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11-16-1964 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News

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Plane Carrying 28 Crashes in Nevada Wreckage on Man Kills Wife , Four Mountain Peak Near Las Vegas LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Children. Then Sell Wreckage of an airliner that hit SARTELL, Minn. (AP) - A a month ago by a court-ordered seeming anonymity in this river- "He wasn't a drinking man," a mountain peak in a storm 49-year-old laborer, distraught separation. side village of 1,000, just north said Sheriff Darrel Hurd, a for- last night was found this The over the breakup of his 21-year six surviving children , of St. Cloud in central Minne- mer resident of Sartell. morning. Sheriff s deputies said aged 12 to 20 — one of them "Regular church-goers, the marriage, shot and killed his sota. nicked by a bullet—huddled with whole family," said a Catholic all 28 persons aboard were wife and four of their 10 children relatives in puzzled mourning "We didn't neighbor much," priest. dead. late Saturday night, then took said a woman next door. "No, his own life. today, making arrangements for The propjet Bonanza Air- the burials. there was no trouble from them. One of the survivor!, Thomas, He was John S. Jenderseck, It was a surprise to me when 15, was nicked on the side of lines plane vanished during a arrested once for assaulting his The six deatha burst opon a I heard she had asked for a the bead by a bullet from the snowstorm just before it was wife and forced out of his home family that had dwelled in separation a month ago." death weapon, a long-barrelled due to land on a flight from .22 caliber target pistol. Nine Phoenix. shots were fired. Their -victims: Searchers spotted the wreck- Mrs. Catherine Jeaderseck, 42; James, 16; Phillip, 14; Joan, CRASH IN SNOWSTORM KILLS 28 ... on a mountain 10 miles from the airport age shortly after dawn. 10; David, 6, and Jenderseck The wreckage of the pilots' compartment which the plane was trying to reach. At Helicopters flew to the scene Republicans Near himself. of a Bonanza airliner which crashed near least 28 persons were killed. (AP Photofax ) and began flying bodies to a As pieced together by Sheriff Las Vegas, Nev., last night lies in the snow lower level. Hurd, the story of death began The scene is about 16 miles about 4 p.m. Saturday when Jen- southwest of Las Vegas near derseck telephoned his wife to the railroad community of Ar« Showdown on Burch demand a reconciliation — "or den. WASHINGTON (AP ) — Sen. Among others, Gov. Nelson A. President Johnson that the par- there'll be trouble." The terrain is so rugged in Barry Goldwater's support ol Rockefeller of New York, form- ty should honor Burch's "con- He entered the home through Hundreds of Drivers that area that jeeps could not tract." reach the scene. Bean Burch's claim that he has er Ambassador Henry Cabot Goldwater picked Burch the kitchen door about 11:30 Lodge and Sen. Jacob K. Javits for the chairmanship after his p.m. Saturday. As told to offi- Searchers were directed to "a four-year contract" to head of New York made it clear they own nomination at the San cers by the son, Thomas, the area by a motorist who the Republican the National Com- will use all the influence they Francisco convention and the father, said: "I've wasted 21 told officers he saw the plana mittee pushed bickering Repub- have to force a change in lead- committee in turn elected the years of my life if you won't skimming the ground ma licans Stalled today in Blizzard toward a showdown ei ship of the national commit- Phoenix, Ariz., lawyer. come back." . PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) ' posses into t desert whirl of snow eight miles south over control of their party - A in Arizona s northwest corner. snow-swep ma- tee. mountains south of Kingman in of the city. The witness said chinery. Burch has scheduled a Janu- when Mrs. Jenderseck re- snowstorm that blitzed the Arizona 93, the main route ' search of the lost, who were the plane had one wheel down, Burch said Sunday he will Goldwater said OH his return ary meeting of ttie national buffed the plea, the father Rocky Mountains Sunday from Phoenix to Las Vegas, Nev., was closed by the high- mostly hunters. All were found as if it were trying to land. fight back if anyone tries to oust Sunday night from a Jamaican committee at which be has said stepped out of the living room brought blizzards to northern way patrol after at least 100 by late Sunday night. The Fairchild F27, Bonanza him. vacation after his defeat bv he would stand or fall on a vote for a moment, then returned and Arizona and spilled wintry cars were stranded about 15 Sheriff Floyd Cisney said he'd Airline's Flight 114 from Phoe- of confidence. began to fire. weather across normally mild miles south of Kingman, never seen a heavier storm so nix, Ariz., was three minutes An Associated Press survey Mrs. Jenderseck was struck central ang southern deserts. in a radar scren about 10 early in the year. from a landing at McCarran first, with the three bullets. Hundreds of motorists were Popularity Grows showed that the comparatively Deputy Pearl Misak said, Field when it vanished from the few national committee mem- The .others died methodically stranded, hunters marooned The Arizona Highway Patrol radar screen at 8:27 p.m. and 13 reported miss- to the east, "There was about four inches of bers willing to express an opin- of single shots to the head — a persons also shut off U.S. 66 ing as tne late-afternoon bliz- and the Mohave County sher- snow on the ground and the The plane was heading north- ion were about evenly divided girl and boy near the living wind piled up drifts as high room television set, a teenager zard struck tht Kingman area iff's office dispatched its jeep ^s east, dropping down into the on whether the chairman should two feet on both U.S. 66 and mountain-rimmed Las Vegas step aside because of his part in on the stairs, the 6-year-old boy State Route S3. . in his valley for an instrument land- the election campaign. Many bed, apparently never Public Rates wakened as he clutched three Motels filled up as the strand- ing. members of the committee said stuffed animal, toys. ed motorists poured into King- Sheriffs officers said Bob something must be done to re- Baker, a Las Vegas man, told build the party, but not many Thomas a*d the twin girts, man and many were taken into Janet and Janice, 12, ran in Forest Fires private homes. them: "I was driving on High- were specific about what form way 91 between 8 and 8:30 p.m. this should take. terror to the home of Mrs. Frank No serious injuries were re- Davidson next door. when I saw a Bonanza plana, 70 Kennedy as Veteran politicians had ex- ported there, but a Prescott to 100 feet off tlie ground, head- "Help us Help luf'. abe re- pected Burch to save his $30,- school teacher, Callie Mae ing southeast. There were no called their screams. Rage in East White, 20, was killed when her 000-a-year job by some concili- landing tights on. One landing "Dad's over there. He shot car skidded off snowy Arizona atory statement that he would CHICAGO (AP)—Forest fires The temperature dropped to gear was down." mother." 69 about 30 miles south of Pres- serve all party factions as a The three eldest - Robert, 20, continued to ravage woodlands 25 below zero in West Yellow- Baker's location was about ' cott. non-policy-making director. Judith, 19, and Richard, 18 — in the desperately dry eastern stone, Montanas traditional where the plane was last sight- President half of the nation today, icebox. It was 4 below in Butte. The main highway from Phoe- Good adding returned from Saturday night ed on radar but his sighting This would have followed the to the already staggering cost A 16-inch snow stalled traffic nix to Flagstaff , 140 miles to the gave the plane a different direc- By LOUIS HARRIS outings to learn of the tragedy , was closed for more than pattern of Goldwater's state- of the record-shattering autumn near Broadus, Mont. north tion: south instead of north. as they were met by sheriff's six hours before the patrol got With nearly a year gone by since John F. Kenne- ment that the Republican drought. Snow fell in the mountains of Sheriff's jeeps and squad cars dy's death shocked the world, more than one in three course in the next four years deputies outside the house. some 500 cars rolling early to- The children were in seclusion Rainfall dampened portions of western New Mexico, and Zuni gathered on Highway 91 — the will be carved out by GOP the Midwest Sunday, day. Americans say that they miss him more as time goes in the St. Cloud home but the reported a 4-inch fall. Northern road between Los Angeles and members of the Senate and of Jender- downfjl The patrol summoned all its by. Most of all, people miss the late President's style seck's brother Donald. light wasn't enough to Arizona and the mountains of Las Vegas — near the railroad- , dramatic personality. House under the leadership of make up for weeks and months southern Arizona were hit by heavy equipment and called on siding settlement of Arden, of leadership and his forceful private wreckers to help pull By six to one, the American people rank Mr. Ken- Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illi- Jenderseck was arrested for of no rain. snowfalls. where Baker said he had seen nois and Rep. Charles A. Hal* assault last March in a com- Communities renewed their The Midwest drought cars back on the road. Chains nedy as one of the nation's better chief executives, abated were necessary on nearly all the plane. leek of Indiana. plaint signed by his wife. The effort to gain federal emergency somewhat after ' with 42% ready to accord a day of sub- northern Arizona routes today. The season s first snow was separation order, directing him relief funds, farmers hauled stantial rainfalls. The U.S. "one of the Flagstaff reported nine inches falling heavily as the search him a place as to leave the home, was issued water to livestock, city officials Weather Bureau predicted a greatest" of snow and Prescott eight. was launched. Soon after men to occupy the Sept. 23. Since then, Jeaderseck planned alternate water sup- sharp temperature decrease as the F27 disappeared McCarran out WEATHER White House. Even two had lived in a St. Cloud hotel as plies and fanners watched their a cold front moved toward the Snows and chilling rains Field was closed to traffic. An- of every three persons who FEDERAL FORECAST he worked at two Jobs, in a man- winter crop wilt. heart of the nation. spread across central and other Bonanza plane, Flight 104, voted for Richard Nixon in WINONA AND ufacturing plant and as a part- Nel- VICINITY - But in the Northwest, snow Considerable street flooding southern Arizona, with snow landed north of the city at 1960 now regard Mr. Kenne- Mostly fair tonight and Tuesday, time clerk in the Sartell post- mantling higher mountains and lis Air Force Base. was piled three feet deep in was reported in northeastern dy as having been a good Wanner Tuesday. Low tonight office. leaving a four-inch cover to sur- Cars of a few curious drove spots and temperatures plum- Kansas after a 4-inch rainfall Six to eight Inches of snow President. in 20s, high Tuesday 40. meted below zero. prised residents of Ajo, near the slowly past the weather-beaten and varying amounts of rain Mexican border. covered the open desert country A special survey of a cross- LOCAL WEATHER yellow frame house Sunday. In- Officials closed U.S. 160 over dampened an area from central near Arden, and higher drifts section of Americans just Official side, the blood had been Wolf Creek Pass in southwest- Illinois to the Texas Panhandle. In southwestern Colorado, stalled many rescue-party cars. observations for the 24 washed U.S. 160 over Wolf Creek Pass before the anniversary of hours ending at 12 away on the worn floors. ern Colorado and Independence Temperatures in the eastern The highway and the railroad m. Sunday! Pass in the central was reopened today after a Mr. Kennedy's death reveals that four highlights of his In one room stood a pool ta- portion as United States remained unsea- run through the bottom of the 4,- Maximum, 69; minimum, 41; three-foot snowfall closed the career stand foremost in the public's mind: ble once a gathering place snow piled up three feet deep. sonably warm. The range went 500-foot-high valley, which is noon, 49; precipitation, .11, , for Ten inches of route Sunday. (1) His handling of the missile crisis in Cuba in teenage boys. snow fell Ln As- from the 25 below in West yel- within sight of the neon glow of pen. lowstone to 90 in Presidio October , i»t}_.. Official observations for the 24 Outside stood Jenderseck's , Tex. the Las Vegas strip to the north. In Wyoming, light snow con- Records were set in Louisiana, (2) His position as the President, only a fair President, hours ending at 12 m. today: station wagon. A sack of candy Most of the valley is open coun- tinued to fall and highways Tennessee, Arkansas and Texas try where a plane could possibly first Catholic to be elected or a poor President?" Maximum, 59; minimum, 34; bars lay unused on the front were reported slick seat. In and danger- the mercury lifted into the 80s Piggy Back survive a forced landing. to the Presidency. noon, 34; precipitation, none. the back lay a pocket- ous. RANKING OF JFK AS size book, a novel about crime. and 90s. Not many miles away on tha (3) His stand on behalf of PRESIDENT east and west are mountains. civil rights for minorities, In 1M0 Car Topples On the west, in the Clark Moun- A cross-section of the Ameri- Voted for: tains, slopes climb steeply to 8,- can people was asked: Total Ken- 504-foot Potosi Mountain. To the "As time goes by since the Public nedy Nkon east foothills rise to 5,000-foot % % % Rail Signals death of President Kennedy, do heights. you personally feel you miss One of greatest 42 58 16 MILWAUKEE (AP)-A "pig- Good President 43 38 62 gy back" mail car attached to Bonanza officials hoped at him more, or do you feel that Only fair 11 3 22 time is healing the wound , or the rear of a Milwaukee Road first the plane might have been Poor 3 8 passenger train twisted partly flown to another field after its don't you feci strongly about Not sure 1 1 2 him one way or the other? off its flat car Sunday, toppling pilot somehow lost radio com- The public was then asked: munications. The plane carried this list of things, everything in its path on a 10- ON MISSING JFK "From enough fuel to keep it aloft until which one or two do you feel mile stretch, In 1950 11 p.m. that John F. Kennedy will be Milwaukee station master Voted for: remembered?" Edward Gromacki said the mail Soon after that Myron Reyn- Total Ken- JFK PLACE IN HISTORY car was picked up in La Crosse olds, Bonanza's vice president Public nedy Nixon la 1M0 by the "Pioneer Limited," in charge of operations, told % % % Voted for: bound for Milwaukee and Chi- newsmen : "The fuel point has As Time Goe» By: Total Ken- cago from Minneapolis. The 50- been passed. We must assume Miss him more .15 46 18 Public nedy Nixon foot mail car swung out about the plane is down. We just don't Time heals % % % 10 feet to the side while the know where." wounds 36 36 22 Missile crisis train was traveling about 70 ¦ Don't feel In Cuba 43 47 37 m.p.h. strongly 35 18 60 First Catholic in Gromacki said about eight Wisconsin Marsh White House 41 39 47 Nearly half the people who warning signals at crossings Area Burned Over Kennedy in 1960 Inauguration and six semaphore signals were voted for Mr. speech 30 42 35 are increasingly aware of his toppled and a 10-foot hole was MUKWONAGO, Wis. M — Nearly two in 10 of Stand on civil torn ln the roof of the train Fire burned o\er more than absence. righta 38 40 32 those who voted against him station in suburban Brookfleld. l ,2O0 brush-covered acres in the same remorse Nuclear Test state-owned Vernon Marsh con- express the . Ban Treaty 23 27 17 The mail car finally struck a Part of the reason (or this bridge abutment in Wauwatosa, servative area Saturday before about Mr Kennedy Standing firm it was brought under control. deep feeling . on Berlin 23 23 22 just outside Milwaukee. Grom- undoubtedly stems from the fact acki said 36 bags of mail were Heavy rain Sunday morning he became a martyred Starting Peace that Corps 22 23 21 thrown from the car after a finally extinguished the blaze. President. But part, too, derives Bay of Pigs 18 13 2ft rear door was torn off. Twenty- Smoke and flames were visi- from the high regard his fellow eight of the sacks were found ble 18 miles away. Conservation still have for his Live news countrymen conferences 17 18 IS near the tracks. The other eight officials and firemen from Muk- record In office. Winning I960 were recovered from the Men- wonago, the town and city of People were asked: THEY ESCAPED ... Six surviving children of Mr. and (left to right) Robert, 20; Thomas, 15; Janet, 12; Judith, 19; election 15 14 17 omonee River. Waukesha, Eagle and Big Bend Mrs. John S. Jenderseck sit in numb anguish Sunday after Janice, 12, and Richard, 10. After being hospitalized (or shock , would you rank John (Figures add to more than "Piggy back" mail cars aro (ought the blase. "How their father shot to death Mrs. Jenderseck the youngsters were taken to an uncle' F. Kennedy as a President - 100% Because many respondents , the other four s home, where this loaded at postal stations and The cause was not deter- ) one of the greate.t, a good named more than one.) children and himself , in Sartell, Minn, Tht youngsters are picture was taken. (AP Photofax then transferred to flat cars. mined. Stockton Firemen H#» money Handicapped _ ^-_flB -HHlR ^ftk _MI__ r IT I No down, take SOMETHING TO LIVE BY Galesville Tax Out at 1:30 A.M. payl ' i » » i ' to m -I K i . « I lU rffllllJ CHARGt II! month* For Woods Blaze til Levy May STOCKTON, Minn. (Special) Boy Leads Hunter —Several volunteers were rous- Many a ed from their beds about 1:30 a.m. Sunday to extinguish a Rise Slightly fire in a hollow tree and sur- Normal Life GALESVILLE, Wis. (Special) rounding brush on property ELMWOOD PARK, HI. (AP) Not Too Anxious — A city budget hearing will be owned by Harold Laak, Minne- — Brace GoQgola dances, By BILL MERRILL questioned the value of such held Nov. 30 at 7:30 p.m. sota City. swims, plays the trombone and expenditure as was necessary The proposed budget is down makes model can and planes. Hunting has become a must The scene of the early morn- to enter this sport in class. $3,100 from last year. City dis- ing blaze was a mile north of He is a guard on the Elmwood ¦ perfect to many a sportsman. I'd like bursements are estimated at " ¦ ¦ would- Stockton on a bluff. About one- Park High School freshman to give some thought to a AND WHAT did his wife lay $40te62. School costs to be paid - 1 ^ be sportsman that might bet- when asked of her husband's quarter acre of brush and leaves football team, and he plans to by the city are $67,86*3, which try out for basketball. ter b» classified a "gentleman" success as a duckhunter? "Oh," , the burned. is higher. Because of this A rural couple spotted the hunter, a product of our 20th she laughed, "he didn't get a mill rate will be slightly higher. Bruce. 14, is a typical boy ex- Save u to 40%! flames while en route home has no fingers and has '^ P century. thing. He came home and said, John Williamson and Clarence cept he Wm ^^-^-' • 1*\- especially for us We live in a land of milk and 'You know, Dorothy, I couldn't Brown, street commissioners, on County Road 23. They re- only one toe on each foot. The •^fl H- K^ m? ^ . ^rfe* . w 'iV {ry, /\byMade of one and for the most part, shoot one of those birds. They're ported it to Mayor George Hin- only thing he can't do, his moth- '^V ' -r* __ >*&\l4_*^r the maker of honey, will contact the power company JH-H " there is plenty for all , as is so pretty out there on the lake. for a light on the service road ton, who went to the scene with er says, is tie his shoelaces. v^-^-^-^-^i V..>i_&. ^"2-£a_MfSL_< '' tha leedingTHE ONLYnational evidenced in the way we Ameri- I just didn't have the heart. '" south from the Ekern corner. Jack and Lawrence Oevering, "It's very important to contin- WmmWB ^mmt ^ ^ ' JL\mW ^Kbrands. DIP- cans work at the art of relaxa- It's the truth. I knew the Stockton, and Louis McMartin ue your education and try these FERENCE IS OUtUQW. MRS. ALMA Quina. treasurer, , Wm\\m\\mm\\\\\\W ^^ '^mm W^^mLmmmmma. tion. With shorter working fellow and his wife. Planning asked help at the liquor store Jr., LeRoy Gaulke, Gale Haase different things." Bruce said. '^^mm\\\\\\m\\\mX ^mW ^^lmm\\\\\\\\mmm\. L0W hours, paid va- to go hunting soon? What will during the holidays and with Dale Prigge and Ray, Arthur "You've got to at least try." , antelope , bear Hills- • mW\\\\\m^m\\\\mWLammmmm\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\mm\^^ ^ cations, and it be — deer , or collection of taxes. Howard and Holland Udebuhr, ;^ maybe duck? Whatever the dale Township. Bruce, who was born handi- ^9|j ^B_!^_^«_i_fl-9-_- ^i_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^__-___ time - payment Barenthin and Al Brandtner, capped, began his education at *w'^H_fl_l^_^_N^_aj Kj_^EflRHE^H|^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |BBtoi^^ case, look around. All you need find ex- With two hand pumps, pails plans, a man's councilmen, will help the Luther Burbank School for to find is another guy with a perienced persons. ~he named of water and shovels, the men dream can be- ' man, Handicapped Children in Chica- come' a reality heart like Dorothy s and eight persons delinquent in per- fought the stubborn fire two 'll get fitted out pretty cheap, go. After three years his par- __ ^^^ m with few varia- you sonal property tax payments. hours. - It was concentrated > !/ ^ ^^mmmmW * w~ 're not too fussy ents transferred him to Rhodes • SS^mmmmu mm\*¦ ¦ **HeBmaa\a»¦ ^^^m . ¦ tions. Where providing you The council requested the at- mostly in the tree. They sur- '"Trv vffl l _ ^^^ ^*^mmm\ **^' ' . about an exact fit. School, regular public school our granddads torney to quote the statute of mised a hunter may have start- a in River Grove, a suburb of Chi- V^ batter than aver. Ev«ry went hunting PERSONALLY I'M not a limitations regarding old re- ed the fire in the tree to smoke . •'$ • * This year 'i value* ara ceipts so storage boxes may be cago. both welt and toe. primarily to hunting enthusiast, but I wond- out a squirrel or coon. . . • pair with built in run stops in lower the cost to removed from the liquor store. In the fourth grade Bruce be- All proportioned for perfect fit* er if half of the inducement The fire department grant in- nf livinc the Merrill the great out-of-doors isn't that gan playing the slide trombone. S«amla*i man of today Bill Merrill creased from $200 to $500, The He manipulates it with his SPURGION!S Budgtt gear with its appeal to a per- council set $10 a day for elec- Flags Return hunts for the sheer delight of son's manhood. It's like a boy wrists and now is a member of it. His equipment for a Sa- tion officials. the Elmwood Park High band. getting his first pair of long The city will pay Mattie Bol- To Top Nov. 19 turday tramp in the woods or a hat like Dad's. Oh , "Bruce is very strongly deter- '%# 7 pants, linger for screens damaged by ) pi», would put an infantryman of don't misunderstand me. I'm WASHINGTON (AP - Flags mined to do things," his moth* shame. tankers of water overflowing. the good old days to sure hunting game — large or Florence Ertel was granted a which have been flown at half ar. Mrs. Raymond E, Gongola , Gift Box of 3 pair 1.95 I once knew a man who pur- small, can be intriguing. It's staff in mourning for the late said. "And he always finds a needed by malt beverages license at the chased all the gear just that I keep seeing my Green Lantern. The assessor President Herbert Hoover will way." SPURGEON'S Finest Seamless 20th century sports enthu- be returned to full staff on the a friend in my mind's eye, stand- will be the same ; pay is raised Plain or micro film. ^ Pr siast to go duckhunting. His ing before the mirror wearing from $600 to $800. morning of Nov. 19, the Army "When he was three yean 89c * wife caught him standing be- , only to said today. old," she said, "we dropped a Gift BOX of 3 pair 2.55 all that paraphenalia ROLF GIERE, attorney, and • fore a mirror sizing himself wilt on the scene of action. You President Johnson in a procla- penny on the floor to see wheth- up in the latest thing in at- Troy Stellrecht of Beaver Build- mation on the day of Hoover's er he would pick it up. He stood Sheer Stretch Seamless know, I've heard fellows say ers discussed deeding a road SPURGEON'S tire and gear for the duck- they've hunted all day, but nev- death, Oct. 20, had ordered the there for a few minutes, then hunter. to the city. It will run from moistened his hands and picked er even saw a deer , or what- Highway 53 toward the lake and flags lowered to half staff on Then came the big day, and ever they were pursuing. 1 government building and at mil- it up." Gift Box of 3 pair 2.85 ' he did go. What a turn south. The natural flow of the oldest of four a huntin wonder. I suspect some hunters water to the low area will be itary installations for 30 days. Bruce Is horrible sight this gun-tot tin' may go hunting with the same ¦ boys and the only one with a AOILON Stretch Seamless _ ' handled by a culvert. Stellrecht 'he-man must have been to an spirit as the salesman who will obtain easements from ALMA LEGION MEETING handicap. He wants to go to col- fitting hose made. .pr. unsuspecting duck. The great ( he Most perfact | ,19 walks up to the door like any other property owners. ALMA, Wis. Special) - The lege but hasn't decided what moment was at hand when the other salesman, knocks on the The city will furnish crushed American Legion will meet at wants to do professionally. Mrs. • Gift Box of 3 pair 3.40 two came face to face — the doer like any other salesman, rock to a depth of four inches the Legion Hall Wednesday at Gongola said Bruce maintains a Mallard and the man. His blood and says to himself, "Nobody on the 60-foot road, including 8 p.m. - good academic average. must have run hot with en- home, I hope, a-hope, a-hope." shoulders and gutters. The work thusiasm of the moment. Here will be done by the Bill Merrill's "Words to city with it was —- his chance to bag a help from the building concern. kill. Steady now! You've got Live By" may be heard the best of equipment •— just daily over KV7NO at 6:50 take aim, squeeze that trigger, a.m. and in a second, that beautiful Wounded Deer fowl will be a trophy to hold 130 Attend Gun Club Dies on Fronr EV ERY BANK SERVICE FOR EVERYONE before your doubting wife, who Card Party at Ettrick Lawn of Family ETTRICK, Wis. (Special) - HIALEAH, Fla. (AP) - The About 130 people attended a on in! E.L. Westbrook family had ven- come Final Week party given by the Blair-Ettrick ison today—delivered to their Rod and Gun Club at Ettrick door. Community Hall Thursday The 125-pound buck with five- Begins for nigrft. Cards were played and inch antler points apparently lunch served. wandered miles from its Ever- Albert Gunderson and Ronald glades habitat after it was Terpening, Ettrick, are presi- wounded. Carolyn, 10, and Alan Church Parley dent and secretary - treasurer. Hasker, 6, found the deer lying Melvin Hjerleid, Blair, is vice on their lawn Sunday . It was S ) or... (AP ) VATICAN CITY - The president. dead. Mrs. Charles Hasker said current session of the Vatican The club maintains pheasant she didn't want it. Ecumenical Council entered its rearing pens near Blair. Each "I've never had deer," she final week today with word year about 1,000 pheasants are said. "I wouldn't from Pope Paul VI know what to that impor- released in the area from these do with it. " tant church doctrines must be pens and from those near Trem- Police called the Westbrook issued before the session ends. pealeau, The latter are main- garage to make the pickup. It promised to be the most lained by the Trempealeau Mrs. Westbrook knew what to hectic week for the 2,000 council County Association Conservation do. In quick order, the deer was fathers since they started this Clubs. skinned, dressed and iced. 1 third session Sept. 14. Each year between 4 ,000 and "We're cooking a piece of The cardinals, archbishops, 5,000 legal size trout are releas- hindquarters now," she said. bishops and patriarchs may ed in the streams in the Blair- Mrs. Westbrook's husband have to meet in the afternoons Ettrick area, including North and three sons weren't home to as well as the mornings to get and South Beaver creeks. The enjoy the meat. documents ready for the cere- rearing pond is on the Ralph They were in the Everglades monial closing Saturday. Kittleson farm at Beach. — hunting deer. It seemed virtually certain that Pope Paul would be able to issue two council schemata as full Church decrees next Satur- A day. mmW ^m W M m ZZlfl One blazes a new path for Ro- ** man Catholic relations with oth- er Christians. The other estab- lishes the principle that all bish- 2f | ops share collectively with the Pope in governing the church. NOVEMBER 17-18-19-20 Final voting on the first sche- ma, titled "De Oeeumenismo" —On Unity — was completed j CLEARANCE W T last Saturday, leaving only the formality of a vot e in public Of All 1964 Wallpapers meeting before promulgation. Reduced Now to . . . For the other schema. "De Ecdesia " - On the Church - s e final voting on a series of minor 20c - 50c 3 changes will - SOME REMNANTS - take place Tuesday > i and Wednesday. These two schemata are of outstanding significance to the Christian world. Christian unity Shelf Lining Paper - - Ro). 19c is a major goal of the Ecumeni- j cal Council . Pope Paul has termed the issue of shared pa- , PAINTS pal-episcopal power the coun- cil's weightiest task. Discontinued Paints

Due to th« Tr«rmndou* yj Acceptance ol trim Complete Window Glass & Shade Oept, gy M ERCHANTS 23-INCH MOTOROIA (S.rm D«y Service) COtOR TV JUST A FEW OF THE w* hava a few JHnrti Color Stts BARGAINS AT . . . wt v»*ult ltk » It till ¦•!»--, th*y patama amaatata. TIKMI. Winona Fir* ft Power p Jfa&mLpanl i Equipment Co. WEAVER & SONS jgg ifj k M I. ind fI. - Acrtii Pram 601 East 7th Street «^ YOUR IOCAI INDEPENDENT IANK lft- II. FllkllHI _•» ^J -(^* MEMIIR HDIRAL DEPOSIT INSURANCI CORPORATION Conservatives Maia Garry Dms Storm Misses City Employment kriey'll Area; 5-Day Former Owner InMcMatiCrash Return Winona's most, decorated air it's all over and you start think- Forecast Good Continues to Climb Of Post Office Aid Cut hero of World War II, Maj. Wil- ing about what could have hap- Winona's employment level , climbing ing to stepped-up production in wood case PAUL, HP* Minn, - School liam J. Garry, 41, pas injured pened. While you're in the midst Cooler weather moved Into since March, hit another record in mid- production. districts will Winona and vicinity today but be reimbursed for fatally in an automobile acci- of it everything you do is al- October with 11,122 persons at work here. Retail trade employment climbed sub- a 4.5 percent " the forecast indicates the city Facing Suit cut in aids order-f- deet Suwiay in Hawaii. most automatic. The previous record was 11,011, set in stantially during the month. Most of the in- will miss the blizzard which crease occurred in the food and department Testimony began today in the ed by Gov. Karl Rolvaag, Cot*. The son of Mrs, Katherine The Silver Star award cited mid-September. whipped the western plains stores. Employers report that the unseason- $46,621 suit of Kraus-Anderson, semtive* in the State Legis- Carry, 617 Johnson St., and the Maj. Garry for bravery when, states over the weekend. A record for each month has been set late William Garry, Maj. Garry returning alone from a mission ably warm weather has tended to hold back Inc., against the former owner lature's lower house said Satur- since March, but the October figure is the additional hiring. died of injuries suffered when in a disabled airplane, he dis- The extended forecast for the Further substantial climbs day. next five days indicates South- highest ever attained here. are expected toward the holiday season. of the new Winona post office be apparently lost control of his covered a group of 12 enemy House Speaker/ Lloyd Dux- eastern Minnesota and West- THE PRESENT favorable job pattern Construction in the area continues to hold building. car while rounding a curve on aircraft preparing to attack a at mid-summer levels Good weather is per- bury, Caledonia, read a state- column of ground troops. ern Wisconsin will have tem- was set early in the year, Ray H. Brown, . Kraus-Anderson claims that a road in the Kahana Bay area peratures averaging 3 to 8 de- mitting contractors to maintain full crews on the $46,000 sum is due it for ment recalling the Conserva- about 20 miles north of Hono- manager of the Minnesota State Employment Despite the fact that one of grees above daytime means of , pointed out ln his month- both building and road construction projects. work it . did in construction of tives' lulu. Service office here pre-election pledge to re- bis wingtlps was gone, Maj. 38-40 and nighttime lows of 19- ly report released today. Even during the Weather conditions will govern the employ- the post office but were not store the The automobile crashed into a Garry attacked the formation ment direction of present projects. cuts. The Conserva- 24' winter , when worker levels are traditionally paid for. tive * croup, which again will clump of bushes. and forced the enemy group to at* their low point, totals at work here were LABOR DEMAND was good during Octo- control the legislature jettison its bombs, preventing A LITTLE warmer weather is ber, particularly in the manufacturing and A DEPOSITION by the late , caucused A VETERAN of 103 combat well above the 10,000-mark. at the St. Paul Athletic Club. the attack. A short time after indicated for early in the period jump of retail job categories. Jackson T. Dawson, Excelsior, missions in World War II, dur- The present job total shows a The governor ordered the cut- his diverting action Garry was and no important change there- almost 1,000 from the January figure. LABOR SUPPLY at the end of the month Minn., the man who mad* back in aids to districts this ing which he earned the title of joined by a flight of Allied air- after. Precipitation for the five Changes from a month ago were strong- was tight, Brown said. Applications for work Kraus-Anderson's estimate for year because he said tax re- "Top Tank Buster" of the 9th craft. days will total .10 to .20 of an est in retail trade, manufacturing and govern- were down to 650 at the employment office the post office job, formed tha ' ceipts were not sufficient to pay Air Force, Maj. Garry also serv- He was mentioned in Stars & inch in occasional light rata' or ment work. Construction continued at a here, with about 150 of these applicants being basis for Monday morning s the full schedule established by ed during the Korean conflict Stripes, the overseas service snow after midweek. three-year high, and service jobs moved to students seeking part-time work. testimony. the Legislature in 1963 Con* and was most recently on a se- publication, during the Battle of For tonight the weatherman their highest level of the year. Following is a breakdown of employment John Larson, Minneapolis, servatives generally had called curity mission in Hawaii. says mostly fair with a low in Employer forecasts indicate continuing by industries, based on a month's survey read Dawson's answers from the Bulge in World War II in endine in mid-October: / Rolvaag's action unnecessary His widow is the former Don- a story which told of bis using the 20s. Tuesday, he declares, •high employment until winter weather forces the deposition in reply to tho and promised publicly to pass will be fair with slightly higher the shutdown of outdoor activities , Brown —1964— Oct. questions of John Levine, Minn- na Compton, daughter of Mr. the battle cry, "Remember Mai- Sept. Oct. 1963 deficiency appropriations in the and Mrs. J. B. Compton, 314 medy!" — referring to an en- temperatures, probably near 40. said. eapolis attorney for Kraus- 1965 session. Manufacturing 4,433 4,455 4,573 Olmstead St. gagement in which a large toll Early Sunday morning a light (Added to this seasonal slowdown .this Anderson, a Minneapolis firm. Rolvag and Rolland Hatfield , rain fell over the area with pre- year, ' however, will be workers displaced Wholesale trade 435 439 340 C. Stanley McMahon represents A 1941 graduate of Winona was exacted of American 593 Republican-appointed tax com- cipitation totaling .10 of an inch. from their jobs when the Swift & Co. plant Retail trade 1,676 1,739 1, the U.S. Investment Corp., Senior High School , Garry was troops — when leading his air Service 1 661 1,669 1,680 missioner, had disagreed on The temperature rose to 69 Sat- here closes Feb. 19. ) , Milwaukee, owners of the post in Alaska in 1941 when Pearl group into combat. Railroads 325 325 325 whether a deficit would occur urday afternoon and 59 on Sun- office building until early this Harbor was attacked and he im- MANUFACTURING daring October mov- Utilities 423 420 427 in income tax receipts from HE WAS never wounded In day. Low Sunday morning was year. which aids are paid mediately returned to Winona ed up slightly, holding close to its former Government* 89-3 920 875 . combat but had one narrow 54 and this morning 34. At noon Dawson' Duxbury, who has been in the to enlist in the Air Force. record high. Metal products , textiles, apparel Construction 784 775 674 s deposition dealt escape when he was leading a today, with the ski cloudy most mainly with his negotiations House since 1951, was elected Commissioned as a second and wood products showed worker climbs. Finance 298 302 307 dive bombing and strafing mis- of the morning, the reading was Other activities 78 78 78 with U.S. Investment for the unanimously as the Conserva- lieutenant in May 1943, he re- Concrete products and chemicals were down sion. Garry flew low to investi- 34. slightly. Metal was up because of crew build- contract to build the Winona tive bloc candidate for speaker ceived his first overseas assign- A year ago today the Winona of the house . This is tantamount gate an enemy formation when ups in chains ; textile and apparel was higher Totals H OI] 11,122 10,872 post office. Dawson's bid and ment in England late in that , high was 59 and the low 38. All- to election, since Conservatives a bullet struck his aircraft as workers were added in plastic garment "Includes public schools and Winona State the contract for the job were year and went on dive bombing creased his left shoe and cut time high for Nov. 16 was 70 in manufacturing, and wood products rose ow- College. received in evidence by Judge have a majority of 78 of the missions over France, Belgium, 135 seats. It will be Duxbury' through the leather and shoe- 1953 and the low 3 in 1933. Mean O. Russell Olson, who is hear- s Holland and Germany. second term in the speaker's strings, for the past 24 hours was 46. ing the case without a jury. chair. Aubrey Dirlam, Redwood He had another brush with Normal for this time of the year DURING his 17 months over- is 34. LEVINE established that Falls farmer, was re-elected seas as a P-47 Thunderbolt pi- death in the summer of 1954 Stolen Car majority leader. when, as an Air Force captain The thermometer dipped be- Radio Peking New Trial Dawson had based his bid on lot, he earned the Silver Star, low the freezing mark in several estimates of the work and speci- Rep. Richard Fitzsimons. Ar- Distinguished Service Cross ; two flying on a training mission gyle, Marshall County, will be out of Great Falls (Mont. ) Air Minnesota cities overnight. Be- Recovered in fications provided by officers Distinguished Flying Crosses ; of U.S. Investment. Dawson al- chairman of the tax-writing ap- Base, his airplane caught fire midji had a low of 23, Interna- propriations committee. Fitz- the Air Medal with four silver over Alberta, Canada, after be- tional Falls 25 and Duluth 28. Says U.S. Denied to so deposed that the architects' simons said a great deal of Oak Leaf clusters; each in rec- ing struck by lightning. Garry At Rochester the low today Washington specifications were supplied to ognition of five awards of the him after the building contract research on tax legislation has and his radar observer both was 30 after a high of 57 Sun- A 1964 model car stolen Tues- Air Medal; Presidential Unit Ci- day and La Crosse posted fig- was signed and that they dif- been ' developed in preparation parachuted to safety with only day night from the Quality for the coming session. Duxbury tation and the European Thea- minor injuries. ' ures of 39 and 60 for the same Plane Felled Mastrian fered from specifications tha ter of Operations ribbon with Chevrolet Co. lot, 105 Johnson post office had supplied. said "the appropriations com- At the time of this incident times. TOKYO (AP) - Radio Peking DULUTH, Minn. (AP)-Judge four battle stars for major cam- St., has been recovered in mittee has never been better he was serving as assistant Washington state, police report- Judge Olson recessed the paigns in Normandy, Northern WISCONSON FACED cooler said Monday an unmanned Donald C. Odden today denied court for lunch as arguments informed at this point" than it air inspector general for the ed today. is at present. The junior college France, Berlin and Germany. weather today following week- American high altitude recon- a motion for a new trial tor Nor- were being heard whether car- 29th Air Division at Great Falls. end rains that brought some re- naissance aircraft was shot Assistant Chief Marvin A. and vocational education pro- He logged 275 cofhbat hours man Mastrian, serving a life tain extras (items not included grams likely will get special At the conclusion of his World lief to parched areas . down over south central China ' Meier said that the car, belong- in the contract ) by during World War H, was credit- Garry remained sentence in Stillwater prison in supplied attention, Duxbury said. . . War II duty, Most of the rainfall was less Nov. 15. ing to L. William Bailey, 510 Kraus-Anderson should be al- ed with downing six enemy air- in the Air Force reserve and j W. Broadway , had been recov- the slaying of Mrs. Carol planes and destroying 38 tanks. than an inch, but for many The broadcast gave no further ( lowed in evidence. entered radio work. He was em- areas is was the heaviest in a details. | ered by the Washington State Thompson in St. Paul in early The DSC was awarded Maj. ployed as an announcer in Cali- Police. The car and its driver, Garry by Gen. H, G. Arnold, 24-hour period since last August. Monitors of Chinese Commu- 1963. ' fornia , Minneapolis, South Da- Burlington recorded 1.05 inch- j are being detained by the Is- Reappointments then commanding general of the before join- nist broadcasts here noted that Attorneys for Mastrian had kota and Rochester es, Racine .90, Madison .75 land County sheriff at Coupe- United States Air Forces, after Station , Mil- it was the first time that Peking sought the new trial largely on ing the staff of Radio waukee .65, Green Bay .31 ville, Wash. Garry's squadron was attacked the fall of 1949. , Be- claimed downing a pilotless Choate Loss KWNO here in toit .30, Lone Rock 27 and La City police have referred the a letter written in Stillwater by by 32 enemy fighters in a bat- high altitude plane. Made by Board Crosse .09. ¦ matter to the FBI for further confessed killer Dick W. C. An- tle which ended in bis destruc- THE FOLLOWING spring he Daytime temperatures Sun- investigation and prosecution. tion of four enemy aircraft in requested a return to active derson, who repudiated testi- Air Force and day were nearly 20 degrees The man who was driving the About $4, 25 minutes. service with the mony he had given at the trials 650 In Houston Co. 1950 was accepted above normal for the season, Man Leaving car when state police stopped in June of him has not been identified. of Mastrian and T. Eugene After putting together records CALEDONIA, Minn. - The AT ONE TIME he comment- for duty. reaching a peak of 64 at Beloit. Game Dies of scattered by the burglars, H, Houston County Board of Com* ed on his feelings in combat, Prior to reporting for duty At night, minimums ranged Set. Joseph Kryzer, 553 E. Thompson, husband of the vic- Choate & Co. officials told po- missipners has made reappoint* he married Miss Compton here. from 28 in the Superior-Duluth Wabasha St., reported that a tim. lice today that "to the best of "You don't get scared while the Heart Attack 14-foot aluminum boat and 15- ments. battles are going on. It's after After his return to service region to 48 at Milwaukee. their knowledge" they lost Arnold Goetzinger Crooked he was stationed in Chicago as horsepower outboard motor be- Mastrian, Anderson and $4,650 in cash in Friday sight's , PRESIDIO MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Ar- Creek Township, commander of an Air Defense . Tex., reached the longing to him were stolen over Thompson were convicted of burglary. was reappoint- national high of 90 degrees thur Sturley, 78, St. Paul, col- the weekend from a dock east ed to the township board of filter center for the central Sun- murder, and all are serving life day and Broadus, Mont., and lapsed and died of an apparent of Latsch beach. Police said that they are for- managers of the Crooked Creek portion of the United States, prison terms. warding reports, including pic- Casper, Wyo., set the low of heart attack as he was leaving The items were valued at watershed for three years be- followed by a tour of duty at Judge Odden said he was of tures, of the burglary to the four degrees below zero early the Purdue-Minnesota football $400. the opinion "that Dick W. C. ginning Dec. 1. Ellsworth Air Force Base, game Saturday. A retired pur- Iowa and Wisconsin crime bu- South Dakota, and the base at today. Anderson was coerced and reaus. The method used by the GEORGE 8CHAUBLE, Cale- chasing agent for the Great threatened by other inmates at Great Falls. Northern Railroad, Sturley was men is so distinctive, Winona donia, was renamed to the He attended an officer ' the Stillwater Penitentiary to s weir known in St. Paul civic af- police feel, that a similarity Hiawatha Valley Mental Health school for special investigation | draft a statement that was with burglaries in other states ; fairs. Fillmore Interest board for three years effective in Texas for six months prior ' ¦ taken from his possession by the may be turned up. Jan. 1. to his assignment to a base in Ford s Theater authorities at the institution. The thieves took zippered Arlow Abraham, Houston, Germany in the Air Force Of- In Mental Health "Without a shadow of a donbt, bags from the store's filing cab- was reappointed county service fice of Special Investigation. It 25-Year Employe inet, piled them on a table, officer for a two-year term be- was while he was in Germany the court is of the opinion that then systematically went ginning Dec. l. that he was promoted to major. Being Closed Honored at Bank the difference in testimony of through each bag, removing all He returned to the United WASHINGTON (AP ) - The Center Noted Dick W. C. Anderson as it stands Lyle Ask, Caledonia, was re- RUSHFORD, Minn. (Special ) cash including change in de- appointed county assessor for States for duty at Langley Air old Ford's Theater building is to Public pressure toward estab- today and the testimony given nominations above a dime. Force Base in Virginia, was re- be closed on Nov. 30 so that —Mrs. Frank Haselmd was hon- lishment of a mental health by this witness* during the Mas- four years starting Jan. 1, No ored Friday at open house for weed inspector appointment was assigned to Japan in 1961. and work may start on restoring the clinic is being exerted in Fill- trian trial would not lead to a having served the First National more County, according to the different result in a new trial." made. Salaries will be set MAJ . WILLIAM! J. GARRY received his most recent as- interior to its appearance the signment in Hawaii in 1963. Bank 25 years. president of the three-county at the reorganization meeting With ChiJdr«n, Dog night of April 14, 1865, when She began working for the La Crosse Youth in January. President Abraham Lincoln was mental health board comprising HE AND Mrs. Garry and bank in the fall of 1937 as book- Winona , Houston and Wabasha . The final stage of the Browns- , assassinated. keeper and stenographer. Later 2 More Added their four children Michael, counties. ville road improvement was Thomas, Kathy and Kevin, had Work will take about two she became an assistant cash- Dead ot Injuries approved and the board allow- years, said Secretary of the In- Noting that a meeting to dis- To Presidium been living at Hickam Field ier and also continued her sten- , ed Hector Construction Co. fi- Debaters Take terior Stewart L. Udall. Con- cuss such a facility will be held LA CROSSE Wis. W—Ken- in Honolulu. ographic work. With the excep- MOSCOW (AP ) - Two new nal payment of $0,466.08. The gress has voted $2,730,600 for in Preston later this month, Dr. neth Banasik, 19, of La Crosse, Other survivors in addition tion of two years, she has work- members have been elected to died today of injuries suffered project has been a three-year to his mother are two brothers, the restoration. ed continuously for the bank Max L. De Bolt said that the , the all-powerful Presidium of early Saturday when his car one of re-location and three 9th in Tourney J ames P., Winona, and Robert The building now houses the completing her 25th year Nev. 2. public and civic groups, par- the Soviet Communist party missed a curve on Crosse projects in addition to a bridge The Winona Senior High F., Sunnyvale, Calif. , and one Lincoln Museum and has little The former Anna Swenson ticularly in Fillmore County's La , which Nikita Khrushchev was County Highway F just east of job. School varsity debate team com- sister, Mrs. Walter (Genevieve) to indicate that it was once a she was born on a farm north- Rushford area, is rallying be- removed last month official At the meeting Thursday, Au- piled a 5-1 record to win ninth Lange, St. Charles. theater. During restoration the east of Rushford to the late Mr. hind establishment of a cen- , the city and rolled over several sources said tonight. times. ditor Dolores Hauge was direct- place in the annual Hopkins Funeral arrangements are museum items will be placed in and Mrs. Oscar Swenson. She ter. Lueck of the (Minn.) High School Invitation- pending word from Mrs. Garry, storage but later will he on dis- attended the local schools and ed to request Verb DR. DE BOLT said that when conservation office al Debate Tournament Saturday expected later today. play in the theater basement. Winona Business College. state soil the Hiawatha Valley center was to publish a new soil survey of at Hopkins. in the planning stage, Fillmore County . The current Some 59 teams competed in Houston County was invited to join, DO YOU KNOW published in 1929. the A division of the meet, the but book was its county board rejected the authoriz- largest debate tournament con- H. M. McLaird was proposal. ed to attend the annual school ducted in Minnesota with about YOU DON'T HAVE for county engineers at the Uni- one-third of the state's high The center, which will be es- versity of Minnesota Dec. 7- Schools having debate repre- tablished as soon as a grant in 10. sented. Richfield High won. aid is received from the state, Arnold Ideker , Brownsville Coached by Keith Larson, the will serve Winona, Wabasha and Houston counties. Township, was appointed to the Winona negative team of Lee county planning commission. Turner and John Morse went Expanding the center to serve DIABETES? Next meeting will be Dec. 9. undefeated in three rounds while Fillmore County as well could ¦ the affirmative team won two be done, Dr. De Bolt said, but IF YOU HAVE — of three debates. not until June 1. No formal in- Plainview Co-op On the affirmative team were quiries as to whether this might Excessive Thirst Patrick Ellis and Jeanne Hitt- be done have been recei ved Frequsnt Urination Employes Vote ner. from Fillmore County, the doc For Teamsters 874 Larson Saturday will send his tor said, but residents there Conitant Hunger A team to Rochester for an- have indicated an interest in the Lost of Weight PLAINVIEW , Minn.-Employ- other Invitational tournament, tri-county center. esf of Plainview Cooperative while the C squad will be par- Intense Itching Creamery Friday voted 10-7 to Dr. De Bolt added that he ticipating in a tournament at would be ln Rushford Tuesday Chang* in Vision join a union. Vlroqua , Wis. and might be approached then Teamsters Union Local 874 , ¦ Eaty Tiring by county officials. Rochester, will represent them The tallest bird ever to live Slow Healing of Cuts & Bruiios in collective bargaining. on earth was the giant moa, now THE PRESTON meeting to The election was conducted by extinct, The average giant moa discuss a mental health center — YOU may have dlabetts. a member of the National La- stood about 12 feet high, with for Fillmore County was set by bor Relations Board. enormous elephantine leg bones. the county nursing board last Howcver , DIABETES may b» proiont without any week. signs at all. Be alert to the symptoms, be tested ^^BBHIM_BBB_M_BHBHBBMH_H_H-BBMBHH_M_M_H_M_> Dr. De Bolt said that a state A WINONA LODGE NO. II A.F. A A.M. board Friday reviewed the Hia- during DIABETES WEEK , November 16th through No- watha Valley center's applica- vember 21st. Be sure that you and your family do Jj|/)W ork in thc Second Degree tion for operating funds. No < not tiave DIABETES. Jw\ Tuesday, Nov. 17, 7:30 o' clock word has been received yet , he 9 R-ftWHTHNrt i M. A. PBTEMON, W.M. said, adding, however, that this ( ^ * might indicate favorable action by the board. FIRST AND FOREM08T . . . First per- here, which begins at 1 JA 100 and will GET A FREE DETECTION KIT AT The Hiawatha Valley board _^taArfS**\ymma_ Regular MMtHifi son to buy his 1965 auto license plate at the run through at least 1 JV 901). Second in t tk l«t awl 3rd has almost decided on a site mJ^VSI UST Mond«y»—IsW p.m. office of deputy registrar Morris Bergs- line Is George Heaser St. Charles , who I N ANY WINONA DRUG STORE ^ , for the clinic, which is to be Socl-1 M, w Cwh,r Monday* rud here this morning is Bernard T. Kalmes, followed by Herb J. KlekWch, 550 W. 4th {L Jf^^^^Afil •• - " - established in Winona , and has ^ 73 E, Sanborn St., getting his plate from St., and Mrs. John Vcrdick , 674 E. Broad- advertised for a psychlutrial, a INDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODDFELLOWS Mrs. Bergsrud, His green-en-cream plute in way. (Dally News photo) clinical psychologist and a so- Winona Pharmaceutical Ass'n. John 0. Ichmldt , N.O. at the beginning of the series being Issued cial worker. Qt djj opp sw&j &l a^VU qhL Illustrious PianoTrioOpens 'Sex Symbols' Community Concert Series By PAUL PARTHUN Not So Stupid Mnsle Department, College of Saint Teresa By EARL WILSON I don't know when a piano trio NEW VORK-Sbirley Eaton, the girl with the gold-painted was last in Winona, but with bodyy smiled at me across the top of a glass of gin and said, ua Saturday evening in the Wl* "I don't want to be a sex symbol-or anything like that!" nona High ScJbool auditorium "My gracious!" I said back. "You mean sex symbols are waa the most Illustrious ol the ¦tupid ? Marilyn Monroe, Jayne Mansfield, Carroll Baker . . .?" two or three now coocertudng. " Not Marilyh,'* she replied lightly, she had much more. I Musicians of Ekberg and Jayne the Beaux Arts mead perfectly terrible symbols like Anita Trio are not only Anita Ekberg's even worse than masters of Mansfield. They're laughed at. technique but tbey are also con- Jayne Mansfield. She has a hard summate artists. think Add to these a brittle face—and I don't wear bikinis, things like that. flair for talented." performance and show- she's conspicuously I can't bear people who are al- manshipand the , a shapely, 28- total is a mem- Bliss Eaton ways downing people, can you?" orable program. year-old British ash blonde, has TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: been getting a sex-symbol build- Shelby Friedman suggests that A LARGE aadience greeted up since they covered her body the players Cassius Clay may have ath- when they began the Soma 66 attended the annual with gold cosmetic for the concert with a trio , IOOF HOMECOMING . . * lete's mouth. That's a condi- composed by Independent Order of James Bond picture, "Goldfing- tion caused by opening your big Beethoven at age 26. Others homecoming of Humboldt Lodge, Noble Grand er." mouth and putting your foot in have criticized his early trios as Odd Fellows at Hotel Winona Saturday evening. "What about Carroll Baker?" it. piano pieces with violin and John Sehmidt, left, welcomes the speaker, Roy G. Genneary, I asked. WISH I'D SAID THAT: Some 'cello accompaniment. Yet, even Minneapolis, past grand master, who noted there are 65 "If that's going to be the new people who get credit for be- lesser Beethoven is no trifle and around the world. R, W. Sparrow I feel sor- IOOF homes for the aged American sex symbol, ing patient are just too lazy to the men of the Beaux Arts gave program were Mrs. Bonnio ry for the American woman!" was toastraaster. Also on the start anything. it an impeccable performance. Zellers, president of Rebekah Lodge 53/ Minneapolis; J. A. Miss Eaton flung back, REMEMBERED QUOTE: with A longer wort by Tschaikow* Millar, Red Wing, past grand secretary, and the Rev. James "I'll be terribly popular "Fortune is like glass — the sky closed the concert. This retired Winona minister. The Sweet American movie stars for talk- brighter the glitter, the more C. Hill, Minneapolis, " she laughed. "But Opus 50 has been labeled photo) ing like this, easily broken." — Publius Sy- "tawdry " Adelines sang. (Daily News it's true. Carroll Baker won't a nd "orchestral," rus. with the result that it is Barely make it as a sex symbol and by Sidney EARL'S PEARLS: Mickey played. In any case, its lugubri- LEGION DINNER was served, prepared she'll lose what she had before. Freeman reports on the cross- (Special)--About Mohan, and Harley Hager. R. "She wears a low dress and ous mood made it a risk to close ALMA, Wis. word puzzle fan who died and the concert. - 100 persons were served at the S. Huber, F. 0. Huber and Mrs. a big fur, but she's like a little A Mendelssohn was buried sue down and three TERESAN PLAY . . . Kathleen Wimer, Members of the chorus, left to, right, are scherzo, brilliantly played aa an Veterans Day dinner at the John Lisowski entertained the housewife. ' with instrumental num- across. playing Chrysothemis, speaks to the chorus Carrie Benoit, Candy Young, Gayle Viehman, encore, was one of the glitter- American . Legion Clubrooms. group Dialogue from the new "YOU DON'T need far* to be "Some- during a performance of "Electra" at the Mary Ann Hausman, Jeanne Roux, Marcy ing spots of the evening. The traditional turkey dinner bers. thing More" show : "Please sexy. I'm sexiest when I'm dirty College of Saint Teresa. At the right is McCann, Kathleen Kendrick and Susan Between these compositions and scruffy. I have an earthy come to my party Friday" . . each of the musicians | | Marguerite Coughlin, who plays Electra. Streiff. (Harriet Kelley photo) performed " "May I bring ray wife?" . . ¦ ' ¦ quality. i _ _i_ i_^_^_a_^_^M_^_^_^_H_H_MM_M_ ^_a_H_a_l_a_ Ba_M_i_i_ a_H_' Bas soloist. Their pieces obvi- "It's informal — bring "What about Ursula An- whom ously were selected to demon* dress?" I Inquired. Miss "Un- ever you like" . . . That's earl, state the performer' brother. s technical dress," ss they call her, has al- command and finish. Violinist so been getting a big buildup. Daniel Gullet played three com- "I think she's delicious — ex- Retarded Children's positions that revealed not only cept she's no actress," Miss Ea- his superb skill but the tonal ton answered. "She's attractive- Executive to Speak beauty of his "hymraly". Strad- ly untalented but it doesn't an- At Meeting Here ivarius, now mon than 260 noy you." -feSo^ years old. "Who do you like?" The assistant executive direc- Two virtuoso pieces played When you take it as a whole, tor of the Minnesota Association by pianist Menahem gorgeous hunk of wom- Pressler the most for Retarded Children will speak ^ ^ "wowed" the audience with his , beauty and per- an for talent to the group's Winona County Bundy Doubts razzle-dazzle pyrotechnics. sonality — Sophia Loren!" Un- chapter at 8 p.m. Wednesday in daunted, 'cellist Bernard Green* "And Elizabeth Taylor?" the Red Cross headquarters, 276 France Would Makes house proved that Electra intensity, too, "I THINK she's terribly pret- W. 5th St. could hold his listeners in his ty. Talented . . . yes . but Merlen G. Kurth, Minneapo- Leave NATO performance of Bloch's "Chas- nit in every picture. People lis, will speak on the topic "Peo- sidic Prayer." WASHINGTON (AP) - Mc- have been downing her because ple Are Mental Good Theater' ENSEMBLE PLAYING ii an of her private life . . saying ly Retarded.' George Bundy, President John- By GEORGE McCORMICK a superb tribute to the cast — art more innate than really terribly bitdby , things The public is in son's special assistant on na- Daily News StaJtfWriter and to vocal coach Eileen Whal- acquired, vited. and so it is rare. It is also true about her. How she shouldn't tional security affairs, says he Adherence to the classical tra- en. Kurth, a na- Most impressive in this re- that solo playing is a distinguish- tive of Chippe- doubts that France ever would dition where possible and intel- gard Sunday night was the per- ed gift. Therefore, the dualism of ligent changes where^ neces- WINONA DAILY NEWS wa Falls, Wis., withdraw from the North Atlan- formance of the chorus. Ev- the Beaux Arts Trio as ensem- sary make the College of Saint ~ who was grad- tic alliance. ery word could be heard and un- ble and solo artists is an apothe- MONDAY. NOVEMBER .6, 1964 France, he said, has demon- Teresa's "Electra" an^ experi- 307 uated from the derstood. One of the group's osis of musicianship that has VOLUME 108. NO. strated repeatedly it means to ence in good theater. Publish*!dally except Saturday and holt- U B i v e r s i- leaders, Marcy McCann, was es- been matched enly by a few of days by Republican and Herald Publish- ty of Wiscoonsui stay in the alliance which still is There is . no reason, of course, this regard, and th'- greatest musicians in each (01 Winona, pecially good in ing Company, Franklin St.. directs field successfully protecting Western why it should not be such. Soph- her voice and bearing added to era. Mifi ___ Europe. But, ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES services for tht Bundy added, even ocles drama is an important ex- her effectiveness as well. After the concert, the players Single Copy - 10c Dally, 15c Sunday state asso Knrth if any nation should withdraw ample of an ancient Greek play, Maureen Ellis is an impres- were swarmed by youthful auto- Bellvered by Carrlir—Par wart so cento nation's 62 chapters and is in from the alliance he believes but it became one because of , but she tend- M weeks $12.75 52 weeks tti .30 sive Clytemnestra graph seekers, and when I later charge of fund-raising for the ways would be found to protect its inherent worth, not simply ed Sunday to overplay the role •y mall strictly In advance; paper stop- remarked to Mr. Greenhouse per on expiration date. group. the interests and security of oth- because it was old. Nonetheless, so that she ended up a bit like that I was glad to see so many In Fillmore, Houston, OlmstedT^WInona, Mrs. Myron Findlay, 1620 er members. the temptation does exist to pre- the wicked stepmother in Cin- children in the audience, he re- Wabasha, Buffalo, Jackson/ Ptpln and Edgewood Rd., is president ot Bundy was interviewed on the sent the play in a sort of glass derella. This is unfortunate, plied that more parents than Trempoa liau counties: the county chapter. CBS "Face the Nation." cage, and it was good to see 1 year $12,00 a months. S3J0 since Clytemnestra is a much before are making good mu- ? months MJO 1 month 11.35 that this temptation has been more complicated person than sic a family participation. A few * All other subscriptions: rejected. that. persons looked annoyed as some 1 yeer $15.00 ) monthi S4.2J - i months S8.C0 1 month tl.oO DEAR ABBY: PERHAPS the only real com- WILLIAM PELTZMAN is an youngsters fidgeted in their Send change ef address, notle-s, undeliv- plaints in connection with the adequate, although not very scats, but good concert manners ered coplts. subscription orders and other are contagious and they soon mall Items to Winona Dally Ntws, P.O current production of "Electra" awe-inspiring Orestes, and John max 70, Winona, Minn. are to be brought not against the Bellairs is an earnest Paedago- settled down. Their desire to Second cists postage paid at Winona. play, but against its audience gus. Also among the leads Is meet the artists and secure their This Girl Has One results from director John Gene D'Amour, an almost minc- signatures demonstrates the val- Marzocco's having chosen to ob- ing Aegisthus. ue of their presence. serve the classic tradition in Costuming is excellent, with Adults, however, weren't so LVlUbliMJL-Ku-Q-uI-K-iLJM Self .to Blame presenting the play without an most garments carefully match- spontaneous. Beethoven was intermission. This made things ed to their wearers. Miss Whal- cooly dismissed, technical acro- 7:15-»:t0 — 25**65*-tS« By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN difficult for many not-very- en was in charge of this. Most batics loudly applauded, and the DEAR ABBY: I am 21 and a college senior. I could Spartan members of the audi- notable in this regard is Clytem- encore was brought on more by ENDS TUEST have had many dates last year but a boy on campus monopo- ence Sunday night. nestra's flaming red and Elec- a kind of formality than any- lized all my time and ruined my chances with everyone More important, however, was tra's drab gray and purple. thing else — at its conclusion else. At the end of the semester I told him I wasn't THAT BEACH PARTY sure the refusal of many in the aud- Yellow , however, seems a the applause was barely polite. I cared enough about him to continue dating him in the fall. ience to accept the conventions strange choice for Orestes, and GANG GOES DRAGSTRIPI I said we shouldn't see each other over the summer, but BUT THERE were distrac- _^_»^-^^^^ ^^ t^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^-"-*s^__ ^__M of Greek drama. This is a talky sometimes it seemed as if the should think it over and talk about it again when school play, but it is far from a com- chorus was robed too cheerily tions. Perhaps the cluttered resumed. He said he loved me and always would but he'd edy — a point many seemed to for this play. stage had something to do with it, (We abide by my wishes. miss. Richard Weiland's set is sim- all hope it will be clear- When we returned to school he immed- Marguerite Coughlin bears up ple, although not particularly ed for the Chicago Opera Bal- iately started dating another girl. I called well in the demanding title role. not My- let, since we see visions of im- Grecian and certainly ) tjjj mitfhim and told him I wanted to talk to him. She has a good voice for the cenaean. It might be, however , pending chaos. Or perhaps it (I him.) was the array of coiffures, like tammm\* 1 ^*'t was going U> tell him I DID love part , and she makes Electra a too massive for the college au- ^ '**M\ When he came to see me he brought the a skyline, bathed in the light ammwaaaiaaaaaamtamaMmaaaaaaaaaaaaamaaaaaaaaaaaaamaaaamami-.- i n " ¦- , complex — hence believable — ditorium's stage — although it other girl along. I knew then that it was persons by lapsing occasionally is difficult to think of anything from too broad spotlights, shad- all over between us. Now everyone is say- from noble resolve and grief for that would not be. owing the stage and players in ing that HE dropped ME for HER. This is her father to a very human self- The play ends today, with cur- enormous shapes. hurting my .reputation and I think it's his pity . tain time at 8 p.m. And perhaps the warning bell H_^__^R3^I place to tell our friends that I diopped HIM. ¦ that signals the end of' inter- - What do you think? AS ELECTRA S .later, the The female sea horse plays mission could be repaired or re- 'tarn »6_»*i«3% *lB&jt adaptive Chrysothemis, Kath- but a brief part in producing placed. Not only did about 15 i nWrtmiaamV . V S DKAR NOT: All right , so you ABBY leen Wimer is suitably girlish it- t I! I U_ II) t I «-_.. ._ J i_ , the young. She deposits her percent of the audience seat we. en i urwypca — you were ireea. nui aon i expeci but her enunciation leaves 'some- eggs in the male's brood pouch, self late, but quite a few others STARTS WED. him to put an ad in the paper. Your pride may be bruis- thing to be desired. This is par- then swims away. After about never returned. What seems to ed but your reputation won't suffer. ticularly noticeable In this pro- 10 days, the fry are hatched be needed is a place where a , DEAR ABBY: Six months ago I took a course in "scien- duction in which enunciation is and ejected. concert is less of an imposition. tific massaging" and I passed the examin ation without any trouble. I massage as a side line to earn extra money. They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmie Hatlo SMMATINEE-2:15O I enjoy massaging because it brings relaxation to many. 25c-50«-65< 1 massage men, women and even children. 1 carry my own table unci go to their homes by appointment. My problem NITE — 7:00-9:10 is my wife . She does not want me messaging ladies. I say 25c-65 . -85e that my work is like a doctor's and there is no reason why I shouldn 't massage ladies. Wliat is your opinion? | ENDS TU EST] MASSEUR DEAR MASSEUR: Your wife apparently fears tliat OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS I your lady clients may be g«tting a treat instead of a i I M and others by appointment ¦ treatment. Such fears could be caused by her _ own » t WF!SS525irl feelings of inadequacy. Keep> assuring her that she has O M**»**»* -*-^^»«-»*»«^Mn-YWtfMV-^^ 8 absolutely nothing to worry a bout. (PS. The little woman is jealous—but don't rub it in ) MigSffj DKAIt AB BY : That lady who wrote nboul the "Open House " shower , where an ad was placed in the newspaper At* MM _-^J fcggpsr-iand anyone who wanted to come was welcome, was a piker compared to someone in my husband's family. Listen to 1.9 Iff V&< this: One of the girls had to get married, so all her aunts got together and gave her a combination BRIDAL and BABY ¦ m. shower! Practical U&l\ K • , I suppose, but wasn't that the absolute 4fr**. ii pro. tuiiiui limit? v ^* OWOSSO , MICHIGAN J ; MURI Usui Sill DEAR OWOSSO: I'd say they exceeded the limit . ELECTROHICS ; > , | /"""*""• • """•"% Speed and otherwise. H '""- •*• W„ K M. CONFIDENTIAL TO POST AL EMPOYEE: All my mail Easy Termt Arranged is opened for mc with the aid of an electric letter-opener , No Home Service Call Charge f anmv amm and the envelopes are discarded. When I read unsigned When Your TV or I r^ap akamJ Radio Set - V-L.II , -/ letters , unless some reference to the city Is mode, I have /. Repcttrrd In Our Shop no way of knowing from where the letter has come [MH-UHTMIISTS Ai* ui stMtuf tvr •xccpiion-l Warrant Problems? Write to ABB-V , Box 697O0. Los Angeles, y Policy STARTS WED. Calif. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self- flddresscd envelope. i-M . riiriiiri,' ^ ™ 7 Killed on 1,4 ! : ; tjM ^ Wisconsin

Highways W -in-^B-B-K-B-B?3r"wrniiy7i'jr*T^^^ I By THE ASSOCIATEDPRESS Seven persons were killed on Wisconsin highways during the weekend, raising the state's By GRETCHEN L. LAMBERTON 1964 toll to 933 - 147 more than IF this sounds like an ill-tempered blast (which it probably on this date a year ago and is) just put it down to the fact that after many weeks in jiist 22 shy of the all-time high the hospital even a fairly good natured person gets frustra- Of 955 In 1956. ted and maybe a little sour, but 1 am moved to Bay a few words about the state of Oscar Grady, 78 of Saukville much of our daytime radio or , perhaps, more accurately, the great opportunities daytime was killed Sunday night when radio misses. he was struck by a car as he For a long time music has been used as a great therapy walked on Highway S3 in Sauk- for tha very ill. ville, Ozaukee County. After President Eisenhower suffered his stroke, the first therapy used on him was good music. Mrs. Emily Oehler, 68, of Mil- Because I love music 1 try to get the solace and healing waukee died Sunday from in- effect of good music these long, long days and even longer juries suffered in a two-car nights. All I can manage physically is a little transistor collision in Milwaukee Saturday radio with a simple off and on button which gets a number night. of area stations very well (I can't manage tuning a FM William Silvers, 19, of rural radio from this bed). Gays Mills was killed early Sun- Here is a list of typical selections played during one- day when the car in which he half hour of "Music for Adults" or "Serenade" or "Better was riding overturned several Music"-"Lay Your Lips on Mine," "Don't Leave Me Dar- times on Highway 131 near ling," "My Sad Heart Is Breaking," "Broken Hearted Doll," Prairie du Chien. "Shangri-La Sweetheart." All selections are done in sob- bing violins, throbbing ukuleles, fluttering harp notes and William Shepard, S3, of Mui- the general effect is one of throbbing "bellyache music" kego was killed Saturday night that melts ones spine to a jelly. ', Sometimes there are a few when he was stuck by a car whining hillbilly instrumentals mixed in. After one-half as he crossed Highway 100 in hour of this completely undistinguished music one has the Wauwatosa, a Milwaukee sub- helpless feeling of swimming in a river of pallid pink slop. urb. Victims listed previously I don't know which is the relief and high spot in this were: worst—the bellyaching mu- mass ot mediocrity. During Walter Heger, 27, Jefferson, sic ("Don't Leave me Dar- these many weeks in the hos- and his wife, Darlene, 18. ling" type), the whining hill- pital I cannot remember ev- Christ Churoff , 74, of Milwau- billy ballad or the rock and en one distinguished or kee. roll noisiness, but not a one memorable selection being of them is any help in buck- played. I don't necessarily ing up the spirits or stiffen- mean all symphony or opera ing the old backbone or en- music but just good honest BY FLEXSTEEL - LENIOR HOUSE - FASHION TREND larging the spirit. The only distinguished music that Guard Aims saving grace of this "music" would put some heart in a ¦ is that it's so completely un- person and enlarge the spir- AW sofas havo solid hardwood frame construction, | fj . ' . distinguished that, happily, it. one forgets it ten seconds One evening the announcer At Readiness after it ends. said "Gershwin's Rhapsody And in this fact, my in Blue" and I sat up .anti- friends, I think lies the se- cipating something distin- cret of why radio stations guished but it was played In 3 Weeks keep on playing such moun- by Henry Mancini's orches- WASHINGTON (AP) - The tains of undistinguished junk. tra with exaggerated ting National Guard has strong It's so nondescript and com- brightness. It wasn't Gersh- hopes its first-line divisions monplace that when an ad win's Rhapsody but a rhine- could be in shape to deploy goes on the air the audience stone imitation. three weeks after mobilization listens to the ad as a great in an emergency, its chief said today. One memorable night over TV I heard a Leonard Bern- This would be less than half stein Concert for Children during which he played some the eight-week readiness objec- of Liszt, Mozart's Prokofieff and music from Carmen. It tive set by Secretary of Defense was spiritually enlarging and a complete joy. If radio Robert S. McNamara. announcers who choose programs feel that this kind of music During the Berlin crisis of is too "high brow" for our adult audiences, I advise them 1961-62 it took two Guard divi- to look at the rapt faces of the she to ten year old children sions five months to get into listening with joy to Bernstein's music. Why can't the radio condition for deployment after program directors give us adults credit for a little, just being mustered into federal a little musical taste and understanding? Think of the many service. people in addition to hospital patients who are starving for a spiritual lift that music can bring, and yet you spoon — feed Maj. Gen. Winston P. Wilson, them a diet of this pallid mush. It is so completely undis- who heads the Pentagon's Na- tinguished, so terribly commonplace when there is a whole J5l\ •-PIECE CURVED SECTIONAL tional Guard Bureau* told The treasure house full of distinguished, memorable and honest ^i|ffe MMBI S ^^ « !!! ' .^ i air^l -^>^T;; ,jf L Is a decor- Associated Press certain re- music at your disposal. You're missing a great opportunity forms put into effect over the and insulting your audience. past two years are showing If this is pretty-ill tempered, I apologize. promising results. The three-weekreadiness goal of the Guard can be reached "if Four School Board Older People we are supported properly," Members to Attend Wilson said. More Cautious By this he said he meant State Convention getting enough money to bro- Four area school board mem- When on Skis aden weekend drills to include bers will attend the third all 400,000 Guardsmen. Up to an- BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) - Old nual meeting of the delegate bones may be brittle but they now, Wilson said, he has been assembly of the Minnesota able to find funds to give this don't break as often as young School Board Association in bones on skis. kind of training to about 150,000 Minneapolis Nov. 30 and Dec. 1. Guardsmen. Representing Area 1 of That's what Dr. L. Bruce An- derson of Billings reported to Another must, he said, is the Southeastern Minnesota, Curtis Howe, Wyoming and Montana doctors modernization and fully equip- Rushford; Elton Redalen, after making a five-year study ping of priority Guard units Lanesboro; Loren Graskamp, Wykoff at the Grizzly Peak ski run near which have been given a key , and Dr. E. L. Morse, Mont. Spring Valley, will be among Red Lodge, role in the Pentagon's plans , which contemplate a 22-division 108 elected delegates from 27 The number of broken legs Army force — 16 regular divi- association areas throughout per capita, decreases with age sions and 6 from the Guard. the state attending the meet- but "maybe older people are The reform on which Wilson ing. just more cautious skiers," An- placed considerable stress was The two-day session was derson said. the substitution of weekend called to formulate a legisla- drills in the field for one-night-a- tive program for presentation to week training in armories. the business session of the as- BUDGET PLAN "About all you could do with a sociation's annual state conven- man under the old system was tion in St. Paul in January. show him a tank ," Wilson said, Among those on the program ( FUEL Oil ] "but now he can get out and will be state Treasurer Val actually train with the tank." , Bjornson who will discuss the status of the school tax fund; State Sen. Donald Wright , Min- neapolis, and Rep. Donald Phone 2314 Wozniak, St. Paul, who'll con- Man s Life sider Minnesota's need for tax reform. There will also be a DOE RER 'S fianel on the per capita tax limi- Radlo-Ditpatchad Equipment Savings Stolen tation law. ¦¦ ¦¦¦ f n ii i-mni BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Mo- ""*Wwywg__rT_ _»MM ^ hamed Ben Ali had hoped to retire this year after 40 years of selling hot chestnuts, peanuts and popcorn from his pushcart. Saturday night burglars stole £i_3______|^^ ^^^H-B-Qra-i--- what he called his life savings {&H __^__R '! of $24,000. The money Included Y /' v ^BE_rSt*H- $10,000 In coins, stuffed into pea- nut bags and hidden in shopping bags. "I saved and saved and saved —all for a burglar," said the 68- TRADITIONAL Lawson style tuxedo sofa 1 ____ * year-old vendor. "I'm just a ^ ^^ ?^t^_y^' mKmWmW A C&Stl m% SQ-fiO-QO DflV ChANTi man without a life. I feel like the blood has run out of me." lined kick nlcnls on both sofa and chair'. "^^^^^f m ^^rfj L TtriHt 88 LOW &3 $6 MOIlthly Ben Ali , who lives alone, has B^_^_i^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_l-_^_^_i_Hm | * been a widower nearly 20 yeors. He left tils native Morocco as a ?*" teen-ager. styling nnd quality! w/t *' After losing money in the 1929 MATCHING CHAIRS . . . $119 w/t stock market crash he began to store his cash in paper bags.

ARVIN 14-INCH PORTABLE HAPPEN TO YOU!!! TV This accident victim should have heeded the warning of the National Safety Council. Install seat belts in your car . . . and use them every time you drivel If every driver did this. the National Safety Council says c^ofOf^FURNITURE $118.88 that more than 5,000 lives, CO. could be aaved each year. And serious Injuries could bo- BROS reduced by at least one-third. Don't make the rhlstake of not DADD - using ICUPD STORI aeat belts. One of these days it might be too lite! 166 Main Street Phone 3145 V 5 HARDWARE * Published lo aava IIVM In coaparatlon with Tha Ad. tWrnS KaAaM ' 4M7 var..»lni» Council and tha National Sataty OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT J7e e 4th tt. Pb«n« Council. -SK «_3SB ————————_—-_¦ TIGHTER LITTL TO YOUR GOOD HEALTH Presidential Succession TODAY IN NATIONAL AFFAIRS E ISLE Amendment Needed ¦It ' s Time to D/obe/es Moy WHEN CONGRESS quit Washington early in October to go home and campaign, it left behind a vital piece of unfinished Prime Pump business — a new Presidential succession By DAVID LAWRENCE Be Hereditary l WASHINGTON — The administration has ev- aw. you at all idently decided that it has to "Prime the pump" By J. G, MOLNER. MD. titude to bother been traveling — Now that President Johnson has again*> The decision to repeal some of the ex- Dew Dr. Molner: My while you are "elected" he ought to recall the lawgivers cise taxes and reduce others in order to stimu- husband had diabetes that is, riding. But it can and hasten the process which would assure late business in 1965 is a recognition of the pos- in advanced form. The cause shortness of breath, acclimated to an orderly transfer of power should either sibility of a downturn that year. doctor told me our until you are you are exerting the presidency or the vice presidency be- There is no promise forthcoming as to when daughter inherited a it, while yourself physically. You can the budget will be balanced, though Secretary tendency to the disease. come vacant avoid pain by moving slow- of the Treasury Dillon says this is not likely She is now nine years this last September old and has a craving ly until you adjust. Recent The Senate did before 1968. The immediate consideration, how- As- constitutional amend- for sweets and butter. ly tbe American Medical when it approved a ever, is to keep the economy booming through that a president nominate Does this mean any- sociation reported ment which would let a 1965 and into 1966, when the next congressional statistical study shows heart case of the latter's thing? a vice president in the elections will be held. disease to be no more prev- disability, subject to the ratification of Con- The experts who are master-minding the na- Are there any precau- high-altitude tions I should take? I alent in tbe gress. The amendment also clarifies the suc- tional economy through the exercise of govern- •states than elsewhere. become ill and have tried to get her cession should a President mental power scoff at the idea of a balanced to use artificial sweet- Dear Dr. Molner: I duties. budget, at least until full employment has unable to perform his . ners and to keep candy have an exercise cycle been reached. The deficits are being defend- (just a bicycle ex- much that could away from her, but if I like Now, there is nothing ed as necessary because of the unemploy- cept no rear wheel, and day, Jan. 20, am not looking she puts be done before inauguration ment. Yet the rosy stories of prosperity which two or three spoons of an adjustment to make because of the sheer shortness of time. A were circulated during the presidential cam- sugar in a cup of tea. pumping harder or eas- constitutional amendment must be approved paign were for the most part unqualified. If I make a batch of ier.) I wonder if riding by two-thirds of the Congress and three- THE STRATEGY of the administration is candy she eats it as this benefits the body as fourths of the state legislatures. based upon the theory that business needs to fast as she can. Should much as a regular bicy- increase its volume of sales, There was a little she have regular medi- cle? YET THE NATION will suffer its own downward turn in retail sales in October. This cal checkups or am I I am 36 but have been constitutional disability up until that time, may have been due to labor problems in the being- overly worried? deaf for years (nerve and it is a serious one. auto industry, but it emphasized the importance -MRS. R.L.A. deafness) which makes of doing something about repealing several ex- it risky for me to do any The fact is that Mr. Johnson will not be cise taxes. Levies of this kind were started dur- Diabetes is highly depend- bicycling on the street. truly elected until the Electoral College ing World War II and some of them were add- ent upon heredity. Since the How much (or bow meets Dec. 14 and casts its ballots. Should ed during the Korean War. The total amount of American Diabetes Associa- many miles—there's a interim, the Electoral College receipts from excise taxes runs approximately tion began its drive to a meter on the cycle) , he die in the detect the disease, its fre- could choose anyone it wished, and not $14 billion a yeary and those items which are •should I do dally in order to be repealed will cause a loss of somewhere quency has risen from two to benefit?~J. necessarily the "elected" vice president. percent to nearly five per- H* between $2 and $3 billion. The exercise Is just as After that the jungle of law and prece- There is no doubt that there has been con- cent. One hospital recently examined all patients for good with your cycle. The dent is nearly trackless and extremely dan- siderable pressure to secure the repeal of many principal disadvant- of these excise taxes. The Senate finance com- diabetes and found six per- gerous. cent with it. ages, really, are that the , mittee approved a program of this kind last variety, and dies between the meeting Diabetics these days are scenery lacks If a president year} only to have it reversed by the White 't fun of inaugura* receiving treatment and you can have the of the Electoral College and the House because it did not fit in with the admin- hill. On the istration's planned tax-reduction schedule and hence growing up and hav- coasting down tion, the vice president-elect is sworn in other hand, you can do your the belief that the economy would do well at ing children; so the disease and the vice presidency stays vacant until riding regardless of weather least into 1965. , is more common now. the next election, with the speaker of the THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND If both parents have dia- or time of year. house next in line for the presidency. If he But now the repeal of some of the excise Fifteen-minutes a day of taxes betes, all children are likely electoral ballots are count- , it is believed, will stimulate the business good brisk pumping will dies before the situation in the latter part of 1965, and it is to develop it. keep your muscles toned up; ed in the Senate, some authorities argue, hoped that this trend will continue If one parent is diabetic, through (or more the vice president would not automatically 1966. and the ether isn't — but make it longer miles on the meter) If you become President. WHAT IS NOT explained is how poblic con- Russell leff Johnson is a carrier of the trait, in- feel like it. fidence in the value of the dollar can retain- herited from an earlier gen- NOTHING OF THIS sort has ever hap- be ed as the government postpones from year to eration—- there is about Dear Dr. Molner : My American history. Yet we live in pened ih year the balancing of the budget. Meanwhile, a 50-50 chance of a child X-rays were interpret- sponsor a time of instant extinction. As a the tax burden on the American people is not To Fight Georgia Battle being diabetic. ed as intestinal spasm. of the Senate-passed amendment, Sen. really being decreased materially, because How could that show in By DREW PEARSON plane, to Nice on the south- Johnson when Lyndon was a IF ONE PARENT I* dia- Birch Bayh (D., Ind.) remarked at the time, there is a steady rise in state and local taxes. a picture? What is the ern coast of France, for betic and the other is not "We've tried to cover every possibility we Concurrently, wages are being raised and WASHINGTON—Sen. Dick green but ambitious young probable cause? It is re- more inspections, leaving even a carrier, there is could think of," including the possible cap- costs are rising because of this increase. Many Russell of Georgia, the se- senator from Texas and cor- lated to a stroke? I was the next day for Seville, the about a 25 percent chance ture of the President by an enemy. businesses, therefore, which cannot raise prices date southern solon, took a ralled the votes to make him that among four children one treated and cured. — H. junket to Europe last month famous bull-fighting city of Senate Democratic leader. L. in order to absorb the higher wage rates will Spain. There he observed will have diabetes, two will As we said, time is too short to redefine find themselves with shrunken profits, and this which may have major po- Two years later, when Lyn- be carriers, and one will the vague succession laws now. ll cal reverberations. the joint Spanish-American don wanted to run for the In the stomach, the spasm could diminish tax receipts from business in military maneuvers. be free oi tbe trait. will be disclosed by slow- a considerable amount next year. Officiall Democratic nomination for Thus in your daughter' . Many legislatures, however; will be meet- y Russell was in- s ness in emptying the stom- The argument, of course, is being made that specting U.S. military bases THE SENATOR remained President, it was Dick Rus- case, you certainly must be year as is the case in sell whom he p ach. You doubtless were ing early in the businessmen should hold down their prices, and in western Europe, which in Seville until Oct. 28, at honed to watchful, and doubly so if Minnesota and Wisconsin. If Congress gives come to Chicago and handle given a barium solution to there is talk about certain "guidelines" as chairman of the Senate which time he drove in a there has been diabetes in swallow, so it would be them a prompt cue they can act quickly bis campaign. which the administration would like to see them Armed Services Committee, rented car to Lisbon, Portu- your own family. opaque and this shows in on a succession amendment. follow. Unfortunately, the government "guide- lie has a right to do, though gal, and on Oct. 29 caught It was the gentleman from The craving for fats and the X-rays. lines" are being disregarded by the labor-un- Georgia who was behind sweets is not particularly is not improper these bases have been in- a TWA flight home. In the bowel (if that is IT IS MACABRE but it ion, leaders, and some time between now and those "Love That Lyndon" significant. It is true of spected repeatedly both by By this time, the election where the spasm occur!) the to discuss what ought to be done in the next spring, tbe steel industry will be confront- Defense Department offi- campaign was over and buttons which appeared on many children. Just tbe light of what has been left undone to gov- the convention floor. same, she should limit her rate at which the opaque ed with a new labor contract which may in- cials and other visiting con- there wasn't much he could material progresses, as well ern the present dilemma. A brief special evitably force an upward trend in its prices. gressmen in the past. have done to influence the consumption of them. Most THIS EXPLAINS the as the contour of the bowel, session at which the House and Senate vote—even if he had tried, close particularly, don't let her Unofficially and more im- bond between the man who become fat or overweight. will give the clues by which could produce an amendment is urgent portant, however which he didn't. , the Rus- became President and tbe Why make candy? It just spasm can be identified. business in the public interest. sell trip was made just at IN YEARS GONE BY Of course, it can be ar- senator who has exerted puts temptation in her way. Cause? Usually it occurs the time bis old friend Lyn- Ten Years Ago ... 1954 gued that in ducking out great power over him and Teach her sensible eating ln tense, nervous individ- don Johnson was pleading on the election Sen. Rus- habits. uals. Otherwise, Inflamma- The First National Bank will convert the over the southern bloc. desperately for sou t h e r n sell was merely doing what Repeatedly, Under the circumstances, tion of some sort (such as area to the west and north of its building into as Senate ma- colitis) votes and especially trying he had done in the past. jority leader, Johnson defer- don't let fear of diabetes is the likely factor. Department Clarifies a parking lot and a drive-in window service. to carry the state of It has no Geor- In 1952, during the Ste- red to Russell. Repeatedly, become an obsession. The relationship to The first Minnesota-Wisconsin Dairy Insti- gia. The President stroke. even venson-Eisenhower election, at Russell's advice or re- little girl may never develop tute sponsored by the Winona public school vo- sent his wife on a whistle- I'm glad your Position on Locating Roads Dick also went to Europe. quest, Johnson appointed the disease. treatment cational agriculture department will be held at stop tour through Georgia. was effective. In In 1956, in the second Ike- southern senators to posi- some peo- the Central Junior High School. I'D JUST BE reasonably ple, this problem becomes IT HAS BECOME apparent to Minnesota However, the most power- Adlai campaign, Russell tions of power, thereby in- ful politician in Georgia careful — an annual check chronic. Highway Department officials that the pub- 1 939 again walked out. He made curring the wrath and re- for diabetes. There are Twenty-Five Years Ago ... was absent, touring Europe an inspecion trip of military sentment of northern Demo- Dear Dr. Mol ner; lic does not completely understand the posi- at the taxpayers' expense. simple urine and blood su- A regional Odd Fellows convention will be at- bases. In 1960, Russell went crats. gar tests. Please write about men- tion the department takes when determin- He planned hi; trip with tended by 37 lodges in Southern Minnesota to on another inspection trip, This is also why, as Presi- Don't make these opause. I am 40 and al- ing the location or relocation and design ' expert timing, just when his tests be held at Red Men s Wigwam Dec. 19. made no speeches for John dent, Johnson has frequently in the morning, when sugar though I have tried to of a highway such as Interstate 90 from absence from the political "Santa Claus Lane" will be the name for F. Kennedy. deferred to Russell, why he levels will be low anyway. ask my doctor, he never Dakota west to the South Dakota border. scene would count most. On the business section of Winona when the Christ- But in the recent election accepted Russell's very bad Rather, they are most use- seems to want to ela- Oct. 14, mas decorations have been put up. Decora- a few days after many of Russell's friends advice on the Panamanian ful when made about two borate. I believe that if To clarify its position, Commissioner Lady Bird had pleaded for tions will extend from Kansas to Washington on thought it would be differ- crisis last December, hours after a meal. That is a woman knew what to James C. Marshall has made the following votes in Georgia advice 3rd Street. , Russell ent. For Russell is the man which deadlocked the dis- when the blood sugar will expect, it would be a lot statement. flew to Frankfurt , Ger- who went to bat for Lyndon pute for three months. be most significantly ele- easier to face. many, then on to Weisbaden, vated ln early cases. At what age does men- "I would like to remind you that the Fifty Years Ago ... 1914 then caught a train to Hei- Diabetes, in childhood, opause start? When do location proposed for this highway has been The Bay State Milling Co. announce.; that delberg, then proceeded by determined by professional engineers. They it will erect a new 500,000-bushel capacity ele- i can develop swiftly - much monthly periods cease? train to Bad Tolz, Germany. JhsL jbdA. more so than with adults. What have made every evaluation of the area in vator on its property east of Market Street. The are hot flashes? contract for the work has been awarded to FROM THERE, the sena- Sudden excessive thirst, How many years before an effort to solve your transportation prob- frequency of Barnett & Record Co. of Minneapolis. tor from Georgia was driv- urination and menopause ends? What lems. unexplained loss of weight other Ice was found clinging to the shores of the en by Army sedan to Vien- symptoms are are common symptoms. there? "In determining the recommended align- Mississippi today. In some places the ice ex- na, arriving on Oct.' 17. He - MRS .L.P. ment for a highway, our engineers eval- tended from one to two feet out over the remained through Oct. 18. Dear Dr. Molner : I It's a complicated Just why the senator went enough uate many different locations, keeping in water. E. E. Rote , connected with the govern- am a retired citizen 65 subject so I guess most doc- mind our obligation to serve the most and ment fish hatchery at Homer, is hunting big to Vienna is not known, be- years old and in good tors feel the cause there hasn't been health same way injure the fewest people. Our engineers game in Canada this week. a , but I keep get- about it: Don't get single U.S. soldier In or ting notices in the mail started work closely with leaders of civic and talking about It , around Vienna for a dozen to send $20 for a urinary or you use planning groups of the area in order to Seventy-Five Years Ago ... 1 889 up a lot of time you can't years. The famous Vienna analysis, perhaps alert- Miss Gertrude Stoker has resigned reasonably spare. reach the best decision for the benefit of her po- opera is there, of course, ing me to trouble. What the area. sition as principal of Jeffe rson School and left There is a great deal of plus the intriguing Viennese should I do? - MRS. difference for St . Paul to n.ccept a position as critic teach- B. C. in the way men- "Serious opposition to the recommended coffee houses. But that was opause affects er in Superintendent Gilbert's training school. about all the senator could various in- require us to make a com- Be wary of dividuals. location would Sheriff Scott of La Crosse was in the city inspect. solicitations There is no sure today looking over the jail of this type. It is wise to way of predicting plete restudy of what we believe to be the . La Crosse is to have Sen. Russell caught the when It a new one. have a urinalysis period- will begin - best alignment for the area. I hope you train to Venice, Italy , on but for most will not interpret this as a desire to keep The Board of Trade rooms were the scene of ically at your age, but your women It is somewhere be- Oct. 19. arriving at 6 p.m. doctor can do it and at tween you from making statements in opposition a pleasant gathering on the occasion being the and pulling out for Verona the the moderately early , same time take notice 40'g and to the proposal. We want you to say any- second annual meeting and banquet of the Wi- Italy, at 10 p.m. In this of very early 50's, any other signs that indi- and most nona Jobbers Union. city, which Shakespeare generally In the thing you wish about it, but we also want cate need for care. I have later half made famous with his play of the 40'a, you to have a complete understanding of no doubt that your total cost ihe situation. One Hundred Years Ago... 1864 "The Two Gentlemen of will be substantially less. NOTE TO M.B.A. : No, The Sixth Minnesota Regiment has changed Verona, " Sen. Russell in- cataracts do not return af- "THE MINNESOTA Highway Depart- its quarters from Helena, Ark. to St. Louis. spected one U.S. base. Dear Dr. Molner : I ter an operation , because ment's primary interest is to improve your On Oct. 20, Russell flew have angina pectoris tho entire lens of the eya transportation facilities , and in order to by U.S. Air Force plane to and take nitroglycerin is removed — and a "catar- do that in the most efficient and benefi- Athens, Greece, from which tablets for the pain. We act" is a lens that has be- cial manner, we need your ideas , bot h those WINONA DAILY NEWS most of our troops have are planning n mountain come cloudy. I ' 'r~ ' \ * ~~ ^^mamaama+r trip. Will high altitude our proposal and t hose in long been removed, but in support of A M Independent Newspaper — Established IH55 "Isn't this a beautiful mink affect my condition?— opposition. " winch is a lovely tourist coat? It's for you spot. Then on Oct. 23, birthday — I thought MRS. S.S. W. F. W HITE G. R. CLOSWAY C. E. UNDEN he you'd enjoy something nic j START YOUR DAY ] Publisher Exec. Director Business Mgr. flew , again by military to look at." I wouldn 't expect the al- • with I and Editor 4 Adv. Director OPINION-WISE 1*7 1 ^ W. J. COI .E Anoint H HKMKR H. G. H YMK .I Bill p Me Managing Editor City Edttor Circulation Mgr . Merrill's Try and Sto i B. H. HABECE F. H. K I AGCK L. V. ALSTON By BENNETT CElt* Composing Supt. Press Supt. Engraving Supt. Admiring a necklace adorning Mrs. W ILLIAM H. ENGLISH GORDON HOLTK "Something to Richard Burton (Elizabeth Taylor — if Comptrolle r Sunday Editor you've been lost in the jungle for the past ' MEMUlJr Or TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS Live By three years), an envious lady at a nearby I " | i table exclaimed, "That string of pearls is the George Washington Bridge on a clear i •*50 Each Morning | Tho Associated Press Is entitled exclusively ! i night!" lo tin- use for i ¦ republication of all tlic local i on news printed In this newspaper an well as all | We know thai we have (IUKK <- the lefse-baJcfhg. Mrs. The bride and groom are both ed 65 paid-up members at the LEWISTON, Minn.-The Lew- undersea recalls one, especial- graduates of the Spring Grove regular meeting of the Amer- iston Garden Club will meet at § , who, after watching her bake High School and the groom is ican Legion Auxiliary Tuesday 2 p.m. Wednesday at the home a batch said, "Why on earth now serving in the Air Force sight. The quota is 75. of Mrs. Ray Laufenberger with at the Luke AFB Mrs. Wendell Draper, presi- m , do you use that sand on the top near Phoenix, * fwl " Mrs. Julia Litcher as assisting your stove." It was the flour Ariz., where they will make dent, appointed Mrs. Maynard hoateaB. from the lefse that had burped their home. They took a wed- Ask and Mrs. John Russell to Election of officers will be brown. ding trip through the southern the planning committee for UJ CARDS held and Mrs. Augusta Krenzke states. They will make their naming streets in the village. (l&' ST) When asked about future Im- Surprise your card playing I IjjalL . _/t _X J / will have the topic. home at Glendale, Ariz. Mrs. Kenneth Wangen, secre- friends with the perfect gift I provements to her product, The bride was honored with tary, and the president are W%*m*\l&BM f BTOCKTOV HOMEMAKERS Mrs. Gunderson replied, "I sup- pre-nuptlal parties at the Faith delegates to the fall conference . . . Kern Cards. They're pure / pyMfyM^vi I STOCKTON, Minn. - Mrs. pose there are some changes Lutheran Church at St. Paul, Nov. 20-21. plastic to stay fresh and clean j _ and at Our »^Sw I9mTVlWfI I Ray Lafky will give a demon- to be made to make it taste Saviour's Lutheran Church, Mrs. LuVerne Johnson an- even after months of use. The I f^W^Lr / stration on "Packing Frozen better." "One of our men cus- Rlceford, Minn. The groom's nounced plans completed for Foods" When the Stockton tomers suggested a change. He parents were hosts at a lunch serving lunch at the open house Homemakers meet Wednesday asked, "Why can't you put but- at the church following rehear- during American Education at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. ter and sugar on it before you sal. Week at Lanesboro High School Lyle Ladewlg. wrap it upr" when the auxiliary also pre- ST. MARTIN'S CIRCLE P sents corsages and boutonnieres RANGY GRACE! k^^^K ^HV Mrs. William Koeller, 216 to all faculty members. Mrs. DOUBLE *7 QC Mankato Ave,, will entertain Richard Hollenbeck reported on DECK VlrtW Circle F of St. Martin's Luth- tbe Halloween party for area eran Church at 2 p.m. Thurs- children, sponsored by the aux- The White Gate day. iliary. A Christmas Seal Bond AND L^^^K BILLFOLDSgrain Preston, Minnesota was purchased. ^mmWm f cowhide or NOVELTY SALE Mrs. Alvin Rose and Mrs. ^^m^mmmmmmmmW ostricha ' leather BASIC DARKS ^^^V ^ lent billfoldslure LAKE CITY, Minn. (Special) George Gulbranson will be host- ^^H ^f^^^m\mmm~mmW ' dnjwwwA, esses at the sewing meeting, ^^H^^Hj Thomasby Rolf , -Members of Ruth Circle, First Nov. 20. n^L Methodist Church, will have a ^HHHN |^^H her are to Hostesses serving supper in- ^H^^ MMKB pleascl Ladies love the chic A COMPLETE LINE OF novelty sale Tuesday, beginning cluded Mmes. Lester Gunder- SS^U^^_ ^ at 1 p.m. Dessert and coffee will son, Samuel Lewis, Paul Even- TYPI- m mmWs ^ Sm%lBmm "French __m ^^BBPK\' >£_&__¦ ^ be served from 1 to p.m. mMV£r mmmmmmmmmmY If* *\ I Am\ ^^Jmm ^^^mm\\\\ 5 son and Draper. ^ SM.OO and ^^_HH__H__-H-HK^_H___..u___3l__sGS-l^_H £a\ HILL AND VALLEY CLUB LEAVE FOR TEXAS CAL ft V&mXXX W^iZ/ () )/ fl ¦_^_^_HHI_HHRI-H ~ CHRISTAN BOOKS if S JAmmmY ^^_T 1 wWKAaTMma / %%, plus tax LAKE CITY, (Special) Mr and Mrs. J. W Goss will ^ -** - W^H^HKP^R^^^fl FOR AIL AOEf Minn. leave Winona Tuesday for Edln- MATCHING —Mrs. Herman Hastedt will be TALL /* Q T/ ^ ^UH^HHIHHHH CIGARETTE • hostess to the Hill and Valley burg, Tex , whore they will VwltmVi XJOmmmmT CASES spend the winter. ^^^PPHHHK W» Alio Have Many Unusual Gifts Birthday Club at her home ^^^^ AL50 AVAILABLE. Thursday. The meeting date was ^ * and Plaques SILVER TEA moved up • week because of LAKE CITY, Minn. - Lake Thanksgiving. City Women's Club will give a HOSIERY AND LINGERIE DEPARTMENT silver tea at 2 p.m. Wednesday WIN TRIP TO ITALY at the home of Mrs. Ford Mar- WE STILL SERVE HEARTY IUNCHES CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) quis. - Mr. sod Mrs. William Wle- Homamada Soup, fandwichos and Pi* land, Caledonia, left Monday on LADIES AID MINNESOTA CITY, Minn. WILLIAMS (No M*al») an eight-day tnp to Rome and - Naples, Italy, They flew b> Jst Minnesota City Lutheran Ladies y from Minneapolis to ' Chicago Aid will meet In the church Hvl I v V SL \ * basement at 1:30 p.m. Thurs- ^ BOOK AND STATIONERY OPEN 7:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M. and from there directly to Rome. They won the trip free in day. Mrs. Edward Maxham , _ 52-54 Weil Third (Closed Sunday*) a sales promotionprogram con- Who will be hostess, said visit- . *: "* __ , ___ . . ducted by Norge appliances. ors are welcome. ¦HHM-HHH-HHH_HH-H^^ en. If leaves are not available, marsh bay can be «*IM«-M -HM-M- MMHMM ¦ ; : ,tr«w or The' above practices, in brief, ^ill produce good roses. Howev- Ve refinementa such as er, other ry House Avoids rtical Look pruning the heavy roots slightly 2^Sto Uts tktGrMllKIand cutting off all broken ones, A flve-bedroom house that as well as cutting out all small answers the needs of complete » By A. F. SHIR* canes will help. The application suburban living? of a complete fertilizer with a No trouble at all for the archi- A Symposium On Rosas formula of 5-10-5, or similar tect if he has a large plot with A discussion of rose growina-and their care was indulged one, in tbe early spring and But if the house first neavy which to work. -in freely by the members of tI*Wln«m Rose' Society at the again after the must go on a modest piece of is over about July 15, meeting last Wednesdaye vening at Lake rPaifc Ledge. In its blooming ¦ ¦ ¦;¦ ¦ ground, extra care must be ex- might should be sufficient. two-story scope and ramifications it be properly called avsympos- ercised to create a ium. Conducted t>y Francis Jilk with questions on ttie various Shallow cultivation will keep that will not have a structure phases of the subject,J*tbe members participated actively in down the weeds, or a mulch boxy look. , teUing of their experiences, mostly {successful, but -somenot so can be applied, during the ram- ARCHITECT Herman York good. Practically all of the pros and cons of ro«| growing mer. Frequent wakings with has done an excellent job of were included in the discus- water is desirable, depending and condition iiroviding an optical illusion of sion. upon the rainfall in the case ot rosea, perhaps, In * ength in a five-bedroom house Probably no other garden part to the-lact of the soil. ' , tfcat they are with dimensions of SC by 39 , plant has been surrounded by so widely grown under varying foregoing the necessity of hav- mora misconceptions about the climatic and soil conditions. ing an oversize lot difficulties In growing it, than There has been so much , rose, (fcrtajnly,it requires written A wide, portico front entrance the . about roses, not a little of which of the goodc ^rejust the same as most extending across most . is contradictory, that some gar- house, creates a long line that all plabts, but it is not hard to ' hori- deners have been every much puts the emphasis on the grow good roses, If the basic confused as to to the appear- fundamentals what and what zontal. Adding of proper culture not to do. length at the front of and usual gardening practices Fortunately, the rose ance of plant will withstand the house is the combining of are applied. Too much tradi- much mis- tbe portico roof line with that of tion, mystery and even un- treatment and will perform well the two-car garage. sound practices have surround- even though the optimum condi- Much attention has been given ed the growing of roses. tions may not be provided. ^%*^*^. ^ ^j/ ^NF The four main considerations THIS IS TRUE, of coarse, in growing roses are good soil, COMPLITI FLOOR PLANS: Excellent traffic pattern is feature of kitchen, and with five bedrooms on second floor. with some other plants, but proper planting, insect and dis- ' this two-story house, with ' . living area radiating around seems to be more pronounced ease control, and adequate win- Welding Service ter protection. Given these, the incidental cultural practices , JOB or CONTRACT WORK Property Transfers such as fertilizing, mulching and PORTABLE EQUIPMENT watering are matters for the in- In Winona County Services Also InctoAe: City Issues dividual gardener's likes. Our WARRANTY DBRD ShMt, Plat* end Struefural Oian Erwln Gaulke et ux to Aloys FIRST, LET m look at the loll • ~2*+ j aammmmm\\ N. VlmlB tt ux-S. 1J0 ft. .of W. 155 Statl Work *>* *Jam ^ ft. of tot 39. limits of City of St. preparation for planting a rose. Cherles, Any good garden soil will grow Boilar Repair Work Permits for Herbert A. Vollbreehf »t ux to 4ohn roses, but it should • f-l»nl8»n «t »V-SE>A of NE'A of SWW contain a ^£r ^WG!!mmmmm\ Sec. M-.05-5 axc.pt 1 acre to church. considerable amount of humus Aarwi I. Harrison fo Harold M, Crow for best results and of WINONA BOILER -SW/4 of SEW Sac. 1»j W% of NE'A. this, WONOERFta IlillllltllUllI S. 70 acres of course, applies to other CHOICE ^ SW'A Seci 21; HV, of plants •irr #nWiniii Three Houses NW of NW'~ Sec. 38-105-10. as well. If the soil is heavy, a & STEEL CO. won UDIES jJy.) ' mmmWmuu^L\ alteration 11 ¦¦• ; ' . . . J \Mm \wS99 work — givo s y^sjj GAS FURNACES j us a chanc* •—^-u_u_>3 "MIRRORS" K FH^ W^le^ ^i to bidl ty j (Doors, walls, shelves. Over j "VALSPAR" fireplaces.) S (SASH & TRIM PA, ; NT) ALSO j . . ¦ ; ; ¦ I In whit* and gloss colon tor "Pole Mirrors" j trttrtor UM SENSE (Brass rods — adjustable te '. -^§ room height.) ' ^>*^\/iT ^ Wi ELECTRIC , SERVICE ^ - ^ 1712 Wtit Fifth ^ ^^ Don't be satisfied Phone 8-3762 / ^^ with less than Lennox ! NEW PRESTON BANK . . . This Is the all banking activities, including I architect's draw- The upper floor will house ing of the Farmers & Merchants Bank under construction night depository and drive-in window. The present build- INDUSTRIAL I * ^tf/ lfff/ 'hK W« hav* a Furnac*. for Any '¦ at St. Anthony and Fillmore streets in Preston, Minn. The ing, constructed in 1916, will be sold when the new one Is PUTT COMMERCIAL cover 3, }\ Y KNIVES it /jt^V 1 building will 806 square feet on each of two floors. occupied in June. y^pa ^ Heating Naed ... GLAZIER POINTS IUSIDINTIAI. jj> krnl vV-VUi' • * ^ ^ r*n SIGN OF RELIABILITY ... RAZ0R BLADE SCRAPPM A, FAHM WIRING ^ ^ | UVJG SPACE I fltrrfl i • ^^ GAS ir ELECTRIC • WCR^ » J "PLEX-O • * F 0 Horn* Building \ !- JrL TITE" DOOR ¦ AND WIND ¦k Mma 0 Cabinet Work |-* « '-"•^a'TIl °w OIL • COAL " '•^.-', 'J«7 | WEATHER STRIPPIN0 I I Ramodeling I • GLASS CUTTERS ^^^^^^^^^^ QUALITY SHEET For Complete Personalized Building Service Contact * WINONA PAINT tf__^__l__H^__l__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^H__^__H_^_B ' rmu & METAL WORKS ffi^K__ -i^^ ^t \ GLASS CO. CALL 74*4 "Your Color HAROLD OFENLOCH BRUCE McNALLY Carousel Store " BUILDING CONTRACTOR East Broadway 7*1 GEO. KARSTEN Phone I 55-57 Watt Second St. lOJt _ Phon* 5793 Central Contractor Phon* 3652 w „ 304 Lak* StrMt " " BOB FOLLMANN grandchild, and four brother!, MONDAY Norris, Irvin and Albert, all of Khrushchev , NOVEMMR 16, 1964 Eleva and Clarence, Eau Spring Valley Ouster Big The Deri/*[ Record Claire. One sot has died. NASON ON EDUCATION Funeral services will be at 2 Surprise fo All At p.m. Wednesday at Eleva Luth- Community Winona Deaths Two-State Deaths eran Church, the Rev. Calvin WASHINGTON (AP ) Larson officiating. Burial will Youth Killed; - John Memorial Ho$pita| Mrs. WIIKelmlna C. 0|aus H. Overlaen A. McCone, head of the Central be in Eleva Cemetery. Intelligence Agency, l,lni ¦; DonaMeon BUCK RIVER FALLS, Wis. Friends may call from 3 p.m. says the When Students Fail pa_.Y l1"en.is: . '!_J"?' W_»' *ra>ta\ fall of Soviet Prem i«(wrS tit***¦ a.m.¦ (M* (Special) - Olaus H. Ovarii*, Tuesday until 11 a.m. Wednes- ier Khru- chiwrtn ond*r II.) Mrs. WUbelmina C. Donald- State Toll 735 shchev surprised the Soviet Maternity patients: . to J:M and / ta son, 90, 708 Johnson St., died 84, Jackson County highway day at Strand-Kjentvet Funer- 1:30 a.m. (Mult* only.) ^T commissioner more than 25 al Home bare, and after noon By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Presidium SB well as the rest of Sunday morning at Glen Lake the world. SUNDAY Nursipg Borne, Minnaapolis,aft- years, died Saturday at 7:80 it the church. Eight persons died in Minne- Who Bears Blame? er an UloMt of many years a.m. at the Jackson Coun- sota traffic accidents this week- The reason , he said, ws that ADMISSIONS heart at- Mrs. Gottlieb Hoch Khrushchev's enemies did By L. J. NASON, Ed. D. different all through The former Wllhelmlna Matt- ty home following a end and two former residents of not the last Walter R. tack . ALMA, Wis. <8peclal)-Mrs. themselves helieve they had twelve years. Bess, Fountain City, sod, she was born Aug. 20, 1874. Minnesota were killed in crash- U. of Southern California Wia, One of nine children, be was Gottlieb Hoch, 90, died of a strength to remove him until It is necessary at this stage to John and Beata Ander- es in other states. in born Dec. 2, 1879, near MiUston, heart ailment Saturday night at they assembled In Moscow Oct. The failure of children to get the whole matter out into Wealey J. Laumb, Houston, s t , Winona, and lived The state's 1964 traffic toll school often catches parents by on Ma tson Monroe County, to Hans and hjar hojhe. 14. the open so that parent and Minn. in toe city most of her life. Her soared to 735, compared with 711 surprise. Their first thought is Brita Overlien. The former Lucy Obrecht, pupil understand the problem Kevin Burke, 1116 W, husband, Andrew Donaldson, in tbe same period last year. McCone discussed the Soviet ' blame?" Mark St At 16 he started logging on she was born Jan. 19, 1874, in often "Who s to and accept the challenge. died in April 1938. She was a Richard Johnson, 19, Rose- situation in a talk before a Cath- There is little question where Mrs. Virgil Pellowski, 820 E. Black River. He was highway tha Town of Alma to Mr. and As the problem is allowed to Sanborn St. member of ^t. Paul's Episcopal villa, was killed and two com- olic University homecoming to place the blame when ser- commissioner from 1923 to 1948. airs. Sylvester Obrecht. She banquet - the first speech he drift further into the teens tha Church. lifelong resident of this panions were injured critically ious learning problems are en- difficulty of solution Robert McLean, 158 W. Wab- During those years he twice re- was a has made since becoming CIA shows Surviving is one sister, Dr. El- |Tea and was married in 1898. lata Sunday when their small countered as soon as a child startling increases. asha St. . ceived the certificate of merit director three years ago. vena Mattson, Ed.D., Winona She attended public schools at foreign convertible went over enters school . The school hasn't LeRoy Peterson, 178 E. How- from a Milwaukee newspaper AT THE VERY Mill Creek, Town of Alma, and an embankment in Shoreview, had a chance so the finger time tha ard St Private funeral services will for "the greatest improvement teen-ager is be Tuesday at 10:80 am. at was a member of St. Paul and overturned and burst into points to the home. struggling for in- Karl Grabner, in maintenance and traffic serv- However, with changes at home dependence and self-determina- 226 Pelzer St. Bfeitlow Funeral Home, the St. Luke United Church of flames. Mrs. Harold ice in several counties in Wis- and cooperation at school the tion the parent comes face to Hellickson, 865 Rev. George Goodreid, St. " Christ, its church guild and the , 41st Ave., Goodview . consin. David Dale Nagel 21, Spring New Typhoon child's behavior patterns can face with the necessity of im- Paul's Episcopal Church, offi- He was given credit by road Royal Neighbors of America. Valley, Minn., was killed Sun- Ian Armstrong, 661 W. Waba- Her husband died in 1955. be improved. During the kind- posing suddenly more strict con- ciating. Burial will be in Wood- builders for developing the day. His car missed a curve on ergarten year, kindergarten sha St lawn Cemetery. There will be Surviving are: A son, Irvin, trols, or in the opposite situa- drop inlet culvert and was in a county road south of Simpson, teachers and parents working tion DISCHARGES no visitation. Rochester; four daughters, Mrs. , suddenly loosening tha charge of selecting the site and a town about five miles south Bearing Down together can bring about suffi- reins. Mrs Emory Rine and baby, building the bridge over the Lila Gillespie, Minneapolis; in Olmsted County of Rochester , cient change to assure a suc- In the first situation it brings 823 W. Howard St. Winona Funerals Black River here. Mrs. Harold (Lorene) Gustaf- Kenneth James Linde, 47, cessful entry into the first about an emotional explosion; Mark D. Miner At the state Road Builders As- son, Alma; Mrs. Elsie Rata- Fosston farmer, died in a col- grade . Prompt change is vital , Lamoille, in the second, it leaves the boy Minn. Hatmar Thompson sociation convention in 1955 he Jczyk, Winona ; and Mrs. Mar- lision on Highway 31, about 16 On Viet Nam to the child's future success in garet Rothwell, Minneapolis; 11 or girl lost and confused. Funeral services for Helmer was honored for his ability to miles south of Bagley in north- SAIGON, South Viet Nam school since first grade starts Mrs. Fred Hohmeister, 361 W. grandchildren; 33 great-grand- Self-control and self-disci- Bellei_iew St. Thompson, Winona Rt. 3, were foresee future needs of county western Minnesota, Sunday. (AP ) —Another typhoon bore basic work in reading and arith- today at Central Lutheran children and six great-great- pline that should have been at- Charles Acheson, Milwaukee. held and state highway departments. Five persons, including the vic- down today on South Viet Nam's metic. Church, Dr. L. E. Brynestad of- grandchildren. tained by this age is not some- John Culhane, Rushford, Minn. He held the state record of 40 tim's brother and nephew , were central coast area, still not re- ficiating Burial was in Wood- Two children, one brother and ACTUALLY the kindergarten thing that can be acquired over- Baby boy Bronk, Stockton Hill. consecutive years of attendance injured in the crash. covered from floods in which night . lawn Cemetery. at state Republican conventions. two sisters have died. teachers are often so successful BIRTHS . - August Stanke, 74, rural Web- nearly 7,000 persons drowned Outside counseling is usually Pallbearers were five sons , He was a member of the Mason- Funeral services will be Wed- as substitute mothers that a , ster, Minn., was killed Sunday and hundreds of thousands were necessary and is effective pro- Mr. and Mrs. James Paniel- Allan, David, Rudolph, Peter ic lodge here. nesday at 2 p.m. at Stohr Fu- left homeless. child's lack of self-control and in a collision at the U.S. High- vided all concerned face up son, Fountain City, Wis., a son. and Helmer Jr, and one grand- Survivors are : Two sons, neral Home here with burial in self-discipline are not obvious ; way 65 and Dakota County Road The new storm was expected in fact , some children, are car- to the situation. If the student Rev and Mrs George Scho- son, Allan David Thompson. Earl Moslnee; Calmer, supply Alma Cemetery. The Rev. Gene , 70, near Orchard Gardens. to hit the coastal resort of Nha- ried all through the elementary resists, it is often helpful to walter, Fountain City, a son pastor of the Methodist Church Krueger will officiate. Grand- Mrs. Lillian Kinowski sons will be pallbearers. Michael Bruce Peterson, 17, trang where Typhoon Joan school by their teachers. place he problem squarely in at Elmwood; three daughters, caused wide devastation earlier his lap. FREE TB X-RAYS Funeral services for Mrs. Mrs. Ernest (Blanche ) Bugler , Friends may call at the fu- the son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard The start of junior high school this month. Emergency meas- The counselor may say, "Your (Mon.-Wed.-Fti., 1-6 p.m. Lillian Kinowski, West Allis, Pasadena, Calif., and twins, neral home this evening. Peterson of Glenwood , died in a then becomes a traumatic ex- ures were taken in the city of parents have tried to do what Room 8, City Hall) Wis., were held this morning Mrs Jackson (Eileen ) Skid- Minneapolis hospital Sunday of perience. Suddenly a child must . Mr*. Lawrence Marsoiak 55,000, where several U.S. in- they can for you. The school Winona Co. residents f ret, at St. Stanislaus Church, the West Bend, and Mrs. injuries suffered late Saturday. adjust to several teachers who |_ more, INDEPENDENCE, Wis. ( Spe- stallations are located. has tried. Both have others, each. Rt. Rev, lMtegr. N. F. Grulkow- (Irene ) Marvin, Niles, The car carrying the victim and are interested primarily in sub- failed. John cial) — Mrs. Lawrence Marso- ject matter and who expect Obviously if there is going ski officiating. Burial was in Mich.; several grandchildren Pamela Tollefson, 16, Starbuck, A U.S. weather expert said to Last week 61 lek, 55, Town of Montana, died their pupils to have acquired be any improvement YOU are St. Mary's Cemetery. and one sister, Mrs. Emma Wal- Minn., crashed on Highway 29 Kate, third typhoon to strike the Since 1959 .53 ,831 Sunday at 3:15 a.m. at Tri- a fair amount of self-confidence going to have to do it." Pallbearers were L- Robert ler, LaValle. west oi Glenwood. Miss Tollef- central coast this fall, is expect- County Memorial Hoapital, 's injuries were not serious. ed to cause heavy damage de- and self-discipline, along with Nevertheless, someone must Prondzinski, Glen Morgan Sr., The funeral service will be son TODAY'S BIRTHDAY Whitehall, after a long illness. Two pedestrians were killed spite precautions proficiency in reading, writing help the student bolster his John Sikorski, James Yahnke, Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Little Nor- ' The former Mary Broskowski, Saturday night. Ray Mittelstad, and arithmetic. shaky study techniques and Laurie Ann Bronk, Rolling- George Shugart and Helmet way Lutheran Church, the Rev. In the flood area, U.S. mili- she was born Oct. 1, 1909, in 56 was struck down by a car Here then the lack of home study habits. He may seed stone, Minn., 4. Lueck. Robert Salveson officiating. Town of Bumside , tary sources said Viet Cong to Frank and as he crossed Highway 16 near training is really faced for the guidance in catching up on Burial will be in the church Anastasia Broskowski. She was guerrillas were waylaying vil- his home at Guckeen, 10 miles lagers at roadblocks and seizing first time. To make matters neglected fundamentals. , Una cemetery. married in June 1929 at Ss. Pe- west of Blue Earth. Dno Berg- worse, the pupil has had an should be provided by someone Municipal Court WEATHER Friends may call at Lan- food. ter k Paul Catholic Church lund, 76, Duluth, was struck added six years in which his outside the family. lois-Galston Funeral Home this A Defense Ministry spokes- WINONA OTHER TEMPERATURES g here. while crossing a street intersec- wrong attitudes have become , said the Communists killed David F. Meyers, 24, 1652 W. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS evening. Survivors are: Her husband; tion in Duluth. man fixed habits — to say nothing three daughters 150 Vietnamese soldiers last Ith St , pleaded not guilty to High fcow Pr. , Mrs. Jesse Cecil Moonin, 24, New Market of the established behavior pat- driving after revocation of his Albany, cloudy 48 35 .'. Harry A. Hall ( Dorothy ) Ryan, Mrs. John week and made off with 236 terns in the heme which, for Wis. (Special) Minn., died Saturday of injuries drivers license. Municipal Albuquerque, cloudy 61 43 .. PEPIN, - ( Helen) Wiersgalla and Miss weapons. He said the Viet Cong best results, should' have been Pepin died suffered when his car rolled Judge John D. McGill set trial Atlanta, fog ...... 73 55 .. Harry A. Hall, 75, , Elaine, all of Independence; suffered 136 dead and 49 cap- Saturday morning at St. Eliza- near that Dakota County com- for Dec. 1 at 9:30 a.m. and Bismarck clefar ... 31 14 .. five grandchildren ; one brother, tured and lost 60 weapons. , beth's Hospital, Wabasha, munity early Nov. 1. Moonin ordered Meyers to post bail of Boise, clear .... '... 30 13 Joe, Independence, and one sis- where he had been a patient succumbed without regaining $100. Meyers is in city jail pend- Boston, cloudy ..... 50 36 . ter , Mrs. Christina Schneider, A U.S. helicopter pilot was Supreme Court ing the posting of bond. The al- since Nov. 9. Eau Claire, consciousness. wounded by Viet Cong ground Chicago, cloudy .... 63 60 1.50 . 14 1889, Mrs. Linda Hurtgen, of leged offense occurred on Wa- He was born Jan , Funeral services will be at 10 fire Sunday while attempting to Cincinnati ... 71 M .36 at Hudson, Wis., to William and Hope, Ark., but formerly of St. basha Street between Mankato Cleydbnpd, rain .... 70 59 .03 a.m. Wednesday at Ss, Peter & get flood victims out of an iso- Avenue and Chatfield Street to- Ada Hall. He served in World Paul, died in a car collision lated region in the Qui Nonh Upholds '1-Man, Denver, snow .. .. 26 20 .03 on Paul Church, the Rev Edmund day at 1:40 a.m. Meyers has War I and later worked J. Klimek officiating. Burial will Sunday a mile north of Hope. area. On Saturday a U.S. Army violations on Des Moines, cloudy . 61 38 .14 ranches in Montana, moving to 14 previous traffic be in the church cemetery Also killed in the crash was officer was wounded when his his record. Detroit, rain .61 55 .11 Pepin in the early 1930s. He Mrs. Ed Aslin of near Hope. ' Fairbanks, cloudy .19 -6 Friends may call after 3 p.m. armored carrier bit a mine in 1-Vote Standard Marvin Fy Taylor Jr., 23, married Helen Allen in Septem- Vinh Binh Province . Denison, Iowa, pleaded guilty Fort Worth, clear .. 79 66 .02 ber 1936. After , their marriage today at Kern Funeral Home WASHINGTON (AP) - The to careless driving Saturday at Helena, clear 30 8 the couple farmed in the area here. Rosary will be said at 8 Supreme Court banded to the 1:24 a.m. at 3rd and Main Honolulu, cloudy ... 81 66 several years, then moved to p.m today and Tuesday Pennsylvania Supreme Court Indianapolis, cloudy 65 60 2.13 6 Students Hurt today the job of seeing that the streets and paid the $30 fine the village. Mrs. Elsie Kaarup Californians EVERY TIME A 9TRAN6Et The Jacksonville, cloudy 77 62 .29 state's legislature adopts a levied by Judge McGill. His wife survives. She is hos- FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. (Spe- At Big Bonfire CROSSES YOUR SIDEWALK, YW alternative was 10 days in jail. Kansas City, rain .70 42 2.07 pitalized. ) reapportionment law meeting RISK DISASTER! Then lit many Forfeitures: Los Angeles, clear . 59 42 cial — Mrs. Elsie Kaarup, 72, the federal "one-man-one-vote" rttntiif hazards on your property, Funeral services will be Tues- died at the home of a daughter, HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - An pisttrby could trip and Gerald D. Schaefer, 19, Foun- Louisville, cloudy .. 72 60 .19 day at 11 a.m. at Pepin Metho- Feel Quakes exploding bonfire at a high standard. bn»» tain, Minn., $10 on a charge Memphis, clear .... 81 64 Mrs. Theodore Braatz, today at his Itf. Next thingyou know you're dist Church, the Rev. Charles SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A school pep rally Thursday night The highest tribunal, in a being sued. Cm JWI of going through a red light clear 79 65 . 2 a.m. afford soch a MlamV Garel officiating. Burial will be she series of earthquakes rumbled injured six students. unanimous action, vacated a financial risk? Or tout* resulting Saturday at 11:12 a.m. at Broad- Milwaukee, cloudy . 60 51 .65 The former Elsie Grewe, in Oakwood Cemetery. was born Nov. 24 1891 in the along a nine-county area along Witnesses said the 35-40 feet decision by a special three- from storms, thefts or fires? It ptys way and Huff Street. ls.-St.P., cloudy . 55 32 , , to know you can art Mp Friends may call at the Town of Buffalo Buffalo Coun- California 's central coast Sun- high bonfire exploded when a judge U. S. District Court for Ml pretectal Harry V. Borcherdina, Schal- New Orleans, clear 81 62 .47 , church Tuesday after 10 a.m. ty, to Mr. and Mrs. Wilhelm day night, centered in the student poured gasoline on it the middle Pennsylvania dis- ler, Iowa, $15 on a charge of New York cloudy .. 64 50 cost with t State Farm i I , Grewe. She was married July sparsely populated Santa Cruz from the top. trict that had declared invalid Homeowners Policy. improper passing on U.S. 14, Okla. City, rain .... 72 45 .58 4-aVf Mrs. Ole Sylfest 11, 1911, to Albert Wetzel in Wi- Mountains about 90 miles south Some 300-400 students were legislative apportionment acts Call ma today! Stockton Hill, Saturday. Omaha, cloudy 44 34 .08 , Wis. ( Special) - Mrs. CSlI BLAIR nona. The couple lived in Wino- of San Francisco. gathered around the bonfire at of Jan. 9, 1964. Philadelphia, cloudy 66 45 , , died Sunday Ole Sylfest 96 na, where Mr. Wetzel died in A University of California the Northshore High School pep The high court's order said Phoenix, clear 99 35 .14 at Tri-County Me* at 3 p.m. 1938. She was married to Henry seismologist said the heaviest rally when the accident oc- the federal decision had to be Pittsburgh, rain ... 70 57 .05 m o r i a 1 Hospital , Whitehall, Kaarup May 28, 1957, at Red shock registered between' 5 and curred. vacated in favor of action or- Ptlnd, Ore., clear .. 46 30 . where she had been a patient Johnny Crenshaw, 18, ap- Damage Wing. They lived in Fountain 5.5 on the Richter scale which dered by the Pennsylvania Su- Crash Rapid City, clear .. -33 16 since fracturing a hip five peared to be the most seriously City, where he died last Decem- placed the destructive 1906 San preme Court. The state court St. Louis, cloudy ... 73 63 1.01 weeks ago. injured. He was blown off the ber. Francisco earthquake at 8.25. had ordered the General Assem- Salt Lk. City,\loudy 35 25 The former Pauline Olson, she She was a member of St. top of the fire with his clothes bly to write a new reapportion- San Fran., clear ... 58 51 The shocks in San Francisco afire. Over $900 was born Jan.. 30, 1368, about John's United Church of Christ 's worst since a ment law in time for use in the Stattlt, dear 47 36 .. were the city ¦ Accidents Friday, Saturday one mile south of the Trem- and its Women's Guild. 1957 tremor with a Richter mag- 1966. state election. Washington, cloudy . 68 53 .01 pealeau Valley Lutheran Church Survivors are: One son, Roy and Sunday on Winona streets DAILY RIVER BULLETIN nitude of 5.5 injured 31 persons Jack Benny' s Car the city traveled only a few feet caused one minor injury and to Mr. and Mrs. Christian Ol- Wetzel, Winona ; two daughters, and caused several million dol- Stage 24-hr. son. She was one of the first Mrs. Ervln (Ruby ) Ressie and Runs Out of Gas before running out of gaa. An more than $900 damage to the Today Chg. Pr lars damage. "Pete . babies baptized in the congre- Mrs. Theodore (Leona) Braatz, embarrassed reception commit- " Polus six vehicles involved. Wing 2.0 Sunday night's shocks were (AP) 7:45 a.m. Nick Red gation, the ceremony being per- Fountain City, eight grandchil- SALT LAKE CITV - tee quickly found another vehi- Phone 4520 Sunday at Lake City 6.4 -f .1 .. brief, lasting but about four sec- Jack Benny, often the victim of cle, 1.6 Eait Broadway Box 521, was formed at the'house wherr the dren; three great-grandchildren Deonas, Winona, Wabasha 7.3 .2 .. onds. comic misfortunes on his televi- Benny , who will play the vio- Street + itinerant pastor stayed. and one sister, Mrs. George •TATM FARM T driving east on Howard Alma Dam .. .. 4.0 Santa Cruz, 15 miles west of tie struck the rear of a She was a lifelong member (Gertrude) Sehniepp. Three sion program, had a real one lin in a benefit performance when Whitman Dam . 2.3 the quake's center, reported Thursday. with the Utah Symphony Or- Fire and Cawany Company ' car parked facing east on of the Trempealeau Valley sons, one brother and one sis- Winona Dam ... 3.2 - .1 T broken dishes and overturned chestra Saturday night, brushed tiomeOfficaiMoarnlntton, lllinota Howard. Aid. ter have died. A car that was to bring the WINONA 5.3 01 Church and Ladies lamps. performer from the airport into the incident off with a shrug. Trem'au Pool . 10.1 . .1 She was married June 11, Funeral services will be Wed- THE PARKED car, belonging + ,_ ... _ _ 1891. She and her husband nesday at 2 p.m. at St. John's • ^^^ ^ to Darol E. Lee, 273 W. Howard Trem'au Dam . 4.2 ... . T Dakota 7.6 farmed on the Sylfest homestead Church, the Rev. George Scho- St., received more than $200 walter officiating. end. Dresbach Pool .. 9.6 + .1 in Vosse Coulee. Later they pup Burial wilt be damage to its left rear in Woodlawn Cemetery, was done to the Dresbach Dam . 2.0 16 chased a farm two miles east Winona. Similar damage Friends may call at Colby Fu- right front of the Deones vehi- La Crosse 4.0 09 of Blair in Twin Coulee. Follow- Willis H. Wogan Tributary Streams ing Mr. Sylfest'a death July 4, neral Home, Fountain City, cle. Patrolman Tuesday afternoon investigated. Chip, at Durand 4.9 -| ,7 1944, , she and two daughters and evening, two-car collision at U.S. Zu. at Theilman 28.8 ¦+ A moved to Blair. , Wednesday until II a.m., then A * at the church. 61 and Orrin Street Saturday Tramp, at Dodge 0.0 Survivors* are: Three daugh- at 8:40 p.m. left a passenger Bla. at Galesville 4.3 + .5 ters, TiUie and Amelia, with bruised and did more than $200 La Cr'se at W. S. 1.9 whom shelved , and Mrs. Har- damage to both cars. Root at Houston .5 .7 20 rison (Myrtle) Immell, Blair, Walter R. Thompson, 728%. E. RIVER FORECAST and two grandsons, Roger and 3rd St ., was driving west on (From Haitingi to Guttenberg) Clark Erickson. One daughter, Ford Facing U.S. 81 when he collided with Little change indicated In riv Mrs. Basil (Stella) Erickson, a car driven north on Qrrin er stages in this district ln next ' died March 19. Street by Robert W. Gvoghw. several days. The funeral service will be ' oar did Stoppage Police said Googlns Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Trempea- New its headlights on. not have WINONA DAM LOCKAGE leau Valley Church, the Rev. DETROIT (AP) - Ford Mo- Thompson, 29, a passen- Mrs. W. H. Winkler officiating. Bur- tor Co. studied its next move her husband's car, was Flow — 15,000 cubic feet per ger in ial will be in the church ceme- today in a parts-shortage situa- bruised. Damage was to the left second at 8 aim. today. * tion which it says could lead to Thompson tery. side and front ot the Saturday a system-wide shutdown of Its add 1:50 p.m, — Cartaaca, 5 bar- Friends may call at Freder- car and to the right side 90 plants by the end of the vehicle ges up. i '' , ; ixon Funeral Home Tuesday week . ^L-mm-m------^^^ front of tho Googlns . , Approximately 58 ^------Wl Richard L. Peter* 7:10 p.m. — Lady Ree , 3 morning and at the church af- ,000 of Patrolmen Ford's 160,000 employes re- and George M. IJebsch in* barges, up. ter noon . son mained idle in strikes or layoffs vestlgatcd . 10:10. p.m. — Arrowhead, 12 Mrs. Olaf Haganess at factories across the country ¦ ¦ H R^M^ . < barges, up. >__,•!' ]I x^,t*> 4- f^^. *¦$^ i!^^^H_-^H__fl_^H A TWO-CAR collision Friday Small craft - 1. ELEVA, Wis. - MM. Olaf as negotiations continued with -^-^¦--^-M-BS-i-WI--m ... * % - *<¦ ^SB&BS. > ' n JI^I^^HIHH_^_^HE__1 ^__H at 11:30 a.m., again involving a - Sunday Hagenesa 69, died Saturday the United Auto Workers Union. ^mmmmmmmmmmmWmMM\mW%mmmmmmmmmmm ^ 2maMm ^^ammmmmma\wmWKKtl^Bma\aa\mmmmm parked car, caused more than morning ^at Luther Hospital, 6:30 a.m. — Bull Durham, S Included wrre 16,700 workers _^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_HmJU_^___SI-«M^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^n-&& $50 damages to both vehicles. , up. EaA tt CUire, where she had Rndomski, barges affected by local-plant strikes The car of Joe A. 9 am. — W.S. Lyon, 2 bar- Been i patient 4ft weeks. 462 Main St., was parked facing The former Tilda Severson , which were reduced to five over , 100 feet get, up. the weekend. west on King Street 8:4W p.m. — Arthur J. Dyer, she was bora* Dec. 3, 1894, in east of Main. It was hit on the the town of Pleasant Valley to Ford, blaming a car-parts by a car driven 1 barge, down. left front fonder — Francis M. Houg- Mr. and Mrs. Alvfn Severson. shortage from key manufactur- Street Frank 6:36 p.m. west on King by , 5 barges, down. She wan. married J an. 29, 1016, ing plants, laid off 34 ,000 men 18, 316 Center St. land K. Prosaer, 7:211 p.m. - George W. Ban- and was a lifetime area resi- last week . At thnt time a string There ere tlgers-and there ere Wide-Track you priced a tiger lately?) Patrolman Roy J. Nelson In- tigers. (Have ta, 8 barges, up. dent. of local-plant strikes was idling vestigated, but not at the scene ' 24:100 workers. { W« maka two: GTO , La Mana, Sama liandioma , 0 p.m. — Hawkey#, 9 barges, Survivors are : Her husband ; look* aoll* handling, pluati buckat-itatad Intarlora. Dltfaranca *a , fiTO muanlaa flaileV,, WJJB-Tri pJt TlMM- of the accident, IIC335 hp. Alioatandnrd: Hurst tloor ihlrtar , dualtxhaiKta. 1' H* » ""*• ¦.•"*•» "IWi * a down, three sons, Kenneth, Janes- Both company and union ex- ipaclaltiroi-radllnaal l.*M-n. li lamer: 250or 265 hp on ordar. Com* vllle , Wis., and strikes para tha I'ontim » with "aporty" cara, Saa whnl vou Qtt (or how much, Than hurry back to Wlda*Track Hoar town. POIltiM Ll Even under Communist rule , 10: 10 p.m. — Bayou LaRose , Tillman and pressed hope that all the MM8 9k 619 in Peking have ex- 5 barges, up. Oliver , both at home; * two could be settled before a sched- We 're building Wide-Tracks again! See them al[ at your authorized Pontiac dealer nowl restaurants ) travagantly flowery names - Small craft - 7. daughters, Mrs. Obert ( Irene uled meeting betwen mnnag- Virtue and Hep Today Tweet, Eleva, and Mrs. Marvin ment and the UAW's national C. PAUL VENABLES, INC. "Unbounded ) pineaa," for example, and "Ac- 3:56 *.m. — Lady Ree, 2 bar (Myrtle Franaoii, Strum; «ev-> bargaining committee Thurs- 110 Main St. Winona cumulated Virtue." gas. down. en grandchildren; one great- day. *)>wwwnnw« MVW¥MWWWMMWM W BUT THE DUTCHMAN Y/AS NEVER PROUDER No

¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ . - . " ¦' •;. V Hopes Moore Pack Loses. . . Colts Nip Vikings 17-14 Yardage BALTIMORE (AP) - The had tp leave the game. Gino Marchetti told him later with a Fred Cox field goal at- In San Francisco Tarkenton's reaction was: "it was a bum decision." tempt that hit the upright and SAN FRANCISCO -rV-It'i However, one of bis errant son racing over from the king-of-the-hill Baltimore Colts ¦ ¦ ' "We moved, but we got some Minnesota also came close bounced to the outside. On This wait 'til next year for the tosses was picked Off by a i-ve- . _ __ .. got even with the Minnesota ORUN MY I » • ¦ bad bounces and so we didn't . San Francisco defender at ¦» __;«•» SAN FRANCIICO ,. • . «« ,__ Vikings Sunday , but it took get enough points . . . I've The Packers left their Na- the Green Bay 30 and the oV-McOto 44 past from Starr (Horn- caliber play to seen our guys hit harder." tional Football League hopes 49ers promptly ung kick). championship never went ahead SP-FO Davis 4». , wring out a 17-14 decision. One "bad bounce" in the first buried in Kezar Stadium to stay in the third period. SF-Alaxandar 70 »unt return toavll called Sunday aa the rookie-stud- The Packers muffed sev- John Unitas' perfect pass fired half was a OdV-McOae 11 »•*- ¦*"•»» -ralKewsltl back because of a holding in- ded San Francisco 49ers eral scoring opportunities. (Hornung kick). Hawkins, who made a (Davis kick). . to Alex fraction. Tarkenton tossed an rallied in the second half They failed to score after SP-Und 1 run catch, SF-R. Johnson J nm (Dovls kldrt. timely, desperate 11-yard pass to Bedsole in the for a stunning 24-14 upset picking up first downs on Attendance—-MM. fourth-quarter gloom zone but Errol Linden was before a crowd oi 38,483. the 49er 16 and 11 in the sec- changed end ''It's all over with, into victory for the Colts. The called for holding. " Green ond. And fail- Bay Coach Vince Lombar- ed on four field goal at- Western Conference leaders of But he contended he made a legal move and Colt veteran di muttered alter his charg- tempts. Hornung has booted the es' record sagged to 5-5 with only 9 of 28 attempts this Three Divide now boast a 9-1 record—their four games left. season. "The team that only blot an opening-game loss blocks bet- After the Packers moved ter, tacklesbetter and wants in front 7-0 on Starr's pas* to the Vikings. , Pro Football to win better wins," Lom- to McGee, the 49ers pick- Midwest Title Still. In defeat, and with his bardi said. "It's just those up 10 points on Tommy team sporting a 5-5 record. three things in football. You Davis* 49-yard field goal and can take Coach could everything else and a 70-yard punt return by Bows say of his Vikings, "I have Standings throw it out the window." Kern.it Alexander. The St. Olaf NFL PRESS never been prouder of our foot- Lombardi had cause to be Packers regained the lead By THE ASSOCIATED EASTERN CONFERENCE angry after the upstart 49ers Conference foot- ball team." W. L. T. PO. PT OP The Midwest Cleveland ...111 .HI 5*5 1» managed their first victory ball title for 1864 has been split It looked like the Vikings St. Louis ... $ 3 3 .ti5 234 J45 over Green Bay Cornell ' since 1961. STATISTICS three ways, with Ripon, might pull another upset when Philadelphia 5 5 • .500 217 117 The 49ers wounded the sharing the crown on ahead 14-10 in the Dallas 4 i 1 .444 IK 17* Packers 4fers and Coe they went Washington 4 4 0 .400 21t 20* Packers physically as well First downs 20 15 7-1 records. fourth quarter on Tommy Pittsburgh 3 7 0 .300 1«1 IS* Rushing yardage ...... m 13* New York 2 i 1 .ISO ttl 217 as mentally. The clinchers came Saturday 's 21-yard touchdown Passing yardage ...... 231 73 Mason WESTERN CONFERENCE P«sts ii43 te-tr with Ripon edging Beloit 27-24; sprint. Baltimore » 1 0 .NO 331 1(7 tossed a 44-yard touchdown Passes Intercepted by . I 1 42 14, LOS Angeles 5 4 1 .554 23? 22* Punts .;. . . 4-37 3-14.7 Cornell defeating Knox The teams had battled to a Detroit S 4 1 .55* 171 IN pass to Max McGee in the Fumbles loll 1 4 and Coe walloping Lawrence 47* Green Bay S 5 0 .500 231 174 first period and Yards penaliied ...... 'JO tt scoreless halftime tie before the Minnesota 5 5 0 .500 237 225 then was 10. In other games, Grinnel beat Colts moved out smartly in the Chicago . 3 7 0 .300 193 274 knocked cold while throwing St. Olaf 28-10 and Monmouth third quarter to a 10-0 lead. San Francisco 3 7 0 .300 177 242 an incomplete shot early ip nipped Carleton 13-12. Michaels SUNDAY'S RESULTS the second quarter. Stan- on Bratkowski's 33-yard Baltimore's Lou Chicago 34, Los Angeles 24. payoff pass to McGee. Coe scored twice in the first lucked a 35-yard field goal and Cleveland 37, Detroit 21. was helped off the field five minutes on a 64-yard pass San Francisco 74, Green Bay 14. ' The 49ers wasted little Unitas connected with Lenny Baltimore 17, Minnesota 14. and spent the rest of the aft- play from Rich Tosi to Dennis Moore on a 74-yard scoring pass New York 10, St. Louis 10 (tit). ernoon in the clubhouse. He time after intercepting a eight-yard run Philadelphia 17, Dallas 14. Bratkowski pass early Kittler and an play. The fleet Colt halfback got Washington 70, Pittsburgh 0. suffered a Slight concussion. in the three Line, by Don Hayes, and added past the Viking secondary and SUNDAY'S GAMES The Packers' top running second half. Mike final- more in the second went 45 yards untouched. Baltimore at Let Angeles. backs, , Paul ly banged into the end zone Cleveland vs. Green Bay at Milwau- from two yards quarter. kee. Hornung and , out. Lawrence scored a safety in Minnesota moved in the third Dallas at Washington. also were clobbered by the Abe Woodsen set up the quarterback Fran Tar- Minnesota at Detroit. the third period when a blocked period as Pittsburgh af New York. rugged San Francisco de- third 49«r touchdown with a punt dribbled through the end kenton, who'd netted a . minus SI. Louis at Philadelphia . fense. Taylor and Hornung 26-yard punt return to San Francisco at Chicago. the zone, and collected its lone one yard in the first half , finally managed, however, to re- Green Bay 39 later in the jelling combination. touchdown on a 20 - yard pass found the AFL turn to action. third quarter. With quarter- from Dave Koskelin to Dave He directed an 80-yard drive EASTERN DIVISION veteran Zeke Bratkowski back at the W. L. T. Pet. PT OP Crowell in the last quarter. Kos- capped with a 16-yard scoring replaced Starr. Bratkowski controls in his pro starting Buffalo * 1 t .*0* 304 14* kelin passed to Bob Schoenwet- pass to Hal Bedsole. A few min- Boston 7 2 1 .771 274 225 hit on 16 of 25 passes for 228 debut, the 49ers stormed the the Vikings got with- New York .4 4 1 .500 1M 171 yards and one touchdown. ter for a two-point conversion. utes later, Houston .2 I t .200 207 2(1 distance, rookie Rudy John- Beloit stung Ripon with a 16- in striking distance again and WESTERN DIVISION Mason streaked brilliantly San Diego 7 2 1 .771 253 200 point first quarter and eight Kansas City 4 5 * .444 237 214 points at the outset of the sec- around right end for the score. Oakland ¦ . ... 2 7 7 .222 211 271 Baltimore drove to the Vikings Denver 2 I t .200 177 342 ond period. Then sophomore SUNDAY'S RESULTS quarterback Dick Kuehl scored 26-yard line, helped by key runs Boston 36, Buffalo 3t. by Unitas and Moore to set the Oakland 20, Houston It. a pair of touchdowns and pass- Denver 20, New York 14. ed for two others in Ripon'i stage for the quarterback's final San Diego 21, Kansas City 14. STOPPED . . . Baltimore's Lenny Moore League game. Moore was stopped on the scoring fling. Hawkins got past FRIDAY'S GAME is grabbed by Minnesota's Paul Dickson Colts' four-yard line. Baltimore won 17-14. sparkling comeback. Denver at Boston (night). Beloit ended the season with defender Karl Kussulke and SUNDAY'S GAMES and thrown for a five-yard loss in the sec- (AP Photofax) dived for the aerial, grabbing Kansas City at Houston. a 5-3 record and Lawrence was New York at Oakland. ond quarter of Sunday's National Football , it as he fell into the end zone. Page 10 Monday, November 16 1964 2-6. "I shouldn't have given him the outside," Kassulke said later. "He cut once toward the noddle and then went to the corner. I should have stayed with him a little better." Get Set! Basketball Is Here In a game of attempted con- Four games will inaugur- sort of a prep topper in a year ago with a 6-2 mark at Augusta; Arcadia's Red trol ball, the Vikings stayed on ate the 1964-65 Badgerland the first night of play, it and had a 16-6 overall. Raiders at Osseo and Tay- " m the ground much of tbe time, B& : *« _^fiFNFRAI sSx cage schedule Tuesday would have to be the natur- lor at Blair. *t£ • ¦ ¦ __^_ using the slashing runs of Mason night. al rivalry of Cochrane-Foun- Coach Greg Green has _#3F _HK •» -j unii *£2__H!_IB B 32? and Bill Brown. Brown carried tain City playing at Alma. 11 members of that same Prescott is at Pepin, New J wu m Starting Tuesday will be squad returning, and all of Lisbon at Bangor, Westby at !&-£ i_D_M CS__iiL ^^Sw^^W _$§* for 106 yards in 19 games and the longest high school The Pirates, coached this ' Mason had 78 in 13, while Tar- Green's starting five could Onalaska and Arkansaw at ^B m m f sports seasons, extending year by Jim Danielson and Zr JH Rpttpr ^^^mW mm m m mw _§s£ kenton was 37 in two. members of the Dairyland sky over the six-foot mark. Plum City. Elmwood trav- ^ until Saturday, March 20, els to Durand in another The Vikings outrushed the when the 1965 basketball Conference had a rather Another game that rates a ' contest. Colts 221-107 but Unitas aerials champion will be crowned "down" season in 1963-64, "rivalry" tag is Whitehall carried for 274 compared with amid some 13,000 plus spec- but all of that will be for- at Trempealeau. The Norse- Seven-foot one-inch Eino § Safer Winter Driving, 8- only 85 for Minnesota. Intercep- tators at Madison's Univer- gotten when the squad takes men are members of the Hendrickson and the rest jK^j your Tire tions also played a key part in sity of Wisconsin fieldhouse. the Alma court Tuesday. Dairyland and Trempealeau of the Holmen team will fienera the Baltimore victory. Colt sec- Tuesday's tilts are all of In Alma, the Pirates will is a Coulee Conference en- journey to Onalaska Luther, l §| ondary men picked off three of the non-conference varie- be tackling a team which try. and Alma Center Lincoln ' Sx^^fW Tarkentons 21 flings, but the ty; some schools will be pre- has to rate as one of West- Whitehall is coached this will host Neillsville. St. Vikings could intercept none of paring for conference open- ern Wisconsin's finest. The year by ex-Trempealeau Croix Central at Clear Lake ' Specialist Unitas s 31. In first downs, it ers Friday night. Rivermen tied with Taylor cage star Ken Stellpflug. rounds out the opening night * is holding ' || Ovl K || was the Vikings margin 22-18. If there were to be any for the West Central crown Other games find Altoona schedule. Van Brocklin ' said it was a ® great performance by his team M/ < a terrific- —"We went after them and we | | stood with them from start to H finish. I know the Colts have our respect after this. " Nc argument there. "They This Week's kept coming at us all day like Buffalo Calls on Fireman 1 GENERA 11 Van Brocklins," remarked Basketball S'DAY one Colt veteran. "They never * | slopped." TUESDAY WISCONSIN NON-CONFERENCi , MelroM at Cathfon. Ore who was stopped, though, Before Fire Streak Ends Whitehall at Trempealeau. was Ed Sharockman. com- ¦By , rallied for a to Larry Garron and a two-point Altoona at Augutta. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS touchdown passes Arcadia at Ottao. f bative Colt defender who suf- i l l If 36-28 League conversion flip to Cappelletti , Taylor at Blair. f|jf Key injuries and costly fum- fered a severe nose bruise and victory that endeti the Bills' whose 24 points raised his Prescott at Papln. gum bles opened the gates. Babe New Lltbon at Bangor. winning string at nine games, league-leading total to 122. Wattby at Onalaika. BIG TEN STANDINGS I Parilli' s right arm finished the Arkansaw at Plum City. Elmwood at Durand ohio sntt > job. But the Buffalo Bills' magic Injuries to pass receivers The Pats' victory lifted them . SS^ • a i.ooo I Holmen at Onalaska Luttier. _ Michigan 5 I o .833 i may have started to slip away t_^ Glenn Basa and El Dnbenion within lv. games of the front- Nelllivllla at Alma canter Lincoln. H ^t^kM ^mmmmm\^ *W Purdue 4 5 0 .647 when they called for the fire- and defensive back Booker Ed- running Bills in the Eastern St. Croln Ctntral at Clear Lake. Minnesota 4 i o .it? Cocnrane-Fountain City at Alma. Michigan Stat* .. 1 1 o .too | man before the fire had started. gerson contributed to the Buf- race. The clubs wind up the sea- ¦ --F^ Illl-Olf 3 3 O 50O three fum- son at Boston next month in a Northwestern .... 7 s 0 284 The Boston Patriots capital- falo fadeout. So did ) Indiana l 4 o .200 ized on Buffalo mistakes Sunday bles that set up Boston touch- geme that could decide the title. Iowa 1 S 0 ,167 North Dakota Signs -_fcik--Ki downs. The tip-off , however , The Chargers , 7-2-1, can nail Wiiconjln 1 5 o .167 and , with Parilli firing five jfj} ^^B came in the second half when their second successive Western For Mineral Bowl | | the Bills made a mistake that crown by winning two of their MILWAUKEE M-l-North Da- ? AHMFuH.W .AII TWW ®£ won't show in the game statis- remaining four games. 2§r "-BIBRiiw --^-fl-HH-feiik kota State University lost little - Now in stoc| tics. S^tttHHRkfliK _^-^-^-^-^-^BKBk < - •£& No wonder this man is smiling! time in signing for the Miner- Q They sent in DaryTefLamorica al Bowl football game Saturday » ma 1 1 —when they were ahead. flyIi5_£ 4-BHBrHF-****BmMM^ ^-^ Tlrt> ""-' 4s* Jim Brown night after overpowering Wis- * JKEmWzSzBt-WR^^^^m BSK Lamonica, the league's No. 1 consin-Milwaukee 34-6. K ^^_^ l¦ow, s Pr|c#,f _ relief pitcher, had come off the Dorrell Mudra, North Dakota £E ^^^^^^ J»--^^^w''''''©'i«^s_8^_HI__^^^_^_^ *'* 3# bench in six previous games Paces Win coach, said contracts for the and led the Bills to comeback Wlnl*- the Colts game Nov, 28 were signed dur- victories. But, when he replaced were fi }-ht- I IIK tor their lives against ing a reception given the team starting quarterback Jack the Vikings and the Sun by about 70 Milwaukee area Kemp midway through the third Francisco alumni. Mudra coached the Ad- quarter, with Buffalo leading 28- -l!»erN wer« istorm- lng past the ams State College oi Colorado 14, the move backfired. (Irticn Bay Puckers, ('M CUKO 'K Beurs team that defeated Northern Il- After a five-yard delay-of- were stopping I,os Angeles linois 2,'i-20 in the 1962 Mineral He got his kind of loan game penalty moved the ball ¦M-.4 while din-plnying some Bowl . from the Buffalo 27 to the 22. of their "old spirit. " Lamonica threw an incomp payments lete Louis Schuth and Band with his kind of puss, was tossed for a 10-yard The New York (iliuits lied Hi* EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT W L ¦ °"«» oooo People are different ... no nre- I heir monoy loss on the next p St. Louis 10-10. Philadelphia B H . _^^_^_0f***f^_^_H_^_l_^_^_^_^B_^^^mmW_^_i Ami ,m * 3trV lay and then ppft '*_^ i _^_H-8_' ^_^__^^^ Amm wt'« °**-T WCK needs. And nobody doi-H <|iiil « im much about lost the ball to Boston 's Lurry edged Dallas 17-11 and SMORGASBORD DAILY ^^^*^*» ^^^^H^H . this «a Public Kimuicfl. Eisenhower on the Si. Washington sluup«d Pitts- EXCEPT SATURDAY hurgh .'Cfl-0 Fith—Spaghetti Nest time you need money . . . deal with your . Chicken— offer the rinht kind of loan Parjlli Immediately fli pped a Minnesota fell to Balti- Pork Hock*—Salad Bar WHBBL AI ANC _ kind of people who ' Roll*—Butter—Beverage _K9 ^^_HMiiHMw_3_^_^_^_--HKjfl^_^_^_P^ » . tSX, with sensible payments you omr * It's helpful, struck for two more touchdowns The IIIR game KjL r*WtltHl t§ &tKt L ^ *EtKK UBJ _»J§ to meet your needs and your Hitu ntion. saw Jim- $1.50 in the last quarter to pull it out. my H rtiwn score Call or come in lor your k ind ol lonn. two touch- ALL YOU CAN EAT While the Bills' loss lighted downs in lending the Cleve- Yoai emit daapmnd on. .. Sunday—Noon to I p.m. JM I Where tha Men Who Know Tiro. Boot Are: mZJr the Eastern Division race, the land Browns past Detroit Mon , Triru Fri.—5 t* 10 p.m. San Diego Chargers closed in on .17-LM. the Western title by whi pping I lie scoring smashes of six FINANCE Kansas City 28-14 behind sec- and two yards placed Brown OAKS | KALMES,«%.(Bl g TP BL/C only two Phone mtf-ftn Sjaw ammw — ond-year quarterback John behind Don Hut- TSlk WM1* *»* 2ml St. "Since 1W" phona 2847 ^*^a2a \W,. ^\t mmmmmm son' Restaurant t Losing* ^^¦^umuum¦- i-e ^"' B5T ^^^ **** ** CORPOR ATION llsdl. The Denver Broneos sur- s record for total touch- mJAmm °P*n '••• ••m' ,p *••• P- m* - Saturday* 'til 5:00 p.m. J&a ¦ ¦ blckadby 4/ ynora ol luuml tuiini.ial anr>*ii»n

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