTRICK Wis. (Special) — were: Vernon Michel and Rue- move into the home they pur- weeks. Wednesday afternoon. perfection in color, weave, size Newly elected officers of ¦ or knit. This imperfection may one else run their business for other veterinarians. Dr. Idsvood ben Kiehne, Harmony; Nerval chased in Lanesboro from Mrs . them ," he explained." Farmers started practicing here again Frenchville Cloverleaves 4-H Johnson , Peterson; Robert Halbert Flaby, often referred to In the Civil War , tobacco ra- FORESTRY STUDY GRANT not affect the wearing quality. club are : lone Enghagen ST. PAUL, Minn.-The School must put a price tag on their after Christmas. His family will , presi- Vagts, Granger, and John Yan- as the old B. K. Larson resi- tions were authorized for Fed- Seconds may have a mend, dent; Russell Butman, vice cf Forestry of the University of tear or run in the fabric. These products , just as labor bargains remain in Stanley until the end te. Rushford . dence. eral and Confederate troops. Minnesota has received a 5-year for fair wages. The present of the school year. Mrs. Idsvood president ; Pauline Solberg, sec- Present dairy board members need close and careful examina- is teaching home economics and retary, and Larry Peterson, 528,475 grant from the Hill Fam- tion before purchasing. marketing system is as outda- are : Loren Barnes, Chatfield; ily Foundation in support of its ted as the horse and buggy . English in the Stanley school treasurer. Judy Shoop will be Richard Rindels, Greenleafton ; forest-tree improvement pro- Supply and demand no longer system. reporter . Donald Thompson, Lanesboro; SPECIAL PRICE! gram. The studies will be made Spring Grove Class works because chain stores James Klomp, Harmony, Hal- by Cliiford Ahlgren, research as- control the price." vor Halvorson, Rushford , and sociate in the School of Fores- SPRING GROVE, Minn.-In- Lauren Applen , Granger. Onfonnfeed making af Hs best... try and resident director of the crcasing income on the small Present grain board members Quetico-Superior Wilderness Re- farm will be discussed Monday Buffalo Co. NFO are : Verlis Payne, Cherry search Center. The research will at 8 p.m. at the adult agricul- Grove ; W. W. Greenwood, Ches- be done al the School's Cloquel ture class at the high school. GILMANTON , Wis. fSpeciaH ter, Dale Schram, Ostrander; Forest Research Center and at This meeting will be a continu- — Officers will be elected at Paul Eastwold, Chester, and FEEDMHSTER! the Wilderness Research Center ation of the Jan . 4 meeting the meeting of the Buffalo mmmmMLeonard Vigun, Ostrander. »*"* on Basswood Lake. Purpose of which considered this topic and County NFO at 8:30 p.m. next By FRANK BRUESKE Two holdover trustees are MmWMMMMMMLW -m the studies is to determine the followed through an example Thursday at the Alma Bank . Daily News Farm Editor Loren Barnes, Mm^vmMMMMMl Chatfield , and Ay' ^_^_^_^_^_^_H compatability of different conif- small farm situation. Interest- Election of officers was post- Hay supplies in Minnesota , generally thought to be Milo Domink, Preston . W^m ers when grafted and the effects ed people should plan to at- fairly adequate a few weeks ago, may start running short mm&AcMMMMMM\ poned at the meeting earlier , The meat board chairman •law WaWk*MMMMmmmW-~-m., of such grafting on flower and tend even though they did not in \\\e. month because of bad says MATT IMETZ , Wabasha County agent. Some farmers said there would be an an- new mmMM. 'mMMmWM%^AAim^^. ¦ M J i MMW€iMMMMMML^MMmm\. seed production. attend thte first meeting. weather. are feeling the pinch now while others still have some hay nouncement soon of a marketing Model on hand. There will be a shortage in many counties before procedure similar to the one Bf^^^^^HMfit spring pasture time, he says. Farmers who feel they will used this past summer but on from Hil ^^^^^^ r be short on hay in the coming months should buy now aa a larger scale. This will be I L-^-fe FARM SUPPLY prices will be up as hay becomes more in demand . . . available to members and non- Farmhand* USKkMmmmV mll^^^ _-. •*HP ^fW» > What' ^M ^M ^B 339-341La Causeway Boulevard \ s happened to the pork eaters in the country ? While members. ^ mA * the consumption of beef increases yearly, pork consumption mW Wm m^k ^M W^L H^ Crosse, Wisconsin V ^ ^^ STORE has stayed about the same and in some cases has dropped. FARM SHORT COURSE V^LM LW\ 1 ^ wMm £ Pork experts are trying to solve the problem . . . WT - DISTRIBUTING 8 a.m -5 p.m. Mon -Thurs. MADISON , Wis. - More than ^^ P _\ 400 former students and their m ^^ X 107 Main St., Winone •^ 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Fridays V The cow is an amazing• creature• , says • the USDA. A dairy rkinB cow producing 11,000 pounds of milk a year cats 3,925 pounds families are expected to return ' _r FREE¦ ¦¦ ?"„ I a.m..4 p.m. Saturday C ,C * ¦» ¦» in Rear m of grain and protein feed , 47,000 pounds of hay and 3,400 to the University of Wisconsin pounds of silage. She drinks 75,045 gallons of water. She campus Tuesday for the annual pumps 10 tons of blood through her udder in a day's time Farm Short Course alumni re- to produce 40 pounds of milk. It requires from 300 to 400 union. All former Farm Short pounds of blood in the making of just one pound of milk Course students aro invited to . . . Farmers .shouldn't wait too long for the government attend , but special invitations to bail tliem out of the financial cellar. During the past 14 have been extended to the Mfik« the feed you want , th» with thrower and agitator years the federal government has had cash deficits of graduating classes of 1964, 1960, amount you want, when you paddlcn . around $50 billion. This is offset by surpluses totaling around 1955 and 1950, according to J. want it. I Jan corn, grain and • Swinging auger drop feeder hny already ore hand...grind, with adjustable , aelf-lock- COLD $15 billion for the years of 1951, 1956, 1957 and 1960. This Frank Wilkinson , director of the mn and feed two-ton load. WEATHER! Ing M l lupport to hold it at leaves a total cash deficit ot around $35 billion , which will school. Over the past 79 years, of any ration you need in any height, buy a lot of hay, even at today's going rates. more than 13,500 persons have minutes. Have time, handling, , Band-type brakes at pivot BATTERIES GET been enrolled in short courses grinding conts. points on drop feeder and DURA START ^fe ife5Ei* Valleyland Lynn•, a senior• 4-year-old • registered Guernsey on the University campus. HIDMASTU IIATUItS YOU IL 1Mb discharge auger for poai- YOU GMNG WITH POWER TO SPARE m cow owned by OLAF .1. KJOME & SONS, Spring Grove, has • Fnll 16' Hommermill, 28 tioning and protection, _^>*_f W\ completed an official test with 12,524 pounds of milk and 572 World cigarette output in 1963 hammers, low power r»- • Handy winch for easy posl- Arctic winters or Sahaia summers, was up four per cent to a total quircment. tioninfc of 10' unloading /^A^j**rAA2*ft\W__W— pounds of butter . . . MRS. MILDRED BRADY , research auger. *W—MS—)—MMl—f^Mm. of 2,466 billion pieces, the For- • Feed is angered , not blown, Dura Start Batteries art twill to start A ^ associate for the Consumers Union , a nonprofit testing or- directly from mill to mixer • Easy-changing screens, {^A ^^' ^AJ, v mgMHmtm^MMMmmMMt. eign Agriculture Service reports. any weather. Every component a ^- —__ i. ganization , said that 30,000 cars released by each of two for leaa dust, no clogging, • Hig. low , convenient con- - _~-^ wl^^B^^^^^Hmanufacturers this year had defects in steering or in rear Dura Start Battery is designed and built to stand A less power required. centrate hopper. j ^ ^UK^/M/ fMMMMmmMMr suspension which the Consumers Union experts said could W I COUPON ¦ Calibrated tank with big • Augers, mill and mixer can ' l» i op to the meanest weather. And in Dura Start you also .' \ jm' gm' _ n-' tnttfr \ \- cause the car to go out of control. ¦ ¦ chocking windows and he operated separately, J^'W- * n.nnr-n-mnn^, weight chart for accurate .O gel Ihe exclusive plus of Silver Cobalt Sealed Charge J\ ¦A ~k -k M ptional corn iheller at- //' mmmm 'J , Caledonia Champion Racers 4-H Club , MMMMMMMMMmm m mi*inK. tnchment, magnet, 2-way construction. Plates are protected to Rive 3 times » .1011N ERNSTEH ¦ 12* Vj \IJ Sfg RV ' A presented the winning essay in the state weed essay con- vertical mixing aug«r bagger. greater resistance to overcharge, No. J killer of ordi- * MSmmKOmii - ilsfmMm \A' K III **& Jl WWI » ' ' } test, says IIAHI.IK LARSON, Houston Counly extension soils nary batteries. An weraje battery has ?6 monlhs af \v JJ i ^ , , ¦—! agent. John's title was "How Wc Control Weeds on Our *" ~¦ ""''" ^ , 1 itartmR lile. If yours is this old wouldn't il pay I* V 1j . &^AAT? A^~'j A\ ' .:.., Farm." . . Ever wonder if it's cheaper to do the laundry "^HHHF DEALER ¦¦d.iUM.UU ^ shop today? Go Dura Start. \i d^7AA . :' T- '' yj at home or take it to a self-service laundry. It you do five or ^ more loads a week , it's definitely cheaper nt home the USDAk LARGE FOAM ¦ £ Compare—than arrange a demonstration on your farm. J it may be cheaper to Jj As Low A* says. If you have lens than five loads, WANTED . . . USED MIXERS IN TRADE go to the nearby self-service laundry. The final answer de- pends on transportation costs. Of course, convenience ls an PILLOW S 6-Volt... $11.40 exchange (has 2-year guarantee) important point to consider ... To get the newly born dairy S ¦ ¦ REG. AA. ¦ calf off to a good start , one of the most important manage- ¦ 12-Volt... $13.00 exchange (has 2-year guarantee) ment practices i.s to be sure the calf gels colostrum milk ™ 1,99 7«H* as soon after birth as possible. The first milk of a fresh With Coupon 5 FEITEN IMPL. CO. | | | | 113 Washington SI. Winona *VWSA/V*FREE PARKING IN THE REAR cow is loaded with antibodies that protect the calf from in- *A*VvVWV fection saya ARCHIE BROVOLD. Buffalo County agent. !h« COUPON IMI The Right Way to Milk Cows Hair Residents No New TB . MADISON, Wis. _ A Early Peace pro- They list a number of funda- to prevent infection of other her milk down. This means tort in Accidents See jpwtsfte dairyman uses good mental points for dairymen to animals. Again, this milk must that all of tbe milk will be tak- BLAER, Wis. (Special) — Found in mflking procedures and good consider: Cases be dumped. en from the cow during the Blair and area residents .have milking procedures help to • Establish proper milking • Prepare the cow for milk- mJOdng operation and it will suffered illnesses and injuries. make a progressive dairyman. order in tbe herd. Milk the ing by washing and massaghog reduce the time necessary to Glen Odegard is ill with In Dock Strike -J8g la toe opinion ol Dm Rat-heifers'first and Che oMer cows the adder and teate with warm leave the machine on the cow. bronchial pneumonia at St. Leininger Case NEW YORK (AP) - A possi- Some 60,000 men are idle and lei, dairy inspection supervisor, later. Cows with abnormal milk water and a single service pa- Attach the milking mach- Francis Hospital, La Crosse. • (AP) ble early end to the crippling estimates of the cost to the na- and Dr. A. R. Smith, veterin- should be milked last and the per towel. This step, Dr. Smith ine no longer than a minute or Thomas Nelson, Blair High MINNEAPOLIS - No tional economy range from $20 of the Wisconsin Depart- new cases of tuberculosis have Maine-to-Texasdock strike was arian, milk withheld from the mar- points out,' has a two-fold pur- a minute and a half after stim- School teacher, has been a pa- in the hands of striking New million to $67 million a day. ment of Agriculture. ket. pose. It will eliminate flecks of ulation begins. Do it gently and tient a week at Tri-County Me- been detected among persons procedures are who associated with the Joseph York longshoremen today, as However, an Associated Press Stand needed • Use the strip cup to de- dust or dirt from tbe milk sup- make sure it is positioned pro- morial Hospital Whitehall. Mor- they voted a second time on a to insure quality milk produc- termine whether the Leininger family, public health snivey indicated that tha milk is ply and the stimulation that re- perly. ris Skogstad is in a Rochester contract tfaey rejected two strike's full impact has not been tion and to protect the health normal. If any abnonnalties sults from washing oi the ud- hospital. officials said Wednesday. "of tbe herd, both men agree. • Machine strip to remove Mr. and Mrs. Leininger and weeks ago. felt in some areas. are found, milk this cow last der will cause the cow to let all of the milk. This will help Mrs. Palmer Hjelsand, Vosse Thomas W. Gleason, president Coulee, fractured a hip in a their five children, 10 to 17, are Boston reported losing S589,- eliminate the possibility of a confined in Glen Lake State San- of the AFlrCIO International reservou* of milk being left in fall in the ban, and is a pa- Longshoremen's Association, 000 weekly. Officials com- FARMERS KNOW tient at Whitehall. Mrs. Ells- itorium for treatment for tuber- mented that many industries AS the udder. Dr. Smith points out culosis. All were found to have says he has received enough worth Sweno fractured a leg petitions and telephone calls to apparently were unaffected the necessity of keeping an eye when she slipped on the ice the disease after it was discov- in- on tbe machine during the milk- assure acceptance of the pro- since they had not used up while getting into a car. ered first in an examination of ventories of raw materials sine* ing operation. Leaving the Mrs. Leininger while she was posed contract with the New Mrs. Ernest Fromm frac- York Shipping Association. the walkout began. machine on too long will cause tured a wrist in a fall while hospitalized for pneumonia. New York's loss is figured at Economist: Rapid Growth irritation of the internal tis- assisting with cleaning in a Persons who But even if his prediction $1.2 million a day. sues of the adder and may set home. Linda Sweno 17, a junior knew members The Gulf Coast walkout has up areas of infection.) , of the family have been stream- proves correct, contract dis- re- at Blair High School, injured putes in other ports could pro- more than quadrupled the im- • After milking is over, her right thumb in a car door ing into the Hennepin County port of bananas at Tampa, Fla., move the machine gently. This Chest Clinic for Mantoux (tuber- long the 11-day walkout that has Not Answer for Sunday. Linda lost considerable idled 343 ships on the East where dock workers are unaf- Everybody can be done by shutting off the culin) skin tests. blood and was taken to a doc- Coast. fected since they are under a . WINDOM, Minn. — Rapid stimulated? Bryant distinguish- said, such as in tax reduction. vacuum and inserting a thumb tor. ' Many others had X-rays taken separate contract. Most of tha economic growth can create ed between real gross national Or federal spending can be in- between the teat cup and the Miss Beverly Rude, Minne- Monday and Tuesday at the fruit was diverted from New a climate for attacking social product (GNP) and capacity to creased. teat of one unit allowing au- apolis, received a deep cut in Christmas Seal mobile unit Orleans. and economic problems, but it produce marketable goods and to enter. Again, care in remov- the knee and her fiance, William while it was in Richfield where Independence estimate However, Bryant said, in- the Leiningers home is located. Philadelphia officials does not itself provide all the services. creasing capicity to produce is ing the machine is a necessity. Schlink, Osseo, Minn., cuts and Creamery Sales their area is losing $500,000 to solutions GNP is what a nation actual- something else. Such an in- • After the machine is re- a bump on the head when their $700,000 daily. Agricultural economist W. K. ly produces, which Bryant said crease is possible only if sonde moved, disinfect each of the car hit a tree in the Everett Bryant? from the University of can be increased in a number or all of these things happen: teats with a mild sanitizing so- Hanson yard here Saturday at Near $600,000 Minnesota pointed out here to- of rather well-known ways — 12:30 a.m. They were en route Caledonia Bank • Quantity of productive re- lution. INDEPENDENCE, Wis. (Spe- day that the economic growth as long as the economy is oper- sources is increased; • The teat cup cluster should to the home of her parents, cial) — Sales at Independence of the last two decades has ating below capacity. be rinsed in warm water be- Mr. and Mrs. Rolf Rude, rural Mother, Five • Quality of resources is im- Cooperative Creamery during not done much for the coal min- For example, high unemploy- tween each cow and also sani- Blair, to spend the weekend Boosts Surplus 1964 totaled $596,614, it was re- er and his family in West Vir- ment rates of recent years proved; and make plans for their mar- tized. CALEDONIA, Minn. :Special) vealed at tbe co-op's annual ginia or Kentucky. show that we have not been • Productive potential of re- riage next month. They were meeting Tuesday. sources is increased. Both men suggest using more released from Tri-County —The surplus of the Caledonia producing what we could have than two milking units per man Me- Sales from dairy products and Children Die "A RAPID RATE of national produced Bryant said. Such sit- Bryant pointed to estimates morial Hospital, Whitehall, State Bank was increased $50,- economic growth can complete- may result in machines staying income from interest totaled uations could be corrected sev- by other economists that in- Tuesday. 000 at the annual meeting of sales ly by-pass an' industry or a on the animals too long, caus- stockholders, thereby increasing $556,942 while warehouse eral ways. creases in quantity and quality totaled $39 ,942. Net savings dur- region, be said. of inputs has been responsible ing damage to udders. the lending limits of the insti- "Agriculture is one industry "THROUGH monetary policy If the above procedures are ing the year totaled $8,729. In N.Y. Fire for 68 percent of the growth Daley Elected tution to $30,000, according to T. All skim milk and buttermilk out of adjustment. But unless we can increase the money sup- followed, a safe fast job of E. Jaeb, vice president. MINETTO. N.Y. (AP) - A ¦ from 1929 to 1957. The rest - was marketed to A. G- Coopera- there are jobs in another in- ply, ease credit and lower in- 32 percent — came from in- milking can be done. It also The bank has total resources mother and five of her 18 chil- dustry, the adjustment problem terest rates in order to stimu- Credit Unit Head tive, Arcadia, and to South creasing productivity. means good clean milk and bet- of $4,166,448.37. Capital stock is Alma dren died Wednesday night in in agriculture is harder to late spending and a greater ef- LEWISTON, Minn. Alma Cheese Factory, Bryant said that real GNP — ter herd health. — George $75,000; surplus, $125,000; undi- Center, Wis. flames that destroyed their two- solve," he continued. "Econo- fective demand by business, P. Daley, Lewiston, was elect- vided profits and reserves, story frame home. mic growth may provide these individuals, and state and local what we have produced — and Improvements during the our capacity to produce need ed chairman of the Farm Cred- $134,908.91, and deposits, $3,818,- past year included installation The father led the other five jobs.'^ governments." it Board of St. Paul at its or- 205.18. children to safety. How can economic growth be Fiscal policy can be used, he not be the same, and rarely of a new stainless steel coil and are. In recessions, the economy 2 Conservation ganization meeting during last Officers are: V. A. Jaeb, pres- new platform butter truck , a Firemen said the victims does not produce up to capa- week,. ident; A. S. and T. E. Jaeb, vice new boiler feed pump and a were Valeta Petrie, 35; and th* Wisconsin Replaces city, and during inflation, people The seven members of the presidents, and W. T. Schiltz, new bulk truck. children, Susan, 8; Barbara, 4; demand more goods and serv- Awards Offered board Daley heads also serve cashier. Other directors are George Sylla was elected di- Bryan, 1; James, 6, and Gary, 50 Root River Farm, Home Week ices than the economy can sup- as the board of directors of the Henry Frank, Miles Marnach rector for a three-year term IS. Tbe bodies of the children ply. LEWISTON, Mmn.—Two spe- Federal Land Bank, the Feder- and Theodore Ranzenberger. to succeed John C. Walek. were recovered. With Week's Forum cial awards for outstanding con- al Intermediate Credit Bank and Officers elected at the direc- Tnnls Petrie, about 44, was CAPACITY is more difficult servation effects are being of- Farmers Ask to measure, and the commonly the Bank for Cooperatives, all of tors meeting: Edward Baeck- hospitalized with smoke inhala- ALMA, Wis. — The University fered this year to Winona Coun- St. Paul. These three banks had Rotarians Hear er, president ; La Vern Pam- tion, burns and shock suffered , of Wisconsin College of Agricul- used measure of economic ty youths and farmers, county growth is real GNP, according a total of $738 million in loans puch, vice president; Peter firemen said, when he tried to ture will sponsor a Wisconsin agent Oliver Strand says. outstanding to farmers and From Jaycees Maule, treasurer; Oscar Bett- rescue his wife and the five chil- Help of SWCD to Bryant. And, of course, from Farmers are eligible for the industry and public affair for- longtime changes in real GNP, farmers' cooperatives Dec. 31, hauser, secretary-manager and dren from the home, about sev- CALEDONIA, Minn. - Fifty um at the Madison campus Mon- Farmer-Sportsman Award and 1964. On Anniversary Ephraim Slaby, LaVern Grul- farmers have requested assist- one infers changes in capacity. en miles south of Oswego in day through Friday. youth for the Frank Blair Jun- kowski and Sylla, directors. central New York state. ance for constructing ponds, de- Bryant added that figures on The Winona Rotary Club ob- The university is conducting ior Conservation Achievement He had tried to re-enter tha tention dams and gully control change in GNP can be mis- Award. State winners will re- served the anniversary of the this event in place of tie tra- leading, since it measures only house after leading to safety structures, said Harold Dineen, ceive plaques and trips to the Dairy Unit Junior Chamber of Commerce Tri-Co-unty Officers Root River SWCD work unit ditional Farm and Home Week the real values of goods and Randy, 12; Nancy, 7; Rodney 3; Northwest Sports Show, April 2- by listening to a program set- To Attend Conclave Roger, 9, and David Stevenson, conservationist. program. services which are actually Holds Election ting forth the goals of the Jay- bought and sold April 11, in Minneapolis. Strand RUSl J'ORD, Minn. - Tri- 17, a son of Mrs. Petrie's by a The 50 requests are in various Each year th« conference will . ARCADIA, Wis. (Special;) — cees at its meeting at the Hotel Thus, in a non-market econ- urged conservationists and County Electric Cooperative will previous marriage. ¦tages of completion. Assistance focus attention on one subject. sportsmen to enter , worthy can- Two committeemen and seven Winona Wednesday noon. omy, GNP would be zero; when John Breitlow send six of its directors to Mi- Oswego County sheriff's depu- has been asked for 17 ponds, 11 This year water and its use didates in the competition. delegates were elected at the , panel leader, ties said a space heater appar- which are ready for construc- will receive the greatest atten- a person does gardening at introduced its members Gary ami Beach, Fla., to participate home, or when the wife does Strand explained the two District 6 annual meeting of the ently touched off the fire. tion and 5 which are surveyed. tion in the program. In addi- American Dairy Association Nelson, Kenneth Nelson ahd in the 23rd annual meeting of the laundry, goods are being awards: .Farmer - Sportsman Jerry Papenfuss, the National Rural Electric Twenty-three gully structures tion other items to be includ- or held at the Arcadia Lutheran who in turn produced but they do not enter Award—Any interested group told Jaycee objectives Cooperative Association Sunday have been requested; 18 are de- ed during the week are pro- individual may make a nom- Church here, Tuesday. , its his- President of Russia the market and thus may not tory in Winona and today's through Thursday. signed and ready for construc- grams on poultry, music work- be counted in real GNP. ination for the award. The Elected to three-year terms as tion, 2 surveyed and 3 to be sur- shops, florist programs, live- goals . They will be among the 8,000 Sends Congratulations But as soon as you hire these award is based on tbe nomin- committeemen are : Edwin veyed. Seven detention dams stock production, crop produc- With a membership of 10C, a rural electric memtxrs that are (AP) services done, you add to meas- ee's reputation as a successful Schaffner, Fountain City, produ- budget of MOSCOW - Soviet are designed and ready to build tion, what's new in dairying, ho- $15,000 annually, and expected to attend the meeting President Anastas I. Mikoyan ured GNP. Therefore, much of farmer; leadership; wildlife, cer representative, and Lyle a goal of making Winona a and 3 surveyed. tel-motel resort institute plus Stair, Osseo, Co-op Creamery, from nearly every state in the and Premier Alexei N. Kosygin A farm pond is mainly to pro- the rapid change in GNP shown conservation and forestry prac- more attractive place for young country. many other sectional programs. by developing nations often is tices; soil conservation activi- Osseo, industry representative. cabled congratulations today to vide water for livestock and men, the Jaycees in its 31 Attending the meeting from President Johnson. Free copies of the complete largely a transfer to a market- ties and good land use; farm Delegates elected for one year years has a record of high at- should be a distance from farm ing system. the Tri-County Electric Coopera- Tass, the Soviet news agency, buildings. program are available at the practices; and community ac- terms are: Arnold G. Hanson, tainment here, according to the Osseo, Carlet Miller, West Sa- tive will be George F. Mathis, said the message read: "Es- A gully control structure is county extension office at Al- tivities. The latter includes work panel. Winona; Glenn Churchill, Spring lem, Gerhardt Nilsestuen, Ar- teemed Mr. President, please primarily to stop a gully from ma. with youth, sportsmen organiza- Valley; John F. Papenfuss, Da- ¦ tions and farm groups. cadia, and Donald Schmitt, accept our congratulations and cutting back into a field or any kota; Arnold Schroeder, Lanes- best wishes on the occasion of place where it will do damage. New Tomato Nominations for the award Fountain City, producer repre- Osseo Pupils boro; Erling Burtness, Caledon- county exten- sentatives ; Arlan H. Lee, Hol- Get your official inauguration aa In some places a diversion can Trempealeau County are due in the ia; Arnold Onstad, Spring President of the United States of office by Feb. 20. The coun- men Co-op, Union Center, and be used to stop a gully. NFO Re-elects sion Free Toothpaste Grove; and Manager Earl L. America." Detention dams are construct- Plant Available ty winner will receive a special Philip A. Thomas, Black River Johnson, Rushford. ed to reduce damage below Skroch President certificate and will compete for Falls, industry representatives. OSSEO, Wis. (Special ) - The meeting will center on ST. PAUL, Minn. — Irradia- regional and state honors. Donald E. Stanford, Preston Co- Teachers are hoping that better them. This would be damage by tion has played an important the theme "Rural Electrifica- floodwater or silt. INDEPENDENCE. Wis. (Spe- A winner and "runner-up" op Creamery, Blair, is an al- dental habits and better teeth tion—Today and Tomorrow." part in the development of a will be selected in each of the ternate. will result from a teaching unit Anyone wanting a pond or cial ) — Emil P. Skroch has been new early ripening Topics ranging from the future structure this year should con- tomato var- four regions. One of these will Officers of District 6 are Al- on dentak health in grades 4-6 • NEW, LOW-COST re-elected president of the iety being introduced by the currently being taught in Osseo of water and power resource tact the SCS office soon so a Trempealeau County NFO. Nor- be named Minnesota's top vin Kamroth, Tomah, chair- development to rural poverty survey can be made this win- University of Minnesota this Farmer-Sportsman and will be man; Edwin Schaffner, Foun- Community Schools. A commer- vel Bortel was elected vice spring. cial producer has provided programs and tbe need for con- ter. Also ASCS will cost share president; Aloysie Halama , sec- honored at the Northwest Sports tain City, vice-chairman, and the DARI-KOOL Named Early Fireball, the toothpaste but the school doesn't sumer action on a broad front on these practices and you retary, and Henry Sygulla, Show, April 11, in Minneapolis. Lyle Stair, Osseo, secretary- will be discussed during the five- should sign up with them for new tomato resulted from a will receive treasurer. endorse any particular brand ; 1 treasurer. mutation or genetic change He and his wife day meeting. this. an all-expense week-end vaca- State board members are Har- it only endorses good dental 'CHAMPION Jon C. Bautch, Ed Przybilla, caused by irradiation treatment , health. Leonard Robinson, Charles tion to attend the event. rison Storandt, West Salem, ¦ SEEDLING APPLICATIONS • FITS SMALL MMHOUSES according to T. M. Currence , and Becker and Ed Potzner were professor of horticulture Frank Blair Award—All 4-H, producer representative, LEWISTON, Minn,—Area resi- Some Applications , re- Parker Hagg, Arcadia industry named to the dairy bargaining sponsible for development of the FFA and other youth who have Eyotan Chairman dents interested in ordering For Price Support hoard and Aloysie Halama, Ro- new variety. done an outstanding sportsman- representative. seedling trees from the State man Giemza, Emil Skroch, Nor- Parent of the new variety is conservation job are eligible. EYOTA, Minn. (Special)-An Conservation Department should Needed by Feb. 1 blanks and further infor- AFS AT WHITEHALL Eyota woman says Oliver vel Bortel and Wilbert Selke Fireball, widely accepted gen- Entry (Special) , Mrs. Ray do so at once, mation are available from eith- WHITEHALL, Wis. Schnell, is Olmsted County Strand Winona County agent. LEWISTON, Minn. - Dead- were named to the meat bar- erally as an early standard var- —James Olson, Whitehall High , line for applying for price sup- gaining board. iety since it was er the county extension office chairman of the crippled chil- Persons interested in obtaining introduced School principal , has announced dren' port for wheat, flax , barley, An educational seminar on about 10 years ago. or your local high school voca- s appeal which will start trees should contact the exten- department. members of the local chapter Sunday. Contributions will be oats and soybeans is Feb. 1, bargaining in agriculture will be Work on the new tomato be- tional agriculture of the American Field Service. sion office here or the local for- Independence High used to maintain and expand ester, Robert Schulz. says the Winona County ASCS held at gan in 1957 at the university, They are: President, Keil ¦ office. School Saturday at 12:30 p.m. services for the physically hand- when several thousand seeds Blank ; member for homes, Mrs. icapped, support Camp Cour- Tsetse flies frequent wooded from one Fireball plant were Young Farmers Lester Brennom ; member for age, and for rehabilitation and places, often along rivers where irradiated with thermo-neu- finance , Len Ellison; school ad- sheltered employment. people and animals go for wa- trons. Plants were grown from Class to Begin viser, Olson; American abroad ter. TED MAIER DRUG'S these treated seeds and from coordinator, Mrs. Lyle Pavek ; PRESIDENT RE-ELECTED untreated seeds of the At Whitehall Hiqh student representative, Rodney FASTEST MILK COOLING - same HARMONY (Special) plant , Currence explains. Everson ; secretary, Mrs. Thur- , Minn. 33* ice-water cools faster and WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) — Itoderick Wolstad , owner of From the plant population man Fremstad ; publicity , Mrs. § ANNUAL § I better than any other method ol —A series of 10 night classes for Robert Gauger; projects , Carl Harmony Feed and Fuel Co. , ¦ grown , seed was saved of the young farmers will begin Mon- "FROZEN MOWN) SPK1W I cooling milk. first-to-ripen fruit. The same Nordhagen, and members, Mrs. was re-elected president of the day at 8 p.m. at the vocational Everett Guse , Lester Brennon, Norlhwest Retail Feed Associa- ' ' 1 procedure was followed for ag classroom at Whitehall High ACCURATE BUTTERFAT PAY- COUNTRYS% W-m- m^uAn-'' three additional years. In the William Dahl and Mri. Willie tion at its annual meeting at . School under the direction of _ fourth year the heist selection— Johnson. Minneapolis. MENT With fast ice-watee Glen C. Olson. ' Ctfinmc k now known as Early Fireball- A special demonstration by a cooling there s no chtirned otl JkS produced an early yigd of 2.6 specialist will be held on elec- fro zen milk to lower the butter- ¦ ¦ FREEALL-PURPOSE ¦ ) pounds per plant ( compared tric motors Feb. 1 and Feb. 8. ¦ SOCKET WW HOI ¦ fat test and cost you money * with 1.7 pounds from the best All former agriculture stu- ¦ «t 3JT. STEPLADOEt ¦ -^asgfesg? line planted from untreated dents are invited. Lunch will be Happy Families EMERGENCY MILK COOLING seeds. served each evening. PRODUCT NEWS OP INTEREST TO FARMERS ¦ I ^ m — The large reserve ice-bank The red, slightly ridged fruit m _^SS_-S*^^^^^.^mlSSSfW._w^ M _H l^_ra_M_r ^ _V^_b _H provides valuable protection foe of Early Fireball Is slightly i ¦ _H tBPyrW at JJl _¦ larger than that of Fireball . Woof, Lamb Subsidy Ifflfar £_H?*V H your milk during power or com- pressor failures. Since foliage ia sparse, the ; H On tool tat RO H NEWl Applications Due cewnllcu* typ-i I fruits are exposed and tend to ^M at iS^Wj r I _H i&SSfe j m^a a^ttpaaatil al ^^BB ^mwM sunscald in hot, sunny weather LEWISTON, Minn. - Produ- . mmfaa SELL M0BE Plants are self-pruning and cers who sold wool and/or un- m^^an^^^v , a^a^^am ^t wmta m m^^m fS|l__Jlr ' "'7 small. Because of early fruit- shorn lambs in 1964 are re- ing, they tend to wither and January 31 is the M vout CHOICI H die minded that Wirt your onto far ama JO-tol. ) < ^ 1 ^B vJ in late summer. final date for making applica- ¦ atom at tw» 15-gol. *un» ai M uiiiiBiMI'lE ^ If you are interested in grow- tion for incentive payments un- WM Mun ing this new variety this year, der the National Wool Act. Sales ^ss & ^ check with your local garden records must be submitted with You stop Mastitis fast and sell milk sooner with Mcdifuran storo. this application. V MOTOR Oil OK W • USE OUR NEWPURCHASE PLAH from Hess & Claifc. Milks out clean in only 48 hours, Con- More information on Early ^ i HYDRAULIC Oil _^ • NO DOWN PAYMENT that kills bacteria which Fireball is given in Miscellane- taitiK funiltadonc. the now drug MI ELECTION OHM* MOW Kit IMMKHAH 0« • 4 YEARS IO PAY cause most mastitis. Especially effective against •'staph" ous Report 58, "Early Fireball," J HARMONY , Minn. (Special) fUTUM M1IVMY WITH type mastitis. Buy Mcdifuran and sell more milk . Carton available from Bulletin Room. Mict ntoracnoN (5.1). Institute of Agriculture, — Rodney Tcrbeest was elected Univer- Mer- Ed's Refrigeration sity of Minnesota, St. Paul. president of the Scotland ryworkers 4-H Club . Lindn READ F. A. KRAUSE GO. The Communist government Schlmmlng was elected vice ; & Dairy Supply Ted Maier Drugs " Briraiy Acr«V Eatt at has changed tho name of the president ; Diane Serfling, sec- 555 East 4»h St. ANIMAL HEALTH CENTEft am nil trading town of Palllng- retary ; Jancen Klomp, treasur- DAILY NEWS ADS ! Winona, Hwy. H-U Winona ' PKona 5533 3rd * lafayoti* mtao in Inner Mongolia to er; Jeffrey Milne, reporter and • Phone 5155 TuerhhnnmnominRanlicnhochi. Charlene Terbet-fit. non leader. REDMEN MEET LAKELAND, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - MILWAUKEE St. Mary s Begins 2-Game 'Oiling Tr ip It's not hard to compare league games to come. ing touch of ineligibility. height disadvantage. sin-Milwaukee, the Redmen Mike Maloney at guards. dotted "They're big," purred will meet a team St. Mary's two upcoming The Redmen have been Squad practices are that has Jim Buffo, regarded by UM idle since a 75-62 victory with empty spots. Wiltgen. "They go 6-8, 6-11 gone with a full-court zone coach as his best sixth man can, road games to an oil over St. John's Jan. 11. The "We haven't had a full and 6-4 across the front and press and then dropped into ever, rounds out the list of for Coach Ken Wiltgen ex- reason for the lapse is se- squad out all week," stated 6-2 and 6-1 at the guards. a man-to-man. predominant playables. pects the contests to set up mester examination period the coach. "The first time I know they've lost a couple. "That will be a real fine we will have them all to- St. Norbert (a 69-58 Red- test," smiled the coach. Following the trip, St. his team for the MIAC run at the school. Mary's will return home to ahead. With depth a problem for gether is tonight." men victim) beat them." Wiltgen will not break up The two contests should What about the zone, when the combination that has host Gustavus Adolphus "We're bound to be St. Mary's this year, you ' Monday night at 8 p.m. rusty ," said the coach. "I can imagine a coach's con- present interesting con- most MIAC schools prefer given the Hilltoppers their just don't know how much.' cern while his charges flirt strasts in the game of bas- man-to-man? fastest start in his 11-year "They will be tough!" At any rate, it is hoped with ineligibility . ketball for Wiltgen's crew, "It really doesn't make tenure. Wiltgen emphasized. the clashes with Lakeland "I don 't think we have 11-2 on the season and 4-1 in any difference. I'd just as That wil send George "They're 5-1 and blowing College at Sheboygan, Wis., anyone to worry about this the conference. soon see a man-to-man, but Hoder to the circle for the them over one at a time." tonigJit and at the Univer- year," said Wiltgen. "I sure Lakeland is expected to we'll probably see a couple center jumps, put - George But for now, the task sity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee hope we don 't." confront the Redmen with zones in the conference, Valaika and Roger Pytlew- stands at shaking off the Friday night serve as lubri- Exams cause more head- the task of combatting a too.'* ski at forwards and hot- cobwebs of an U-day period cating fluid for the tough aches than just the linger- zone defense as well as a In University of Wiscon- shooting Jerry Sauser and of inactivity. Can Lima End St Felix Indian Sign ? By ROLLIE WUSSOW Does this indicate a favorable ent would have to worry when "I'm hoping that it will be cent of the school's male popu- Harmony ((5-0) is at Lanes- edge for the Yellowjackets? your eyes catch the 6-6 over- a different story this year ," lation on the cage team. There boro (3-2) in the Maple Leaf Daily News Sports Writer Not so. implies St. Felix all mark. But the Redmen says Father Kaiser. "I think are 40 boys in the school—19 circuit, Whitehall (4-3) is at Wabasha St. Felix and Li- coach Duke Loretz, who last have dropped three of those the boys will be up for the are on the basketball team. Alma Center (5-2) in the ma Sacred Heart put their week saw his charges stomp six games by two points, the game. When we play on their Loretz will go with Gene Wo- Dairyland, and Goodhue (4-0) unbeaten Bi-State Conference Hokah St. Peter 111-54 to set most recent one Tuesday 65- floor, it's usually disastrous, dele and Doug Kennebeck at is at Elgin (3-1) in the Cen- records on the line Friday a school scoring mark. 63 to Gilmanton, and one by but we have hopes for better the guards, Tom Foley and tennial Conference. night at Wabasha when the "They're big," says Duke three points. things Friday. Bill Glomski at forwards and In other games, the Wiscon- two teams clash in an 8 p.m. emphatically. "We're going to "Those small-margin losses "We've been trying to get Mike Cichanowski at center. sin area's three top-ranked game. have to do an even better job are the type that should have the good shot in our past Glomski is the leading point- prep teams aren't expected to Currently Lima, which is on the boards to beat 'em this made them mature in a hur- games," states the coach. getter on the team, averaging find much trouble in confer- located near Durand, Wis., time. ry," says Loretz, "this is an- "Therefore, we've only been an even 20 per game. Wodele ence opponents this weekend sports a 5-0 record, while St. "This has got to be the big other reason why we have to averaging 40-42 shots a game. and Kennebeck sport 15-point —but there is always the pos- Felix is 4-0. Overall, the one!" says Loretz. "We've worry." But our percentage is good. per game averages. sibility of an upset. Redmen are 6-6, while the still got a pair of games with Lima coach the Rev. Leon- It's near 80 percent.." In another top game Friday, Holmen, rated No. 1 in Yellowjackets are 7-5. Luther (Onalaska) so we have ard Kaiser remembers well Father Kaiser has the Spring Grove travels to Pe- many polls and holding a 10-0 St. Felix is the defending to worry about them too, but that his club has yet to win unique (some coaches wouldn' terson in the Root River Con- record, plays at Melrose, win- conference champion and has this is the big one!" on the St. Felix floor and on- unique (some coaches ference. Although the game less in seven Coulee games; won five of six games from Looking over Lima s record, ly owns one "win in six games wouldn't call it unique) fea- doesn't have immediate bear- Eleva-Strum, 9-1 in all games Lima in the past three years. you wouldn't think an oppon- over the Yellowjackets. ture of having nearly 50 per- ing on the conference out- and 7-0 in the Dairyland, plays WEST AND BAYLOR TEAM ... Los Angeles' Jerry come, it will give the fans a at Cochrane-Fountain City, West (44) uses teammate Elgin Baylor (22^ as a blocker treat in the aspect that two 1-6 in the loop ; and Alma, as the Laker star drives in for one of his 16 held goala of the state's most potent which also owns a 10-0 rec- scorers, 89-pIus- against the New York Knicks at Los Angeles Wednesday Mel Homuth of ord as well as an ( ) Spring Grove and Murton pOint scoring average, trav- night. West wheels around the screening Baylor top , los- Boyum of Peterson, will clash els to Pepin, 0-4 in the West ing his guard, Tom Gola (6) as he drives toward the basket Will Homuth, Boyum head on. Central. Los Angeles won 119-103. IN BASKETBALL TONIGHT ) «We£ M A i<,v *t?.' .'A'W$lyw^k I ¦ ¦ ( ¦' ' J__WiP^'' fif ' Wrong-Way Jim To Lead Vikings I PORTS Jim Marshall is 26 years 255-pound Carl Eller, 6-3 MI weighs 235 pounds and 220-pound Jerry Reichow or WE CALLED ATTENTION Tuesday to the fact that St. old, Mary's would pay tribute to Joe Hutton at the new Terrace stands 6-3. He is regarded 6-2 240-pound Grady Alder- man. heights athletic complex Feb. 20. as one the National Foot- Hutton, ball League's greatest de- The backcourt corps will as you know, is retiring at the be beaded by pleasant Vi- end of the present fensive ends. season. But if Jim Marshall didn't king fullback (pleasant if Now there is word of a possible successor happen to be a great f oot- you don't happen to be a to the 34-year veteran. Austin Coach Oscar ball player , chances are you Viking opponent, that is) Haddorff , who took the head coaching job would know the name any- Bill Brown, the bowlegged when Ove Berven stepped down last summer, way. rambler from Illinois. was interviewed Saturday by Piper officials. Marshall is remembered Joining Brown, a 5-11 221- Haddorff is a Hemline graduate. Also men- for various things such as pound 1965 Pro-Bowl choice , tioned has been the name ot Kerwin Engel- parach u t e will be 6-2 249-pound Larry hart, like Haddorff a Hamline grad and ju ra p i n g, Bowie, 5-10 Impound Kart present coach of the Rochester John Mar- selling wom- Kassulke and 6-0 200-pound SelU shall Rockets. en's wigs, Ed Sharockman. • al m woun ding Winter Carnival officials WHILE ON THE SUBJECT of Austin coaches, Dick Seitz. himself with report the gymnasium floor popular baseball mentor and basketball assistant, is a strong a pistol — has been tested and will prospect for the Lincoln High School job at Bloomington. and running stand the strain. Word has it that Seitz can have the head baseball and the wrong One other thing is cer> assistant basketball job if he desires. way, his tain. The last time Marshall Willard Critchfield, popular city kegler gr e a t e s t went the wrong way it cost and Seitz' father-in-law , reports that Dick , single e n- the Vikings two points. The d e a vor to penalty will be the same to- although he is considering the offer, bas Marshall reached no decision as far as he knows. put himself night. in the public eye. "He is pretty well set up at Austin, " The same rollicking Min- Advertisement mentions Willard. "There are many things to nesota Viking funster will consider." STRATEGY SESSION . . . Coach Dave Moracco (seated) Schoening, Barry Arenz, Bob Haeussinger, Leonard Dienger, be in town this evening FAT discusses plans with his team for the Winona High wrestling Pete Erickson, Bill Roth, when the Professional Foot- QUOTE • • • Paul Erickson and Larry Pomeroy. OF THE WEEK: From Tom team's coming meet with defending state champion Man- (Daily News Sports Photo) ball All-Stars — all 2,088 OVERWEIGHT Koeck, Austin Herald sports editor : "Nothing Avallabla? to you without a doctor'* pre- kato at Mankato Friday. From left, the grapplers are : Gary pounds of them — tackle the scription, me ODRINEX plan. You mutt has happened lo change our mind that Roches- Galloping Gophers in a Win- lose ugly tat or your money back. Ona ter will win the Big Nine Conference title. Critchfield ter Carnival bask e t b a 11 of the bailc problem] of losing weight Rockets over game at the Senior High Is your Inability to stick to a planned The 75-74 squeaker against Faribault put the LAW OF AVERAGES POINTS TO GOPHER ROUT diet. Tha ODRINEX plan contains a tiny the hill. The only team left on their schedule who will give School Auditorium at 8 tablet and Is easily swallowed. When tliem trouble is Winona." p.m. The contest is a Car- you taka ODRINEX, you simply don't nival button event. have tha urge for extra portion* because The rematch of the two rivals will take place at the ODRINEX depresses your appetite and Senior High Auditorium here Feb. 10. Marshall, who endeared decreases your desire for food thus himself to many fans and making It easier and more comfortable • • • brightened days for many for you to diet. Your weight must come WHILE MANKATO'S 63-«0 VICTORY at St. Clond State was Kundla*. 'Might Say We re down because as your own doctor will Due y cruising 60 yards less, you weigh shocking to say the least, Huskie Coach Marlowe (Red) Sever- others b tell you, wtitn you eat MINNEAPOLIS (AP ) - "You the 1956-57 season when the Go- 25 at less. Get rid of excess fat and live longer. son now views the end of the 41-game home conference win Ohio State doesn't have a Lu- personnel," assistant Gopher the wrong way Oct. might say," Minnesota basket- phers beat the Buckeyes 76-69 cas or a Bradds around this San Francisco, will be the Of course ODRINEX can't do all tttm weric in disguise. Coach Dan Spika warns. "They tor you alone. But If you really want to streak as a blessing ball Coach John Kundla said in Williams Arena here. season, and the Bucks have lost backbone of the front-line "Maybe losing the long home floor win streak wasn't too haven't started to click so far , cut down on your eating, and lose weight Wednesday, "that we're due." Kundla has coached the Go- their first two Big Ten games. but they can be a spoiler when for the Viking stars. ODR INEX can be a powerful helper, The bad after all," he mused. "It added extra pressure to the Kundla was talking about Sat- phers since 1959-60. ODRINEX plan costs $3.00 and Is sold Last year, they tied with Michi- they do." If Marshall can't contain on Mils guarantee: if not satisfied for players and everyone was coming in here set on breaking it." ' urday s game in Williams Are- Most of the losses have come gan for the championship. the 1964 Gopher footballers any reason lust return the package to But bad news to future Huskie foes — Winona at St. Cloud na with the Ohio State Buckeyes. at the expense of Buckeye teams Top Buckeye stars this year your druggist and get your full money The year before that, they are 6-feet-l playmaker Dick by himself , he can expect oack . No questions asked. The ODRINEX Saturday night — were Severson's words: "I think we're bound The law of averages point to boasting Jerry Lucas and Gary -i.-i \- -^>rl <"ith Ih l4 ouarantpe by: Ricketts and 6-4 sophomore for- help from the likes of 6-5 ' to be in any game we play from here on with our defense and a Gopher rout. Bradds. however , and there are tied with Indiana. From 1960 Brown Drug Store — W W. TMrtf St.— through 1962, ward Ron Sepic. 275-pound Jim Prestel, 6-5 Mail Orders Filled rebounding." But Kundla can be excused if a lot of coaches in the same the Buckeyes won he's suspicious of the law of av- spot as Kundla. three straight conference titles If Severson was worried about Saturday's loss, Monday 's outright. 34-52 victory at Moorhead should have eased the tension. erages. This could be the year the Go- Minnesota has lost 11 straight phers break the drought. At That's what Kundla has had • • • basketball games to Ohio State, least they'll be favored to turn to contend with. THE SWAMI COUNTED on 18 of 20 Tuesday night to run dating back to the last game of the trick Saturday night. "They still have some fine his total to 30O of 410 for .732. With handicaps the numbers Exclusively on KWNO are 254 of 410 f or .620. Now for the weekend: WINONA HIGH over Mankato by .t. "It will be tough , but the Hawks know they have to keep moving now . " Van Hoof in Baab s Registers ST. MAKY'S over Lakeland by 11 . "The host school will be humiliated . " BASKETBALL! , ST. MARY'S over University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee by 6. Knockout of "The press will be troublesome, but Ken's 1097 for Fi fth Q boys will he equal to the task . " Baab's Standard of the West- bel Smith and Suzanne Schnei- "FOLLOW THE COTTER over Mondovi by 8. "The Ram- gate Men's League , Wednesday der's 181 paced Pin Dusters to SR blers have to be up after Saturday. ' Rochester Foe night shook up the most stable 491. fl Felix by 5. "The top ten department. RED MEN'S CLUB: Class A COTTER over St. Ram- ROCHESTER , Minn. - If BOUNCING blers want revenge. " The group rolled into fifth —Ray Thrune speared 236—577 BALL" Golden Gloves boxing coach place in team game with 1,097 as Winona Milk posted 2,834. J&k (» WINONA HIGH over Mounds View by 11. Jim Mullen is wearing a smile "This could turn into a real rout. " and then continued on to 3,- Winona Boxcraft leveled 1 ,007. today, you can't blame him. 006. Leading the pack was Jim AT 12 3-OH RADIO fl St. Cloud over WINONA STATE by 13. The coach watched his ace Wk Weimerskirch with 173-215-224 "After being beaten by Mankato at home, middleweight , Tom Van Hoof , -«12. Gary Baab racked 225— the Huskies arc liable to be hostile." return to form with a second- # ST. by 595 errorless for tbe group. FOR COMPLETE |K v^sv MARY'S over Gustavus 5. "This round knockout in action at the Bill Ward came up with the | | ^ k *=* could be tough . " Mayo Civic Auditorium here league series high with 222-216- Basketball Rochester over Northfield by 14; Owatonna over Albert Wednesday night. 184-622 for O'Laughlin Plumb- BASKETBA LL COVERAGE W Lea by 3; Faribault over Red Wing by 4; Kenyon over St. , ing. Tom Riska turned 589 er- m^^_W VAN HOOF cut with a hod Scores ; Charles by 7; Lake City over Stewartville by 3, Zumbrota Injury for two weeks, decked rorless and Jim O'Laughlin 555 ! over Plainview by 2; Kasson-Mantorville over Cannon Falls Joel Nack of Rochester in 1:59 errorless. WISCONSIN COLLEGES In the Commercial League at St. Norbert fl, Michigan Tech II . ALL THRU THE SEASON. by 4; Claremont over Byro n hy 7; West Concord over Wana- of the second round. Norm P.rk 37, Carthagt 5J. Pete Marr push- Wil £MWL mingo by 5; Hayfield over Pine Island by 9; Dodge Center In a wild welterweight bout Hal-Rod Lanes, Mlnncioti-Dulutri 71, Superior It, ed over 637 for Schlitz Beer COLLEGES Arnie May, who fights for Win- BAST over Dover-Eyota by 6; Peterson over Spring Grove by 4; while Ed Kauphusman of Wino- Houston over Rushford by 6; Caledonia over Mabel by 3; ona but hails from La Crosse, Rhode Island (7, Northiasttrn 77. dropped opponent Vic Hall of na Rug Cleaning was sweeping Amherst 45, Middlebury M. Goodhue over Elgin by 2; Mazeppa over Faribault Deaf by 5; 's 605 paced Vermont tt, Norwich 77. Rochester twice in the second 243. Jim Boynton SOUTH Wabasha over Randolph by 8; Gilmanton over Taylor by 11; Florida Stata 7], Georgia Tech ti. round and went down once him- Sunshine Cafe to 2 ,803 and Fairchild over Arkansaw by 4; Alma over Pepin by 22; Sam's Direct Service kicked MIDWEST self before winning a decision. Kaniai Stata 71, Kaniai tl . High vs. Mankato Harmony over Lanesboro by 2; Preston over Wykoff by 5; ' over 1 .020. Evtntvllla 11, Southern Illinois 10. Winona | Winona s Mark Biesanz Dayton tt, Chattanooga to. it (Si' 1M A Chatfield over Spring Valley by 7; Eleva-Strum over Cochrane- scored a technical knockout Len ore Klagge paced the ¦ Fountain City by 14; Independence over Blair by 9; Alma over Jim King of Faribault in women with 525 In the Sun- Center over Whitehall by 7; Augusta over Osseo by 6; St 1:41 of the second round in setters League nt Westgate Sports Scores . Dianne Felix over Lima Sacred Heart by 5; Onalaska Luther over their welterweight go and Tim for Goltz Pharmacy. NBA Caledonia Loretto by 13; Rollingstone Maloney lost a decision to Bill Hardtke blazed a near top-ten WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS Holy Trinity over Hokah score with 225 to lead Mankato Cincinnati 10], Detroit It. St. Peter by 8; Holmen over Melrose by 26; Onalaska over Wagner of Caledonia in a light- Boilon 131, Baltlmora 10J. weight bout. Bar to 924—2,640. She built the Lot Angeln lit. Naw York 10* Mindoro by 4; West Snlem over Trempealeau by 4; Gale- 225 into 521. Anita Orzechowski TODAY'S OAMB Ettrick over Bangor IN THE MAIN event , Roches- San franclico at Philadelphia. by 1; Dodge Center over Kasson-Mantor- spilled 512, Cnrolce Stenzel 510 FRIDAY'S GAMES Winona High vs. Moundsview ville by 3; Austin over Minneapolis Washburn by 4; Northfield ter's Rusty Clark won a light- and Helen Selke 510. Detroit vi. Philadelphia at Boilon. /!^Sfcy ^M|W heavyweight decision over Gary San Franclaco at Boiton. over Windom by 2; Limn Sacred Heart over Caledonia by 18. Larry Donahue with 518 and New York at Loi Angelaa, Elzen of Faribault. Arlene Kessler wilh 189—510 Baltlmora at SI. Louli. Other action found Elba's paced Golden Brand to 896-2,- NHL Roger Hildebrand decisionlng WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS Cotter High vs. St. Felix Rams Linebacker 548 ih the Mixers League at Montreal I, Toronto 1. ^W^ K Don Bisagna of Rochester in a Westgate. \B Will Play Tarzan Si. Mary's Runs middleweight bout. WINONA AC: Ace — Don of Dlatreat Arising from HOLLYWOOD (AP) - A new Werner shoved Hamernik's Bar Symptom* Tarzan soon will be swinging to 1,010-2 ,889 with his 218. B ill Mark to 8-2 Winona FFA Chuchna scored 574 for Jerry 's STOMACH ULCERS through tho prop man's jungle. HUE TO He is Mike Henry, 6-foot-3, 227- St, Mary's Grade School de- Tops Wa basha Plumbers. EXCESS ACID jk pound feated Vikings 70-35 In a return MaJoretUt — Marie Ellison of QUICK RELIEF OR HO COST Mon., Jan. 25 , linebacker for the Los WABASHA , Minn. — Forced 176-465 f^ Syr Angeles Rams. game to run ita record to 8-2. Sloppy Joes waxed f Neltnn, Featherstone and Con- to fifjht off a Wnbnsha FFA while Ed Phillips was piling 905 s vs. Gustavus Adolphus Producer Sy Weintraub an- in the final half , Winona St. Mary' LJlMp way led St. Mary 's scorers rally -2,435. ?¦ Oraf ftve million paefcafte ol tha nounced Tuesday the selection Winona 7:4S with Hughes and Schollmeier High's FFA team finally beat IIAI^ROD LANES: RfUII - WILL** . TIHATJtMNT Iumbaaaeotd of Henry for the next screen the home team 52-51 on a free l<* relief ot symptoms ot dtatnea ariain f trom high for Vikings. Dick Schoonover of Mahlke and Btaewaah endOieaaleaiaHWaan duatoaU- Tarzan, fhe 14th since the throw by Jim Girtler with Ifi AI Smith of Behrens divided in- tmaaltt»*—P—>rOlaV tlttim,%mmt)arUpaat popular series of films began ln Leagu« : "I don't think the other seconds left. dividual honors with 212 and •taenaeh, Qaailwaae, lleaat»w »i, U**(~ laeattaea, •*«•. due to huae Aclal. Aik tot 1918. players In the league will kid Winona led 29-12 at halftime. 557. Lang's Bar hit 1 ,001 and "WttlattTs Mw«aa»" which Mly aiplaina Snid Henry, former Southern me about playing Tarzan; Dave Belter scored 27 for Wi- Bub 's 2,775 . Mm homa l«e l ment—tree—at California star and a seven-year they 're too busy playing foot- nona, Lee Harold 12. Gerald Twilight — Rain Drops col - GOLTZ PHARMACY veteran of the National Football ball." Giem got 22 for Wabasha. lected 938 behind 300 from Ma- KWNO Lake City Slates 1 P. M. New York WINONA MARKETS »-¦¦¦¦ ~— Wesley Shows Junior Pin Jamboree Worsley Gets Stock Prices Swift It Company Stocks Decline Buying hours ara from I t.m. to 4 LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) AU'd Ch 54^4 fnt'l Ppr 33V4 p.m. Monday through Friday, — A Junior Jamboree will be Als Chal 22% Jns k L 70% Thtra will ba no calf market, during Knight Rally This Week s Amrada 85 ttia wlntar months on Friday*. held at The Bowl here Feb. 13. Kn'ct 96% Thasa quotations apply as to noon Handiness by The event will be sponsored by Back at Least Am Cn 44% Lrld 44% today. As Trading the Men's and Women's City As- Am M&F 18V< Mp Hon 62% All livestock arriving aftsr closing tlma j Basketball Am Mt mill bt property cared tor, weighed ana Topples Tech, sociations and prizes and tro- 14% Mn MM 59% priced tha following morning. phies in different age brackets AT&T 67% Mn & Ont 35% HOOS THURSDAY Top butctiafs, 190-230 ...... 15.60-16.00 Scoring 30 will be awarded. The older Share of Job Am Tb 34% Mn P&L 55V4 Pace Slackens LOCAL SCMOOLS- Top aowa 13.10-13.50 St. Mary's at Lakeland. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS children will bowl three games By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Anda 57% Mn Chm 85% CATTlf. NEW YORK (AP)-The stock Arch Dn 35 Mon Dak Tha cattla markal: Steers and htlfsrs and the younger children two — steady to weak; cowa itaady to strong. irregularly Duluth Romps FRIDAY Big 6-foot-ll Walt Wesley of About 15 months ago an in- Armc St 65% market declined games. Mn Wd 38% High cholca 22.50 LOCAL SCHOOLS— early this afternoon as .trading By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mankato at Winona Hlgtt, »:J» "B" Kansas probably will receive jured Gump Worsley lost his job Armour 46% Nt Dy 89 Top beat cows 12.75 The men's City Association Canners and cutters 11.50-down squad game. as Montreal Avco CP 22% N Am Av 51% slackened. St Norbert rallied in the sec- St. Mary's at University ef Wiscon- much consideration when All- tournament will be held March goalie to Charlie VEAL Beth Stl Tha veal market Is steady. ond half to avoid a road jinx, sin-Milwaukee. America voting time arrives ia 13, 14, 20 and 21. The Women's Hodge. After five days, Worsley 37% Nr N Gs 60% Losses of key stocks went Cotter af Mondovi. Bng Air 65% Top cholca 17.00 but Carthage and Superior were Nor Pac 50% Good and choice 8.00-11.00 from fractions to a point as BIO NINE— ollege basketball next month. City Association finished their has won back possibly more Brswk 8% No defeated in out-of-state ventures Northfield af Roehesfer. tournament Sunday. The an- St Pw 39% Commercial and boners .. ».00-down profits were taken on the mar- Wednesday night in the only ac- Owatonna at Albert Lea. He showed his qualifications than half a share of it. Ctr Tr 41% Nw Air 67% Faribault af Sad Wing. nual single tournament will be Froedtert Malt Corporation tion involving Wisconsin college by scoring 30 points against Ch MSPP 29% Nw Bk — ket's sustained rise to new HIAWATHA VALLEY— held on February 20, 21, 27 and The Canadiens recorded their Hours: a a.m. to 4 p.m.; closed Satur- basketball teams. St. Charles at Kenyan. C&NW 57% Penney 67 days. Submit sampls before loading. highs which stalled Wednesday. Lake City at Stewartville. Kansas State Wednesday night 28. third straight triumph 21 over St Norbert's Green Knights Chrysler 58% Pepsi 63% (New crop barley) The trend was lower among Plainview at Zumbrota. although the Jayhawks were ¦ Toronto Wednesday ni Ne. 1 barley 11.11 Tech Cannon Falls at KassotvMantorvllle. ght, all of Ct Svc 79% PhU Pet 56% handed hapless Michigan the victories having No. 2 barley 1.05 steels, rubbers, aerospace WASIOJA— beaten by the Wildcats 71-63. come with Cm Ed 55 Plsby No. 3 barley 95 its 10th straight defeat 93-81 at Byron at Claremont. 80^ electronics, nonferrous Worsley in the net. The decision No. 4 barley 16 stocks, Mich., Carthage was Waniminge at West Concord. Roy Smith, almost as tall as Cn Cl 54% Plrd 189 Houghton, enabled firstplace Montreal tc metals, chemicals, electrical edged 57-55 by North Park in a Hayfield at Pine Island. Wesley at 6-10, threw in 25 Rochester Man Cn Can 50% Pr Oil 58% Dodge Center at Dover-Eyota. maintain its two-point margin Winona Egg Market equipments, oils, airlines and Conference of Illinois ROOT RIVER- points, his career high, Cnt Oil 77% RCA 32V4 College to lead over Chicago in the National Thasa quotations apply as of drugs. game at Chicago, while Super- Sprlng drove al Peterson, Kansas State back into conten- Cntl D 56% Rd Owl — 10:30 a.m. today Houston at Rushford. Hockey League. Grade A ((umbo) 13 ior was belted 78-56 in a non- Mabel at Caledonia. tion for the Big Eight crown. Deere 47% Rp Stl 43% Utilities were ahead on bal- Wins Singles in The Black Hawks trounced Grade A (large) II league meeting at the Univer- CENTENNIAL— A crowd of 12,000 turned out Douglas 31% Rex Drug 30% Grade A (medium) 16 ance, as were cigarette atocks Goodr.ua at Elgin. Boston 71 in the other game. Grade B .16 sity of Minnesota-Duluth. Maieppj at Faribault Deif. for the game at Manhattan, Dow Chm 77% Rey Tob 40% but these gains were irregular. The Canadiens acquired Wor- Grade C , 10 Michigan Tech took a 44-41 Randolph af Wabasha. Kan. It topped the slim national du Pont 246% Sears Roe 128% Building materials and mail or- WEST CENTRAL- sley in 1963 after he had halftime lead, but then faded be- Jaycee Tourney spent EastKod 146% Shell Oil 59% Bay State Milling Company der-retails were mixed. '• Taylor at Gilmanton. program, cut to a minimum by 10 seasons with the New York fore St. Norbert's hot shooting. Fairchild at Arkansaw. midyear exams. LEWISTON, Minn. (SpeciaD- Ford Mot 54%Sinclair 57% No. 1 northern spring v*eat .... 1.72 Many analysts said a "rest Rangers. He started the 1963-64 No. 2 northern spring wheat .... 1.70 The Knights connected on 54 Alma af Pepin. Florida State scored its ninth Gen Elec 97 Socony 92% period" for the market was In MAPLE LEAF- John Cordes of Rochester and season for Montreal but was No. 3 northern spring wheat 1.66 percent of their floor attempts Harmony at Lanesbore. straight home-court victory de- Paul Tart and Jerry Narveson Gen Fds 82% Sp Rand 13% No. 4 northern spring wheat .... 1.62 order following a string of 11 hurt in the eighth game. When No. 1 hard winter wheat 1.62 in boosting their record to 10- Wykoff at Preston. feating Georgia Tech 72-65. Oth- Gen Mills 53 St Brnds — sessions prior to Wednesday Spring Valley at Chilfiald. of Chatfield were the big win- he recovered, he was sent to No. 2 hard winter wheat .: 1.60 4. Dave Minten paced St. Nor- Gen Mot 98 St Oil No. 3 hard winter wheat 1.56 when more stocks rose than DAIRYLAND— er home-outt triumphs were ners in the regional Jaycees Quebec of the American League Cal 74% bert with 27 points, three more Eleva-Strum al Cochrane-Fountain registered by Dayton and Rhode bowling tournament held at Cly- Gen Tel 37% St Oil Ind 43% No. 4 hard winter wheat 1 52 fell. s Larry Launch. City. while Hodge guarded the net Gillette 31% No. 1 rye 1.16 The Associated Press averaga than Tech' Blair al Independence. Island. Mar Bowl here Sunday. regularly. St Oil NJ 89% No. 2 rye 1.14 Minnesota-Duluth stormed to Whitehall at Alma Center. Goodrich 58% Swft & Co 58% of 60 stocks at noon was oEf .9 a 39-25 halftime lead in posting Augusta at Osseo. Dayton downed Chattanooga Cordes took the singles com- But Worsley was recalled to Goodyear 47% Texaco 86% at 333.5 with industrials off 1.5, BI-STATE— petition with 667. In second Montreal last Saturday so its ninth victory in 13 starts. Lima Sacred Heart at St. Felix. 96-80 and Rhode Island took Gould Bat 38% Texas Ins 95% LIVESTOCK rails off .1 and utilities up .«. Mike Patterson and Gary Rich- Onalaska Luther at Caledonia Loretto. Northeastern 87-77 behind Den- place was Allyn Tewes of Lew- Hodge could receive a rest. In GtNo Ry 58% Un Pac 43% Some silver mining stocks Rollingstone Holy Trinity at Hokah iston with 619 and Winona three games, Worsley has al- ards paced UMD with 19 and 17 St. Petert nis McGovern's 38 points. Henry 's Gryhnd 25% U S Rub 66 SOUTH JT. PAUL were easy following a prediction COULEE— Dave Dreas was third with lowed five goals, and the Cana- SOUTH ST. PAUL, Minn. W-(USDA) points, respectively. Superior, Finkel tallied 36 points for Day- Gulf Oil 59% U S Rub 53% —Cattle 4,200; calves 1,400; slaughter that the United States will have Holmen at Melrose. 605. diens have moved from two which has a 4-6 over-all record , Onalaska at Mindoro. ton . Homestk 50y8 Westg El 41% steers and heifers mostly steady; occa- to adopt non-silver coins ulti- points behind the Black Hawks sional spots of strength ; cows steady to was led by Jeff Youngquist with West Salem at Trempealeau. None of the Top Ten teams in Tart and Narveson scored IB Mach 440 Wlworth 27% mately. Gale-Ettrick at Bangor. to two points in front. trong; bulls steady; vealers very un- The Associated Press poll saw Int Harv 80% Yg S & T 45% even, $1 and S3 higher ; slaughter calves 13 points. NON-CONFERENCE— 1,207 to best Plainview's J. Jnst two days ago, Montreal Dorand at Elmwood. action, but the unbeaten Evans- Green and L. Boyd by four strong; feeders scarce ; cholca 950-1,250 IBM lost 3, Xerox more than Coach Toe blake said he would Ib slaughter steers 2275-23.25; good 19.50- a point. SATURDAY ville Aces, the No. 1 small-col- pins for the doubles title. PRODUCE 22.25; choice heifers 22.00-32.50; good Hudson Ranks Fifth ege team, won their 14th platoon Hodge and Worsley the 18.50-21.25; utility and commercial cows U.S. Steel was off nearly a LOCAL SCHOOLS— Teams from Winona, Roches- remainder of the season. But if NEW YORK (AP ) - (USDA) 12.5H3.50; canner and cutter 10.00-12.50; I straight by edging Southern Illi- point. Other major steelmakers In Big Ten Scoring Winona High vs. M OV HII View, Uni- ter, Plainview, Chatfield, Spring — Wholesale egg offerings am- utility and commercial bulls 16.50-17.50; versity ol Minnesota preliminary. nois 81-80. The Aces won in the Worsley continues his torrid cutter 13.50-16.00; choice vealers 30.0O- lost fractions. Winona State at St. Claud Stata ple to more than ample. De- CHICAGO (AP)—Minnesota's . last six seconds on a layup ly Grove and Lewiston competed. play, he may do better than an 36.00; some cholca 37.00-38.00; good 24.00 The Dow Jones industrial av- Wabasha St. Felix at Cottar, St. mand generally quiet today. to 29.00; choice slaughter calves 16.0O- Lou Hudson ranks fifth in scor- Stan' s, «:1S preliminary. The placings: even split. erage at noon was off 4.01 at Larry Humes, who scored 38 (Wholesale selling prices 31.00; good 14.00-17.00/ no feeders to ing among Big Ten basketball NON-CONFERENCE— points. quota. 891.30. Dodge Center at Kasun-Mantorvilli. Singles based on exchange and other Hogs 8,000; fairly active; barrows and players, statistics for this week Minneapolis Washburn at Austin. Prices were generally higher 1. John Comes, Rochester tt7 M5 gilts mostly steady; sows and feeder Wlndont al Northfield. K-State switched from a zone volume sales). show. 2. Allyn Taws, Lewiston 41* 30 pigs steady; U.S. 1-2 190-330 Ib barrows in active trading on the Ameri- Hudson is averaging 20.5 SUNDAY to an aggressive man-to- man ]. Dave Dreas, Winona t05 U New York spot quotations fol- and gilts 16.75-17.00; 340-360 lbs 16.00- can Stock Exchange. BI-STATE— 4. Dave Whiting, Rochester SW low: 16.25; medium 1-2 160-180 Ib 14.50-15.75; points a game to trail Dave defense in overcoming Kansas * Haynes Goes Corporate bonds were mixed. Sacred Heart at Caledonia Loretta. 5. Jim Larson, Chatfield in s Mixed colors: Standards 26- U.S. 1-3 370-300 Ib sows 13.75-14.35; 30O- Schellhase of Purdue, 30.9; Caz- and Wesley. The Wildcats went t. D. Kjome, Spring Grove 5*3 5 400 Ib 13.00-14.00; 3-3 400-500 lbs 12.75- U.S. government bonds were zie Russell of Michigan, 27,0; MONDAY ahead for good at 30-29 late in 7. Dick Beniiet, plainview in s 27% ; checks 21 %-23. 13.25; choice 120-160 Ib feeder pigs 14 .00- mostlv unchanged. I. Herb Peter, Winona 577 S Whites : Extra fancy heavy 14.50. Skip Thoren of Illinois, 21.2; and LOCAL SCHOOLS— the first half on one of Smith's Doubles Sheep 1.500; active; all classes steady; Gustavus at St. Mary's, a p.m. weight (47 lbs min ) 29-31; choice and prime 80-110 Ib wooled slaugh- Chris Pervali of Iowa, 21.1. baskets. 1. Paul Tart and Jerry To AFL Chiefs ROCHESTER 20TH ter larnbj 22.5023 ») 115 lb 22.50; 113 Narveson fancy medium (41 lbs average) Ron Malmen's 23 points paced , Chatfield 1,107 ISO Ib 23.25; 113-114 lbs 32.00; 130-121 lbs DODGE CITY, Kan. (AP ) - 1. J. Green and L. Boyd, 25-26%; fancy heavy weight (47 31.50; good and choice 70-85 lbs 21.SO- EXPENSIVE PLAN Florida State in the game at Plainview 1, Two Minnesota junior colleges Baseball Funnyman, 103 JS 33.00; utility and good slaughter ewes SHEBOYGAN (/^-Milwaukee J. Harold Wadewifz and lbs min) 27%-29%; medium (40 are ranked in the top 20 this Tallahasee. The Seminoles held ) 6.507.50; choice and fancy 60-80 Ib County Board Chairman Eugene Allyn Tews, Lewiston MM II lbs average 25-26; smalls (36 feeder lambs 32.50-23.50; good and cholca Nick Altrock, Dead Jim Caldwell, Georgia Tech's 6- 4. Bob Sim and John Cordes, For Top Punter Week in the National Junior Col- ) 50-60 lbs 20.0OM.00. Grobschmidt says he believes 10 star, to six points. Rochester MM 1« lbs average 23%-24%; peewees lege Athletic Association's bas- the Braves can be prevented WASHINGTON (AP) - Nick KANSAS CITY (AP) - Swift, (31 lbs average) 19%-20%. CHICAGO ketball poll. Willmar, with an from moving to Atlanta if at Altrock , one of baseball's most tricky Abner Haynes — who Browns : Extra fancy heav? CHICAGO 1* —(USOAl— Hogs 7,000,- 11-1 record , is 17th and Roches- famous funnyman, is dead at 88. thought he had proved to the weight (47 lbs min) 30-32; fan- butchers steady to 25 cents lower; 1-1 least 10 wealthy businessmen in 190-223 Ib butchers 17.25-17.75; mixed 1-3 ter, which stands 10-2, is 20th. Wisconsin put a number of the Altrock died Wednesday night Kansas City Chiefs that the day cy medium (41 lbs average) 27- 190230 lbs 16.5017.25; 2-3 24O-370 lbs 16.50 club's players on their payrolls after a lengthy illness. He had of the 190-pound running back 28; fancy heavy weight (47 lbs lo 16.75; 1-3 400-500 Ib tows 13.25-14.25; (First Pub. Ttiursday, Jan. 7, 1?«) isn't over — was traded to Den- min) 28-29%; smalls (36 lbs av- 2-3 500-600 lbs 12.5013.25. State of Minnesota ) ss. at $30,000 a year. suffered a stroke IVz years ago. ' WESTGATE MEN FOUR-CITY Cattle 800; hardly enough steers and County ol Winona ) In Probale Court Westgate Poinls Hal-Rod Points ver Wednesday for linebacker erage) (31 hellers for a market test; couple lens 1 25-26; peewees lbs No. 15,969 DENNIS THE MENACE Winona Cleaners IS Girtler . Oil M Jim Fraser. average) 19%-20%. high good and cholca slaughter steers In Ra Estata ef Freddie's Bar 14 Bell's Bar 21 1,0001,100 lbs 23.25-23. 75 ; good 20.50 Augusta Wolpers, also known as O'Laughlin Plumbers tl Old Style Lager HV, Haynes, the first big name in Butter offerings increased. De- 23.00; utility and commercial cowa 11,50 Augusta L. Wolpers and Augusta L Cove Bar 12 Winona Truck Service 11 the American Football League, mand improved slightly. 13.50; cutter to commercial bulls 14.O0- Louise Wolpers, Oecedint. Maxwell House 12 Lang's Bar n 18.00. Order for Hearing on Petition for Probata Wunderlich Insurance 12 Christensen Drugs 20 was named the AFL's Come- Wholesale prices on bulk car- Sheep 500; wooled slaughter iambs ef Will, Lim iting Time ta File Claims Golden Brand Foods Baab's Standard ll'i 20 back of the Year last fall by the tons (fresh). steady to strong; cholca and prime 85- and lor Hearing Thereon. Mike s Fine Foods 17 105 lt> wooled slaughter lambs 23.25-23.7S; Federated Mutual 11 ' DeLlnnah E. Valewicke having filed a Burmeister Oil Associated Press. After a bad Creamery, 93 score (AA ) 58%- cull to good wooled slaughter ewes 5.50- Golden Food it lsi-i petition for the probate of the Will of Central Maters (A) 6.50. Ruppert's Grocery IB n season in 1963 — the club's first 59 cents; 92 score 58%-58%; said decedent and for the appointment of F. A. Krause 10 Koehler Auto Body 9 (B) The Merchants National Bank ol Winona Humble Oil Co j in Kansas City — Haynes came 90 score 58-58%. (First Pub. Thursday, Jan. 7, 1965) Matzke Block «',i as Administrator with Will Annexed, Albrechfs 7 WINONA CLASSIC back with 713 vards and a 5.2 Cheese steady. Prices un- State of Minnesot a ) ss. Athletic Club W. L. which Will is on file In this Courl end Winona Abstract 4 County ot Winona ) In Probata Court Hamm's Beer . i 3 average, plus 'Several long runs. changed. open fo Inspection; Erickson's 4 File No. 15.706 Golden Frog Supper Club .. t 3 It's no secret, however, the IT IS ORDERED, That tha hearing Swede's Bar 4 In Re Estate el COMMERCIAL Hot Fish Shop t j CHICAGO (AP ) - (USDA) - thereof be had on February 4lh, 1945, Chiefs still regarded his 190- Charles E. Steffas, Decedent. Hal-Rod W. L. Bub's Beer 3 t at 11:30 o'clock A.M., before this Court Potatoes arrivals 66; on track , Order for Hearing cn Final Account Sunshine Cafe 22 5 Ed Buck't Camara Shop 3 t pound size a drawback in an era in fhe probata court room In the court and Petition for Distribution. Springer Signs 17 10 Emil's Minswear .3 t of 225-pound backs and 245- 196 ; total U.S. shipments 535; house In Winona, Minnesota, snd that Winona Rug Cleaning It 11 LADIES CITY The representative ot the above named obiections to Ihe allowance ol said Will, old — supplies moderate: de- estate having filed his final account If any, be filed before said time of Bub's Pilsen 1* 11 Hal-Rod W. I. pound linebackers. More impor- mand slow : market dull to and petition lor settlement and allowance Sam's Direct Service 15 12 Buck's camera Shop l< I , they needed linebacking hearing; that the time within whlcti tant thereof and for distribution to the per- Orv 's Skelly 14 11 Sammy's 19 I after E. J. Holub's knee opera- slightly weaker; carlot track creditors ot said decedent may file Pappy's 12 13 Linahan's le 9 sales : Maine katahdins 5.10-5.15; sons thereunto entitled ; their claims be limited to four months Toye - Kramer Plumbing .. 11 lt Coiy Corner lt 11 tion . Kansas City received an IT IS ORDERED, That tha hearing trom the dale hereof, and lhat tha Cities Service 11 It Mankato Bar 14 13 undisclosed amount of cash in Minnesota North Dakota Red thereof be had on February 4th , 1945, claims so filed be heard on May 7lh, Schliti Beer . . 11 tt Golden Frog u 14 River Valley round reds 6.15- at 11:00 o'clock A.M., b efore this Court 1945, at II.M o'clock A.M., before this Spelli Texaco 10 17 Pcot s 13 14 the trade. in the probate court room In the court Court In the probale court room In the McNally Builders I il Togs 'n' Toys 13 14 Fraser. 6-3 and 236, is an ex- 6.25. house In Winona. Minnesota, and that court house Jn Wlnorta . Minnesota, and WESTGATE MIXERS Poianc Trucking 11 lt notice hereof be given by publication of thet notice hereof be given by publica- Reddl-Kilowatt 10 17 cellent linebacker and out- CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago this order In tha Winona Daily News tion of this order In the Winona Dally Westgate W. L. Homa Furniture . ..-, ? II standing punter. He has led the and by mailed notice as provided by News and by mailed notice ss provided Deluxe Beauty Shop 10 1 Haddad's 7 10 Mercantile Exchange — Butter I SM. by Inw. Golden Brand * 3 HIAWATHA AFL in punting two straight steady; wholesale buying prices Dated January i, 1965. Dated January 5, 1965. United Building Center ... t 4 Westgate Points years, and set an AFL record of unchanged ; 93 score AA 57%; 92 E. D. LIBERA, E. D . LIBERA, Goldwlnners 5 t House of Hellemans 13 's a four-year veteran Probata Judge. Probsta Judge. Marigold Dairies 5 7 KAGE 14 46.1. He A 57% ; 90 B 55%; 89 C 55; cars ( Probale Court Seal) (Probale Court Seal) Millstreamers 5 7 Kulak B rothers Wa from Wisconsin and 28 years Golaoerg & Torgerson, Goldberg & Torgerjon, Merchants Bank 5 7 90 B 56Vi; 89 C 56. Tri-County Electric 11 Attorneys tor Petitioner. Attorneys (or Petitioner. Von Rohr Drug J t Midland I old. Eggs irregular: wholesale A cm Smiffy 's Bar 7 Haynes , 27, a North Texas buying prices unchanged to % (First Pub. Thuriday, January M, 1965 1 Athletic Club W. L Norm's Electric tVi Hamernik's Bar 7 ! Spelts Implements s State graduate, said in Dallas lower; 70 per cent or better Winona Heating Co t 1 WENONAH he was delighted about the grade A whites 25; mixed 24% ; CALL FOR BIDS Schmidt's 1 3 Westgate W. L. trade. He said "I think it will be Jerry's Plumbers 4 i Breitlow t 3 mediums 23% ; standards 24; For the Sale ond Removal of Buildings in Merchants Dank 1 » Studio Girl 4 2 better for me and for Kansas dirties unquoted ; checks 19. Winona Vets Cab 1 I Lucky Five 3 1 City." Connection With the Improvement of RETAIL Pin Pals J J ^MMBMM ^iMMMMBMMMMMMMMMMW Hal Roa W. L. Points Flintstones J 3 Trunk Highway No. 90, Located in Behrens 21 i It Alley Capers 2 4 GRAIN '10OK.FOR THB LAST TIME : IQW BUy BUGS!" Federal Cakes H 11 31 Old Style 2 4 MINNEAPOLIS (API-Wheat Dakota , Minnesota i Bar 14 131j ll'i Lang' Blue Tuesday . 11 receipts Wed. 98; year ago l.p. 1510 (ffl = l»l) »01 •«»-»< - Winona County St Clalrs 13'i 13!i 18' a WORKING OIRLS IB There Was This 133; trading basis 1 lower; price Sealed bids will b« received up to 3:30 o'clock P.M. on January 31, IMS, bv Main Tavern II 13 Westgate W. L. BIG GEORGE Bub's H 14 '» Gutter Ousters 3 1 1 lower; cash spring wheat Stephen T . Quigley, Commissioner ot Administration, lor the Stnte ot Minnesota. WAS Hopto 13'i I3>t 17'i KtS Gall 4 2 al »>e office of tha Division of Lands and Right ot Way, of the stale Highway Mahlke DoNuti ll' i 11 lt'i Bowlarettes 4 1 basis, No 1 dark northern 11 to Department, Room 3J1, State Hlohway Building, St . Paul 1, Minnesota, Inr tha Dorn's IGA 13' j \Vh lt'i Hl-Pockels 1 3 Horse, See, and 17 protein;!.75%-1.82% ¦ale nnd removal ol the following listed buildings, all dimensions belno approximate: Sportsman ' s Tap . 12 IJ 1t Leaguetfes 3 3 Neg. Type of Building Location 16 No 1 hard Montana winter BTF 13 13 Bell Chimes 2 4 32(1) A 3-story frame house, aonrox. 56' x26' with »> !7>V Femke Body Sftop » ll'i SwabOle s 7 4 1.68-%-1.76%. porches approx. 30'x8' and U' x8' Dakota, Minnesota MAJORETTE Sweet Sixteen. 1 i Minn. - S.D. No 1 hard winter 3213) A frame and concrete barrt approx. 34' x5«' ...... Dakotn, Minnesota Athletic Club W. L. NATIONAL They Goofed Ed Phillips 4 3 Weslgafa Points l.fi7%-1.73%. 32(3) A chicken housa approx. l6>.Yx4' and a Super Saver 3 a Louise's 13'i LONDON (AP) - Many bet- No 1 hard amber durum, chicken coop approx. 14' xET , Dnkotn, Minnesota Sloppy Joel 3 a Cosy Corner 11 where bookie 32(4) A stone hog housa approx . 13'x30' Dnkotn, Minnesota 4 5 Kelly 's 13"i tors in England , choice 1.73-1.75; discounts, am- Winona Industries l/) and a milk 4 5 Skelly tO' i shops nre legal , collected Tues- 22(5) A corn crib approx. 7 ' xl6' Warnken ' s ber :i-5; durum 7-10. house approx. 10' xlO' .. Onknm, Mlnnejota Pleasant Valley 3 t Klinger. 10 day on a horse who finished CLASS "A" Short y's 10 Corn No 2 yellow 1.20%-1.21%. Bids will be opened and read publicly at the time nnd place above irxclll«f. Hi-Way Pure 5 Red Men W. L. third , was announced as fourth , Oats No 2 white 61%-68%; No A description of such buildings to ba LIMITATION OF MOVEMENT OI> Morken s 4 Dunn' s Blacktop 4 3 ' 14- sold and removed, together with specif Ice- BUILDINGS FROM HIOHWAY S 4 TUESDAY NIGHT but actually was last in a 3 white 58%-65%; No 2 heavy Winona Milk Co No lions and bid forms, may be obtained RIOHt(--Ofi yVAY ¦ ¦¦ Red Men W. L. horse field. white fifi^-69%; 3 heavy -^ Kalmei Tires * ' at the State Highway Department, Di- . .,., ^Jf . , _ , .. . Wlnnna Boncratt Co 3 t Mahlke' s Bakery 7 1 1- An b,nldlng *when o.ded, that Golti Pharmacy . t 3 The mixup happened in the white 64%-67%. vision of Land, and Right of Way, Roo m / TWI LIGHT <">" ,,l «' vial dlmanslons or Braves . . . . 3 t Upall Barley, cars 78; yenr ago 521 . State Highway Building, St . Paul I. "° f^"?, , '" ILI-Rod W. L. last race at Warwick. ui i axle weight will not require e trampor- Apaches . . 27 ,ion ¦ Strikeftfj i « Night , a 50- 1 hazard , finished 112; good to choice J .08-1.36; Bld security In lha form of a certified '» <">"" » '¦ P"»P«llve bidders or LUCKY LADIES bu l0 Queen Pins 4 ° low to intermediate 1.01 - 1.32; check , cashier, check, or money order. *"» «" 1 ««?'""" '" "«- 3 1 Hal-Rod W. L. third , but jockey F. Morris v n« po»lblllly of movement on Pin Duvterl Fountain City 3 e to the full amount of all bids ol lass " '*• " "'" 4 2 feed 94-1.00. d » 0,her ,h n highway*. J. Rain Drops Seven-Up 2 1 failed to weigh in. This automat- than lllly dollars ItSDM), to Ihe amount ;°" . " u"^ 3 3 Th» l u ,0 Gutter Gals Clark Clark 2 1 Rye No 2 1.12%-1.1B%. of fifty dollar. (IJO.OO) on all bids from " an" ° ve"?"x 'A"* T"" 3 * ically disqualified Upall Night , 0», buildings from Ihe, hlohway Trl Jets 1 Standard Lumber Co 2 1 llftV dollars <»iO.CX» to ' ona thousand """' 1 Flax No 1 3.17. hl , b,> Bowlerettei ' to last place , but it was an- dollar. ($1,000.00), and to the amount of "** "'" *»"""<><[ «» ° 3 R. D. Cone Co 1 1 ' ° °\ Alley Galon 1 Soybeans No 1 yellow 2.82%. (5%) of tha bid on all bids >'». weight , distance, route, and traffic 1 3 Midway Tavern 1 3 nounced thnt he had been tlv. parcenl Al» Call Coca-Cola 1 2 aver one thousand dollar. 1*1,000.00) most Interference ami Ih. general policy of Three Ti .04 Hamm 's Beer e 3 placed fourth. be enclosed In tha sealed bid and made ,n « <*«P<"-tment r«0«rdlng th. movement AMERICAN ¦ LKS The error was quickly cor- payable to th. State Treasurer. <" building* on trunk hlghwayi . Moya- Court Hea ring men ov, r m ,runk Nohwav or portion Wnlnate W. L. Athletic Club W . L rected , but not in time to pre- The successful bidder shall remove fhe ' ' " , Lincoln Imur.nce 13 3 Spelts Texaco 4 2 building or buildings from tha trunk of any trunk highway except ai Indicated Hauler ' s Black Crows 11 4 Penney 's 4 2 vent payment by many bookies Held on highway right of way on or belore March l"'low wl» "»' h" allowed. Quality Chevrolet 11 4 Gralnbelt * 1 to thousands of gleeful bettors 37, I9&5.. Ha .hall at his own expense ob- (a) Tlie followlnn h to be used only Graham A McGuire 11 4 Bub's Bear 3 3 tain all required lleen.e. and permits. as a guide In determining Ih. feasibility Country Kitchen 11 7 Home Furniture 2 a who had picked Upall Night for LIMITATION OP MOVEMENT of movement end li not to be considered Main Tavern ... 1 1 Morals Charge Bub's fleer 10 * fourth. Fourth-place payoffs arc The Highway Department will consider a» eny guerante. Hint permits will ba Westgita Bowl 10 I SUNJITTBR3 Lyman Plank , 45, Utica town- applications to move tha abov. parcels granted for such distances. Building, Earl's Tree Service t'.'a 1',^ Westgate W . L common in England when there provided permits are obtained from tha exceeding the lognl width and or legal 40 Gralnbelt Bear t t Merf't Market u ship, was bound over to District proper municipal authorities and sublect weight will b. limited nn In movement Asco, Inc 3» 1« nre big fields. He paid 12 to 1 Boland Mlo. Co • '• to iflflhway limitation s of movemen t . nt follows: Merchants Bank 7 11 Schlitz Baer 31 IS for fourth. Court after a preliminary hear- Swill Prams 7 11 Oolli Pharmacy 31 32 ing today in municipal court on Approx. Weight Approx. Tolal Distance Mankato Bar 11 32 Winona Rlddi Mix i' i ll'.li BltOTIIDRifOOI) VVKHK a morals charge. Width at Building over Trunk tllflhwaye "Sounds like tapping a half-filled pickl« barrel, II Choata A Co t 11 Boland Mis. 30 3} Unknowns 4 11 Jordan's 27 3a WHITEHALL , Wis. (Special) Judge John D. McGIII order- Over a'0" to M'0 " 10 Ton 31 Io 40 mllai * doesn't it?" Rainbow Jtwtl.n 3 13 Sunbeam Sweets It 47 Ouer 14' lo 16'0" 10 Ton 30 to 11 mll«»* — Maurice Kwing, Whitehall , ed Flank bound over to the Over 16' to U'O" 10 Ion 20 to 10 mll«» » chairman of tbe education com- higher court to mako a plea to Over U' to 20'0- U Ton 10 to 3* miles* MARK TRAIL By Ed Dodd Over 30' to ,10'0" JO Ton or more 10 to 30 mil*.* ¦ ¦ —¦¦¦ »¦¦" ¦ ¦— ¦ mittee for National Brotherhood the charge after hearing the aa—ataa— ¦ is ¦ I M i i ¦ —I ¦ aajpiaaifaaaiw nia—iil ea» ¦¦ aiipi l iaiil i 1 r" ' " "-¦——l-' - w "'" " -*; '— — .. .. n rMaaaajgaaJTM ' JTXBkW "" -'-" JM«pa ¦< l -faaMnMaMa * Over 30' to 34'0" 20 Ton or mor. 5 lo IJ miles* Week , has contacted all schools testimony. Over 34'0" or mora 30 Ton or more 1 to 10 miles* of Trempealeau County, asking Plunk remains in county Jail ¦Distance will depend on bridges .nd route to be traveled, them to participate with pro- todfiy under $2,500 bond. He tn no event will movement b« al- wires, for crosilng of railroad tracks , grams, posters, etc. The observ - will be arraigned in District lowed If traffic cannot pat-i or Ihe trimming ol treas, and porm Imlon ha. Court shortly. delourino of traffic Is required. been ohtnined Irom nil municipalities ance will be in February. (b) Tha abov. dl.tanc. of movement through which movement li to be made will govern from the cily limltl of and In wMrfi building Is lo bo located, coi.iiAii: <;KAWJATF STYLIST MOVKft cities of the first class or otherwise PROSPECTIVE BIODLWS HIO U I. O ALMA, Wis. (Special ) - Char- ETTKICK , Wi.s. (Specinl) - from tha location of Ilia building or Irom CHECK WITH THE HlfiHVMy OHPART- hair .stylist, will be the first point of • .nlry on the trunk MENT AS TO ISSUANCE Of- A PER- les White, fiance of Miss .Judy Dennis Cnrr, hlcjhway. M'T OVE R TRUNK HIGIIkVAVJ B«. Schweitzer, Almn, will grad- affiliated with a beauty Khop (c) Applications lor permits for move- fORU ANY BID IS SljBMITTeo. uate tonight nt Eau Clnire Stnte in Winona. He i.s moving there ment of buildings will be considered only In r.quritlng permits from the Maln- If buildings ar. lit movable condition tenanca Division for ttia mnv.rnent nt University with a music major. with hi.s wife and child. Son of and mounted on sufficient llr.s and buildings over trunk lilnhwayi, specify He has accepted n teaching po- Mr. and Mrs, Harold Carr , dollies and all arranQements ara mad. the parcel numlwi as well n\ th. be- ot ullllty scriptlon nl building sition at Goodridge , Minn., be- Washington Coulee , near here, in advance lor tha railing ' DEPARTMENT OF I4I(',||WAY» ginning Feb. 1. Mr. White s he has been employed at a Jalnas C, Marshall home is at New Lisbon. shop at Ely, Minn. Comml.slon.r Help Wanted—Male 27 Hay, Grain, Feed SO Specials at the Stor»>s 74 Houses for Sale 99 Motor 1 .. _ .. ' . ^Baaa I „ —«———mmm n II ¦ MIM a ai/MmilBft IO«f "W tMBBV •TV | _^„^_—___ DICK TRACY By Chester Gould BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker THE FLINTSTONES By Hanna-Barbera ¦ ¦ >¦— i DAN FLAGG By Don Sherwood BLONDIE &/ Chic Young LIL ABNER By Al Capp STEVE CANYON , By Milton Canniff "' * ¦ -—¦¦¦—¦ ¦¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ m - i - II TT I i a— a—ai— IM ' — ¦ IT ¦' " ' r "J- i ajjajaaaajaw ~tm ' "——Ml APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kotzky \ y/ / 7 , "^5 \ V most beautiful bride _ °~ e mos yC\ _J~J/^4i l5W*\ \^ " \ s/ V/ #M > h ^-^~A beautifulu *^ 4.x i *• /^-O, / I ii ' ^ J^^ ring "^v ^^^ selected from our REX MORGAN, M. D. By Dal Curtis ^^\/\f^( W$\^^" *~ J . IfLTZks M 'A W DIAMOND STYLES Iff K V \ ' \ $rl * L NANCY B Ernie Bushmiller \ \k f ki y I y\ \X I Yw Below the versatile Melodic D' Amour \ \ \\ ( ~^ wedding band can \ \\ V \ G be I U \ worn in two different positions II \ \ $15° MARY WORTH By Saunden and Ern»t ^TJs^m^SINd 1M3 r^Tj o JEWELERS v^/ ML I I iSfll lR/ I jK^REGISTERED JEWELER, AMERICAN CEM SOCIETY QDIQBH