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12-4-1970
Winona Daily News
Winona Daily News
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Captors flown to Cuba Cross thin but well MONTREAL (AP) - Cu- this condition was not af- a good collection of revolu- ment worked out between ban Intermediaries handed fected by his ordeal. They tionary literature, but it's Canadian officials and the over a kidnaped British dip- said they expected him to very unlikely he was con- kidnapers. lomat early today after the remain at the hospital •'for verted,'' Mrs. Cross said. The negotiations took Canadian government flew at least a day" and a more "Two men with subma- place at the Expo site and his captors to political asy- thorough examination would chine guns guarded him day in a house in North Montreal lum in Cuba. be made. and night, and he said he where Cross had been held British Trade Commission- His wife, waiting in Bern, kept hoping they were well since he was kidnaped Oct. er Richard Cross was turn- Switzerland, for news of trained in controlling them." 5 by members of the FLQ, ed over to Canadian authori- her husband said she hoped , Mrs. Cross said her hus- or Quebec Liberation Front, ties at the site of the Expo to be reunited with him a terrorist group that de- '67 -world's fair and was Saturday in London band "did not seem bitter" . toward his kidnapers. v mands independence for the driven immediately to the "I am. deliriously happy French-speaking province of Jewish General Hospital in after these long weeks of "He was so buoyant," she Quebec. LOOKING TIRED Montreal for a checkup. tension," she said. "But I said. "He told me he got The terrorists threatened . . . Cross' doctors said he lost never gave up hope." the impression his captors to kill him unless the gov- James Cross, British trade 22 pounds during his two Cross telephoned her were not very keen on the ernment freed 23 FLQ mera- commissioner to Montreal, months of captivity in a Thursday night after he idea of going to Cuba but fcers and paid a ransom of looks tired and is unshak- small, windowless room. was delivered to the Cubans. it seems they had ho 5500,000 in gold. When the en after his release from They said he was in good He told her "he had seen choice." government refused another ' , his kidnapers in Montreal physical and mental condi- 162 French films on tele? The Cubans released the FLQ cell kidnaped Quebec Thursday. He was kidnaped tion, however, although suf- vision 49-year-old diplomat after ," and this improved Labor Minister Pierre La- from his home Oct. 5 and fering from minor vitamin his understanding of;' the receiving word that two of porte on Oct. 10 and murder- released when his kidnap- DEALT SETBACK ... Senate Thurs- the nation's global jet fleet. This is an ar- deficiencies that could easi- language. But he said he his abductors and five other ed him a week later. The ers left for Cuba on a Can a- day dealt a stunning and perhaps fatal set- tist's conception of what the plane would ly be corrected. spoke very little with his French - Canadians exiled Cross has high blood pres- captors."" (Continued on page 2a, col. 5) dian Forces planea (AP back to the supersonic transport, the plane look like in flight. (AP Photofax) with them had arrived in sure, but the doctors said "The kidnapers gave him Cuba under a ransom agree- Cross thin Photofax) President Nixon wants as Uie flagshi p of Senate against SST 52-41 Unemployment In return for joint meeting 59 Vief Gong Nixon hope f or g/obo/ highest in Sovietis asked to ease said dead in K years W. Berlin resfr ictions forest clash flag ship crushed By NEIL GILBRIDE _ fleet (AP) SAIGON South Viet- (AP) - The for- leaders are resisting. hope current Big Four negotia- WASHINGTON (AP) - Un- BRUSSELS namese infantrymen hacked By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON million appropriation orig- most observers found only employment rose to 5.8 per cent eign ministers of the North At- After agreeing on the sub- tions over West Berlin would WASHINGTON level in 7% agreed today at their annual the ministers took the1 unusual agreement, appropriate to the Minh Forest today and reported ment than appeals to tech- totypes. with protecting ttie environ- years, the government reported winter meeting to join the com- step of going into a restricted interests of easing tension in the 59 Viet Cong killed in the first ment in an atmosphere in nological progress, the , Sen- It was a personal victory today. munist powers in a European session. One report was that center of Europe as well as the three days of the 7,000-man ate has dealt a stunning for Sen. William Proxmire, which the SST has become, At the same time, average security conference only after they were considering whether needs of the populace of West and perhaps fatal setback D-Wis., who in two previous rightly or wrongly, a sym- weekly earnings of some 45 mil- the Soviet Union joins the W£st to meet in Portugal next spring, Berlin and the legitimate inter- drive into the enemy stronghold to the supersonic transport, tries could muster no more bol of unplanned progress lion rank and file workers in an agreement easing restric- a site* that would probably let ests and sovereign rights of the at the southern! end of Vietnam. the plane President Nixon than 23 votes to stop Ythe and misplaced national pri- dropped 66 cents to $121.07 per tions on West Berlin. : , NATO in for extra criticism be- (East) German Democratic Re^ Field reports said only ona wants as the project he has called an orities. week because of shorter work- cause of Portugal's colonial pol- public." The debate that preceded The 15 foreign ministers South Vietnamese infantryman flagship of environmental monster, an ing hours, said the Bureau of stressed the importance, un- icy. The statement also said ac- economic ship of fools, and the vote was a catalogue of of had been killed!and six wounded the nation's Labor Statistics. hinde'red access to Berlin, 110 In their final statement, the ceptance" of East Germany as in the sporadic, light contacts. global jet a flying white elephant. potential environmental, ec- an equal to West Germany in in- political criti- miles inside communist East ministers expressed satisfaction The mangrove swamps and fleet. And it was a personal onomic and Although the average pay- ternational relations, in the cism. check was more than 5 per cent Germany. with the letter from President forbidding jangle 140 miles Backers of defeat for the President who Nixon Thursday promising that United Nations and in other in- had mustered his personal Scientific fears were aired larger than a year ago, the na- They also want improvements southwest of Saigon have been a th e SST ? the United States will maintain ternational organizations "are major Viet Cong influence and the weight of that the SST s sonic boom tion's continuing worst inflation in the situation within the city, hideout baso project , try- would cause avalanches and its present strength in Europe vital demands of the times and for a decade. Repeated at- ing to rally the executive branch to in more than 20 years cut pur- divided by the wall the commu- an important contribu- kill sea birds; that its ex- chasing power 2 per cent below until the Soviet . Union reduces would be tempts to clean out the area from the save a program he called nists built in 1961, and they'want tion to European and interna- essential to the future of haust in the upper atmo- a year ago, the bureau said. its forces. have failed. shock of sphere would change global acceptance of the ties between The ministers also welcomed tional security." T h- .' u r s- the American aviation in- ¦ Total employment dropped West Berlin and West Germany. dustry. weather and cause chemical 165,000 during the month to 78.7 the resumption of talks betweteri Before' the ministers' meeting Before the campaign started Hnv's 52-41 reactions that could increase They said as soon as satisfac- the United States and the Soviet Tuesday, U.S. B52 y bomber* Proxmire The lossYwas particularly million compared with a nor- today, U.S. Secretary of State vote to kill the cases of skin cancer on tory Berlin arrangements have Union on restriction of strategic William P. Rogers met with De- pounded the area in two raids. $290 million in federal S-ST bitter for two powerful mally expected rise in Novem- earth; and that its noise ber. The report blamed in part been made, they would be ready nuclear missiles and the treat- fense Secretary Melvin R. Laird The infantrymen advanced un- subsidy money, said they • Democratic senators—War- to start multUateral contacts to ren G. Magnuson and Henry at airports would equal 50 the recent General Motors ies made by West Germany and David K. E. Bruce*, the der the cover of helicopter gun- would try to salvage at subsonic jets, so loud all see whether it would be possible with the Soviet Union ships whose fast-firing crews of the program M. Jackson — whose home strike and declines in transpor- and Po- chief U.S. negotiators at the least part homes in a 15-mile radius to hold a conference or a series land. claimed about half of the enemy in a House-Senate confer- state of Washington is the tation and other industries. Paris peace talks. headquarters of the econo- would have to be sound- The rise in unemployment of conference's on security in They called these treaties a At a news conference after- reported killed so far. ence. proofed. Europe. The victors, savoring the mically depressed Boeing was two-tenths of one per cent, contribution to peace in Europe. ward, Rogers said the American The U.S. Command reported On every point, the SST's the B52s struck again in the Me- taste of their 11-vote tri- aircraft company, prime from 5.6 to 5.8 per cent, highest The communist governments The seven Warsaw Pact na- raid on the Son Tay prisoner of SST contractor. backers could hardly find have been pressing for such a tions, in a communitjue' after war camp in North Vietnam kong Delta during the night on umph, say there is little hrases to express their since May of 1963, the bureau Repub- new p said. conference, with some support their summit conference in East would help, not hind* the Par- the northern edge of the U Minh chance the Senate or even The vote drew 18 disagreement. , the House would now ap- licans and a number of The number of jobless Ameri- in the West, but many Western Berlin Wednesday, expressed is talks. Forest. The command said tha prove a conference report Southern conservatives into Nixon's hope cans rose 350,000 during the big bombers hit base camps, containing any of the $290 the anti-SST camp and (Continued on page 2a , col. 6) month to 4.6 million, it said. bunkers and storage areas on the Gulf of Siam near Rack. Gia The jobless rate for men about 150 mDes southwest of edged up from 4.1 to 4.2 per cent Saigon. There was speculation to a total of. 1,815,000. The rate that the raid might be the fore- Nixon, senators Inside for women rose from 5.1 to 5.5 runner of a ground operation. per cent to a total of 1,557,000. Elsewhere im the Mekong Del- The late for teen-agers went up MMB A Northwest Airlines ta, the South Vietnamese said IBWV H pilots have been from 17.1 to 17.5 per cent to a to- government troops killed 35- Viet tal of 1 235 000. ordered to remain • on the , , Cong at a cost of three wounded Cambodian In the past year, the total on job — story, page 2a. in three small engagements number of unemployed has ranging from climbed nearly two million in- 30 miles southeast cluding 905 000 men 565 000 of Saigon to 120 miles southwest Television SHS. , , , of the collision course programming, plus weekend women and 430,000 teen-agers, capital. sports highlights and otlier the bureau said. In the central part off the reports — pages 4a and 5a. By CARL P. LEUBSDORF The national jobless rate over country a big search operation WASHINGTON (AP) — Senators favoring restrictions the year was up from 3.5 to 5.8 continued for ttwo U.S. transport 0|l| Nortncast Florida per cent of the labor force. on U.S. involvement in Cambodia may be headed for another "II beach residents looked planes missing since Friday and collision with House backers of President Nixon's policies for to the weather today to end Sunday. No trace has beep that embattled Southeast Asian nation. the threat of Navy oil coat- found , and there was little hope ing their clean, sandy for any of the 38 Americans and With an earlier Senate move to restrict U.S. actions in beaches — stories, page 7a. 85 Vietnamese aboard the Cambodia—the Cooper-Church amendment-stalemated by the fund . planes. The search has been House, committees of both chambers took potentially contra- Uf ! nl.« A lull-blown bliz- hampered all week fflBllor by fog and dictory steps Thursday. Z ard bounded Previously listed $013 low clouds over the mountain across the Lake Superior re- area. The Senate Appropriations Committee, citing.the 58-37 gion Thursday, halting nor- In memory of their par- vote last June for the Cooper-Church restrictions, added a ban mal routine itr even that ents—Mr. nnd Mrs. H. A Cambodian military spokes- on U.S. combat ground troops for Cambodia to one enacted winter - hardened neighbor- G. Hymes 5 man In Phnora Penh reported last year covering Laos and Thailand. hood — stories, poge 10a. In memory of Mother that the communist command '• who died 12/10/68 — is pouring reinforcements into The full Senate is expected to go along next week. 'rhe head oE a the Cambodian rrUttfCPpnlta Mr. and Mrs. Ole B. government's House panel in- northern front Foreign Affairs Committee, meanwhile, over- vestigating ' Itcnslo, Caledonia .... 5 , possibly for a The House the Lithuanian fresh round iai whelmingly approved a $550 million supplemental foreign defector incident , angered Mr. nnd Mrs, George B. the offensive it Cznplewskl, Madison, began nearly a month ago aid bill that includes $155 million asked by President Nixon by a State Department offi- . Wis. • .. ..¦ "THE SUBTLETY OP INHUMANE of war can't contend with "is the sameness" for economic and military aid to Cambodia. cial's failure to show for a 5 The Cambodians have soma liearing, says he will act Walter S. Kutclicr '10 TREATMENT' .. . Col. Norris M. Overly, of POW life in North Vietnam: "The same 32,000 men in the area, but It rejected proposed reductions and restrictions on the to subpoena witnesses if Room 240, WHS 5 U.S. Air Force shows a sketch of his cell cell, the same soup, the same propaganda , many are isolated or story, page lb. deployed aid — including a prohibition of U.S. troops in Cambodia— necessary — in which he spent five months as a prisoner tho same . . . everything," Col. Norris calls on security missions to guard before sending the bill to the floor where approval is vir- Total to date .$043 of war in North Vietnam. Col. Overly, in It the "subtlety of what we mean by 'inhu- towns and bridges. certain. TO tually Rome, N.Y., Thursday, said what a prisoner mane* treatment. (AP Photofax) >>wf-ywppwywwgwyy?^y<¦ " •" -S- -- ^| ^ i ' '7^ mmmmmmmm^mm^mm^m ,Y,1 YV r^ Vi a -X^' fl1Vl yV' V ivV 'ii*i' m\ niKmWfiS'fiXi^v/^1 But the aid request faces tough going in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, scheduled to open hearings on it next Thursday. Secretary of State William P. Rogers will testify before the committee in open session for the first time in more than 18 months. For American POW's: a life in Umbo The Senate committee action came with approval of a By JULES LOII dured it, is tlie ultimate ordeal "A military man can antici- ing in San Diego. liberate cutting of communica- f $Gfi.4 billion defense money bill, $389 million less than Uie AP Ncwsfcatines Writer of the "Hanoi Hilton." Thc iso- pate beatings, can even expect "The actual physical thing tion with the outside and among i Never fully awake; never lation and monotony of the pris- it from someone who House voted -and $2.3 billion loss than the Nixon administra- wants in- isn't so bad,*' he said of his pris- prisoners." - | soundly asleep. Never unbeara- on, they say, surpasses In psy- formation. What ho can tion requested. 't con- on experience. "I wns struck Frishman and Rum- | bly uncomfortable"; never at chological horror and human tend with is tlie sameness. Tho , with rocks and had knives Overly, The comrnitteo cut back to the $300 million budget level case. degradation all the beatings and samn cell , tbe same soup, the jabbed at mo and I was slapped bie are three of nine American 1 for the Victnamization program to beef up South Vietnam's Tho world of the American rats and diarrhea and morning same propaganda, the same ... around and tied up with ropes prisoners so far released by Ha- army. The House had added $58.5 million and had given the prisoner of war in North Viet- emptyings of the honeybucke't, everything." on my bad arm. But it's tht' iso- noi. Tho United States believes i: to transfer an additional $150 million. nam is' a twilight world "If you think only in terms of Pentagon authority in which Other former prisoners con- lation, tho extended isolation, that 378 men, perhap s as many I he does not live but vegetates. physical torture you miss tho cur. Even men like Navy Lt, that gets you." Tlie $66,4 billion is $0.2 billion below the amount voted as 500, possibly many moro, are Gradually the treadmill of dep- subtlety of what we mean by Robert Frishman, Air Force Capt. Wesley Bum- being held captive among about i^, by Congress for the Pentagon last year. Bwt the Appropria- rivation, and routine flattens his 'inhumane' treatment," said Air Exploding shrapnel shattered ble, now stationed at George Air Committee said the reduction will only bo $4.6 billion 1,500 listed a" missing in Indo« f tions wit and crushes his initiative Forco Col. Norris M. Overly, Frishman's right elbow when ho Force Base, Calif., is another. china since 1064. Hanoi has when funds are provided later for pay raises that are already re* | i until he responds not to ideas or who spent five months as a pris- was shot down Oct. 24, 1067. Ho Ho spent 15 months as a prison- fused to give an accounting of f. In effect. | oven to hunger or pain but, like oner of the" North Vietnamese was taken prisoner and released er, calls it "tho worst thing I've its war prisoners. the Nation- Tho committee said It based the ban on ground combat Pavlov's dogs, only to the sound and is now attending 21 months later, his elbow titill over lived through" and insists of a gong. al War College in Washington. unliealCd—and (Continued on page 2a, col. 1) )\ troops for Cambodia on the Senate action in passing the his weight down "Tho worst thing about it was Cooper-Church amendment to the military sales authorization That, say men who have* en- D.C. 63 pounds. Ho now is recuperet- the forced boredom and tho de- For American U AV y. «-jywi^>. . .Wfv^ j-^/y^.y.-.y^wwvs ^-wAvij.y)^ WW V WVA 'W.;AV s^r\wHv ¦ ¦>¦ !-w w* ¦¦¦>¦¦ ¦ . ¦¦ . '.v^;' ' rwnwi*.fl«j w . . - . \t**rtwx">yM,N v^w™*wrr'YT»'''V'**¦¦ ' '(>j >'V '-w«-^, - r^y-ww-, -^.*^""!, > wvwiwwrw^'xrvi- •- ' .., '¦ ¦.. <¦ - .. '.^¦•¦v.v.w ;;;: >: ;i r , l - >fl. /. -; ;- W - .,, ,;l tftti^ ^ u^a*) a. toa lZ\\U<^JJ4.:U. +. ' •V>..' '. i'aaL -..lL.|H a .» ' .uj-i :i..a-i..\ .»^. \-a. .^ A l^l\ .^'V J^ f y , . Yi Va '. '-i' .V.y.l'E.lXJ bill. r.n in .,Wi ^ < Viy^i r ,f;>;ll ;,y11f f uaa^au. ^ WM^i -*^,> a^w>u>*v .t ;.w^ ' For American POW s— Nixon's hope Hanoi ju stifiestreatm ent of Wool payments Jackson: no evidence SST for 1970 due will af feci environment (Continued from page 1) conference will ignore the Sen- lion to see the development pro- men by usin v ate vote. gram through the production of Jackson told the Senate: "I two prototypes. l) we'd have one hell of a row. It dubbed Hanoi Hannah, consist- same three persons next spring (Continued from page , two women have seen absolutely no evi- Bat Rep. Henry Reoss, D- was therapeutic." ed of repeated assertions that and a man—"I'd know their ALMA, Wis. -^ Payments will Wis., like Proxmire a longtime Proxmire said the latest re- Hanoi justifies its treatment "But there were tender mo- America would eventually with- be made beginning about April dence that SST operations will SST foe, said he will call for a quest for $290 million would voices as well as I know my adversely affect our environ- of the men—or rather its refusal ments too," he said, his voice draw from Vietnam because the 1 on marketing of wool com- record vote to instruct House have boosted federal funds for to honor provisions of the Gene- lowering. "We prayed together. American people opposed the mother's"—and occasionally, he ment." * the 300-passenger, 1,800 mile an pleted in 1970 and reported by Gordon Allott, It- conferees to go along with the va Convention of 1949—on At least three times a day." war, Overly said. said, by persons with American And Sen. Senate's action. He said the hour craft past the $1 billion lev- Propaganda broadc a s t s, Negro accents telling of racial Jan. 31, 1971, reports James A. Colo., declared: "It is quite' grounds that they are "war The broadcasts were by the measure almost certainly will el and warned that the end of troubles. The propagandists, he Hill, chairman of the Buffalo clear that unless the SST is built be approved. federal spending probably criminals" and thus not entitled said, also took great delight in our hold on the world aircraft Proxmire gave much credit wasn't in sight. to the convention's protections. reading letters taken from the County Agricultural Stabiliza- market is doomed." Injunction issued tion aid Conservation (ASC) for the victory to the highly or- Whatever the reasons for de- ""They certainly treated us bodies of American soldiers. ganized lobbying efforts of a co- feat, there were powerful forces like criminals," Overly said . Overly said his captors' con- Committee, who reminded pro-- Magnuson said defeat of the SST funds probably ends the op- alition of environmental and working to assure the SST sur- "Ihe Hanoi Hilton is not a PW trol over the mail the prisoners ducers the 1970 marketing year , conservation groups. vived its Senate test. camp as Americans have come could send and receive was an- portunity to create up to 200 000 under the wool program ends new jobs. He said the* vote may And he added: "On top of ev- The Federal Aviation Admin- to think of them. It's an actual Northwest pilots other diabolical form of mental this vote as * anguish. Dec. 31. mean the Soviet Union and the erything else, I see istration, the SST office In the prison, a penitentiary, a place a sign of the concern—amount- Department of Transportation, fo- keep felons." Wool payments are based on French-British team building Etome men were not allowed to European versions of the SST ing almost to anger—in the Sen- the Surgeon General's Office , Actually, Overly explained, write at all; others could write the difference between the in- probably will dominate the fu- ate over President Nixon's veto the- White House and represent- the Hanoi Hilton is three pris- to keep working but did not receive mail and centive price and the average ture high-speed air market. of the appropriations bill that atives of Boeing all supplied the ons, all nearly identical and all didn't know whether their let- national price for marketings A representative of General provided vitally needed money technical data and support to ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - The court, In agreeing with * in separate locations in down- ters—limited to six lines—ever during the year. Wool sales Electric, which had been chosen for better housing, health care bolster arguments of SST back- town Hanoi. Overly spent time Pilots for Northwest Airlines Northwest, said, however: "The got out to design and build the world's and education." \ ers. in all three and said the routine said they would remain on the ALPA contract can arguably be "I once asked an interrogator made after Dec. 31, 1970, will largest jet engines for SST use, The SST when first proposed Wednesday, the day before was the same at each. job today following an injunc- interpreted to prohibit the asso- why they let some men write not be eligible for payment un- said hope is still alive the House in the administration of the late the final vote, Magnuson ush- "The light bulb was kept tion issued by a three-judge ciation from instructing its home and not others," Overly til early 1972. will stick with its earlier ap- President John F. Kennedy was ered through the Senate a sep- burning in each cell 24 hours a said, "and he quite frankly said Incentive payments are made proval of the SST and that the to cost no more than $750 mil- arate bill designed to sooth tne day," Overly recalled. "There panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit members to respect the BRAC 'to confuse the enemy.' " through ASCS county office to fears of undecided and waver- was never any sense of day or Court of Appeals ordering them picket lines." The repatriated prisoners said all producers who file applica- ing senators. night and never any feeling of to report for work. Some 4,000 of Northwest's 12,- many of their comrades were tions and present the necessary The bill, passed 77 to 0, would more fatigue at one time than at The Air Line Pilots Associa- 0O0 employes have been work- sick and injured and described sales receipts and other rec- ban over the 50 states all flights another." tion (ALPA) ing during the strike, and limit- medical treatment as primitive ords. capable of producing sonic During the long periods of had threatened to at best. begin honoring picket lines of ed flight service has been main- Hill reminds producers that booms; order SST takeoff and waiting, he said, the irien—two Frishman was refused treat- sales documents must show all praises landing noise reduced, arid di- the Brotherhood of Railway and tained. Nelson to a cell, sometimes three, Members of the International ment of his shattered elbow for details of the sale were com- rect the Transportation Depart- sometimes only one—-took turns Airline Clerks (BRAC) at 5:01 Association of Machinists (IAM) days before his captors finally pleted during the current mar- ment to report fully on all as- pacing the floor for exercise. a.m. today. The clerks have removed the bone splinters in a keting year — including pass- pects of the development pro- Tley had to take turns because have been honoring BRAG pick- crude operation, although Dr. been on strike since July 8. et lines, with strike settlement ing title to the buyer. There gram—including environmental there was only room between Robert Brown, chief of or- Senate action impact—before* full commercial stalled on details of a back-to- must also be a record showing WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen, Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis., the bunks for one man to walk. The court Thursday also or- work schedule for both BRAC thopedic surgery at Bethesda either actual delivery of trans- production would be authorized; Bunk is not an accurate term. dered Northwest and the ALPA (Md.) Naval Hospital who treat- applauded Thursday the Senate's vote against continuing Overly said, were a»d IAM members. ed Frishman when he came fer of control of the wool to federal aid to develop a commercial Supersonic Transport Some senators said the fact Tie beds, to submit the dispute to the Air- the buyer. The- buyer's total simply three 6-inch-wide planks line System Board of Adjust- home, said, "He received the plane. - . Magnuson found it necessary to laid across two sawhorses. same treatment they give their purchase price also must be "Today the environmental issue has come of age," Nel- make such concessions was rea- ment immediately for arbitra- clearly stated. : The y routine was interrupted tion . First Baptist own people. I feel his treatmnt son said after the Senate approved an amendment striking son enough to stop the program from time to time for interroga- was based on what might be Applications for the 1970 mar- out a pending appropriations bill. About $290 million was altogether, at least pending a The board of adjustment is keting year payments under the tion sessions and other activi- composed of union and com- cantata planned called skillful neglect." deleted from the bill to develop two SST prototypes. full environmental checkout. ties, most of which were accom- Frishman said he also knew National ; Wool Act should be "From this point on," Nelson said, "major technological Proxmire said he has indica- pany representatives and a neu- The Chancel Choir of the First filed with the Buffalo County panied by beatings and insults. tral party acceptable to both of some men who received eye- developments in this country will have to meet the chal- tions the British may stop fur- ¦» Baptist Church, 368 W. Broad- ASCS office as soon as possible, and con- But Overly and the others em- sides. way, glasses and some who got den- lenge of rigorous testing of environmental impact ther .work on their Concorde phasized that the mental an- will present a Christmas tal care. advises Hill. sequences." version of the SST which they guish enforced inactivity Northwest has contended that cantata, "The Wonder of Christ- For the excruciating bore- aware that quality , the " " a walkout by pilots would con- mas "The Senate has shown that it is now are building with the French. as he put it, and the isolation of ": by John Peterson, at the dom, however, there was no re- JAPAN POPULATION of life is an essential ingredient in the future of the country, He said the French, too, may the men from one another stitute breach of a valid labor 10:45 a.m. worship Sunday. lief. major agreement with the company, Director of the choir is Mrs. TOKYO CAP) - Japan's pop- and that the effect on the environment will be the call it quits on the SST, indicat- caused more suffering than the ulation has passed the 100 mil- measure of the quality of material goods,1' he said. ing much of the impetus behind physical torture. or an "illegal strike." Lee Christopherson while Mrs. Ini their long hours of loneli- But an attorney for the pilots, Joseph Orlowske is organist and ness—hours when the only di- lion mark, the Bureau of Statis- "This is only the beginning of government responding to that nation's interest in .the "Of course my cellmates and Robert S. Savelson of New York Terry Christopherson; pianist. version often was watching the tics reported Wednesday. The the needs and desires of the people of the nation who have plane came from the nationalis- I got on each others nerves a City, contends this is not so. Soloists include: Carolyn rats play on the cell floor er try- figure on Oct. 1 was 102,703,552, been pleading for environmental protection and the pre- tic fervor of the late President lot," Overly said. "After a time "This is not a strike," Savel- Frick, soprano; Judy Asp, alto; ing to identify the day's particu- the bureau said. servation of the remaining resources," Nelson said. Charles de Gaulle. we knew every minute thing son said. "This is a situation David Christopherson, Wesley lar guard by the distinctive about each other, our past ex- where pilots are about to recog- Marks and Ray Taggart, basses, sound he made opening the periences, our ideas on every nize a legal right to observe and Lee Christopherson, tenor. doors cell by cell—did the pris- Cross thin subject, and about once a. week picket lines." The public may attend. oners ever contemplate escape? DOT WAIT! Pick yours "We talked about it often," Overly said. "We figured we could get out Cornered / kidnapers of the prison—but then where out now for Christmas would we be. In downtown Ha- ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ noi, that's where. Six-foot-tall Come in soon and see the ,;. - . -Y • - ' ." ' men with blue eyes wearing red asked negotiations and white striped pajamas. (Continued from page 1) Cross over to Canadian authori- Nobody really believed ties. "No. The events leading up to there was any way out of Quebec Justice Minister Je there." Cross' release began late rome Choquette said the seven Weekend Advertisement Wednesday when police, acting persons flown to Havana were on various tips, moved in on the Carbonneau, Lanctot, Lanctot's SIRECIALS kidnapers' hideout and sur- wife and child; Lanctot's broth- Hearing Tests er-in-law, Jacques Cosett Tru- rounded it. del; Traders wife; and Pierre Set for Late Wednesday night, appar- Seguin, who was not identified. -——— — AVAILABIE AT ——— ently in response to what must Choquette said although Car- ' Winona have appeared to be imminent bonneau had been charged with Free electronic hearing tests capture, someone threw a piece will be given in Winona. participation in the Laporte kid- of pipe containing an offer to ne- naping, Anyone who has trouble hear- gotiate from an upper window he was not involved. ing or understanding is welcome Otherwise, the minister said, he to come in for a free test using of the three-story house. would not have been allowed to the fastest electronic equipment Two lawyers entered the go to Cuba, LUMflg to determine his or her particular building early Thursday to be- Federal Justice Minister John loss. IIP Center St. Diagrams showing how the ear gin negotiations. Turner said the seven will be Wltwna, Minn. works and some of the causes Early Thursday afternoon "exiles for life." of hearing loss will be available. Cross, two of his captors, Marc -m7 RE¥ERJIDB.LEltVEIKIRI f m1 wi.I A Visitors can see statistics of how Carbonneau and Jacques Lane- \ iM* thousands of people have been tot, and the two lawyers walked helped with a simple ear oper- out of the house and got into a ation to hear again. And how the battered 1962 Chrysler. The cor- latest electronic developments don around the building opened Give the TV that anyone are helping thousands more. Sv to let through a cavalcade of po- at H Everyone should have a hear- '«a u''8 multi-ball thruil blaring point ^ ^C.'i^ lice motorcycles and cars which R ^\ ' > SLfi8aB^Bpiy ILYl ing test at least once a year if «f heavleit wear, doubt* reduction gean. escorted the Chrysler at high jfrYyfl jwl ii l r ^&im there is any trouble at all hear- Jteveraing feature redueee bit breakage, speed through the streets of can tune /\yfl villi ing clearly. Even people now perfectly. -fm!w wearing a hearing aid or those Montreal and to the island who have been told nothing could where the world's fair was held. be done for them should have Police said they feared that a hearing test and find out about there were explosives both- in the latest methods of hearing cor- the house and in the car, which rection. , belonged to one of the kidnap- The free hearing tests will be held at Park Plaza from 12 to ers. 5 p.m. Monday, Dec. 7. Call Once on the island, Cross and 452-2801 and ask for Harold Lien his captors went into the build- between these hours for appoint- ing that was the Canadian pavil- ment at another time. ion during the fair. It had been FREE TESTS COURTES/ OF declared temporary Cuban ter- BELTONE HEARING ritory for purposes of the ex- AID CENTER change. Acting Cuban Consul- 1 SHOPCRAFT7INCH General Ricardo Escartin was i llli ^ i if* GET YOURS NOW" waitinR. The negotiations were pro- ™ M » CIRCULAR SAW LIFE-LIKE £& longed by a dispute whether the f,a,vnt om H.P. motor, Overload clutch protected. Hade WM ^B___^^_W^Mi-mW^r ' Pv I'M ' a tva v s > a Includei combination blade. Retracting blade ARTIFICIAL kidnapers' families would be al- J3^m\WmW_ ^^^W^r^mWawSt " ' X* ' " ' - JXESL lowed to accompany them to Christmas Cuba , Finally the conflict was ^^3S ^a^_aMsM^SmMo^MmSa^mfBtf_^^ ^^-\ Jral resolved and helicopters took seven persons to Montreal Intel- national Airport for a flight to Larga selection—All Sfrei Cuba. DARR BROTHERS As soon as the Cuban Interme- nUDD STORE, Inc. diaries In the pavilion learned V A S HARDWARE 50 LB. BAGOF CARGIU MEN'S W* B. 4lh 31. Phone 43M007 that the refugees had arrived ASSORTED aamMtMKMBtMSmtWkaMMtMMMMMMMM safely in Havana, they turned SOFTNER SALT WINTER CAPS
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FREE INSPECTION of your InrtamaHc movlo or still camera. AMGA Wc will give your camera a comploU six-point check. DON'T MISS THOSE HOLIDAY PICTUR ESI BUCK'S CAMERA SHOP Hardt's Music 1S9 Main St. Store •-2SJ 4540 SERVICE DRIVE — Wl NONA Winona 116-118 Lovoo Plena East Phone 452-2712 ' tt*M=H.l»J - I m— ^: . ... _ ._. Mitau says — 30 indictments against College budget ex-Wabasha Co. attorney WABASHA, Minn: (Special) — in writing presented by a grand Credit Co., St. Paul, $2,912; per- conservative' The Wabasha County grand jury charging a person with a sonal property, Earl Balzer, The Minnesota state . college port to the State College Board. jury, which has been investigate public offense. A presentment is $2,000, and American Bank of Alma biennial budget request recent- Dr. Mitau said that the orig- ing business transactions han- an informal statement in writing , $4,000. Wabasha Coun- by a grand jury that a public ly presented to dled by form** Court indictments for ag- Gov. Harold Le- inal budget had been revised in ty Attorney Edward J. Drury, offense has been committed and gravated forgery (using stock Vander and the commissioner the light of new enrollment pro- brought in 30 indictments this that theVe is reasonable grounds certificates issued on Dolphin of education for review is a con- jections and proposed expendi- morning to Judge Arnold Hat- for believing that a particular Products Corp.) — Eau Claire servative budget "prepared tures had been reduced by field. person has committed it. Citizens Loan Co.; Midway with a keen awareness of the some^ $7 million for the bien- These included: two present- Indictments for theft include: Consumer; American Bank of revenue-cost gap that faces the nium. ments for aggravated forgery; the estates of Josephine C. Alma, and Earl Balzer. The 11 1971 Legislature," Dr. G. Theo- "The budget says we do not one indictment for aggravated Goss, $2,100; Lillian Reed, $1,- counts for misconduct by an dore Mitau, chancellor of the want to do the same old things forgery (on six counts); 11 for 751; Archie Prior, $6,149; Eva attorney concern the estates Minnesota State College Sys- in the same old way," Dr. Mi- misconduct for an attorney; 15 Schmoker, $4,805 ; James and previously mentioned and also tem, explains in his annual re- tau pointed out. "Ours is a indictments for theft and three Elizabeth Rafter, $400; Fred the Leroy Ekstrand estate. budget that seeks innovation in indictments for making fraudu- Theuner, $6,944; Dolphin Pro- Presentments of forgery: one teaching and learning. It seeks lent statements. 'X: ducts, Corp., Wabasha, $6,817; against the Goss estate — two quality improvement in facul- All are felonies with the ex- estate of Kathryn Balow, $4,065; checks, one for $210 and one for ty, staff, classrooms, libraries ception of misconduct for an property of Lurene Schwanke, $50; — and the Schmoker es- Juvenile to and laboratories. It is a budget attorney — that is a misdemean- $3,500; estate of John Koob, tate, three checks — $1,618, that continues to emphasize the or. $465; estate of John Ternes, $291 and $911. strengthening of upper level ed- Judge Hatfield explained that $525; Eau Claire Citizens Loan Grand jury foreman was Con- ucation and, finally, this budg- an indictment is an accusation Co., $4,598; Midway Consumer rad Steuernagel, Kellogg. Re prosecuted et seeks to move in the direc- tion of funding based on more than a programmatic ap- proach." Pep rally on assault Asserting that the legislative Three guilty In A 17-year-old boy bis been program involves more than referred to the county attor- a budgetary request, Dr. Mitau said, "This is the time, also it weekend at ney's office for prosecution in . , HAPPY" RECIPIENT . . . John Vater, informing the Vikings of John's need for a juvenile court seems to me, when we, as pro- on charges stern- 12-year-old boy who received a severe head helmet to cover his wound. He will be able to ming from the alleged assault fessionals, might assist the draft office raid Hei swelling goes of a teacher at Winona Senior board in identifying develop- injury in a fall Nov. 7 on Garvin ghts, wear the helmet as soon as the SMC under way ST. PAUL (AP) _ The at- fines of up to $10,000. High School Wednesday morn- ments in our colleges which grins broadly as he receives a Minnesota down. Af present he wears a ski helmet and The senior class of St. Mary*.s torney for three Twin Cities Kenneth Tilsen, defense attor- ing- point to the readiness to assume Viking football helmet irom the Rev. Peter will have to continue to wear a protective cov- College is presenting the col- area men convicted of attempt- ney, said the government did The youth will be prosecuted, additional educational respon- Brandentioff, Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, ering until an operation can be performed, A lege's annual pep rally week- ed interference with the Selec- not prove the trio intended to according to Assistant Winona sibilities. while his mother, Mrs. John Vater, (left) sixth grader at Cathedral school, he is being end today and Saturday, to tive Service system says the remove and destroy draft rec- Police Chief John Scherer, in "It appears to me," he con- 110 E, Sanborn St., and Mrs. Ronald Ready, tutored until he can return to school in the celebrate the home basketball convictions will be appealed. ords. The defense had contend- tinued connection with the Wednesday , "that the system is 579 W. Howard St., look on. Father Branden- early part of January. (Daily News photo) game between St. Mary's and A jury in U.S. District Court ed the defendants were in the ready to enlarge the education- brought in guilty classroom assault of teacher hoff and Mrs. Ready were responsible for Loras College, Dubuque, Iowa. verdicts Thurs- Winona office to copy names of Arnold Huff , 4450 8th St., Good- al options presently available to day against Brad Beneke, 21; 1A registrants to notify them of young men" The opening weekend event and view. and women in this will be a Peter Simmons, 20 Donald draft law changes. Several FBI state. These additional services "Ripple Review" to ^ In other police action, Scherer irls be held tonight at 8:30 in Olson, 27. agents who made the arrests would come primarily through For freshman g the The three said $360 worth of stereo tape cafeteria of the St. Mary were arrested ear- said the trio intended to destroy the establishment of an upper 's col- ly July 11 at the Winona playing equipment was stolen high lege center. The review consists draft records. division college in the metro- Junior board office. Two others from a car parked at the Wi- of folk songs and variety enter- ar- The arrests in yWinona came politian area and the, develop- rested the same night at the nona Senior High School Tues- tainment featuring students Ed after FBI agents and local po- Y" ment of doctor of education will Alexandria draft board office day. WSC drop lice staked out the local draft Chabot, Lou Nuttini and doctor of arts degrees for , Steve Con- were convicted three weeks The car Is owned by Mitchell advisory group nally, Tony Newborn, John Stin- ago, office and waited while the teachers engaged in undergrad- and a third has offered Klagge, 412 W. Sanborn St., son, Bill Mahler, and others. to plead trio broke into the premises. who reported the theft at 3:15 uate instruction in private and guilty. Two persons arrested at They were arrested while in public colleges." Saturday's schedule will fea- Little Falls, also at the draft p.m. dormitory hours ture a gridiron the process of disarranging ma- battle between office and the same night, await Keith Peterson, 308 E, 3rd St., discussion held the men terials in the office. Among and women of St. trial. those testifying told police at 7:10 p.m. Thurs- Dormitory hours for Winona responsibility on the individual Mary' at the trial this Drafting of a letter to be sent s and the women of the Judge Edward Devitt ordered week was Mrs. day that a $45 transistor radio County to State College freshmen girls student.. . . " College of Saint Thdrhas Price, his car Wed- to the Winona Board of Educa- Teresa. The pre-sentence investigation for executive secretary was removed from will be a thing of the past when The no-hours policy will be touch football game of .the local tion concerning traffic prob will begin Beneke, Simmons and Olson. board, who answered questions nesdaynight. receive funds lems on adjacent Washington at 2 p.m. on the athletic At 9:21 a.m. Thursday, Mrs. the winter quarter begins oh evaluated later, officials said, field The defendants face prison about office procedures and Jan. 4 1971. Street was discussed by the of the College of Saint Teresa. Theresa Wieczorek, 722 E. How- for education , to see whether it is successful. terms of up to five years and board functions. Abolition of hours restrictions Winona Junior High School Ad- A pep rally parade will start ard St., called police to report Success of the plan will be visory Board at a meeting this at 6 p.m. from the College of that $25 worth of shrubbery Winona County will receive was voted by the college hous- ing committee at a meeting measured in terms of how well week with Principal Harvey Saint Teresa to St. Mary's. basic sciences under the direc- around her house was trampled $193,025 from the U.S. Office of tion of Brother Education to assist in educa- composed of six students, two security and privacy can be Kane and Ernest 0. Buhler, At 7:30 in the Saint Mary's g I. Ambrose Wednesday night. NSF rants Trusk, FSC, chairman of the : ' ' ' guidance counselor. College fietdhouse, ¦ ¦ - - ¦ ¦ tion of disadvantaged children faculty members and three ad- maintained in the residence the St. . . ministrators. Also considered at the month- Mary's Redmen basketball team chemistry department, will offer during the current fiscal year, ' halls. A key-checkout system, undergraduate courses in tree sales Rep. Albert H. Quie has an- The new policy will put the ly board meeting was the mail- will take on the Duhawks from a wa rded to gen- Christmas already in force for upperclass- ing of final report cards this Loras in a non-conference eral chemistry, organic chem- nounced. freshmen girls on an equal foot- istry, physics io benefit Boy Scouts ing with those in sophomore men, is being readied for the year and in future years. game. Last year Loras beat , and mathematics. The federal funds will be The basic science used to provide educational op- classes and beyond. Hours limi- freshmen girls affected by the It was decided that the next Saint Mary's 77-6L courses will ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - St. Mary's be designed specifically for high portunities for 1,041 children in tations for all women's hall new ruling. time student photographs will A mock fashion show in which scouting program ' - ' ¦ school biology The Arcadia ¦ teachers. ¦ "¦ ¦ ¦ be taken will be in early 1972, St. Mary's men will wear the benefits of a Winona County and are among residents, except freshmen, . St. Mary's College has receiv- Applicants will receive the were abolished this year. Last with the exception of new stu latest women's fashions will fol- for the summer Christmas tree sale sponsored some $22,611,000 in federal CENTRAL LUTHERAN ed two grants from the National graduate funds allocated to Minnesota for year the no-hours privilege was dents and, possibly, sixth-grad- low the game. The weekend will program should have by the Massuere shopping cen- Central Lutheran Church, cor- grade Science Foundation (NSF) to at least three ;years of teach- '' " living ers entering the seventh finish with the last mixer to ¦¦ ¦ this purpose. extended only to girls ing experience. ter. Wabasha County will receive in Sheehan Hall. ner of Huff and Wabasha in the fall. be held at St. Mary's this cal- help finance a summer program Applicants also As in past years, customers Changes in swimming attire endar year. The mixer will fea- should be currently teacming; or may choose their own trees and $110,883 for 598 children; Hous- Men students have never been streets, will conduct the annual for high school biology teachers, Christmas candlelight service at for boys were discussed. Boys ture the music of White Rat, a supervising the teaching of high pay for them in any of the ton County $144,815 for 781 stu- subject to hours restrictions. Brother George Pahl, president, school biology. dents; Fillmore County $221 210 College officials said today 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 13 at the now swim nude but, in the fu Winona area band. has announced. shopping center stores. None of , About 120 students are expect, sale will for 1,193 and Olmstead County that the action is in line with church. The choirs will be per^ ture, may wear trunks if they A pep rally button, available The college received a renew- the profits from the excused ed to enroll in the program. The go to the shopping center. $258,665 for 1,395. trends toward placing greater forming during the service. desire but will not be at the door of the college cen- able $71,000 grant from NSF for from swimming because of hav ter, is required admission to all program leads to a master of a series of graduate biology science in biology. ing forgotten to bring a suit activities. courses and a separate $40,600 Buhler announced that stand- grant to finance a summer in- ardized test results are now stitute in the basic sciences for Bloomington girl Tlfoisb WWISA, JJ&L m/ufa , kiisAA. available in his office and par Sheriff checks high school biology teachers. ents wishing to see their child- Both grants will be used to Miss Teen finalist- By RUTH ROGERS of the staff , "that we would like included in your annual ren's results may call the of- vandalism in provide stipends for the teach- appointment. FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP)- Think of the pleasure you would give former Winona Christmas card list." fice to make an ers attending the summer pro- A Bloomington Black River Falls Wis. , Minn., girl is Dally & Sunday News area residents now living elsewhere, Frank Zygulla, Jackson Home, , Goodview bar gram and to pay operating ex- one of eight semi-finalists Alice O. Brown, in the particularly those who are hospitalized. And that pleasure 54615 is included in the list submitted by penses. The stipends will cover Miss Teenage America pageant. assistant superintendent. Winona County sheriff's of- would be made even greater if you atached a note. tuition, fees, and living ex- Michelle Lee McCabe, 17, Frances Fitzpatrick, La Crescent Nursing Center, 701 ficers today are investigating penses. Consider the following: Jackson Counly representing Mlnneapolis-St. Main St., La Crescent, Minn. 55947. a report of vandalism at the The summer graduate pro- Paul Mrs. Ernest Axness, 12263 Izetta Ave., Downey, Calif. , will recite an original Stella McCluskey, American Lutheran Home, 158 East Goodview Municipal Liquor gram will start June 21 and end poem during Saturday night' 80242. The former Beulah Strand of the Arcadia, Wis., area, Store Goodview. s Main St., Mondovi, Wis. 54755. judge to take , 4054 6th St., Aug. 13. The biology depart- nationally televised (CBS) show. she made a wide acquaintance when she was matron at Julia Bjorge, Nyen's Rest Home, Blair, Wis. Sheriff George L. Fort said ment, under the chairmanship the Trempealeau County jail at Whitehall, Wis., and at the Clara Ncrstad, Green Lea Manor, Mabel, Minn. 55954. this morning that his office of Brother Charles Severin, RED. CROSS OFFICE same time was deputy to her husband while he served as Mrs. Jennie York, Grand View Home, Blair, Wis., former- received a report at 1:05 a.m. FSC, will offer courses in aqua- The Red Cross office, 276 W. sheriff. Hospitalized for many weeks, she finds that the years ly of Whitehall Wis. oath this month today that some patrons dam- tie and terrestrial ecology, cell Sth St,, will be closed until Wed- roll around fast, "although sometimes each day is an eter- Miss Helen Watson, 187 E. Lincoln St., Caledonia, Minn. BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis. aged the front door while leav- physiology, research, limnology, nesday while a new boiler is in- nity." Margaret Blicklc, "Whitewater Manor Nursing Home, 525 (Special) — Louis I. Drecktrah, ing. ichthyology, advanced genetics, stalled. Any emergency calls Marvin Schultz, Minneiska, Minn ., now at the Veterans Bluff Ave., St. Charles, Minn, 55972. who has been appointed to serve They are searching for sev- and the history of biology. may be directed to Mrs. Arthur Administration Hospital, Tomah, Wis., where he's been a pa- Mrs. Elizabeth Powell, Jackson Home, Black River Falls, as county judge of Jackson eral suspects in the matter. The summer institute in the Dora, 62 E. Sanbom St. Thursday he tient for several months. Mrs. Schultz, who continues to Wis. 54615. The Jackson Home, incidentally, is operated by County, said here the oath of office operate their cafe in Minneiska, hopes to have her World Jackson County. may take as she did for Thanks- Minn. 55947. Dec. 15 or Dec. 22. War II veteran home for Christmas, Marie Tushner, 701 Main St., La Crescent, to fill the , Pepin Wis. 54759. He was appointed giving. Melvin Hanson Lake Pepin Manor, , vacancy caused by the death of Veterans Home King, Wis., Judson Sylvester, St. Benedict Nursing Home, Durand, Ask government agency Louis Field, Grand Army , Judge Richard F. Lawton. The to formerly of Blair, Wis. Wis. 54736. appointment was announced Mrs. Caroline Helleckson. St. Joseph on the Flambeau Mrs. Minnie Hclgeson, Nyen's Rest Home, Blair, Wis. Wednesday from the office of Home, Ladysmith, Wis., formerly of Blair, Wis. Eddie Brink, Green Lea Manor, Mabel, Minn. 55954. Wisconsin Governor Warren Shut-ins nearer home: Mrs. Alida Landsverk, Grand View Home, Blair, Wis. Knowles in Madison. coordinate cancer fight Melvin Hoff, Green Lea Manor, Mabel, Minn. 55954. Edward Buchholtz, Whitewater Manor Nursing Home, 525 Drecktrah said the oath will Mrs. I. C. Gengler, 471 E- South Street, Caledonia, Minn. Bluff Ave., St. Charles, Minn. 55972. probably be administered by By H. L. SCHWARTZ HI Panelists Included a Nobel en in recent years show cancer Edwin Amundson, Grand View Home, Blair, Wis. Bert Mathews, Jackson Home, Black River Falls, Wis. Circuit Judge Lowell Schoen- WASHINGTON (AP) — A prize winner, presidents of the the No. 1 health concern of tho Mollic Bateman, Whitewater Manor Nursing Home, 520 54615. garth and it will definitely bo panel of scientists and promi- American Cancer Society and American people. 55972. She is just one of several Miss Margie Moriarty, 426 S. Ramsey St., Caledonia, administered before the end of Bluff Ave., St. Charles, Minn. nent laymen today called for an the American Public Health As- It said unless the disease Is who will be named later as listed by Charles B. Henry Minn. this month. independent government agency The Black River Falls City sociation, and several promi- checked, 50 million of the slight- to coordinate the nation's attack ly more than 200 million Ameri- Council Tuesday night granted on cancer, a disease they say nent businessmen and execu- Drecktrah's request for n leave tives. cans alive today will develop will strike one of every four cancer and 34 million will dio of absence from his duties as Americans unless checked. The committee said tho Unit- city attorney for the period from ed States in 1969 spent $410 per from it. The agency would coordinate Jan. 1, 1971, to April 1971. An person on national defense , $19 Thc committee's report said election to fill the position will research, assist clinics, disburse per person on tho space pro- all available evidence indicated grants and provide for a cen- be held in April of 1971. The , gram, and 89 cents per person tho death rate from cancer person elected win not take of- tral information bank. The cost: on cancer research. could bo cut 15 per cent if ev- fice until the following Janu- up to $1 billion annually within It said cancer currently costs eryone stopped smoking ciga- ary. five years. this nation $15 billion a year—$3 rettes. Drecktrah has served con- The panel, in a report pre- billion to $5 billion in direct care tinuously as city attorney of Winona Dally Newa Q. pared for tho Senate Committee and treatment and tho rest in Winona, Minnesota Black River Falls since being lost earning power and produc- *«• in 1950. on Labor ond Public Welfare, FRIDAY, DEC. 4, 1970 elected to that position said the National Cancer Insti- tivity. He said he is preparing a state- It estimated the proposed na- ment relative to tho change and tute is not equal to the task of bringing cancer to heel. tional program would cost $400 how it will affect his law prac- million in tho coming fiscal year tice clients and the many per- The institute, a division of the CONSTIPATED? had done Department of Health, Educa- —about double the present level DUE TO LACK OF FOOD " sons for whom he can- BULK IN YOUR DIET ¦ Income tax work for many tion and Welfare, is principal of federal expenditures for years. coordinator of the government's cer research. The eventual cost IWf- efforts against cancer. It re- would be between $000 million ceived $182 million in federal and $1 billion by 1076. mfyfimm City accident funds In 1969. The American Tho committee said polls tak- THURSDAY Cancer Society, a nongovern- 5:35 p.m. — West 4th Street, ment group, spends $24 million 100 feet west bf Johnson Street, a year for research and some turning collision at driveway: smaller voluntary agencies Verlle M. Sather, C8 E. Sarnia spend another $5 million. St., 1965 model sedan, $200; Ger- A coordinated national effort ELIVIJ ald Abts, Fountain City, Wis., will hasten eventual victory 1966 model truck, $200. over cancer, which claimed MEMORIAL SUNDAY 329,000 lives last year, tho com- ERECT DWELLING mmgggMMMmMWmmmmmaaammaimimmmmm«w '.7 V- .v-v,-W.'.»;,;'M WWmmimimmmmmM^mmmWmmmMmmmmmmmiiimiiMil mittee said. But tho experts DEC. 6-10:30 A.M. ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - the geometric cabinet administrator of stopped short of setting a dead- SPECIAL EQUIPMENT ... Dr. M. L. DeBolt, left , presi- , and Virgil Burns, Tho Kenneth Olsons are erect- line. Montessori the buckling frame. Breakfast Immediately After dent of thc Dolahanty Montessori School board of directors thc Minnesota Foundation, ing a concrete block dwelling Tho report Is tho work of a cylinder Burns was in Winona Thursday speaking to Kiwanis in the in Winona , tries his skill with tho special Montessori house on the east side of the 26-man committee, set up by afternoon and a special meeting of about 50 persons in thc the Service. Phone 452-47 1 6. blocks used in the classroom. Ho also holds the teen board villnge, near their concrete congressional resolution three (Daily News photo) while Mrs. Gerald Brummcr, achool directress, has part of evening. block factory . years ago. The weelcend on television ENDS SAT- ^^^s^^^^ ^^^^^^ m^^r^'i^Ei^'j i^^^ r^^a-^ra^ f-io.it N W» , ¦it Ui / V i a The College of Saint Teresa « Evonina ¦r^'-w .Krm,,,rt* ¦ SB*9 ... ¦ '¦ ' 7:15-9:55-55*.51.0O-$1.50 r™ih r c«n.k It Ttkei i Thltl 11 W*M*lWHr mMMB ^WSBB -W •:» Your World TW» OrtjMt 11 ^ ouSncM MI Sat. Matinee 1:15 flNH flV mSBBBBflT UHO MirvOrlini. M , " )Weeke nd sports *» Nit Playnowt J a W"* ,J 55*-75<-?1.25 j 'WW ««™» flBflBBB ^'OHBBBBr Intern. II TH S M t " ,,. ., presents ~h«* Olrl0 «-M»?? * .-|>U*ti Jiek Paar 4 ¦ ¦ BEST THRILLER Chiftfrtn'i Sixcfal IU9 Church B««f J pick CfMtl : " ¦-* U al^MKamWlBB 5-lWi Lov» AmiF(««nSryl« MOVIM Ml SINCE Z" fl ^^ H H ' Sllenl Pcre« 1» Bndy Bunch 4-Mf , ., „ «']» CHARLES BRONSON ______W lyYon iel evision j DanlelBoont 11 . . .. • Bit Villiy 11 n.-OD Marv Orlfflu J-M ¦ ¦" 1 p Packerarn* 11 1:00 Ecology 3 Movli If ______m__ ^_MKBS____B , 'Saturday 7:00 Nanny t-M» Bracken' World 11:00 Now Exploilea $ ^. : ,p 7i 30 Headmaster 1-44 * 3-1M3 Movla ll nfljmBjBBHPf]IB iJnPiyi ,,WH ' iOHflWsf MMMM *«flp#f Vff 1I4BV If if V1'BBUBBBF ^~~~''^ CHRISTMAS CAROL | | 12:15 The Chicago Bears meet the Minnesota , Vikings |§ Nomeof ihaOamt »:10 Tom Jones l-M f Movla l> I in a return match at jMetropolitan Stadiuna in | I Bloomington , Minn. Chs. 4-8. . . | x JmY ¦ ?t£X IM W> arfrrr ~/r, A - reMiw. AWW ^V W / +A^J> V A A i' &** *j^ ^ ^Hamm^mm^//« ^ i *. * *W ^ 1 V ^»!w> f If 1:45 The Arkansas Razorbacks take on the Texas Long- § AAarninn ** Outdoor Nawsreel i Mary Tyler Moore • 9 Hollywood Showcase horns. Chs: 6-9-19. . 7.0OluraZ™ cartoons ««vle 11-13 BALLET | : p Tony Parkir » « 8 Football Highlights. Highlights of last week's I PMi«nnvt "'! Blj Pletun 10 Wrattllrn ll I 3:30 Pro -.1«» Pre-Oam. 6-t-U ©r.er 0»ld«r. » m_m 7:J0 AdvinUiraU , MWH CASSfoY i pro football games. •!oo So,.m. «r.at " *•»?.*""» « *'» "»'"'•• «• 7:1/Ton5-9:20 ™^i i „,. " , „ "Christmas Carol" Tr.»Hn !•«•'» M«K« . Oeal ftD adapted from Diekens' US, ciUb It Tnl - * ,00-$1.50 ur 1 5:00 "Wide World of Sports. Scheduled are the Tourna- 1 Education ia w^nwagon Tram ll11 M 55f-$l ,:0 ,l Eh» « ¦ ' Mo unuoZrtyH V ""° |£'"?» "'a . *n«y «llim«n» . .. 1 ment of Thrills Auto Crash Championship Oct. 11 at Sklppy 10 B-10-1S. ,; ¦' ' ' and.; ¦ ^ Partv n - . . | Tampa, Fla., the $50,000 Lange Cup Professional | »:00 Seiama Strea! l '=30 This Week In Dairyland Jubilee If || || Skiing Championship taped last winter^t Vail, Colo. ¦ | ,.^ni"rMn 4 4-H Science 11 5i , „ , ^.. *"Ji directed by Bernard Johansen and The World Championship Professional Target i 1 lie HarUm Otohe. Mus,c Niwlywri ftime «•» I 4.-oo outdoor M«»i r..l ' '. I Diving Championship taped at Hollywood Beach, Fla. I trStteS ' W4 4 iM My nm sm M ; a western- .:;•. BEV;- y Farm Forum 11 *<••"» M . WMS " s C Af 1 Chs. 6-9-19. 1 suearfootLZ?Zt JI Lawrence Walk . -X ¦ ¦ ' ' lO:OO Talkin » ¦ M-L | «| S3 . 53 H, , eh0 ,H,9h- ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ W fllf cw A 'Trf^^^Bflili" "'1 lo;i^/Krl1o : * TH ¦> ^ | | | | 8:30 Mississippi's Rebels and the Tigers of Louisiana $ 11:00 ThU We«k In "S"«.fih?. « Theni dm.Bron.. ^ ' . College Theatre ^^^^ Pro Football 11 ,?"r «l . H
«> >i r T r>A I' 6-9-19. . I American Bandstand . «»n . Frem W.N.C.L.E•• Movie WO-13 Dec, 3, 4, 5-7 :30 p.m. _ % Y| ' « ¦!»¦ ' ¦ «,_„„„. ,; MO M.T. Mpore W Stutlents $1<0() ' ¦ ¦ ¦ Sunday y I — - • ' • jJiJJ-J?' Vi Collefle Football I ... Outdoora 11 a%».ie Dec. 6-^1:30 p.m. Children — 50* Afternoon Ouestlon Mark H Mitch Miller ll 12:00 The St. Louis Cardinals and the Detroit Lions square i Campui Cotnmtnl I IliOJ Pre-Oame 11 *'« PlyinsNun • News 4 I off at Detroit. Chs. 3-4. xf B«-nrn n.r.« i .fiM MUi Teenata Challenge 5 « M If D, /"* . Amerlcs J^-J f|y The Oakland Raiders take on the New York Jets in p 4-H scllnce 10 »'.« B g Picture 1 ,.„ News ,, ¦ :. • New York. Chs. 5-10-13. | Casey n Pro Football High- Dragnit 11 I M05le 10:00 Mews i ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' ¦ '" MM3 ^Vx/wuw ^vv*'^^^ nr i' i * — . *VWY^«^*Y U ' • " The Green Bay Packers and Pittsburgh Steelers | Widewide Worldworld ofor Soort^^Sporti 12:15 Pro Foolball 31¦ ¦ n Tak« A Thief II With Our Fine If meet at Pittsburgh. I Ui30 Hobby Show ». ' . 10!M New» ' ¦ W !$ outdoor^ Newsreel I ' MyMoitier. tho Car 5 Porier Waaone? IJ Johnny Careon 5 • Charcoal Broiled Stir Up Compliments ^ -Z0™' n r Movie | | | | 3:00 In the second half of the double-header, the Atlanta i Western <•? 10 . s. 30 i ,. i o.il^ 1W1 " ?!, : Falcons and San Francisco 49ers play at San Fran- Rol glon 13 DeamDMlh valleyValley OaiiMloay» ll "OO Movie mi CHICKEN FRY & % ** Agriculture 1> „ „ NeWi f |1 cisco. (Time appr0ximate). Chs. 3-4-8. ff 12-15 Wondcrsma 4 evening Movie 13 BowlingTournament 1:09 Now Explosion J 4:00 News 3-4-S 12:00 Now Expiation 5 I II 6:00 In pro hockey the Minnesota North Stars and Sabres ^ S f tUis SATURDAY NIGHT! I are matched at Buffalo, N.Y. Ch. 11. I 10:SO The Bud Grant Show. The Minnesota Vikings \f\ > ' » ** p ^ Sunday JSs ' ^! % coach comiaents on highlights of Satui day's game [ ^g I with the Chicago Bears. Ch. 5. < Morning Afternoon Evening DANCE < t 8:00 Religion 12:00 Pro Football 4:00 Lassie M N^ M 3 S.M0-lM3.il 3.4 'XmKiMMW^AViK ^.^/miA ^UvyA^W,^.vt > ' /„ ,1 , , ,< , . \ j. « v v4» ? f S-S-10-13 News 4J SATURDAY NIGHT 8:30 Cartoons 4-i-I-ll Directions I Young Rebels «•»•!» HBH -> 5 ; MOST COMPLETE STOCK I Believe In Pro Highllghla » Wild Kingdom 10-1J 111 All'l'im Jx iK&tXx BMM^ -at the Yy; Miracles 11 News , 11 4:30 Hogan's Hirois 1-4-1 ¦Jfi'- - WeWm* IN THIS AREA. Television review Revival Fires ll Music il Hall ol Paine f-10-13 MmBsflBl. mmm WMH WBf.MMfll ^ iy- '<' ^Mm' jBJBJ ' flBjfll i'I Phono 452-4970 1:00 Religious Special 3-1 11:30 Issues/Answers 4-1 Fabulous SIxtlM 11 ^ ¦ Day of Discovery 5 Bishop Sheen ll 7:00 Kukle. Fran *\ _0-EACLES Johnny Quest i-t-lt 1:00 Family Hour i 4 0111a t CALLAHAN'S Oral Roberts 10 Directions I Ed Sullivan 3-4-8 Rex Humbard 11-13 Movie 11 FBI 4-M» '- U | Discovery r; / n CLUB >:30 Falls for Today 5 11 7:30 World We Live In 2 B MUBETL off ^B BBT*^B LIQUOR STORE Plimpton will 1:1) i ., ,, Cartoons 4-MI Cartoons i 8:00 Clvllizallen ' 2 BTIllflfllil p** "w^rr - ,^j Happy Leonard J. Tschurnper »:45 Movie 10 l!3D Western 4 Olin Campbell 1-4-1 & George Kennedy ^P^mrPW Beats U9 Main Street 10:00 Camera Three 3-1 Roller Derby I Dick Van Byke •fi^Wj^rn , Town Hall 5 Issues/Answers ll 3-1M3 ' ¦ ' • ' Open Friday to 9 p.m. .( Cartoons Ml liW Mayor's Report 11 Movie 4-MI Member* Saturday to 10 p.m. Calhedral of To- J'» Know Your Oov'f ll t:30 World Tomorrow 11 2:3t> Movie l^GARLAND FRANK MORGAN • RAY BOLGER ' SAT,. DEC. 5 208 East Third St. about traffic. But I finally went the five top DHIA herds in the Delivered by Carrier—Per Week 40 cents Pancho Gonzales. He goes in, 16 week* JI5.30 S3 weeks JJ0.40 BERT LAHR" JACK HALEY Produced by MervynURoy DlrectfdlOy Victor Flemtao} Member* off . It would have taken more ARC Trempealeau County DHIA Music by Music by and expects to come out each By mall ilrictly In advance) paper stoo- guts to ask to climb down." report. ped on expiration date: The Rhythm Playboys The "Western Ramblers" time a loser, net- With 23 cows, In Fillmore, Houston, Olmsted, Wabasha, "Well, Plimpton hedgincly The national educational Call averaged and Winona counties In Minnesota) Buf- _ ^¦¦¦¦HBBBB l " work had something of a drama falo, Jackson, Pepin, and Trempealeau -f.. .--- HELD OVER — ENDS TUES. ^ 1,546 pounds of milk and 6? counties In Wisconsin, and fo military j scoop Thursday night with the pounds of butterfat. The re- personnel wllh military addresses In the 7 75 performance of a new Tennes- continental United States and overseas maining four owners of the with APO or FPO addresses. see Williams one-act play, "I year $19.00 9 month* $15.00 UNEMA ^7sS Can't Imagine Tomorrow." It top five herds, the number of 4 montha $10.75 3 months $ 5.75 was coupled with an old Wil- cows, and averaged milk and Elsewhere — t IMP liams playlet, "Talk To Me Like butterfat totals are : In United States and Canada "f aW-ntM » year $28.00 9 month* $21.00 B MB B B MmmB^M'^B ' the Rain and Let Me Listen." Frederic Back, Strum, Wis.; « months $15.00 3 months $ 8.00 | SEE IT! Both short dramas, beautiful- 57; 1,320 pounds and 52 pounds; Sunday Nawi only. 1 year ...... $10.00 I.#.fffl l .fl l HBHH 1 ly and sensitively performed, Send change ot address, notices, undeliv- I Gerald Holte , Eleva, Wis.; 32, -- were heart-rending vignettes of ered copies, subscription orders and other , 1,402 poinds and 49 pounds; mall Items to Winona Dally News, P.O # IS QUITE SIMPLY, " the lost: A ravaged couple who Leslie Seeker, Gaiesville, Wis.; Box 70, Winona, Minn. 5W. have completely lost contact I HEAR IT! 23; 926 pounds and 48 pounds Second class postage paid at Winona, <% THE BEST AMERICAN FILM Minn. ' . ' ' with each other; a pain-wracked and Steve Lamberson, White- ta«ajMsas«W|t«MsMf *JM^ woman and a disturbed man hall, Wis., 61; 1,277 pounds and # I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!" Spr coming together in another. 47 pounds. "IT'S ONE HELL OF A FILM! A COLD, SAVAGE AND CHILLING l WHO SAYS COMEDY! -BruC« foilliatinion. PLAYBOV g& " 'CATCH-22' says many things f- The that need to be said again and \j Dollar Doesn't again! Alan Arkin's perform' ance as Yossarian is great!" *¦/ Buy Much Anymore? -Joseph Mo»|tf»lltrn, NtWiMU R — No One Under 17 Unless With Adult f ON CABLE TV / ^^^Br B,° M0> l l coucaR Hi| , 5 COUNir5lJSli SATURDAY DEC ^mmwBSSm^SS^B^m\WIMBSM^-\w^:^^Mx\^MII CHICAGO "38J$^E'Vaf)Maf)a'NH §83888 | | A-Mm^. ^fflB - aftw ITJMHO I ^¦H^B^H^^^ ^^^^l»»»»»»»T.aftt'^Til^-J*C¥wKv*J?y Afar *>»igj8!S8| -J H •ARLM FOR ^S^BSi ^llI H THE ENTIRE FAMILY vftSBf ^ ' ¦ II II FOLLOWWHISKERS/' anlndependetit ¦ ^C VIKINGS H and curious young cougar, through two §§|| ^C W exciting years in a mountain wilderness Wm CABLE CHANNELS 4 & 7 — TIME 12:15 P.M. ||J known as "COUGAR COUNTRY" \ |||| H * A true wild life adventure story H*^ |jj ^mmw^^ ¦ STARTS SUNDAY I ^ Change . <.! ¦ ¦ II iwM ¦ UNLf III III Wr^ffcMlJI ! \S7 ^ffi Call 452-6040 || auEBBSUNDAY AT 1§§§ For More to See and Hear on Cable TV! Ml 12:30-2t3O-4i3O.6:3O-8:30 P.M. §§§ Wl MON.-TUES. AT 6:30-8:30 P.M. H n Cablevision ||J ADM. $2.00— CHILDREN UNDER 12 751 H America IMpiM^^ OPEN YEAR 'ROUND ON HIGHWAY 61 JUSTs 2 BLOCKS WEST OP JUNCTION 14 |« $ A PRODUCT OF AMERICAN NATIONAL PLAZA EAST Donald' ENTERPRISEsTlNcT^H 120 ON THE Mc , j —^, ¦ _ __ . ! . ¦- - ——-1"——J—a shepherd boy heaven Is anything but paradise since Ma robe doesn't have pockets, he can't fly and, worst of all, he doesn't Television highlights have his treasured lox. 6:30. Chs. 5-10-13. ED SULLIVAN. The lineup includes Joey Heatherton, Today dancer^choreographer Peter Gennaro, comics Scoey Mitchell CHILDREN'S SPECIAL. "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Rein- and Pat Cooper , together wjti the National Football League Wrikih&fy ^deer, Seventh time around for the animated puppet show Holiday Halftime, a group of singing professional football NEW YORK (AP) - Two "I think everyone has a se- ed them Tvith a pack mule walk. based on the classic Christmas tale.'narrated by Burl Ives. players. 7:00. Chs. 3-44. brothers from Waseca, Minn., cret dream to see the world," named Willie Make-it, which They said they expect to go 6:80. Chs. 5-10-13. DICK VAN DYKE. Dick and Bill Cosby team up for the boarded a jetliner "Thursday said Dave. "What better way they used on the hike to New through Spain, France, Italy, NAME OF THE GAME. "Why I Blew Up Dakota." When tox see it than to walk it?" , York. The mule was then re- Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Greece, first time on this comedy special. 8:00. Chs. 5-10-13. night for Lisbon, where they Turkey, a weird pop ariist receiver s birthday present from his arch TIM CONWAY, Dorothy Lamour, Mickey Booney and He said the trip will take turned to Waseca and the Iran, the Soviet Union enemy, it turns out to be a bomb. The enemy is arrested plan to buy a pack mule,and from 2 to 2% years--"no more brothers were given $50 to buy and return by way of Japan singer Bobby Bloom guest on a program that features a and Ha-waii. and the case is taken by America's most flamboyant at- courtroom sketch in which Dorothy is Mickey continue their projected 15,000- than someone going into the a second mule, which they vrill torney and champion of the the defendant, service." name Willie Make-ityn.;' - - underdog. 7:30. Chs. 5-10-13. the judge and Tim the beleaguered prosecutor. 9:00. Chs. mile around-the-world walk. Winona Daily News THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY. "This Is My Song." Little ¦ John said their local Cham- The brothers will pas; out RJI Danny 3-4-8." ' The brothers, Dave Kunst, 31, Winona, Minnesota V*« Partridge composes a song for tbe group and it turns ONES. A former ber Of Commerce had present- pledges to UNICEF on the FRIDAY, DEC. 4, 1970 out to be identical1 to brother Keith's new song. 7:30. Chs. THE BOLD Army medic who has been and John, 23, began their valk 6-9-19. practicing medicine without a license in an isolated com- from Minnesota June 20 when THIS IS TOM JONES. Jazz singers Nancy Wilson and munity is charged with murder and the man¦ he.claims can they set out for New York City. clear him can't be found. 9:00. Chs. 5-10-13. " • ' " . ¦< . Buddy Greco bring their riiythms to the show. 8:00. Chs. ' ' They are making the trek to 6-9-19. " .. •• laise money for UNICEF—the MERV GRIFFIN. Paul Paulsen, singer Rick Nelson and United Nations International Harry (Gannon) Morgan are on hand at 10:30 on Chs. 3-8 Children's Emergency Fund. QUALITY HOME while a special T^ OWN A "The Year 2000," will be seen onv Ch. 4 at ¦ ¦ y Dave, who has a wife and 10:50. Yy. . . .. '• ¦Today ¦Y Y; . . . - three children, JOHNNY CARSON. Jerry Lewis winds up a week as PEYTON PLACE, Lana Turner/ Conclusion of the two- said he got the Built by LOCAL Contractors and Suppliers guest lost. 10:30. Chs. 5-10-13. part treatment of Grace Metalious'.? novel about personal idea about a year ago, and his DICK CAVETT. Basketball'star Bill Russell sits in for conflicts, secrets and sexual improprieties in a small New -brother, a June graduate of the Dick as guest host, 10:30. Oh. 6. England town. The first part was seen >at this hour Thursday University of Minnesota, quick- (1957). 8:00. Chs. 3-4-8. ly agreed to accompany him. Preferable to a Pre-Fab! Saturday K^ ^t ^X ^t ^j ^ PEANUTS SPECIAL. "A Charlie Brown Christmas." The DIANE, Lana Turner. A countess makes sq ippeal for the life of her husband ..who lias been arrested for ' conspiring Christmas season is approaching but Charlie Browii is in the king The 5th Dimension, singer Son- ' BADMAN'S IJOUNTRV, George Montgomery. A New ny "- James and Jonathan Winter head up the guest list. 6:30. Mexico lawman is: forced to choose between marriage and his annual meet Ch. 5-10-13. badge (1958). 11:00. Ch. 19: y " : Y CHRISTMAS CARTOON* "Frosty the Snowman^" Jimmy ON DANGEROUS GROUND, Robert Ryan, A .tough de- Durante narrates the animated adventures of the snowman tective falls in love with a blind girl while working on a is Saturday who came to life one day. 7:30. Chs. 3-4-8Y murder case (1952). 12:00. C6. 13. ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW. News anchorman Ted OPERATION COUNTERSPY, George Ardisson. A super- The 35th annual meeting of the s plot to desBoy six^ cities (1966), Baxter can't say a word that isn't written for him and goes spy uncovers a¦ madman' stockholders of the Arcadia Co- to pieces at a speaking engagement so; Mary has to. get 12:20. Ch. 4. - operative Association will be him back together again for the newscast. 8:30. Chs. 3-4-8. KID MONK YBARONI, Bruce Cabot. A boxer becomes held in the Arcadia High School MISS TEEN-AGE AMERICA. The 10th annual pageant is punch-shy in order to protect his new profile created by gym Saturday, beginning at 1 presented live from Convention Center, Forth Worth, Texas, plastic surgery (1952). 12:30. Ch. 11. p.m. A free dinner will be serv- 9:00. Chs. 3-4-8. Saturday " ¦ - ' xx - ' ed in the school dining room ¦¦'¦ t " , , . jt. *X ' ' * ** * Y ' Sunday TEXAS ACROSS THE RIVER, Dean Martin. Satire in- at! 11:30 a.m., preceding the ' " - J ^ ir,SA * ^t'i^"^* t - » ' I CAMERA THREE. "Why Alice?" The off-Broadway pro- volving a fugiti've Spanish nobleman, his Southern-belle meeting. duction of "Alice in Wonderland" is discussed by director fiancee, a Texas gun-runner with a dead-pan Indian side-kick The business session will in- John Gregory and author-columnist John Lahr with excerpts and a fetching maiden in distress (1966). 8:00. Chs. 5-10-13. clude the report of officers, a McHALE'S NAVY* Ernest Borgnine. The crew of PT-73 vote on an amendment to the WlfiWm&^MiMtJJ ^:J^i^M^A^.J^-mm^ presented¦ by the Manhattan Project Company. 10:00. Chs. ^ 3-8. " - • " try to pay a $2,009 debt (1964). 10:30. Ch. 10. articles of incorporation and by- HALL OF FAME.. "The Littlest Angel." For a young SUSAN SLEPT HERE, Dick Powell. A HoUywood writer laws and election of three mem- gets into trouble "with his sweetheart because of the antics of bers to tbe board of directors. This Distinctively Attractive Home Built by. B . a delinquent girl who has been put in his custody¦ (1954). Directors whose terms expire 10:30. Ch. 11. ' Y ¦ ' . - . are Richard Haines and Leo • CARPENTRY • PLUMBING dt Lactation average TERROR BY NIGHT, Basil Rathbone. Sherlock Holmes Korpal. A director also will be Oak Construction Kramer & Toye Sandy's is called in to protect a fabulous diamond from jewel-snatch- elected to replace the late Er- ers (1946). 11:00. Ch. 3. vin Duellman, who was serv- © HEATING Plumbing & Heating, Inc. KISS THE BLOOD OFF MY HANDS, Burt Lancaster. A ing as president of the board ELECTRICAL rilia }C.£l I World'. Utaett listed for Sievers Heating & © TOY-FltlEP psychologically disturbed young man becomes involved in of directors up to the time of \ rl^yriJt crime (1948). ll:O0. Ch. 8. his death. Air Conditioning Best Electric PALM SPRINGS WEEKfiND, Troy Donahue. Peaceful Holdover board members are area Holsleins Palm Springs nocks with the annual Easter weekend on- Paul Pehler, secretary, and Al- — CUSTOM DESIGNED -- slaught by vacationing students (1963). 11:15. Ch. 4. len Dora, Rudolph Swenson and HOUSTON, Minn. - Donald Alvin Guenther, directors. A. Fort, Houston; Cyril and FOREVER DARLING, Lucille Ball. A chemist and his wife find their marriage is breaking up because they have The editor of the Midland Co- KENDELL O'BRIEN LUMBER CO. Merlin Persons, St. Charles, operator and public relations di- no interest in each other's activities (1956). 11:30. Time ap- Phone 454-3120 Minn., and Elmer-Simon, AL proximate) Ch. 9. rector, Harlan Stoehr, will be 115 Franklin St. tura, Minn., have reported neV THE HELLBENDERS, Joseph Gotten, Civil War drama guest speakers. lactation averages for their reg- proximate) Ch. 9. istered Holsteins on DHIR tests. ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN, Jose Ferrer. A shy Russian immigrant vows to marry (1952). The herd averages for 1969-70 a Manhattan stenographer 1 11:30. (Time approximate) Ch. 19. test year are: THE PRIVATE LIVES OF ADAM AND EVE, Mickey Fort: 23 completed production Booiey. A group of people seek refuge from a storm in a records averaging 16,934 pounds country church ( I960). 12:39. Ch. 11. . 1; • ¦' ¦ ¦ of'milk and 669 pounds of but- ' Sunday [ WISH FRIENDS A x ] terfat; Persons: six completed CIRCUS WORLD. John Wayne. In fte early lSOOs a man r. . ,. - ; touring Europe with his circus i production records averaging and Wild West show ia troubled by a series of puzzling misfortunes that befall¦ the show (1964). :'X "XX x X X 'X °x X \f *Yx: x -XXX\ 19,099 pounds of milk and 712 8:()0>. Chs. 6-9-19. v ' I A A - * xM_ pounds of butterfat and Simon: TIGER BAY, ; i 57 completed production records John Mills. When a seaman kills the gM .n ; \fho left him, a little girl is the only witness (1958). 10:30. f. _\tt -f%, ww\ AT I ini *C averaging 17,699 pounds of milk ChYll.. . X fl IBKB CTO^ and 691 pounds of butterfat % B w fla^g^ Hi H j^ ^fepi m *%__& __\ MM IS %HJH *i%&? J To provide a uniform means MIDNIGHT LACEYDaris Day.yThe American wife of a of comparing registered Hol- London businessman says she has received some murder threats but her husband and the police are skeptical (i960). I To tho Lucky Winner FREEl| stein herd performance, lacta- 10:30. Ch. 10. I iv*t Coma fa ., . ReglHtr for firawlrgl tion averages are reported on THE INCREDIBLE , NofWaa I a Buy a a. No O&f'sBlfonf the industry standard, two milk- MR. LIMPET, Don Knotts. A shy rata CKti mot to ammrtmlii bymftrm nf. ings per day, 305-day, mature bookkeeper dreams of becoming'a fish (1964). 11:05. Ch. 6. equivalent basis. These produc- THE DARK COMMAND, John Wayne. Story of CantrilTs *}{.Completa TOYS end CAMIS tn All tion levels compare favorably Raiders, the outlaw banol that operated in Kansas during •t#V Hue era |uit n few typical tojH the 'Civil War (IM)). 11:30. Ch. 13. " v D^ to the average United States SHERLOCK HOLMES FACES • 31" Walking Bell • Oolf 1.1 * Boat • hoi T«bl* cow's annual production of 8, DEATH, Basil Rathbone. • Jlj-Waw runl. « Corulrvitlon Set • Advintiire Sherlock Holmes is ldi«t> called "when several unusual murders take ^ Q«m» and muiy ethtr nailonol leyi by 821 pounds of milk and 325 Whldixa,.ornco, H-O, Hoibto, Ironiojm™ A pounds of butterfat. place on an estate (1943). 12:30. Ch. 11. I VIA OUR CLASSIFIED SECTION I The University of Minnesota supervised Uie sampling and production testing procedures in Lewiston High Dairy cattle feeding 'f ALL \ cooperation with the official session scheduled Sm&fcherd testing programs of the site of drug 18-Word national Holstein-Friesian Asso- WAUMANDEB, Wis. _ In- | $ | 25 ADS | HUFF & HOWARD formation on the feeding WINONA ciation of America, Brattleboro, telelecture and Vt. nutrition needs of ., dairy cattle Greeting CASH! LEWISTON, Minn. - Ron Pit- will be presented by James 1 | zer, family life specialist at the Crowley, University of Wiscon- I University of Minnesota, will sin extension dairyman, at the ir. fflJ^JWSS3SS(KfitWS!)BS53KS!S5aj«53 \JJ speak at the informational meet- farm management meeting on dairy cattle feeding at 8; IS ing on drugs, youth and society p.m. Dec. 10 at the Waumandee at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Public School. Lewiston High School cafetori- A question-answer session will yip . ,," M fimM um via telelecture. follow Crowley's presentation. i- Greetingsh™' ii Awx>viif>i i I' Y C^JSlv ^«f "69' hY-K^i t \ Sponsored by the University's Dairymen and other interested -** SPECIALS!^ agricultural extension service in persons may attend. If a1 the J'<# ' l cooperation with the Winona Yff County Extension Office, the meeting will provide a question- KS DANCEj I BOONDOC W7 answer session after the lecture _&$$ at which time questions will Yucatan Store i { ic Fish Special $1.35 \tfj~ i \ ML YOU CAN EAT ! gta be replayed to tlie lecturer via ^ft^j SUN., i^Z\ DEC. 6 the telelecture. $1.50 Jii Muilc by / ir Chicken Special is one of sev- L i ^v^mim ¦a'* m. % HAPPY HOLIDAYS" end beat of iJ iH Winona County \ >vr^^^_ ' ' \ i l»ck ' VW)< Bills May Irom % pi t '^*^ I ALL YOU CAN EAT B W« "Weitam Ramblers \ ~.m\ Ws ft 'o " K * % Cathy, Pat, DorlB and 6ob. I en counties participating in the ^^ 9 to 1 v-V_ \ tC^Vn Wi Jj " 1 I I I SATURDAY — live Entertoinhient > \ program which can be heard Hall available for Wedding t if ^^^vJ i Afl Pa. I. * M « MERRY CHRISTMAS - Happy i " • r ?m \ ljV«'* Wt g Naw Year totr all our «la|lve» C Z by all seven counties at the Donees, etc. !» * trvi Jeonalta S 4 "TRIO CON BRIO" A A *W&k. A \m Dobb|ifrl^'*'' °™ R°V' | | same time. Now serving Chicken and J- SHI m Wi ' It tnd ' tT Doll's ^ar. ind J q • MERRY CHRISTAAA ' Shrimp f. Mm\ MK .^MSSSS1 ^i* ? S a C : Come Out to the J«y_ ^ Ha ¦* 4 For Fino Food / LIVESTOCK JUDGE t" JHa MSL\ mimKKWfSi^^ Ti PPy andNaw Year to all our JJ fr am-Mrfa ^au ^m^a*^-%m%W^ ^ 5 'rlanat nelghbora. Claranca, y J ^^^ Be e s,ev» BtKl Denny Weczorak. S ¦ MABEL, Minn. - Robert C. X \^0t« ^Bi-W^^ fi? " < J ps*"" » Miller, Mabel, has served as L* BEST W|5(|ES 0. 1ho Mawn (rom « J Enjoy r v» tha BamUenaK Family . . . Dan, M j judge in the 1970 Great Western \ A Boondock' Livestock Show In Los Angeles, jf Comploto noma, address and payment must bo included with order. S eiaanor, uri nnd Danny. .\ \ Calif. Tho grand champion bull t No anonymous greetings will be published. « $***\J"ZVTli, loealod oul In lh« "boondockis^/^"^ . Stf rat § T^T . . ^ \ •v on Count/ Trunk "M" betwaan j was S & W- Mr. Marshall 8428, DANCING f K olives and frlendsl Ethel Man- (A J uel and Karen Stark. W t ^-^ (jaloiville and Trcmpo»le»u, entered by S & W Angus Ranch, AT THE h ' ft ^ ^^— "^^^ ^ •* , i,» .nai,., ia,, | .in \ Waubun, Minn. _, _ _ _, m MERRY CHRISTMAS to my Ma- fi -t LABOR TEMPLE S p ¥ h. A I B ttl «•' *" P-T - ••«•» W.S., T.W.. H *" ORCHESTRA f: A #1 •¦*. ¦ I *m _p^_ U tteoroo, Rich, Johnny 0. Sin- R "t ^ cerely, »m D. Mohan. W ¦* * IVlOlS TO K Evory Sat. Might ¥ x ' S YULETIDE GREETINGS and belt E 4 Thli Wwk [5 H , wlihai In Ihe coming year to our _ j L ffi loyal aupportora John S. Pol and C *i RMnntttta Ranch Hands _ _ Co,hv MBMBBRS t m mmammmimm e ' e Jj ¦¦ ;: W9m\ ¦¦ WSSjBm ¦ _X ¦ _^Bm\f& & tl MERRY CHRISTMAS and a Hap- I 'j - J0m%* llWkV^^ ^ J ¦ ! te py Naw Year to all our I MT M m U M B H B^. ¦ m trlonds 6 M INN , VALLEY and Alma M i Highway 35 Botwoon Cochrane Arn °,d u \ [ EMssr" MAS and | i \ 1 CHRU "Just 25 Minutat From Winona" I K IIl\l[ § MERRY T Happy Y [ l ^^mmJm- -I rrM MM iSa%iJmf "T h ~ ^*jW~W W^mK M mMmiHmn mB flflm wl*m ^i^ka^B^MMM^ New rel WEDDING DANCE \\ ^mJM * ^M ^ B Year to friends, stives Jl * f m and nelohtoral Dorothy and Syl Ji ?f ENTERTAINMENT ] tr » Kline. . (A j^ Every Friday & Saturday, 9 p.m. -1 a.m. WITOKA BALLROOM *£ {5 THIS LITTLE oreellnp hopea Vt !I For • I , . P.O. BOX 70, WINONA, MN. 55987 | fflM' ^TSS S j I- a 8. Morlbeth^^^ Schaefer. I, Live Music By EDEN SET of La Crosse I ROSIE PRICK A tt B K *T £ vmmv& ^^w^m ^'sfxst h DAVE BAUMOARTNER v i OPEN j SATURDAY, DEC. 5 Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Mday 4 p,m. -l a,m. \ Music by tha Saturday and Sunday Noon • 1 a.m. j Badger Dutchmen Franklin St. | CLOSED TUESDAYS , Playing Old, M»w Time Or Stop At 601 & Country WssUrn Mutlc l Its bad news B|B|BlW^HpBBi8H|W £&** ^S__sB_ffi Passenger trains or pigeons 'j^t.*- * ' for farmers WASHINGTON - Congress, the against the action by the House last Nixon administration and Secretary x w^^^^^^^^^^miweek in authorizing $17.3 billion more Generally the news this week has not been good of Transportation John Volpe have to complete the 42,500-mile Interstate for termers. m ade a small, shaky start on re- Highway System by 1978. This not deeming intercity rail passenger only represents a staggering level First the U.S. Department of Agriculture said tion of a new public acceptance ot Dec. 4, W0 service from the limbo into which of investment for paving a great Page ia, Winona Dally News, Winona, Minnesota, Friday, that prices paid fanners for raw products dropped American railroads and national pol- rail service. deal of the countryside, bulldozing 1.5 percent in November and averaged 4 percent less icy , have cast it. The designation Moreover, the new rail corpora- much of our cities, and most to the decline turning a than a year ago. Contributing of a basic national passenger net- tion is expected to operate funda- high proportion of American air blue were hogs, beef cattle and corn — products that work, to be operated by a single mentally on its own profits. The fed- and noxious; it is fortunately also an invest- are prominent iri this area/Higher prices, corporation, offers hope for the fu- eral government is investing only ment stupendously out of proportion prevailed for eggs, milk and tomatoes, although, ex- ture — but at the same time it $40 million directly in the corpora- to the low efficiency and are an insignificant poor cost- The committee cept for milk, these products suggests the immense problems re- tion , although it will guarantee $100 effectiveness of automobile' trans- factor in this area. maining. million in loans to enable railroads portation. to invest in the corporation. It is The USDA's index of prices received in Novem- The network announced by Volpe; Since it takes only a fourth as for instance, includes no north-south at best uncertain whether, under much thrust to ber was 270 percent of the 1910-19 base period com- these limitations, and after decades move a railway car and its critics high lines on the West Coast. This is on steel rails as pared with 274 in October and the five-year of neglect of the passenger by the it does to move not only an appalling gap, omitting a rubber-tired I _ _...... jj.. ..mi of 289 percent last March. railroad companies, the new corpo- vehicle on concrete; The Committee on Internal Secur- what many Hiad thought would be a modern train requires only about House of Representatives the farmer is getting ration can approach a profit by ¦ ity of the What this means is that the profit-promising corridor route 15 relatively • pollution-free horse- (it used to be called the House Com- than previously. Can July 1, 1973. After that date, if it M&MmmaM&sm;' ft, ¦» * ' nfjaiffl less money for his products between Los Angeles and San power per, passenger to perhaps 10 Un-American Activities) M^__^_M__W_____ ^_^_j^_i£l^^SSMaMMMm employes settling for does not, it will be empowered to mittee on you imagine General Motors Diego; it is also apparently the times that for a pollution-belching issued a report a month or so back less money than previously? product of cost-cutters in the ad- reduce the basic network now des- to the committee that urged th« ignated. auto. One highway lane can handle called "A Limited Survey of Hon- ex- ministration who held down the 1,200 cars, or perhaps 2,000 passen- oraria Given Guest Speakers for En- abolition of HUAC. No doubt that That's just part of the dismal picture. Farm This niggardly approach stands in per- scope of the system. This does not gers, an hour — compared to 40,* gagements at Colleges and Univer- committee was infiltrated, or who penses have risen to another reconi high of 395 augur well for their faith in it or stark and utterly senseless contrast cent, compared with 394 in October and 378 a year 000 passengers an hour on a sin- sities." knows even conceived, by commu- in rail passenger service generally. to the $290 million further invest- gle railroad track. ago. . ment Congress even now is being The report is, essentially, a ros- nists. But Dr. Bennett is not a com- VOLPE POINTED OUT, mor.- If Congress and the administra- ter of 120 names of men and wom- That means it's costing farmers more to produce asked to make in that unnecessary munist; and remember, this is not over, that no new equipment can tion continue to give outsize prefer- en who spoke at selected colleges the products that they're selling for less money. Can and uneconomic monuineht to pollu- supposed to be a list of dupes who be expected in operation for at least tion and technological! chauvinism, ence to the highways and the air- during the preceding academic year, you imagine General Motors selling its trucks and lines nothing anyone else can do , in the words of the chair- travel with the communists, on cars for less money than prior to the new contract two years, which is not much less the SST. y ; and are than the guaranteed life of the des- will redeem the passenger train , "known radical revolutionar- which list Dry Bennett would be- which raises its employes' wages. man ignated network. Yet, it is the pro- THE SMALL attention end spars* from the fate of the passenger pi- ies." How do we define a "known long. It is supposed to be a list in addition, interpretations of the new three-year vision of clean, comfortable, speedy investment accorded passenger geon. ; radical revolutionary?" The c o in- of the revolutionaries th emselves. farm bill signed by President Nixon this week indi- trains upon which rests any projec- trains makes even less sense judged New York Times News Service mittee defines you as such if you 3. THE COMMITTEE HAS every cate that there will be more emphasis on free-market are "affiliated" with any one of }2 right to seek to inform the Congress prices and less on government subsidies. The USDA organizations listed by said commit- and the people, but if it chooses is in the process of developing the specific 1971 tee as subversive: doing so as ¦ such lazy means of program. ' ' What happened then was that the merely to publish the names of in- The person repersoned American Civil Liberties Union went dividuals who have appeared as It is definitely not a good news week for the farmer — particularly for tie short-haul. — AB. WASHINGTON - Mrs. Guy Bol- himself umasked as Bormann in to a District Court judge insisting speakers at given campuses, it dam- am has found herself living one of 300 pages of specious data and ab- that the committee had no right to ages its own credibility, How much publish such a list. To everyone the more exquisite nightmares made surd speculation at a cost of $6,95 's more useful if it had painstakingly surprise, the judge issued a restrain- put together newspaper accounts of available by the miracle of later- is a very real threat indeed. ing order on the committee, enjoin- what it is that some of the radi- twentieth-century nightmare know- Lawn-littering can Th ere will be those sudden silences THERE OUGHT to be a law, of ing it (and the Government Print- cals are saying to the students. how. A newly published book de- when you enter your hairdresser's ing Office ) from publishing the re- In order to propose legislation to- clares her nonexistent. course, but the F irst Amendment shop. And occasional whispers over- makes it impossible and leaves it port, on the grounds that the com- shut them up? be curbed in city Mrs. Bolam, it says, is not Mrs. heard: "Amelia Earhart! No kid- up to every man to fend for himself. mittee was not pursuing a, valid leg- No; although the committee Bolam at all, but Amelia Earhart, ding?" Curious stares. One of the most successful recent islative mandate. The Justice De. should certainly inform the Congress Winona residents who had to clean up recently a flier who took off across the At- fending cases involved a 'writer partment has appealed the judge's whether existing legislation, state lantic before World War II and has IN ONE RESPECT Mrs. Bolam after a blizzard, of newspaper, advertising supple- is fortunate; While it will certainly whom we will pseuddname Smith. ruling, and it is generally supposed and federal, is doing what ought ments—distributed by out-of-town merchants—de- not since been seen under her own A few years ago Smith became ob- that the higher courts will overrule to be done. Rap Brown, for instance, name. Mrs. Bplam called a news be a nuisance having to go about scended on their lawns may be interested to learn explaining that she is not Amelia sessed with the notion that a distin- him. Meanwhile, the identity of the was about to be tried (he either there is something they can do about such situa- conference and said she was Mrs. guished North Jersey thug whom speakers is weir known, the New skipped town, or was killed) for giv- ¦"¦ ' - Bolam, not Amelia Earhart. Those Earhart, it should not involve a tions; ; . .:. . . ;. . . great deal of unpleasantness. we shall miscall ''Dutch" was really York Times having printed the list ing a speech in Cambridge, Md.t cf us who weren't there cannot say Even in full. A few observations: A city ordinance states specifically that "no per- if common humanity became per- Martin Bormann, which, it is charged, drove his lis- how the reporters responded to the teners to arsonist frenzies. That was son shall within the city distribute printed advertis- poignant plight of a person compel- suaded that she was, in fact, Ame- Smith was writing Chapter Two 1. THE COMMITTEE is clearly ing to residences or commercial properties except lia Earhart, she might learn to live of his book when "Dutch" got wind within its rights. Its "duties" under a state law. Is there a federal coun- led to insist publicly upon her own terpart? Is the 1968 law, under by placing on the porch of such residence or by identity, but the journalist's code with that and even, perhaps, to en- of what was up. Smith tunned a the law, require it to "make inves- delivering it to the occupant of such residential or joy it. There would be television deaf ear to "Dutch's" insistence that tigations" of the "character" and which the Chicago 7 were prosecut- is quite clear about how they should ed, working? Does it need modifi- commercial properties." have responded. opportunities on the "predawn talk his real name, which he had never "activities" within the United States shows, fees for endorsements and even told the police, for fear they of such "organizations" an d cation? What in fact do the revolu- A call to the city manager by any citizen ob- ..THEY SHOULD have looked at testimonials, film rights. A maca- vvould leak it in Jersey City arid "their members, agents, and affili- tionists (who are well represented serving such distribution should be sufficient to bring lier noncommitally. Their task, aft- bre existence to be sure, but toler- have him laughed out of the mob, ates, (as) seek to establish or as- on the committee's list) say to the about quick enforcement of the ordinance by city er all, was only to record Mrs. Bol- able withal. was Katzenjammer. sist in the establishment of, a to- students? Chapter and verse. These police. It seems likely that if this careless and am's assertion and not to judge. Those who disagree need only con- At last, in desperation, "Dutch" talitarian dictatorship within t h e are not prurient questions: indeed, wholesale Uttering of city residential areas were to There were, after all, two authors, sider the case of the man whom promised Smith that if spared the United States, or to overthrow or any revolutionist worth his salt be firmly curbed now and then, the nuisance would •with a book in print, a book stating agony of being exposed as another alter ... the form of government of would presumably be grateful to the assure some author decides to unmask as be abated considerably. At least it could that she was not Mrs. ( Bolam. Martin Bormann. Of all missing per- Martin Bormann he would provide the United States .. . by force, ¦vio- committee for helping to spread the that more attention would he given to proper deliv- Even here, in this space that is sons whom the world absolutely re- Smith with a great story: an inter- lence, treachery, espionage, sa- word. One sometimes wonders ordinance. ery of such materials, as defined in the licensed for blather and recklessly fuses to foreget, Bormann is by far view with Judge Carter in his hide- botage, insurrection, or any unlaw- whether those who fought so active- •- F.R.U. leaped-at conclusions; the demand the most interesting to the public. out. Smith agreed. "Dutch? ar- ful means." Among the organiza- ly to destroy the House Committee for "objectivity" is insistent. One A book exposing the real Marlin ranged for Smith to he flown to tions whose "affiliates" the commit- on Un-American Activities didn't •hesitates about choosing sides and Bormann would be worth a prime a little-known Pacific island aboard tee focused on in the current inquiry, succeed after ail. feels the face assuming that expres- minister's ransom, which is at least "Dutch's" private plane. Smith has are the communist party and the Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. sion of dull passivity, the eyes set- better than being on relief. It is hot been seen since. Black Panthers. It would greatly The crunch on tling into the unblinking stare of not surprising, therefore, that at When interrogated about Smith's surprise, and greatly offend, mem- Michael Caine on the case. any given moment in the past 15 disappearance, "Dutch" insists that bers of these organizations to sug- To grasp the nightmare quality years there have been as many as Smith will be found about 35 years gest that they are otherwise bent colleges 1 "" existing " IV-6RAFFWT® 1970 McMiuaMSytKilcal« l<*. of the experience, the reader must 250 authors actively preparing books from now living in New Jersey be- than on altering the form of gov- * imagine herself in Mrs. Bolam's po- unmasking the real Bormann. hind the -masking mame of Artesian. ernment of the United States by any Winonans and others in this area might do well sition. "An entire book based on For a man of certain age and Somehow it seems unlikely. means whatsoever. to reread a report of the Carnegie Commission on the assumption that I am Amelia physique, the possibility of finding - Newx York Times- News Service Higher Education which appeared in this newspaper Earhart is absolutely ridiculous," 2. ON THE OTHER HAND, th* ¦ yesterday. you might say, "I am Lucy Parme- committee did a truly lousy job. nit >- For one thing, it -was inaccurate. ^&! ^ iWt 1^i-0a-W'm 1,500 sian." Yes, you are Lucy Parmesi- The commission has found that more than For instance, the ululator Nat Hent- colleges and universities with 77 percent of Amer- an. And yet the reporters do not W status: one or all i$gm$9m nod their agreement. They are off is listed and his affiliations are ica's students, are at or near the point of having given with three organizations,- "with to cut hack important services for lack of money. merely taking notes that will enable From an editorial in ly equate university status to a loss them to write : "She denied that she Mankato Free-Press of control or the setting up of a which in fact he is not affiliated; In calling special attention to the report it is not was Amelia Earhart and said she It is imprecise to say that every- costly system of duplication. or so he claims and there is no HHHIIN suggested that the city's three colleges — two of was Lucy Parmesian ." body is agreed that Minnesota's reason to disbelieve him. For an- which are private — are necessarily in great fi- It appeared that way in the pa- state colleges, singularly or collec- THIS IS A NARROW viewpoint, other, the mix has so many ingred- nancial difficulty. pers under headlines saying "Wom- tively, someday will be known as however, and not shared by those ients it loses any genuine flavor. an denies she is Earhart ," accom- state universities. most intimately associated with ed- One of the revolutionaries listed is But the pinch is on nearly all educational insti- panied by pictures encouraging all Some supporters and protectors of ucation or who have watched the Cassius Clay. Cassius Clay is a I^^^ B tutions as a result of a variety of factors. Costs are America to judge for itself whether the University of Minnesota, for in- impressive growth of the state col- black separatist, who preaches to |j |llt §|| going up, income is going up but slower, campus you, Lucy Parmesian', are in fact stance, might not concede this ei- leges in the last two decades. college audiences the disutility of economy are hurting Dr, Sweet has recommended that ¦ ' ¦ disturbances and a slackening Amelia Earhart 35 years after. ther publicly or privately. So, too, violence, outside the ring. iifE^'S^ ' ': " fund-raising programs, riots have upped insurance Your grocer will never be sure. for a few legislators who incorrect- the 1971 legislature be asked for au- John C. Bennett, of the Union The- ^^ premiums, the federal government is tightening down thority to determine names for ological Seminary, comes in as a on aids, etc. the individual state colleges. revolutionary because he belonged There is in short, tremendous competition for Parenthetically, Sweet in his rec- , ommendation said " the education dollar, whether it is a private or tax . . .it is likely thaf, one or mor e of tho colleges dollar, with a resultant necessity for careful atten- tion to business details by the institutions. It is no will seek to be redesignated as a happenstance that college trustees and boards are university." Business career best becoming conscious of a president's business apti- Thirteen states with institutions similar to the Minnesota state col- tudes as well as his scholarly achievements. Courtland G. Newton Jr., 34, was decidedly educational. For it leges already have designated them senior vice president of Daniel J. somehow failed to teach him that Yet, despite the financial strictures nearly all university, granting as they do that Edelman, Inc., public relations jirm, while there are many ways in life higher education institutions are experiencing, the there are no generally accep ted cri- in Thc Alternative magazine. to find fulfillment , there is no great- University of Minnesota and Rochester continue to teria for distinguishing between a 1 pursue their plan to plant still another higher edu- In Mike Nichols' classic, "The er way to serve one's fellowman college and a university. Size does than through a creative, cation institution in Southeastern Minnesota at the not necessarily mean anything nor Graduate," Dustin Hoffman is offer- competitive career in business or the trades . expense of tlie taxpayers of Minnesota, who with docs complexity of organization . ed one word of advice by one of his such a development would have a little less to give To put it differently, teaching, so- The big differences in thc main father s friends: "Plastics!" Unfor- to help the private institutions. — A.B. ' cial work, the ministry, medicine, ¦ arc a better advantage in seeking tunately, this well-meant counsel and many other careers offer won- federal funds and private foundation goes unheeded. For while Dustin derful pathways to service and ful- money and tho inherent stature in The Word of God abideth in you, and ye have tries to listen politely, he is tuned fillment. It is my view, however, o vercome the wicked one.—/ John 2:14. attracting a stronger faculty and that none of these His re- offers any great- ridding tlie often unwarranted psy- to a different wavelength. er satisfaction or escape into cool reaches opportunity for chological and sociological presump- sponse is to meaningful service than a career tion of relative inferiority. of the family swimming pool with in business. the aid of scuba gear. THE LONG-STANDING, effort to Which , ironically, he could not WINONA DAILY NEWS procure university status! for Man- have done without plastics. Any more kato State College extends well be- than you could give a member of WnxiAM F. WHITE . Publisher yond name change for name your family, or your dearest friend C, INDEN E. L Bus. Mgr., Adv. Director change's sake. Incumbent through- feeding or a blood A DOLPH BREMER . Editor-in-Chief an intravenous out lias been tlie plea for further transfusion without plastics. Any G AUV W. EVANS ...... News Editor upgradings of library reference ORDON OLTE ..... Sunday Editor more than thousands of essential, so- C. G H ... works and curricula that "will as- FRANK R. Vnua Edit. Writer cially vital medical, research, edu- sure top quality undergraduate and WILLIAM H. ENGLISH Controller cational , transportation, recreation- A, J. K IEKBUSCII ...... Circulation Mgr. graduate degrees . al, safety, and other devices could L. S. BKONK Composing Supt. We arc pleased that tlie office of exist without plastics. Any more L. V. ALSTON Engraving Supt . the state college chancellor is tak- than Mike. Nichols would have a me- Roy LORD ...... Press Superintendent ing a positive stance on university dium-film-with which to immortal- status. ize Dustln's tragic alienation. MEMBER Of THE .ASSOCIATED PBESS Its recommendation that tho board Dustin's alienation is tragic be- actively pursue an individually ori- cause there are literally millions of Thomas A. Martin, L.F.D. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to ented course Is sound. It denies people who could show him thou- u,»a, .. nv ,,, .. ¦.. ¦raOiSST'W — --'^<&T>$. the use for republication of all the local news printed «fc tVl. /V\/»S-0 CDMt* "3» nothing to anybody just as it grate- sands of avenues to fulfillment. Un- 6AE.IT L.OUT- ta this newspaper as well as all A.P. news dispatches. 'ITS WRY lli/Ell ON fully avoids a lockstep shackle that fortunately, if some measure of rele- m/wrm mm>* IN FACT, ITU W yoiiK WT criuld penalize more than it would criterion, FUNERAL HOME vance or applicability Is a 174 [tit Simla • Wlnoni An Independent Newspdper — Established 1855 tl*t» 0*1 ti Nltfct 45+MMO help. Dustln's undergraduate experience ^ A
Mr, Ta end oil threat
AFBF convention Friends not surprised FldridiM ^ to begin Sunday JACKSONVILLE, Fla. */ ¦ ¦ ¦ and Mrs. John Randall, all of Wll '¦fc If J\ ™?* *la'***' *'*'•••«• * **VK^, n «••* - OUTERWEAR. _. . . - . Utica, have "been elected to the parents' council of tho Waseca Southern School of Agriculture Order attempt to cut off Parents' .Association. Tha couples were elected to the zone one posts 'at the 18th annual Parents' Day at the Wa- oil flow to burnirra figs seca school this month. Welcoming the parents to the NEW ORLEANS (AP) - day, with smaller slicks fanning drilling rigs would be moved school was Mary Johnson, Utica, Four big drilling rigs were or- put in other directions. into position to drill intersecting UNTRIMMED COATS ../^ student council president. dered in today to try to cut off In Washington, the Interior shafts into the wells. When con- ALL WEATHER^^ the flow from a cluster of flam- Department said it still intends nections are made, heavy mud REGULAR HOW ^w.„ . ing oil wells by inserting plugs to hold the first sale of offshore will be pumped down the shafts SI99I9.D988 $12OlaCiUU00 REGULAR NOW beneath the Gulf of Mexico's to plug the wells. ftft Q99 ftff oil leases in 18 months on Dec. I A 9&viUU v£C.vv bottom. The spokesman said apparent- COR IO CODipOy ©99 flfl BELT0NE 15. «f> JL- 01(1 {IflA AA WfcWlJIW «PC*t.Ql) plosion-wracked control plat- Chevron Oil Co. platform {ire in failed on several of the wells $35 to $42 ...... $30.00 $38.95 $34.88 HEARING ABD form 10 miles off shore, were the Gulf last February spilled after the explosion and fire and, feeding the biggest oil fire in the thousands of barrels of for reasons unknown, the sub- FUR TRIM $48.05 ...... $39.86 CENTER history of the business. crude surface safety valves had not into the sea. closed. REG ULAR HOW 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. How many of the 22 working SUBURBAN spewing fuel to the Part of Shell's metal platform $60 to 370 $53.00 wells were collapsed Thursday as the inten- All wells connected to the REGULAR MOW AT PARK PLAZA flames was uncertain, The sity of the fire increased. platform were equipped with $80.00 .. $63,00 Coast Guard estimated seven. subsurface safety valves, called $35.00 ...... $30.00 . (Formerly Hotel Winona) A spokesman for Shell Oil Co., The automated platform, storm chokes, the spokesman owner of the wells, said the oil about half the size of a football added. ALL WEATHER $59.95 ..... $50.00 would be kept on fire to mini- field , stands on stilts in 60 feet After the Chevron fire, four REGULAR HOW $69.95 $60.00 MONDAY, DEC. 7 mize sea pollution while work- of water 65 miles south of New oil companies were fined more men try to bring the flow under Orleans. than $1.5 million for failure to $20 to $28 $17.00 JACKETS control—a project that may An explosion touched off the install storm choices. Shell has Service and Supplies for take weeks. fire Tuesday as a crew was pleaded innocent to 170 counts CAR COATS REGULAR NOW trying to pi all makes of Hearing Aids. The Coast Guard said a light pe in a new well. of failing to have storm chokes REGULAR NOW slick of unburned oil extended Two men were killed. on 40 wells. The burning wells $25.00 SI 9.88 FREE HEARING TEST from the platform about eight The Shell spokesman said the were not among them. $25 to $28 $18.00 $20.00 SI5.68 miles to the northwest Thurs- $30 to $35 ... $26.00 $32.50 ' . $24.88 SUEDE JACKETS " ""' REGULAR M0W ' «»BM ¦..W « 1Ihul me <=L avisk oL ook Think about this »38.00 M6.00 . . _ $ «™ 535,0 before you buy CIRLS9 ° $29.88 Q^^mae) JACKETS ROW ^ CANDELABRA your next tank REGULAR NOW B *' ' ' ™~"*** " "——— j| fr &y WA i_ L/\ o \~ of heating oil $13 fo $17 $10.91 REGULAR HOW REGULAR HOW 1. High quality Mobil heating oil. $21 to $25 $15.97 9.99 $ 7.88 2. Complete burner service & furnace cleaning. -—-——-———-—--— f$12.09 $ 3. Our "KEEP FULL" delivery. 9.88 A. Our balanced monthly payment*. CHILDREN'S 2-Sx *'*¦»» * ">*» 5. Expert maintenance-repair service for ell heating —: PARKAS equipment. JACKETS «eA ..i «» REGULAR HOW En mM mM jjjj«*"" ; $15.99 $12.88 M@bil 'Z fil] S,3,8B heating oil $8.99 ZZZZl^Z $s!97 $l6'99 $9,99 $6.97 COATS COATS REGULAR HOW Joswick Fuel & Oil Co. REGULAR NOW $19,99 $16.88 Phone 452-3402 $(5.00 $12.88 $25,00 $10.86 $18.00 $15.88 Q97 Rd 5,9 1 ,8BfiR —~. U1M 5Z I —c ^ . ^ . $2 1.00 $17.88 * Breakdown Candlestick, ht. 15%", with five-light NEW AND USED CANADIAN JACKET orm. Tho pair. tea. 0300, Toys Oalore! SHOW SUITS NOW $260. REGULAR NOW REGULAR NOW With liurricnno globes, each rep. $205. SKATE NOWS17B. SCARECROW SI5,00 $11.97 $32.50 $24.88 ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ———————~———~ *—»^———__^_____„___. Exchange 11 — - — - . - S paclnl prices end December 31, 1970. TARGET GAME All pilcos tubjoct to clmnao without notice. SHARPENED -at — —I I—— 7j MIRACLE MALL-W1NONA DAnn BROTHERS 4 MON THRU FRI QJ (jewelry QJ tore IfUDKfr STORE, Inc. If III TEB'C BICYCLE L%yksuWARDS OPEN o TO 0 . . lager V A S HARDWARE MIL I Elf O STORE v^ SALBI MRVICR 50 LEVEE PLAZA WEST 574 E. 4th St. Ph. 4J1-40O7 * 9 TO 5:30 SAT. - 12:30 TO 5 SUNDAY 401 Minkito Av*. Phon* ua-SMJ Imm^^^ ^^^^^^^^^ ^X^^^mHw^^WW^lr xS ^^^ SxJ ^A ^Mv. K &w-v: v. <^^^&\&J»&/^^f^P ^. >X*«w»&&. School ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦. ' - '• ¦• ' For SATURDAY, Dec. 5 lunch sear Yonr birthday today: Your path through the coming adjustment to _ brings normal growth, <:^^^:u^^:t^eh:LdkW:uh«k'-^«.tV Phone 452-5952 1 P.M. New Ytfrfe FRIDAY ; Stock market Stock Prices The weather The daily record DECEMBER 4, 1970 Allied Ch 19% Hoieywl 81 Allis Chal 14% Inland Stl 26 ¦ deaths regains Amerada '. -. IB Mach 812% Decorah man Two-state deaths At Community Winona most Am Brnd 44% Intl Harv 28% W. -^. Arthur Dtorseii Memoria l Hospital Mrs. Adplph G. W«bwr Am Can 41 Intl Paper 32% Mrs. CAIaEDONlA, Minn. CSpecial) Maternity patlanta: 2 to 3:30 tnd 1 to Funeral services for Am Mtr *M JM & L — Arthur W. Diersen, 82, Cale- 1:30 tun, (Adults only.) Adolph G. (Florence) Weber, of early losses killed while Visitor* to a patient limited to m AT&T 9% JostOoa : ¦ *\ and .* donia, died at 11:30 p.m. Wed- on» tlmt. •: 65, Berwjnr Heights, Md., NEW YORK (AP)—,The '• Visiting tiourii Medical and lurglcal died Anconda 21 Kcncott 84% nesday at Caledonia Community formerly of Winona, who stock market regained pitlentti I to 4 and 7 to 1:30 p.m. (No Norfolk, Va,, hospi- almost Arch Da 31% Kiaft Co 40>% Hospital after a lingering ill- (Children- under ,11.) y . Oct 21 in a all of its ness. . . ¦ ' ' : y. tal after an automobile acci- early losses today, but Armco SI 2OV4 Loew's 31% welding barrel Maryland. prices .-were still on the down- , (Special) He was born Aug. 26, 1888, to THURSDAY dent, were Oct. 26 in Armour 46Vi Marcar WA MABEL Minn. — ADMISSIONS Burial was in Gate of Heaven side in active trading. Gerhard Rauter, 32, rural Deco- Mr. and Mrs. Henry Diersen in Mrs. Edwin Ambrosen, 473 W. Spring, Md. Avco Cp 10% Minn MM 92% Winnebago Township and mar- Cemetery, Silver At noon the Dow Jones aver- 2iy rah, Iowa, was killed instantly- King St. V A native of Winona, Mrs. Web- Beth Stt 4 Minn PI, 19^ ried Martha Stigen on Nov. 25, Olive Douglas, Winona age of 30 industrial stocks was Boeing 13% Mobil Oil 57% late Thursday afternoon on a Mrs. ¦ ' ¦ er v/as on her way to visit her 1914, in Eitzen, Minn. The cou- Rt. 2. ¦ • ' - ' ¦ the crash off .07 at 808.4. Earlier it had MQChm ple farmed in Wilmington Town- . son in Virginia when Boise Cas 41 .. farm one mile east of Locust. Miss Loretta Bronk, 706 E. occurred. She was the daughter bden off more than 3 points. Brunswk 18 Mont Dak 33% Iowa, wliile welding an oil bar- ship until retiring anal moving 5th St. of the latd Mr. and Mrs. John Declines held a narrow lead Brl North 30V4 N Am R 17% to Caledonia in 1948. over advances on the New rel containing anti-freeze, ac- Paul Kiehne, Harmony, Minn. Jahikowski, Winona. York Catpillar 40% N N Gas 59 ¦ Survivors Include his wife; DISCHARGES Stock Exchange. • WEATHER FORECAST . . . .' . Siiow flurries are forecast cording to the Winneshiek Suravors include her hus- Ch MSPP 10% No St Pw 25% a son, Harold, Minneapolis; two Mrs. Lewis Balcome, St. Char- Analysts called the profit tak- Chrysler 29 Nw Air 1S% today for part of New England and the Rocky Mountains. County coroner. band; a son, Navy Lt. Cmdr. ing on the 55-point gain in the daughters, Mrs. Erwin (Selma) les, Minn. Jerome Weber, Virginia Beach, Cities Svc 45 Nw Banc 35% Showers are expected In the Great Plains states. Sunny Survivors are: his wife, the Schroeder, Watertown, Wis., Judge Glenn-Kelley, 1320 Cofi-; Dow average in the past 10 ses- Com Ed 363/4. Penney 53V4 weather 'will prevaH overmuch of the nation. (AP Photofax) Va.; two daughters, Mrs. Susan sions a normal happening. They former Karen Bigler, whom he and Mrs. Robert (Irene) Kratz- rad Drive. Miller, "Wiesbaden, Germany, Com Sat 51% Pepsi 50% ke, Comas, Wash.; 14 grand- Mrs. Myrtle Cordes, Houston also added that the pickup in in- Cond 24% Pips Dge 36V4 married two months ago; par- and Miss Cecilia Weber, Ber- stitutional activity this week children; three great-grandchil- Rt; iy Minn. wyri Heights, Md.; four sisters, Cont Cari 36% Phillips 29% ents, Mr. and Mrs. David Rau- dren; a brother, Louis, Cale^ Kenneth Salwey, Fountain was serving to lessen the effect Cont Gil 31% Polaroid 73 Mrs. Laura Moga, Winona; Mrs. of the profit taking which has Local readings ter, rural Decorah; one broth- doma, Minn. A son, Norbert, City, Wis. Frances Kramer, Trempealeau, CnU Data 50% EGA 25% er, Paul, rural Decorah, and and three brothers have died. YMrs. Joseph Brendler, Winona occurred off and on. Dartlnd '• S4% Rep Stl 2?% Readings fox the 24 heurs ending at noon today: Rt. 3. Wis.; Mrs. Grace Ohnesorge, Brokers attributed the rally to Maximum temperature 39, 'ininlnaum 26, noon 26, pre- four sisters, Mrs. Alvin Gross, Funeral services will be at Minne apolis, Minn., and Mrs. Deere 393A Hey Ind 50T/s Gary Mrs. Curtis Vandermoon, improved investor confidence in Dow Cm 67 Sears R 75 cipitation .02. Mrs! Gary Boyle, Mrs. 2 p.m. Saturday at Zion Luth- William Walsh, Milwaukee, both the administrations at- Olson and Miss Lydia Rauter, eran Church Eitzen the Fountain City, Wis. du Pont 125% Shell Oil 47% A year ago today : , , Minn., Hiss Elizabeth Revoir, 429 Wis.; three brothers, Ralph Jan- tempts to expand the econo my High 34, low 12, nooii 24, trace of precipitation. Decorah. Rev. CyriU SerWe officiating. ikowsbi Bellfiower, Calif.; Vic- East Kod 71% Sp Rand 24% Huff St. , and in the market's ability per- Firestone 45% St Brands 47% Normal temperature range for this date 32 to 17. Record Funeral services will be at 2 Burial will be in the church tor Janikowski, Las Vegas, haps to begin a new bull-market p.m. Sunday at St. John's Luth- Baby boy Roberts, West End Ford Mtr 53% St Oil Cal 50% high 61 in 1962„recprd low 7 below in 1950. cemetery. Trailer Court. Nev., and Joseph Janikowski, phase as well as to the general sets at 4:29.; eran CImrch, Locust, the Rev. Winona; and nine grandchildren. Gen Elec 87% St Oil Ind 52% Sun rises tomorrow at 7:25, Friends may call this after- Walter Schwager, Altura, decline in interest rates. Gen Food 83% St Oil NJ 71% A. D. Thogerson officiating. noon and evening at the Potter- Metals were up. Steelsymo- Burial will be in the church Minn. Gen Mills 33% Swift 29% Haugen Tuneral Home here and Mrs. Earl Tong Yang and Winona funerals tors, chemicals, Tails, and air- Gen Mtr 77% Texaco 34% cemetery. at the church an hour before baby, 608 Winona /St. lines were* mixed. AH other Steine Funeral Home, Deco- . Mrs. Susan Kanthack Gen Tel 28% Texas Ins 30% the service. Mrs, Thomas Klinger and stock categories were off. Gillette 44 "ilnion Oil 33% rah, has charge of arrange- baby, Fountain City Rt. 1, Wis. Funeral services for Mrs. Su- ments. Mrs. Ruth Hedberg san Kanthack, 702 Huff St., Goodrich 27 Vn Pac -45% FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. (Spe- were held this morning at Goodyear 29% US Steel 29% cial) — Mrs. Ruth Hedberg, TODAY'S BIRTHDAY Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, Livestock Greyhnd 14% Wesg EI . 66% Fountain City, died this morn- the Rt. Rev. Joseph McGiraiis SOUTH ST. PAUL Gulf Til 30 Weyrhsr 53% 1st Qtr. Fnll Last Qtr. New Grand jury Lori Kim Neitzke, 2C5 E. SOUTH ST. PAUL, Minn. Hl-(USDA) Homestk 25% Wlworth ¦ 36% ' ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦' ing at Lutheran Hospital, La officiating. Burial was in Wood- - • :' • - ¦ — Cattle 4,000; calves 500; limited . . ¦ . . Dec. 5 Dec. 12 Dec. 20 Dec. 28 Howard St„ 2. sup- , . continues Crosse, where she had been a lawn Cemetery. ply of slaughter sfeora and helfors about patient several days. steady; cows steady; not enough bulls Elsewhere IMPOUNDED DOGS . Pallbearers weie: John Jani- on sal* fop price test; vealers , and Forecasts Colby Funeral Home here slaughter calves steady; feeders consign- Produce shooting probe kowski, Cleon and Gerald Si- ed to auction; choice 1,175 lb slaughter By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS has charge of arrangements, No. 574 — Small brown and mon, Ernest Kjos , Roger Hey- steers 25.75-26.25; choice 850-1,050 lb CHICAGO CAP) - Chicago WABASHA, Minn. - The Wa- which are incomplete. black female pup. Available. mans and Joseph Eischen. slaughter heifers 24.50-25.25; utility and ' S.E. Minnesota High Low Pr. commercial slaughter cows 19,00-20.50; MKTY X X- basha County grand jury this No. 576 — Medium-sized male, canners and cutters Pair to partly clondy to- Atlanta, clear ...... 72 58 .. afternoon continued its investi- Emmons W. Kern 17.00-19.50) choice Mercantile Exchange — Butter , Bismarck, cloudy .. 21 -5 .. part collie. Available. Carl Holtegaard vealers 40.00-43.00; few high choice and steady; wholesale day, becoming mostly clondy gation of the fatal snooting Sun- MABEL, Minn; (Special) — Funeral serviceis for Carl Hol- prime up to 46,00; good 34,00-40.80; choice buying prices Boise, clear ...... 44 38 :07 day ol Harry Francis, 56, a Funeral services will be con- No. 580 i. Medium-sized black slaughter calves 26.00-29.00; good 21.O0- unchanged ; 93 score AA 71; 92 tonight and Saturday with rain 57 43 .23 and white male, long-haired tegaard, 4215 8th St., Good- 26.00. Boston, Lake City businessman. Hogs 7,700; barrows and gilts opening A 71; 90 B WA. XX light snow or some freezing ,59 ducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at view, were held this afternoon rain likely to- develop tt*. Buffalo, rain ...... 50 43 A 27-year-bld Lake City house- St. John's Lutheran church in terrier; Available. higher; weights under 240 lbs active, fully Eggs steady; wholesale buy- Chicago, snow 71 35 No. 585 at Trinity Lutheran Church, 25 cen-ts higher, some 50 cents htgher; ing prices unchanged to high- night, continuing into Satur- wife, Mrs. Gary (Margie) Sea- Locust for Emmons W. Kern; - Small brown , white Goodview, the Rev. Larry Zes- heavier weights steady to 25 cents high- about steady; 1-3 120-160 lbs 12.OW3.O0, Fairbanks, snow .. -36 -41 .. She will stand trial on that mostly 12.00; boars not fully established. Grain Fort Worth, clear ... 83 45 ..;¦ charge only if the grand jury ficiate. Burial will be in the and white male, long-haired ter- Pallbearers, all nephews, •..Sheep 1,400; not enough slaughter lambs ' Minnesota church cemetery. rier. Available. and feeder lamos roJd early fo establish Heleaa, cloudy .... . ' 37 27 .06 returns an indictment to that were Odin, Arvin, Lyle and quotations; slaughter ewes steady; utility MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Wheat Jacksonville, cloudy 77 56 .. effect. He was born Dec. 26, 1898, in No. 589 — Small male blond Lawrence Holtegaard and Rob- and good wooled slaughter ewes 5.50-6.50. receipts Thurs., 145, year -ago Mostly cloudy tonight and Hesper Township, Winneshiek cocker. Available. ert and Clarence Anderson. CHICAGO early Saturday with snow Kansas City, clear .. 68 32 .. CHICAGO «V -(USDA)- Cattle 3,000; 238; Spring wheat cash trading County, slaughter steers steady ' likely developing tonigfat, Los Angeles, clear . 66 50 .. Iowa, to Valentine and No. 590 - Large tan and black fo 25 cents lowers basis unchanged to down 1 cent; Louise (Soeder) Kern. He at- female, part Great Dane. Avail- slaughter heifers 25-50 cents higher; prices possibly mixed with some Loulsrille, clear ... 72 43 .14 Arcadia school Two-state funerals prima 1.225-1,375 lbs slaughter steers unchanged to down V4. freering rain south. Saow Memphis, chiar .... 75 47 . - . ' . tended rural schools in Canoe able. yield orade 3 and 4 27.50-28.00; high No. 1 dark northern 11-17 pro- Township. On July 16, 1924, he Clarence M. Gauger choice and prime 1,075-1,350 lbs 27 2J- tein 1.84y4-2.0O%. font Milwaukee, snow .. 60 29 .20 self-evaluation No. 593 — Large white, brown 27.75) choice 950-1,350 lbs yield continuing into Saturday married Fern Hovey. They READS LANDING. Minn. - grade ending In most sections by Mpls.-St.P., clear .. 39 19.08 and black male, part beagle. 2 to 4 26.75-27.50; m ixed good and eholco Test weight premiums: one farmed in Hesper township un- Second day. Funeral services for Clarence 26.50-27.00; good 25.50-26.50) high choice cent each pound 58 to 6S lbs; afternoon. Partly clearing New Orleans, fog ... 81 59 .. is completed and prime 950-1,000 lb slaughter heif- til retiring and moving to De- M. Gauger, Reads Landing, ers yield grade one cent discount each lb Saturday afternoon. Not New York, rain .... 64 50 .09 No. 594 — Large tan, male, 3 and 4 26.50-27,00; choice % change, ' ¦ ' ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - corah jn 1969. part Golden Retriever. Second who> died Wednesday at St. 830-1,COO lbs yield grade 2 to 41 2«.0O- under 58 lbs. mach temperature OklaYCity, clear ... 71 37. . ;. ' Elizabeth Hospital, Wabasha, 26.30; mixed good and choice 25.5c- low tonight 5-15 north, 12-22 Principal John J. Koetting re- Survivors are: his wife, one day.. . . 26.00. No. 1 hard Montana ivlnter Omaba, clear ...... 55 2S .. will be at 2 p.m. Saturday at Sheep 300; few Satnrday 15-26 ports that ihe faculty and ad- son, Earl, Decorah, and one No. 595 — Small brown and lots and pari loads i.69%-1.91%. loath. High Philadelphia, cloudy 63 52 - ., - . Our Redeemer Lutheran choice 90-100 lb. wooled slaughter lambs ministration of Arcadia High brothei Albert, Decorah. Twp white male, mixed bre«d. Sec- 27.00; good and Minn-S.D. No; 1 hard -winter north, 24-35 south. , ' , * ¦ ¦ ¦ choice 80-100 Iba 25.0O- Phoeaix, clear - .... 70 35 .. School have completed a thor- children and one toother have ond day. Church, Wabasha, the Rev. Eob- 25.00. . . . 1.62%-1.93%. Pittsfcurgh, cloudy . 58 39 5.6 ough self-evaluation of all diedY ert T. Beckmann, officiating. No. 1 hard amber durum, 1.82- Wisconsin St. Louis, clear 73 36 .. phases of the present school Burial will be in Riverview 1.87; discounts, amber . S to 4 Salt Lk. City, cloudy 44 37 .. program, a project carried out Mrs. Emma C. Back Munici pal court Cemetery, Wabasha, w i t h lake cents; durum 5 to 7 cents. Tonight clondy, Increasing .. conjunction with a program Center winds *»dth snow likely north San Diego, cloudy .. 62 50 in ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - graveside military honors by Corn No. 2 yellow 3.36%- San Fran., rain .... 56 55 .96 of the North Central Associaition Mrs. Emma Caroline Back, 73, WINONA the American Legion. 1.38%. and snow or flurries likely of Colleges and Secondary Winona attorney Dennis A. recalls laid sontl. Low mostly In teens ex- Seattle, cloudy ..... 42 35 .12 Beach, rural Ettrick, died this Pallbearers will be Harold Oats No. 2 extra heavy white Tampa, clear 80 60 .. Schools which requires that ev- mornuig at the Grand View Challeen appeared today to Badger, Daniel Davison, Leo .71.. Y treme north to upper 20s, low- ery member school engage in plead guilty on a speeding off workers er 30s extreme south. Satorday Washington, clear .. 62 49 .04 Nursing Home, Blair. Halm, Willis Kruger, Robert Barley, cars 115, yeair ago •Winnipeg, cloudy ... 12 10 .05 this self-study at least once ev- The former Emma Witt, she charge for Robert J. Sandvik, Wallerich and Everett Allen. Lake Center Industries said 105; Larker 1.09-1.28; Blue Malt- clondy • and windy with snow ery seven years. La Crescent, Minn. Sandvik was likely north anal chance of snow was born Aug. 13, 1897, in Inde- Friends may call at Buck- today that it has recalled about ing 1.09-1.30; Dickson 1.03-1.24; The staff has been engaged accused of driving 80 in a 55- half of the workers laid oh¦ I feed 1.00-1.08. or flurries soutli. High Saturday River in this project the past two pendence to Mr. and Mrs. Fer- mam - Schierts Funeral Home, as dinand Witt and was married to mile zone at 4:45 a.m. Nov. 14 Wabasha, this afternoon and a result of the recent General Rye No. 1 and 2 1.14-1.17. in 20s north, mostly 30s south. DAILY RIVER BULLETIN years. at Highway, 61-14 and 43. Special Ervin Ganschow is the chair- Clarence Back Jan. 30, 1920, in evening and Saturday until time Motors strike. Flax No. 1 2.64 nom. 5-day forecast Flood Stage 24-hr. Whitehall. The couple farmed at Judge Loren W. Torgerson fined of services. Layoffs resulting from the Soybeans No. 1 yellow 2.80%. man of the steering committee him $50. ¦ ' Stage Today Chg. responsibili- Beach, She was a member of the strike totaled about 2S em- . ' MINNESOTA whiclh had overall Roger D. .Beyers, Gilmore Mrs. Gust Kreger ployes in the plant Partly cloudy Sunday; „ Red Wing ..... 14 4.4 ty for the evaluation. The com- Blair American Legion Auxil- here. Of iary. Valley, appeared today on a LAKE CITY, Minn. Spe- these 11 have been'called! back Mostly fair Monday. In- Lake City 7.6 .. .. . mittee coordinated the efforts non-support charge. Judge Tor- cial) — Funeral services for Winona markets creasing cloudiness Tues- 12 7.4 .2 of faculty members in studying Survivors are: a son, Floyd, since , the strike settlement. Wabasha + gerson continued the case to 9 Mrs. Gust (Anna) Kreger, Lake Lake Cetater officials said day with chance of snow. Alm a Dam 5.2 — .1 the adequacy of the various on the home farm at Beach;, it is Arraonr & Co. subject areas, library, guidance two daughters, Mrs. Clifford a.m. Dec. 16 and ordered him City, will be held at 11 a.m. expected the rest will be recall- Open 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wanning MoJiday and Tues- Whitman Dam ... 3.3 — .4 to pay support. Saturday at St. Mark's Epis- ed hy Jan. 1. Mohdav to Friday. day. Low from 8 Sunday Winona Dam .. .. 4.3 — .7 and other services, administra- (Irene) Fjelstad, Northfield, Theie quolatlom apply to [livestock - tion, activity program and pro- Wis., and Mrs. Odeen (Jeanette) FORFEITURES: copal Church, the Rev. George The company said some oth- delivered to the Winona atatlon today. to 18 Tuesday. High from WINONA ...... 13 6.0 — .5 C. Perkins officiating. Burial Hofli gram of studies. Johnson, Eau Claire; six grand- Joel A. Twaiten, Houston, er miscellaneous layoffs were Hog market: Butchers ategdyi towi .'. 24 Sunday to 34 Tuesday. Trernp'eau Pool .. 9.1 — .6 will be at 3 p.m. Saturday at WISCONSIN To assist as a guide of evalu- children ; three great-grandchil- Minn., $50, speeding 4$ ia a 30- made as a result ol seasonal itetdY. Trernp'eau Dam .. 5.4 — .2 ation, a document known as the mile zone, 4:10 p.m. Oct, 27 at the Jordan Cemetery, Jordan, slowdowns and that this is a Butchen. 2M-230 lbs. base .... 14.73 - . Partly cloudy and season- 8.0 .1 dren; a brother, James, White- Sows, 270-300 lbs. 13.50 ' Dakota ...... + "Evaluative Criteria" was hall, and four sisters, Mrs. Clara East Broadway and Carimona Minn. recurring condition. Bay State Milling Comjinny ably cold Sunday, the lows Dresbach Pool.' .' . 9.4 |- .1 used . Published by the National ranging from the middle teens Hendrickson, I n d. e p endence; Street. Pallbearers will be Robert Elevator "K" Grain Prlcai Dresbach Dam. .. 3.9 .. .. Study of Secondary School Eval- Kraig Lang, Johnson, Lloyd Petter, Ralph One hundred buahela ot grain will ba ' highs Mrs. Josie Amundsen, Black 534 W. Broadway, Ihe minimum to the middle 20s and the: La Crosse 12 6.2 + .1 uation, this instrument consists Must approve loans on load* accepted at tha twenties to low 30s. Mostly River Falls; Mrs. Millie Back, $5, delinquent overtime parking, Petter, Kenneth Slayicek, War- elevators. Tributary Streams of a number of criteria which Independence, and Mrs. Alice 4:20 p.m. Sept. 8 on Main Street. ren Slavicek and Carl Carlson. No, 1 northern iprlng wheat .... 1.84 cloudy and warmer Monday Chippewa at Durand 3.2 —1.0 faculty members used to meas- co rn stored in cribs No. 1 northern »prlno wheat .... 1.82 with chance ol snow north and Engaji, Strum. Louise Nordsving, 1731 W. Honorary pallbearers ard Al- No. J northern »prlng wheat .... 1.78 Zunnbro at Thellm'n 29.3 — .6 ure the local school. No, 4 northorn sprlno wheat .... 1.74 in the m Fossum Funeral Home, Et Wabasha St., $5, delinquent fred and Willard Zell. LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) rain south. Lows mostly eau at Dodge 3.1 — .2 No. 1 hard winter wheat J.4J twenties, and the highs low 30s Trernp' trick, has charge of arrange overtime parking, 11:32 a.m. - The Wabasha County ASCS No, 2 hard winter wheat 1.59 Black at Gaiesville.. 4.9 -h .5 No, 3 hard winler wheat Lis ' ¦ Monday. Cloudy with ments, which are incomplete. Aug. 8 at Municipal Lot 2. Committee reminds county ' to low 40s La Crosse at W". Sal. 4.3 .. Conservationist No, 4 hard winter wheat 1.51 chance of ratn or snow north Rudy Przytarski, 573 W. Belle- To discuss farmers that price-support loans No, 1 rye v \.u .1 No. 2 rye 1 1.14 . and rain south Tuesday, thc Root at Houston .... 6.1 + Mrs. Rose Andress view St,, $5, delinquent over- on corn stored In snow fence ranging from the middle RIVER FORECAST begins duties ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) — time parking, 6:43 p.m. Sept. 11 child abuse cribs must be approved by the lows Sun. Mon. Froedtert Malt Corporation 20s extreme north to th« mid- Sat. Mrs. Rose Andress , 82, Arcadia on Walnut Street. committee. Hourt I a.m. to 4 p.m. Red Wing 4.3 4,2 4.2 at BRF * Richard Starzecki, 623 Main Submit tampla before loading. dle 30s south ond the highs in died Thursday at 8:15 p.m. at committee Committee preferences in- Barley purchased at prices subject to the thirties and in tlie forties WINONA 5.9 6.0 6.0 St. Joseph's Hospital here where St., $5, delinquent overtime chtnge. 1 6.0 5.9 BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis. A discussion on the need of clude a floor and roof ior the ¦oath. La Crosse .... 6. (Special) — Gerald Krause, the she had been a patient the pastt parking, 10:42 a.m. June 19 on ______a committee to work with fami- crib. Removal of a commodity former Manitowoc, Wis., soil several months. She had been Walnut Street. under loan for any use -without conservationist, has begun his a resident of St. Joseph's Nurs- lies who abuse their children permission makes it subject to ing Home for 1% years. IRREGULAR? duti es as district conservation- and prevent any battered child an Interest rate of 12 percent DUE TO LACK OF FOOD f gone by ist -with the Black River Falls The former Rose Kamrowski , Dama ge high in cidents in Winona will be dis- plus full loan repayment. Regu- BULK IN YOUR DIET ¦> In years soil conservation office. H« re- sho was born here Aug. 11, 1888, cussed at 4 p.m. Jan. 14 at the lar interest rate is 3.5 percent. places Louis Barber, who was to Nicholas and Rose Jaszow- in car-truck The 1970 corn loan rate for '"A BRAN years ago . . . 1960 transferred to Ellsworth, Wis. ski Kamrowski and was mar- First National Bank board room. /M • Ten The discussion stems from Wabasha County is $1.04 per A native of Coleman, Wis,. ried to James Andress Sept. 24, crash at Ma bel bushel. The boycott of an integrated elementary school in New Kraus majored in agronomy and 1932, at Sacred Heart Catholic the Family Service showing of today with 15 to 17 white MABEL Orleans weakened a Ibit more ¦ received his bachelors degree Church, Pine Creek. , Minn . (Special) - A "The Battered Child," a film pupils turning out for classes. ' y ,, • ., „„ in 1967 from the University of par-truck crash in Mabel Wed- „ M was Survivors are: two stepdaugh- on loan from the Minnesota A 72-foot Scout rocket and the inflatable satellite it Wisconsin at Madison after ters, Frances Pellowski, White- nesday at 3:15 p.m. resulted In to have put into orbit lay under deep water 80 miles off the which he had a year tesearch a total of $1,300 damage, Welfare Department. major space hall, and Mrs. Norma Rouse, Notice to Virginia shore today after the failure of tho first assLstantship. Racine, Wis.; 18 step-grandchil- A 1968 sedan, driven by Mrs. It depicts actual results of attempted from Wallops Island, Va. Prior to Manitowoc, he serv- Fern Klein. Blue Earth, Minn., battered child incidents at thc shot dren and one brother, Stanley was traveling east on Prairio ed with the soil conservation Kamrowski, Arcadia. Her hus- Colorado General Hospital, ago . . . 1945 service at Alma , Wis. Krause Avenue, and struck a 1953 truck, Twenty-five years band died in MM. Five brothers owned by Allen Engrebrelson, Denver. It develops the theme Winona and Goodview and! his wife, thc former Pam- and three sisters also have died. Mrs It H. Wilson , owner of a large doll collection, will ela Richards, Kenosha, Wis.; Mnbol, and driven by Kermtt that each community should at the St. Paul's bazaar. There are moro daughter , Funeral services will be at Ffattum, Mabel , who was going have a group of persons work- display the collection hare a two-year-old 11 a.m. Saturday at Our Lady Sunday NEWS Subscribers than one hundred dolls representing all nations, antique and Wemdo Denise, and are looking south on Maple Street. The ing to meet the needs of the in the area. of Perpetual Help Catholi c Klein car struck the right front character figures. for a homo ¦ CImrch here, the Rev. Jolm of, tho cab. Estimated damage battering family, especially Maud officiating . Burial will to the Klein car wns $1,000 and from tiye preventive standpoint. & Our city circulation department will accept "Jelo- Fifty years ago . . . 1920 Catholic Ceme- to the truck, $300. Mo ono was ¦ Angela Davis petition bo in St. Mary's pliono call* from 7:30 a.m. to 9:GO a.m. Sunday Lake Winona has been -given atten- tery. Winona. injured. The footbridge over extrad ition denied Orvcl Olson, Mabel pdlipo of. Soviets replacing tion nnd missing sideboards have been replaced. For many on Friends may call at Killlam for tho delivery of mining papers in Winona and is moro conveniently placed for crossing Funrfral Home heio after 4 p.m. ficcr, investigated the accident. persons this bridge NEW YOHK (AP) - Black ambassador to Cuba Goodview. tlfcn the Huff Street fill. militant Angela Davis has been today. There will bo a Christian FOUKIGN STUDENT Gildonieistcr addressed the general assembly wake service at ft p.m. by FatBi- ELEVA, Wis. (Special) - Ol MOSCOW OOO » rain. EBB'aa^aSBB'HH ^^M*^^VaVaVaHfaValaaVaHallHfaVaVaVaHf'^^m — J_ ^^^ .^OODOOOOOOOO->••»» "" ^oooooooooooooooo o o 6 snow, rain and freezing BfaPHMNMH .0008 ° ^ ¦ 00000000000^^^^^ gustLng to 65 miles per hour and Trangos, administrator of WaSaWmMMMMMm ' . ¦¦ ^^^ ^Mm^ ^m ^mm^^r aOoooOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOMOOOeOM : When the near-blizzard condi- ^ 15-foot seas. the Division of Environment- ¦: ¦ 'BfVHHEHB___M : #toooooooooooooooooooooooooot>ooooonY.«&is sMS ^n»-- . . .. - : ~^-^— xx tions eased up late Thursday, K3I9HBBWH jeoooOOOOooooooCOOOOOOOOOOOOO on*'* __ ^^^^^^^aammm)mm^ mmmmmmm^^--¦ VaVJHHHlHHlHHHHr' Hotels and motels across the DfslataHivn qSai ¦ •joooooooooaoooooooooooooooof __ ^^^^*a^^^^^ ^^^^^H L ¦ ' Blair youth wins al Protection. RMBUul . ^^ . y__HB ^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_yBBH the storm left behind massive ^ooooooooooooooooooooDOOD^' ^^a^i^^^ ^^*^^^_ BW. area were filled to more than FrangOs said a fine of ¦ PRWffijtSMlBW #000000 cocooooaooooo* ^^^ X L ^^^^^^ *^aHaoVaHaWaHaVaHlk. traffic tieups along with closed WCTJ KKM ^^ ' ' ^^^^^^ capacity and one motel mana- , M^ H J . . ^baooooooooooooeoooor" ^^r-¦ •. ^H MBH^BBBW. ^^^^. VJiaHaVaiHaVaBaBaBaiflav speaking contest 45 000 "would not be unrea- •oeoooooooooocooooo'* JBfl-^^^ UBBHBHBHBW' mc&f VtWbSKfm ^ ^ ^BgDHflHaBBBHk - ^^^. schools, stores and industries. AVooocoeooooooooociO' a ^ ¦ • . M ¦ ¦ ger reported, "We're stacking sonable." K^SSRSF9 ' ^f at^ L^H9 ' M^m\\m_wkM^BS^Bv^^-\X ^ ^\_ ^^^^^^______• The unexpected blast of win- m AOOODO OOnOOOOOOOO _ thein up two high." BLAIR, Was.. . — John Jacob- _fMn&S_ ^^ ^ H^^^n^Hl ' aHa^[HHB^^^UfllaHBH\. ^BF M^P^ ^B ' '^aHaB^^^aHl^aHVaHVaHlHk. disrupted lake The department also de- ter's fury also son, Blair, has won first place tailed plans for operating a shipping and forced cancelation More than 250 women from in the junior division of the 1970 ''monitoring networ k" of many events throughout the the Iron Range area were also Wisconsin Soil and Water Con- -which would serve as a area. among the stranded after they servation Speaking Contest at "positive check" on the op- Most Duluth schools closed in came to Duluth for "A Day Madison. eration and effectiveness of the early afternoon, shortly aft- With Dottle" — a promotional Other winners included Shari the treatment systems de- er the storm turned up with event put on annually by a local Lowe, New Lisbon , elementary tailed in the orders. _ti___f$j_f_\ uoooooooooDoODCcoofc HftaGlHaV ' HHaOHlW. JaflBaHBoW \ ^^M^KMutjH V. sudden speed, but even so^ department store. The firm was division, and Cheryl Streiff , "I believe that the man- many students were stranded trying late Thursday to provide Erookfield, senior division. date from the public is in their schools late Thursday private and hotel housing for Runnersup included Y. Julie clear," L. P. Voigt, DNR and faced the prospect of spend- the ladies. Sundby, Chetek, elementary di- secretary, said. Pollution of ing night there. The temperature got only as vision; Joseph Hoyer, Manito- Wisconsin's rivers and lakes Complicating the picture low as 26 above zero at the woc/ junior division, and Jeff must be controlled." along with the heavy snowfall height of the storm, thus dis- Lowe, New Lisbon, senior di- Voigt listed five major ob- were winds up to 65 miles per qualifying the situation from the vision. jectives which the orders hour that cut visibility to near blizzard category. In a blizzard, Jacobson and the other state are intended to have met. zero over much of the area. the Weather Bureau says, tem- winners presented their speech- Included were plans for Officials at the National peratures must be 20 degrees es and received their prizes providing secondary sewage Weather Service in Duluth, who above or colder. at the annual meeting of Soii treatment for all municipal said the storm, "surprised, every- and Water Conservation Dis- wastes and a comparable one," said seven inches of snow tricts this week at Fond du degree of treatment for or- had already fallen by 6 p.m.— less than eight hours after it • all began at 10:14 a.m. * * Afcont 300 students from St. Jean's elementary school and Wisconsin weather: Cathedral High School spent the night—turning the incident into a kind of holiday with food and sleeping material provided by , neighbors. snow rain; tornadoes About 200 at Cathedral and By THE DISSOCIATED PRESS ning and thunder. " ed a quarter inch of warm, ^iWlCTHliaWBtWi. \ ' ^ioooooooooooooooooc H^aBaBBHl ~ ...... oooooooooooooooooo> '¦ ^ ¦ ' ¦ ^ ' ¦ H A rapidly moving blizzard WKaMvSmxamm X ^. r 100 at St. Jean's were reported A Douglas County deputy spring-like rain. lrnKSyif^S5BS» V "oooooooooooooooooc .BHHHHHl¦ [ ¦¦ _¦ ¦ *^rfVJaFnlatfirS X our ^oooooaoooooooooo- . swamped northern Wiscon- ¦ 3OODOO0OO0O00OI . sheriff in Superior said: The conflicting conditions \ l£&i£^ffl&&K2aK \. ' ¦ ¦ ¦ M -J B^^^^^^^B sin's Lake Superior region "We've really got it. It's im-. were spawned by a low- store. /dfiiYi everything#. ¦ JOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ¦¦ ¦¦ ' ¦¦ I mt§ -J with road - blocking snow- passable. You can't see a pressure . ' , ^^m\Wa^tSWKEiMkltSfffittSCSKrwai. X ^. on . in w OoooooooooooooooDoot ¦¦¦- ¦ ¦ ¦ 1 National Farm 1 system that whip- *^BPffraraBSqJmMft ^k _w 'toooaoosoooooe 10000 ^HDBHHHHVJ drifts Thursday and stabbed quarter of a block in front ped out of the Great Plains ¦Ht^tSHS^^SDmi.- ^V. ./.¦locooaaescoof *QO .BBBBHBJ downstate areas with torna- of you. *Exeept for a few fair trade, minimum '' Bureau meet " with winds of more than 50 TaEK'HBqWlfflflMHaW>.B'SHBW X. : /.MBWMsifQOOOOOOOOOOOOOQ ¦VH ^V. .A i nnri ¦ cnloi iiomc• . .S joooooooooooooop * . .HHBEHBl does. ^^wntwPjBHW. ^AA^fB» IIIVirKUPmfirvim UHU aUIU llCllia* • ¦^r!^ joooooooooooooo ^r .¦¦faVHi'BB Bayfield County officials miles an hour, and clashed ^ffl^^ffmHwf*^ 1 ' JOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO»O ' ¦sflnBaBfl Weather conditions gave ^Kv^ftrWPMlBESp^"^*" ' .^^ HHVSHVJ starts Sunday said plows Were abandoned with a cold - air system IB^ ' ^ BBE*9SB^1M HB».^^W_~ _ ^r.^r¦ jt oooooooaoooooooo p HBHHn^H the state a mixed person- ¦9£xJ23jWliW£Lw5Q&E3k^. ¦ joooooocoooooooooo.00000000000000000% ^t H^aVIDoMI because "they just weren't from Canada. ^GB&__W_\__W_tfi___vk ¦' ^k _^^ B^HBOBJ MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. ality with its feet in unsea- ^^"VffialWwSSHSBt^aW ^^^ 9_f^^ jdoooooooooooooooooqr KHHIBBH - A \ V M_ ' ^^^^ ^ ^eooooooooooooooooooot * . . doing any good." Witnesses reported two '9 __ __ SS_ ^^SSB\ ' : ^ ^^^a . __fj__ \\___t iHJWWWfTllffffnaBnk ' ' ^^ . ' ^^ M aoooooooooooooooooooo Q# ' ¦ " BtSEsmBHl group of Minnesota Farm Bu- sonable temperatures that . MvSavKi/tVRSaXtmMmB -ak ^^^-^^^^a^^_ _ i X~^ ^0t^. >^oeoooeoooooooooooooo« * ^amaiaASFi . _ _ -uuoOO cooooooo OOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOBOP KwtVHaPUiiin snow became slush, but touched down during the aft- «ooeoooocoooflot)OOir«DOOooooooo6oeoot-ocouuoooowoouoouoBi>uuuuouuiJDDOoooj)uououo .. . ¦ ¦ . »POOeoO0OCOC©OnO00OOOC-ODOOOP0OOOOOO«OOOOOOOPCOOOOCOO£OCOOOOOOCPPOOOObOO^ ¦BfaBttKBHBfllSKBKH apolis-St. Paul International Air- winter wreathed its head. OOOOOfOC "OCOCcnooa oroCOOOOOOOOOOOODClOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOQOOOOOODOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOaOOOOO ^ HBBHPBCBI driving was no hoon, damaging farm struc- »C1 COCO Cii f^fOOOOi;ci.C'".t"- tiOQOOOOOOOOO 00 00000000000 00 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 000 OO CO 00000000000000 00 OOOOOOOOOOO 00000 0000000006000000000P* HEkCBHmBl less haz- • OOCLJDaCcOnur. OOOCO Q fii-a OCO OOC O 00 OQO OOOOO 00 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOO OOOOOO OOC OOO 00000 OOOOOOOO OOOO OOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOODOQOOOJIO" MKBflKH port Sunday by chartered jet Snowfall that began about SOO^flp 3C KC OOCOCOCOnt C~ ODOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOpCOOOOOOOOOOOOCO 00 0000000000000000 0000000000000000 ooo^oooooooooin mytftmbmlXFtm tures. • COOUOOLOIiOOCOCCOCO OC OOOO QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0300000000000000000000900000'*" . WlaWfJSUlf-^m ardous. OOOOOO OOOOO QOOOOOOOOOO 0000OOOOOOOOOODOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO00OOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0000000'** noon measured eight to 12 COOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOO 'OOOOOO aoOOOOOOOOQQOO ^"' . BaStataSaBflttfl ' for Houston, Tex., and the 51st • OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO QOOC 0 n n ft aVaD^HHSDHaB Thundershowers whipped Mrs. Robert Pankow said ¦ooosvoDOoooscoBioaoooBSSOOOOOoooooocooo ooopoj>po 0 00 oo600 000 o.o,0,000.0,0.0,0 0 c,0S.°J> °J>JiJiS,0 °®JiJ'J1l'SJs°J> ®°S'°PSJ> ° " * ¦ DF H D inches deep by nightfall ^ . * . °- BI DB annual convention of the Ameri- across the midsection. Fun- she watched a twister bad- can Farm Bureau Federation. County highway crews re- ported even nel clouds were reported ly damage a barn on the State Farm Bureau officials snowplows were seen in Washington County, neighboring farm of Fred The new TV season is here! mm will accompany the delegation bogged down in the wind- built drifts as deep as a and witnesses in Dodge Braunsweig, town of Lega- to the five-day meeting. Some County reported two barn- non. She said one of her 5,000 farm and ranch members car's windshield. See Our Complete Selection of Winter - wise Ashland damaging wind blasts de- two pet dogs fled to the Pan- B of the nation's largest general scribed as twisters. kow barn, and the other H farm organization will attend County began closing , schools and sending students Thursday's temperatures cowered between her feet. with 49 states and Puerto Rico safely home when the heavy ranged from the 20s in Walde Wendorf , working represented. snowfall began. northern Wisconsin to 60 in in a silo, escaped injury Among convention speakers Milwaukee, matching the when what he called a twis- Coronado COLOR TVs. S Winds raised huge waves will be John B. Connally, form- city's highest reading for ter sucked five doors off his cn Lake/ Superior, and two DURI NG OUR SPECIAL DISCOUNT SALE v er U.S. Navy secretary and one- Coast Guardsmen were tem- the date. Milwaukee receiv- barn near Ashipun. time Texas governor ; Clarence porarily marooned in the Ad amy, president of the Nation- Duluth - Superior harbor on al Association of Food Chains; a lighthouse over which David Stroud, president of the ¦waves broke. National Livestock and Meat An Iron County deputy MIRACLE MALL- WINONA Board, and the Rev. Bob Rich- sheriff in Hurley said the X^ffr^_f%__ ards of Minneapolis, former blizzard "was weird. During Auto Olympic star. the storm, there was light- Stereo ifS^m^ Sensational Buy!
,^^P^Bwli^*WaMRBail.fc aflaV B^aa»Ba»Mt$raP5&*I^JM Wit -^MMMMaMt ' V^BmB^L ^mU^-^Klf ^W^T^^^T^mlW^S^"^^^ I DECISIONS... I ISgg . 8 Track Stereo Player __23_M____ Wl IJJ a^fam~^a»^af—,— laHHfflBHHBl ^aWBWIl^WBglaCfflra ^ *V , -.--^m-^.-..~ I ¦ >.——¦¦ ~ *T" "£,__?.' j~X"" *'"' , ¦ I*' [•/ Y* ¦> Vt V** *^TO ft '.WSfifll I mmm ¦¦ ¦ ¦' ¦"''^"'¦ "'¦¦'¦¦*-wttiMmmWl ,,»4r ,, n,s —,„ . < ¦ « ..ifrM- i flH™— ' mmWB *WnmTiW!Smm—*•> wmmsr . -— —^y— ^^ jg jam m ma ma ¦Hwmm H~^ ^£L* £L m^ ¦ ¦¦HHH ^BII I ' \j; - ' . , | I wSD ^ ^// : I "TT !»«"»*«« ^ ^ 1 :' ^M®- *®* UWLIftM|Y Speakers H^^HHi* hr .. * 1 II—MIT includes tfr^Bmm^BSm^tMBBAMl^^^fi*fl ^^^^^^B^^B ^^^ft^HB.BBtgl.' -U'-~ >^'" ••" Jm^nrmmmMM^KIIIMHmWtHMMM Pacesetter speakers! **_w_m__ ^_^_^__ w^_W_ \^MnMcxJMm ^{.^M 2 1 O watts _jJ mmm ^MBBmM?>M MMMMBBBBBBB^BBBBmBtB&Bfl^mm^B ^L^^M&^ * n| ¦ Peak power sound ¦ ¦ Just push in an 8-track car- ¦SB BS HI '' X^t^^P ^^E ^^ EI ^^^ Si ^S ^^^^ lBKSMfor • ¦ ¦ ^S^m : : tridge instant performance ... are easy I ^ } IAMAUH y ^ || ^BB - ^BK - ^^^^^^^^^ SB B/ ^BjjmmMm^^ ^B Automatic or pushbutton channel change. Recessed at f %QAN& I Demi-Eight 8 Track Stereo Tape Player Automatic 8 Track Stereo Tape Player m^m^mmm^ »f \ $ C 4^95 Tiny Alarm I %^^B JmWn. t* ImmyiMMMaWmR ^KBBSBO ^^m * m»M ^fl r Spoakwrs Tr BJ| Ex,ra In Choice I $ 95 _m^W___W__ ^_WBB-mmmma- ^ mHH ppPHk g jy Ui. Your Credit of 3 I ^r ill^^^^^^^^^^ i ' O USO TOUT V-fCalt ¦ Colors I _n__y^^£jjmmma-amt*a in aaii^a^aaaMafalWaWaWalllaaBr aHalK(lHB« BHHP J _J|| —111) its 1R IA/AH K all
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' ——** Tax rate is up for city Meadlo refuses to of Arcadia talk^ FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) — ecution (or Meadlo, 23, and an- ... I didn't notice any great re- ARCADIA, Wis. (Special) - The Army must proceed in its other Galley platoon member, luctance on his part at the time The 1971 tax rate for the city of murder trial of Lt. William Gal- Allen Boyce , was signed by to tell everything he knew about Arcadia has been set at .043742 ley without the testimony of a Maj. Gen. Orwin Talbott, com- My Lai—in great and nauseous or $43.74 per thousand on as- former 61 who has said publicly manding off icer of this infantry House group probing defector he killed men, women and chil- base. Boyce then testified, but detail." sessed valuation, Warren C. dren at My Lai on Galley's or- Meadlo stuck to the asserted ' 'That doesn't have anything Shankey, city clerk-treasurer, ders. protection of the Fifth Amend- to do with his constitutional reported this week. This com- ment. Paul David Meadlo persistent- rights," Kesler persisted. pares to .4353 per thousand for ly refused to testify Thursday, The charge to be brought incident may use the subpoena 1970, an increase of 21 cents despite tihe judge's admonition against Meadlo probably will be Kennedy said only a court- By CARL C. CRAFT plete /and President Nixon's : The incident took, place off in the United States. that "if anyone goes to jail, it's refusal to testify—akin to a con- martial or military commission per thousand. no ^WASHINGTON (AP) - The findings bad been made public. Martha's Vineyard on the Mas- "Under no circumstances^" Milage is up on school, vo- not going to be your lawyer; it's tempt charge in a civilian court. -^and state or federal courts head of a House subcommittee Since neither condition was ful- sachusetts coast Nov- 23 When a say the revamped instructions cational school and state gov- going to be you." Conviction carries a rnaxinwm —has jurisdiction in the My Lai investigating the Lithuanian de- filled, the spokesman added, Soviet trawler was moored ernment ' and down on county sentence of six months in jail case. And the general's immuni- fector incident, angered by a Macomber didn't go. alongside the Coast Guard cut- on handling defectors, "should a But Meadlo continued his re- and a $50 fine. person asking asylum be arbi- and city levels. Valuation of fusal on grounds of possible ty writ, he said, is binding on State Department official's fail- Shortly before Macomber's ter Vigilant for talks about taxable properties is also up trarily or summarily returned self-incrimination and the mili- John A. Kesler, attorney for the military. ure to show for a hearing, says scheduled appearance on Capi- coastal fishing rights. in the city. , he will act to subpoena witness- tol Hill, the White House dis- On Capitol Hill, the House to foreign jurisdiction or con- y tary frdge, Col. Reid W. Kenne- the pallid soft-spoken Meadlo On CBS television Nov. 24, trol" pending a determination ""'"-' 'JXI Hazel Gunderson , senior, and office said lie turned himself in Karen Benson, freshman, earn- to authorities Thursday night. ed a 4.0 average. QtnuliM A}**,!Old J Mr.^ _ S i l l Law enforcement officers ETTRICK RINK Same Service Makos Our Used Cars Bettor. We Our Whole Ford Team-ready to serve you In tho ¦&£ . . _¦ from across northern Minnesota ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - havo tho know-how to chock, tost, recondition. most courteous, compejent, money-aavlng way. Tjl-ftSff and northwestern Ontario were Ground has been leveled for a *9?#£ Boston? attending the funeral for Sheriff skating rink at tho Ettrick park *nnxu '* ' H¦¦¦KM MMM «MIMMI It s lusty.' Hearty. Priced right.** Milton Kochianiuk when tho two on North Main, in front of Liv- youths escaped. ing Hope Lutheran Church. A Authorities snid tlie youths light has been installed between used a hacksaw to cut nwuy the park playground equipment TOUSLEY FORD COMPANY Bo««(» OttfUtar Cajwaito * fcatoik, Maw. a protecting screen and opened and the rink, which will be BNWV W pwo». Mt. a lock with a key in their flooded when weather permits. MIRACLE MALL —WINONA escape. Tho village is doing tho work. 'tezf tesh Your SoulEvery ^ahb ^^ wiWp Worship God In 44is 44oLiiScutotutirtplff m
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL (American Baptist Convention) (East ; Broadway and Lafayette Lutheran Services (West Broadway and Wilson) The Rev. George Goodreti The Rev. E. L. Christopherson REDEEMER EV. LUTHERAN t a.m.—Communion. 9:45 aim. — Sunday school will meet 10:45 a.m. — Communion and church (Missouri Synod) ¦ ' with a dais -(or every age. school. White gifts will be received. Tha 0717 W. Broadway) 10:45 e.m.—Morning worship. Chancel The Rev. Charles A. Tansfll choir, directed by Mrs. Lee Christopher- children's Christmas gifts will be ready son, will present a Christmas cantata ti- to be collected by the children following . 9:15 a.m.-Sunday school. tle: "The Wonder of Christmas" by John the second service. Vestry meetinj fol- ' Peterson. Oroanlst will be Mrs. Joseph *.'30 a.m.—Adult Bible claw. Orlowske; pianist, Terry Christopherson. lows, . 1D:30 a.m.—Communion service. 5:30 p.m.—College age dialogue. A 7:30 p.m.—EYC meeting. ¦1:20 a.m.—Fellowship. meal will be served. Tbursday, 7»30 p.m.—Senior eholr Christopher- 4:30 p.m.—Christian Louth league bowl* 7 p.m.—Vespers. Pastor ' son will spesK on "Three Questions." practice. Ing et Lewiston; meet at church. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.—Board of Christ- Friday, 3:30 p.m.—Junior eholr prac- 7:30 p.m. — Stewardship meeting *jt Ian education meets in Social hell. tice. ' church. • p.m.—Board of trustees meets In : 7 p.m.—Church decorating party. —Stewardship nneet. pastor's study. Monday, 7:30 p.m. 8:30 p.m.—Dlaconett board meets tn Ing at church. eholr room. Tuesday. 7:30 p.m.—Stewardship meet- Thursday, 7:30 p.m.—Adults will meet McKINLEY "Jesus, Teacher ing at church. In chapel and study UNITED METHODIST and Lord." Baptist youth meet in (801 West Broadway) 8 pjrir-Sarah Society Christine, par- Fellowship hall. ty. •;30 p.m.—Chancel choir rehearsal. The Rev. Glenn L. Qnam Saturday, 10 a.m.—Confirmation In- Larry Tomten, associate struction. ASSEMBLIES OF GOD program en ' (Center and Broadway) 7:35 aim.—Word and music Pastor W. W. Shaw KWNO. ST. MATTHEW'S LUTHERAN 8:30 a.mi—Stockton worship service; reception of new members. (Wisconsin Synod) 9:45 a.m.-Sunday school. Classes for 9:30 a.m.—Stockton Christmas program (West wabasha ana High! all ages. rehearsal. The Rey. A. L. Mennlcke 10:45 a,m.—Morning worship. Chil- 9:45 a.m.-^McKIn ley worship service; dren's church for ages Ml years. sermon, "Renewed Possibilities." Music Vicar Glenn Moldenhauei 6 P.m.—Choir practice. ministry: Mrs. Harvey Gordon, Mra. 7:30 p.m.—Evening service. Commun- Robert Garvey. Acolyte, John Hogue. • a.m.-Worship. Sermon, : "Are You ion served the first Sunday evening of Senior choir director, Mrs. Dennis Gop- Ready For Persecution?" Miss Susan each month. len. Nursery provided for babies down* Haer, organist. Tuesday, 7 p.m.—Second Tuesday of s Missionary Council stairs. 9:15 a.m.—Sunday school and Bible each month: Women' 10:45 a.m. — McKinley church school Classes. ' ¦ ' ¦¦. ' and Mlssloneltes. —Bible and prayer classes. 10:30 ajn.—Worship. Sermon and or- Thursday, 7:30 p.m. 7 p.m.—Genera l youth program. All gan same as earlier. Grades four to six, hour and C A. service. lun lor and senior MYF members are ask- directed by Mis* Haar, will sing, "terd. ed to come and help decorate the Dismiss Us With Thy Blessing." FIRST CONGREGATIONAL Church... a: 15 p.m.—Youth League. (West Broadway and Johnson) Tuesday—"The Place," radio program 7:45 p.m.—Married Couples club Christ- on KWNO, Rev. Quarh hosting. mas party. . • The RSv. John A. Kerr Wednesday, 8 p.m.—Pastor-parish com- Monday, 11 a.m.—"Pastor's Communion —Church school and- worship mittee meets. service. ' 10:30 a.m. Thursday, 7 p.m.—Senior choir and <:30 p.m.—Lutheran Pioneers) Lutheran service. Broadcast over KWNO. New nominating committee meeting. members to be received should meet In Olrl pioneers. M p.m.—Council en ministry meet*. 8 p:m.—Men's club; Lutheran Olrl chapel. Preludes: "Fantasia on 'The' Pioneers council. " First Noel'," Mhes, and "Beautiful Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.—Sewing guild. Jesus," Polish fJFol, by organist, Miss . 4:30 p.m.—Junior choir. June Sorllen. Anthem by senior choir, 7 p.m.—Adult Blbla class and Sunday directed by Harold Edstrom. Offertory, Catholic Services school teachers. "I Wonder es I Wander," by Mrs/ Har- 8 p.m.—Choir and adult membership old Rekstad, soloist. Sermon, "I Won- CATHEDRAL class. der as .1 Wander," by the Rev. John A. Wednesday, 6:30 P.m. — Conllrrriatlon Kerr, minister. Nursery provided. OF SACRED HEART class.' 11:30 a.m.—College group meets In (Main and West Wabasha) 7:30 p.m.—Advent service. Junior Pennant Corner. 4 p.m.—Senior High bowling at West- Tlie Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph R. choir, directed by Miss Ellen Koch, will I^V fSnPP! ¦ sing. Miss Susan Haar, organist. gate. ' - • . McGinhis, Rector Thursday, 8:40 a.m.—School: service. 6:30 p.m.—Junior High fellowship. The Rev. Peter Brandenlioff ¦ «:» p.m.—Lutheran Collegians. Wednesday, 1 p.m.—Circle One meets 7:18 p.m Women's club Christmas »t home of Mrs. Frank Merkus, program The Rev. David Anioldt parly -and church council. by Mrs. John Kerr. Thursday, 3:30 p.m. Sunday Masses (5:15 p.m. Saturday)! Friday,¦ 5-7 p.m.-^Comtnunlon registra- —Junior eholr rer tion.: . • , . hearssl. 5:4S, 7, 8:15, 9:30 (broadcast, KWNO), Saturday, 9 a.m.—Confirmation class. 7:45 p.m.—Evening circle In . Fellow- 11 a.m., 12:15 and 5:15 p.m. Nursery 10:30 a.m.—Christmas rehearsal. ship hall. provided at 9:30 and ll Masses. J p.m.—Lutheran Olrl Pioneers carol- lim Saturday, IO a.m.—Church school pro- Sacrament of Penance: Daily' s 4:41 Ino. mr gram rehearsal. to 5:10 p.m.; Saturday: 3-5 and 7:30-9 ' ¦ • p.m. \MS ^ ~ -M-WBBP'^ ' %i< ' rM&tfMM^- " x '^BM-W tWIMB aW^ ^ ^• -^v -. CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST Dally Masses: 7, B a.m. ana 1:15 pm, GOODVIEW TRINITY OF LATTER DAY SAINTS LUTHERAN CHURCH ST. STANISLAUS (MORMON; (East 4th end Carlmona) (Wisconsin Synod) 11455 Park Lane> The Rev. Donald W. Grablsch, (820 STtti Ava.) WiaBB^Wl [i«jgM °^*^^BSMpW*''' I ¦ ¦ f.t^BffflHMswWtialwisn B Ronald G. Pntz, Branch ' : ¦¦ The Rev. Larry Zessin ^^ . . . . 'Pastor y President The Rev. Peter S. Fafinstd t ajn.—Worship with Communion. Ser- ^ Sunday—District conference at Roch- The Rev. Thomas J. mon, "Where's the Sign of My Repen- vVhen Dr. Christiann IM. Barnard transplants the heart of one person m tance?" Text, Matt. 3:1-10. Organist, BBB^ *^^^^^ ester. No Sunday school of sacramental , Hargesheimer Mrs. Oary Evans. W$ ^^ into another person, he gives a part pf his own heart to both patients. For Dr. Barnard M meeting. 10 a.m.-Sunday school. 9 a.m.-Prlesthood. The Rev. Dale, Tapper 10:30 am—First Rochester session. Monday, <:30 p.m.—Lutheran Ptonetr W of Cape Town, South Africa, the world's most famous heart transplant surgeon, believes that m Associates ¦: ., Wild game feed end award night. 1:30 p.m.—Second Rochester session. Tuesday, 7 p.m.—Church council. j f ife itself is God's greatest gift to His image on earth. Son of a Dutch Reformed missionary, tall, lean, m Sunday eucharistic celebrations (7:30 Wednesday, 7 p.m.—Bible class and LAKESIDE EVANGELICAL p.m. Saturday): 5:30, 7:15, 8:30, 9:45 Junior choir. personable Dr. Barnard lives the legacy left him by his parents. ..a sense of deep responsibility to Ms. FREE CHURCH and 11:15 a.m. and 5:15 p.m, I p.m.—Senior choir. others and to himself. &¦, (Lincoln School Veekday Eucharistic celebrations—6;3t Friday, *•» p.m.—Congregational Pic- Hufl and Sarnia streets) and 8 a.m. and 5:15 p.m. tures.' Saturday Eucharistic celebrations—6:H Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.-Congrt- The Rev. Sylvester Hanke and 8 a.m. and 7:30. p.m. gatlonal pictures. First Fr.ldays-6:30 and 8 a.m. end 5:11 1 "A Higher Force gives us His support when we need it most,'' the famous surgeon says. "God rS 9:30 a.m.-Sunday school. Classes for P.m. . J all ages. Holy Day Eucharistic celebrations— FAITH LUTHERAN m shares His knowledge with us, when we share it with others." Dr. Barnard prays 10:45 a.m.—Worship service. Sermon, 5:30, 6:30, 8, 9:30 a.m. and 5: 15 p.m. (The Lutheran Church Ilf l "Suddenly! As Like a Snare." Choir (7:30 p.m. when announced.) every day, but not for impossible things like a perfect world. He asks God tb help r-i I anthem, directed by Mrs. Jackson Herr, Sacrament ol Penanco: Dally—7 and In America) m IMJ special music will also be presented. Pi- 7:30 a.m. - Saturdays—3-5 p.m. end 7 to (1717 W. Service Dr.) I him realize his full capacity to help others. Above all else, Dr. Barnard believes ¦¦ anist, Mrs. Steve James, Junior church 7:30 p.m. and after the 7:30 p.m. Eu- I * r— will be conducted during tha worship chjrlstlc celebration; Thursday before The Rev. Gordon R. Arneterg ¦ service. Nursery care available during first Friday—3 to I o.m. and r ia » m in self discipline to help achieve the "impossible." He says that today's heart transplants . j i Jj the Sunday school and worship hour. P.m. ?:30 a.m.-Sunday church school. 1 6 p.m. — College and senior high 10:45 a.m.-Worshlp with Communion. B are just one step in the inexorable march of surgical science toward undreamed * m youth fellowship at the home of Mr. Sermon, "God Is for Us.' Nursery pro. and Mrs. Steve James. ST. MARY'S (1303 W. Broadv.ay) vlded. Mk of possibilities. He believes that all human beings are essentially good until ^' ' 7:15 p.m.—Preservlce prayer and medi- 6:30 p.m.—Luther League fun night. _ cEfctTi* m tation. The Rev. Joseph Mountain Bring your games and a friend. ,11 they go out of their way to prove themselves bad. «0rm.«mbin..ion t§ | 7:30 p.m.—Communion service. The rlev. Daniel Dernek Wednesday, 2:30 p.m.—Hannah circle. \ figJK ' for ooerf. t«fy ww, WM Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.—Homebullders Thursday, 7:30 p.m.—Choir rehearsal. * ws| < • womtniMl ,—Service. Sublect, "God the will be served. 5:15 o.m. for the King,' Moryl Nichols directing. 8:30 end lfl:4S a.m.—Worship service . Only Causo and Creator. per served each Sunday. Nursery pro- ble classes for all aoos. Central, " 11 a.m, Supervised nursery (or tots. Sermon, "A People, Prepared for tho Wednesday, a p.m.—Testimony meet. — Church scliool, nursery vided. 10:45 a.m.—Worship services. Pastor Tuesday, 1 p.m.—Ruth and Ma/the clr« 9:15 a.m.-Sunday school; three-year through adult, Adult class, "The Mid. 11:45 a.m.-KWNO "A Closer Walk cles polluck luncheon, church. ST. CASIMIR'S Lord." Luke 1:15-17. Ina. Williamson bringing the message, pia- nursery throuoh 12th grade. Reading room open Tuesdays, Tnura- east Crises In Biblical Perspective. " With Thee," 6:30 p.m.—Parish youth council, Cen- (West Broadway near Ewlng) 10:30 a.m.—Sunday school; three-year •:JJ a.m.—Sunday school and Bible 5 p.m.—College spaghetti supper. All 6:30 p.m,—Bible study. nist, Valarle Sanfordj congregational tral. days and Saturdays from 1 :30 to 4:30 singing led by Charles Sackett. Thc Rt. Rev . Msgr. nursery through nlnlh grade. class. p.m., except holidays. welcomed, Thursday, 7 p.m.—Choir practice and Lord's Thursday, 5 p.m.—Handbell choir No. 1:30-3:30 p.m.—Special Christmas can- 3:30 p.m.—Sauor Memorial Home serv- ¦ fellowship. Supper will bo observed. Nursery cart 2, Central. Emmctt F, Tifihe dlelight service pracllce for all choirs. ice. I provided for bolh services. 7:30 p.m,—Choir. —Valley View Tower service. SALVATION ARMY 7 p.m.—Business mealing at tho churcti. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. 2 p.m.—Adult Instruction class, 5 p.m. (tlj W. 3rd Sf.) KHAEMER DRIVE Saturday, 2 p.m.—Chrlstmai program Tuesday, 7 p.m.—Trustees and deacons 4:111 p.m.—Senior Youth league bowl- WINONA GOSPEL CHURCH Thursday, 7 p.m.—Good News club re- rehearsal, Julius YV. Haun, pastor emcrlins meet. ing. Capt. and Mrs. Jack Ltndsey CHURCH OP CHRIST (Center and Sanborn Streets) hearsal for (ho Christmas program; adult 7:30 p.m.—Church council meets and Monday, 5 p.m.—Trustees meeting. (IMO Kraemer Drive) The Rev. Jack A. Tanner prayer group. Masses—(5:19 p.m. Saturday); Sun- Tuesday, 10:30 a.m. — Ladles Bible ¦ CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Bethel class, 9:30 a.m. - Sunday school af Thurley Kenneth Middtaton (Orrln Street end Highway 61) days, e and 10 a.m. Wednesday, 7 a.m.—Men's Bible study brunch, Garden Gate. Homos, community room. f:4j a.m.-Sunday school. Weekdays—7:15 a.m. group. 7 p.m.—Bible class, church basement. 7:30 p.iri.—Salvation meeting. 10 a.m.—Blbe classes (or all ages, 10:49 a.m.—Worship. GRACE BRETHREN CHURCH The Rev. James Hayes Holy days—5:30 p.m. on eve of holy Thursday, 3:30 p.m.—Junior and senior Wednesday, 7 o.m.—Men's Bible break- Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.—Home League at 11 a.m.-Worship with the Lord's Sup- 6:30 p.m.—Adult choir. (Wesl Wabasha and Ewlng) 9:45 a.m.-Sunday school. d»y and 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. on Ihe holy conllrmands 1. fast, Garden Goto. Thurloy Homes. Tot time. per. 7 p.m.—Prayer service. 10:55 a.m.-Worshlp. day, \, Saturday, 9 a.m.—Junior and senior 0:30 p.m.—School service. 7;30 p.m,—Home League at the Corps, 6 p.m.-Worship. 7:30 p.m.—evangelistic service. 10 a.m. —Sunday school. Lessons from 6:30 p.m.—Study groups. Flrsi Fridays—ai li and /:» a.m, conllrmands 2, 6 p.m.—Advent STVlce. Wednesday, 4 p.m.-Youth activities, Wednesday, 7 p.m.-Blble study In the Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.—Orchestra practice. the Book of Romans. 7:30 p.m.—Evening service. , Confessions—Snturanys eves ond holy 10 a.m.—Junior High choir and youlh 7 p.m.—Council mooting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.—Bible study and Book of Job, wllh Bible classes for all 7:30 p,m,-B|b!e study. U a.m.—Morning worship wllh guest Thursday, 7 p.m.—Prayer atudy, olsys, Thursday before flrat Fridays— choir. Thursday, 7:15 p.m.—Choir rehearsal. prayer meeting. ages. Friday, 7:30 p.m.-Hobby club. speaker. • p.m.—Choir. 9 to 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Badger Foundry Company Fidelity Savings & Loan Ass'n. Winona Ready-Mixed Concrete Bauer Electric, Inc. H. Choate & Company Watkins Products, Inc. and Employees Pred Schilling 8. Staff Henry Schormtr A employees Russell Bauer & Staff D. W. Oray A employee* Management A Personnel Karsten Construction Co. Holiday Inn Berg Truck Bodies & Trailers Sandy's Restaurant Bunke's APCO Service Mr. T's Restaurant Mr. end Mrs. Letter H. Berg OeorQe Kersten Kellh Whltcman 8. Staff Feafurlno Llnahan'i Restaurant Mr, A Mrs. saver! Tindal Ed Bunk* •> Employe** Kendell Corporation Joswlck Fuel & Oil Co. Chas. J. Olson & Sons, Plbg. Boland Manufacturing Co. Winona Furniture Company . H. P. Joiwlck A Bmployte* Clarence Olsen A Employees Stan Poland & Employ**) R. W. Cornwall, Employees Ai tmlth & Bmployees Culllrjan Soft Water Service Prank Allan A Employ*** Kranlng a Sates m Service J. C. Penney Company Curloy' floor Shop Lake Center Switch Co. ' Paul Miller A Stall i William* Hotel t> Annex Mr. end Mr*. Res* Kranlnp . Belt* & Richard Slevtrs Rey Meyer & Stan Brom Machine & Foundry Paul Brom A Employee* Park Plaza Merchants National Bank Kujak Brothers Transfer M*n«semen» A stiff Downtown Shell Service Off/cers-Dlrcctors-Staff Hubert, Emll, Merlin A Frank Kulsk Del DOard S, Employee* Polachek Electric Burmeister Oil Company Will Polechtk family Fred Burmeliter Peerless Chain Company Cone'a Hardware Montgomery Ward & Co. N Madison Silos Wlnono.MInn, A" . Management & Personnel DIvn.Mertln-Marlttta Co. All employees Quality Sheet Metal Works, Inc. Dunn Blacktop Co. Ruth's Restaurant Ruth Denning A Stan Northern States Power Co. Even H, Davit* A Staff Morgan Jewelry Store Fawcett Funeral Home A ' S, J. Patltracn Employees Ruppert's Grocery Stev* Moroan A Sftft , Siebrecht Floral Company Management s. Personnel dale's Mobil Service Mr*. Charles Siebrecht A Employee* Gibson Discount Center North American Rockwell Corp, Clayton Heesilg A Employee* Whlt-Crotl Houseboat Division Nelson Tire Service, Inc. and Employees Th* Company 4 Bmployte* >y y' ' Turner's Market Spelt* Philli ps ' 66" Service Stn. 0«r«ld Turner A Employe** Rolllngtlone Lumber Yard Paint Depot — Elliott Paints Joseph A. & James I. Spells Golte Pharmacy Rolllngiton*. Minn. The Hubofs a Employes! N, L, Ooltt A starr Winona Auto Sale* Tempo Dept. Store Oodoo-Rambltr Management A Employees Thorn, Inc. Highway Shell Happy Chef Restaurant P. Earl Schwab Company Mr & Mrs. Royal Thern P. Earl Schwab & Staff Winona Boiler & Steel Co. Winona Delivery 8, Transfer Roy Taylor A Employee* Mel Boon* S, Employees Management A Bmployees A.W, "Art" Salisbury
Auto Inn <& Gulf Service H. S. Dresser & Son, Contractors Warner & Swaeey Co. Altura State Bank Hossfold Manufacturing Co. W. T. Grant Dept, Store Allan Schualar a. BmBloyaaa Harry t, Jim Draisar Dsdger Division Employe** Member P.D.I.C. Management A Bmpl»y**» Mr*. Meuriru Strom A Staff ¦ i 1 >l If i jkouqhiJL L CL cmgjpmtL Area church % 92nd Congress will have services Maleand femcr/e Parsonage MURK Hebron Moravian Church Sunday wor- Ship, 9:15 a.m.i Sunday Khoof, with Christmas program 116 Roman Catholic members rehearsal following , ventists until in*) a.m., 10:15 a.m. Wednesday created He them priorities WASHINGTON, D.C. - time since its statistics have , Apostolic Christi- 92nd Congress include two -Released time classes, 8:30-11:30 a.m. The 92nd Congress will have been regularly compiled, ans, Christian and Mission- United Church of Christ, 5a ur United Methodist Church morn- So included here is our own understanding of sexuality ETTRICK, Wis. (Special;) - iciate at a military funeral, he him for his position. ng /worship, Dr. M. L. DeBolt, Winona, and how it can be used in its proper sense. Our sexual nature ing minister, ! year-old minister was plunged lay speaker, 9 a.m. Mrs. Marion Woyicki, Beach, faces some questions of con- But most of the congregataoi can be abused and misused just as any other part, but it can the R e v.| into some soul-searching reflec- LAMOILLE Wis., has been re-elected a Charles Gavin science. If he says no, he also firmly supported him; only on< Precious Blood Catholic Church Mas*, also be just as glorifying to God as any part of our human trustee of First Lutheran con- ,! tion about it. 9 a.m., Sundays. ¦¦' ¦ ' ,¦ who left this I may face repercussions in his He himself was a veteran, he left. Many young men, semi LOONEY VALLiY body. . . gregation, serving with Basil summer tol nary professors and others, ii Loeney Valley Lutheran Church Sunday It is time more Christians seek an understanding of how Finch, Franklin, and Ruel community. relates, having joined the Air worship, 9:30 a.rn.; Sunday school, 10:30 serve in th«| his commit- and out of the community ^ sex can be an intricate and vital part of our total human Young, Melrose. That's what happened to the Force in 1945 before a.m. Monday—Hannah circle, Mrs. Paul collegiate field.l Later, after he thanked him for ids stand. Say! Anderson, hostess, and Mrs. William Pe- experience. Instead of deploring the presence of ''sex" in Other officers elected at the Rev. Jack R. Farrell a Church ment to God. terson, leader, A graduate of I he: "God is still working amohj 7 p.m. Wednesday—Sa- movies, magazines etc., let us begin to build an understand- recent congregation meeting in- ^ was graduated from McPherson , rah circle, Mrs. Earl Brevlg, hostess, a Columbus j of the Brethren pastor in Syra- became a semina- His people."y and Mrs. Avis Unrasch, leader, a p.m. ing of our own seruality that will allow us to be more com- clude Otto Busse Leland Tor- College, he , high school,! cuse, Ind., who .first, said "yes" Bethany Semi- ¦ MINNESOTA CITY pletely the creatures God created us to be. Toward that end kelson and Allen Moen, dea- rian, studying at First Evangelical Lutheran Church Pastor Kramer S before the experience led him fto nary and Mennonite Bible" Semi- Sunday school, 9 a.m.; worship with ser- Central United Methodist Church in co-sponsorship with the cons; Ed Erickson, treasurer; 1 mon, attended Evan- Ind. "Where's the Sign of My Repen- YMCA, YWCA, and the Margaret Simpson Home — Family Keith Hardie, secretary; Mrs. announce a "no." nary at Elkhart, tance?" 10:1S a.m.; Monday-Lutheran gelical Luther- Rev. Kramer The 200,000-member Church of New pastor Pioneers wild game Service, is sponsoring a Sex Education Seminar in January. Vilas Steine The story, as recounted in the feed, award night , financial secre- an Theological seminary in Col- in which he be- at Goodview, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday- The public may attend. tary, and Mrs. Richard Matt- denominational magazine, the the Brethren, Bible class, 8:15 p.m. Saturday—Ne con- umbus before he was ordained came a minister, is an historic firmation son, mission secretary. Messenger, began last spring Instruction. there in June, 1960. denomination, teaching St. Paul's Catholic Church Saturday Auditors will be Preston when he agreed to officiate at a "peace" at Lake City Mass, 7:30 p.m. with confessions at He has been in the home mis- an ideal, although 7 MuqiotL in. ihsLMWA . Busse , and James Brynildson. military funeral of a Korean pacifism as P.m. Sunday Masses, 8 and 10 e.m. sion field on the west side of many of its members, like Friday-Friday Mass, 5:30 p.m. Holiday Brynildson will be head usher; Madison; has served at Jack- War veteran kilted at work in a Masses. 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. Daily Mass- local factory. many Quakers whose teachings es, 8 a.m. except Wednesday and Fri- Helmer Tranberg, custodian, son, near Milwaukee, Wis., and Congregational day at 5:30.p.m. also uphold pacifism, serve in and Mrs. Jennie Jordahl, or- Zion Lutheran Church, Manawa, As is customary En such serv- forces. LAKE CITY Minn, -i- Den. NODINE ganist. the military , St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church Wis., before coming to Durand. ices, the local American Legion Finally, after re-examinaging nis Dickie, a student at United Sunday worship, io a.m.; Sunday school, Two Protestant Officers of the cemetery as- 11 a.m. Pastor Kramer and his wife, post or other veterans' organi- his convictions, Pastor Farrell Theological Seminary at New sociation will be Raymond Dav- RIDGEWAY the former Deloris Mossholder, zation takes part, usually in a decided that the? military por- Brighton, Minn., has assumed R Idgeway-Wltoka United Methodist wor- is, secretary-treasurer ; and Appleton, Wis., have three flag presentation to- the next ol tion of the funeral went beyond his duties as new pastor of the ship at Ridgeway, 9 a.m. Helmer Tranberg and Raymond ROLLINGSTONE traditions united daughters, Karen, nine; Kath- kin after the graveside commit- his understanding of the Gospel. Lake City Congregational Trinity Lutheran Church, Wisconsin Lien, directors. Leslie Herreid erine, seven, and Julie, two. tal. The following Sunday, he pre- church, replac- syneef, Sunday worship, 10:30 a.m.t will be Sunday school superin- _^^^^_^ Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; Ladles* Aid By KERYGMA NEWS/FEATURES In the Syracuse case, Pastor sented a statement to his church ing the Rev. A. Christmas party, 1:30 p.m; Monday- tendent; Mrs. Marion Woyicki, CENTRAL Farrell recounts, the American council saying he realized many J. Ward, who Lutheran Pioneers- «:45 p.m.; Lutheran In an historic action, two Protestant traditions have secretary, and Mrs. James Bry- Girl Pioneers, UNITED METHODIST flag was displayed on the coffin of the church's young men were is now serving 7:30 p.m. Tuesday—Joint Main) church council meeting et Jehovah, 8 been united into one, as the former International Congre- nildson, treasurer. (West droadway an* in the church, and just before accepting military service, but the Theilman P.rh, Wednesday—Advent vespers at The Rey. Harlyn Hagmann, gational Council and the former World Alliance of Reformed Officers of the American Luth- the service be*gan, a group in le- that he, nevertheless, must take United Church Trinity, 8 p.m. Thursday-Bible class the World Alliance of seaier pastor at Jehovah, a p.m. Friday—Release Churches merged into a new body, eran Church Women include: gion caps walked to the coffin, a clear stand for the church's of Christ. time classes, 8:30-11:30 a.m. Saturday- Reformed Churches (Presbyterian and Congregational). Mrs. Harold Tenneson, presi- The " ev. Rogei A. Parks, saluted and sat in a front row. position on peace. A 1965 gradu- Confirmation classes, 9-11 a.m.; Christ- associate pastor mas eve rehearser, 1-5 p.m. About 550 delegates, observers and guests from 127 member dent; Mrs. Helmer Tranberg, "a*ifter the service in the sanc- He declared: ate of the Uni- STOCKTON countries celebrated the union at a service churches and 75 vice president; Mrs. Ruel 9 a.m.—Communion, Norton chapel. tuary and as the casket was "With the strong voices call- versity of Min- Grace Lutheran worship, 9 a.m.; Sun- classes for day school, 10 i of word and sacrament in Nairobi, Kenya. A "Message to Young, secretary, and Mrs. 9:15 a.m.—Church school being placed in the hearse*, the ing for the support of our mili- nesota with a a.m. three-year-old children throush 12rh Stockton United Methodist Church Sun- the Member Churches" spoke to current concerns: "We Preston Busse, treasurer. Mrs. honor guard, in uniform and tary system, and the Gospel of bachelors de day worship, 8:30 a.m. Orade. have tried to face the most dramatic and stubborn instances Lloyd Klinkenberg will serve as 9:30 a.m.—Coffee hour. with rifles, stood in a row in a Jesus Christ which strongly gree in psycho- STRUM —Worship. Sermon, "Tha Strum Lutheran of injustice while guarding against implying that only a few secretary of education and Mrs. 10:45 a.m. Church Sunday Com- , Change of cfirlslmas," by the. Rev. Har- military position by the door of calls man to lay down those 1 o g y, Dickie • Dickie munion worship, 8:30 and '11 a.m.) church nations are involved in the mis-uses of economic and political Marion Woyicki Organ selections: school, 9:45 , secretary of lyn C Hagmann. the hearse," he recounts. weapons of war, your pastor has spent two years on the psychi- a.m.; Advent hymn festival aggrandizement. Meeting in Africa has deepened our realiza- stewardship. Mrs. Jordahl will "Wake, Awake for Night Is Flying," by In Osseo High School gym, 3 p.m.; "Pastorale/ by Darius Mil- Then, after the committal at no other choice than to proclaim atric staff at the Hastings state Junior League J. S. Bach; trip to Eau Claire State tion of the turbulent glory of God's reconciling and liberating be sunshine chairman; Mrs. haud, and "Once He Came in Blessing," , , in the work of hospital and two years in man- University Smithsonian puppet theatre, the grave, he says there was a and be involved $ ways with men." Racial justice, the impact of technical Joyce Amidon, altar chairman, by J. S. Bach. Adult choir will sing agement for p.m. Wednesday—Senior chelr, 7:30 Shall a Star Come Out of Ja- 21 - rifle salute. The procedure the Lord Jesus, the Prince of industry. p.m. ' "There change on culture and the responsibility of wealthier nations and Mrs. Marva Herreid, flow- cob," by F. Mendelssolin. Nursery pro- Peace. " He will conduct his Lake City TREMPEALEAU toward poorer were issues that characterized work of the er chairman. A nominating com- vided. Specifically, he added, if lie is duties while continuing to at- Mount Calvar" Lutheran Church Sun- 7 p.m.—Advent program. day worship with Communion, the Rev. world meeting's four study sections: "Reconciliation and mittee will consist of Mr. and Monday, 4 p.m.—Sex education iraff. New caretakers again asked to function as pas- tend school, spending only part Nolan Sucher officiating, «:)J a.m.; Creation, Reconciliation and Man , Reconciliation and Society, Mrs. Ed Berg, Mr. and Mrs. 7 p.m.—Boy Scouts, Explorer Post. tor at a military funeral, "in of the week here. ¦Sunday school, 10:15 a.m. Monday— 7:30 p.m.—Neighborhood group No. 20 evening service with Communion Reconciliation and the Church." A special project assigned Myron Noren and Mr. and good conscience 1 would have to The Dickies have two daugh- , 8 , and vacation church school board. at Luther Haven p.m. the world body was to seek improvement in race relations in Mrs. Ed Erickson. Tuesday, i:ls p.m.—Girl Scout troop. refuse such service. ... A mili- ters, Jodi Lynne, seven, and WHALAN 4:30 p.m.—Parish y6uth council. Whalan b'tti—-n church Sunday South Africa, with the church striving to "eradicate attitudes 8 p.m.—Nominating committee. DAKOTA, Minn . — Mr. and tary funeral is lending support Heather Ann, 1% years. The school, 9:30 CALVARV BIBLE CHURCH "»: wnratilo, 11 a.m. of racial superiority and racial prejudice by leading her Wednesday, 4:30 a.m. — Men's quest Mrs. Bernard Pfingsten, former- to that life-style and I will not family has moved into the par- WHITEHALL members into full Christian maturity in race relations." (676 W. Sarnia St.: group. take part in it." sonage here. Assemblv of , 'GM revival time via The Rev. Joseph Scbeny 1:15 p.m.-WSCS. ly of' Darien, Wis., have as- WWIS, 8:30 a.m.; Sunday school classes, William P. Thompson, stated clerk of the United Presbyterian 3:15 p.m.—Cadet Scout troop. sumed the duties of caretakers 10 a.m.; worship, the Rev. William Bvert Church in the U.S.A., was elected president of the World f a.m.-KWNO broadcast. 7 p.m.—Membership and evangelism at the Luther Haven Bible officiating, 7 p.m.; Gospel service, 8 p.m. 9:45 a.m.—Sunday school, clasae. for work area. W-dnfsdav—Blhte sludy and prayer. Alliance. all ages. Adult Bible class. 7:30 p.m.—Personage- study. Camp here. First Baptist Churchv Sund«v Bible 10:45 a.m.—Worship. Blbla messaaa. 8:30 p.m.—Central Methodist vs, St. The camp is operated by the study, 9:45 a m.l worshln, the Ri>". Sven Nursery facilities available. Mary' s volleyball game. It's an Idea for Lutherans Haukfdilen of'IcWInp. 11 a.m. Wednes- Today's Christian student pushes a strong tide of dis- <:I3 p.m. — Calvary Youth Crusaders Thursday, J p.m.-Ha ndbell choir No. Luther Haven Bible Camp As- rt„v_Blhle dub, 4 p.m.; choir practice, content against the evangelical, conservative church, an and aentor youth. 2. sociation, an organization of 45 7:15 p.m. 7;30 p.m.—Service, familiar hymn ilno, 5:4$ p.m.—Wesleyan servica guild, Our Saviour 's Lutheran Sunday Wor- American Baptist educator told Southern Baptist home mis- Blbla message. 4:30 p.m.—Confirmation preparation. American Lutheran area ship, 8:30 and 10:15 ri.trw conflrmntlon sions workers at Ridgecrest, N.C, recently. Dr. J. Lester Thursday, 7 p.m.—Church choir prac- 7 p.m.—Adult choir. churches. 3<-rKlce, 7:30 n.m. Monday— DTwnles, tice. Saturday, 11 a.m.—Handbell choir No. 3:31 p.m, T'^da"—Ju-<'or ftlrl Scouts, Harnish of Philadelphia, said that active, concerned stu- 8 p.m.—Midweek family service. Bible 1. The Rev. Richard Gilmore, 3'** n.m. Thursday—Cheri'b. Ca-lllon dents of Christian colleges arc calling churches to end study, wllh prayer groups tor men, pastor of Bethel Lutheran ) end ch»pi»l choir, 7 p.m.: Our Savior's racial discrimination to be more active in political affairs, women and youth. SEVENTH DAY Church, La Crosse, Wis., and Life insurance for f j rry ch"'r, 8 p.m. • ' , Sf. John's Calhnllc Church S»»urrfay to be more concerned on war and peace, to be flexible in CALVARY FREE ADVENTIST CHURCH chairman of the board, no ted evening CHURCH Mass, n p m. Sunday Masses. program and to use their large resources for others. "I hear SPRING GROVE Minn. (East Satborn and Chestnut) that although the camp was re- Lutheran teachers? X A 8 nnd 10:^0 n ,m. Weekday Misses—7 , (Spe- Pastor Gerald II. Grccr am. Confessions before Muss dally students calling churches to stop building buildings and put cial) — The FCYF of Calvary cently ior sale, a decision Bias Aid Association ^ *nH on Saturday f rrm 3-4:30 and 7 to 7:10 Life insurance from & o B. P.m. their resources in the programs that will meet the needs Free Church here will conduct 1:45 p.m, — Sabbath school. Lesson been made to continue to op- study, Appetite Character for Lutherans is one investment you +2 : United Mf-'hrd'-l Church church «chool, of people, and they say the first need is evangelism, to meet a gospel service at 7;30 p.m. "Tho and erate the camp. .Any purchase 9:^J a.m.; S-iprl-•• w~-«hlp, 11 Development." Lesson text: Luke 211 ^ em, eternal needs, but almost equally as strong, to meet social Sunday at the church. The of- 34-35; matt. U:37-M: Malt. 4:U) Gal. proposals, however, will still be can depand on without personal ; "I T : WILSON L BnninrJ Trinity Lullwui 5:16-17; Luke 9:33; John 14:33. . church Sunday serv- needs," the president of Eastern Baptist Theological Semi- fering will go to the vacuum 2:45 p.m.—Worship. considered by the board, he concern about management of* ice, 10 a.m.i Sunday school, tl a.m. Sat- cleaner fund for the church. added. urday—Conflrmetlon class, 9 a.m. nary said. Tuesd ay, 7:30 p.m.—Prayer meetlno. money. Goals are guaranteed by contract — old age ¦ security,.education for children, mortgage cancel- PASTOR RECEIVES CALL lation, money for travel. Savings can even continue SPRING GROVE. Minn. (Spe- cial) — Tho Rev. Rolf Hanson, to grow if disability should curtail income. It's an Trinity Lutheran Church here, Religion is 'big business in Tulsa idea l And tho Idea man? Your AAL representative. has received a call to become senior pastor of St. .Anthony (EDITOR 'S NOTE: The sity. politically conservative It sacks, with 750 to 1,000 oversees his University Vil- Park Church , St. Paul , Minn. following is the f irst of a About 25 blocks north of is not too far-removed from pieces of mail in a sack. lage retirement retreat, gets No decision has been made. two-part report o»i evangel- the Oral Roberts enclave, its get-rlch-quick frontier And aides to Roberts said around in his Viscount jet ism in America.) T. S. Osborn, another evan- origins. And it is a church- that 530,000 letters, a record , and, in the process, spreads AW AsaocUltonfofLulhtram ill Appl»too,WT«oon»lnFratamallfolraunne* AT WILLIAMS ~ gelist, has his headquarters, going community. had been received in Sept- tho word of Christ to what Ulc Ileum-FWlremm, By JOEIN LUBELL the Osborn Foundation, ember. one associate estimated to Okla. you In addition to its three TULSA, - If from which more than 100 major evangelistic installa- Inside much of the mail bo 25 million people. pick up the phone and dial missionary agencies oper- headed for Roberts is the nowadays, tions, Tulsa has almost 700 The revivalist's techni- 743-2187 in Tulsa ate. Still farther north is congregation's — mostly life blood of his organiza- que, often described as you will hear the following the headquarters of Billy tion: money. Contributions message "Our Baptist — serving a popula- "faith healing/' has been recorded : •Tames Hargis and his anti- tion of about 330,000. come from people all over widely criticized. He denies Heaven- ______tlie world ("mostly onesies communist Christian Cru- One of the local radio sta- ho has tho power to heal, ly Father, \7t 7, , sade. and twosics," an associate "Wo thank New York tions provides Gospel mu- saying he prays with the Religion is big business in of preach- snid), in response to his faith that God will heal. You for Times sic and an array well-publicized message, Tulsa. The city is celebrat- ers from dawn to dusk. "God heals,"" he says, "I Your Lov« News ed for Its oil interests (it and con- Soon it hopes to broadcast THROUGH A parent or- don't." BIBLES s ice styles itself tho "oil capital religion 10 hours a day — ganization the Oral Roberts Robert' of versions. ccrn. And \ s move to the Choice of the world"), but it hns in PM stereo. Association the 52-year-old Methodist church row I pray just as much right to bo , was ap- Noma can ba Imprinted of tlie pul- former Pentecostal Holiness parently part of an attempt leaf. for my friend who has call- known for its Fundamental- The popularity In gold recently preacher, who became a to improve hia image. Ho VICTOR L. CLARBNCB DEPT. ed mo for prayer." ist religion. pit was indicated STATIONARY The voice is thnt of Oral by Post Office officials , who Methodist minister two has also modified his ap- MUELLER MILLER Itoberts, tho evangelist, who TULSA IS situated fin the estimated that Oral Roberts years ago .operates his ul- proach on television, elimi- 4390 W. 8th 1537 Gilmore WILLIAMS has his headquarters in northeastern corner of the got at least as much mail tramodern university, pro- nating thc undocumented Phona 453-2945 Phon* 452-7553 & STATIONERY Tulsa as well as a multimil- state, near tho buckle of each day aa the big oil com- duces his "Contact" televi- "miracle cures'' that ho BOOK , publishes COMMON CONCERN FOR HUMAN WORTH 52-54 Weit Uv«« Pl«» lion-dollar liberal arts col- the nation's Biblo Belt. It panies. One official put tho sion spectaculars hud been noted for in the lege, Oral Roberts Univer- is relatively affluent. It is figure nt between 10 and 25 his Abundant Life magazine, past. Lee handed St. Mary s bows starting job MINNEAPOLIS (AP ) - Min- has had to face the Vikings, S-2, "Vikings Coach Bud Grant immediately after a Minnesota nesota ' says it takes more than a loss, . quarterback to win a football The Vikings wDl be attempt- game, and the outcome of Sat- ing to improve on last Sunday's to tough veterans urday's Minnesota-Chicago Na- performance when they were Conference clash downed 20-10 by ithe New York occasions the floor. The Redmen dropped tional Football By BRUCE CL0SWAY three points on two solely on the shoul- Jets. of the in; 18 of 25 free throws and will not rest Daily News Sports Writer in the closing minutes the Bob Lee. The Detroit Lions are two first half. Pointers hit 14 of 22. ders of "Expertehce beat us tonight; The Vikings said Thursday back in the Central Division be- anytime we made a mistake Tom Hclmstrom's 15-foot "Most of the time when you Gary Cuozao's hind Minnesota, and also are in team that quarterback they were right there." jump shot put the host lose, you can usually tell what ankle would the running for the playoffs . If margin with sprained right ahead by a 29-27 you did wrong," remarked from starting against the Lions, 74, lose to St. Louis, Such was the .testimony of St. 4:43 left before the intermission. "but I sure can't put keep him ' Wilt- Wiltgen, and Lee, the only re- 8-2-1, Sunday, the Vikings would Mary s Head Coach Ken Baskets by Joe Keenan and Pat my finger on it tonight, I'll be Chicago, Stevens maining regular Viking quar- clinch a playoff spot. gen after a veteran Wiltgen gave the Redrnen leads glad to see the tape of the terback, planned to call sig- Point State University team of 32-29 and 34-31, but Stevens game find how they (Stevens Oakland, Is at had administered an 89-74 beat- to nals. Also Sunday, Point spurted in the final two Point) got 15 more points." Denver takes on ing of tbe Redmen Thursday Rookie quarterback Bill Cap- New York; minutes before halftime to gain Wiltgen, now in his 18th sea- be activated Kansas City; Cincinnati in- night at Terrace Heights. a 41-35 advantage at the buzzer. {ileihan was to son at the helm, did admit that rom the taxi squad for the vades San Diego; Washington is It was the first game of the 's was unable to re- ' St. Mary Stevens Point hurt his team at Dallas; Buffalo meets the season in the St. May s College duce the gap to any less than game. ; New 's with its offensive rebounding "I feel we can win," Lee New York Giants Or- Fieldhouse and left Wiltgen six points the rest of the way. Los Angeles ; squad with a l-l mark for the and several fast breaks. said. "I know the players feel leans plays at Ritzenthaler, a 6-4 senior for- "I was surprised at our lack at Miami; Atlanta year. Saturday night the Red- we can '•' . . . . with me at quar- Boston is ward from Baraboo, Wis., dem- of rebounding considering our " travels to San Francisco; Phila- men will entertain Loras Col- onstrated that his reputation as terback. lege of Dubuque size," noted the Redmen men- delphia is at Baltimore, and , Iowa, in a one of Stevens Point's all-time they nonconference tilt beginning at tor, "but they knew how to « the Vikings do win, Green Bay invades Pittsburgh. 7:30. leading scorers had not been use good brute force in there, will clinch a spot in the NFC In Monday night's nationally exaggerated by tossing in the and a few of them have been playoffs Dec. 26-27 with their televised game, Cleveland The Pointers started Thurs- first 10 points for the Pointers. playing varsity bail all four third straight Central Division meets Houston at 8:00 p.m. ' day s game with for regulars The left-handed sharpshooter, years." title. CST. back from last year's team, who like St. Mary's Keenan is , FOLLOWING Ritz«ntha!er's Grant played down the role all of wi»m had played to- from a family of athletic stars, of the quarterback in Satur- gether for the past two seasons. finished the game with 34 points. 34-point performance for the Pointers was senior guard Quinn day's game. The established edge in experi- "Lee isn't going to win the ence combined with the hot ASIDE FROM the running Vanden Heuvel with 22 points. score the game was extremely Reserve forward Jim Olsen fin- game or lose it," Grant said. hand of Tom Ritzenthaler began "The rest of the team will. Lee to take their toll in the second close statistically. Stevens Point ished with 14 points for the win- ¦ only outrebounded the Redmen has been preparing all year for half, yy . y-y - . ners and 6-5 center Terry fl 26-24. The visitors shot 51 per- Amonson added 12, Ampnson this and we expect him to do j^^^^^^H ST. MARY'S played, head to cent from the field hitting 35 was the leading reboimder for well." head with the visitors for near- of 67 attempts, and St. Mary's Stevens Point with nine. "But I want to emphasize ly all of the first 20 minutes. finished with 46 percent, con- Keenan was bottled up for one point," Grant added. The Redmen actually led by necting on 27 of 58 shots from much of the game but still "Quarterbacks don't win the , ' ' managed to finish with 23 points. EXTRA INCH PAYS OFF . ... . Stevens (53) of St; Mary's, and Quinn Vanden Heuvel ball game." ¦P" 1 * X* J ifc K^ The 64 senior from Mankato Point's 6-5 center Terry Amonson leaps be- and Bob Henning of Stevens Point. The Point* The Bears face the same dis- now has 49 points Jn the Red- tween Jinx Long and Dave King (55) of St. ers won the contest 89-74 spoiling the Red- advantage Saturday that they men's two games this season. Mary's to grab a rebound in Thursday men's home opener. (Daily News Sports photo had when they lost to Minne- flL Winona Daily Naw* W Pat Wiltgen bagged 19 points, night's game at Terrace Heights. Battling for by Jim Galewski) sota 24-0 earlier in the season. Winona, Mfnnespfa Hawk cagers a career high, sinking all seven position under the basket are Joe Keenan They are the only team which FRIDAY, OBC. 4, 1970 free throw attempts in the pro- cess. Keenan and TOtgen both pulled down seven rebounds. "We thought we did a good job on Keenan, and he still got sef 2 23, said Bob Kreuger goals " Stevens , Winona High's basketball team Nov. 25. Point's head coach following the game, "so that shows you g will, another year be striving to seeks reat achieve two Protsman The reason for Austin's estab- goals when it entertains a high- lished play and convincing tri- how tough he can be. St. Mary's By STAN SCHMIDT they started to call me for such a big man — also (Wothke s) styie. But if we has a strong young team ly-touted Austin team tonight, umph ovetr John Marshall is and Daily News Sports Editor 'Bones.' And I guess it just led in the assist department don't do it right , it's not In lieu of the obvious prob- easy enough to explain. Head will be tough to beat once some Believe it or not, Steve stucfe- all the way up." with 172 . ¦ going to win — but it won't lems suffered in the loss to Red Coach Oscar Haddroff has four of the younger players get Protsman, Winona State's The transformation to a Protsman explained why be Coach Wothke's fault. Wing last Friday, Head Coach returning regulars from last more experience." bespeckJed senior center, center, after his first two he dominated in assists. That offense he's got, it's Dan McG-ee has been priming year's squad that compiled a The Winona State freshmen was once a guard — at 6- years in high school, has "Our offense last year was a" great offense if it's run the Winhawks to start taking the 15-7 mark overall. Thepackers' beat St. Mary's frosh in the foot-3 and 175 pounds. been a highly productive one basically trying to get the right. open shot and to develop more roster Is bolstered by no less preliminary game 53-52, the big That was way back in his for Protsman. Recognized ball in to me. I had a great '"We 're still not running it confidence at the free throw than 12 lettermen. difference being at the free high school days of course, as one of the best centers sophomore year and it was right yet; we nave to rely throw line where line. The goals, be lias set ate McGee indicated that he was the Redmen and Protsman, or "Bones" in the Northern Intercollegi- an incentive. on our defense a little bit 75 field goal attempts and a uncertain as to who would be hit 6 of 27 and the Warriors as he's known to teammates ate Conference last season, "Everytime we got the longer. We're running it near-perfect percentage from Winona's five starters tonight. 15 of 30, and friends, has added an he was chosen to the All- ball, they (Warrior oppon- pretty fair but we're not " Slsvsni point (19) St. Mary 't (70 ") the foul line." The first-y«ar mentor stated that OFT OFT inch and 45 pounds. Conference team. . ents collapsed around me. sharp." Against the Wingers, Winona senior guard Dick Sauer missed Ritllhslr 15 •)¦« 34 Wlltgon t 7-7 If The strong, aggressive -In three years of varsity So I got the ball and I'd Protsman also thinks tie Amonson I 14 ll Keen»i. 7 Ma JJ the Warriors are aid justing well got off only 50 shots and hit but the Red Wing game due to an Kurth 0 00 0 King l 1-1 s center is the Warriors' lead- ball, he has pumped take one or two dribbles un- 17 of thosd. The Winhawks were ankle injury but that be was VdHeuwl 10 3.3 32 Long 1 0-1 11 ing scorer and rebounder as nets for points — and only til I got everybody sucked to Wothke's new, more ex- cold from the charity expeoted to see a lot of action Hennlng 1 3-1 7 Zatloukd a 0-o 4 result. But the nomencla- two of those came in his in on me. And then when citing offense. "I don't find equally af? Olson 5 AS 14 Hlmilrm 2 0-1 4 a stripe; dropping in just seven against the Packers. Helgeson 0 co o Serval* 0 3-5 3 ture has remained. freshman year when he they (the opponents) were it too bad," he said, "the of Peter* 0 BO 0 OBUIKM 9 o-t 0 "I got that in high played four games. Last all around me, they (Prots- only adjustment- I have is 21. Winhawkp assured of regular Herrlasn 8 00 0 —., ,,, ,. "WE'VE WORKED hard all duty Include center Joe Fergu- Totals J7 10-27 74 school," explained the 21- season he was tops with man'? teammates) would be the conditioning part. week; the players have shot ov. forwards Gary Mueller Total* 3F «•« Jl year-old Phy-Ed major, "I 398 points. Protsman also open for the short shot. I played it im high school son, and STEVENS POINT .....41 4fr-8f er 6,000 free throws, and they're Tim Smith, and guards Mike ST. MARY'S 35 37—74 was pretty skinny and then led the Warriors in rebound' "So I just slipped off to where every (time we got becoming more accustomed to Semling and Jon Lunde. But Total toulu SUveni Paint 21, St. I caught somebody with an ing the last two seasons, 244 them." Mary's it. ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ '¦'¦ ¦ (Continued on page 5b) 'I iH lliliaji . I' m »'" ..' ' —«!! " as taking the good shot when it McGee stated that several other Pouted ouli St, Mary elbow or a kneq, It was as a sophomore and 289 tt also likely that 's—Willaon. I Steve Protsman seems Protsman comes along," McCes comment- players had shown progress dur- Holmstrsm, pretty honey and it hurt, so a junior, and — surprisingly Protsman will have another ed. He added that against the ing the week and he still had great year this season. In hounding man-to-mani type of some evaluation to do prior to the Warriors* opening vic- plays defense that Austin1 , Wl' the game. Warriors open tory (73-8? over Gustavus nona won't be able to> afford to "A DELIBERATE gnme Is Adolphus Tuesday) Frots* GAR li pass up many open shots. tough to play against Austin's wrestling season man led in scoring, 15; re- 1 COU McGee had a scout * Underdog chance to kind of defense," concluded Mc- Cotter may bounding, 10; and assists, COUNTBYjy The Winona wrestling M the Packers in their 64^5 romp Gee, "so we're going to try to State four/ And he was successful over Rochester John Marshall open it up a little tonight, and team, coached by Fran McCann, on seven of 10 field goal at' last Saturday and noted that I think we can stay with them will get its first competition of tempts, so there's no qu«s« IfeiBiijf^^KkilEnK riM5ff!'^*?cwillSI pMi tH 3BB.^Bv$v "Austin appeared to be in mid- on the boards." be without Schultz tion why he hit more than season foim." The heavily ex- The game is scheduled to be- the 1S70-71 season today and SIM Cotter's basketball 58 percent from the floor in "^"B S^ .- 1 perienced Packers aye 2-0 on gin at 8 p.m. in the" Winona fortunes er two returning regulars are we can bring our shooting up tomorrow at the Iowa State In- , are running into hard times (q 1 his sophomore and junior 3 the season after stifling South High gym preceded by a B-squad — Dave Winkels, a 6-s guard, and we 're going be tough , ' vitational Tournament at Ames, years, MgBife*' TW . and injuries to crucial person- Gary Duren a 6-0 guard , ANOTHER PROBLEM facing ' JS* 1 St. Paul 65-55 in their opener contest at 6:20. , AH Iowa. «» ' COtOR l nel aren't making the matter axe seniors except junior Dur- the Ramblers is the tough road It also appears highly H any easier for Head Coach John Eighteen Warriors will be probable that protsman has en, The other starter is junior schedule Cottor is currently in STARTS 1 Nett. forward Dun Rlaser, (1-3, the midst of. five - game making the road! trip, including an excellent - opportunity to The 00(Npaint The Ramblers wilt he seeking Coach Nett expects Pacelli yoad schedule parted vjith a defenclmB Northern join the exclusive l, IntercoV club with Head Coach Les SUNDAY | their first win of tho season ''to be one of the toughest loss to Houston*, continues to- legiate Conference champions tonight - after losing their first teams we'll play" this season. night, and then comes Roches- Wothke's new system, which 3 PAYS PNMT I Dave Oland aaid Bill H|tes« stresses a running, three battks *- against a heav» "It will be a good test for us," ter Gourdes, St. touts Park Be- shooting Sun.-Mp n,-7uos. I ily favored Austin Pacelli on man. offense more than Coach continued the Cottor mentor. nilde and undefeated and top- Sunday at the Shamrocks' home court. "If we make a good showing ranked St. Thomas Academy. Others in the six-team tour- Ron Ekker's style of a stall- || type defense. 12,30-2:30-4:30- Game time is 8. It may indicate the direction "The worst part of the sched- nament include defending NCAA § we're going." But does he like Coaph But Coach Nett may be minus ule," noted Nett, "is not the champion Iowa stato, the Uni- 6:30-8:30 1 one his starters. What seems to be the prob- road trip, but the fact that all Wothke's, stylo bettor than of of Mike Schultz, a 6-0 senior lem with Ihe Ramblers this the toughest teams in the con- versity Nebraska, Drake , the Coa ch Ekker's"? "If it wina," guard, may not bo able" to play year? "Our shooting hasn't ference" will battle Cotter on University of Missouri and Kan- replied the Warrior co-cep- been good," replied Nett "so if their home court. sas State. tain, against Pacelli because of a , til " wrenched back suffered ln And will It win? HTTP^•¦ •*^mmmmtnm»«. -n honor thoy protected Thc Toxas'Aj'knnsaa affair was working out this week in Ei iJ WINONA toward, are tho sparkplugs for with a victory over Notre Dame will bo televised nationally in pads, and was listed as doubt- ITiT^T f HeadfCoach Leo Roll. Tho oth- In tho Cotton Bowl. Texas, with tho afteVnoon from Austin, Tex., ful. MARK TRAIL By Ed Dodd - 2 CM T jMS TWT RNISHES THE I20LI. OP SM W -^: ^Mv -i* -hritfSf ,T' SiHf 11 JJIIL I ml Wwr%>0 *EEP » %'A mmmmmWlG^r THEM¦ -BBT ' •L. PEVEIOPEP ' ^)^^A^Bk^ ^ I^W H SSK ^^. JmW "™* V^- ^'ji/ \^W/& \ " v\ - (£__M Hawk tankers ¦ L^^M^\fJ^^i/» ' ' airi' - - '' ' ffl»Sr ' MEg M^k -j??9i Austin in dual inopemW #1^^^Wl ^K ^r J d^ QW^rl tfi^m4SSa^ Winona High's unbeaten swim Ten Warriora, along witli tin, is to "get a look at all the j sophomore Mike Brand, from ^^gpRj^aff y ^Jffl J:/ I Head Coach John Martin take kids in a lot of events." In Port Dodge Iowa; sophomore ir^mW^^tr: team is due for a strong chal- , , /.tS ^ i to the water for their first meec other words, Martin will be able John Suppon, from St. Paul ; JB ^^ TOMMV PUBASB JJ V ^^•® ^P ) j[ lenge when they invade Austin's of the 1970-71 season as Winona to see. what his swimmers are freshman Tony Hoyt from Wi- "wis GTUBE /WADE Q^^l 0?^^^^^/iMMSB ' ^j| S^/ ^f*Brf "AD AFOQ ) W /J ^MMM^^ M *~^<4fc a pool to take on Terry Redding travels to the Minnesota Re- capable of under fire. nona and junior terry Wakley M-4^ JUST vou? td^M . and company In a 6 p.m. meet lays at Hamline University Sat- And the competition Saturday from St. Paul. _^^^M-^-^/^ L^BWA V^^^ ^^Wk,. tonight. urday. will be tough, with the Warriors Freshrnan Gus Lammers, The meet, Lloyd Luke, ttie Winhawks' in fact, is the only undermanned in most events. from Plymouth, Wis., and Bri- veteran tank coach , has termed actual competition the swim- Almost aL of the college and an Rudel from St, Paul Park, the meet a "tossup" in lieu of mers will see this year. The university swim teams in Min- Minn., will be entered in the the home pool advantage going next meet on the schedule is a nesota will be represented, in- butterfly events. to Austin. Oddly enough, Wino- dual affair at Mankato State cluding meet favorites Bemid- In the breaststroke events will Pro cage na split a pair of dual meets Jan. 12. j i State , Hamline and Macales- be Dave Basin, a freshman with Austin last season losing But tbe purpose of the Min- ter College, in addition to La from Bloomington, Minn.; AI 48-47 here and clipping the nesota Relays, says Coach Mar- Crosse State and Stout State Crawford, another freshman from Wisconsin. results Packers 52-43 in Austin. from Bloomington, and Dave ¦¦ Redding, a senior "all-stroke" Co-captain Roger Braaten , a Mueller, a freshman from St. ¦ NBA . specialist, will be Austin's in- junior letterman from St. Paul, Paul. Y EASTERN CONFERENCB Atlantic— W. L. Pel. C» dividual booster after placing Woody defeats tops the list of Warriors making Notably missing from the 10 New YorK .....;. si « .M4 first in 200-yard breaststroke in Saturday's trip. Braaten is the is senior letterman Boh Ball, Boilon ...... IS 10 .MO 3 the state meet last March. Luke Philadetphla .... IS 11 ,S3< Si/a defending Northern Intercollegi- a two-time NIC champ in the Buifaio ...... 7 ir .m mi admits he won't know what ate Conference champion in 100-yard butterfly. Ball y how- Central— events Redding will be in to- Doyle again the 20O and 400-yard individual ever, has become ineligible un- Balltmora ...... 14 12 .551 (AP) Cincinnati ...... H JM a\a night, but adds that the Austin BLOOMINGTON, Minn. medleys and 1,650-yard free til January because he failed Atlanta ...... 4 is Mt 7 swimmer will . have a lot of — New York heavyweight style. , x . to acquire enough credits in the Cleveland ...... 1 2* .037 1314 influence on the final outcome James J. Woody pounded out a WESTERN CONFERENCE Freestyle specialists will be last quarter. Midwest W. L. Pet. OB of the meet. unanimous decision over Tony MILWAUKEE ..It 3 Mi Some of the other leading Doyle Minneapolis, in a dull Dalrolt ...... 17 10 .«0 «i'/i , Chlttae ...... l» » .571 4 swimmers on the Packers' bout here Thursday night. Phoenix ...... IS 12 .334 4Vi squad include Tom Murphy, There was not a punch land- ' Pacific— Jerry Thatcher, and Joe Gosha. San Francisco .. IS 10 .400 ed that appeared to cause either Hawk wrestlers LosAnjelej - •«¦ » .in Vx ' Rochester John Marshall pasted boxer more than slight discom- San Diego ...... IS 13 .534 l'/a Austin 59-36 in a dual meet last fort. Woody was the aggressor Seattle ...... 1) 14 .481 X Saturday in Rochester. Portland ... t 19 .321 VA constantly THURSDAY'S RESULTS s throughout, moving Out to counter Bedding' in under 's left jabs. MILWAUKEE 107, Chicago '05. heroics tonight wifl be Todd Doyle psychologically Orty ssmi schedulM). Doyle FRIDAY'S OAMES Taylor and MiSe Martin, co- The taller sought to Woody by leaning Seattle at Baltlmora. captains for Winona. Also being wear down Chlcess at Detroit. heavily counted on will be diver and holding the stocky Nett Philadelphia at MILWAUKEE. Yorker but the tactics appar- San Francisco at Los Angeles. Dan ricka, backstroker Bob , ready for Austin New York at Buffalo. sprinter Jim Hartert, ently caused Doyle to lose the Boilon at Cleveland. Gonia, Pliotnlx at Portland, and freestylist Mike Murphy. match. The Winona High wrestTing Hoesley or Tom Kooh at % Only games scheduled. pounds, Scott , SATURDAY'S OAMES team got a big psychological lift Tmnaerfall at 103 Philadelphia at Cincinnati. from a second place finish > in Mike Skelton at 112, Tom Reed Budalo at Naw York. at 120, Seattle at Atlanta. last weekend' Mark Grangaard at 127, s Winona State Dave Babler at 133, Karl Hen- Boston at Chicago. . ENDANGERED WOLVES . . , The Sler. ing there are still enough animals, A good High School Lot Angtiea at San Dlcgo. Invitational Tour- derson at 138, Rod Stoltz at Phoenix vi. San Francisco at Oakland ra Club, North Star Chapter, has strongly en- timber wolf pelt i$ worili $100. Thia drawing nament — and now the Hawks Only Barnes scheduled, 145; Larry Strange or Terry dorsed closing an area of the Superior Na- of two timber wolves is by Francis Lee Jaques are ready to take on powerful Burke at 154, SUNDAY'S OAMES THURSDAY'S RESULTS Someraet at Boycaviiie. Dave Ledebuhr at Portland at Los Angeles. tional Forest to wolf hunting. Trappers of and is reproduced from the Sierra North Star. Bjk Mound at Elmwood. Austin. 165, Rick Syhder at 175 and Buffalo at Cleveland, tOCAU SCHOOLS- Pepin at Colfax. Northern Point 6?/ St. Mjry 's 74. The Packers, top-ranked in Greg Cincinnati at Baltimore. Minnesota are protesting, contend- Steven* St. Croix Central at Plum City. Lessen at heavyweight. San Diego at Phoenix. MINNESOTA NONCONFERENCE- DAIRYLAND— the state last season arid de- But tlie Hawks must be con- Only sames scheduled. Mlnn.-Morri> 101. Dskoti Wuloyan Indepentlonca at AtiBVtle. fending Big Nine champions, sidered underdogs to Austin, ft. Cochrane-FC at Oicta-Fairchlld. bear the hosting honors in ABA Swedish¦ ¦ Nationals li, Guttavui ACiol- Blair at Whitehall. to- which won the highly-contested pmii 72, ' Eleva-Strum at Aim* Center, night's meet and eight return- St. Olaf Invitational tournament East— W. L. Pet, OB Seufhw«it stilt 71, Lincoln We.) 43. COUtEE- ing lettermen will be out to Kanfucky ...... 18 « ,7J0 WISCONSIN NONCONFERBNCE- Holmen al Oalo.Bttrlctc. last week winning four individu- Virginia ...... 14 10 .563 4 Dominican 13, Btloit 70. Bangor it Arcadia. manhandle the Hawks. al titles, New York ...... II 11 .300 4 Floridians ...... 11 13 .430 7 td Millon il. oors Bay 101; the Ou O W'Grecn Trempealeau at Melroie-Mindore. Voice of ¦ • ' ¦ ¦ ¦¦ "That tournament did us a Jerry Flink (1755, Jay Flink EAST- . ' .. . Onalaska at Weit Salem. lot of good," Plftlpurgh ...... Id 1< .JM f Jacksonville 1S2, St. Piter't (N.J.) MIDDLE BORDUR- opined Head Coach (112) , Rich Loeding (103 and Carolina ...... 8 13 .341 n. Waterfowl still here were 482 Canada geese and an One winter fisherman re- West— 101. Baldtyln-Woodvlllt •' Sfenwood Clly Dave Moracco this week, "in Kurt KuebJ (154) claimed titles , SI, Joseph (Pi.) 71, Manhattan ii. um n 7 .tn As ef Wednesday, there still estimated 5 000 wild dducks, ports, the fish are not tak- Sprfnpj Valley at Dunnd. confidence and experience. It in that tournament in which Indiana ..,...,. 14: id .533 Hi Dartmouth it, Stetson 71. New Richmond at Preicott. mainly mallards and mergan- ing minnows. Duquamt », Ballimora W. helped and we're psychological- Austin beat out runnerup Rob- MtmpMl .;..... IS 10 .915 J were waterfowl ta the Winona Hudson at Mondovi. Denver 7 la .304 » sers. The latter sr>ecies stays NYU 5), Falrldlsh Diekerson il. Blltwcrth. ly ready for Austin/ - Mark J ' River Palls al ' binsdale by eight points. TOMS ... .,. ..# u .373 »ti district, according to data gath- around the open water below , Boesch, press rep- ¦ H0IV Crew HI, St. 'MichMl'i IVul.J ROOT RIVER- Winona 48. finished a mere seven Marlin Sandvig (120) and THURSDAY'S RESULTS ered by the field men of the the dams most of the winter. resentative of the Chippewa Na- P rovidence fl, Brown il. Peterson at Lewlttcn. points behind champion Cale- Denver 124, Virginia Hi, tional Forest Caledonia af Le Crescent. Randy Hardy (138) are also let- Carolina 124, Florid lana 114. wildlife refuge. The birds ap- Mallards also remain on open stopped by the M»in« 40. Vermont 45. Crovt. donia, with four individual SOUTH— Rushlord at Spring ter winners. Loeding and Jerry New York n, Mtmphls 17. parently rode out the Thanksgiv- sloughs in the backwaters. other afternoon and extended MiMI-Cinten at Houston. titles scheduled. F lorlda Stat* 106. Blscayni 70. . Flink are defending district Only games ing storm in the more sheltered an invitation to Visit the for- Sc. Carolina fi, Auborp it. CBNTgNNIAL- Moracco will start either Rod champions. FRIDAY'S GAMES ¦ ¦ ¦- ' The first group of bald est during the next fishing sea- W. Ky, li, Oil) Dominion aj. ' Mazeppa at Elgln-Mlllvllle. Kentucky at Uhah. areas. .- Caroline at Indiana. G». Stale Si, U. of th* SouttHf. Ferleault Deal at Randolph. eagles has moved into the son. YHe also said snowmobilliig S^mlord 93, Sim Houston stata 17. OoodWa at Waoasha. Flpridiani at New York. The count Wednesday re- area, the survey showed. A is popular there In the winter DoPaul 100# Va. Commonwealth 77. HIAWATHA VALLBt"- Memphii at Pillibursri. vealed that 966 swans were Ciemson 4?. Furman 54. Kiison.Manlorvllle at Jt. Charlei. Denver vs. Texas at Dallas. total of 30 eagles were seen and that many trails have been SATURDAY'S GAMES Ml*l. Stat* so, so. Alabama 11. Zumarot* at stewartville. still feeding in the area be- in the Alma-Beads Landing opened. Tlie CIMdel «, Wofford 42. Plainview «t Cannon Falls. Protsman Pllliburgh vi. Virginia at Richmond. tween the Trempealeau darn area. They remain near the seeks Tanas vs. Carolina at Chsrloilt. WPVieST- Kenyon at Like City, The "Wiring5, of Blair OkUtiom* il, Miami (Ohio) ii. WASIOJA- (Continued from page 4b) four-game Warrior streak Only games scheduled. and Lake Pepin. The flock mouth of the Chippewa Riv- Missouri to, mails 40. pover-Eypta at Wanamlnjo. SUNDAY'S GAMES was seen at two points, the er fishing that sector of the sponsored a "Mr. Buck" Purdue lo, Valparaiso 41. Dodga Center at Byron, and was Winona State's Kentucky at Denver, the ball we ran, Some of Carolina at New York. slough contest for all deer hunters Upper Iowa 40/ Cornill Si. CUrtmont at pint island. worst defeat of the season. south of Weaver and river. Hayileid «| Well concord. the guys though Memphis vs. Virginia at Norlolk. in the Blair area, The con* Tulia tt, Mttialet In Action 13. , , I can see * But what about the War- Texas at Pittsburgh. on Pritchard's Lake. The SOOTHWeST— 810 NIWR- Here and there test for the animal with Rnl Wing at Owalonni. » . can have trouble because riors' morale under their Utah vs. Floridians at Jacksonville. birds were digging wild cel- was Limar Taeh 100, St. Leo (Fla.) 70. What ice is left in the sloughs the widest antler spread and Pan Amer. S8, Texai A A I il. Mankate it Farlpaglt, they're not used to it. But new' mentor? ery from the mud. Hmlon iU M la. it. HIGH SCHOOL NONCONFERENCE- is not safe, in the opinion of also for the heaviest animal. PAR WEST- Waj«» *t Rpchnler JM. most of them are adjusting "Merale is really good,'" Nat ( Hockey League Mingled with the swans and Bill Gannaway, local game Ma. Calif, ft, Utth 11. Cresco (Iowa) at Spring Valley. From a list of. U'Rev Ostrander at Adams. well; the whole team is stated Protsman, who bails THURSDAY'S RESULT] at other points in the district warden, 48 entries, Rich- *rl»on* Stat* U7, San Dlwo Stat* 7* Montreal t, St. Louis 3. Colo. Stata ft, Fullorton (Calif.) Stall COLLESB NONCONFERBNCE- from Lansing, Iowa, "I ard Nyen of Blair has been Minot at Bemidji. really. Boston 4> Buffalo 4 (fie). 74. don't think that there's any- Detroit 4 crowned "Mr. Buck" in both Sf. Cloud at Washburn (Kans.). "There' , Los Angeles 4 (tig). Wartburg at St, Meiby. s not anybody body that's down. There Only games scheduled. categories. His deer weighed tn Tournaments Likehcad U. at M»f»ieiUr. that's having really too might FRIDAY'S OAMES at 165 pounds field dressed, and vmainiA mo Pivt;- be a couple guys that phiitdolphlo «t California, Morris records overtime win Third Place: SATURDAY'S OAMES much trouble. They don't are down on themselves be- only game scheduled. the antlers measured 20 inches. William 4t Miry tr, Richmond M. cause they haven't been SATURDAY'S OAMES Big bucks also were registered chimplonihipi LOCAL SCriOOLSr, have any big improvements Boston at Montreal. By THE ASSOCIATED PRJESS 26 for Morris. virtinla it, virolnla Tath u. Alumni at Winona state, i p.m. looking good, h a Hew Yerk at Toronto, by Harold Gunderson, Ron Lores at S|, Mfry'fi 7tl0 p.m. to make, it's just the little ut as a te m Two In another close gamo at St, NAIA DISTRICT J 71 P.DPF- it's really good. Detroit at St. Louis, Minnesota teams won and Thompspn and Dennie Lyngen. Flnt Round: . HIGH SCHOOL NONCONFERENPB- Chleagp at MINNBSQTA. Peter Minn., the Swedish Na- Mpts, things — they've got to two lest Thursday night in the , or*. co|. 79. PMlflc Or*, it. B«lh at Bochaiter Mayo. "Like tonight , Cannatota, N.Y., slopped Jost Na- At the end of regulation play , qnd Vflluo every night .and they get to Beckley S .495 1 3 U U0 poles, l44>/a, Mexico, 4i Backus dethron- i^M^fl l Jabrosky .... 4 Mt 4 « II T2.0 ed tyapofes ai world wefferwafgM sonen, ' na, $51 j flordlq Fakler, *- tw i ¦^¦tUMW i H Iil m jMMimwm'me*-*-i .mr ^ma m *7 a ' \fHBaraKfflBwJ' f -*V^ (O Ceumotc »i«.U« Jcs Co.. toulsvillc.Owcnsboro, Ky. captains wero thc guests of ono Kosidowski, 612 errorless, notched a 100-470 to poco Wi- y^m^^M^Br honor at tlie luncheon. and Dovo Ruppert GOO. nona Oil to nn 074-2.517J ¦n ' * Sewing Machines 73 Personals 7 Male — Jobs of Interest — 27 Wanted-Llvestock 46 Article* for S*l« 57 Article! for Sal* 57 USED VIKING Zlg Zag sewing machine, YOUNG MEN between 21 and 36. Do FURNACE OPERATOR-mutt hav« sec- LEWISTONI LIVESTOCK MARKET OIL PAINTINGS by Ray Mertes. (.and- CHRISTWAS TREES-Scotch, Norwey end , 0 Shop In- In good condition, M"1, .con,r ,l.^ ' Want Ads something for your clly, state, country ond class engineer's license. Tel. Bob A REAL OOOD auction meirket for your ecapet, wildlife. Tel. 452-2612 after Spruce. Flocked freei on hend. embroidery. WINONAJ, n I and self, loin the Jaycee s. Winona 454-4624, Redevelopment Office, Valley livestock. side. X-Chenge, 265 W. 3rd. button holes end ' Dairy cattle on hand til 12:30 p.m, People* CO., 915 W. ilh. Area Jaycee's, P.O. Box 308. View Tower. week. . Livestock bought every day. SEWING Trucks available. Sale, Thuri., 1 pm. CHRISTMAS PRESENTS lor leal, Hun- DAY-BED^-Mue, 'flre«n tweed, hed 4 PLAY SANTA wllh toys, games, skates, EXPERIENCED MAN Wanted full or Tel. Lewiston Ml er WSnone 453-7814. dreds ol new useful, quality Item* for months. Originally JOT, first $91 buys Typewriters . . 77 Start Here dolls, elc. for ell ages from the Use* part-time lo work on dairy farm. II gift Blvlno. Not bad tor youraelf eltiier. It. 456 Center St. y A-Blf Shop, downtown Sfewarfvllle. married will provide house. Contact HORSES WANTED - We can pay more Try us, you'll be pleasently surprised. OLIVETTI UNDERWOOD typewriter, Bernard Ziegeweld, Rt. 1, Arcedla or than anyone else. We pick up. Welter Haielton Varlely, 217 E. 3rd. Tel, 4S2. SARAH COVENTRY Jewelry would be Studio 41, l ike new. Tel. 452-5655. ' WHILE YOU'RE thinking about Christ- Tel. 323-3062 before 1:30 a.m. or Maro, Black River Falle, Wis. Tel.. 4004. " :' : the perfect gilt for Christmas. Special N O.T i C ¦ giving, and some of those ¦ • ( League mas gift after 3 p.m. 284-24BJ. . Chrlstmes offers now. Contect Judy ROYAL TYPEWRITER-*?!.. Tel. 454- "herd-to-buy.for people on your list, ¦ Tills newspaper will Be responsible " COMBINATION MOTOROLA Jterso-AM- Tel. 452-Q777. 2314. ¦ - teke o moment to think about a gift MAINTENANCE MAN-Capable of gener- radio-TV. Excellent condition, wal- lor only one Incorrect Insertion of any ' FM subscription to the Winona Dally/Sun- al maintenance and Janitorial work. Form Implement* 48 nut. S-year crib with mettress, blond, IT'S TERRIFIC the way we're telllns TYPEWRITERS and adding machines for classified advertisement published day News. Call the Circulation Depart- Preferably to live on premises, room In- rugs and up- Ihe Want Ad section. Check your ed $15. Tel. 452-7285 alter 2. Blue Lustre for clesntng rent or sale. Low rates, . Try ui for all ment, 454-2V61 for Information and rates, cluded. , Write B-32 Dally News for fur- holstery. Rent electric ihempooer $1. desks, filesi or¦ end call 452-3321 If correction must USED McCORMlCK shelter; manure load- your ofllce supplies, c* bowling • You'll be glad you dldl ther Information. CHEVROLET, 1943 waflon, 7:50 x 14" H. Choate & Co. Chairs. LUND OFFICE SUPPLY be made. er for John Deere, till 200 bales first flee slicks, pair headrests. TV set. Items Center St. Tel. 452-5222.t YOU WONT get stung on porches enclos- PART or full-time help for local advertis- crop hay. James Brongar, Rt, 1, Wi- CO., 11» nona. may be seen et 159 E. 9th. POOL TABLE-7'x42" wllh accessories RETAIL BLIND ADS UNCALLED FOR- ed by LEO G. PR0CHOWIT2, Building ing program. Must have good knowledge Tel. 454-2428. Contractor, 1007 E. 61h. Tel. 452-7841. of Winona area and own car. Pick your Hal-Rod Point* ' • y HAVE "BREAD" to- spread this 'Christ- Washing, Ironing, Mach. 79 B -17, 2i. ,. . own hours from 9 a.m.-? p.m. Above CABS, rear entry for Farmall H through NATIONAL sight? Compmy coming? Clean :...... ,.... 540, $495 or . purchase mas. See MERCHANTS RUGS • BTF Y I GOT A tiger In your rib cage? Tame that average earnings. Paid dally. Apply .complete steel BAN K for a low-«ost Personal Loan, them right with Blue Lustre. Rent Warner _• Swasey » package cut to size, reedy to weld, THREE COMMERCIAL washers wllh 12- growl with a stop at RUTH'S RESTAU: CK. Advertising, Hotel Park Plaza, Dick, Max or Dennis will b« electric shempooer, $1. • : Robb Bros. Emil's Menswear ...... i Card of Thank* y $170 (less glass). Tel. 282-8874. Write Frank, lb. tubs, 1 year old; 3 commercial ¦ »¦ RANT for a lion-sized meal. 126 Plaro Suite 14*. happy to explein the easy term), con- Store. Sunbeam cakes ...... 7 E„ downtown Winona. Open 24 hours Roger' Cab, Rt. 4,/ Rochester. . < home dryers. All machines In good con- 1 * venient repayment plans, and b« as- 452-2079. Main Tavern KORB - y • . every day except More. confidential. Stop PORTA POWER 10 Ion heavy duty air dition. Tel. ... „ andY FITZGERALD SURGE sured It's all strldly Winona Rug ••• \ A sincere thenk you to the relatives Situations Wanted — Fern. 29 In todayI sender. D.A. sander, Home built Kan- Turner's Market .. * . friends who called on me at the res- HELP! HELP1 Sales & Service Lewiston, Winn. sas lack, spotlight, compressed air Buy 81 Winona Furniture * pita! and at home or sent cerds, letters, WANT to borrow piano score for "Okla- EMPLOYMENT WANTED—Experienced Tel. 6201 sprayer. 2 chrome reverse rims and Wanted to McNally Builders « flowers end gifts. Your kindness will in retail sales, hotel, motel or corrv APARTMENT SIZE refrigerator and kit- homo" and "Battle Hvmn of the Re- rug, cabinet base, complete tires, Ford or Plymouth. Coleman lan- Merchants Bank 4" always be remembered. public . Contact C. E. Linden, Wlnone panlon with light housekeeping. Tel. USED LAMINATED RAFTSRSI chen sat, SAWED SCRAP Wood wantsd. Tel. '452- " LIKE NEW. Save 50% single bed, Maytag washing machine, tern, blow torch, barn radio, 2 drills ¦ ¦ - ¦ ¦ ¦ Winona Fire & Power ...... 4 Mrs. Wilmer Kerb- Daily News. Tel. 452-7520. . 452-563. or morel Other .. .for-perls. Tel. 454-2002 or 251 E. Mark. 902*. :¦ . • - . ' :' Nelson Tire Servica ...... - building materials for sale. For more Portable washtubs on stand, 13" and Information. figure Ice COMMERCIAL ROMENESKO- THE PARK PLAZA cordially Invites your WILL BABYSIT In my home, days. Tel. Tel. (5071 289-0348. 14" snow tires; boy's, girl's TOY TRAIN S-Llonel American Flyer, ¦ V ¦skates; size 8; oil heater. 16! High NICE SELECTION ol gift Items for Hal-Rod W- «-. Our sincere and grateful thenks are ex- reservation for New Year's Eve. For 452-7278. W. Location, y Christmas. Antiques and coins. Town etc. Any sires, parts or pieces. Need not tended to ell our friends, neighbors and Information please Tel. 452-2801. HOMELITE, THE NO. 1 CHAIN SAW Forest. Tel. 454-3075. Polachek Electrie « 1 Now some good used saws 6 Country 61ft Shop, Hwy. 43 at Sugar run. Jim Meier, Industries: .. 7V4 H4 relatives for their various ects ot kind- EXPERIENCED reliable babysitting 1n Loaf. . Lake Center shown Expert repair service. NEIGHBORHOOD BASEMENT Sale. s Skelly i 4 ness and messages of sympathy, SAY MERRY CHRISTMAS to family and my home, weekdays, nights. West loca- WANTED-consIderable quantity of clean, Orv' ' ' bereevement We POWER MAINTENANCE 8. SUPPLr CO. Girls , boys . and women's clothing ; stove-lengths Masonry Mike 5 4 us- during our recent friends Dec. 23rd with a Classified tion. Reasonable. Tel. 454-4222. ' ' 350 GALS, of Interior lacquer paint, dry wood, any kind, cut ln especially thank Rev. Pennington, Mr. Greeting. 18 words $1.25 CASH. Name, 2nd & Jolmson Tel. 452-2571 ladles' uniforms, large size Wonder thick. Tushner s Market, KAGE Radio -.- . '.. 4Vi 4ft assorted colors. 3)1.50 per gal. Tal. not over 4x4" ' 5 Buckman, the pallbearers and the address and payment must be Included WILL DO babysitting for pre-school chil- hobby horse, lady's size 9 figure skates, 501 E. 3rd St., Wlnone. Tel. 452-4845. Sam's Conoco 4 Guild No. 5 of PROMPT SERVICE on all makea table, miscellane- Galesvllle¦ 582-4141 I to 5 Mon. through Mississippi Welders ...... 4 5 Weaver Ladles Aid end with orders. Malt to Greetings, Box 70, dren In my home, 5 days a week, 7 commercial billiard ' Fri, ' ^Minneiska Catholic Church for serving Winona 55987 or stop at our office. to 3:30. Tel. Rollingstone 669-2229. of bulk tanks. ous household items. 254 Jefferson-East. . wanted. Tel. Coch- Quality Chevrolet 4 5 ¦ Ed's Refrigeration & Dairy Supplies USED SAXOPHONE 4 S the lunch. : Fri., Sat. & Sun, 9 to 9. , rane 248-2482 after 5 p.m. Seven-Up Family of Herbert Romenesko 555 E. 4th Tel. 452-5532 SKIS—i'3" Lund, with bindings; also Hal-Leonard Music ...... ,. The DOES ONE oi your loved, ones have a have slci poles and size 8 boots. Tel. J'A 5' drinking problem? If so, contact the Situations Wanted — Male 30 A SMALL AD Is not economical If II good condition, Steve s Lounge ...... J t •457-2M5 after 7:30 p.m. USED UPRIGHT piano, ' Winona Alanon Family Group. Write says nothing or too little! . reasonable. Tel. 454-1428 before 5 er John's Bar ...... 1% TVs Lest and Found 4 'Galesvllle, Wis. SUNSETTERS 6m W. 3rd. GIL FRIESEN, your remodeling consul- write Allyn Kaste, tant. For carpenter work and general BASEMENT RUMMAGE Sale. Gas stove, 235 AMP ARC welder; air compressor, Wesfgafe W. L. maintenance. Tel. 454-4441 or 452-2593. TRACTO RS working pressure 150 lbs.; set of bino- SNOW PLOW for pickup truck. Tel. FREE FOUND ADS dresser, clothes, bowling ball, variety ol culars 7x50; set Jordan's . 25 17 Auto Service, Repairing 10 miscellaneous. Sat. and Sun. all day of 2-way radios, 1 454-1639. 18 millwatt.' . Tel. 452-M&T for further In- Boland's 24 AS A PUBLIC SERVICE to our readers, 2 John Deere A Tractors evening. 519 E. Belleylew. Commodore Club 21. 20 DONT GAMBLE with your llfel Have Business Opportunities 37 formation. WM. MILLER SCRAP IROM & METAL free found eds will be published when Farmall H : — ,—__—:—______— v Schmidt's Appliance ...... 21 20 a person finding an article cells the TAGGART TIRE SERVICE specialists CLOTHES RACK, 2 natural gas heaters, CO. pays highest prices for scrap Iron, Homeward Step ...... 21 11 rebuild your , brakes. Price S34.95 most WIS. BUSINESSES 454-2269. USED REFRIGERATORS, TVs, auloma- metels end raw fur. Winona Dally & Sunday News Classified 15 Newly listed business opportunities. Massey Harris 44 . 1952 Ford %-ton truck. Tel. Mankato Bar 21 21 Dept., 452-3321. Aiv 18-word notice will cars. Tel. 452-2772. y tic washers arid dryers. BIB Closed Saturdays Trac Oil ...... H 23 Write for free brochure. ELECTRIC, 155 E. 3rd. 222 W. 2nd Tel. 452-2067 be published free for 2 days in an ef- HEIT REALTY, INC. ELECTRIC STOVE, 30", $50; 7' deluxe Sunbeam Sweets . 14 U fori td bring finder and loser toflether. stainless aluminum Christmas tree Business Services 14 Durand, Wis. 54736 CHRISTMAS TREES, sheared Norway OLD U.S. coins wanted by private col- ' ACE . -. Tel. (725) 472-4224 USED SPREADERS with color revolving lamp, J15, Tel. Labrador wearing choke and Scotch. Outdoor roping. Houses dec- lector. Will buy eny amount of Indian Athletic Club W. L LOST—Female WILL TAKE ORDERS for finished cab- .452-3744. chain and shot tag. Reward. Tel. orated for Ihe season, complete with cents through silver dollars and any The Plumbing Barn ...... 2t 7 inets Of Oil kinds. Inquire 520 Ga r- John Deere N 135 bu. PTO lights. For Information and quotations value. Tel. 454-2274 452-5751. Money to Loan 40 ' coins of collecting Coca-Cola Co. lt IS field. . John Deere W 10O bu. PTO TWO WALK-IN COOLERS — 1 medium call Westgate Gardens, after 6 p.m. or write Dick Drury, Rustic Bar It 18 s billfold In Tel. booth In size, 1 large size, both at small prices, Pleasant Valley, Winona, Minn., 55987. Winona Heating Co. 17 lt FOUND—girl' front of William's. Owner may claim et NEED Carpet Installed? : IHC #30 SPELTZ CHICK HATCHERY, Rolling- MONOGRAM OIL HEA1ERS-T room to Dunn Blacktop « 20 Ssnte Claus House, MARLIN ENGRAV Quick Money , - stone, Minn. Tel. «!89-2311. 7 room sizes, thermostat controlled. HIGHEST PRICES PAID Seven-Up 10 24 835 38th Tel. 452-5487. . . Small IHC " GAIL'S APPLIANCE, 215 E. 3rd. lor scrap Iron, metals, rags, hides, on any article of value. WESTGATE MIXERS MAN'S LEATHER glove found at St. NEUMANN'S BARGAIN STORE USED . TV-good Working condition. $20. . raw furs and wooll FOR COMPLETE home remodeling and STOCK CARPET at rol l end prices. Ce- Westgate W. L. Martin's Church. -May be picked up at Tel..;454-28«3. T : ;y Oasis Bar & Cafe ...... 21 17 church. custom crafted furniture built from your , ramie tile, linoleum. Open mornings or Sam Weisman & Sons design, Tel. Mike Sornmer, 452-3439. NEW SPREADERS by appointment anytime. Welly s Sweethearts ...... 3t Dogs, Pets, Supplies 42 2-speed, 2rnove- Curley's Floor INCORPORATED ' 1* HEAVY DUTY motorized Shop, Tel. 454-1907. 377 E. Filth, Wlnone. 452-5847 Black Horse Tavern ...... SS it LOST—smell brown dog, part Terrier, E. ment exercycle. Tel. 452-Siit. 323 Olm- 450 W. 3rd Tel. has collar and tage, li- BLOWN IN INSULATION - walls and John Deere #54 220 bu. Bette and Richard Sievers, owners. Hauser Art Glass ...... 35 20 end location, depend- SIX-MONTH Beagle springer, housebrok- stead. cense No. 545. Tel. 452-5066. . attics. Free estimates. Fast, George's Lounge ...... as 20 able service. Carlson Insulation Service, en, all puppy shots. Child allergic; Tel. John Deere #40 175 bu. CHRISTMAS SPECIALS. Desks, chests, Apartments, Flats 90 pozanc Skelly Products ... 25 20 Ronald Carlson, Houston, Minn. Tel, 454-4257/ John Deere #34 145 bu. USED LUMBER, 2x4's, 6's. 1962 Chevro- stools, rockers, dinette sets, chairs, bed- UBC IS ._* 896-3538. let, $100. Tel. 452-r Distribution. .. through Sat. For information and ap- of Sheared Norway, program The representative of the above named pointments call The AQUARIUM, 159 E. WANTED—approximately 1500 bu. of corn FIREPLACE Available for rent Dec. 7. HUSBANDS, buy your wife a gift she Scotch & Spruce trees. wood, oa* only, spill and estate having filed her final account and 3rd St. Tel. 454-2876. delivered from picker sheller. Tel. dry. Tel. 452-7490 or St. Charlts 932- allowance can always use and remember, a Houston 896-3344. 442»y . petition for settlement and Waste King dishwasher or garbage thereor and - .for' distribution to 'the per- POODLE GROOMING, gentle and exper- PLEASANT sons thereunto ent itled? '. ' . ' disposal. See or call the PLUMBING ienced; double Sassafras Toy Poodle Gut Your Own BURN MOBIL is listed - ' BARN. FUEL OIL and en|oy IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing pups. 716 S. 2nd, La Crescent, Minn, Logs, Posts, Lumber 52 the comfort of automatic personal care. KNOLL MOTEL thereot be had on December 15. 1970, Tel. 895-2082 evenings and weekends. Keep-full service — complete burner Court MERRY CHRISTMAS comes Ihree times Trempealeau, 'Wis. WASECA, Minn. — Beef Day at 10:45 o'clock A.M., before this a day when you give her a work-saving WHITE PINE timbers. B'WxU', 2«' and Your choice cere and furnace cleaning. Budget serv- Ir, the probate court room In tho court AKC REGISTERED German Shepherd ice. Order today from JOSWICK FUEL Bud and Jane Hunter at the University of Minnesota KltchenAid dishwasher. Portable models pups, 6 weeks old. Will hold until Christ- 30' lengths. Tel. 454-1207. house In Winona, Minnesota, end that need no additional plumbing or remod- $1.50 8. OIL CO., 901 E. Sth. Tel. 452-340.. nollce hereof be often by publication ef mas. Burdell Herold, Alma, Wis. Tel. Southern Experiment Station, eling In your kitchen. If may be kept In Cochrane 608-248-2632. this order In the Wlnone Delly News and any convenient place and rolled to the Antiques, Coins, Stamps 56 Open Dec. 5-20 Furn., Southern School of Agriculture, by mailed notice as provided by law. Rugs, Linoleum 64 Business Places for Rent 92 table for easy loading, then to the sink MINIATURE SCHNAUZER puppies, AKC and Technical College here on Dated November 17, 1970. to complete the operation. Easy to 10 a.m. to dusk S. A. SAWYER, registered, champion sired, shots, ears HEXAGON TABLE, value S350, will sac- VINYL ASBESTOS e||«, 12x12, 15V.C MODERN OFFICES on the Plaza. Stlrne- Tudsday will include a presen- handle. Large capacity. Dishes get cropped, excellent dispositions. Will hold rifice. Tel. 454-2491 after 5:30 or each. All vinyl tile, 12x12, 20e each; man-Selover, Co., Tel. 452-3351, 452-9233 Probate Judge. cleaner, sparkling dry with a Kitchen- Free boughs with your tree. Seal) until CJirlsfmas. Te|. 452- In Probate Court Female — Jobs oi Int. — 26 pions. In foal to Sonny Champ Filly, Stereo Components & Franklin. Open every evening until No. 17,128 Speakers, amplifiers, turntables. ?. Park behind the store. able Apr. 1971. Financing available. mal Science Department — Its AQHA Champion side out of above WINONA FIRE S, POWER EQUIP CO. Contact Mrs. Russell Gllllgen, 727 In Re Estate et WANTED: Girls to learn beauty, culture. mare. Tel. 452-7346. Cut Your Own ~ Role in the Beef Industry." Dr. Harry L. Elnhorn, Decedent. 54-54 E. 2nd St. Tel, 452-5065 GIFT SUGGESTIONS Warsaw St., Menesha, WJs. Tel. 414- Harding Beauty School, 76 Plaza W. 722-5011. Touchberry came to the Uni- Order for Hearing en Final Account HOLSTEIN COWS - 3 close springers. Christmas Trees Hassocks from SD.95 and Petition for Distribution. LADIES—set your own hours. No lay Richard Galewski, Trempealeau, Wis., Smokers from $4.95 versity of Minnesota last sum- representative of thai above named NEEDLES Magazine Baskets from il.ii The otfs. Make $50 a week end up. Write (3 miles N. of Centerville, Wis.), For All Makes Sheared Norway Pine Houses for Rent 95 mer from the University of Il- estate having filed Its final account and B-34 Dally News. Cocktail Tables from $7.50 petition for settlement and allowance Ot Record Players . Up. to 8*, $1.50 '¦ea. 3-Way Table Lamps from $9.95 WEST LOCATION. 3-bedroom home, linois where he distinguished PUREBRED HOLSTEIN bull, from an Pole Lamps thereof end for distribution to the per- SECRETARY NEEDED-shorthand, 1yp- excellent daughter of the famed Wis. Go to Rollingstone, turn from $13.95 available- Immediately, 3100 month. Tel. liimself in dairy entitled; Hardt's Mus ic Store Tree Lamps from $1 4.95 cattle breed- sons thereunto . Ing. Work 12:30-4:30 p.m., 5 days a Captain, Excellent type and production 114.118 Plain E. Book cases, 452-7680 alter 6. IT IS ORDERED, Thef the hearing week. Tel. 454-5160 extension 77. In pedigree. Carlus or Ofto Dlngfelder, right at chuich, follow #25 $19.95 ing research. He is a native Plaltorm Rockers from $44.95 thereof be tied on December 29th, 1970, Rolllngstone, Minn. about 5 miles, then follow Occasional FOUR BEDROOM house, 163 E. 10th, ef South Carolina and graduat- WAITRESS—part-time Frl. evenings and Your Favorite Christmas Chairs from $29.95 $150 per month. References and deposit at 11:00 o'clock A.M., before this Court signs. BORZYSKOWSKI ed from Clemson. Advanced de- In the probete court room In the court Sundays. No phone calls. Garden Gate PUREBRED YORKSHIRE boar and also Records & Tapes FURNITURE required. Tel. 454-1639. , house tn Winona, Minnesota, end that Restaurant, 56 Plaza W, purebred Hampshire boars. Donald Sel- 302 Mankato "Ave grees Open Mon., Wed., Frl. Evenings were earned at Iowa State notice hereof be given by publication ol fert,/ Pepin, Wis. Tel. 442-3492 . For The Holiday Season ' Dec. 4, 5, 6, UNFURNISHED BRICK honeymoon University. this order in the Wlnone Dally News end ADVERTISING COMPANY needs pert- Available at home, 1 bedroom, lorge kitchen, full by malted notice .as provided by law. tlme help for local advertising program. FEEDER PIGS—55, 110 a piece. Neuman Your Downtown Store 11 , 12, 13, Good Things to Eat 65 besement, eest near bus. Please call Research reports to be pre- Dated December 2nd, 1970. Experience not necessary. Above aver- Twite, Caledonia. Tel. 724-2382. JIM ROBB REALTY, an affiliate of age earnings. Salary plus. Hours: 9-1, TED MAIER DRUG 9 a.m. Robb Bros. Store Inc. and Robb Wo- sented include last year S. A. SAWYER, - 5 p.m. APPLES, $1 bu. and up; Russet potatoes, 's ex- Probate Judge. 1-5 and 5-9. Pick your own hours. Apply REGISTERED QUARTER mare, King $1.25, 50 lbs. Ed JIck, Centerville, Wis, fors Inc. Tel. 454-5870 before 5 p. m. perience in five housing systems (Probate Court Seel) Mrs. Ward, CK. Advertising, Hotel breeding, 8 years old, well broke and at the Morris station. Dr. R. Darby a. Brewer, Chartered, Park Plaza, Suite 144. NOT MAGA- gentle, bred to Sonny Champ II) regis- CHRISTMAS Edward & Aurelia HEAVY BEEFER chickens, alive. Tel. Wanted to Rent 96 Attorneys for Petitioner. ZINES. tered quarter filly coming 2 years old; Cochrane 248-2309. D. Goodrich registered quarter filly yearling. Mar- will cover manage- TREES Wolfram GARAGE In vicinity of Huff ond Wsbe- ment (First Pub. Friday, Nov. TO, 1970) vin KlQtfer, St. Charles, Minn. Tel. RUSSET POTATOES, 30 lbs., 69cj apples, "Tips That Mean Dol- 932-3044. Choose and cut your own. Winona, Minn. $1.75 bu.; she. Tel- 452-4430, extension 313 between dates, 2 lbs., «9c; Christmas 9 and 4. lars," and R. E. Jacobs will State of Minnesota ) ss. Bring your camera ! candy; nuts. Winona Potato Market. discuss the County of Wlnone ) In Probate Court MATURE BOOTS, SHIRTS, pants, belts, buckles, place of "Beef Cow File No. 17,192 purses, hats, moccasslns, saddles, brid- YOUR CHOICE RESPONSIBLE COUPLE would Ilka to OF 30 butcher steers. rent or possibly buy 3-bedroom older Herds" in southern Minnesota. In Ra Estete ef les, lackets. Kleller 's Western Sliop, B's TREE FARM Will butcher on faem and cut, wrap Sophia Gaulke. also known as INDIVIDUAL St. Charles, Minn. Christmas hours: and freeze. home In good condition, In Winona, "The Value of Crossbreds in Norway Pines, some Scotch Cut Your Own BILL CORNFORTH, Le Tel. Cochrane 248-2461. Sophie Osulke, Decedent. Sun. 1-5, weekdays 9-9, Sat. 9-5:30, Crescent, (near clly limits). Tel. 895- the Feedlot" will be covered Crder for Hearing en Final Account to do detail and White Pines. 2106. by Dr. R. L. Arthaud and "Meet- and Petition tor Distribution. ACCOUNTING WORK. PUREBRED HEREFORD bull] buck $1.50 and up. Farms, Land for Sate 98 Tha representative of the above named sheep, drinking cups, stanchions, pump Follow signs E. side of Guns, Sporting Good* ing Roughage Needs" will be estate having filed her final account end Fringe benefits. lack. "Victor Gunderson, Pickwick. Tel. CHRISTMAS 6G FARMS - FARMS - FARMS reviewed by Dr. J. C. Meiske. petition for settlement and allowance 452-4294. Trempealeau. thereof end for distribution to the persons Tel. 534-6401 BRAN D NEW rifle, 2_3 Savage, 99 DL, < DO NOT OVERLOOK this one. 60 acres, The program will start at 10 thereunto entitled; Write B-33 Daily News. HEREFORD CALVES-16, built and power scope and complete set of load- |ust a stones throw to downtown Ploas- IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing hellers, Lelghton Kragncss, Rushford, TREES ing tools, 250 cartridges. Tel. 454-2633. antvllle. Newly remodeled farm homo. a.m. and conclude about 3 p.m. thereof be tied on December 14, 1970, et Minn. Tel. 864-9274. Good barn and usual buildings. Run- after a question and answer pe- 10:30 o'clock A.M., before this Court •Machinery and Tools 89 ning water In pasture, Top producing riod. AH beef producers in the In the probate court room In the court CLOSE SPRINGERS-5 days to 2 weeks. Norway Pine soli. house In Winona, Minnesota, and that Inquire Willard Salwey, Cochrane. Tel. GRAND MELROE BOBCATS hereof be given by publication of Waumandco 262-2386. area may attend. notice NEW, used and reconditioned for tale or 240 ACRES beef farm, located 4 miles this order In the Winona Dally News and MEDICAL rent by the hour, S.W. ol Fairchild. Excellent 8-room provided by law. FEEDER PIGS-7, 40 lbs. Werner Senv iM«MMMaI All persons Interested m«y appear 3. No snowmobile shall ba operated In and be heard at snid time end place, the Village of Allure except In con- FEEDER CATTLE-70 head, 400-600 lbs, By Order of tho Vlllego formity wllh Minnesota Statutes (4.11 Contact hospital Personnel $145 per head. MARK ZIMMERMAN, Council. Rt. 3, Winona. Tel. 454-1476 or 454-3741. REX A. JOHNSON, to 84.89 Inclusive, and Village Clerk. Office for interview. COMMERCIAL PROPERTY (1) No Snowmobile shall exceed a PUREBRED Duroc boars. Clifford Hoff, Lanesboro, Minn. Tal, Peterson 875- (First Pub. Friday, Nov. JO, 1970) speed of ten miles per hour upon Tel . 454-3650 ETTRICK LIVESTOCK a city street, end 61J J. FOR LEASE State of Minnesota ) ss. O) Snowmobiles shall stop at all County of Winonn ) In Probete Courf through Intersections not posted by "Alt inquiries held in HORSE BOARDING, J18 month will feed No. 17,272 stop signs end yield the right ol and house your horse In a new barn. 1. In Ro Estate of way to any approaching: motor ve- confidence." Tel. 454-1315. MARKET Executive Office—65 Johnson Street Rlcka Blfmann, Decedent. hicle, and 2 Order for Hearing on Petition for Probate (3) No snowmobile shall be driven on HOLSTEIN HEIFERS-dua Jan. fafh, ETTRICK, WIS. ,400 square feet)—Ideal for profes- of Will, Limiting Time to File Claims city streets between the hours ol Malo — Jobs of Interest — 27 dams record over 500 lbs. butterfat. sional and for Hearing Thereon. one-half hour after sunset ond one- Reuben Anderson, Spring Grove, Minn. people or small company of- Henrietta Swing having filed a petition Tel. Caledonia 724-2588. Slaughter Livestock sale, half hour before sunrise and al EXPERIENCED MAN for farm work, ±- , , . fices—fully carpeted and air condi- for the probata of the Will of eald de- 11:00 a.m. on Sunday, except upon by day or month. Ralph Plcknrl, Gar- cedent end for the appointment of Hen- REGISTERED HAMPSHIRE boars, test- every Mon. at 1 p.m. controlled through streets or during vln Heights, Winona. Tel. 45<-mi. ed pen Index 206. tioned. rietta Swing aa Administratrix With tha an emergency when other transpor- Just call, will deliver, punrantco satisfied. MHo Wills, Nodlna, Will Annexed, which Will Is on file In this tation Is not available. SALESMAN NEEDED Court and open to Inspection; Tel. Dakota 643-6251 . Feeder Cattle and Dairy Replacement Sale .. . UNLIMITED Income soiling to America's 2. Office Space—-164 West Second St. IT IS ORDERED, That the hearing 9- Snowmobiles shall not ba driven up- on sidewalks, boulevards or private fastest growing Industry, the Mobile DOOS AND CATS wanted, 6 monlhs or First and third Thurs. at 7 p.m. thereof bo had on Decembor 15, 1970, at Homo field. For lr»|ormatlon write or older. No charge 3,000 square feet—Ideal for offices— 10:45 o'clock A.M., before this Court In properly without permission of the for pickup. Send cord, owner of said property. call I Technl-Fab Inc., Rollaroom Dlv„ Nick Rellnnd, Maieppa, Minn. Ihe probate court room In the court Box 224, Hwy. 16% Mnnkato, AAlnn. For Trucking from Buffalo Co. area Second floor carpeted' offices—First house In Winona, Minnesota , end that 4. Snowmobiles shall not be operated by 660Q]. oblectlons to the allowance of said Will, any person under the age of fourteen Wanted—Livestock 4Q Tel. Delbert Ellis 608-323-7146 floor open area. Fully air conditioned. ff any, be filed before sold time of years In (he Vlllaoe of Allwa, ex- WANTED cept upon private property and with or Art Quarbcrg 608-946-3758 tiearlng; that Ihe time within which MEN who think they ere worlli $8,500 3. Office rehouse Space—l 66 creditors of said decedent mey file their the consent of the owner oi sold prop- per year end more. Positions now open and Wa claims be limited lo four months from erly. In tliet Winona area. Trolnlno and lends - WANTED - the night before each sale. 000 square feet the date hereof, and that the claims so 3. Violation of this ordinance shall be furnished. No overnight travel. Send West Second Street: 6, filed ba heard on March 23, 1971, at punishable hy fins not to exceed brief resume to P.O. Box 339, La Holstein heifers, or —Ideal for distributor or warehousing 10:30 o'clock A.M., before this Court In Three Hundred Dollars ($300.00) and Crosse, Wis. 54601. 200 Open the probata court room In the court house /or ninety (Wl days In (all- operation—400 square feet office air In Winona, Minnesota, and that nolle* Passed by the Council of the Village of H AND A INSURANCE from 500 to 700 lbs. hereof be given by publication of this Allure, Minnesota, this 10th doy of No- A RAPIDLY expanding etjoncy looking itioried—warehouse heated. t>tdtr In the Winona Dally News and by vember, 1970. (oragentt who wish to bo part of a Good quality. Ettrick Livestock Market cond mailed notice as provided by lew. Attest: vnltjva marketing system never before Paled November 17, 1V70. Gene Schumacher, used In the Insurance Held, coupled wllh 608-525-3011 S. A. SAWYER, Village Clerk. 100% return of premium policies and a Ed. Lawrenz & Sons Probata Judge. Witness: fantesllc lead program making corrmls- St. Charles Buying hogs daily until noon. LAKE CENTER INDUSTRIES (Probate Court Seal) Ronald G, Thompson, slons extremely lucrative. Sond brief , Minn . j extension 32 C Stanley McMahon, resume to P.O. Box 339, Le Crosse, Tel. Collect 032-4165 T«l. 454-5010, A*!om«y for Petitioner. ' Mayor, Village of Allure. Wis. 34*01. Farms, Land for Sal* • 98 Houses for Salt 99 Trucks, Tractors, Trailer* 108 Used Can 109 Used Cart 109 Used Cars 109 Mobile Homes, Traitor* 111 Winona Dally Newt 7|» 1M-ACRE FARM near Mabel, feme soil. Winona, Minnesota I" $1,000 DOWN buys 2-bedroom home on CHEVROLET — 195? VMon pickup, new FORD—1MB Torino 2-door Hardtop, 303 WANTED—auto painting and body work. BLUE 1969 SS 3?« Cheille, 350 h.p,; Quality Mobile Homes Good 4-bedroom home with net water laroe lol In Gilmore Valley. Tel. 453- tires. Robert Fayerwealtier, Wabasha, . cubic Inch, automatic, power steering. , Class replacing. Repair water leaks, wh tla vinyl top ami Interior, buckets Af Reasonablo Prices. FRIDAY, DEC. 4, 1970 heat. 84 head of beef caltle and mechln- 9543 after 5. MJnn. Tel. 54*4752. Excellent condition. Tel. -152-W0, ask _d|ust doors, etc. Fast parts service, with rurbo-hyoro In consols, power Glen-Cove Mobile Home Sales ery may tx> bought wltli farm. Also 140- aere adjoining bare land for Pcta Kram. Any price paint lobs. 15 years exper- stwrlng, windows and disc brakes, Arcadia, Wis. Tel. 323-3785 or 323-7220 Auction Sales lor $180 per ELEGANT NEW home, FORD, 194? Won pickup; 1946 Cnavella acre. Buhr Realty, Suite exceptlonolly dec- ience. Bring your Insurance papers and posltractlon, stereo tape player, poly- ~ ~~ 104, Mlrecla orated, 108x300' lot, black SS. Tel. 452-4537. 443 W. «th. estimate to me, I'll save you money! glass tires and air shocks. $2650. Gene Mall, Rochester, Minn. Tel, 288-6668. brick fire- ALVIN KOHNER place end beamed celling PLYMOUTH, 1967 Fury III 4-door, auto- Jr s Aulo Body. 251 E. Mark, (corner BaKer, Cochrane, Wis. Tel. 24S-237*. GREEN TERRACE Mobile Homes, exclu- In family matic transmission; 1967 Ford Gelaxla ' AUCTIONEER, City and stata llcwswl room, formal dining room, 24x15' living DODGE-lffSS tt-ton pickup. Tel. 452- Mark and Franklin Streets). Tel. 454- sively Northern built Chlckasha dealer. end bonded. Rt. 3, Wlnoni. Tel. 230-ACftB FARM, 120 tillable, on black- room. T«l. 452-3.20. . 9349 or 1 «8« W. 5th. 500 2-door hardtop, automrtlc transmis- -001. Sizes and prices for everyone. See Earl 452-4988. top about 15 miles from Winona, wi th sion. Contact Installment Loan Depart- Nottleman, Tel. 45*1-1317 or 452-M12. fairly nice 3-bedroom liome. P REDUCED TRUCK BODIBS-trallin. built, repaired ment, Flrsl National Bank. Tel. 452-2810; MLS 274. 5'5L for Immediate tale. ¦tier 829,800. Also a good sel ection of homes. $27,500. Naw 3-bedroom Townhouse. and painted. Hoist ulei and service*. hours, 415-3787. WE HATE Minnesota Land & • BILL CORNFORTH, REATOR, ML.S, Basement, 2-car oarage, many exlrae. Berg's, 3950 W. 4th. T«l. 452-4849 i La Crescent, Minn. Te-I, 855-2106. Don't miss eeelns Roadrunner; 1970 1964 PONTIAC J.AX'S Auct on Service this. Tel. 454-105?. PLYMOUTH - 1948 WINTER!! Everett J. Kohner Used Cars 100 Chevy Nova. Inquire MERCHANTS Wlnone, Tel. 452-7814 NEA > R NATIONAL. BANK. 4-door hardtop, automatic MOBILE HOMES IF YOU ACE In fhs market for a farm . ? y E/yiONT^5-room house. 4 acre* Jim Papenfuss, Dakota Tel. 453-2973 of lend, Largest selection In this erea. or home, or are planning to sell real C. SHANK, 552 . E. 3rd. transmission, radio And it will pay you to Highway 35 Nelson, Wit. estate of any type contact NORTH- DODGE-1969 Dart GTS, automatic, pow- CHEVROLET - 1964 Impala Station , power er steering, radio. Lime green with DEC. 5-S«t. 12:30 p.m. U mllei 8.W. Ot ERN INVESTMENT COMPANY Real, VERY CLEAN and carpeted, Sn-oom . Wagon, at* conditioned, new tires, 327 steering, power brakes. A buy now at our cold Houston, Minn. Duane Peterson, owneri Estate Broker, Independence white stripe. Low mileage. Tel. Gales- , Wli, or home, east. Reduced price. Ter/m. , ¦• " cu. In. engine. Tel. 452-3836, Frlckson «. Sctiroeder, - •uctlofittni Eldon W, Berg, Real Estatt villi S34-_m , TOWN & COUNTRY Salesmen, Gate City Agency, Tel. 454-1570. good buy at weather prices. Northern Inv. Co., elerk. Arcadia, Wli. Tel. 323-3350. CATALINA, 1967 4-door hardtop) 1«9 DODGE-1»« Super Bee, "4 pack", 4- MOBILE HOMES NEW 3-BEDROOM home, double at- We hava 12' and 14' wldes and double DEC. 5—Sat. 1 p.m. Furnltura Auction, Grand Prix. Tal. 452-4127 after 5. speed. 11,COO actual miles, Shown , by $575 , WIS. FARMS tached garefle, family room wllh fire- . appointment. MERCHANTS NATIONAL wldes, all 1971 . models, starting at 453 E. 3rd Winona. Clem Erpelding olaco. Estate; Alvln Kohner, auctioneer) ' 55 Newly listed dairy or beef farms. M92 Heights Blvd. Hilke Homes, FIAT—1967, 600 D series, good condition. BANK. $3445. Tel. 454-5278 Herb Gunderson on Ev- Inc., 3710 9th St., Goodview erett Kohner, clerk. Write for frea brochure. . Orval Hilke, Tel. 452-4127. Tel. 452-7490. FREE SET Hwy. 43 at Sugar Loaf. Weekends Tel. HEIT REALTY", INC. | j Nora Heinlen 452-3175, Durand, Wis. 54736 SMALL MODERN house. Second house COMET-1960 4-door. Tel. 452-5544. DEC. 5—Sat. ll a.m. 7 mile* E. of Orc- of Chicken Ville. OF SNOWTIRES nocco, Minn., on Co. Rd. 12. David Tel. (715) 672-4224 fr; L. . W. Moody, 1510 i*a Crosse Mobile Homes W. Mark. PONTIAC—1940 Catalina, S175. Tel. Lew- 1st Class with every car sold this Nelson, owneri Loos and Cartwlaht, iston 4664. ¦ " " ' ¦ ' New and Used auctioneers; Gateway Credit, Eau SIXTH E. _ X . .. xX ' ' . BUICK Claire, elerk. Houses for Sale 39 363—ComfortSble 2-bedroom weekend. homo on full lot. Tel. 452-7831. CHEVROLET—1957 2-door hardtop, 301 Transportation 1966 Skylark Coupe V-8, ROLLOHOME cubic Inch cam and solids, 4-speed and DEC. 5—Sat. r p,m. Sheldon Store, • EIGHTH E, 1057-4 rooms and bath, all automatic trans mission REDUCED TO SELL-Cholce location, 2 bucket seats, Tel. Houston 896-3105. , 1S68 Chevelle Malibu 2-door 1% Miles S. of City Limits miles S.W. of Houston. Leona Gledrem years old, 4 bedrooms, 2V* baths, dou- newly carpeted, remodeled kitchen, lot power steering, radio, tint- Estate, owners; Beckman Bros., auc- ble garage, fully carpeted, centre! air, 50x150', combination doors. Only $7500. BLUE CHEVELLE-1970 , superior eondl- '67 Buick Riviera hardtop, 327 4-speed, red on Hwy. 14 tioneers; Houston State Bank, clerk. finished basement. TeE. 454-3859. No dovyn payment for G.I. Frank West Hon, radio, automatic transmission, V-8, 2-door Iiardtop, silver in col- ed glass, wheel covers. Agency, with black vinyl top, Wack Tel. La Crosse 608-788-2142 175 Lafayette. Tel. 452-5240 or 2 months use; Army husband tent over- Fully conditioned for win- DEC. 5-Sat. 10:30 a.m. 2 miles E. of 4524400 after hours. , or with black all vinyl inte- interior. Lyle Norshog-Hollis Norskog ON LOHSE DRIVE—new 3-bedroom, for- seas. Tel. 454-1443. ter including new white- Chatfield, Minn., on Hwy. 30, then JV* mica kitchen and gas heat. Double ga- rior, power steering, power 1868 Chevrolet Bel Air 4- miles N.E. Dan 1 Don Lynch, owners; rage. 2 baths and rec room. Carpeted. BUICK —1955, automatic. Good shape. brakes, tilt steering wheel, wall snow tires. Auction Sales Ode & Olson, auctioneers; Thorp Salet Just being finished. Tel. 454-5382. Tel. 454-3537. door sedan, 307 engine, Corp., clerk. radio, heater, excellent tires. automatic, power steering, RAMBLER . — 1964 American . 2-door, go FREDDY FRICKSON DEC. 7—Mon. 12:3D p.m. 1 mile S. of Ready to anywhere. " ' . ' ___ straight -tick. $295. Tel. 6B9-2649. green with black interior. .. Auctioneer Holmen, Wis., Edward J. McCabe, own- ____ff l __7o\_e L^^__--«__9___M^^^_^__[^____[ A. H. ROHRER Will handle all sizes and kinds of er; Russell Schroeder, ¦' $2295 1968 DODGE Polara 4-door auctioneer; CAMARO . — 1970, 307 With turbo-hydra- Cochrane, Wis. auctions. Tel. Dakota 643-6143. Northern Inv. Co., clerk. . I jT BOB matic transmission. Tel. 452-3298. sedan, 318 engine, power steering, standard trans- YOU WANT to try the very best at a '66 Buick Elecfra HE CH E 2oi 454514t* very reasonable price? Here Is your 4-door hardtop, white with mission, blue with match- UM9 CHCVWOLBT^y C VBOLET J(afCHBVROLCT/ggy BVH-OUtTJ - ^ chancel 1960 Cadillac 4-door, full power, O s 't ing interior. I MBM^t ' rJHJff? ; very oood condition. Tel. 689-2387. black all vinyl interior, pow- ur sale men aren I I T REALTOR T&HaW-V kWILmWifffi 1967 FORD Moor hardtop, . Y Nt£^^ .CHRYSLER-IMS 3H) hardtop. 82100. Tel. er steering, power brakes, dressed in red suits, nor |I20 CCNTER- ¦ 689-2«». ; power windows, power seat, turquoise with black inte- Multiple Listing Service tilt steering wheel, factory do they wear long white rior, automatic, power, FORD—19«S6 LTD 4-door hardtop, white beards ' steering, radio. ' with black Interior, 390 V-8, automatic, air conditioning, radio, heat- , but you ll think Near The Lake W i nte.r Pro j ect Spec ids fully quipped, snow tires. Excellent con- er, wHtewalls and many y i f 1967 PLYMOUTH Satellite 2- dition, Tel. Rushford 844-9144. the are the man h msel i JIM'S other extras. Luxury at its door hardtop, blue with . I 5 Room house in excellent i* FOUR-"bedroom fcrick home when you hear their location. 1% car garage. EL CAMINO—1944, excellent shape. Tel. finest. black vinyl roof, automa- has fireplace, den, bath and 452-2734 after 5 or all day Sat. and Sun. tic, power steering, power ' a half. Spacious closets with 2 good $1795 sized bed rooms. Living AMX—1969, with new tires, mags, 4-speed CHRISTMAS brakes, radio, wnitewall with 390 engine. After 5 p.m., 70714 W. tires, l-owner, Eke new. Low Down Payment room, dining room and Kino. kitchen. New plumbing. '65 Olds 'W DEALS TO qualified buyer on this MLS 275 Luxury 4-door sedan, dark 1968 CHEVELLE Malibu two-bedroom home, priced CORRECTION blue with black vinyl top, '70 Buick Custom Skylark 2- SS 2-door hardtop, ,396 at only $10,500. 5 room house, has good matching blue interior, pow- door hardtop, V-8, auto- engine, 4-speed, blue with Jim illausolf _ y_\ M possibilities. East Location. 1965 BEL AIR er steering, power brakes, matic, power steering, ra- white vinyl top, white ™ TOWN1 \»# ff I On Edgewpod MLS 277 power windows, power seat, dio, stereo tape player interior. 4-dopr, 283, automatic, FACTORY AIR, tilt steering FGUR-bedrooraY two and a radio, etc. and speakers, beIted 1966 CHEVROLET .. .. $1198 | Good investment, remodel wheel, radio, power antenna, whitewall tires, tint wind- f half bath home only two this 5 room home. 2 bed- SPECIAL $595 rear speaker. This car is 1967 RAMBLER Rebel, 4- years old. y Large panelled shield, vinyl roof, under- 1968 CH EVROLET ...... $1698 | ! rooms, garage and r good absolutely loaded with equip- coated. 16 000 miles. , door sedan, 6, automatic, family room, big master ; lot. MLS 273 FENSKE ment and will go anywhere , white with blue interior. 1969 CHEVROLET ...... $2498 bedroom. Carpeted. today. $3095. | ' t AUTO SALES 3966 OLDSMOBILE Dyna- If You Need 4 Bedrooms '69 Chevrolet Impala 2-door mic 88 4-door sedan, 8, 1967 FORD Wagon ...... $1098T Ideal Location 460 E. 2nd. $1295 1 See this new listing today. hardtop, V-8, automatic, automatic, power steer- FOR the family needing four Newly remodeled in last power steering, radio, ra- ing, power brakes, blue 1965 PONTIAC ...... $ 9981] bedrooms. There's a fire - year. Carpeted and draped '65 Cadillac Deville dial ply tires. 32,000 miles. with matching interior. '¦ ' 4-door hardtop, light brown , : . 60 DAYS or 2,500 Miles place, new carpeting, and a living room and dining CHRISTMAS $2295. 1966 BUICK LeSabre 4- fcj in color with matching 100% WARRANTY ON GOLD charming kitchen. Near room. New plumbing and '69 Ford Galaxie 500 4-door door hardtop, 8,: automa- STAR CARS JK wiring. New gas furnace. BONUS brown upholstery. Another tic, power steering, pow- schools and downtown. loaded with equipment car. sedan, 390 V-8, automatic, Will take Contract for Deed. power steering, factory er brakes, tan with match- Eas C MLS WR Make it a family gift with This is a fine automobile, ing interior. Good t entral luxury at its best. You can air, tint glass, new white- 1966 PONTIAC Catalina 2- LOCATION. Four bedrooms, one of our reconditioned save a lot of money here. wall tires. 46,000 miles. cdj&Lt* Corner Lot $2395. door hardtop, 8, automa- ^^u £hwjf awn^ big kitchen, new gas fur- used cars. $1695 tic, power steering, power nace. Garage workshop. 4 bedroom family home. 2 '69 DODGE Polara 4-door '69 Mustang Grande, 351 brakes, tilt wheel, yellow "In Beautiful Downtown Winona" . H UNDER $13,000. car garage with electric- V-8, automatic, center eye opener. This home is in hardtop, automatic, pow- with black interior. 121 Huff Tel. 452-2395 W er steering, air condi- console, power steering, 1966 FORD Galaxie 500 428 \ Tel. 452-5351 prime condition and has an factory air, tint glass, Open Mon.-Wedi-Fri. Evenings excellent central location. tioning, vinyl roof. engine, automatic Litre 2- ¦ I ' WALZ ¦V ¦ ' • ' _ . " - • . ' • ' . 1» i AFTER HOURS GALL: whitewall tires, vinyl roof. . • . . ; ' - MLS 272 Buick - Olds - GMC - Opel ¦ '[ door convertible, power '68 BUICK Wildcat Custom Tel. 452-3660 $2495. . - . . steering, bucket seats, Laura Satka '..... 452-7622 2-door hattltop, automa- jBBfyc^vwoLET ^ycHcvBOLgT^HycHgvnouTr^^ycHBVwoijrT, Laura Fisk 452-2118 Open All Day Saturday Open Mon. & Fri. Nights '69 Chevrolet Impala Con- blue with black top, blue Myles Petersen ...... 452-4009 tic, power steering, pow- interior. ¦_ After Hours Phone: er brakes. vertible, 350 V-8, auto- matic, power steering, ra- 3962 FORD Galaxie 500 4- Pat Magin ...... 452-4934 '68 CHRYSLER Newport 4- START YOUR dio, rear speaker, white- door Sedan, red and white Jan Allen ...... 452-5139 door sedan, automatic, ¦: wall tires. A real sharpie. with matching interior. Ed Hartert ...... 452-3973 power steering, power HOLIDAY SEASON $2350. fro itsauf Bill Ziebell ...... 452-4854 brakes. MANY OTHER FINE CARS '68 DODGE Charger V-8, WITH A '69 Ford Torino GT 2-door AND TRUCKS TO , hardtop. 351 V-8, automa- __ Accessories, Tires, Parts 104 automatic, power steer- CHOOSE FROM nm 1-OWNER SPECIAL tic, radio, jjower steering, ing, power brakes, vinyl TWO like new snow tires and 1 used; also whitewall tires, vinyl in- COUNTRYm* 2 wheels, all 15". Will fit Ramfcler, roof. terior. 24,000 miles. $2395. Ford. eft. $35 takes all. Tel. 452-7-94. from JERRY'S '67 CHEVROLET Impala 4- experience! 3iMr374 1 WINONA., PAIR OF snow tires, used little, 7.75*14 door hardtop, V-8, auto- WINONA AUTO '67 Ford Country Sedan 4- whltewalls with wheels, mounted end matic, power steering. door, 390 V-8, automatic, AUTO SALES balanced. Elmer H. Matzke, Lewiston. power steering, radio, roof Tel. 5341. SALES 759 E. 3rd Tel. 454-2558 1966 Cadillac sedan DeVille. 1966 Fury III 2 door Hard- '67 MERCURY Montclair 4- carrier, excellent tires, Open from 8 a.m. til 9 p.m. Polyglas tires : Luxury plus, top, stick. Al) New Listings FOUR F-70X14 Goodyear. door, automatic, power air conditioned. $1750. end megs. Excellent condition. Will, fit steering, power brakes, Nicely remodeled 3 bedroom Fords. Tel. Rujhford 854-7443. '66 CHRYSLER 300 Mobile Homes, trailers 111 $2095 $1395 air conditioning. 2 door Hardtop. Yellow in '65 Chevrolet Impala 4-door home. Some remodeling hardtop, V-8, automatic, 1970 Chrysler Nevrport. Fac- 1968 Mustang 2 dr, Hardtop, Boats, Motors, Etc. 106 '66 COMET 4-door, 6 cyRa- color with black •vinyl . roof . TR COURT In Lewiston has space avail- inside still 60 be done. power steering, radio, ex- able for Immediate occupancy. Tel. Bob tory warrantee. V-8, automatic. aluminum boat with der, automatic. equipped with 383 Cu. in Material is there, ready ROUN DABOUT 14' cellent tires. $895. Hennessey. Lewiston 2451. for a do-it-yourselfer. $11,- self starter and steering equipment and V-8 engine (regular gas). $3695 $1995 batteries. 2-wheel boat trailer. 45 h.p. '65 CHEVROLET Malifcu Automatic trans mission, FOR SALE or rent, 19<8 Star mobile 200. MLS-T. Owner will Evlnrude motor. 150 m.p. arc electric Super Sport V-8, auto- home, cn lot •» Lewiston. T«l, Lewiston 1968 Buick Soberg, Box 211, All cars winterized and 1970 Dodge Polara 4 dr. Special station take contract for deed. woldor. Odell M. matic, power steering, power steering, power «81. . ' Mabel, Minn. Tel. 493-5235. brakes, Radio, whitewall Hardtop. Air. wagon. power brakes, low mile- and tuned for winter weath- IP THERE IS a Winnebago Motor dome - with One story duplex, separate JOHNSON 40 h.p., 14' Starcralt; boat- age and sharp. tires, bucket seats er. Buy with confidence at In your picture, see Tommy's Trailer $3295 $2095 entry for each apartment, house; tanks, skis, ropes, preservers, center arm rest and MUCH Sales at once I Price Increase has been miscellaneous. Tel. 452-4300 after 5:30; unnounced for Jan. V 1971. Tommy's 1967 Cutlass 2 dr. Hardtop. 1969 Custom Surburban wag- two bedrooms in each. no enswer, 454-3365. '64 CHRYSLER Newport 4- MORE Trailer Sales, 3 miles S. of Galesvllle Good income. Central lo- door sedan. WEEKEND SPECIAL on 35 & 53, Buckets, vinyl roof. on, power steering. Motorcycles, Bicycles 107 P&J cation. $22,400. MLS-T. '63 CHEVROLET Impala 4- INVADER—1570 Hx55', 4 monlhs old, on $1895 $2795 ONLY $1395 lot. Must sell. Tel. 507-289-2584 before Owner will take contract HONDA Motorcycles, Polerli Snowmo- dbor, V-8, automatic. MOTORS ( p.m. or 452-7774 after i. 1968 Buick Skylark 2 dr. 1965 Impala Super Sport 8 for deed. biles, rider's accessories. Swell gilt Ideas for Christmas! >63 4- Hardtop, FORD Galaxie 500 '68 BUICK (Successor to Miller Motors) Many home* to choose from at Hardtop. Vinyl roof. dr. ROBB MOTORS, INC. automatic HOME SALE8 Large corner lot, Two or Winona —Eau Claire door, V-8, , Rushford, Minn. COULEE MOBILE three bedroom, lovely pan- power steering, power Special Hwy. 14-41 E., Winona Tel. 452-4274 $2195 $1195 HONDAi — Immediate delivery. SL350, 6 passenger wagon equip- ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff eling in living room and brakes. ------_-_----______--______------a^i^lBBBHH $ff C ff ^C ^L ff CL350, CB350, Honda Mini Trails. New ped with V-8 engine, Auto- «4> 3> 4> ^«p^ ^ *J) ^ ^> ^> ^) ^) ^) ^p ^) ^> ^>^^4) family room. Across from Honda 350CC K2, 5599, CT70 Mini Trails, ^ ^ grade school , near snoo- 5299. Starks Sport Shop, Prolrle du matic transmission, power ping area. $13 , 900. MLS-T. Chien, Wis. Tel. 324-2331 steering, Air Conditioning, BAUTCH Deluxe wheel covers, Beau- WE HAVE BEEN PROMISED A FEW Snowmobiles A 07 A Hobby Farm — Well con- MOTOR SALES tiful bronze with light tan MORE "FACTORY EXECUTIVE" CARS. 4 bedroom home. SNOWMOBIE TRAILER — like new. vinyl" interior, immaculate a-_c___-____K_8$^it '¦. i r^_fi-______i structed, Chrysler - Plymouth - Dodge 1 Good barn and outbuild- "Tony " Stelnke, 433 Clark's Lone, inside and out. > a__e_____HP t£&V'^^ V^" ^i1l2JB-______-____H R-2. .Arcadia, Wis. TH EY SHOULD BE HERE BY THIS WEEK- ings. Could be a perfect Tel. 323-3118 WEEKEND SPECIAL place for boarding- riding SKIROULE SNOWMOBILES — END. STOP IN, WE MAY RECEIVE JUST The only snowmobile good enough ONLY $2145 horses. Between Stockton to carry the Coleman nomol and Minnesota City . Own- BEE JAY'S CAMPER SALES THE ONE FOR YOU. 3648 W. 6th Tel. 4J2-4J29 "We Service What We Sell" ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff er will take co"frnc( for Open evenings and Sat. ffpffffffffffffffffff deed. $28 ,500. MLS-T. $^J) U) u) u) .3) 4) *ip^^A^^A^AA^^4j)«P THINK SNOWI Think Sno-Prlnce, Let us Telephone Your Want Ads Crescent — Valley service your snowmobile for the winter Near La mason. Wlnone Recreational Equip- 1908 Fury III 4 door Hard- 1969 New Yorker. All . the farm bordering the Root ment Co,, 74 W. 2nd. Hour*, 12-9 week- to The Winona Daily News Cold, Snow or Hail. Jerry Heidenreich, Pres. top. Tutone. extras including tape deck. Ri-ver . 479 acres, 320 till- days; 9-5 Sat. $21 95 $3895 able, 159 acres in pasture, Oo Ono Bolter Dial 452-3321 1969 PLYMOUTH Fury III 4-door rich silty loam, highly Go Skl-Dool Tho nineteen seventy for an Ad Taker 1968 PLYMOUTH Fury m 2-door hardtop 1967 LTD 4 door Hardtop. 1967 Fury III 2 dr. Hardtop. productive land. Modern ONE Local one owner. You can't say no to this one. (j liedroom home, 2 barns, DICK'S MARINE I 1968 PLYMOUTH Fury n Station Wagon granary , ar- Latsch Island, Winona Municipal Harbor $1895 $1795 2 fiole sheds , Tol. 452-3009 3rd and Washington 1966 PLYMOUTH Station Wagon the lor Christmas tesian well . One nf BUY a Skl-Doo snowmobile Open Mon. & Fri . Evenings 1969 Fury III 4 door Hard- 1966 Plymouth 4 door. Fac- best farms in Houston and got a Polaroid Colorpack IV cam- 1968 PONTIAC Bonneville Station Wagon era FREE. top. tory air. County. $119,500. MLS-T. 1966 PONTIAC Bonneville 2-door hardtop $2495 $1395 Four Tots between Hiphway POLARIS 1969 BUICK Le Sabre 4-door SALES e. SERVICE 1967 Impala 4 door Hardtop. 1970 Fury III 4 door Hard- 43 and Glen Mary Road. New & Used Snowmobiles 1969 BUICK Opel Rallye Sport Three lots 8O'x200\ one ROBB MOTORS INC. One owner, top. A factory executive car. ¦¦¦¦ Wlnone — Eau Claire ¦ ¦¦¦¦ "Bug" 2-jdoor tot 100'x250>'. $13,400. AUTO SERVICE 1969 VOLKSWAGEN $1695 $3295 MLS-T. POLARIS 1968 CHEVROLET Impala 2-door hardtop 1967 Plymouth 4 door sedan. 1964 Chevrolet 3 seat station At the Arches — 3 bedroom Trucks, Tractors, Trailers 108 [T iVlu llJ CENTER 1968 CHEVROLET Impala 4-door hardtops Extra clean. wagon. homo on 75'xlRO* lot . Base- 1967 CHRYSLER 300 4-door hardtop $1795 $795 ment parage. $3,500. 1965 CHRYSLER New Yorker 4-door MLS-T. '69 CHEVROLET COMPLETE . . . GUARANTEED , %-ton pickup, V-8, 3-speed 1968 FORD XL 2-door hardtop Four miles south of Ridge- mod- transmission, radio, tu-tone, 1967 THUNDERBIRD Brougham 2-door hardtop WE HAVE THESE way, 160 acre farm, step rear bumper. BRAKE JOB $43.88 ern 5 bedroom house, good 1968 FORD Torino 2-door hardtop barn with 26 stanchions, 1966 BUICK Electra 225 4-door 'TOYOTAS" barn cleaner. Milk house, '64 DODGE Here is what we do: DELIVERY pole shed, hog house, 6-pnssengcr crew cab, */*- 1963 PONTIAC Bonneville 2-door hardtop FOR IMMEDIATE grnnnry. en'ekon coop. ton pickup, 6-cylinder, 4- 1. Install NEW brake linings all four wheels 1—Corolla Station Wagon 2—Hilux Piclcups $$9, 500. MLS-T. speed transmission. 2. Completely rebuild wheel cylinder 100% WARRANTY ON 2_Corona 4-door sedans 1—Crown 4-door sedan ' 3. Turn drums and aro shoes to fit drums for 1—Corona Mark II 4-door sedan Town & Country '54' CHEVROLET complete and safe braking '67 AND NEWER Itenl Estate %-ton pickup, 6-cylinder, 4. Bleed Brake Lines and add New Brake fluid 3-speed transmission. Office: 454-3741 5. Clean, inspect end repack front wheel bearings Toyota — Plymouth — Chrysler . . I ¦» After hours call; BAUTCH mzmmw Mark Zimmerman 451-1470 Your Country Style Dealer Gone Knrnsch ... 454-5009 MOTO R SALES Ford-Mercury-Lincoln - Miracle Mall Jim Mohan 454-2307 Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge Montgomery Ward f Open Men.- Wed. Frl. Evenings Nystrom Motors Inc. Herb Gunderson ... 454-3368 Arcadia, Wis. 454-4300 Tel, 464-5170 2nd and Washington — Phone 452-4080 ' MIRACLE MALL Tel. Nora Heinlen .... 452-3175 Tel. 323-3118 BUZZ SAWYER By Roy Grant ' ¦ ¦• ' ' ' ¦ ——a " ^ ^ . : .. _ . . .X. .
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BEETLE BAILEY By Mort Walker
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APARTMENT 3-S By Alex Kotzky THE WIZARD OF ID By Parker and Hart
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